Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Tom Friedman nails it
"Financial systems are accidents waiting to happen."

The Tip of the Spear
1) whether China will be able to reign in and reorient its economy's focus on production for export- assuming that the US' spendthrift days are not coming back anytime soon, this is exceptionally important to rebalancing the world's economy and China's development in general; and
2) whether the world will actually reduce its carbon output- this is a battle that will be either won or lost in the developing world and (assuming current trends continue) most of all in China.
Something to keep an eye on.
Sad story
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
The Art of Wall St.

Steve Coll, Afghan Sage

Monday, September 28, 2009
What the crisis means
Germany's election
Friday, September 25, 2009
The People's Republic of China at 60

Also from the FT today, check out this really cool interactive timeline of highlights of the PRC's history over its 60 year lifespan.
Thursday, September 24, 2009
An Afghan history lesson by Steve Coll
Thinking about climate change
I've come late to this video (by 2 years...), but I really like it. It's a very smart way of looking at climate change- through the prism of risk management rather than scientific certainty. Apparently this guy has a book now that's supposed to be pretty good too.
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Some real thinking on Afghanistan?

Although Mr. Obama has said that a stable Afghanistan is central to the security of the United States, some advisers said he was also wary of becoming trapped in an overseas quagmire. Some Pentagon officials say they worry that he is having what they called “buyer’s remorse” after ordering an extra 21,000 troops there within weeks of taking office before even settling on a strategy.
Steve Coll explains it all
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Probably a big deal for the internets
I am always shocked that these sorts of stories don't get more notice in the general public, considering how incredibly important the internet is to most of our lives. How much would it suck if you could only get Comcast sponsored websites through your Comcast internet service?
Headscarves and European Education
Sec. Gates in focus
Photo Essay in China

