Victor Davis Hanson on Spain, Europe, America and the Middle East

FrontpagMag.com interviews the always insightful Victor Davis Hanson regarding the recent events in Spain and the Middle East, and how Americans and Europeans have reacted to them. Thanks to Occam’s Toothbrush for the link. The entire interview is a must read, but one sentence about what could defeat America stands out:

I am talking about a secular religion of anti-Americanism brought on by our very success that allows such utopianism and cheap caring-and it does weaken and tire our efforts to win this war.

How low will Royal Dutch/Shell go?

In this stunning announcement, Royal Dutch/Shell today downgraded 250 million barrels in reserves to less certain reserve categories and decided not to book 220 million barrels that it had earlier classified as reserves. Although small in comparison to Royal Dutch/Shell’s earlier writedown, the timing of this latest reserve writedown is certain to increase scrutiny of the company’s management practices.
As noted here and here, Royal Dutch/Shell is already the subject of Justice Department and SEC investigations regarding its earlier reserve writedown.

Who is Ken Venturi?

This post from awhile back addressed the dust-up that has occurred between Arnold Palmer and Ken Venturi over Venturi’s recent allegation in his new book that Arnie had broken a rule (might we say, cheated?) on the 12th hole of Augusta National on his way to beating Venturi to win his first Masters Golf Tournament in 1958.
Well, Arnie’s Tour event — the Bay Hill Invitational — is this week. And, as you might expect, a reporter asked Arnie during his annual pre-tournament interview about Venturi’s allegations. The King’s response was classic:

Reporter: “Mr. Palmer, what is your reaction to the issue at Augusta raised in Ken Venturi’s new book?”
The King: “I don’t know what book you’re talking about. I don’t know a thing about it. I really don’t, and I’m not really too interested. That’s my comment. Next question.”

Justice Scalia refuses to recuse himself

Here is Justice Scalia’s opinion refusing to recuse himself in the Supreme Court case involving his hunting buddy, Vice-President Cheney. Here is the Sierra Club’s motion to recuse that prompted Justice Scalia’s opinion.

The poor health of Russians

Tyler Cowan over at Marginal Revolutions has this interesting post about the Russian health care system, which has been in the news because of recent reports regarding the decreasing life expectancy of Russian men. Tyler’s post contains several good links and solid analysis of the reasons for this crisis in Russian health care.

Smart View at Yahoo Maps

Tom Mighell over at Inter Alia notes the new feature on Yahoo Maps that provides information on area businesses such as restaurants for any address that you plug into the map building service. A very nice feature.

ChevronTexaco: Enough already

Clearly worn down by the prospect of dealing further with the Harris County Commissioner’s Court, ChevronTexaco announced yesterday that it had closed the deal to buy the former Enron Building in downtown Houston. In light of the County’s recalcitrance, I suspect that the seller threw come additional consideration to ChevronTexaco to get the deal done.
As noted in this earlier post on the matter, this closing frees Harris County taxpayers from having to deal with Commissioner Steve Radack’s delusions about having the County buy the building.

Medicare prescription drug controversy intensifies

The Bush Admininistration’s conduct in promoting the Medicare prescription drug legislation last year is coming under increasing scrutiny. Already of dubious financial merit, this NY Times article reports on the opening of a House inquiry into bribery allegations that are based on a Republican congressman’s public comments made immediately following the close vote last year over the controversial bill.
In related news, this WSJ ($) article and this NY Times article report on the controversy swirling around Richard Foster, Medicare’s chief actuary. Mr. Foster was warned last year that he could be accused of “insubordination” if he shared information with Congress about the White House-backed prescription-drug bill without the approval of his politically appointed superiors, according to e-mails from the top aide to Thomas Scully, who was then the Bush Administration’s administrator for the health-care program. A WSJ copy of the email can be reviewed here. The gist of the story is that Mr. Foster was pressured to reduce the estimated ten year cost of the Medicare prescription drug program by about 30% in order to make it more politically palatable. While Republican leaders say the allegations are overblown, no one doubts that release of the higher cost estimates last fall would have probably killed the prescription drug bill, which only passed by one vote after hours of arm-twisting in the House in November.
Again, my sense is that the Bush Administration’s handling of health care finance issues is a major, and largely underappreciated (at least by administration officials), political problem for the administration in the upcoming election.

UAL bankruptcy – Will it ever end?

This NY Times article and this WSJ ($) article report on the postponement of confirmation and consummation of United Airlines‘ reorganization plan in its long pending chapter 11 case. UAL has been operating under chapter 11 since December, 2002, and it’s exit financing and debtor-in-possession financing commitments expire on June 30. Although UAL is probably too big for its institutional creditors simply to give up on it, this is clearly a business that is in trouble, and no sure bet to make it even after emerging from chapter 11.
A related NY Times story reports on the daunting problems confronting UAL competitor, American Airlines.

