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No More Excuses

The BBC has more on the most recent waves of bombings in London. If this was an attack, it wasn’t a particularly effective one. The “bombs” were merely detonators not tied to any explosives and only had a minor effect. There is a report of one injured person, who may be one of the bombers based on preliminary descriptions from eyewitnesses. It is believed that the explosive devices were designed to be more powerful but failed to properly detonate.

This attack has some of the hallmarks of al-Qaeda - multiple bombings designed to disrupt London’s infrastructure, but none of the sophistication or planning. It’s quite possible that if this were a real attack and not some prank by copycats, this is a sign that the terrorist infrastucture in London is being greatly diminished.

Fortunately there are no reports of casualties from this attack other than one injured person, and already arrests have been made relating to this case.

Faring not much better than the terrorists are the press. Glenn Reynolds gives them a hearty evisceration:

Some idiot correspondent asked Blair if the attacks were his fault because of the Iraq war. And others are taking an equally negative line — one asks if the propaganda war against terror is being lost.

No — but if so, it’s because of people in the media like these. John Howard’s too polite to tell them to read Norm Geras, but he put them in their place with logic, noting that Bin Laden was unhappy about the liberation of East Timor and declared war on that basis long before the Iraq invasion.

Translation: You’re idiots, cowards, and political hacks. Yes! The preening, point-scoring irresponsibility of the press, which is if anything worse in Britain than in America, is one of the most striking things about this war, and it will be decades before it recovers. If it does.

Geras makes precisely the right point in his excellent piece:

A hypothetical example illustrates the point. Suppose that, on account of the present situation in Zimbabwe, the government decides to halt all scheduled deportations of Zimbabweans. Some BNP thugs are made angry by this and express their anger by beating up a passer-by who happens to be an African immigrant. Can you imagine a single person of left or liberal outlook who would blame this act of violence on the government’s decision or urge us to consider sympathetically the root causes of the act? It wouldn’t happen, because the anger of the thugs doesn’t begin to justify what they have done. The root-causers always plead a desire merely to expand our understanding, but they’re very selective in what they want to “understand”.

Imagine if Ann Coulter wrote that the violence of the KKK was in some way justified or understandable because lower-class whites harbored deep-seated resentments dating all the way back to Reconstruction. Would she be considered a thoughful and astute thinker and praised for her open-minded tolerance? Or would there be a line to string her up for racism and heresy against the political correctness? It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out which.

If it’s unacceptable to try to understand the “root causes” and make tacit excuses and apologia for the KKK, why should it be for al-Qaeda? Either xenophobic violence is universally condemnable or it is not. Giving Muslim terrorism a pass is totally unacceptable and displays the double standards that exist on the part of many on the left.

Bravo To John Howard

The Corner has a transcript of Australian PM John Howard’s devastating response to a reporter’s Iraq question:

PRIME MIN. HOWARD: Could I start by saying the prime minister and I were having a discussion when we heard about it. My first reaction was to get some more information. And I really don’t want to add to what the prime minister has said. It’s a matter for the police and a matter for the British authorities to talk in detail about what has happened here.

Can I just say very directly, Paul, on the issue of the policies of my government and indeed the policies of the British and American governments on Iraq, that the first point of reference is that once a country allows its foreign policy to be determined by terrorism, it’s given the game away, to use the vernacular. And no Australian government that I lead will ever have policies determined by terrorism or terrorist threats, and no self-respecting government of any political stripe in Australia would allow that to happen.

Can I remind you that the murder of 88 Australians in Bali took place before the operation in Iraq.

And I remind you that the 11th of September occurred before the operation in Iraq.

Can I also remind you that the very first occasion that bin Laden specifically referred to Australia was in the context of Australia’s involvement in liberating the people of East Timor. Are people by implication suggesting we shouldn’t have done that?

When a group claimed responsibility on the website for the attacks on the 7th of July, they talked about British policy not just in Iraq, but in Afghanistan. Are people suggesting we shouldn’t be in Afghanistan?

When Sergio de Mello was murdered in Iraq — a brave man, a distinguished international diplomat, a person immensely respected for his work in the United Nations — when al Qaeda gloated about that, they referred specifically to the role that de Mello had carried out in East Timor because he was the United Nations administrator in East Timor.

