Category Archives: Commentary

The Fuse is Burning

Last year, George W. Bush told us the U.S. had to invade Iraq to prevent Saddam Hussein from using weapons of mass destruction. Later we learned there were no weapons of mass destruction and that the Bush administration had twisted facts to make it seem as if there were. This year, Mr. Bush told us […]

Hard to Believe

When my friend Lynn was in college, a history professor assigned her to research the Holocaust by reading microfilms of American newspapers from the 1930s and 40s. Although many people claimed to have been shocked to discover in the spring of 1945 that Nazi Germany had sent the bulk of Europe’s Jews into a system […]

Dude, Where’s My Nuke?

I graduated from high school 25 years ago next month. I doubt I’ll go to the reunion, but a quarter-century is an appropriate vantage point for a backward glance. Jimmy Carter was president then, his reputation has traveled several full circles since. Gas cost 80 cents a gallon, the Cold War was still on, the […]

The Computer Ate My Vote

I’m in Canton, Ohio this week to attend the annual shareholders’ meeting of Diebold, Incorporated, the leading manufacturer of touch-screen voting machines that don’t work. I’m not a shareholder; I’m an unwelcome guest. I’ll explain why shortly. After the fiasco that was the 2000 presidential election in Florida, Congress passed, and George W. Bush signed, […]

Things We’re Not Supposed to Say

To hear George W. Bush tell it, the Iraqis attacking American troops are either remnant supporters of Saddam Hussein’s Baathist regime or maniacal Islamic militants, bent on destruction of all things Western. “They hate us for our freedom,” Mr. Bush says. Do you think that’s really the case? Whenever Mr. Bush gives that line, he […]

Who Is It Good For?

Years ago, Edwin Starr asked the musical question, “War – what is it good for?” and the rhetorical answer was “absolutely nothing.” Problem is, Ed asked the wrong question. If instead, he’d asked, “War – who is it good for?” he’d have gotten a very different answer. War was not good for the four Americans […]

No Place Like Home

When I was growing up in Western New York, if a family had a small retreat on a lake for fishing or weekend getaways, it was called a “cottage.” My Uncle John had a cottage on Lake Ontario; an unheated, uninsulated, summertime-only cottage built in the years after World War One. In Vermont, such structures […]