Caesar Bush and the New Imperialism?

Caesar Bush and the New Imperialism?

Thanks to Ray Ison for sending me a link to Jay Bookman’s remarkable editorial in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, which is not exactly a leftist mag. ” The official story on Iraq has never made sense”, Bookman writes. “The connection that the Bush administration has tried to draw between Iraq and al-Qaida has always seemed contrived and artificial. In fact, it was hard to believe that smart people in the Bush administration would start a major war based on such flimsy evidence.

The pieces just didn’t fit. Something else had to be going on; something was missing. In recent days, those missing pieces have finally begun to fall into place. As it turns out, this is not really about Iraq. It is not about weapons of mass destruction, or terrorism, or Saddam, or U.N. resolutions.

This war, should it come, is intended to mark the official emergence of the United States as a full-fledged global empire, seizing sole responsibility and authority as planetary policeman. It would be the culmination of a plan 10 years or more in the making, carried out by those who believe the United States must seize the opportunity for global domination, even if it means becoming the “American imperialists” that our enemies always claimed we were. “

It’s a fine article — all the more so given its mainstream publication. One finds echoes of it in Anatol Lieven’s long piece in the London Review of Books. Many of the conclusions both writers draw about the ‘new Imperialism’ now rampant in the Bush administration are said to have their origins in a report published in 2000 by the so-called ‘Project for the New American Century’ entitled “Rebuilding America’s Defenses,” and written by some of the crazies now propelling Bush over the precipice.

But (as this Diary modestly pointed out on April 14 last), this kind of thinking does not have a wholly American provenance. In fact, my own newspaper (i.e. the one for which I write) printed an essay by British diplomat Robert Cooper in which he outlined a more judicious version of the same thesis.

“The most logical way to deal with chaos”, wrote Cooper, “and the one employed most often in the past, is colonisation. But this is unacceptable to postmodern states. Empire and imperialism are words that have become a form of abuse and no colonial powers are willing to take on the job, though the opportunities – perhaps even the need – for colonisation is as great as it ever was in the nineteenth century. Those left out of the global economy risk falling into a vicious circle. Weak government means disorder and that means falling investment.

All the conditions for imperialism are there, but both the supply and demand for imperialism have dried up. And yet a world in which the efficient and well-governed export stability and liberty seems eminently desirable.

What is needed is a new kind of imperialism, one compatible with human rights and cosmopolitan values: an imperialism which aims to bring order and organisation but which rests today on the voluntary principle.” “

Wolfowitz & Co agree with most of that, but they see no need for the ‘voluntary’ principle’.

Rick Boucher’s Fair Use bill unveiled

Rick Boucher’s Fair Use bill unveiled

‘Boucher raised the spectre of pay-per-use libraries in the future if the copyright holders were not checked.

“Under the 1998 law, copyright owners now have the power virtually to extinguish the Fair Use doctrine with respect to material delivered in digital format. Even a simple technological protection measure, such as a password, can be placed in front of copyrighted material and a small payment then exacted for every use of the material. Inevitably, more and more copyright owners will use this broad legal power,” he said in a press statement.

The DMCA also penalized the disabled, academics and Linux users, he said.’ [More.]

Bob Wallace, inventor of shareware, dies at 53

Bob Wallace, inventor of shareware, dies at 53
“NYT” obituary.

What I hadn’t realised was that he was one of the first Microsoft employees, with 400 of the original shares. He was also the first person to leave Microsoft with stock. John Markoff’s obit hints at Bob’s counter-culture side. He was, er, very interested in mind-altering substances, and once broke into a building site with Bill Gates in order to engage in some unauthorised driving of bulldozers. Whether Billg was likewise anaesthesised is not recorded. Wonder what he died of. His wife mentions an autopsy.

Well, well, well. Open source OS now a serious competitor, says Ballmer

Well, well, well. Open source OS now a serious competitor, says Ballmer

At the Microsoft Most Valued Professionals conference held in London this week, chief executive Steve Ballmer acknowledged the growing threat of Linux.

“We got beaten by Linux in the very high-end systems, but we have a whole development team despatched on that now,” he is reported as saying in the Financial Times: “Linux isn’t going to go away. Our job is to provide a better product in the marketplace.”

He added that Microsoft needed to better explain how its products added value compared with free software.

Pitching the Most Valued Professionals initiative against the open source movement, Ballmer recognised that the appeal of Linux is not just low costs, but the sense of belonging to a development community.

“Linux is not about free software, it’s about community,” he said. “It’s not like Novell: it isn’t going to run out of money. It started off bankrupt, in a way.” [More.]

Google goes into the news aggregation business

Google goes into the news aggregation business

And very good it is at it too.
“NYT” story.

‘Google, the rapidly growing online search engine, introduced a service yesterday that uses its search algorithms [~] but no human editors [~] to create a news page that looks not much different from those of many news Web sites.

“We are trying to leverage the experience of all the editors out there,” said Larry Page, Google’s co-founder and president for products. The site brings together headlines, and makes its automated news judgments, from information appearing on 4,000 sites.’ [
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