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Obama On Islam: Reduction and Relevance in Political Rhetoric

Politics

Kevin Hilke

U.S. President Barack Obama’s speech “to the Muslim world” from Cairo University earlier this week has provoked a variety of predictable reactions from the right, most of which impugn Obama for admitting points of view other than that of U.S. interest when thinking through global affairs. By this rationale, Obama’s admission that the Islamic societies of the past were crucial to generating and preserving the ideas that underpin what we call “the west” becomes nothing more than a sheepish “apology” to “terrorists.” Criticism from the left has been almost as uniformly boring and predictable. An intriguing and problematic exception comes from Foreign Policy’s David Rothkopf, a former Clinton Administration official whose readings of events are often simultaneously refreshing and myopic.

Buckley, Mailer, and The American Conservative

Culture Politics

Kevin Hilke

If any American conservative publication of broad appeal can claim to be a home for conservative intellectuals today, it is not The National Review. It might be The American Conservative.

Political Psychosis and the Rhetoric of Climate Change

Politics

Kevin Hilke

We’ve stopped talking about “global warming” and begun talking about “climate change” simply because the latter is a more precise description of what’s actually happening. The shift has happened not in spite of science but in the name of better science, and it implies no concomitant shift in scientific opinion about the gradual, manmade warming of the planet. The Washington Times is one of the few right-wing organs that hasn’t yet climbed out of its psychosis on this issue.

The Plasma Spring