Saturday, March 12, 2005

The Benefits of Boldness

Victor Davis Hanson casts his clear eye on recent history and notes:
Every time the United States the last quarter century had acted boldly its removal of Noriega and aid for the Contras, instantaneous support for a nified Germany, extension of NATO, preference for Yeltsin instead of Gorbachev, Gulf War I, bombing of Milosevic, support for Sharon's fence, withdrawal from Gaza and decapitation of the Hamas killer elite, taking out the Taliban and Saddam-good things have ensued. In contrast, on every occasion that we have - abject withdrawal from Lebanon, appeasement of Arafat at Oslo, a decade of action in the Balkans, paralysis in Rwanda, sloth in the face of terrorist attacks, not going to Baghdad in 1991 - corpses pile up and the United States became either less secure or less respected or both.
Perhaps in politics as well as art, audacity is key.

As Penn Jillette observed, if your field has "science" in its name it probably isn't one. Might'nt it be more honest of universities to offer courses in Political Arts?

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