I agree with this post almost completely and entirely. I am not as sanguine as is Amar Bhide is on the issue of immigration and education, but I am on board with everything else in the post. Go read.
I agree with this post almost completely and entirely. I am not as sanguine as is Amar Bhide is on the issue of immigration and education, but I am on board with everything else in the post. Go read.
Of those Americans who will carp about Iraq’s elections being no better than a census (with the country cleaving along sectarian/ethnic lines), and who will underscore many other imperfections, I would simply ask that they look at their own history. It took the U.S. until 1787 to adopt the Constitution, until 1870 to (very imperfectly) enfranchise black adult males, until 1920 to enfranchise adult females, and until 1964-65 to guarantee voting rights to black citizens. Democracies go through a very long process of consolidation. It will not take the Iraqis anywhere near as long as it took us, because there are examples for them to emulate, or to beware of. It takes time—sometimes a very long time—to apportion power among different groups within a nascent political system. What Iraq has achieved in five years is a political wonder, and those who would deny that are being very, very dishonest.
–Tunku Varadarajan. Read it all.
Up until now, most of the realist, or realpolitik school of American foreign policy has opposed–resolutely, one might add–any effort at fomenting regime change in Iran, doubtless spurred by what the school has perceived to have been the mistakes of American foreign policy vis-à-vis regime change in Iraq. As a realist–or realpolitik practitioner–in good standing, it might have been expected that Richard Haass would not deviate from the dictates of the school.
Gee, I wonder why Krugman left out the issue of per capita income in his column.
Despite constant reports of American declinism, Dan Twining is not deterred from pointing out what declinists ought to know; that America is still, far and away, the preeminent power on the planet.
The Economist on the Reagan legacy in fighting the Cold War.
The U.S. is suffering from a reverse brain-drain.
When I went after Flynt and Hillary Mann Leverett, I tried to be nice about it. I might not have been as nice, had I known that they wrote . . . this.
Dan Drezner reads the Leveretts on Iranian-American relations so that the rest of us don’t have to.