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the breakfast table: An e-mail conversation about the news of the day.

from: Joe Klein
to: David Brooks

Taking Us in the Direction We All Already Want To Go

Posted Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2002, at 1:07 PM ET

Who are these people?

Note: The first entry was sent last night.

David,

What passion! But to be transformational, one must transform: Who exactly disagrees with the president's war against al-Qaida? I sure don't, and neither does Dick Gephardt—a politician whom I usually find uninspiring, to say the least, but who was, happily, far more bellicose than Democrats usually allow themselves to be last night. But this is a serious business, and nuances must be observed. The most important nuance is this: Who's waging war on us? North Korea? Oh, please. The Iranians have been careful to limit their international mischief to the "Zionist Entity" ever since Khomeini died. Saddam is the worst of the bunch, but it was Bush 41 who tacitly decided that Saddam in control was better than the chaos that would ensue if the Shiites in the south of Iraq bonded with Iran, and the Kurds in the north established a separate country—thereby destabilizing Turkey, home to a great many unhappy Kurds. Saddam, too, has been careful not to target Americans. Hamas and Hezbollah and Islamic Jihad (and the Irish Republican Army, for that matter) are all dreadful—and entirely local. If we find any evidence that any of these guys are targeting Americans, as I said in the last posting, we should nuke them forthwith. But show me the evidence.



You cite the "idealism" of Kristol—whom I consider a friend—and Kagan. But their foreign policy has a tragic flaw: They tend to conflate "idealism" with aggressive action. (Their support for a Nader-Buchanan China policy is sad evidence of this.) Aggressive actions are often appropriate—the Gulf War, Clinton's sending the Navy into the Taiwan straits, the current al-Qaida campaign—but what about our disgracefully low levels of non-military foreign aid? Shouldn't we be concerned about that particular idealistic void? Doubling the Peace Corps is a fine start; more support for non-governmental and, yes, faith-based anti-poverty programs overseas would be even better.

As you said the other day, it's a mistake to underestimate Bush. I think he has a good heart and a great personality, and there is hope that he will use his enormous popularity to lead the Republican Party away from its witless, selfish excesses (just as Clinton led the Democrats away from their crack-brained protectionism, extreme civil libertarianism, and undue faith in the wisdom of bureaucrats). But I saw precious little evidence of that last night—just a leader who is taking the country in a direction that practically everyone, for the moment, wants to go.

See ya tomorrow,
Joe

from: Joe Klein
to: David Brooks

Taking Us in the Direction We All Already Want To Go

Posted Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2002, at 1:07 PM ET
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David Brooks is senior editor of the Weekly Standard and author of Bobos in Paradise. Joe Klein is a staff writer at The New Yorker and the author of The Natural: The Misunderstood Presidency of Bill Clinton.
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Wednesday Notes From the Fray Editor:

The main topic in the Fray is the State of the Union speech. REW-OEM explains here why he was tempted to join the 84% but ended up in the 16%, and asks "Why is it not possible to respect and applaud President Bush's positively spun and well transformed public demeanor, acknowledge his strength and steadfastness in difficult times, and yet still question the will and wisdom of his plans for our future?" More questions: Anita tries to answer Joe Klein's "how do you convince people that a certain selflessness is good for the soul…?" John-Paul Spiro read "bourgeois democratic nations…don't breed poisonous ideological groups" and wants to ask "What do you call Timothy McVeigh?" Why does Peter Lahey feel like a character from Invasion of the Body Snatchers? Click here to find out.


Reader Comments From The Fray:

What Brooks calls idealism could itself be called, and often has been, imperialism or the spread of global capitalism or an arrogant disrespect for the sovereignty of other nations. To define the "spreading" of any cultural force or view (democracy, capitalism, or hmmm say Christianity) by force as "idealistic" seems on the face of it absurdly ethnocentric and arrogant. One must, like Hegel, be willing to assert that one's culture represents the historical pinnacle and telos of human endeavor--in which case, every other country, including Great Britain (with their nasty socialist ways!) would have to be invaded and made to conform to the US Constitution in the name of American idealism. To suggest, as Brooks does, that bourgeois democracy represents the best that can be aspired to--well, that's a dim thought, made no brighter by being pasted with the shiny label of "idealism."

--J

(To find or answer this post, click
here .)

Monday Notes From The Fray Editor:

Always check your quotations or the Fray will get you. All together now: "I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness." (We'll miss out the "starving hysterical naked" bit.) Other phrases that caught readers attention were "by any means necessary" (in regard to questioning suspects) and "congenital DNA" (What other kind is there, asked one poster.) Urquhart says Klein "gets points for use of the word 'dudgeon,' which I've never seen outside of a Wodehouse novel." And there are plenty of discussions on Enron and the economy.


Reader Comments From The Fray:


Klein thinks we should be "interrogating the hell out of them by any means necessary." Does this include torture? I'd like to hear his opinion. And his reference to the nine families who lost loved ones is weak. Yes, we should remember the damage done by the terrorists. But that doesn't mean that every policy argument needs to have the approval of the relatives of the victims.

--Leonard

(To find or answer this post, click here.)


It seems to me the public's indifference about the extent of Enron's dealings with the Bush administration says more about the public than it does about our need to know. I doubt Cheney would risk the potential political damage of a court dispute if he didn't think the contents of his meeting notes were potentially more explosive. If Cheney's right, and this is just Dem hype, then prove us wrong and release the documents. Enron shareholders got screwed, in part, by a lack of corporate transparency. Cheney's claim that disclosing these documents could impair future leaders' ability to consult with corporation without fear of public scrutiny is, at best, disingenuous, at worst, more of the same opaqueness that got us in this mess.

--John Rogers

(To find or answer this post, click here.)






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