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Monthly Archives
1:03AM

China-India border tension

ARTICLE: China and India Dispute Enclave on Edge of Tibet, By EDWARD WONG, New York Times, September 3, 2009

Old business, going back to the 1962 border clash, between China and India: a fight over a sacred Buddhist enclave located about 20 miles on the Indian side of the border.

The growing belligerence has soured relations between the two Asian giants and has prompted one Indian military leader to declare that China has replaced Pakistan as India's biggest threat.

Economic progress might be expected to bring the countries closer. China and India did $52 billion worth of trade last year, a 34 percent increase over 2007. But businesspeople say border tensions have infused business deals with official interference, damping the willingness of Chinese and Indian companies to invest in each other's countries.

Why it gets hard to think of China as a world power any time soon: they have such a long list of these past issues to work their way through, and it'll take years and years to clear the deck.

1:01AM

Only the strongest survive

ARTICLE: Politics Permeates Anti-Corruption Drive in China, By DAVID BARBOZA, New York Times, September 3, 2009

This gets much closer to the truth in China:

But analysts say that prominent corruption cases in China are often the outgrowth of power struggles within the Communist Party, with competing factions using the "war on corruption" as a tool to eliminate or weaken rivals and their corporate supporters.

It is a pluralism of a sort--just a decidedly destructive one.

12:50AM

A vainglorious waste of time, attention and resources

ARTICLE: Obama-led UN council backs broad nuclear agenda, By CHARLES J. HANLEY, AP, Sep 24, 2009

At its most defensible: diplomatic ass-covering for a president who cannot stop and thus presides over the nuclearization of the Middle East.

(Thanks: JRiley)

11:59PM

Super Muslim Grandma!

ARTICLE: Dubai Superheroes: Little Old Grannies Who Wear Veils, By BRIAN STELTER, New York Times, September 2, 2009

A fascinating story of importing the form but localizing the cultural content, something we do in America all the time: the first, big-time popular animated TV series in the Middle East. A usual culprit: Dubai.

Mr. Harib's animated aspirations took shape a decade ago when he studied at Northeastern University in Boston, where his peers downloaded "South Park" episodes in their dormitories. He recognized that his native emirate lacked homegrown characters and superheroes.

"We don't come from a land that has a lot of role models, except for C.E.O.'s and sheiks," he said in an interview at his loft studio near the man-made island called Palm Jumeirah.

At Northeastern Mr. Harib started to sketch his first character, later named Um Saeed, a wise, stubby lady in red who often leads the grandmas' conversations. The cartoon he envisioned would extol grandmas as role models. Mr. Harib said that he imagined that the veil that partly covered a woman's face would be the "costume of the superhero."

As far as globalization's embrace of the reluctant region: the show goes on.

11:57PM

Huntsman in China

ARTICLE: New U.S. Ambassador to China Predicts Broad Engagement, By DAVID BARBOZA, New York Times, September 2, 2009

Neat personal connection for Huntsman going back to Nixon. He seems to be the right man at the right time for the job in Beijing.

11:55PM

Repubs hanging tough

ARTICLE: G.O.P. Support May Be Vital to Obama on Afghan War, By HELENE COOPER, New York Times, September 2, 2009

Then again, give credit where credit is due: the GOP right hasn't abandoned Obama on Afghanistan.

7:44AM

Can Obama Save the Global Economy (and Globalization) at the G-20?

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After a tepid U.N. Week, the White House takes to Pittsburgh with a humble plan: convince China and the rest of the world that we'll stop consuming enough to take them down with us one more time.

Continue reading this week's World War Room column at Esquire.com.

Graph by Pat Carr/MCT; Source: International Monetary Fund

1:27AM

USAF shores up nuke management

ARTICLE: Air Force Strengthens Nuclear Deterrence Operations, US Department of Defense, September 15, 2009

Don't make too much of this. It was long overdue and represents more the sloppiness on nukes that emerged inside DoD (and the Air Force especially) in recent years.

So, no change in doctrine, but rather a getting-our-house-in-order thing.

(Thanks: Rob Johnson)

1:24AM

Khamenei's Nephew on Iran

ARTICLE: Khamenei's Nephew: President, Revolutionary Guard 'Running The Show', Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, September 10, 2009

Just another opinion, but an informed one that supports the thesis that the mullahs have already lost in Iran.

(Thanks: Zachary Peterson)

1:22AM

Chinese training Afghans and Iraqis

ARTICLE: China Trains Afghans and Iraqis in Mine Clearing, By MARK McDONALD, New York Times, September 15, 2009

Small but nice sign from Beijing: Chinese PLA training demining personnel from Afghanistan and Iraq.

But note how the story also includes, at the end, details on local Iraqi blowback on the Chinese oil effort at Ahdab.

1:20AM

Accomodating women in the work force

ARTICLE: Indian Women Find New Peace in Rail Commute, By JIM YARDLEY, New York Times, September 15, 2009

Fascinating dynamic: women pulled into the labor force in numbers, commuting in droves.

But Indian society has not yet evolved enough on this point to allow the women to travel to their jobs without near-constant molestation from men.

Answer? Ladies-only rail cars.

Smart patch by the government.

12:38AM

Get used to this headline

ARTICLE: U.S. Company and China Plan Solar Project, By TODD WOODY, New York Times, September 8, 2009

Premier Western alt-energy firm partnering with a Chinese firm that receives generous gov subsidies, to produce energy over there.

12:36AM

Non-ideal but necessary compromise

ARTICLE: Big U.S. Bases Are Part of Iraq, but a World Apart, By MARC SANTORA, New York Times, September 8, 2009

A good glimpse of how it will be for the long haul in terms of presence in Iraq.

