Month: July 2020

WSJ: Bonfire Of The Left

Now that the purge of conservatives from America’s intellectual institutions is almost complete, new enemies are needed, and it’s no surprise that the left is descending into mutual back-stabbing.

America’s liberal intelligentsia thought the election of Donald Trump meant America would re-enact “1984,” but it’s starting to look more like “Homage to Catalonia,” George Orwell’s account of the left’s internecine savagery during the Spanish Civil War. Witness the spectacular online meltdown that followed a liberal open letter opposing left-wing attacks on free speech.

“A Letter on Justice and Open Debate,” published Tuesday by Harper’s, opens with anti-Trump throat-clearing. It then accurately describes the ferocious campaign of coerced conformity sweeping America’s liberal institutions as they purge dissent from the hard-left line. “Editors are fired for running controversial pieces; books are withdrawn for alleged inauthenticity; journalists are barred from writing on certain topics; professors are investigated for quoting works of literature in class,” says the statement signed by more than 150 writers and academics.

The online left, which can’t decide whether left-wing censorship is a myth invented by its enemies or a necessary tactic for destroying them, erupted at the betrayal. It wasn’t long before the renunciations began. Jennifer Finney Boylan, a frequent New York Timescontributor who had signed the letter, pleaded for forgiveness on Twitter. She had not realized that not all the signatories were of the caliber of the socialist intellectual Noam Chomsky, she wrote. “The consequences,” she added, “are mine to bear. I am so sorry.”

A Tufts University historian, Kerri Greenidge, tweeted that she did “not endorse” the counterrevolutionary document (without denying having signed it) and asked that her name be removed. Others may yet face consequences. Matt Yglesias, a co-founder of the millennial progressive website Vox, was among the signatories. One of his colleagues wrote in an open letter to the publication’s editors that because the Harper’s letter was signed by “several prominent anti-trans voices” Mr. Yglesias’s signature “makes me feel less safe at Vox.”

Tom Wolfe couldn’t have devised a more pungent satire of mutual recriminations among liberal elites. There is a significant layer of hypocrisy here; many free-speech liberals tolerate left-wing mobs when their furies are aimed at conservatives. But now that the purge of conservatives from America’s flagship intellectual institutions is almost complete, new enemies are needed, and it’s no surprise that the left is descending into mutual back-stabbing.

Our hope is that the moderate elements can fend off the woke attack. Society benefits when both its left and right coalitions accept basic free-speech principles. Yet if the intolerance turns out to be self-perpetuating and unstoppable, we have a humble suggestion for any remaining signatories of the Harper’s letter: Consider a political belief system that is not premised on the transformation of society, that is built on the sanctity of traditional rights, and that abhors the certainty of revolutionary vanguards.

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July 9, 2020 at 05:21AM

The First Green Energy War?

Egypt threatens war as Ethiopia prepares to fill its new dam

The Grand Renaissance Dam, decades in the planning and costing £4 billion, is finally nearing completion ZACHARIAS ABUBEKER/BLOOMBERG

If their argument were only over water, the dispute that is threatening to throw Egyptian jets against Ethiopian concrete might be easily resolved.

But in the coming weeks, when Ethiopia starts filling the reservoir behind its Grand Renaissance Dam, the biggest in Africa and half a century in the making, it will touch nerves deeper even than the River Nile, the lifeblood of both countries.

On the one hand the project promises to connect millions of Ethiopians to the electricity grid for the first time, and embodies a defining national endeavour. The dam is an expression of the country’s evolution from a symbol of famine and war to Africa’s burgeoning economic powerhouse.

On the other is Egypt’s millennia-old claim to dominance in northern Africa, founded since the times of the pharaohs on control of a river with which its historic greatness has long been regarded as synonymous. More than 90 per cent of Egypt’s population of 100 million live along the Nile or in its vast delta, many of them farmers who rely on its waters for their livelihood.

Egypt says it regards the damming of the 4,100-mile river upstream as an existential threat. It fears its water supplies will be depleted, in part through evaporation from the reservoir, but in particular is demanding a binding legal agreement on how Ethiopia operates the dam, to prevent it simply turning off the flow in any future dispute. […]

President Sisi, 65, spoke more plainly during a recent visit to an airbase when he told Egypt’s pilots to “be prepared to carry out any mission on our borders or, if necessary, outside our borders”.

At the height of the sabre-rattling, even Abiy Ahmed, Ethiopia’s Nobel peace prize-winning prime minister, warned: “No force can stop Ethiopia from building a dam. If there is need to go to war, we could get millions readied.”

If war does come, it could be a one-sided affair: Egypt’s military spend last year was $11.2 billion; Ethiopia’s was a fraction of that, at $350 million.

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July 9, 2020 at 05:07AM

Thursday Open Thread

Rating: 10.0/10 (1 vote cast)

Rating: 10.0/10 (1 vote cast)

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July 9, 2020 at 04:52AM

New Study finds no evidence of a ‘signal of human-caused climate change’ from weather extremes

By Paul Homewood

 

Roger Pielke Jr brings news of the imminent publication of his latest paper:

 

 

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https://twitter.com/RogerPielkeJr/status/1280576376836206592

 

 

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Pielke has written many papers over the years, which have come to similar conclusions. What is significant about this one is that he has reviewed studies by other authors.

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July 9, 2020 at 04:24AM