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Showing posts from August, 2017

The Honey Badger President

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I heard someone refer to President Trump as the honey badger president, and I almost fell off the couch laughing so much.  Like the honey badger, President Trump spends most of his time fighting with everyone. Not just his enemies, which are easily legion, but even his supposed friends. He fights with the people he needs to accomplish his goals. What is wrong with this man? If you need to see what he is trying to emulate, take a look at this:   Youtube video of the honey badger Honey badgers are fine in the wild, but we don't need one in the White House.

Afghanistan

Last night, President Trump finally gave a thoughtful, intelligent and unsullied speech on foreign policy. In essence, he offered a three-prong approach to dealing with the conflict in Afghanistan. First, he is going to use a conditions-based criterion to decide when the war is over, rather than a time-based criterion. Second, he proposes using all tools in the toolbox to address the problems in Afghanistan: not just military, but diplomatic and economic tools. And third, he is changing the US response to Pakistan's role in the South Asian conflict. The conditions-based criterion--with no conditions actually specified--is a good way to keep the war going until the President and the military decide it's time to leave. No timeline for leaving, to be sure, but we've seen how "mission accomplished" has been interpreted in the past. All the tools in the toolbox. A great metaphor, but a totally vague concept. We already use all the tools in the toolbox, but h

Reflections on Trump

When I first started this blog (in late January), my intent was to post a blog each day of Donald Trump's presidency. I wanted to speak truth to what I observed. If that meant criticizing what he did, I would criticize it. If he did something I agreed with, I would mention that. However after just a couple of weeks, I discovered that I was getting exhausted by my endeavor. First, there were so many things happening each day that pained me, I had difficulty keeping up with all the things that I might include in the blog. Second, I realized pretty quickly that I was only seeing a fraction of the things that were going on in the Trump administration. And finally, I realized that my secret hope that he would actually prove me wrong in my original dislike of him became less and less likely to ever be realized. My first encounter with Donald Trump (not in person, but as a concept) was in a management class I was teaching. One of my students asked me what I thought of Donald Trump'

Free speech

I'm an advocate of free speech. I think that people should be allowed to express their ideas, no matter how much I may disagree with those ideas. I only ask that there be some guidelines to how free speech be allowed to operate. First, I don't think free speech includes body armor, weapons, clubs, helmets, flames, rocks, or other implements. If you can't get your point across with words, then you're not engaging in free speech, you're engaging in coercion. Second, I think that free speech requires dialogue. It is not speech when one side drowns out another side by their sheer numbers. It is not free speech when one side uses their bodies to crowd and intimidate someone who is speaking. Third, I don't believe all ideas are created equal. I don't believe that free speech requires one side to listen to the other side. Forcing someone to have to listen to an opposing argument, simply because "all sides must be heard," is just another form of con

Destroying free speech

I watched with sorrow and outrage when the Taliban destroyed the Buddha of Bamiyan statues in Afghanistan in 2001. I thought that was a heinous and detestable act of religious intolerance, and should never be allowed by anyone on the planet. I again watched in dismay as Isis destroyed historic statues in Hatra simply because their current interpretation of religion defined them as idols worthy of destruction. So how could I watch with equanimity as a mob of anti-racists did the same thing with a stature commemorating a Confederate soldier in Durham, North Carolina? While I oppose the display of Confederate memorials and flags on public lands as much as anyone, I find it hypocritical to support the act of mob destruction in the name of religion in this case when I opposed it in previous cases. There is a way to remove unpopular and unwanted testimonies to things you don't believe in. And that is through a process of law. If you don't like something, sure, you can demonstr