Author Archives: golsen@the-noble-polymath.com

Online ed for K-12, what?!

Jessica Calefati over at the Bay Area Newsgroup (Contra Costa Times, San Jose Mercury News, et al.) has an expose on the failures of online charter schools in California that are run by K12, Inc.  The online charter schools are performing more poorly that the California schools as a whole on standard measures of student achievement.

As a veteran of 163 units of online education, and counting, through 3 masters degree programs and a graduate certificate.* I can honestly say that online education should only be used as a supplement to brick-and-mortar K-12 education.  It is appropriate for tutoring especially motivated advanced students, but it should not be used by the normal population of students, because online education is only for the self-directed with goals.

My daughter, in kindergarten and first grade, had some online learning homework to develop reading skills.  It was entirely supplementary and appropriate use of technology.

California needs to rein in the online ed establishment in K-12.

* I did an MA in Jewish Studies at Gratz College, in Philadelphia mostly distance ed.  I then took my business school prerequisites plus various additional courses in Mathematics at the local junior college, Diablo Valley College.  I got my MBA in Finance from University of Nebraska, which is one of the highest ranked online MBAs in the country.  I took some courses in archaeology with Oxford Continuing Education.  I did a Graduate Certificate in New Testament at Regent University.  I am currently working on an MS in International Relations at Troy University in Alabama.  I will likely be applying for a PhD via distance education.

ISIS Turns to Suicide Terrorism

ISIS says it has ramped up suicide attacks due to its recent losses on the battle field.  This is entirely consistent with the instrumentalist view of terrorism, that is, terrorism is undertaken to achieve political objectives with a strategic logic and is not the result of mental illness, nor is it random. It is a tactic used in conflict typically from a position of weakness. Its key feature is that the targets are civilians, other non-combatants, or civilian installations, explicitly ignoring the just war principle of civilian immunity.

Suicide terrorism has its own strategic logic that is tied to the hardness of the target. As counter-terrorism operations improve security, the terrorist organization escalates to suicide terrorism in order to demonstrate (a) to its adversary the ability to still terrorize its victims, (b) to its supporters that it is still relevant to the cause. Religiously motivated terrorist groups are rational economic actors.  The resort to suicide tactics is a sign that other less expensive options have been foreclosed.

In the case of ISIS it must project the image of a successful Islamic insurgency that will result in the establishment of an Islamic state. To fail would risk the dissolution of the movement as various Sunni salafist jihadi and takfiri organizations would seek a stronger horse to back in the battle against the nearest enemies (Marxists and Shi’ites) and the far enemies (Europeans and Americans).

Some Thoughts on the Trumpkins

Are Donald Trump and his supporters (hereafter: Trumpkins) conservative?

Roger Kimball, a man I greatly respect for his fervent defense of traditional aesthetic values, certainly doesn’t think so, however, there is a case to be made that the Trumpkins, who describe themselves as conservative, are correct in that description.

There are three main ways that conservatism has been defined: (1) a defense of the European feudal order that is historically irrelevant today, which is the position held by Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.; (2) an autonomous system of values; or (3) the a situationally defined ideology that is asserted against another ideological movement that seeks to undermine the established institutional order.

Modern American conservatives have never accepted the first definition and it is mainly used as a rhetorical tool by proponents of ideologies that are opposed by those claiming to be conservative; it is a class-based definition which appeals to those whose worldview interprets political reality in terms of class. The second definition is what a conservative like Roger Kimball would assert. It is  a certain Whiggish set of values held in common with Edmund Burke, the founder of conservatism. The final definition though is probably most relevant to the Trumpkins.