Now I don’t know the mind of the terrorists. By definition, you can’t put yourself in the mind of a successful suicide bomber. I can only look at objective facts, and the objective facts are as I’ve cited. The objective evidence is that Australia was a terrorist target long before the operation in Iraq. And indeed, all the evidence, as distinct from the suppositions, suggests to me that this is about hatred of a way of life, this is about the perverted use of principles of the great world religion that, at its root, preaches peace and cooperation. And I think we lose sight of the challenge we have if we allow ourselves to see these attacks in the context of particular circumstances rather than the abuse through a perverted ideology of people and their murder.

Thank God that the Anglosphere (with the lamentable exclusion of Canada) understands the nature of this war and the absolute necessity of prosecuting it to its full end.

The Daily Impromptu

One Small Step For A Man…

Today is the 36th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing. Google is celebrating with Google Moon, a version of Google map’s for Earth’s slightly less atmospheric satellite.

Farewell Scotty…

Actor James Doohan, best known as “Scotty” from Star Trek has passed away at the age of 85 after a battle with Alzheimer’s. Doohan was also a veteran of D-Day who lost part of one finger at Normandy. Who knows how many engineers have been inspired by his fictional exploits, but no doubt he deserves his legendary status in American and world culture.

Another Reason I Never Want To Have Children

Michelle Malkin reveals the reason why President Bush had that smirk during the Roberts introduction, and why Mrs. Roberts had such an aghast expression.

And yes, I’m sure that poor kid will never live this down…

SCOTUS Watch - Roberts Is It

Scroll down for the latest information and reactions…

In a little under two hours, all the speculation about Bush’s next judicial pick will come to an end, but for the moment speculation is running wild. Edith Clement appears to be out for the moment, and ABC is standing by their statement that she will not be the nominee. Edith Jones is another strong possibility at this point. Michael Luttig and John Roberts are also being looked at very closely. RedState is starting to lean towards Roberts at the moment.

For political nerds, this is like the Kentucky Derby… more as the night develops.

UPDATE: Word from the White House: the pick will be a “real surprise”, and the White House staffers are being told the name of the pick now. Something tells me we’ll get a heads-up shortly…

Judge John G. Roberts Jr. is Bush’s pick for the Supreme Court vacancy left by Justice Sandra Day O’Connor

The Associated Press is now confirming John Roberts is the Bush pick for the Supreme Court.

Roberts is a mainstream conservative, he’s already survived the nomination process for the second most powerful Court in the country (the DC Circuit Court of Appeals), and his jurisprudence seems solid based on the cursory examination I’ve been able to do. Roberts’ nomination will be controversial - any conservative’s nomination will be, but he stands a good chance of getting through the fillibuster deal reached a few months ago.

At National Review’s Bench Memos Blog, Jonathan Adler says that Roberts is close to the “Platonic ideal” for a SCOTUS nominee - and based on his biography that seems quite possible. I think that conservatives will be happy with this pick.

It looks like NARAL, the Alliance for Justice, Ralph Neas, and the other usual suspects are going bonkers over the Roberts pick. To borrow a quote from Mr. Burns, eeexcellent…

Bush speaks in just a few minutes. Naturally, I’ll be live-blogging it between sips of a wonderful Aussie Shiraz…

President Bush is speaking from the White House, with Roberts at his side.

Roberts looks a little uneasy with all the attention - hell, who could blame him? Bush seems quite pleased with this pick.

8:06PM CST: Bush has gone through Roberts’ impressive legal and personal credentials. Bush is putting some pressure on the Senate to proceed with a prompt and fair confirmation before the Supreme Court reconvenes in October. I have a feeling that the Democrats won’t dare fillibuster him - he’s got to many bipartisan bona fides for that, and the Gang of 14 will likely support him.

8:08PM CST: Roberts had a chance to speak - he comes across well on camera, which will help. First impressions are important, and he seems to come across as someone who has the right demeanor for a member of the Supreme Court. Roberts is a bit of a cipher, but he doesn’t seem to be a Souter - if anything he’s a solid and intelligent conservative jurist.

Bush has an excellent pick here.

