zenpundit.com » 2008 » January

Archive for January, 2008

Recommended Reading

Thursday, January 3rd, 2008

One of these is overdue as the holidays interrupted my normal blogging schedule.

Top Billing! EDGE: World Question CenterWHAT HAVE YOU CHANGED YOUR MIND ABOUT? WHY?”  (Hat tip to Ginny at Chicago Boyz)

SWJ Blog – “Sneak Preview: Iraq and the Evolution of American Strategy

Dr. Steven Metz of the SWC has a new book.

Abu Muqawama – “Al-Qaeda in Pakistan … and Final Thoughts on Benazir Bhutto

Whomever Abu is, I’m enjoying his blog.

The Duck of Minerva – ” The Bhutto Connection

No foreigner with aspirations to a throne has ever had as many influential friends as Benazir Bhutto since Herod last visited ancient Rome. The propraetors weep profusely in Manhattan and Georgetown.

ERMB – “Mapping Connections

Steve DeAngelis ventures into cool visualization graphics

Ross Mayfield – “Collapse: How Startups Choose to Fail or Succeed

There must be some kind of Jared Diamond revival going on in the blogosphere lately.

My good friend Dr. Von has returned to blogging after a long hiatus and a successful brush with local elective office.

Andrew Sullivan is awarded favorable mention for meritorious mockery of Hillary Clinton’s anal-retentive, angry aging honor student, control-freak on the road, campaign.

That’s it!

Marxist Gorillas and Chimpanzee Capitalists?

Wednesday, January 2nd, 2008

Caught my eye today: The Mind of the Market: Compassionate Apes, Competitive Humans and other Tales From Evolutionary Economics by Michael Shermer.  A premise that intuitively makes sense to me ( and therefore, I’ll have to read it with a critical eye).

Going to have to pick this one up.

                                                                                                                                                                 

Eighth Post in the Nuclear Policy Series: Charles Cameron

Wednesday, January 2nd, 2008

I’m pleased to offer a different perspective here from blogfriend Charles Cameron of Hipbone Games who blogs at Forensic Theology. Charles has a deep academic background in comparative theological studies and he is offering insight into the mindset of millenarian religious radicals and what their motivations might mean for the concept of nuclear deterrence.  Cameron seeks to address an aspect that is, surprisingly, seldom highlighted properly in the media despite the U.S. having been at war with Islamist terrorists since 2001. The number of voices who have also tried to do so – Gilles Kepel, Olivier Roy, Tim Furnish and Michael Scheuer – have focused exclusively on radical Salafist and Mahdist Islamism while Cameron puts these in context  with all eschatological religious extremists, mythic archetypes and other primal currents of human culture.

Charles Cameron’s post is really an 18 page paper of considerable intellectual depth and subtlety and I offer it here to readers with a strong endorsement for your careful consideration.

Religious and apocalyptic background to nuclear policy making

“I read about Cheryl Rofer’s invitation to the blogosphere of 18 December, suggesting that we should form a “blog-tank” on nuclear policy, on my blog-friend Zenpundit’s blog. My purpose here is to offer as background to that ongoing discussion of nuclear policy, some reminders from the spheres of religion and mythology.

It is my purpose here to suggest that the actions, plans and motives of those who are subject to religious drivers, and in particular drivers of an apocalyptic or “end times” nature, are, by reason of their seeming irrationality and fringe quality, often overlooked by those whose specialties revolve around such things as centrifuges and the enrichment of uranium, short-range missiles and their forward deployment, and so forth – and that a theological understanding of the place of nuclear weapons in the eschatological thinking of radical religionists of a variety of stripes is one of the key desiderata in an effort to come to grips with the realities of proliferation and peace”.

Read the rest here (PDF)

A Joker to Make Frank Miller Proud

Wednesday, January 2nd, 2008

The Joker as a scary, homicidal, maniac….as he should be.


Switch to our mobile site