Johann Hari, in an otherwise illuminating interview with Salman Rushdie, repeats the canard: “Just after we meet, it is estimated by the Lancet that 650,000 Iraqis have been killed due to Quiet Americans (and Brits).” The number of deaths from violence, according to the Lancet, is 600,000, not 650,000. And once again, the study does not show that all the
It is as I said: Bill Maher, on this week’s “Real Time,” brought up the Lancet report showing that “we’ve killed 600,000 Iraqis.” This is outright misinformation, catching on as conventional wisdom. The issue is not simply the veracity of the number, but the allocation of responsibility for the slaughter. The report shows that the majority of killings can be
A new study conducted by Johns Hopkins and published in the British medical journal The Lancet posits that Iraqi civilian deaths since the 2003 invasion may top the 600,000 mark. A pdf of the study is here. Doubt has been cast on the study’s accuracy — of course by the Bush administration but also by qualified people in the fields
The Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk has won the Nobel Prize for literature. Be sure to read my essay on Pamuk’s novel Snow, published this May on the weblog of Norm Geras.
I have a review of the new Weather Report box, Forecast: Tomorrow, in the October Jazz Times. It’s online as well. Also, I apologize for the lack of posts. I’m writing a long piece for the next issue of Democratiya, which will appear on December 1.
My monthly list of recommended CDs, as published in All About Jazz-New York, October 2006: David Binney, Out of Airplanes (Mythology) Nels Cline, New Monastery (Cryptogramophone) John Hollenbeck, Joys & Desires (Intuition) Keith Jarrett, The Carnegie Hall Concert (ECM) Rudresh Mahanthappa, Code Book (Pi Recordings) Florian Weber/Jeff Denson/Ziv Ravitz, Minsarah (Enja/Justin Time)
A disturbing piece in today’s NY Times about the plight of Iraqi journalists. Not only are they being systematically slaughtered by Sunni terrorists (sorry, “freedom fighters”). They’re also being persecuted under the draconian laws of the Shia-dominated government. This is the democracy we’ve created. This is the liberation of Iraq. The press restrictions extend to Iraqi Kurdistan, often thought of
Dahlia Lithwick of Slate breaks down exactly what this detainee rights bill means. Her piece is two days old but still worth reading, as the bill has now passed. Lithwick also makes an interesting point in this piece. The infamous Abu Ghraib photos, she claims, did not shock the nation’s conscience; perversely, they softened up public perceptions and made torture