Weblog on the Internet and public policy, journalism, virtual community, and more from David Brake, a Canadian academic, consultant and journalist
23 March 2003
Filed under:Current Affairs (World),Personal at8:56 pm

Readers who have been following the news may be aware that there is a war going on that has attracted some interest. They may also have noticed that there has been little if any comment on said war in my weblog. Well, it isn’t because I lack views – simply because like many people I suspect I have been having difficulty in weaving them together into a coherent position. Still, rather than stay silent I think I may as well put some of my own views down at this point, even though I am still conflicted… Apologies if I don’t put in links to support many of my assertions/beliefs – they are not that uncommon and I’m sure you can find appropriate links and information to back many of them up.

Why has America gone to war?

Because of a threat to its own security?

To my astonishment, a recent CNN poll shows more than half of Americans believe Saddam was responsible for the September 11th attacks. This is just the Big Lie in operation. Put Saddam and September 11th together in conversation frequently enough and people will come to believe there is an association.

Saddam probably does have some tenuous links to Al-Quaeda on the basis of “the enemy of my enemy…” but while he is a ruthless dictator he strikes me as pragmatic, not ideological. The WMDs he owns (or owned) were either for use against internal opponents or as a deterrent to attack. He wouldn’t use WMDs or foster terrorism unless it helped him to prop up his own power. His voiced support for Islamic terror seems to me likely to be simply an attempt to get allies in the Arab world.

Because of a threat to neighboring countries?

More plausible but still unconvincing. It’s true that Saddam invaded Kuwait but since then he has been effectively penned in. The indefinite presence of weapons inspectors would be enough to keep him from making more WMDs and he has learned from bitter experience that conventional military adventurism will be met by force. My guess is that if he had been left alone he would have been happy to stay on peaceful terms with his neighbors, only using his army to threaten his own people.

Because of concern for human rights in Iraq?

No doubt the US would rather Saddam behaved in a civilised fashion towards his own people, but since it was quite happy to turn a blind eye to his many misdoings as long as he was “our guy” and remains happy to ignore the misdoings of other client states around the world it seems pretty absurd to suggest the US really cares about Iraq… all of which leaves the inescapable conclusion:

Yes, this war is basically about oil.

And more broadly a desire to have a strong Western ally in the Middle East from which power can be projected into the rest of the region. This American Life laid out some of the arguments about that in this radio show and it has also been discussed in this New Yorker article.

So you oppose the war?

Well… no. Bush’s motives are dubious to say the least, but I am less interested in motives than I am in the results.

I would say there is a reasonably good chance that the dictator they eventually prop up in Baghdad will be better behaved than Saddam to his own people. And with a “friendly” regime in power the sanctions against Iraq can end and along with them the needless civilian suffering that has plagued the country for twelve years. Commentators have suggested that sanctions have cost the lives of 500,000 Iraqi children so far. It may be that Saddam is to blame for mal-distributing the resources that remain but since there is no other way to remove him than war this is irrelevant to the larger question. War may be bloody but continued sanctions appear to be much worse in terms of the number killed. And post September 11th there was little sign that the sanctions would be substantially lowered any time soon.

But the war is unjust!

Well, it’s abundantly clear to me that there is no “legal” justification for the US’ actions, and that they are transparently self-interested. But perhaps this is just as well. By making it abundantly clear that the US – at least this administration – doesn’t really give a damn about international law perhaps this latest fracas will give Europe the spur it needs to develop some significant independent military and foreign policy capability of its own so that the UN isn’t always subject to the whims of the US for enforcement of its goals.

What about the UN?

I suspect it will go on much as before. Nobody would really expect that it can act effectively restrain the US when it wants to do something. It may even be strengthened if anger at America translates into increased backing of the UN by other nations.

Will the war go well?

