OK, I get it: Fashion Week in New York is expected to be exotic and excessive, an uber-chic party for only the few and the very few. Even so, I was a bit taken aback by this unexpected display of privilege.
Continue ReadingThey are symbols, sure, but they also are real tanks having specific designs and manufacturers. And that’s where some of the “missing” information is actually there to be seen.
Continue ReadingUsually I avoid rubbing your face in it, but not today. This image, which has been sitting on my desktop for a few months, is offered out of anger, grief, and extreme frustration with press, public, and the Obama administration--and most of all with the public.
Continue ReadingToday the New York Times reported on a “critical assault” against the Taliban in Afghanistan. There were no photographs in the print edition, and the web version featured only the US commander. I think we can do better. This photograph was taken recently in Kandahar, although not during the...
Continue ReadingBoth this photograph and a second, featuring Hamid Karzai, reveal the same, sad reality: no amount of military force on the periphery can compensate for injustice or corruption at the center of the state.
Continue ReadingThe invasion of Iraq has caused untold suffering in both the US and Iraq, and no amount of economic development and nation building can undo that damage. Nor is this a matter of finally making right. It's about accepting a common history of pain.
Continue ReadingWhen going on vacation this summer, you can be assured that the war will be there when you return. Waiting, stealthily, ready to kill again. This chilling image could well be the face of war in the 21st century. He sits there quietly, comfortably, in no hurry. There is...
Continue Readingthe story that accompanied this photograph in the New York Times is one reason why we will continue to experience large-scale disasters. To see why, we can begin by noting that photo had two captions: One was the small credit off to one side that said "Catastrophe"...
Continue ReadingThis photograph from Kabul, Afghanistan could have been captioned “Return of the Body Snatchers.” Gallows humor is pretty cheap, but it may be as sane a response as any other to another suicide bombing. The attack last week killed 18 people, wounded at least 47 others, and generally made...
Continue ReadingWe can look forward to the day when, according to the Pentagon, Afghanistan will become "'the Saudi Arabia of lithium.'" But that's the future, and the future could turn out otherwise. What is interesting for the moment is how the conversion of Afghanistan into a mineral extraction colony...
Continue ReadingWhitman celebrated democratic athleticism, but we are further down the line now. Whatever the complexity of the world, Americans are turning war into an extreme sport.
Continue ReadingI'm featuring these photos in order to point out not only that nature can't be fooled, but that humans will continue to fool themselves. The sinkhole in Guatemala is not the first in that area, but few would expect everyone living there to pack up and leave (and then...
Continue ReadingThe usual response will be to clean up the worst of the mess and then make do with a bit less than you had before. But why settle for that? I'd like to think that the time is coming when, instead of getting back to not very...
Continue ReadingWe might as well admit that American politics is insane. Where else could selection for the nation’s highest court involve debate over a photograph of the nominee playing softball? Really incriminating, isn’t it? Do we really want a Justice who bats right? But wait: if justices, in the immortal...
Continue ReadingTwo quite different photos inadvertently expose habitual gaps in public understanding of the terror war.
Continue ReadingHuman beings should strive to preserve the earth that will outlast them, and to create societies that can work in concert with nature rather than in the pursuit of dominion. To that end, beauty is a form of moral truth.
Continue ReadingThe English speaking peoples of the world can bask in the knowledge that their common tongue has become the international language not merely of science and commerce but also of police power. No matter whether they maintain civic order or brutalize regime opponents, English gets the credit.
Continue ReadingThe national interest of a democratic people may be served well by reason, but the modern state, to the extent that it is a regime of coercive control, will rely on another mentality: stupidité d’état.
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