Here is another relief link, from pianist Vijay Iyer.
Sullivan makes two important comments today. First, about For God and Country, the new book by James Yee, former U.S. Army chaplain at Gitmo. Falsely accused by the military of colluding with al Qaeda, Yee now tells of routine tactical desecration of the Koran by American interrogators and guards. Sullivan quotes Yee: I never heard of an incident where a
The news from Pakistani Kashmir is unbearable. I have no words. Here is a list of relief resources via the NY Times. Many of the same nonprofits are probably handling Guatemalan relief efforts as well, in the wake of last week’s mudslides. Entire towns have been buried and abandoned as mass graves. Just try to imagine it.
… that hippy-dippy New Age ideas don’t make people more sensitive and thoughtful, but rather more flakey and self-involved?
Marc Cooper‘s Oct. 7 post (“Dead Serious”) is a must-read. It’s all too easy to laugh off the NYC subway terror threat as convenient right-wing hysteria, Cooper argues. I’m a subway-riding New Yorker (often four times a day) and I couldn’t agree more, though I always counsel against the illusion that any sort of warning will precede terror’s return to
Answer: No. Jon Katz explains. As a dog owner and lover, I hang on this man’s every word. He’s got a new book, Katz on Dogs.
Nick Cohen tells it like it is in the New Statesman. Money quote: It’s not radical, it’s barely political, to turn a blind eye and say you are for the Palestinian cause. Political seriousness lies in stating which Palestine you are for and which Palestinians you support.
The petition has been updated in the aftermath of the Bali bombings. Lend your support. And note links to the Madrid11 initiative and Open Democracy. PS: Here’s a great Saletan piece on Bill Bennett’s remarks.