Sunday, December 12, 2004



The Art of Culture War: Political Strategy Lessons from the 1990s Culture Vultures

Eye on Politics & Law Lords: Vladimir Putin is an autocratic obstacle to change
Future generations will look back on this decade as a period of far-reaching and hotly debated leadership at all levels of the post KGB democratic absurdity

The drama playing out in the streets of Ukraine in recent weeks has been gripping in its own terms. But its bigger significance for the West lies north-east of Kiev, in Russia. As the tide moves towards a presidential election victory for the opposition leader, Victor Yushchenko, on December 26th, the efforts of Russia's president, Vladimir Putin, to thwart him have looked ever more cack-handed. But they have also depressed those who still hoped that Mr Putin's Russia might move, slowly and tortuously, on to a path leading to political liberalism—and that he might prove an ally not a foe of the West.


Putin takes on democracy, the West and all-comers [Doctors say Dioxin Poisoning Caused Yuschenko Illness]
• · In the aftermath—and there's no better word for it—of the election, Democrats all over the country fell into despair-ridden support-group-like conversations with their friends about what had happened and what to do next. A discussion on the way forward for the Democrats
• · · Diversity is in the melting pot So long as immigrants want to buy into the American Dream. Assimilation is good; [Many of the people in Haiti and Iraq have the truth but don't have the water. We have the water, but we don't have the truth. Burying Water ]
• · · · Feel-Good Politics The therapeutic activism of MoveOn.org
• · · · · Could Hillary become America's first woman president? If I Had Hillary Clinton's Ear...
• · · · · · Mark Kelly (Sydney): Racism, Nationalism, Biopolitics: Foucault's Society Must Be Defended; Warning PDF format Biopolitics: http://www.usyd.edu.au/contretemps/4september2004/Kelly.pdf