Shelby Steele on gay marriage

Hoover Institute fellow Shelby Steele writes this Wall Street Journal op-ed in which he criticizes the notion that the gay marriage is a civil rights issue analogous to that of the struggle to end racial segregation in America. Mr. Steele, who favors civil unions for gay couples, nevertheless does not favor gay marriage. The entire op-ed is well worth reading, and here are a few of Mr. Steele’s poignant observations:

But gay marriage is simply not a civil rights issue. It is not a struggle for freedom. It is a struggle of already free people for complete social acceptance and the sense of normalcy that follows thereof — a struggle for the eradication of the homosexual stigma. Marriage is a goal because, once open to gays, it would establish the fundamental innocuousness of homosexuality itself. Marriage can say like nothing else that sexual orientation is an utterly neutral human characteristic, like eye-color. Thus, it can go far in diffusing the homosexual stigma.
In the gay marriage movement, marriage is more a means than an end, a weapon against stigma. That the movement talks very little about the actual institution of marriage suggests that it is driven more by this longing to normalize homosexuality itself than by something compelling in marriage. . .
But marriage is only one means to innocuousness. The civil rights framework is another. To say that gay marriage is a civil rights issue is to imply that homosexuality is the same sort of human difference as race. And even geneticists now accept that race is so superficial a human difference as to be nothing more than a “social construct.” In other words, racial difference has been made officially innocuous in our culture, and its power to stigmatize has been greatly reduced. Evidence of this is seen in the steady, yet unremarked, rise in interracial marriage rates for all of our races. So if gay marriage, like race, is about civil rights, then homosexuality is a human difference every bit as innocuous. Thus, America should treat homosexuality like it treats race and give gays the “right” to marry as it once gave blacks the right to vote.
* * *
The civil rights movement argued that it was precisely the utter innocuousness of racial difference that made segregation an injustice. Racism was evil because it projected a profound difference where there was none — white supremacy, black inferiority — for the sole purpose of exploiting blacks. But there is a profound difference between homosexuality and heterosexuality. In the former, sexual and romantic desire is focused on the same sex, in the latter on the opposite sex. Natural procreation is possible only for heterosexuals, a fact of nature that obligates their sexuality to no less a responsibility than the perpetuation of the species. Unlike racial difference, these two sexual orientations are profoundly — not innocuously — different. Racism projects a false difference in order to exploit. Homophobia is a reactive prejudice against a true and firm difference that already exists.
Institutions that arise to accommodate these two sexual orientations can never be exactly the same. Across time and cultures, marriage has been a heterosexual institution grounded in the procreative function and the responsibilities of parenthood — this more than in either love or adult fulfillment. Marriage is simply the arrangement by which humans perpetuate the species, whether or not they find fulfillment in it.
The true problem with gay marriage is that it consigns gays to a life of mimicry and pathos. It shoehorns them into an institution that does not reflect the best possibilities of their own sexual orientation. Gay love is freed from the procreative burden. It has no natural function beyond adult fulfillment in love. If this is a disadvantage when children are desired, it is likely an advantage when they are not — which is more often the case. In any case, gays can never be more than pretenders to an institution so utterly grounded in procreation. And dressing gay marriage in a suit of civil rights only consigns gays to yet another kind of mimicry. Stigma, not segregation, is the problem gays face. But insisting on a civil rights framework only leads gays into protest. But will protest affect stigma? Is “gay lovers as niggers” convincing? Protest is trying to hit the baseball with the glove.
The problem with so much mimicry is that it keeps gays from evolving institutions and rituals that reflect the true nature of homosexuality. Assuming, as I do, that gays should have the option of civil unions that afford them the legal prerogatives of marriage, isn’t it more important after that to allow quiet self-acceptance to lead the way to authentic institutions?
The stigmatization of homosexuals is wrong and makes no contribution to the moral health of our society. I was never worried for my children because they grew up knowing a gay couple that lived across the street, or because several family friends were gay. They learned early what we all know: that homosexuality is as permanent a feature of the human condition as heterosexuality. Nothing is gained in denying this. But neither should we deny that the two are inherently different. The gay marriage movement denies this difference in order to borrow “normalcy” from marriage. Thus, it is a movement born more of self-denial than self-acceptance, as if on some level it agrees with those who see gays as abnormal.

Meanwhile, in this Atlantic Monthly piece, Jonathon Rauch argues that principles of American federalism call for the gay marriage issue to be determined on a state-by-state basis.