UPDATE: Glenn Reynolds notices the same thing I did - Bush seemed to be quite happy with Roberts, and Leahy and Schumer seemed to just be going through the motions in their counterpoint speech to Bush. I have the suspicion that they do know that Roberts has the support of the Gang of 14 and cannot be easily filibustered or painted as some kind of extremist radical. Not that they won’t try to sink him, but I think that to do anything even resembling a filibuster will make The Deal null and void and risk a nuclear option - and the Democrats won’t be able to swing public opinion to their side on this issue. Roberts seems to me to be a virtual lock unless he has some particularly bad skeletons in his closet - and the chances of that happening after the vetting process seems slim. We’re not only getting a solid conservative and a sharp legal mind, but one that will sail through confirmation. Absolutely brilliant.

UPDATE: Blogs for Bush has a linkload of reactions on Roberts.

Justice Clement To The SCOTUS?

BREAKING: ABC is reporting that Clement is not Bush’s pick. More as it comes.

Erick Erickson believes that Edith Brown Clement will be Bush’s first Supreme Court nominee, replacing Justice Sandra Day O’Connor.

RedState has more background on Judge Clement and her positions on the issues. She seems to be sufficiently conservative to keep the base happy, but doesn’t have the sort of record that makes it easy for the radical left to tag her with the title of “extremist” and the like. Clement appears to be exactly what a Supreme Court nominee needs to be in this hyperpoliticized age: a relatively inoffensive cipher.

Judge Clement has stated that the “right to privacy” in the Constitution is a matter of “settled law” - but only so far as the Supreme Court goes. Does that mean that she would be more or less likely to overturn Roe? The fact that her position allows for some weasel room on either side means that she stands a better chance of passing through the confirmation project than someone who’s taken a firm stand one way or the other. To both the left and the right, Roe v. Wade is a lightning rod - to the left, it might as well be their One Commandment, a document handed down from On High and to be defended with every method. To the right, Roe is an abomination, a legalized sanction of the murder of thousands of innocents.

Roe may be horrendous law that rests upon the idiotic concept of “emanations” from a “penumbra” that creates some vague “right” to privacy, but it’s nowhere near as important as either side makes it out to be. Absent Roe, abortion would almost certainly be legal in many states. Certainly a state like California isn’t going to outlaw abortion anytime soon. Roe should be discarded not because of any concern over the balance between “life” and “choice” as a set of conflicting values, but because it’s a crappy piece of jurisprudence that’s only inflamed the abortion debate.

However, the chances of the logical and federalist choice of remanding this issue to the voters of each state being acceptable to either side is roughly nil. The abortion debate has become too inflamed with both sides too entrenched for their to be much chance of a reasonable compromise. Judge Clement seems to be a relatively staunch conservative on important matters such as property rights, the Commerce Clause, and other economic issues, but no Supreme Court pick will dare touch Roe. To do so would be too politically risky and guarantee sending one side or another into apoplexy. Until there’s a decisive shift one way or another on these issues, any Supreme Court nominee will continue walking the legal tightrope on this issue.

UPDATE: A Tale Of Two Ediths?

Now there are some interesting indications that Judge Clement isn’t the nominee - that another Edith, Judge Edith H. Jones is the nominee. Is this some kind of bizarre political jujitsu or just noise on the wires? Find out tonight at 8PM Central when President Bush announces his pick to replace Justice O’Connor.

UPDATE: More on Clement

The Supreme Court Nomination Blog has done an excellent service by providing case summaries of some of Judge Clement’s prior decisions on the 5th Circuit.

Drowning Ourselves In Guilt

Victor Davis Hanson has another exceptional piece on the war in National Review Online as well as an interesting radio interview with Hugh Hewitt. Hanson makes that argument that the West is hampered by a set of ideologies that weaken our resolve against terrorism - moral equivalence, utopian pacifism, and multiculturalism.

Hanson’s theme is now a major topic of discussion in Britain where the aftershocks of the 7/7 bombings still loom large over the United Kingdom. The fact that the London bombers were relatively affluent and seemingly well-integrated young Muslims has caused many on the continent to wonder about how far the cancer of Islamic radicalism has pierced European society. In The Scotsman, Fraser Nelson argues that the concept of a multicultural society helps breed terrorism:

Britain is incubating its own suicide bombers and has become the European headquarters for people seeking to indoctrinate them. It is not enough for Blair to “uproot this evil ideology”; he must also treat the soil from which it springs.

