| Core: noun, the most important part of a thing, the essence; from the Latin cor, meaning heart. |
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| Needless Commentary from Small-Town America |
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The Weblog at The View from the Core - Wed. 01/14/04 08:37:50 PM
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The New City Journal Is Out It's that time again. Your Humble, Faithful Blogster has been informed by no less than the Senior Editor himself of City Journal that the latest issue is now available. I haven't look at anything in depth, so here follows Brian Anderson's synopsis. + + + + + George F. Will's Can We Make Iraq Democratic? explodes the widespread view that all we need to do make Iraq a democracy is remove the tyranny that oppressed the nation and lo! the Iraqis will forthwith become democratic republicans. Though love of liberty may be part of human nature, Will argues, it isn't enough to make a people capable of democracy. Democracy rests on notions like the dignity of the individual, the rule of law, and equality before the law-cultural ideals not inborn but the fruit of the West's long national history. Nothing comparable yet exists in Iraq. In What Makes a Terrorist? James Q. Wilson answers that it takes a village-even a whole culture. As Wilson shows, most terrorists belong to tightly bonded groups, whose members reinforce one another's delusions: that evil is good, wrong is right, death is life. All this might make rational-if immoral-sense if terrorism actually achieved its political goals; but as Wilson finds, it rarely does. Nevertheless, Wilson soberly concludes, little platoons of nihilistic, death-dealing unreason, cheered on by a culture of rage and resentment, wish to wipe out Western civilization and will plague us for some time to come. The Winter issue also features two articles on important domestic issues: Economist Richard Florida's notion that cities must become trendy places that attract gays, bohemians, ethnic minorities, and other "creative" workers in order to compete in the twenty-first century is sweeping the nation. But as Steven Malanga proves in the devastating The Curse of the Creative Class, Florida's ideas are fatally wrong. Far from being economic powerhouses, many of the cities he identifies as creative-age winners have chronically underperformed the American economy. And some of his top creative cities don't even do a good job at attracting-or keeping-people. It turns out that old-fashioned economic concerns like tax rates and regulatory rules still matter the most. In The Illegal-Alien Crime Wave, Heather Mac Donald shows that some of the most violent criminals at large today are illegal aliens. Yet in cities where the crime these aliens commit is highest-in Los Angeles, for instance, where 95 percent of all outstanding warrants for homicide target illegal aliens-cops cannot use the most obvious tool to catch them: their immigration status. Reasons: fear of offending powerful immigrant lobbies and, even more disturbingly, the non-stop increase of immigration, which is reshaping the law to dissolve any distinction between legal and illegal aliens and, ultimately, the very idea of national borders. Other fascinating stories in the Winter issue include Michael Knox Beran on self-reliance versus self-esteem, Walter Olson on how the ADA has spawned a sleazy lawsuit industry, Julia Magnet on the films of Whit Stillman, Richard Brookhiser on DeWitt Clinton, and Theodore Dalrymple on Stefan Zweig. + + + + + Finally, I have to ask: what does the "Q" stand for in James Q. Wilson? Lane Core Jr. CIW P Wed. 01/14/04 08:37:50 PM |
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