Charles Horman

Just a quick note that I’ve once again updated my booklog, adding a review of the non fiction book Missing, the story of how Charles Horman, an US citizen got caught up in the 1973 coup in Chile led by Pinochet. He was arrested, killed and very likely tortured because he accidentaly learn of the US support for and involvement with the coup. He was of course not the only one, thousands more, Chileans as well as foreigners would disappear, be tortured and eventually murdered by the brutal Pinochet regime with the full knowledge and often support of various US governments. But at least Chile was out of the hands of that dangerous Marxist, Allende.

For those of you who have wondered in all innocence why the rest of the world seems so suspicious of the US’s “War against Terror”, this is one of the reasons why.

Want more information on Chile? Read this overview of Chile under Allende’s government, take a look at the Chile documentation project, read Christopher Hitchens on Henry Kissinger.

“Let’s roll”

September 11, 2001, a few minutes before two o’clock in the afternoon. I was idly channel surfing, having become bored with the deadly dull Kingsley Amis interview I was watching, when my eye was caught by an image on one of the local news channels. Some sort of skyscraper, one tower of which was on fire, a big hole in its side. I recognised the New York WTC and heard the newsreader say it some sort of airplane had crashed into the tower. Not conciously knowing the scale of the towers, I thought it had been some light sports plane or so which had gotten too close to the building and kept watching, switching between Dutch channels and CNN. Not that long after I started watching, while some reporter or other was talking I saw a second plane crash into the towers. Then I knew it was some sort of terrorist attack and started calling people, yelling to my brother, who was also watching upstairs in his room.

As it turned out, those would not be the only planes crashing that day: a third airplane crashed into the Pentagon and minutes later a fourth crashlanded somewhere in Pennsylvania. It’s because of that fourth airplane that I tell you this by now overly familiar story all of us experienced that day.

Because today, just minutes ago in fact, one of the dutch networks showed a reconstruction of what happened on that flight, flight 93. And once again it grabbed me by the throat, hit me deep inside.

It was the only one of the four hijacked flights not to hit its target, because of the heroism of several of its passengers and crew, because thanks to a delay of 41 minutes taking off they knew that three other planes had hit the WTC in New York and the pentagon in Washington and they knew they were going to be the fourth plane to hit an unsuspecting target, killing more innocent people. And they knew they had to stop the terrorists from doing so.

Mark Bingham, Todd Beamer, Tom Burnett, Jeremy Glick, Sandy Bradshaw, who knows how many other passengers and crew attempted to do so. They failed in winning back control of the plane and landing safely, but they succeeded in stopping the terrorists -at the costs of their lives. In life, they had little in common other then that they were American, shared the same flight and were not afraid to do what was the right thing to do, even if it would cost them their lives. So in death they shared one more thing: they had become heroes. The US can be proud of them.

Brendan O’Neill doesn’t get it

Nor does Mick Hume. They both, O’Neill in his weblog and Hume in a Times article complain about how “the left” has responded to the new revelations about the September 11 attacks. The last week or so evidence has come out that the Bush administration may have known about the upcoming attacks, or at least had enough information to know some sort of attack was imminent -why else would Ashcroft have started traveling on chartered jets?

Hume first:

Was September 11 preventable? The answer, of course, is yes. All the Bush administration had to do to
prevent those terrorist attacks was to close down the entire civil airline industry and evacuate all skyscrapers and government buildings (or, better still, empty the cities of New York and Washington). Then it could have rounded up and interned all Muslims and everybody of ‘Middle Eastern appearance’ (including several million US citizens) and launched nuclear missile strikes against Afghanistan, Sudan and anywhere else that might be accused of harbouring Osama bin Laden and his agents. Job done.

Does anybody see the flaw in this? That’s right, it excludes the middle! It’s a common tactic. Juxtapose your own, entirely sensible position with something ridiculous and over the top (for bonus points imply this is what your critics think), make sure everybody knows how ridiculous it is, then declare victory. In this case Mick Hume, ignoring practical measures that could’ve been taken to prevent the attacks, instead pretends that the only choice was between doing nothing or unleashing World War III to stop the terrorists.