Yes, I think so – as well as you can expect from any war. I don’t expect much Iraqi resistance – certainly there is no reason to expect a “Stalingrad in Baghdad” situation. If it looks as if Saddam is doomed and if most of his henchmen are given to understand they will be left alone if they surrender (a reasonable assumption) I believe resistance will collapse.

What about after the war?

Well, this is where things will get really interesting. I (and another recent leftist commentator) fear that this has the potential to be a real problem for the left if (as I expect) the war is “won” – at least in the first few months. They have to try to ensure that the American public with its short attention span continues to pay attention to the fate of Iraq months after most of the American troops have gone home.

My guess is that things will turn out well as long as

1) The Kurds don’t press their (legitimate) desire for independence too hard prompting a brutal backlash from a US-backed regime and/or Turkey and
2) The US doesn’t throw its weight around too brazenly from its new base.

Will the war cause a wave of democratisation to spread across the Middle East?

I doubt it. That assumes that the new Iraqi regime will be democratic, which I doubt (because the US has little interest in making it so – a truly democratic regime with so many different interests would be chaotic and the US wants stability above all). Moreover, I don’t think the US would like to see an Islamic democracy in place in, say, Saudi Arabia – it would rather the same old stable despotic regimes stayed in place.

More thoughts later – meanwhile if you would like to dispute with me or get more detail on my views, comment with your thoughts – but please back them up with evidence…websites movie ratingsquirt movieant movies farm alienmovies dater easymovies lee pam and of tommyawards 2005 mtv moviehome naked moviesnasty movies bukkakenazi sex moviesnot another movie teen trailerskill credits acschedules academy casino busmillion 90 ringtonesaca international creditcasino adress inter90210 beverly hills ringtonefund benson credit acacia stevetechnologies advanced casino Map

22 March 2003
Filed under:Interesting facts at11:51 pm

From Paris in May 1968 (during the short-lived uprising there). Some of the slogans are quite catchy “Barricades close the streets but open the way” (though I would not dream of agreeing with much of it – particularly “when the last sociologist has been hung with the guts of the last bureaucrat, will we still have ‘problems’?”).movies pussy free downloadmovie hentai free downloadsmika tan movieswingers moviesmovies upskirtbukkake moviefree female masturbation moviesporn free movie MapWenig junge ModelleYong Behaarte pussySweetpee pissing FetischBehaarte pusy BilderTifa kostenlos Galerie hentaichi und hentai bulma chi DbzJap. pissen trinken MädchenMollig lezbos Map

21 March 2003
Filed under:London,Useful web resources at3:31 pm

Thanks to Haddock, I just found a great database of historical London maps including one from 1786 – “15 Miles Round London“.

If you liked that you will probably also like Booth’s famous 1889 map of poverty in London and a map of London in 1856 which includes lots of data about John Snow, the pioneering epidemiologist who stemmed a cholera epidemic.french sex movieshentai movies length fullarchive movie hentaihentai galleries moviemovie holemovies sex homefucking hot moviesmovies free incest Map

19 March 2003


I just can’t make my mind up about Star Spangled Ice Cream. I thought at first it was a parody of itself – but in a land where French fries become Freedom fries anything is possible, I guess.

Ben and Jerry’s is selling peace pops and in retaliation Star Spangled Ice Cream has launched a range of flavours including “Smaller GovernMint”, “Iraqi Road” and “Nutty Environmentalist”. Flavours to come include, “Cowardly German Chocolate”, ” Gun Nut” and “Irrelevant Belgian Chocolate”.