The solutions proposed so far say much about Britain’s woeful progress in tackling jihadism: Gordon Brown seeks to freeze the assets of terrorist groups - as if the mission is to suspend their ISAs, not lock them away; it will, we learn, become an offence to provide or receive terrorism training. Such activities have, it seems, been allowed until now by British authorities. It is as if the attacks of 11 September 2001 never took place.

Niall Ferguson also takes a critical look at Islamism and British society:

No, the problem today is not immigration per se; it is the fact that a pernicious ideology has been allowed to infiltrate Europe’s immigrant communities. And that has happened because we have blindly allowed our country to be a haven for fanatics.

And Tom Leonard writes in The Telegraph that crieds of “racism” have stifled integration in Britain.

Europe faces a unique problem - for years Europe has been a haven for immigrants from the Middle East. There’s nothing wrong with immigration per se, as Ferguson notes. Where the problem lies is that the societies in which these immigrants have settled are unwilling and unable to integrate these immigrants into society. The “root cause” is that the West is simply unwilling to uphold the superiority of its own value systems.

Gen. Charles Napier, a former British commander in India during the 19th Century once was confronted by the tradition of suttee, or bride-burning in India - when a husband died, his wife was burned in his same funeral pyre. His response to this barbarous practice was succinct:

It is your custom to burn widows. Very well. We also have a custom: when men murder an innocent person, we tie a rope around their necks and hang them. Build your funeral pyre and beside it my carpenters will build a gallows. You may follow your national custom - then we shall follow ours.

Today, Napier would be hauled in front of a board of inquiry, branded a dangerous racist, and condemned in no uncertain terms. The idea that the West has a superior culture is anathema to many in the West - propose such an idea on a college campus would probably get you kicked off for violating some Orwellian “speech code”. Moral relativism is less the idea that cultures can’t be judged, it’s the idea that Western culture is uniquely guilty of the world’s ills.

It is this sense of Western guilt that is the single largest fracture in this war. It is also an ideological framework than makes it difficult - if not impossible - for the West to prevail. As Hanson writes:

These tenets in various forms are not merely found in the womb of the universities, but filter down into our popular culture, grade schools, and national political discourse — and make it hard to fight a war against stealthy enemies who proclaim constant and shifting grievances. If at times these doctrines are proven bankrupt by the evidence it matters little, because such beliefs are near religious in nature — a secular creed that will brook no empirical challenge.

These articles of faith apparently fill a deep psychological need for millions of Westerners, guilty over their privilege, free to do anything without constraints or repercussions, and convinced that their own culture has made them spectacularly rich and leisured only at the expense of others.

Britain is facing the question of whether or not multiculturalism is compatible with civil society. Like many things in life, there’s a tension here.

  • Immigration
  • Multiculturalism
  • Civil Society

Pick any two.

Stemming immigration is difficult, and undesirable in many ways. Immigrants can and do add to the strength of a society. At the same time, no option in which the civil society of a state is sacrificed can be considered a good one.

It’s pretty clear which one has to go. Either human rights are universal demands that cannot be abrogated or breached, or the entire concept is utterly worthless. Either those who preach hate and encourage acts of terrorism are evil and abhorrent to a civil society or they are not. Giving someone a pass because of their race or religion is unacceptable to a doctrine of human rights.

We can no longer afford the idea that for every criticism of radical Islamists must come a corresponding period of handwringing over Western sins, real or imagined. The idea that we can say “the use of terrorist tactics is wrong, but…” is no longer acceptable, and should have collapsed along with the smouldering wreckage of the World Trade Center on that terrible day in September. Either we stand as one united force for the doctrines of human rights, or we admit that we don’t really care for the concept at all. Either it’s universally wrong to commit acts of terrorism and systematically oppress women and minorities, or human rights is a worthless concept. Either self-determination including free elections is a universal concept shared by all humanity or the values of democracy and human rights are worthless.

The sense of self-guilt that is smothering the West from truly taking a stand against terrorism is ultimately self-defeating. At the same time, it’s also deeply harmful to the rest of the world. The values of bride-burning, suicide terrorism, subjugation of women, and theocratic tyranny are not compatible with a healthy, vibrant society. By ensuring that any condemnations of such actions are met by Western handwringing we only serve to justify the fantasy ideology of victimhood that helps justify the continuance of such barbarity.