However, the prevention of the Millennium bombplot, because one of the bombers was stopped during a routine US border patrol suggests otherwise.

Then Brendan O’Neill jumped on hume’s bandwagon, in an article called the shame of the left:

The shame of the left. At first it was just annoying — all the endless anti-Bush carping about what Bush knew, didn’t know, should have known, and failed to do. Some left- wing websites turned their entire content over to mocking Bush and revelling in the revelations that the administration knew something prior to 11 September. It was annoying because it suggested that the left has become
incapable of developing a decent political alternative, instead jumping on the politics of chance,
rumour and conspiracy.

Then it became more than annoying. By getting bogged down in the ‘Bush knew’ fever sweeping America, the left actually granted Bush a significant moral victory and made it far harder for themselves, or anybody else, to protest against the Bush administration in the future.

[…]

With their demands that Bush do more, more, more, the anti-Bush left have effectively given him carte blanche to clamp down on civil liberties, issue panicky warnings that will heighten people’s sense of fear, and even to intervene abroad in the name of stopping attacks on the USA. The left have argued that ‘precautionary action’ should be the centre of American politics — and Bush might just be happy to take up their offer.

Here O’Neill takes Hume’s portrayal of “the left’s criticism” as fact, using it to castigate them. Again, the middle ground between doing nothing and turning the US into a police state and the rest of the world into a bomb crater is ignored:

How will the left respond when Bush and Blair and their friends in the West decide to bomb Iraq, on the dubious grounds that Saddam Hussein is building weapons of mass destruction with which to threaten the West? The ‘evidence’ for Saddam’s weapons programme may be thin bordering on non-existent, but so were the pre-11 September warnings of a hijacking in America. When Bush says he is bombing Iraq as a precautionary measure to protect America, the left won’t have a leg to stand on.

This is specious arguing at its worst. Hume and O’Neill have taken sensible criticism of the Bush administration, twisted it beyond all recognition and then used this strawman to beat up “the left” with.

I cannot help but think they have an agenda in this. O’Neill and Hume aren’t strangers to each other. Mick Hume is the editor of Spiked Online while Brendan O’Neill is its assistant editor. Spiked Online itself is the reincarnation of the old LM Magazine, previously known as Living Marxism, which disappeared after it lost a libel trial. And both magazines were involved with/part of/published by (the distincitions are unclear) the old Revolutionary Communist Party, which disappeared into its own asshole to re-emerge as the quasi libertarian-socialist Institute of Ideas [1].

Spiked touts itself as a champion of “unorthodox, enlightened thinking” but I’ve always had the nagging feeling they were just another group of establishment pundits. They often seemed to be more interested in slagging of “the left” then in doing much to shake up the established order. In this context, this latest attack on the antiwar left makes sense. It establishes once again their independence, their “freethinking” spirit, without running much risks. It impresses the punters and I bet those two articles will be quoted all over the blogosphere in the next few weeks or so.

[1] This Guardian article has some more detail about the Institute of Ideas. More about Living Marxism can be found in this Weekly Worker article.

Books

I hope y’all have checked out the link to my booklog to the left of this post? Just in cased you hadn’t, I’ve put up new reviews/musings of two books: Poul Anderson’s The Corridors of Time, a science fiction time travel novel and Dutch author Nescio’s classic collection of three novellas. Martin sez, check it out.

Courtesy of the Guardian comes another book review, of China Mieville’s latest fantasy novel, The Scar. Apart from being a fantasy and sf writer, China is also active in politics, having been a candidate in the UK parliamentary elections last year for the Socialist Alliance.

For the Fantastic Metropolis webzine China put together a list of fifty fantasy & science fiction works that socialists should read, which is probably also of interest to non socialists. For the Guardian he also put together his top ten of weird fiction.

Something’s gone horribly wrong

Huh. It seems every second weblog I try to read today is having trouble — and they had all created with Blogger. Seems to me this has been happening a bit more lately. Just shows how important it is to have control of your weblogging sofware, I guess.

Fortunately what I use is Blosxom which is no more then a clever Perl script developed by Rael Dornfest, a researcher at O’Reilly. It’s lightweight, easy to use and adapt and open source. Check it out.