We destroy the beauty of the countryside because the un-appropriated splendors of nature have no economic value. We are capable of shutting off the sun and the stars because they do not pay a dividend. — John Maynard Keynes
2009/04/25
Maybe you can go home again?
That's what several of our foreign friends and acquaintances in Spain are hoping, such as Rumanians who may have had some other profession but in Spain were working in the once-booming construction industry. See As Jobs Die, Europe’s Migrants Head Home in yesterday's NYT. But "home" isn't what it used to be, either. There will be lots of stories to tell, of kids pulled out of school, repatriated and having to function in a language they´re no longer used to (or maybe never learned beyond talking with their mothers), of marriages in trouble because of new economic stresses, and lots more. Maybe the only upside of this crisis is that it is sure to enrich Rumanian (and Lithuanian and other eastern countries') literature.
2009/04/23
Bad move by Japan
Now this is going to be self-defeating: Japan pays foreign workers to go home. No, folks, you can't de-globalize, though you can do your economy a lot of damage by trying. They're going to need foreign workers in Japan if they're ever going to climb out of this recession, but when they do, will they be willing to come after this insult?
2009/04/20
Autoescuela update
In case you were worried (I was), I just learned that I PASSED the written test for my Spanish driving license that I took on Friday. 30 minutes for 30 multiple-choice questions. I'm pretty sure (from comparing notes with another student afterwards) that I got two wrong (you're allowed 3 errors), but I'll never know for sure and it doesn't matter. So now on to the practical (physical driving) test.
Dirge for all humanity
A Spanish friend who likes to read novels in English pressed this terrifying little book by Cormac McCarthy on me: The Road. (The link takes you to my summary and commentary.)
2009/04/19
Vengeance vs. pragmatic politics
My friend César Chelala has just written a vigorous denunciation of Cándido Conde Pumpido, Spain’s attorney general, for saying "that he wouldn’t recommend going ahead with a probe of six former US officials over allegations that they gave legal support for conducting torture at Guantánamo Bay prison in Cuba." (See Bush Six Should Be Indicted.) The six miscreants are former US Attorney-General Alberto Gonzales; ex-Undersecretary of Defense Douglas Feith; former Vice President Dick Cheney’s chief of staff David Addington; former Justice Department officials John Yoo and Jay S. Bybee and Pentagon lawyer William J. Haynes II.
Well, yes and no, César. Yes, morally and psychologically, it would be good to see those guys squirm and to teach a lesson to any other government officials who might be tempted to commit such crimes. But politically, Spain's taking on this case would be a bad move for two reasons, one of them strictly internal to Spain.
The non-Spanish reason is what the ever-astute Obama implied when he said we should be looking forward, not back. An indictment in Spain or any other country would necessarily take up political resources (media attention, government expense) that his administration wants (correctly, in my opinion) to concentrate on its other enormous challenges. It would just give the usual rightwing bloviators (I love that word bloviator -- who invented it?) more material for firing up chauvinistic emotion and confusing voters (example: if Obama doesn't defend those Bush officials, he'll be accused by that crowd of treason and bowing to some foreign, puny power; if he should defend the six, he knows he'd lose the support of a lot of the rest of us. Better to just let it alone).
OK, accept that reasoning or not (I find it persuasive), here's the specifically Spanish reason: There is a huge campaign here by the unreconstructed hard right to find any grounds whatever to discredit Judge Baltasar Garzón -- which is probably why the case landed in his court. This is because Garzón has uncovered massive corruption (nothing to do with Guantánamo or with international politics; it's all about money for political favors) by some of the biggest honchos of the Partido Popular. Garzón has also been a key judge pursuing ETA terrorists (the right approves of that, but not out loud, because they don't want to give Garzón any credit). Garzón himself is bullheaded enough to go ahead to do what he thinks is right regardless of the political consequences -- once a card-carrying Socialist, he brought the case that brought down the Socialist government of his one-time friend Felipe González in 1996 (uncovering the "dirty war" against ETA by the government's Grupos Antiterroristas de Liberación (GAL)-- see the RTVE article on Garzón). That makes him very unusual and admirable. But he doesn't need this case, which seems to have been designed by Partido Popular strategists to create a fight between him and the U.S. Government and make it harder for him pursue those corruption cases.
If we want those six to be indicted, we should press to do it in the U.S. courts. It's the only dignified thing to do, rather than let some other country tell us what is right. And let's get Cheney, too.
Well, yes and no, César. Yes, morally and psychologically, it would be good to see those guys squirm and to teach a lesson to any other government officials who might be tempted to commit such crimes. But politically, Spain's taking on this case would be a bad move for two reasons, one of them strictly internal to Spain.
The non-Spanish reason is what the ever-astute Obama implied when he said we should be looking forward, not back. An indictment in Spain or any other country would necessarily take up political resources (media attention, government expense) that his administration wants (correctly, in my opinion) to concentrate on its other enormous challenges. It would just give the usual rightwing bloviators (I love that word bloviator -- who invented it?) more material for firing up chauvinistic emotion and confusing voters (example: if Obama doesn't defend those Bush officials, he'll be accused by that crowd of treason and bowing to some foreign, puny power; if he should defend the six, he knows he'd lose the support of a lot of the rest of us. Better to just let it alone).
OK, accept that reasoning or not (I find it persuasive), here's the specifically Spanish reason: There is a huge campaign here by the unreconstructed hard right to find any grounds whatever to discredit Judge Baltasar Garzón -- which is probably why the case landed in his court. This is because Garzón has uncovered massive corruption (nothing to do with Guantánamo or with international politics; it's all about money for political favors) by some of the biggest honchos of the Partido Popular. Garzón has also been a key judge pursuing ETA terrorists (the right approves of that, but not out loud, because they don't want to give Garzón any credit). Garzón himself is bullheaded enough to go ahead to do what he thinks is right regardless of the political consequences -- once a card-carrying Socialist, he brought the case that brought down the Socialist government of his one-time friend Felipe González in 1996 (uncovering the "dirty war" against ETA by the government's Grupos Antiterroristas de Liberación (GAL)-- see the RTVE article on Garzón). That makes him very unusual and admirable. But he doesn't need this case, which seems to have been designed by Partido Popular strategists to create a fight between him and the U.S. Government and make it harder for him pursue those corruption cases.
If we want those six to be indicted, we should press to do it in the U.S. courts. It's the only dignified thing to do, rather than let some other country tell us what is right. And let's get Cheney, too.
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