Month: September 2017

Home 2017 September
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Get Out

This September marks 16 years since the fateful day we simply call 9/11, when 19 Islamic jihadists caused the deaths of some 3,000 people in New York, D.C., and Pennsylvania.  Less than a month after that horrible day, Operation Enduring Freedom began, as the United States invaded the “land of the Pashtuns,” Afghanistan.  We’re still...

The Tragedy of Richard Nixon
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The Tragedy of Richard Nixon

Pat Buchanan’s new biography of Richard Nixon’s presidency is the first volume anyone looking at that tumultuous time should turn to.  Having served as Nixon’s researcher and speechwriter starting in 1966, Buchanan, not yet 30, followed the victorious President into the White House in 1969. In Nixon’s White House Wars, Buchanan makes it clear that...

The Tragedy of Richard Nixon
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The Tragedy of Richard Nixon

Pat Buchanan’s new biography of Richard Nixon’s presidency is the first volume anyone looking at that tumultuous time should turn to.  Having served as Nixon’s researcher and speechwriter starting in 1966, Buchanan, not yet 30, followed the victorious President into the White House in 1969. In Nixon’s White House Wars, Buchanan makes it clear that Nixon’s tragic...

A Terrible Twilight
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A Terrible Twilight

George Dangerfield’s The Strange Death of Liberal England was published in 1935.  It is an exceptionally well-written book and became a cult classic, its haunting title suggesting a mysterious crime, as in a thriller.  Dangerfield’s theme was the decay of the civilization created by the British Liberal movement in the years that led up to...

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Make Yourself at Home

“Unless you were born here, you will never really be at home in this city.”  Amy and I heard those words (or a variation thereof) over and over again in early 1996, as we met new people in our adopted hometown of Rockford, Illinois.  We continued to hear them occasionally through the years; the last...

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Rumors of War

By the seventh month of Donald Trump’s presidency a surreal quality to U.S. foreign policy decision-making had become evident.  It is at odds with both the theoretical model and historical practice. When we talk of the “behavior” of states, what we have in mind is the process of decision-makers defining objectives, selecting specific courses of...

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Parties and Strange Bedfellows

London summer parties are a dime a dozen.  The moment the weather turns hot, Englishmen cast aside their brollies and head for a garden party.  This year was no different.  I spent from the latter part of June until mid-July in England, and went to more parties than there are Trump haters in New York...

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Taking a Stand in Warsaw

With a monument to the 1944 Warsaw Uprising as his backdrop, President Trump delivered a forceful speech on the eve of the G20 Summit, sounding themes that would not be welcome by most other leaders of the world’s most economically powerful countries.  Trump identified “the fundamental question of our time” as whether “the West has...

The Poison and the Antidote
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The Poison and the Antidote

No historian worth his honoraria ascribes major social change to a single factor.  That is ideology, not history.  Nonetheless, an ideology has been and remains a large cause of America’s cultural and moral decline over the past half century.  It is an ideology whose origins, history, and goals are known only to a few academics,...

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Still Printing the Legend

I have to admit, I began reading Roger D. McGrath’s article “The Real McCoy,” (Sins of Omission, August) about Tim McCoy with the suspicion that he was just pulling my leg, but was drawn in enough to read it to the end.  There really are people in this world like Tim McCoy, whose lives keep...

Eine Kleiber Ist Genug—Nicht
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Eine Kleiber Ist Genug—Nicht

When Carlos Kleiber died in 2004, the world didn’t find it out until he had been gone for six days.  The elusive maestro/uncanny conductor had escaped the exploitative notice of the press for one last time.  There were the predictable reactions to the passing of the mystery man, but there was a difficulty in comparisons,...

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Unflinching Women

Lady Macbeth Produced by Sixty Six Pictures, BBC Films, and The British Film Institute  Directed by William Oldroyd  Screenplay by Alice Birch from the novel by Nikolai Leskov  A Quiet Passion Produced by Hurricane Films  Written and directed by Terence Davies  Distributed by Music Box Films  The reviews of Lady Macbeth have been nearly unanimous, proclaiming it a...

Gloriously Complicated
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Gloriously Complicated

On June 8, British democracy did everything it wasn’t supposed to do.  Having called a snap general election, Prime Minister Theresa May was expected to sweep everything before her.  She did not.  The Tories were said to be on the verge of the largest electoral landslide in postwar British history.  They were not.  May’s opponent,...

A Conservative Tax Code
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A Conservative Tax Code

Few American objects attract more scorn than the federal Internal Revenue Code.  When initially drafted in 1914, it contained 11,400 words, about the length of a long magazine article.  Today, the Code weighs in at about four million words, with another six million in supportive regulations.  Its garbled syntax is easily ridiculed.  Tax attorney Joseph...

Books in Brief
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Books in Brief

The Retreat of Western Liberalism, by Edward Luce (New York: Atlantic Monthly Press; 240 pp., $24.00).  Almost by the author’s admission, the title of this book is a falsehood.  Liberalism is not retreating.  It is being pushed back by “populists,” which is what liberals call people who are against liberalism because they are, for the...

What the Editors Are Reading
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What the Editors Are Reading

As the author of a travel book as well as many novels, I’ve often suspected that writing a superior work in the first category is a greater challenge than writing one in the second.  The comparative difficulties become clear when you develop the same material, as nonfiction first and then again as a novel, with...

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A Small Victory for Europe

As the new French President, Emmanuel Macron seems determined to hitch opposites together, combine like with dislike, compatibles with incompatibles, and otherwise fudge his policies as he did during the electoral campaign.  As a candidate for the office, he praised Angela Merkel’s decision to accept a million “refugees” from the Middle East and elsewhere—but has...

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The Abnormal Nation

Since the reunification of East and West Germany in 1990, Germans have debated the question of whether their country can ever be a “normal” one again.  A current best-selling book—Finis Germania, by Rolf Peter Sieferle, a former left-wing intellectual who committed suicide before its publication—argues that since 1945 the German people have made scapegoats of...

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The Future of Politics

It is a healthy and encouraging sign when politicians don’t know where they’re going because they have no idea what’s coming next, which pretty much describes the state of politics in the West today.  Among the various political groupings, only liberals know where they wish to go—and that is simply where they’ve been going for...

The Meaning of Macron—and the “Right” in the West
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The Meaning of Macron—and the “Right” in the West

“He is on the right.”  “That party represents the right.”  These are standard expressions that are familiar today in the West, including France.  But as usual, few understand or even care about the precise meaning of the word.  Most people either hurl it as an insult, or claim it as a virtue. For example, after...

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Nothing in the Middle

Have you noticed?  Newspapers and television channels across the land have discovered a new kind of human-interest story: the business-owning, family-man illegal immigrant who gets deported after living in this country for decades as a productive noncitizen.  CNN’s website headlined the story of one Joel Colindres, “This is the face of deportation: A dad with...

Still Unexplained
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Still Unexplained

Jonathan Swift (1667-1745), dean of St. Patrick’s Church of Ireland cathedral in Dublin, was a most remarkable man.  To begin with, he wrote two of the cleverest, most original books in English, Gulliver’s Travels and A Tale of a Tub, in prose that David Hume described as “the first polite prose we have,” i.e., the...