Samuel Huntington (1957) asserted that conservatism is in fact number 3. He extracts a core set of principles from Burke’s writings that defines conservatism:

  1. Man is basically a religious animal, and religion is the foundation of civil society. A divine sanction infuses the legitimate, existing, social order.
  2. Society is the natural, organic product of slow historical growth. Existing institutions embody the wisdom of previous generations. Right is a function of time.
  3. Man is a creature of instinct and emotion as well as reason. Prudence, prejudice, experience, and habit are better guides than reason, logic, abstractions, and metaphysics. Truth exists not in universal propositions but in concrete experiences.
  4. The community is superior to the individual. The rights of men derive from their duties. Evil is rooted in human nature, not in any particular social institutions.
  5. Except in an ultimate moral sense, men are unequal. Social organization is complex and always includes a variety of classes, orders, and groups. Differentiation, hierarchy, and leadership are the inevitable characteristics of any civil society.
  6. A presumption exists “in favour of any settled scheme of government against any untried project…” Man’s hopes are high, but his vision is short. Efforts to remedy existing evils usually result in even greater ones.

In short, conservatism “stands athwart history, yelling Stop” (to use William F. Buckley’s phrase).  As the society slowly changes over time (see #2), however, a new institutional norm develops to be defended when threated by radical change.

The Trumpkins consider themselves conservative in that third sense. That they want to conserve the existing Great Society programs, which were deeply un-conservative when created, does not make them un-conservative. Those institutions have become part of the accepted social fabric of society and worth preserving. Trumpkins are deeply distrustful of technocratic government, whether Republican or Democrat.

When it comes to issues, the best way to understand the Trumpkins is using Walter Russell Mead’s four main traditions in Special Providence: Jeffersonian, Hamiltonian, Jacksonian, and Wilsonian. The Trumpkins are asserting Jeffersonian (agrarian populism and non-interventionism) and Jacksonian (communitarian, yet egalitarian, and honor-bound) principles against Hamiltonian (pro-business and free trade) and Wilsonian (technocratic and interventionist) principles.

Typical Republican Party themes fail to resonate with the Trumpkins, since they, as a group, have become threatened by them. Flattening the income tax structure fails to resonate because it is insufficiently egalitarian. The claimed benefits of free trade and mass immigration fail to resonate because they suppress wages and the covenantal nature of the republic is threatened by foreign influence. Foreign wars of choice divert resources better spent at home, unless the United States is directly attacked, which challenges the Trumpkins’ honor. Trump is giving voice to a class of conservative that has been one of the three legs propping up the Republican Party and may be poised to either capture the party or split it irrevocably.

Anti-communism was the glue that held the Republican Party together in the twentieth century. That glue disappeared in October 1989.  Will the Republican Party go the way of its predecessor the Whig Party and fracture over irreconcilable differences?  Back then, it was slavery.  Will free trade and immigration be the proximate cause of a new fracture?

How to create a clash of civilizations

Samuel Huntington poked a stick in the hornets’ nest with his controversial article in Foreign Affairs The Clash of Civilizations? (few commentators acknowledge the question mark on the end), which was followed up by his book The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order that expanded on the theme.  In the book Huntington made a distinction between “fault line wars,” small wars that occur on the margins of civilizations where two different civilizations are in contact and populations are mixed and a clash of civilizations where multiple states contend waging total war divided between two civilizations.  I bring this up because I recently read an article that seems to seek an escalation of the various fault line wars on “Islam’s bloody borders,” to use Huntington’s phrase, to a full-blown clash of civilizations.

Choksy and Choksy advocate a vigorous prosecution of war by the West against Islamist groups around the world.  They correctly diagnose the current strategy of the Obama administration as a failed strategy, however, the remedies advocated violate all international norms and are beyond the military capabilities of the United States, Great Britain, France and Russia (who are the only great powers willing and able to project power.  They propose an eight point plan of action:

