Friday Misc.
Buchanan started his administration by conspiring with the Supreme Court over the timing of the Dred Scott decision, stood idly by as civil war raged in Kansas all while engaging in a (failed) power grab in foreign affairs, and then impotently watched Southern states secede. Nixon’s level of corruption is of a league unmatched in American history—the idea of bugging the offices of the opposition party and the subsequent massive cover-up (not to mention the credible allegations of encouraging the South Vietnamese to avoid a peace settlement before the 1968 elections) strikes at the heart of our democracy. Of course, that Bush could even be compared to Nixon or Buchanan shows how far he has fallen since the months after 9/11.
Crooks and Liars has the best of Scott McClellan—in video form!
Tony Judt gives his all to defend the Walt/Mearsheimer piece—but falls a bit wide of the mark, given that his Times essay critiques the “Israel lobby,” not W/M’s “Israel Lobby.” Indeed, the mere publication of Judt’s op-ed in the Times—a key component of W/M’s “Lobby”—would seem to undercut the W/M thesis.
The Chronicle has an interesting piece on junior faculty bargaining for higher salaries. Those of us who teach at institutions with wholly fixed salary structures might not mind confronting this dilemma.
The Keystone Kops Duke lacrosse investigation continues—D.A. Mike Nifong executed search warrants for the two indicted players’ dorm rooms yesterday (wouldn’t it have been more appropriate to have taken this step before indictment—and perhaps have checked if either or both had alibis in the process?). After searching in vain for the accuser’s clothing, a shoe, or other property, the police seized . . . a Times article on the case and an Ipod.