The most recent 20 comments posted to Electrolite by Donald Johnson:

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Posted on entry Open thread 11. ::: February 07, 2005, 03:26 PM:
I thought the Cicero questions were good ones, even if the originator asked them in bad faith (which I don't know one way or the other). I liked the answers Dave Luckett gave, for the most part. I think a fair number of people believe or pretend to believe that only military force can ever topple tyrants--what many people mean by The Lessons of History is that Chamberlain carried an umbrella someplace and was too nice to Hitler, and we'd better never do that again. But there are other tyrants and other examples to look at and one might learn something from history besides The Dangers of Being a Wuss and Appeasing Tyrants.

Anyway, considering that Iran might be next on the list of countries our fearless conquering hero of a President might want to liberate, it might be a useful exercise to practice thrashing out answers to those questions. There's even a slight chance more people would listen this time.
Posted on entry An interesting answer. ::: November 11, 2004, 08:14 AM:
Kevin, you jumped on bellatrys for capitalizing the words truth and reconciliation, though Truth and Reconciliation Commissions often come up in discussions about how to deal with great historic crimes. I get snide in arguments myself, and there's no good reason for it, but I know that when caught making a snide comment out of ignorance the proper thing to do is admit that you were wrong.
Posted on entry A really good question. ::: November 10, 2004, 08:03 AM:
Oh, Matt Y made my point in the link above this post.
Posted on entry A really good question. ::: November 10, 2004, 07:59 AM:
Someone may have already said this--I didn't have time to read through the thread. But I think the fact that Bush proposed 15 billion dollars of spending on AIDS in Africa and other places is at least partially the result of evangelical prodding. I don't bring this up because I'm overly fond of how my fellow evangelicals have been acting in the political sphere, because I'm not. They (or the white ones anyway) tend to be jingoists who ignore America's foreign policy sins and most other sins that don't involve sex. But there are leftwing evangelicals like Jim Wallis and I think their influence has had some good effect on the rest of the community. Not enough, but a little.

Whether Bush is actually delivering on his 15 billion dollar promise is another question. I think Kerry or Edwards promised to double that amount in one of the debates, but that didn't seem to swing too many evangelical votes their way.
Posted on entry Salad. ::: August 24, 2004, 04:53 PM:
On the antislavery thing, Bartolome Las Casas was antislavery about two centuries before the people mentioned in the link. Yeah, he initially proposed substituting African slaves for the Indians he was trying to save, but he eventually realized the slight moral inconsistency in his position and opposed slavery in general.

Just a pet peeve. I get tired of those 18th/19th century abolitionists getting all the attention.
Posted on entry Newspaper of record. ::: May 28, 2004, 08:47 AM:
Martin Kaplan to the contrary, people who are "serious and thoughtful" never took the self-image of the NYT seriously, not if they thought about it. Kaplan's "serious, thoughtful" people who expect the NYT to be a gatekeeper of quality in terms of what is credible or believable are and always have been suckers. They wanted someone to tell them what respectable mainstream people are supposed to think.

I don't think people should concede anything to the NYT beyond the obvious. It's a big paper with more resources than anyone else, but given those resources, they don't deserve any grade higher than a gentleman's C.
Posted on entry Unclear on the concept. ::: May 27, 2004, 05:48 PM:
HP, that wasn't an attack on Fred, that was a sarcastic reference to the post by Mark. That was obvious, if you followed what happened here or even if you read the thread you linked. The "borderline personality" crack was a cheap shot for which there is no evidence, certainly not in this thread. But it's nice to see the old circular firing squad blazing away with its customary accuracy.
Posted on entry Things I don't believe. ::: April 25, 2004, 03:41 PM:
I was very sensibly going to stay out of this, but one of my pet peeves was triggered. The notion that God wouldn't care about us because we're small and weak and live on a small planet around an ordinary G-type star, blah, blah, blah, is silly. By "silly" I mean it contradicts the moral principles most of us claim to believe in. For instance, suppose scientists discovered a mud puddle inhabited by a species of intelligent microbes. Would we say we shouldn't care about them because they're just a bunch of insignificant amoebas sitting there waiting to dry up and perish? Might as well drain the puddle and put in a parking lot, I guess.

So if God exists, He wouldn't care about us because we're too small to matter? Sheesh, if that's His attitude, I'd be an atheist myself. But my own belief is that God is better than humans, not worse.
Posted on entry Resuming normal service, but slowly: ::: May 05, 2003, 09:10 AM:
Darn, a series of comments about topography and I get to it when it's winding down.

Anyway, someone above (Erik Olson, I think) mentioned a river drive north of Alton Illinois, near a small town called Elsah, and he was exactly right--I took that trip around sunset a and words fail--it was like being in a landscape painting. No one would go there for a vacation--it's only the sort of day trip you'd take if you lived in St. Louis (as I did for several years) or someplace nearby, but in a place like this, you start to realize that you don't have to visit mountains or spectacular seashores to
feel some mystical Wordsworthian sort of ecstasy. Ordinary landscapes in flyover country can do it.

Well, I suppose the Mississippi River isn't exactly ordinary, come to think of it, but I could say similar things about landscapes in West Tennessee or other places that no one would fly thousands of miles to visit.

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