The usual details: nothing to do in off-time, the third-nation workers, and living apart from the locals by and large.

But until Iraq gets strong enough and stable enough internally, this will be the barely accepted (on both sides) norm.

12:35AM

Fighting milblogs is a losing battle

ARTICLE: Pentagon Keeps Wary Watch as Troops Blog, By JAMES DAO, New York Times, September 8, 2009

I think Caldwell is on the right side of history here. I expect retrenchments on a regular basis by the bureaucracy, but it will be a losing battle over the long term, despite the operational security issues.

12:32AM

Stop texting and drive

ARTICLE: Driver Texting Now an Issue in the Back Seat, By MATT RICHTEL, New York Times, September 8, 2009

I purposely picked the BB Storm because it's impossible to text with one hand, solving this issue for me.

12:29AM

Free (Chinese) tires!

ARTICLE: Barack Obama and free trade: Economic vandalism, The Economist, Sep 17th 2009

Economist jumping on crowded bandwagon re: Obama's protectionist stance over Chinese tires.

Best part of argument is found at the end: does this obviously political cave-in suggest less than vigilant concern over budget deficits?

Expect the Chinese to be concerned on that score as well.

(Thanks: Michael S. Smith II)

5:15PM

Zakaria shines on Cooper 360

On just now with Michael Oren, who is spinning mightily as Israel's ambassador to the US (predicting Iranian nukes will soon enough threaten US cities) and a Rabbi (who was sometimes good, but quick on the Hitler analogies), and Zakaria acquits himself quite nicely with a series of reasoned arguments re: Iran.

The man certainly tries.

As much as I think CNN has declined precipitously in recent years, Zakaria is a small island of intelligence in a vast sea of blowhard mediocrity.

2:50AM

Susan A. Barnett/Fine Art Photographer

Just a call-out to my sister-in-law's site. Susan married my eldest brother Jerome, for whom my youngest son is named. Susan and Jerry are godparents to my eldest child, who's a very talented artist in her own right (her prize-winning self-portrait hangs in my office and she's got enough of web presence in terms of her anime and fiction that's she's recognized by fans at fantasy/comic conventions--in costume, mind you; but no, she won't let me link to her work just yet . . . and she's impossible to find without her handle).

Sue has been active in the art world since before I met her in the summer of 1985 upon my return from Leningrad. I detoxed with her for a week at Fire Island (too many Lucky Strikes and too much Stolichnaya in the USSR over the summer), where I held onto her arm for dear life whenever we ventured out (it was my first exposure to an openly gay community--not just individuals or clubs but an entire universe!; as the father of non-straight teenager, I now look back on the experience as downright quaint and provincial).

At that point Sue was primarily an agent, and later in the year I got to traipse around with her, visiting her various artists (imagine "Rent" without the cool numbers and everybody far less attractive) in various seedy locations around NYC. Sue located an original painting of horses done by a noted artist that we still hang in a place of pride upstairs in our youngest daughter's bedroom.

Sue later went on to do a lot of bead work herself (we possess one of her best works: a tiny shopping bag done up as the U.S. flag), often working with found objects (we used to hunt for and send her early industrial shoe lasts). Sue also paints. We have a gorgeous watercolor of a single orchid hanging in our dining room. It's as entrancing as anything you've seen from Georgia O'Keefe.

Perhaps counterintuitively, Sue became a photographer after losing the use of one eye a while back, and she does a lot of amazing shots of neon signs, often capturing neon through shooting them in reflection in large-size pane windows, thus capturing through the window and off the window (these are my favorite works of hers, and we have an especially good one handing in our master bedroom). Lately, she's been shooting a lot of T-shirts on the streets of NYC.

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The T-shirt shots are cool, but definitely check out the neon. Those shots are so fascinating that you cannot believe they're not photoshopped (and my favorite ones of hers are not even on the site). Her manifesto explains her approach:

After Neon

John Szarkowski said a photograph is not what a picture is of but what it is about. My photographs are about desire, which is the fundamental motivation for all human action. It is the desire for pleasure which can be liberating and enhancing in opposition to fear. These photographs ask how do you express desire. They are a visual hunger founded in desire: illuminate enticement. They contain the signs and symbols that are desire's stock in trade, that create the atmosphere of delight where it is still safe to appreciate and like what is offered.

They juxtapose consciously and unconsciously elements of the real world with artificial light to create a new world. To delight in the images is to seek the pleasure of your own desires. They seduce you into examining and accepting your own hidden desires and agenda. They say don't be embarrassed to want, don't be ashamed to feel, don't be uncomfortable just to look. You don't have to explain: it ís all OK.

They take the demotic and public and make it private in a world dominated by financial, political and social fears. My images say lighten up and look around for what it is you want and can in fact have.

Anyway, very much worth checking out if you like such things. We'll keep Sue's link listed to the side with my wife's poetry and my beloved Packers (not so beloved after disappointing me and my kid last Sunday in Lambeau . . ..)

1:13AM

As much as some might like to go it alone...

Analysis: Lessons of Europe's history with terrorism, By Michael Goldfarb, GlobalPost, August 26, 2009

Worth reading. America's "Dirty Harry" tendencies here are counterproductive, because, in the end, you deal with everyone if you want the win.

(Via WPR Media Roundup)

1:11AM

Another familiar headline from Congo

ARTICLE: Lord's Resistance Army terrorises Congo after Ugandan crackdown, By Xan Rice, Guardian, 14 September 2009

Broken record, this one.

(Via WPR Media Roundup)