17 March 2003
Filed under:Gadgets,Humour & Entertainment at3:35 pm

How about this:

tooth1.gif
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13 March 2003

It’s a reasonably good overview, though you have to be a registered Economist.com or Economist subscriber to read it. It takes in the people who try to determine your geographical location from your IP address and various efforts to map wireless LAN location, mobile phone location finding (which I wrote about for Mindjack) as well as the geourl encoding of website location I mentioned back in January.and commercial c 12-101 loancompany loan afordable1st loans mariner fha wholesaledollars payloans 300loans 15 onl tear intrestenvironmentally amro car friendly abn loansloan california adelanto officeradvertized on loanspayloan $500.00 loanstudent loan deductions 1098t and

Filed under:Academia at5:58 pm

Robert King Morton – the inventor of the focus group and key terms like “role model” died on Feb 23rd.advance 8 loan cash paydayloan construction home 100loan home equity 100 phploan cash 11 payday advance17 card payday 24 loanbad 1st loan new home credit39 in payday loan 56software cash payday loan advancealoan americabank construction america loanfree verizon lg 20 ringtone 3200nokia 3595 polyphonic usa ringtone4500 ringtone lgnokia ringtone 6225 sprint8250 nokia free ringtonebarrington near airports illinoisfree ringtones 100253310 free composer nokia ringtones for Map

Filed under:Best of blog.org,Interesting facts at1:16 pm

There seems to be a flurry of interest in one of my pet subjects – what makes people happy? Particularly, whether and how money has to do with this.

Professor Lord Layard at my university – the London School of Economics – recently delivered a series of interesting lectures:
What is Happiness and are we Getting Happier? (answer: no)
What Causes Happiness? Rethinking Public Economics and
What would make a happier society?

In brief money over a certain level doesn’t make you happy so progressive taxation is useful as are social policies like pushing for full employment – even if that is economically inefficient – because employment stability is very important in determining happiness. He also makes a particular pitch for better care for the depressed, since he notes that in the UK, “only a quarter of people now suffering from depression are being treated, and most of them just get pills from a non-specialist GP. If we really wanted to attack unhappiness, we would totally change all this, and make psychiatry a central, high-prestige part of the NHS.”

He has (rightfully) made a bit of a stir in the Guardian and the Times.

For other perspectives on this interesting subject also see this interview with Ed Deiner in New Scientist and this from a study of lottery winners from the University of Warwick. The U of W professor Andrew Oswald features alongside a Fast Company journalist (who recently wrote a related article) on a one hour long phone-in programme streamed online – The Connection.
I believe that a further examination of the subject will be coming to Radio 4’s Thinking Allowed programme as well, though it doesn’t appear on the website yet.

Just to give you a taster, here is one fascinating (and probably dubious) chart that Prof. Oswald came up with (based I assume on a person with a baseline average US income). It purports to indicate how much additional money you would have to get to compensate you for not having x:

Event Impact ( per Year )
Marriage $100,000
Children $0*
Losing job -$60,000 ( man )
Widowhood -$245,000
Poor health -$180,000 to -$220,000 ( Decline from excellent to good )

-$600,000 to -800,000 ( Decline from excellent to fair )

*”It’s one of the most surprising results,” says Oswald. “There’s no value judgment implied. All it’s saying is that people without children recorded equally high happiness levels as people with children.”

For what it’s worth, I am (normally) pretty happy, but then I have my health and am recently married…

Update (2005): Johan Norberg takes on Layard in an Australian magazine – and I respond.music ringtone nextel allmp3 6102 ringtone nokiaalcatel composer ringtonesringtones lyrics popular all1200 lg ringtone cingular3560 cellular ringtone one nokiaringtones a620free ringtone sprint 1200 lg Map

12 March 2003
Filed under:Gadgets at2:35 pm

The newly-released Panasonic DMRE50EBS DVD recorder is more or less affordable (£388 inc delivery from Empire Direct) and has an extremely cool feature – “the recorder’s Simultaneous Record and Play function enables the recording of one programme and playback of another […] or you can watch a recording that has already started, from the beginning, as the unit continues to record to the end of the programme.

11 March 2003
Filed under:Humour & Entertainment,Weblogs at2:46 pm

… does indeed appear to be defective yeti.

Thanks to the iSociety for the link.download amateur pornporn online free 100crack sexvilla 3d 2indian sex nudes adultlove in teenager amovie adult sex clips3d sex picturesdifferent sex position 100 Map

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