In light of all the talk about “small town” values, Patrick Deneen gets some interesting perspective from a couple of his commenters.
Author: Lee M.
-
Housekeeping
I’ve added a few new links to the blogroll, and removed a couple of others (mostly in cases where there has been no activity for several months or more; I will happily re-link should they become active again). In these days of RSS feeds, I’m not entirely sure what the proper function of a blogroll is, but there you are.
-
Myths we live by
There’s been a lot of loose talk from both parties about “energy independence,” so I thought it’d be worth linking to this piece from Paul “The End of Oil” Roberts that appeared in Mother Jones a couple of months back: The Seven Myths of Energy Independence.
-
Bacevich on “Democracy Now!”
Starts at about 33 minutes into this stream (thanks, Elliot!).
To the extent that I still think of myself as a conservative, it’s in the Bacevich-Reinhold Niebuhr mold. Bacevich gets at what I take to be the heart of this conservatism in the interview: it’s the recognition that world exists prior to us and doesn’t conform to our ideas or wishes. Ironically, conservatives used to lambaste progressives for allegedly wanting to remake the world according to some abstract, utopian scheme. But contemporary U.S. conservatism seems to have embraced a similarly magical worldview (or what Matthew Yglesias has called the “Green Lantern” theory of politics) where sheer willpower is sufficient to make the world the way we want it to be.
Not coincidentally, Bacevich has just written the introduction for a new edition of Niebuhr’s The Irony of American History. Of course, Niebuhr was in many ways a man of the left, which leaves open the possibility that a broadly “conservative” worldview–one that emphasizes human sinfulness and finitude, unintended consequences, and the need for limits–might lead to what we would consider progressive policy prescriptions, something which I think has a lot of truth in it.
-
Irony and hunting
Turns out that Sarah Palin’s RNC speech was written by former Bush speechwriter Matthew Scully, who also happens to be the author of Dominion, a conservative polemic on behalf of animal rights. (An excerpt from Scully’s book that appeared in the American Conservative several years back actually helped set me on the path to vegetarianism.):
The Palin-Scully pairing is anything but a guaranteed fit, though. Palin is known as an avid hunter; Scully is best known for his vigorous defense of animal rights. A vegetarian who is regularly critical of the NRA and much of the hunting community, he is a passionate advocate for doing away with the more brutal versions of blood-sport, including aerial hunting, which Palin supports.
Personally, I’m ambivalent about hunting. I never hunted myself, but I grew up around hunters; every male member of my family and most other men I knew hunted. The first day of deer season was a de facto school holiday. And I think there are important distinctions between subsistence hunting (hunting to survive), sport hunting (hunting for recreation, but consuming the meat), and trophy hunting. It’s the last that seems most indefensible to me, especially as many of them are “canned” hunts where the animals are confined to a particular area and the hunter is virtually guaranteed a kill. How this is “sporting” is beyond me. And the same goes, best as I can tell, for “aerial” hunting.
(Time article link via Erik Marcus.)
p.s. See also Christopher for some wise words.