Crown Columns

Regular Columns

Citizen Reporters in China

a columnMon 30 Jul 2007 by David Aikman

Cell phones and Twitter accounts are upsetting the status quo in China.

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When demonstrators turned out by the thousands in Xiamen, Fujian province, on China’s coast opposite Taiwan, police knew they had a different problem from normal. Protests by ordinary Chinese citizens, mostly against land seizures by pushy developers, take place by the score on a daily basis in China. They are a nuisance to the authorities, and worrisome, but they are ordinarily suppressed by large police contingents before things get out of hand.

Xiamen, on June 1 and 2 this year, was different. Not only was the demonstration much larger than usual—by some estimates 8–10,000 people—but also the demonstrators were summoned, essentially, by cell phone text messages and Internet blog sites.

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Another Middle East War?

a columnFri 20 Jul 2007 • Responses: 2 • by David Aikman

Aikman surveys the many tangles of the current situation.

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Most Americans numbed by daily casualty reports coming out of the war in Iraq—the drip-drip-drip of American fatalities and the veritable torrent of deaths of Iraqi civilians murdered as they shop for groceries—probably just wish the Middle East as a whole would disappear.

Unfortunately for weary Americans, it won’t. The most war-prone region on the planet won’t go anywhere just yet, and there is a strong probability that, before the end of this year, it may have exploded yet again into a cross-border conflagration.

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Meet Mr. Adamov

a columnFri 13 Jul 2007 • Responses: 1 • by David Aikman

The Bush-Putin meeting brings back memories of Putin’s earlier career.

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At the beginning of July, Russian President Vladimir Putin met with President Bush in the Bush family summer retreat at Kennebunkport, Maine. It could turn out to be one of the most crucial meetings in Russian-US relations since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

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Hold that Ad

a columnTue 10 Jul 2007 • Responses: 1 • by David Aikman

Perhaps China has been too successful at censorship.

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It was some eighteen years ago that the world was trying to absorb what had taken place in China’s Tiananmen Square in Beijing on the night of June 3–4, 1989. Six weeks of sometimes chaotic, always spontaneous, and invariably exhilarating demonstrations had taken place in Tiananmen Square, after the death of Hu Yaobang, a Chinese leader associated with reform, on April 15.

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Accounting for Tenet

a columnWed 20 Jun 2007 • Responses: 2 • by David Aikman

David Aikman looks at the actions and explanations of former US Director of National Intelligence George Tenet.

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Washington insiders have seen it happen so often that they roll their eyes every time it takes place. A national policy is deemed to have been a failure and an individual deeply involved with it resigns or is fired by the administration in office at the time. Then he attempts to redeem his reputation (and finances) by accepting a huge advance from a publisher for a tell-all book and by appearing on TV shows defending his reputation.

By saying this is what has happened with former CIA director George Tenet in the case of the publication of his book, At the Center of the Storm (advance $4 million), is not intended to depict the man as a scoundrel. 

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Six Days and Forty Years

a columnMon 11 Jun 2007 • Responses: 2 • by David Aikman

David Aikman looks back on the Six Days War and its unexpected outcomes.

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The Six-Day War of 1967 was one of the most startling military victories in history. In the course of six days, from June 5 through June 11, the Israeli Defense Forces essentially wiped out on the ground the air force of Egypt, crippled for years the air forces of Jordan and Syria, and triumphed over the armies of those three Arab states deployed against Israel.

More significantly, after just a few days’ fighting, Israel found itself in military control over 1.2 million Arabs in the West Bank (part of British Mandate Palestine and annexed by Jordan in 1950) and Gaza (before 1967 under the control of Egypt). Arabs killed, wounded, and imprisoned were in the scores of thousands; Israeli casualties were listed at the almost mythical level of 777 (which seems small but is a higher proportion of the 1967 Israeli population than all the 57,000 Americans killed during the Vietnam War).

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The Atheist Onslaught

a columnFri 25 May 2007 • Responses: 1 • by David Aikman

David Aikman considers the “new atheists” and new prospects for civility from unexpected sources.

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An interesting publishing and cultural phenomenon has been afoot in the U.S. since the fall of 2006. To a degree unprecedented in recent publishing history, to my knowledge, at least four books by self-described atheists, all of them militantly attacking religious belief, have made it to The New York Times best-seller list and sold hundreds of thousands of copies.

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Virginia Tech Considered

a columnFri 11 May 2007 • Responses: 2 • by David Aikman

David Aikman considers the factors surrounding the massacre and makes a suggestion for workable gun control.

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More than two weeks have passed since the bloodbath on the campus of Virginia Tech University (officially Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University) in Blacksburg on April 16 2007. The President of the U.S., George W. Bush, expressed horror at what happened and the Governor of Virginia, Tim Kaine, returned early from a trip to Japan, declaring in Virginia a state of emergency. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who is, of course, Korean, sent his condolences, as did Pope Benedict XVI. An entire army of counselors descended on the campus from various corners of the U.S., and some of them are still there.

Much of the world press drew predictable conclusions: the Virginia Tech massacre, European newspapers said, would not have happened had it not been so hideously easy to obtain guns in the U.S.; or, the culture that has romanticized gun-ownership and gun-usage played into the hands of a deranged, alienated psychopath. Britain’s Economist tried to straddle the fence with the subhead: “The horror might have happened anyway. But gun control might have made it less easy.”

