Tuesday, January 2, 2007

Nothing really matters, anyone can see

I'd like to think I take something of a maximalist position on ethics issues. I believe that sins of omission are equal to sins of commission, and that we face many more ethical choices than we care to think about on a regular basis. What we buy, what we do with our time, these choices have ethical components. One problem with this philosophy is that it makes it exceedingly difficult to live up to one's ethical obligations; I am only a fraction of the person I could be, and that takes some getting used to. Still, I'd like to think it helps to focus attention on things that actually matter, as opposed to things that only seem to matter. Three news stories from today highlight this.

Sins of Omission


Hundreds of thousands of Iraqis have fled the country, and it can be debated whether or not they are the lucky or unlucky ones. Still, I think it should go without saying (it doesn't, but it should), that we have a responsibility to them, because we were the ones who blew the place up. This would be true even if it wasn't a war of choice, which it was. It should surprise no one at this point that we are going to fail at that basic moral obligation. From the New York Times:
With thousands of Iraqis desperately fleeing this country every day, advocates for refugees, and even some American officials, say there is an urgent need to allow more Iraqi refugees into the United States.

Until recently the Bush administration had planned to resettle just 500 Iraqis this year, a mere fraction of the tens of thousands of Iraqis who are now believed to be fleeing their country each month...

Some critics say the Bush administration has been reluctant to create a significant refugee program because to do so would be tantamount to conceding failure in Iraq.

Holy crap this is a poor excuse. In order to save face now (let's face it, saving face in the long run would require a plan, and we don't actually have one of those, nor a prayer for that matter), hundreds of thousands of people find themselves in danger. It's been suggested that some of them may be terrorists in waiting, but this is a lame excuse for avoiding responsibility, and it is insane to think that wannabe terrorists can't find other ways into the country. Furthermore, no Iraqi has ever been involved in an act of terror on US soil, if I remember correctly, so it's not like they even have a history of it. No, even if it means some risk for us, that risk has to be considered an acceptable one, for one cannot just ignore the damage we've done to thousands. It's about time we grow up enough as a nation to realize this uncomfortable fact.

Sins of Commission


I realize that journalists have a duty to get information out, but sometimes they really just serve as the weapons that the powerful use against their opponents, or in this case, former employees. Bush, having screwed up the war, is looking for a fall guy. Who better than a soldier to fall on the sword. From the NYTimes and the poison pen of Sanger, Gordon, and Burns:
Over the past 12 months, as optimism collided with reality, Mr. Bush increasingly found himself uneasy with General Casey’s strategy. And now, as the image of Saddam Hussein at the gallows recedes, Mr. Bush seems all but certain not only to reverse the strategy that General Casey championed, but also to accelerate the general’s departure from Iraq, according to senior military officials.

General Casey repeatedly argued that his plan offered the best prospect for reducing the perception that the United States remained an occupier — and it was a path he thought matched Mr. Bush’s wishes. Earlier in the year, it had.

But as Baghdad spun further out of control, some of the president’s advisers now say, Mr. Bush grew concerned that General Casey, among others, had become more fixated on withdrawal than victory.

This is what's known in the biz as a "hit piece". Notice no one criticizes Casey on the record; this is a purely professional takedown for political gain, not anything personal. Josh Marshall at TPM gets it right:
In so many words, Casey's policy (which, reading between the lines, it's pretty clear Casey thought was Bush's desired policy) was maintain current troop levels and 'standing down as the Iraqis stand up'. You may have thought that was the Bush policy. But apparently not. "Over the past 12 months," the Times now tells us, "as optimism collided with reality, Mr. Bush increasingly found himself uneasy with General Casey’s strategy."

There's a simple way to figure out if this is fair or not. What have Bush and Casey said in the past? Well, Casey's currently arguing against an escalation while anonymous officials say he's arguing for one, but the liar in chief is our President himself, praising Casey on September 15 (2 months before the election):
And I'm going to tell you I've got great confidence in General John Abizaid and General George Casey. These are extraordinary men who understand the difficulties of the task, and understand there is a delicate relationship between self-sufficiency on the Iraqis' part, and U.S. presence.

Nice of the NYTimes reporters not to mention this little detail. That's what you get from the finest journamalists in the country (and no, that's not a misspelling).

Spotting the bigger picture


Democrats taking over the majority in Congress face something of a dilemma, as noted by Steve Benen, guest hosting at Political Animal:
There's obviously a bit of a conflict. House Dems promised to use certain procedural rules, and they promised to pass certain bills. In the very short term, they can't do both, so they decided to pass the policy agenda first. I can't say I blame them.