  1. The war on terror must stop focusing upon one group at a time. Organizations such as Al-Qaeda, the Taliban, Al-Shabaab, and Boko Haram share commonality with IS through Arabian funding sources, extremist interpretation of Islam, intolerance of moderate Muslims and members of other faiths, and reliance on violence.
  2. Military actions should be expanded. Bombardment from the air, special forces on the ground, and training to establish indigenous troops should not be limited to countering IS in Syria and Iraq, but also demolish IS offshoots, Al-Qaeda, and other groups in Libya, the Sinai, Afghanistan, and elsewhere… Systematically eliminating the traveling ideologues and the local gangs they organize also must become a priority for breaking the global jihad.
  3. The non-military counter-offensive against Islamic extremism needs to be taken worldwide. Better intelligence collection and more effective preemptive operations must prevent attacks by terror cell members and wannabes… Extremist-affiliated media portals providing attack techniques should be taken down as soon as they appear. Internet sites portraying Islamic terror organizations as principled should be taken over and redeployed with vivid images of how they distort Islam’s doctrines and practices to achieve radical goals.
  4. While much success has been achieved in cutting off external funds especially from the Middle East to IS and Al-Qaeda, cash flows within terrorist-controlled areas must be shut down too.
  5. Ending Islamic terrorism requires focusing not merely on current troublemakers but emerging ones as well.
  6. The countries that contributed most ideologically, fiscally, and socio-politically to the rise and spread of Islamic fanaticism must become central to ending it.
  7. The US and its western partners need to persuade Middle East rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran that inflaming sectarian tensions for religio-political goals is detrimental.
  8. Solutions to civil wars in the Middle East must tackle not only military dimensions but religious ones in order to endure. A workable political resolution for Syria has to accommodate all that country’s communities, including Alawites and other Shiites. Likewise for Iraq to stabilize, mechanisms to prevent revenge extraction between Shiite and Sunni citizens have to be established. Power-sharing and revenge foregoing are both needed to end the struggle in Yemen. After all, Islamic terrorists are most active, destructive, and lethal in countries where Muslims comprise a substantial portion of the citizenry.

A underlying assumptions behind this plan are that (1) there is a war of ideas that can be won by intervention by the West, and (2) that colonial intervention in civil wars being waged by jihadis across the Muslim world is both possible and desirable. Both assumptions are wrong. There is no war of ideas being waged between Islam and the West. It is a war of ideas within Islam! Interventions by Western great powers will be counter-productive. Furthermore, the internecine struggles in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen are not going to be solved by Western or even IGO intervention. Syria is beset with the multiple actor problem and will ultimately be solved by population transfers and partition. There is no putting Humpty Dumpty back together again as a multi-confessional multi-ethnic state on a Western model. Yemen is a proxy war being fought between Iran and Saudi Arabia both for ideological reasons (Iran’s export of revolution) and control over the Persian Gulf.

The Obama administration has stumbled into the correct policy for the wrong reasons (Jeffersonian non-interventionism). Great powers intervene in civil wars to contain conflicts and prevent them from becoming a global clash of civilizations, not escalating them to create a clash of civilizations. Treading lightly is the order of the day. Islamic civilization needs to find its own way, which will be violent and possibly last centuries. It took nearly three hundred years for Christendom to make peace with Enlightenment modernity. To expect Islamic civilization get there in decades is unrealistic.

Challenging Xinhua

Xinhua, the official news organ of the Chinese Communist Party, carried a commentary that stated the following:

As ironic as it is, Washington has always defended its arbitrary move by referring to international law, but it has so far not approved the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, which establishes legal order and regulations on international waters.

The calculation behind such a move is crystal clear: The United States is unwilling to be bound by an international treaty, which it claims as severely flawed, because the sole superpower has already controlled such maritime resources as oil and gas deposits through military power.

First of all, the United States has not ratified the UNCLOS, because it created a supranational bureaucracy to administer rights to the seabed that is not on a given nation’s continental shelf.  That supranational body is unaccountable to nations.  The United States resists a self-funding supranational body, because it makes the supranational body unaccountable to sovereign nations.  It itself is effectively sovereign.

Second of all, the rights of innocent passage are customary international law that have been observed since at least the 18th century.  UNCLOS mostly codifies what has been customary law since then.

Xinhua is mistaken.