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Remembering Boris Yeltsin (1931–2007)

a columnWed 25 Apr 2007 by David Aikman

Senior Fellow David Aikman saw a lot of Boris Yeltsin over the years and recalls a flawed and fascinating leader.

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I first met Boris Yeltsin in Moscow in February 1989, when he was still Deputy Minister for the construction industry, a job to which Mikhail Gorbachev had sent him after Yeltin’s dramatic resignation from the Politburo in October 1987 and ouster from the Moscow Party leadership the following month. I was interviewing him for Time Magazine not only because he had already emerged from the gray tapestry of Soviet politics as an outspoken critic of corruption and stagnation within the Soviet bureaucracy, but also because the following month he was going to run as the at-large candidate for the seat representing Moscow’s eight million citizens.

As he spoke during the interview about his adventurous youth and early manhood, losing two fingers in right hand after trying to dissect a Soviet hand-grenade and later traveling like a hobo across the Soviet Union by train, it was obvious he was quite different from the colorless apparatchiks who usually occupied seats on the Soviet Politburo. He joked, he loved tennis, he enjoyed being asked personal questions. It was obvious to me then that he was a quite exceptional Soviet figure: lively, eccentric, and spontaneous. 

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Okaying the Bible

a columnTue 17 Apr 2007 by David Aikman

Musings

A cultural milestone of sorts has been passed recently. The cover story in the April 2, 2007 edition of Time Magazine is titled “Why We Should Teach the Bible in Public School.

There are several reasons why this is significant. First, a national publication of centrist-to-liberal politics has endorsed a project hitherto associated with the agenda of conservative Christians, albeit for a different set of reasons from theirs. Second, this is the first evidence that the center of American public opinion is looking beyond Left-Right culture wars towards a possible consensus on issues often at the center of those wars. Third, there is a recognition that American cultural literacy, held to be in a state of decline for years, can’t really be recovered in any meaningful way while ignoring the core documents of Western civilization that posit a belief in the transcendent.

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Never despair; but if you do, work on in despair.

Edmund Burke

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Featured Resource

Cover image via AmazonOrthodoxy: The Romance of Faith by G. K. Chesterton.

On its 100th anniversary, this book is just as helpful and provocative as ever.

Gleanings Quick Links

Orthodoxy: Georgetown’s Father Schall reviews G. K. Chesterton’s Orthodoxy on its 100 year anniversary. “In coming to believe in Christianity, Chesterton, as he tells us, did not read a single Christian book in the process. Rather, he read book after book of those who maintained that Christianity could not possibly be true. After he had read many of these tractates, he suddenly realized that the intellectual opponents of Christianity were constantly contradicting themselves about what they were opposing. Chesterton, the most logical of men, figured that anything so odd as to be opposed for the exact opposite reasons must either be quite strange or, in fact, rather normal and true.” A helpful introduction to a lovely book. (James V. Schall, SJ, InsideCatholic.com , 2008 05 05)

Where Were Obama’s Friends?: Friendship under fire: “As for the supersized candidates, what strikes one most about them is their ‘aloneness.’ They look so solitary. Indeed, it is possible that the old and honorable notion of ‘standing with’ a candidate like Obama simply didn’t occur to his famous supporters this week. Everyone has become used to watching celebrity stars and athletes take it in the neck on their own. Even someone running for the nation’s presidency looks like just another personal crack-up.” Makes one pause.  (Daniel Henninger, The Wall Street Journal , 2008 05 01)

There’s no way you’re going to convince me: Catholic professor Scott Carson covers the current debates on evil between N T Wright and Bart Ehrman on Beliefnet: “[H]aving had a look at this most recent exchange I have to say that it continues to astound me how simplistic and thoughtless the popular treatment of the problem has become. . . . It’s as if generations of sophisticated and complex theological and philosophical argument amount to nothing when compared to the emotional attitudes of a single individual living in a highly particularized time and place. . . . Just as atheists and agnostics are often—perhaps way too often—tempted to assume that believers only believe for emotional or psychological reasons, so too, it seems rather obvious to me, every non-believer almost certainly has emotional and psychological reasons for not believing that will trump any and every legitimate argument posed against them.” (extensive links from the article to the primary sources) (An Examined Life , 2008 04 27)

The Way We Weren’t: “The fifties really were a time when the culture broadly affirmed Christianity as a Good Thing. I was there. I saw it; I heard it. And yet some kind of demurral is strongly indicated: some sign of recognition that no human society, whatever its good intentions and methods, has lived unburdened, unencumbered by the crushing weight of human fallenness. Good as life may appear to have been in the cities and universities of France and Italy in the thirteenth century, or amid the sweaty fervor of the camp meetings in nineteenth-century America, or among the fierce faith of the emancipators, always human pride and general nuttiness were there to spoil the broth.” (William Murchison, in Touchstone , 2008 04 23)

Not on Sale (2008 04 14)
Seven New Deadly Sins, Suitably Updated (2008 04 10)
The Pope Comes to America (2008 04 09)
Both Read the Same Bible (2008 04 09)
Muslims Outnumber World’s Catholics (2008 03 31)

more . . .