Sometime this summer, Daniel Larison's Eunomia  blog kicked into overdrive. If you graphed all the foreign policy and political  philosophy oriented blogs with quantity on the horizontal axis and quality on  the vertical axis, Eunomia would be in the extreme upper right corner.
Larison is a Ph.D. student in Byzantine History at the University of Chicago and  he knows an enormous amount about West Asia, which, as you may have noticed, is  in the news a lot these days, and, as you may also have noticed, is not at all  well understood by most commentators.
Beyond sheer knowledge, Larison (who is, I believe, a convert to the Greek  Orthodox church) possesses an old man's wisdom rare in someone young enough to  have that much energy.
Contrast him with David Brooks of the NYT, who recently opined:
Since  9/11, the U.S. has had little success in influencing distant groups. Americans  blew the postwar administration of Iraq because they assumed they were  liberating a nation sort of like their own. And yet I can’t seem to renounce  my own group, which is America. It would feel like cultural suicide to repress  the central truths of my society, that all human beings are endowed with  inalienable rights and democracy is the most just and effective form of  government.
The hard lesson of the last five years — that we live in a jagged world filled  with starkly different and contesting groups — makes democracy promotion more  difficult but more necessary. Only democratic habits will prevent the inevitable  clash of the tribes from turning into a war of nuclear annihilation.
(As I've warned before,  neocon thought patterns have a certain logic to them that is slowly propelling  them -- against their conscious will -- toward eventually advocating that  America commit the greatest crime in human history: the nuclear genocide of the  Muslim peoples.)
Larison deftly skewers  Brooks by paraphrasing Inigo  Montoya in The Princess Bride:
Brooks has made a curious maneuver, wrapping up the effort to spread universalist propositions in supposed loyalty to his “group,” his tribe, which he has defined in the most non-specific and un-tribal way possible. It is as if he has declared a blood debt against Iraq on behalf of the proposition nation: “Hello, my name is David Brooks. You killed my proposition, prepare to die.”
I doubt that Larison, or anybody made of flesh and blood, can keep up his output of this summer, but you should check out Eunomia regularly.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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