ART AND SATIRE

I’ve had some correspondence with Instapundit over the whole Burk thing; as noted below, I think he’s off-base, and that he’s not acknowledging a whole history of right-wing satire of leftists (which I don’t have time to research just now, dammit). In my view, that makes his points on Burk kinda meretricious, and as I told him privately, he’s not a moron so he can’t just wave that stuff off.
Now he’s comparing the controversial ‘suicide-bomber self-portrait’ with the Burk article, and here I’ll go back to the point above, which is that the painting is romanticizing violence and death, while the article was satirizing reproductive politics. One != the other.
But there’s another point (surprise!!) that’s more urgent. I think Lileks (scroll to the bottom) and Reynolds are missing the more serious issue, which is the connection the painting makes between romanticism, Romanticism (as I’ve talked about endlessly) and cathartic violence.
I think that the Beltway shooters may have had an ideological framework that made their violence OK, or a plan to bury an act of domestic violence in a mass murder. But I also think they were acting out of an impulse to cathartic violence which is legitimized by modern philosophers, in the modern arts world, and in the mass media.
One issue (unfair satire) is a cold. The other (romantic violence) is the plague. Let’s not get distracted by sniffles.

DEC 7 BLOGGER EVENT

‘Tora, Tora, Tora’ will be shown at the Warner Grand in San Pedro on Dec. 7th, it was announced today. I wonder why…
I’m going, and I’d like to suggest that the rest of the L.A. Blogger community ought to come out as well.
What do you think??

CONVERSATION STOPPERS

One of my best friends spent years as a community organizer for parks in New York City. She is a fountain of funny stories and ‘on-the-ground’ political wisdom, and one of her truisms is: dog doo ends all meetings.
That is to say, much like Godwin’s Law, as soon as dog waste is brought up, the meeting is effectively over. The room divides, the tempers get hot, and constructive discussion flies out the window.
I’ll suggest a corollary of this, which is: race ends all Democratic politics.
In the discussion of the ‘Veterans Day’ post below, the thread immediate turned into a race politics thread…who were the racists, and what political power did they have in which party. And constructive discussion sort of petered out.
Now, race is a real issue in American life today.
Yesterday, I had dinner with a friend. I was dropping off a character reference letter for him to give to the sentencing judge next week. He got talked into something stupid, got set up, and got arrested. Another casualty of the drug wars (to his credit, he blames no one but himself…one reason he’s the kind of guy I’d write judge letters for). There’s a chance…a narrow chance…that he will just get probation, which means he’ll get to keep the job he’s had for twelve years.
We were talking about it and he said something that rang my bells pretty hard.
“Now,” he said quietly, “when I get pulled over and they ask me if I’m on probation, I’ll have to say ‘yes’.” I looked at him.
“Damn,” I said, “they never ask me that…” and then the unspoken acknowledgment. He’s black, I’m not.
Now I’ve ridden along with cops a fair amount (I also have good cop friends). Without going into a lot of detail about my friend, there are things that would make me look at him twice (things I learned to look for from cops, and which I saw and remarked on when he and I first met…part of how we became friends).
But his matter of fact comment is no less heartbreaking to me because I know that if I was a cop, I’d be asking him the same question. And there, in a nutshell, is the American Tragedy of race.
But…it isn’t the only problem or the only tragedy we face. And the fact that it stops us in our tracks…that it stopped Janice Hahn…that it stops discussion…is a bigger problem. I won’t pretend to lecture anyone on this subject tonight.
But the lecture’s coming.

MORE PATRIOTIC LIBERALISM

Check out Joe Klein in Slate. A key quote:

The Democrats have to stop being so goddamned negative and pessimistic. No piece about the party should omit Dick Gephardt’s famous retort to Ronald Reagan’s “Morning in America” ads: “It’s getting closer and closer to midnight.” (For that reason alone, Gephardt should be barred from further national political activity.) Reich, this is your specialty: Why are Democrats always so downbeat and mopey about the most dynamic economy in the history of the world? Why are your friends at the American Prospect so perpetually dour, dark, and humorless? Why can’t they be as funny as you are?
The most important qualities that Newer Democrats need to enlist are optimism and an inspirational, idealistic American patriotism. This is particularly true if they want to appeal to young people. I would guess that those who watch Saturday Night Live and MTV adhere to only three bedrock political principles: tolerance, environmentalism, and entertainment value. (I would guess, for example, that they intuit the difference between Eminem’s—and, yeah, mea culpa, Sister Souljah’s—scathing social realism and true intolerance.)

Read the whole thing.
I’m busy, serious bloggage later tonight.

THIS PISSES ME OFF

First, I think golf is a stupid game. My attitude is best summed up by the famous Michael Schumacher response to the question “Do you play golf?”: “No, I’m still young enough to enjoy sex.” (I love taunting my brother the golf fanatic with that).
But the recent uproar over August National has taken a turn for the stupid.
First, the leading critic of Augusta, Martha Burk, deserves an abject apology from Porphyrogenitus (of Ranting Screeds), Instapundit and Kathryn Lopez of NRO, for their dumb-ass misreading of her Ms. Magazine article. In well-read society, prefacing something with “A modest proposal” is usually a dead giveaway that what follows is pointed satire, as her article obviously was. (I wrote an economics paper for a Marxist economist a long time ago entitled “A modest proposal” in which I suggested that we simply make being poor a capital crime. Dumbass didn’t get it either, until I shoved Swift’s book under his nose.) Lopez then gives a half-apology here, in which she makes this profoundly wrongheaded statement:

I did, in fact, have the piece. I also suspected Burk didn’t really want to sterilize all men. However, Burk, a feminist writing that in Ms. was not the same as the likes Rod or Jonah writing the same thing on NRO. Ms. folks do believe men are the problem, and, frankly, anyone who has spent too much time exposed to feminist literature knows that.

