Die Another Day
Kim Jong-il, North Korea's maximum leader, is a big movie buff. He has a huge collection at his residence and has been known to stay up half the night watching Hollywood classics like Scarface and The Godfather. My half-baked theory regarding North Korea's ridiculous behavior of late is that Kim saw "Die Another Day," the new James Bond movie, and decided that he had somehow been slandered. I think he thinks that we think he killed his father. And that the Bush Administration had this slander inserted into the movie's plot line.
Tuesday, January 14, 2003
Posted by
John
at
1/14/2003 08:13:00 AM
MI5
Stuart Taylor has a good column on reconfiguring US counter-terrorism efforts. You can read it by clicking here.
Posted by
John
at
1/14/2003 08:01:00 AM
Monday, January 13, 2003
A Better Job
Walter Isaacson is leaving CNN to become the head of the Aspen Institute. His letter to colleagues at CNN explains why. Isaacson's departure is a huge loss for AOL Time Warner.
Posted by
John
at
1/13/2003 08:51:00 PM
That Kennedy Quote
A number of readers have written to say that they thought I took Charles Pearce's quote about Senator Edward Kennedy out of context. Since I included a link to Mr. Pearce's Sunday Globe magazine piece with the quote, I felt that that was all the context one could possibly need. But assuming that some people read the quote, but not the piece, what follows is a letter from a colleague of Mr. Pearce's:
Mr. Ellis:
I write in defense of my good friend and colleague Charlie Pierce, who wrote the cover story on Ted Kennedy from which you lifted the quote about Mary Jo Kopechne. As soon as I saw the byline on the article, I knew Charlie couldn't have said that with a straight face, and a quick reading of the article shows I was right. Here's the context... Charlie is riffing on a line used against Teddy Kennedy in his first campaign, that if his name was Edward Moore, his candidacy would have been a joke:
"And what of the dead woman? On July 18, 1969, on the weekend that man first walked on the moon, a 28-year-old named Mary Jo Kopechne drowned in his automobile. Plutocrats' justice and an implausible (but effective) coverup ensued. And, ever since, she's always been there: during Watergate, when Barry Goldwater told Kennedy that even Richard Nixon didn't need lectures from him; in 1980, when his presidential campaign was shot down virtually at its launch; during the hearings into the confirmation of Clarence Thomas, when Kennedy's transgressions gagged him and made him the butt of all the jokes.
"She's always there. Even if she doesn't fit in the narrative line, she is so much of the dark energy behind it. She denies to him forever the moral credibility that lay behind not merely all those rhetorical thunderclaps that came so easily in the New Frontier but also Robert Kennedy's anguished appeals to the country's better angels. He was forced from the rhetoric of moral outrage and into the incremental nitty-gritty of social justice. He learned to plod, because soaring made him look ridiculous. "It's really 3 yards and a cloud of dust with him," says his son Patrick. And if his name were Edward Moore, he would have done time.
-snip-
And that's the key. That's how you survive what he's survived. That's how you move forward, one step after another, even though your name is Edward Moore Kennedy. You work, always, as though your name were Edward Moore. If she had lived, Mary Jo Kopechne would be 62 years old. Through his tireless work as a legislator, Edward Kennedy would have brought comfort to her in her old age."
It's part of the thesis of his article, that Kennedy has tried to bury his many disgraces through substantive, if small, achievements. That's arguable, but it's far more serious than your selective quoting suggests.
Best,
Peter
Posted by
John
at
1/13/2003 08:36:00 PM
Day Twelve: 229 pounds
It might have been 227.5, but some Brigham's Chocolate Ice Cream somehow found its way.....
Posted by
John
at
1/13/2003 10:05:00 AM
J. Lo!
One of the weird things about living in New York is the city's obsession with Jennifer Lopez. There's a funny piece about this in The New York Observer, which is worth a look.
Posted by
John
at
1/13/2003 06:06:00 AM
Sunday, January 12, 2003
31 Under Par
Without Tiger on the scene, Ernie Els would be Tiger; the dominant player in the game. He laid down a marker at the Mercedes Championship this weekend. It's too bad we can't fast-forward the tape to Augusta right now.
Posted by
John
at
1/12/2003 10:51:00 PM
Out
Steve Case is out as chairman of AOL. Supposedly, this means that AOL itself will be sold or spun off and that the ABC-CNN merger will now move to the front-burner. The former is probably true. The latter remains problematic, to say the least.
Posted by
John
at
1/12/2003 09:44:00 PM
Edsall on Democratic Money Woes
How is it that Tom Edsall owns the ongoing story of the Democratic Party's fund-raising woes? Is no one else interested? Does no one else understand the implications? Edsall has another solid report today.
Posted by
John
at
1/12/2003 12:18:00 PM
Baker on North Korea
Former Secretary of State James Baker has a smart piece in today's Los Angeles Times on what the US must do to face down North Korean blackmail. I found the piece at what has become the best political "infomediary" on the web, Real Clear Politics.
Posted by
John
at
1/12/2003 11:56:00 AM
