Just came across this discussion of my old Robert E. Howard posts He Picked Picts to Depict and From Bangles to Broadswords. Cool though they do get my name wrong (and their links to my blog are now sadly obsolete).
Archive | April, 2009
Mystery of the Batwoman
I havent been able to discover who drew this poster (which I suspect looks better than, and bears little relation to, anything in the movie), but I sure have a hypothesis.
Doctor Thing
During his famous run on Swamp Thing, Alan Moore turned the hero into an alienated, vastly powerful cosmic being who teleports himself all over the universe his only remaining emotional link to humanity being his girlfriend Abby Arcane, who lounges around idly in the swamp waiting to provide him with sex and nurturing whenever he drops back in.
In other words, the relationship between Swamp Thing and Abby prefigures the later relationship between Dr. Manhattan and Laurie Juspeczyk in Watchmen the big difference, of course, being that while the first relationship was presented (somewhat tongue in cheek, I assume or hope!) as idyllic, the second is portrayed, more realistically, as deeply frustrating and dysfunctional. So in Watchmen Moore in effect took the opportunity to deconstruct, under new names, the relationship hed previously created.
(In related news, Swampys manipulating matter to create his own world on the Blue Planet [Saga of Swamp Thing #56] likewise prefigures Doc Ms doing likewise on the Red Planet though of course ones exile is chosen and the others is not.)
Democrats For Plutocrats
Left-leaning libertarians and libertarian-leaning leftists have been saying for years that liberals (in the mainstream sense), far from wielding the club of governmental regulation against big business, have been among the chief enforcers of corporate interests.
Now we get confirmation straight from the horses mouth. According to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce (Conical hat tip to Lew Rockwell and Ralph Raico), Obama, Biden, and Clinton all have a higher pro-business record than Ron Paul because (and give them credit for their honesty) the Chambers criterion for being pro-business is support for corporate subsidies and special privileges, not support for free markets.
The right-leaning Washington Examiners story makes it sound as though its liberals rather than conservatives that are pawns of the plutocracy (hence their headline New Chamber index shows conservatives arent corporate pawns), but a look at the winners of the Chambers Spirit of Corporate Welfare Enterprise award shows Republicans and Democrats both eagerly filling the trough with my own states Senator Richard Shelby at the top of the list.
Hail to Our Martian, or Perhaps Simian, Overlords
Imagine a world where Conan, Xena, and Blackadder were real people while Hitler, Mussolini, and Churchill werent. A world where the Battle of Helms Deep really happened but the Battle of Hastings didnt.
Sounds like a better world than the real one until we add in that its also a world in which humanity has been conquered and enslaved by some combination of Martians, Cylons, and damn dirty apes.
What world is this? According to a substantial percentage of the British public, its the one we live in.
So cheer up, fellow Americans we are not alone.
Fun With Totalitarianism
Alina is blogging the top 100 books on totalitarianism, and she has asked me to suggest my own top ten. But Im lousy at such rankings I can never answer whats your favourite X? or whats the greatest Y? questions. So I decided Id just come up with a list of ten pretty good books that arent on her list. Then I couldnt limit myself to ten so I picked fifteen.
These are off the top of my head, so I reserve the right to add other better ones. (I cast my net fairly widely genre-wise because she did too.) Reader suggestions?
1. Omnipotent Government by Ludwig von Mises. Mises analysis of the economic origins of Nazism; Im not sure how much of it I agree with but theres a lot of good stuff in here.
2. As We Go Marching by John Flynn. Explores parallelism between European fascism and the New Deal.
3. Hitlers Willing Executioners by Daniel Goldhagen. Goldhagens thesis that average German citizens knew about and were complicit in the Holocaust is controversial. I dont know whether hes right, but its certainly worth reading.
4. The Ominous Parallels by Leonard Peikoff. An analysis of the rise of Nazism from an orthodox Randian position. I have a lot of problems with this book, but it does provide a useful and apart from his uncritical reliance on Rauschning mostly accurate record of what Nazi ideologists actually preached.
5. Marxism, Freedom and the State by Mikhail Bakunin. The Russian anarchists prediction that implementing Marxism would create a new ruling class rather than abolishing the class system.
6. Statism and Anarchy by Mikhail Bakunin. More of the above.
7. The Bolshevik Myth by Aleksandr Berkman. Initially sympathetic anarcho-communist visits Soviet Russia, gets bummed out.
8. The Practice and Theory of Bolshevism by Bertrand Russell. Initially sympathetic state-socialist visits Soviet Russia, gets bummed out
9. The New Class by Milovan Djilas. Former Yugoslav apparatchik who showed how implementing Marxism had created a new ruling class rather than abolishing the class system.
10. The Black Book of Communism by Stéphane Courtois et al. Surely too famous to require explanation here.
11. The Political Economy of Soviet Socialism by Peter Boettke. Documents Soviet Russias early, abortive attempt to suspend market relations entirely.
12. Organization Theory: A Libertarian Perspective by Kevin Carson. Not about totalitarianism per se, but studies the various informational and incentival perversities that beset hierarchical, bureaucratic command structures generally, be they governmental or corporate.
13. We the Living by Ayn Rand. This one and the next two shouldnt require explanation.
14. Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell.
15. Animal Farm by George Orwell.