“With God on his side.”
The Washington Post’s resident theocrat. The Washington Post’s Michael Gerson is at it again. In a recent column, the theocrat and armchair militarist alerts readers that the real danger to the republic lies not in the emerging of among Wall Street,…
“And now?”
Post–Afghanistan truths and lies. Americans are alive with questions now that Kabul has fallen, though “fallen” does not seem quite our word any more than it was in late April 46 years ago: Saigon did not fall; it rose. Vietnam…
“China manufactures things and social cohesion.”
And America manufactures financial instruments and decay. What has been described in the American press as a Chinese crackdown on private enterprise is more in the nature of an existential choice for Beijing. The government has decided to live by producing stuff…
“Pacific dénouements.”
We’re bombing badly in China. You did not read much about Wendy Sherman’s disastrous official visit last week to Tianjin, where the deputy secretary of state held talks with Xie Feng, her counterpart as vice-foreign minister, and met—key distinction here—Wang…
“The long fight simply to know.”
An exchange with Peter Kaufman It is not often a writer comes along who brings the ballast of history to our contemporary predicaments. This requires a certain intellectual depth and a lot of shoulder in contact with the wheel. Peter…
“The lethality of algorithms.”
The anatomy of digital censorship. This is the second of two pieces on the practice of heresthetics. The first piece can be found here. In Part 1 of this essay, I introduced the concept of heresthetics, the art of shaping the…
“Saints and sinners.”
Heresthetics as political art. This is the first of a two-part series. Structuring the world so you can win. This sounds like sorcery, but in politics there is a phenomenon known among the social scientists as heresthetics, and it has…
“Sino–Russian amity, Ch. 2.”
Washington as matchmaker. There is abundant evidence deriving from White House tapes and an apparently endless series of biographies, histories, and documentaries that for most of their time at the pinnacle of power, President Nixon and Henry Kissinger, his chief foreign policy adviser…
“The divine right of nations.”
Reflections on the Fourth. On cue Saturday afternoon, the martial music began on the classical station that has provided this household’s sound track for many years. It can’t be helped. There is no getting away from this sort of thing…
PATRICK LAWRENCE: Some Cherry Garcia, Please
The apartheid state’s swoon into freak-out mode since Ben & Jerry’s took its stand tells us all we need to know about BDS’s accumulating power. Cherry Garcia, please, two scoops. No make that Chocolate Fudge Brownie. No, I want Coconut…