So instead of relying on what Ms. Burk actually said, we’ll rely on what Lopez thinks she knows about her audience. Stupid, embarrassing, and the apology itself requires an apology.
Porphyrogenitus is usually a lot better than this.
Instapundit missed on that one too, and I trust that he’ll be as quick at backing off as he is in stepping forward.
As far as I’m concerned, Augusta has the absolute right to remain private and discriminatory. But they ought to have the decency to do so behind closed doors, and they gave that decency up when they started hosting a national, public (i.e. open to non-members) golf tournament.
If a bunch of old rich guys want to buy a golf course and go play with each other, I’m all for it. But don’t run a $10 million a year enterprise out of it and then keep claiming it’s a “private” matter.
Calpundit is all over this.
(added links)
(edited for tone and grammar)

MO’ TORA

Councilmember Janice Hahn is now working to find a venue for the veterans’ showing of ‘Tora, Tora, Tora’ mentioned here, here, here, and here.
For those who don’t live in Los Angeles, or who haven’t had much to do with city government here, let me take a moment for an aside.
We have a ‘weak mayor’ system, somewhat strengthened by the charter revisions we’ve recently passed, and a 15-member City Council. Each Council member is, in effect, the mayor of a city of roughly 250,000 people. City departments respond adroitly to council requests; and no development project will be approved in any council district without the consent of the district Councilmember. So Councilmember Hahn’s (that’s hahn-at-council-dot-lacity-dot-org) role here is fairly crucial.
Here’s today’s story from the Daily Breeze:

An uproar over a quashed plan to show “Tora! Tora! Tora!” at a San Pedro theater has prompted Los Angeles city officials to try to line up an alternative venue.
Veterans were stunned when they were told it would be insensitive to the Japanese-American community to go forward with a planned Dec. 7 showing of the 1970 Academy Award-winning film on the 61st anniversary of Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor.
While organizers said they appreciated the effort to find a new location, they are still steaming over the charges of insensitivity.
Los Angeles City Councilwoman Janice Hahn outlined her feelings in an e-mail sent in early November to the volunteer board of the Fort MacArthur Military Museum in San Pedro, which was organizing the commemoration as a museum benefit.
“The manager of the theater informed us that he had made his decision in part because of concerns whether the screening of the movie on that particular day would be seen by some as insensitive,” Hahn wrote. “. . . Every person I have spoken with has recommended that I concur with the department’s decision.”
Asked about the decision last week, theater manager Lee Sweet said his determination was based on there being a prior theater booking for Dec. 7.
And although Hahn’s e-mail did not mention a prior booking at the theater, in remarks Tuesday the councilwoman also stressed that was the overriding reason that the Pearl Harbor show could not be scheduled.
“In no way do I have anything to do with booking events or canceling events” at the city-managed 1930s-era movie theater, Hahn said.
The event was never canceled, she said, because it was never scheduled.
“It was never an event,” the councilwoman said. “It hadn’t even gotten that far.
“The only thing I was asked to do is see if I could overturn a booking which is not in my purview.”
When Hahn received a request from the veterans to intervene, she consulted with Assemblyman George Nakano, D-Torrance, and other Japanese-Americans before issuing her decision by e-mail.
“(Nakano), like the others I spoke with, expressed serious reservations regarding showing the film on that date,” Hahn said in her e-mail. Nakano could not be reached for comment Tuesday.
Hahn went on in her e-mail to mention that her father, the late county Supervisor Kenneth Hahn, was a World War II veteran and that she supported veterans.
“My support of the department’s determination was not in any way meant to offend anyone, most especially you or any veteran,” Hahn wrote. “I sincerely regret that it was received in this way.”
Veterans said they asked for Hahn’s help, believing she had the political clout to do so.
“It’s definitely not her job to book events, but by the same token, it is her job to stand up for what’s right,” said Joe Janesic, vice president of the museum’s volunteer board. “She could have called (the theater manager) and asked him to reconsider. . . . We knew that Councilwoman Hahn could have either some influence or would be able to outright reverse the decision.”
Veterans contend that they got the runaround from theater personnel, who first told them the night was booked but later said it wasn’t.
When the event originally was conceived last May, Janesic said they were told by Sweet that there was a prior booking to show the movie “Boys Town” on Dec. 7.
But later this summer, veterans learned that plans for the movie had fallen through. “Boys Town” now is scheduled to be shown later this month.
With nothing else listed for that night on the theater’s Web page schedule, organizers resumed efforts to schedule the event but were met with a series of city objections about finding a print and securing insurance for it.
The volunteers managed to do both.
Last week, Sweet said there was now a new booking for that night: Los Angeles Mayor James Hahn, the councilwoman’s brother, has reserved the Warner Grand on Dec. 7 for his holiday party. Councilwoman Hahn said she did not know about the party.
“I don’t want anyone to think we’re unreasonable,” Janesic said. “(The city) has every right to say what gets shown on their property, but when they start throwing in all these objections, it screams cover-up.”
Since it was published Sunday in the Daily Breeze , the story has been debated on talk radio stations and referred to by Internet sites.
Hahn said Tuesday that she has asked the city’s Department of Cultural Affairs, which manages the Warner Grand, to find another venue for the museum’s Pearl Harbor event.
“Now that I realize that the showing of ‘Tora! Tora! Tora!’ is apparently very important to the World War veterans in commemorating Pearl Harbor Day, I’ve asked the department to work with this group to find another venue,” Hahn said. Janesic said he appreciates the gesture, but added that finding a theater won’t be easy. The volunteers already have looked for other venues without success, he said.…

Comments to follow later today.

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