Check out this photo essay about the preparations for the 60th anniversay of the founding of the PRC. Looks at least as stunning as the opening ceremonies for the Beijing Olympics, right?
Monday, September 21, 2009
Climate change confusion
Sec. Clinton on Missile Defense
I predict this will continue to be a touchy issue both here and in Europe in the near future.
Friday, September 18, 2009
Insight into Post- 9/11 America
Michael Scheuer is eloquent as he shakes us by the shoulders: That damn dog has been barking nonstop for eight years!
But what to make of the question — which is posed really as an all-American trope — That there was no next bark?
9-11 was a work of art the likes of which we have not seen since Leni Riefenstahl’s Triumph des Willens. If war is a liturgy of identity, then war’s theater is truly religious art. Walking through its bloody gallery across the Anthropocene, it will be hard to find a more compelling and transcendental masterpiece. 9-11 shifted the trajectory of America in History.
Surely America’s relationship with the world has been darkly transfigured.
Until 9-11 the people of these United States were still (somewhat) passionately committed to the redemption of humanity. Today we are committed to the dog that didn’t bite.
In a sunlit September instant we jumped a passage from here to eternity. From the City on a Hill (John Winthrop, 1630) to a United Nations (Franklin Roosevelt, 1945) — our entire mythic passage of becoming — we ditched it all eight years ago. Bucked that baggage.In that instant our sacred narrative went from New Testament to Old Testament. Submit to us, convert to our faith — become like us — and ye shall prosper as our special wards.
Fight us — for whatever reason — and we will punish: Forever if need be.
We are so afraid now of another humiliation that we have made the entire world a source of threat — not simply to our physical self, but also to our geist, our very identity.
This is the dog that keeps on biting, drawing psychic American blood daily, draining our national persona, making us thrash in the pain: That we cannot control those who heap us, who task us.
Like Ahab we have been baited into heaping and tasking ourselves: Boxing ourselves into a never-ending cul-de-sac national ethos.
No longer “We Are the World” — more like, we hate the world. Just graze American blogs and listservs: NATO slackers and girly-men in Afghanistan, evil bearded Muslims, conniving and treacherous Chinamen, tattooed Latin drug pushers, pathetic Africans for whom “we can only do so much” ...
“The dog that didn’t bite” is a pristine portrait of regnant American nativism not seen since the 1930s. But at least the isolationists of that other eight-year era (1932-1940) were honest and true to their tough religious take on American nationalism. Now, what masque and masquerade we offer to the world! Our new nativists cloak their xenophobia in the magical rhetorical raiment of “Liberal Internationalism” — all the while hewing to a zeitgeist that is everyday pushing our nation remorselessly away from the mission — the essential American altruism — that once defined our identity.
What does all this mean?
It means that 9-11 achieved it all: It is an enduring realization in war’s theater. It is History’s ultimate performance art.
To bark again would put all this at risk.
This dog has had its day.
(here's a link to the original: http://security.nationaljournal.com/2009/09/on-the-911-anniversary-the-dog.php#1360027)
Some reactions to the Missile Shield decision
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Great Video from Kazakhstan!
Let It Burn
It is a little economics heavy for those less inclined to that discipline, but I think the metaphor is great- sometimes you have to let a fire burn to keep the forest healthy.
Refreshing debate in the Senate on A-stan
For my money, the best quote came from Stewart:
Stewart disagreed, contending that the United States tended to
underestimate Afghan and Pakistani will to make decisions in their own interests
and overestimated the impact of Afghanistan to Pakistani stability. “It’s very
dangerous to mount an argument about Afghanistan based on Pakistan,” he said,
comparing weak, poor Afghanistan to a cat and nuclear-armed Pakistan to a tiger.
“We’re beating the cat,” Stewart continued, “and when you say, ‘Why are you
beating the cat?’ you say, ‘It’s a cat-tiger strategy.’ But you’re beating the
cat because you don’t know what to do about the tiger.”
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Read this op-ed!
More Trade Troubles w/ Canada
Its notable that American companies have been forced to change their supply chains to comply with this utterly stupid clause.
How Biden Fits In
Its a nice change from our last VP...
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
France to change economic metrics
UPDATE: For anyone interested in what the report mentioned in the article actually says, its criticisms and its recommendations, there's this article from the FT: "GDP branded as poor gauge of progress." I like this report a lot.
Monday, September 14, 2009
Trade troubles w/ China
Friday, September 11, 2009
Some Sept. 11 related articles
On to some good news- apparently al Queda is struggling, and I can only hope its true: "Al Queda faces recruitment crisis, anti-terrorism expert says."
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Roula Khalaf on the language of Mideast peace
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Jackass US Ambassador to Germany rolls up in style
I don't think this is how Obama's overtures to Europe were suppose to be implemented... "New US Ambassador to Germany Lands In Style."
Funny thing... our new abassador is a Goldman alum to boot!
Dexter Filkins is on the Afghan Election like white on rice
I'd say that the political legitimacy of our proxy in A-stan is about shot...
Hunting bin Laden in Pakistan
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Matt Taibbi on Goldman's newest dastardly plot
I Love How Weird Japan Is
That "hijacked" Russian Ship
No matter what gets said about this incident from now on, I'd be willing to bet that this unconfirmed rumor is closest to the truth we're going to get.
Another Schachtman from A-stan
Friday, September 4, 2009
Whither the internets???
"Inglorious Basterds" in Germany
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Chuck Hagel on Afghanistan & Vietnam
(You can find the transcript of the conversation between LBJ and Sen. Russell that Hagel references here)
The administration's response on A-stan
Here's Sec. Gates and Chairman of the JCS Adm. Mullen discussing the new "strategy" in Afghanistan. The Secretary seems to share some of the common misgivings about this war...
The Economist's take on the Japanese election
More on the Afghan election...
Bottom line: the only way to manage the tribalism (read decentralization power) in Afghanistan is through a functioning democratic process.
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Curbing the Power of Finance
Strange happenings in Washington...
Money (and scary) quote: "As I walked out of the studio last night, though, Gwen Ifill turned to me and said, "Look, I understand you're not some fire-breathing hawk, but you're about the only person we can find in Washington to defend this war at the moment." [!!!]
Those Tricksy North Koreans...
Checking in with the Global Economy
I think the most interesting thing to watch is how China's economy has reacted to the crisis, but the world's economy is such a complex system that I find it hard to believe that one, or a set, of statistics can capture what's going on (that's leaving aside how it affects people, because growth should be instrumental, right?).
Renewable Energy by the Numbers
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Cameron on the Lockerbie Bomber Release
This has turned into a big deal in the UK, and an embarassment for it abroad. It's also an interesting look at a man who will probably be a major player on the world stage very shortly.
Nail in the Coffin for A-stan Debate?
UPDATE: George Will has an op-ed piece in today's WashPost entitled "Time for the US to get out of Afghanistan." I have no doubt that this is the thin end of the wedge...