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Archive for June, 2008

There Will Be Blood

Thursday, June 12th, 2008

Watched this a few nights ago and found it to be quite enjoyable. Most likely because There Will Be Blood managed, as with most Daniel Day-Lewis films, to get outside the usual, formulaic, Hollywood box. Every film does not need to have a happy ending nor does every protagonist need to be a primarily sympathetic character. Sometimes clarity between good and evil is great, particularly for films on an epic scale but when the plot horizon is more down to earth then, complexity and ambiguity are more intriguing.

First Post at Progressive Historians

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

It took a while, as the semester was winding down but I finally have my first post up at Progressive Historians; entitled “The Virtues and Vices of Historians as Public Intellectuals.

Have to attend to CTLab and Chicago Boyz later today 🙂

Democracy Journal

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Much thanks to Eddie Beaver and Lexington Green who separately but nearly simultaneously sent me links this morning to a very fine e-zine, Democracy Journal.org. What caught their eye were the following articles by some familiar names:

Pentagon 2.0” by Colonel T.X. Hammes

The author of the critically acclaimed The Sling and the Stone reviews the latest book by another premier military theorist, John Arquilla’s Worst Enemy and finds it wanting.

Return of the Jihadi” by Andrew Exum a.k.a. “Abu Muqawama

Exum methodically analyzes the implications of “when Omar comes marching home” and offers sensible solutions I would describe as “Interagency COIN Jointness”.

Parenthetical aside: One side effect of the GWOT/Iraq War/Afghanistan, I think we shall see in the coming decade, is to have created a generation of future policy makers and statesmen like we have not seen since WWII.

Welcome Rezko Watch Readers!

Monday, June 9th, 2008

A big thank you to blogfriend Pundita for sending Rezko Watch readers my way!

Generally, local poltics are not my primary interest but for Rezko Watch readers outside of Illinois who are interested in the background of Chicago’s unique brand of politics, they might want to check out the following sources:

American Pharaoh: Mayor Richard J. Daley – His Battle for Chicago and the Nation by Adam Cohen, Elizabeth Taylor

An excellent, highly detailed, social and political history both of the city of Chicago as well as the rise to power of the first, legendary, Mayor Daley, and his iron fisted rule over the Democratic Machine. The Shakman Decrees have changed he rules of the game  in the city of Chicago but the current Mayor, Richard M. Daley has adapted and is, in some ways, even more powerful than his larger than life father.

Boss: Richard J. Daley of Chicago by Mike Royko

This book is a shorter but far more colorful and grittier read. Penned by the late Chicago Tribune columnist Mike Royko, it is filled with a cast of infamous Chicago characters such as Ed Kelly, Tony Accardo, Paddy Bauler, Cardinal Cody, William Dawson, John D’ Arco, Tom Keane, Charlie Swibel, Benjamin Adamowski and Saul Alinsky. Incidentally, Mayor Daley reportedly hated Royko for writing this book.

Chicago: City on the Make: 50th Anniversary Edition, Newly Annotated by Nelson Algren

One of Chicago’s great writers, as well as a friend of Royko’s, Algren painted a bitter picture of the Machine at the zenith of it’s power and corruption.

For contemporary coverage of the underworld of Chicago politics, I recommend former City Hall beat reporter turned columnist for The Chicago Tribune, John Kass. Kass is well versed in the current array of ward heelers, mobbed-up businessmen, buffoonish aldermen, ex-gangster disciples, crooked cops, shadowy fixers and Outfit soldiers under the latest Federal investigations (it’s a lot to keep track of).

” Chicago ain’t ready for reform!”  – Alderman Paddy Bauler, 1955.

Recommended Reading

Monday, June 9th, 2008

Top Billing! Dr. Phil Williams at SSI FROM THE NEW MIDDLE AGES TO A NEW DARK AGE: THE DECLINE OF THE STATE AND U.S. STRATEGY

Despite my confidence  in economic flows, I’m featuring the “Forces of Darkness” today. Williams is the ” new van Creveld”. Amusing, considering the hard feelings that SSI’s research director has toward 4GW. Hat tip to Dr. Chet Richards.

MountainRunnerCombat Robots and Perception Management” in SERVIAM magazine.

Matt goes William Gibson on us but he’s absolutely on track. I notice that the actual U.S. military robots featured look a great deal like the crap prototype terminators released by the female Terminator villain in Terminator III.

The Glittering EyePundits Wanted: No Life Experience Necessary (Updated)

Longtime blogfriend Dave Schuler picks on some targets of his own intellectual size – Judge Richard Posner and Professor Gary Becker.

Wizards of Oz DHS S&T Summary

Shane reviews a deceptively exciting, blogger-filled DC conference ( that he also liveblogged)  that featured…well…some things that never made it into Shane’s review.

Art HutchinsonThinking Exotically and Obstacles to Prediction Market Adoption

Art is one of those uber-smart bloggers whose posts ( which are all too seldom) could change how you think.  Not your opinion but your cognitive methodology.

Rick Shenkman at HNNAmerican Democracy: The 10 Alarm Fire We’re Ignoring

Voting is a lot like jury duty and the making of sausages….best not to look too closely.

Registan.netFundamentals: The Problem of Debt

Debt, like wealth, is relative; but in CA/SEA it can make for a debt-peonage system that makes sharecropping look enlightened.

SWJ Blog Hey…George Thorogood is still alive !

That’s it!


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