Monday, December 18, 2006

Jokers Wild

Guy Raz offers us this about Rumsfeld's replacement, Robert Gates. According to Raz, "He’s a pretty well known figure here in Washington…he’s basically been described by colleagues I’ve spoken to as a technocrat, highly competent manager, somebody who’s not necessarily ideological…" Raz needs to learn to interview some people besides Washington insiders because there are those who think that Gates is less than "highly competent" and is ideological.

Then in response to Renee Montagne, who says, “when it comes to Iraq…the talk is about a possible surge in troops," Raz responds, "…you know you can think of it as sort of doubling down your bet or sort of one last push to see if a temporary increase in troops you know in hot spots like Baghdad and al-Anbar could reduce a good deal of the violence..."

Nothing at all about how a surge in troops is utterly contemptuous of the November 7th vote repudiating the war in Iraq. And is there a more crass way to describe sending more troops in to the nightmare of Iraq than as "doubling down your bet?" Lastly, someone needs to tell Raz that neither a capital city of 5-7 million people wracked by sectarian horror, nor a huge province of a country is a "hot spot."

2 comments:

Porter Melmoth said...

Once again, embarrassingly obvious evidence that the amateur hour known as NPR news just isn't ready for prime time. Who the hell is Guy Raz, anyway? Why should we rely on him (or others) as a resource? Why should NPR be considered any sort of reliable clearing house, in order to make sense of what's going on today? Well, because that's what they come off as: one stop shopping for the busy 'thinking person' of today.
There's a good line in the film 'The Insider', when Mike Wallace, played by Christopher Plummer declares, "I don't plan to spend the end of my days wandering in the wilderness of National Public Radio."

Anonymous said...

The government, to include Democrats and Republicans, is overwhelmingly right of the people. Further, the government has no intention of providing any sort of democracy to the people on certain issues, among them Iraq and defense spending. NPR news supports this status quo.

In something related, Democracy Now! today allowed Chomsky an extensive forum. Check it out: http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/12/19/1433244 .

And, yesterday was Howard Zinn: http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/12/18/1326231