October 29, 2009

David Ignatius’s Helicopter Journalism

In case you missed Michael Massing’s excellent observation in the CJR of David Ignatius’s “above-it-all” journalism. That most journalists are either too timid or incompetent to cover Iraq properly is not that surprising, but what is bewildering is how the generals (and the biggest titan of them all, Patraeus, no less) on the ground whose status as oracles of the battle-tested are supposed to give us a realistic picture of events at the local level seem to so “above-it-all”! Ignatius should go back to writing spy novels for all I care - he ceased being even remotely interesting long, long time ago.

Anthony Shadid, though… now there’s a journalist.

7:04pm

China's Boom: The Dark Side in Photos

nybooks:

Orville Schell

A family of five children who emigrated to Inner Mongolia from the nearby Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region to find work in the Heilonggui Industrial District, April 10, 2005. The oldest child is nine years old; the youngest is less than two. Photographs by Lu Guang (courtesy of Contact Press Images).

I have seen some woeful scenes of industrial apocalypse and pollution in my travels throughout China, but there are very few images that remain vividly in my mind. This is why the photographs of Lu Guang are so important. A fearless documentary photographer who lives in China’s southern province of Zhejiang and runs a photo studio and lab that funds his myriad trips around China, Lu photographs the dark consequences of China’s booming but environmentally destructive economic development in ways that stay with you.

Read More

6:50pm
susheela:

THE UNIVERSALITY OF GRIEF
 This extraordinary and heartbreaking photo taken at the Sanaga-Yong Chimpanzee Rescue Centre in eastern Cameroon shows a family of grief-stricken chimpanzees mourning the death of a fellow ape named Dorothy. (Photo: Monica Szczupider / Solent via the Telegraph)
(via nerdgasms:inothernews)

susheela:

THE UNIVERSALITY OF GRIEF

This extraordinary and heartbreaking photo taken at the Sanaga-Yong Chimpanzee Rescue Centre in eastern Cameroon shows a family of grief-stricken chimpanzees mourning the death of a fellow ape named Dorothy. (Photo: Monica Szczupider / Solent via the Telegraph)

(via nerdgasms:inothernews)

4:12pm
Well, yes. She is a muse for me in the sense that a muse is someone who makes you better than you are. I think I am a better director with her, because she believes that I am better than I am, and that blind faith gives me a lot of strength.
12:59am
October 28, 2009
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

James Bamford talks to Nathan Thrall about the politics behind the Bush administration’s evasion of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act and the technology and scope of the National Security Agency’s warrantless wiretapping program.

4:26pm

LRB @ 30

My favorite publication in the universe, London Review of Books, marks its 30th year: A salute to the writers and editors who created “the house magazine of the intellectual elite”. An interview with Mary-Kay Wilmers, the grande dame of the LRB, on her controversial views and her family links to spies and psychoanalyst (and more).

4:13pm
12:40pm

Iraq: A Bigger Threat Than Bombs

nybooks:

Joost R. Hiltermann

An Iraqi weeps as he walks away from the ministries of justice and labour following the suicide bombing on October 25, 2009 (Ahmad Al-Rubaye/AFP/Getty Images)

The horrific twin bombings in Baghdad on October 25 that killed over 150 people, including children in two daycare centers, and injured many more, could easily be seen as supporting the increasingly common contention that Iraq remains profoundly unstable. That such an attack could take place in the center of the capital might demonstrate that security forces under Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki are incapable of providing security; and that the United States will leave chaos in its wake when combat troops depart ten months from now. But the attacks must be seen in the perspective of deeper problems, even if the claim about Iraq’s instability is valid.

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Joost is someone I know and respect deeply, so to hear him sound the alarm bells on Iraq makes me very concerned about what’s happening on the ground. Will Iraq descent into chaos once again?

12:36pm

J Street II

Philip Weiss writes:

“It only seems appropriate to me to begin my posts post-J Street in a celebratory spirit. The ways the organization falls short I will come to, but I must tip my cap to a new Jewish group that filled a hall in Washington with 1500 people, including many congressmen and senators, and these people did not boo Zbig Brzezinski, even as his name was mentioned again and again, and did not cheer sanctions for Iran, and broke into applause whenever Palestinian human rights were mentioned. In the realms of Jewish history and American power politics, this was a huge development. It is little wonder that I ran into Dan Fleshler looking stunned and starry-eyed, marveling that such a day had finally come to pass. Or that I saw Jonathan Chait of the New Republic glowering as if he had just been forced to dine on porcupine. The institutions that Chait is engaged with, the New Republic and AIPAC, had just taken a giant hit. Celebration. The status quo Israel lobby is under assault from within the Jewish community, the battle has begun in earnest. Whether it will have any effect on Palestinian freedom is yet to be determined.”