Here, the procedural rules in question are those that allow the minority party in Congress the power to actually amend bills and have some tiny bit of input into the process. The bills in question are the legislation the Democrats promised to enact, things like raising the minimum wage, establishing new ethics rules, and allowing the government to negotiate with drug companies. Here's the quick question: which is more important? I would have to say that as Congress' job is to pass legislation, the agenda comes first, even if feelings are hurt (Benen concludes this as well). Raising the wage for hundreds of thousands comes before the hurt feelings of 200 Republicans in the minority. Eventually, there will have to be compromises, and I hope this happens sooner rather than later. Still, there is a time to establish policies, and that time is know. All other concerns are secondary, and decorum doesn't matter a bit, especially given that two years from now the month of January 2007 will be largely forgotten in the grand scheme, except for people making something marginally closer to a living wage and seniors not paying the same exorbitant drug prices as Medicare costs continue to skyrocket (more on that in a later post). It's important to be nice in this world, but your duty is to help as many as possible. That's ethical principles for you, sometimes they can make your life difficult (especially if you're a Republican), but you gotta do what you gotta do. Sometimes, baby, you've gotta be cruel to be kind...

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Focusing only on the first aspect of the post, and setting ethics aside (a seeming requirement for long term survival inside the beltway), it clearly will not suit the representative from the Fifth District of Virginia. It was he, how quickly we might forget, who said: "I fear that in the next century we will have many more Muslims in the United States if we do not adopt the strict immigration policies that I believe are necessary to preserve the values and beliefs traditional to the United States of America and to prevent our resources from being swamped". And he and his ilk have made Iraq safe for Iraqis (at least if you stay in the Green Zone, which you can only get in with U.S. permission and business in the zone). The beauty of the seeming Republican plan (or abject lack thereof) is that only those truly oppressed and in danger from the oppressor ought to be allowed in the U.S. Since the Shia now comprise the majority of the populace in Iraq, clearly they cannot claim to be in danger from the government (such as it is) and thus ought not be eligible for entry to the U.S. Only the Sunni fit the profile (I know, we don't profile, Allah be praised, but not aloud in earshot of someone from TSA) but they, after all, were the oppressors under Saddam (all Baathists under the skin), and thus they don't qualify. The Kurds, well they seem to be doing just fine all by themselves (another clear disqualification). So that leaves only Chalabi and his friends, so 500 ought to just about do it.

And on the subject of journalists, Ambrose Bierce said all that need be said over a century ago, in the following definition:

INK, n. A villainous compound of tannogallate of iron, gum-arabic and water, chiefly used to facilitate the infection of idiocy and promote intellectual crime. The properties of ink are peculiar and contradictory: it may be used to make reputations and unmake them; to blacken them and to make them white; but it is most generally and acceptably employed as a mortar to bind together the stones of an edifice of fame, and as a whitewash to conceal afterward the rascal quality of the material. There are men called journalists who have established ink baths which some persons pay money to get into, others to get out of. Not infrequently it occurs that a person who has paid to get in pays twice as much to get out.

Of course, Bierce also had a view of politics and politicians:

POLITICIAN, n. An eel in the fundamental mud upon which the superstructure of organized society is reared. When we wriggles he mistakes the agitation of his tail for the trembling of the edifice. As compared with the statesman, he suffers the disadvantage of being alive.

Of bloggers, of course, he said nothing.

alexis said...

hey, I have a request for your next post - musings on the presidential candidates for '08

jfaberuiuc said...

Hey Alexis, I'll have to do that over the weekend. It'll come as no shock that I've got some opinions already (more surprising is that Obama may be my #2, not #1).

About Virgil Goode, as little should be said as possible; my god do we elect the stupid. On a slightly serious note, isn't Judeo-Christian an artificial designation, that could just as easily be Abrahamic religions and be used to include Moslems instead of demonizing them? For more on refugees, see the brief post that's going up shortly.

Anonymous said...

Abrahamic is the preferred reference most everywhere in the developed world. Once we develop, perhaps we, too, will adopt it. As to our electoral decisions, is it any surprise when the average American spends more time deciding who is the better dancer on "Dancing With the Stars" or in casting votes on "American Idol" than they do in deciding on their representative. Care to place a wager on the relative proportion of Americans who can tell you who won either of those Reality Titles and who represents them in Congress (heck, I'd go with 2 out of 3 in Congress, although the average person has no idea he/she has 3 representatives at the Federal level).

jfaberuiuc said...

Without consulting references, I'll go Katherine McPhee and Emmitt Smith, along with Rep. Tim Johnson (not the Senator who had the stroke), Obama, and Durbin.

As for overall, 40% and 30% for AI and DWS, 25% for the senators, and 20% for the House. I'll look this up for real at some point, I know it's been polled nationally before.

 

Website and photos, unless otherwise indicated: Copyright 2006-7, by the authors

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

This website, and all contents, are licensed under the “creative commons attribution, non-commercial, share alike” license. This means, essentially, that you may copy and modify any of these materials for your own use, or for educational purposes. You can freely copy them and distribute them to others. The only rules are that you must attribute the work to the original authors, use them in a non-commercial way, and pass along these rights to everyone else.

Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors, not anyone nor anything else. Word.