AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

The Week.(Column)

National Review

| March 25, 2002 | COPYRIGHT 2002 National Review, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

-- In a Middle East-wide poll, a full 18 percent of Arabs said they accepted that Arabs -- not the Mossad, say -- had perpetrated the attacks of Sept. 11. Well, at least it's in double digits.

-- The murder of journalist Daniel Pearl was notable for its details, and its theatricality. His murderers filmed him being forced to declare that he was a Jew, and themselves slitting his throat and displaying his severed head. The hatred of Jews is blatant; since Pearl was an American reporter for the Wall Street Journal, there was also an implicit equation in their minds of the United States with Judaism. The ritual elements of the murder remind us that at the heart of this conflict is the perversion of a religion. The terrorists' ritual worships murder, and promises more murder to come. In addition, the filming takes us back, beyond the horrors of the last century, to those of the French revolution. Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn often made the point in these pages that the French revolutionaries, unlike even the Nazis and the Communists, committed most of their murders in broad daylight, displaying the heads and body parts of their victims in celebratory rituals of solidarity. Now the world of Islamo-fascism revives their gory glee. As those monsters perished, so will these, if we see to it.

-- Conservative Bill Simon Jr. won the Republican primary to take on California governor Gray Davis in November. He beat former Los Angeles mayor Richard Riordan, who had been favored. But Riordan ran a lousy campaign. He was passionless, gaffe-prone, and insulting to conservatives. Davis was able to pummel him with ads that raised questions about his trustworthiness -- one, for example, noted that he had flip-flopped on abortion. Riordan's defeat should retire the idea that he was the strongest potential Republican candidate against Davis: To be strong, he would have had to be able to get Republicans to vote for him. Davis now thinks he has a weak opponent in Simon, who has never held elective office. But Simon could be a formidable contender, so long as he doesn't let his primary victory go to his head. He didn't win so much as Riordan lost. If he exploits Davis's weaknesses, perhaps the same dynamic will work in his favor this fall.

-- There are times when the national interest demands that the government offer something other than brutal honesty about its activities and intentions. Prior to the Gulf War, the Pentagon released information suggesting it would launch an amphibious assault against Iraqi forces rather than the ground attack it actually employed, with the specific aim of deceiving Saddam Hussein. The war on terrorism surely will require similar measures, but one tool the military had hoped to use, the Office of Strategic Influence, won't be around to assist. Created in November, the OSI would have helped the Pentagon conduct information warfare. When internal documents suggested that it also might plant wholly false stories with foreign journalists to affect public opinion in other countries, however, the OSI suffered a deathblow to its credibility. Top officers stressed that they would never lie, but the damage was done. Donald Rumsfeld terminated the office. That move may have been a political necessity, but it does not obviate a military one to keep on confusing and frustrating our enemies.

-- Condoleezza Rice accepted an "Image Award" from the NAACP -- gave a very nice speech, as usual. One can see the graciousness in accepting such an award -- any award -- but one can also see that such an acceptance enhances the respectability of an organization that has shown itself unworthy of respect. The NAACP, in addition to making itself militantly racialist, has taken on some of the characteristics of a hate group, as when it ran ads across the country in the 2000 election basically calling George W. Bush a party to a lynching. Rice might have done some good if she had said, "Thanks for thinking of me, but, based on who you have become, stick it, please." But then, it's hard for her to win: A "black-themed" comic strip called The Boondocks rapped the NAACP for honoring a Republican official at all.

-- The two Democratic candidates for governor of Texas, Dan Morales and Tony Sanchez, both trace their ancestry to Mexico, though both were raised in the Lone Star State. Recently they have been playing an unsightly game of more- Hispanic-than-thou. Sanchez wanted to hold two debates with Morales, one in English and the other in Spanish. Morales retorted that he would answer questions in that second debate both in English and in Spanish. Sanchez's camp thereupon put it about that Morales was less than confident of his fluency in Spanish. Morales then accused Sanchez of wishing to divide Texans by language. (And, reported the New York Times, "even appeared to be indirectly appealing to voters suspicious of the use of Spanish." Can there really be such bigoted voters? Imagine!) When the debate finally came off, bigot-friendly Mr. Morales translated his Spanish answers into English because "the vast majority of the citizens of our state speak English." This, averred Mr. Sanchez, ...

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
National NAACP chapter to decide response to Lauderdale police union's actions.
Newspaper article from: South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) June 1, 2006 700+ words
...who in April attended an NAACP town hall meeting on police...surprised by the union's NAACP membership drive, because at the town hall meeting NAACP officials praised Fort Lauderdale...complaint forms in English, Spanish and Haitian Creole. "I...
NAACP cites heroes in city's economic movement
Newspaper article from: Philadelphia Tribune, The Kendall Wilson October 25, 1994 700+ words
...Award," said the role of the NAACP in escalating the lives of Africans...Commissioner Ethel S. Barnett, NAACP Branch first vice president...s registration card and an NAACP membership card in his wallet...and helped someone." Born in Spanish Town, Jamaica, West Indies...
Easton NAACP gives N-word a send-off: Group organizes mock funeral. Ceremony...
Newspaper article from: Morning Call (Allentown, PA) July 29, 2007 700+ words
...It included speeches from NAACP officers, representatives from...stemmed from the Portuguese and Spanish word for black. "Today that...The incident helped prompt the NAACP's College Division campaign...funeral held in Detroit at the NAACP's national convention. Easton...
NAACP Teams With Blockbuster(R) to Boost Minority Participation in the 2000...
Press release article from: PR Newswire April 7, 2000 700+ words
...Centers, with Census Bureau and NAACP representatives on hand to discuss...during the month of March. NAACP President and CEO Kweisi Mfume...MALDEF) to distribute the Spanish-language video and held similar...Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is the nation's oldest and...
NAACP joins protest to seek redefinition, if not removal, of ''nigger'' from...
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service Epstein, Aaron October 16, 1997 700+ words
...correction immediately,'' NAACP President Kweisi Mfume declared...a derogatory word.'' The NAACP did not go as far as grass...officials did not respond to the NAACP announcement. African-American...derived from Latin, French and Spanish words for black. It is uncertain...
NAACP, ally urge parents' involvement in education.(A)(Nation)
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times Billups, Andrea August 22, 2001 700+ words
Byline: Andrea Billups The NAACP is partnering with the People...your child's life," said NAACP President and CEO Kweisi Mfume...commercials, set to air when the NAACP campaign begins in September...Separate ads have been created in Spanish. Daniel A. Carp, Kodak chairman...
NAACP Chief 's Accuser Keeps Her Own Counsel; Complex Portrait of Stansel...
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post Kevin Merida; Kim Masters August 17, 1994 700+ words
...threatens to destroy the career of NAACP executive director Benjamin...suit against Chavis and the NAACP, but agreed to a settlement...documents and interviews with NAACP officials, current and former...earn a master's degree in Spanish from Middlebury College in Vermont...
NPCA Responds to NAACP Comments on Lead Paint.
Magazine article from: The Journal of Coatings Technology September 1, 2001 700+ words
...constitutes a "civil rights issue." NAACP President Kwiesi Mfume was quoted...announced that it agrees with the NAACP call for Congress and the President...Doyle noted, "We hope that the NAACP's publicly expressed interest...publications--in both English and Spanish-- have been given widespread...
For more facts and information, see all results
©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA