Posts in "Antiwar.com"

Rachel Kania's picture
By Rachel Kania at 6:27PM

Antiwar.com on Young Americans for Liberty

Antiwar.com reports on Obama's next step in Afghanistan. To close the article gives hope by stating...

The premier libertarian youth organization, Young Americans for Liberty (YAL), is the fastest-growing political group on campus, these days, and no task would suit them better than assuming the leadership of the moribund, leftist-dominated antiwar movement. As Obama’s zombie-like cult follows him down the road to war – a war on a scale the much-reviled Bush administration never dared attempt – YAL can fill the vacuum, swell its own ranks, and, more importantly, dramatize the moral and political bankruptcy of the current administration, while drawing a clear and very dramatic line of demarcation between libertarians and Sean Hannity-type conservatives..

Read more below the jump.


Read more here
Bonnie Kristian's picture
By Bonnie Kristian at 1:18PM

War elevates the state, so of course the state supports war.

image

On Tuesday, as you have all no doubt heard, the GOP made something of a comeback with gubernatorial wins in New Jersey and Virginia.  However, experience shows that where many issues are concerned, which party is in power makes no difference:  it's going to suck either way.  Foreign policy seems to be one of those issues.  Justin Raimondo of AntiWar.com writes:

Why is it that the War Party invariably wins? Although the majority of Americans are rebelling against the idea that the US must endlessly police the world, and are souring on the crusade to "liberate" Afghanistan, how is it that the only voices heard on the national political scene are those in favor of intervention?

Why, indeed?  Perhaps the simplest answer comes from Randolph Bourne (though don't forget to finish the rest of Raimondo's piece on the disenfranchisement of antiwar voters at the bloody hands of both major parties): "War is the health of the state."  That's the famous quote, which most YAL readers have probably heard before, but Bourne continues:

War is the health of the State. It automatically sets in motion throughout society those irresistible forces for uniformity, for passionate cooperation with the Government in coercing into obedience the minority groups and individuals which lack the larger herd sense. The machinery of government sets and enforces the drastic penalties; ....in general, the nation in wartime attains a uniformity of feeling, a hierarchy of values culminating at the undisputed apex of the State ideal, which could not possibly be produced through any other agency than war. Loyalty - or mystic devotion to the State - becomes the major imagined human value....

The rulers soon learn to capitalize the reverence which the State produces in the majority, and turn it into a general resistance toward a lessening of their privileges. The sanctity of the State becomes identified with the sanctity of the ruling class, and the latter are permitted to remain in power under the impression that in obeying and serving them, we are obeying and serving society, the nation, the great collectivity of all of us....

Elliot Engstrom's picture
By Elliot Engstrom at 1:37PM

US Airstrike Kills 10 Civilians

According to a June 11 article from AntiWar.com, 10 civilians are dead from an American air strike in Afghanistan's Ghor province.
Read more here
Zaid Abuhouran's picture
By Zaid Abuhouran at 2:08AM
contributor's picture
By contributor at 9:08PM

The Case of the Wrong Teleprompter, Continued

Taking a page from the Bush Administration's foreign policy book, Obama asked Congress last night in a letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for $83.4 billion in "supplemental" spending to cover fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan for the remainder of this year.
Read more here
Bonnie Kristian's picture
By Bonnie Kristian at 4:42PM

What will the war propaganda be next?

Jeff Huber's article on AntiWar.com addresses the possible excuses which might be given for the new tactics in Afghanistan:
The aspect of the new [strategy in Afghanistan] I find hardest to believe is that none of the goals involve keeping the Islamofabulists from getting control of Pakistan’s nukes or the oil pipeline that runs through Afghanistan.

Read more here
Bonnie Kristian's picture
By Bonnie Kristian at 3:47AM

Flawed Foreign Policy

In a brief article on AntiWar.com today, Ron Paul argues that a draft or mandatory service requirement is not inconceivable in the United States today, but ought to be out of the question in a free society.  Moreover, he continues, any apparent "need" for a draft is all too often created by none other than flawed foreign policy:
I am convinced that there are more threats to American liberty within the 10-mile radius of my office on Capitol Hill than there are on the rest of the globe.

Read more here
Bonnie Kristian's picture
By Bonnie Kristian at 12:27AM

False Dawn

Justin Raimondo's piece on AntiWar.com yesterday discusses the likelihood of real foreign policy change resulting from the new administration and finds it anemic at best.  Despite Obama's peaceful campaign promises, Raimondo writes, "the idea that Obama is going to get us out of Iraq at all, never mind in 16 months, is going to die a hard death, but die it will – unless, of course, the antiwar movement, so-called, gets up off its fat ass and starts making demands of the candidate so many of them supported." On the contrary, Obama has come off as unfri
Read more here
Bonnie Kristian's picture
By Bonnie Kristian at 12:36AM

New Year's Predictions

Antiwar.com columnist Justin Raimondo lays out a series of predictions for the new year, including hyperinflation, Keynesianism, and war in Taki's Magazine titled Save Your Candles—the Dark Ages Are Coming! "All in all," he concludes, "the prospects for liberty, and peace, in 2009, might be charitably described as dim, although bleak seems more precise."  Read more, or get involved with a Real Change Requires R3v
Read more here