Category Archives: Politics

The Depressive and the Psychopath
At last we know why the Columbine killers did it

columbine-pic.jpg

Slate magazine publishes author Dave Cullen’s fascinating portrait of Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, who murdered 12 classmates and a teacher before committing suicide at Columbine High School, five years ago today. “At last,” writes Cullen, “we know why the Columbine killers did it.”

Harris and Klebold would have been dismayed that Columbine was dubbed the “worst school shooting in American history.” They set their sights on eclipsing the world’s greatest mass murderers, but the media never saw past the choice of venue. The school setting drove analysis in the wrong direction.

Employing the work of University of British Columbia psychology professor Robert Hare — who was consulted by the FBI about Columbine, as well as by Cullen for his Slate story — Harris was deemed to be a psychopath. “Unlike psychotic individuals, psychopaths are rational and aware of what they are doing and why,” writes Hare. Diagnosing Harris as a psychopath was not a simple matter. But once the diagnosis was made, new light was shed on the thought process that drove him to mass murder.
You can read more over at Cullen’s blog, Conclusive Evidence.

Fables of the Reconstruction: Bad Days Ahead in Iraq


BUSHUSSABRAHAMLINCOLN


At hearings being held in Washington D.C. today and Wednesday, the Senate and House armed services committees are being provided information about current Iraq operations from U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Richard Myers and State Department Undersecretary Marc Grossman. During one of the worst months of the yearlong campaign in Iraq, members of Congress are finding themselves with more questions and fewer answers.
With the rising death toll and increasing fear that the U.S. lacks an effective plan for success in Iraq, lawmakers intend to address the question of how America got into the dangerous predicament in Iraq, and how it will get out.
Meanwhile (with thanks to Debra Galant for pointing us towards this story), published in a scores of newspapers belonging to the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies (including The Boston Phoenix, The Village Voice and Seattle Weekly), investigative reporter Jason Vest’s story on Iraq, Fables of the Reconstruction, reports on a Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) memo written in early March which reveals that even those who support the current U.S. role in Iraq believe that the conditions are present which will sew the seeds of a coming civil war in the occupation of Iraq.
The memo describes corruption within the Iraqi Governing Council, resentments about the centralization of power in Baghdad, insufficient security in the Green Zone where CPA officials stay, and black-market sales of U.S.-supplied weapons by Iraqi police. As a CPA official writes, “Baghdadis have an uneasy sense that they are heading towards civil war.”

Mike’s Message: A Heads Up From Michael Moore


MICHAELMOORE


Michael Moore turns his camera to
the controversial relationship between
the Bush and bin Laden families

Following his celebrated Oscar win for Best Documentary for Bowling for Columbine, his brilliant cinematic essay on guns and violence in American society, filmmaker and political activist Michael Moore has been hunkered down in recent months putting the final touches on his new film, Fahrenheit 911.
Fahrenheit 911 – The Temperature at Which Freedom Burns investigates “the murky relationship” between former President George Bush and the family of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden whose family, the film suggests, has profited greatly from the association.
Involved in post-production, in recent weeks Moore has been all but incommunicado. Until this past Wednesday, that is.
Following Bushies’ rambling, awkward press conference this past week, Moore felt he had to respond, beginning his essay with “Friends: I have never seen a head so far up a Presidential ass (pardon my Falluja) than the one I saw last night at the ‘news conference’ given by George W. Bush”.

Moving Image: A Photo Mosaic of Soldiers Who Have Died in Iraq


BUSH-MOSAIC-OF-SOLDIERS



Making the rounds on the Internet, the photo mosaic above is composed of the photos of the American service men and women who have died in Iraq. If you click on the photo, you can see every face.
Created by Joe Broadhurst at the American Leftist weblog, as the original creator had maxed out of bandwidth, the photo is mirrored at several other sites, including that of Dan Shannon at !blog, who writes,

My eyes burn a little as I think about this. Some of these men stare into the camera with a smile, some with determination, some with fear or sadness at being taken from their families to fight a barely-justified war halfway across the world. They all have one thing in common: they’re not coming back.
There are 610 of them now. 610 brothers and sisters, fathers and mothers, sons and daughters. They died in a war for oil and empire. I hope that President Bush sees this picture sometime.

Mr. Broadhurst has titled the image above, “The War President”.