Liberal International Order Maintenance

Ivan Eland, the libertarian, has a very tendentious article over at the Huffington Post, reprinted at the Independent Institute website. The article addresses the the continuity between the Gulf War and the Iraq War. This is a reasonable position, however, the way he gets there and the conclusions are suspect in the extreme.

First he makes the claim that the reasons the U.S. went to war to roll back Saddam’s invasion of Kuwait were two: (1) the U.S. wanted to protect Saudi Arabia from further invasion and maintain low oil prices; and (2) George H. W. Bush was beholden of “Munich Syndrome,” the idea that if Saddam was allowed to annex Kuwait, other dissatisfied powers would be emboldened.

As to the first, he cites an economic analysis that indicates that the increase in the price of oil would have been cheaper than the cost of the war. As to the second, he (rightly) makes the claim that no super power can intervene everywhere.  But that doesn’t mean that a super power shouldn’t intervene somewhere.

The claim of Munich Syndrome is a smoke screen. The conflict was over the threat to the liberal international system and to preserve the principles of the United Nations. The United Nations Security Council was at its most effective, because U.S.-Soviet (Russian) rivalry was temporarily at low tide. The United Nations was able put into practice Articles 39-43 to address an interstate breach of the peace. It was a triumph of the IGO.

A series of coercive actions short of war had been taken through the U.N. to reverse the aggression and restore the legitimate government and borders of Kuwait: Resolutions 660, 661, 662, 664, 665, 666, 667, 669, 670 674 and 677. Iraq refused. And thus, the multinational coalition under United Nations authorization and U.S. command destroyed Iraq’s military and ejected them from Kuwait to restore the status quo. I’ll quote Resolution 678:

Noting that despite all efforts by the United Nations, Iraq refuses to comply with its obligation to implement resolution 660 (1990) and the subsequent relevant resolutions, in flagrant contempt of the Security Council,

Mindful of its duties and responsibilities under the Charter of the United Nations for the maintenance and preservation of international peace and security,

Determined to secure full compliance with its decisions,

Acting under Chapter VII of the Charter,

1. Demands that Iraq comply fully with resolution 660 (1990) and all subsequent relevant resolutions, and decides, while maintaining all its decisions, to allow Iraq one final opportunity, as a pause of goodwill to do so;

2. Authorizes Member States co-operating with the Government of Kuwait, unless Iraq on or before 15 January 1991 fully implements, as set forth in paragraph 1 above, the above-mentioned resolutions to use all necessary means to uphold and implement resolution 660 (1990) and all subsequent relevant resolutions and to restore international peace and security in the area;

3. Requests all states to provide appropriate support for the actions undertaken in pursuance of paragraph 2 above;

4. Requests the States concerned to keep the Security Council regularly informed on the progress of actions undertaken pursuant to paragraphs 2 and 3 above;

5. Decides to remain seized of the matter.

Thus, the U.N. outsourced the ejection of Saddam from Kuwait, making the post-Second World War liberal international order actually work for a change in the absence of a super power rivalry on the UNSC. The only other time the U.N. authorized an action of this type was in 1950 that launched the Korean War, which happened only because the Soviet Union was boycotting the U.N. at the time.

Libertarians may abhor the United Nations as a Wilsonian project that threatens the Jeffersonian roots of the United States, but maintenance of the liberal international regime does not amount to Munich Syndrome.

Perfection is the enemy of the good

Ryan Cooper writes over at The Week that the United States should abandon Saudi Arabia as a Persian Gulf ally. The rationale boils down to the following reasons: (1) the human rights record of Saudi Arabia is awful; (2) wealthy Saudis sponsored Bin Laden and the clerics export a form of Islam that fuels our enemies; (3) the Yemen war works against U.S. interests; (4) we don’t need the oil from the Middle East any longer because of fracking revolution.

What went unstated is what are U.S. interests in the region. U.S. interests in the region have mainly been counted as three: (1) maintaining the free flow of oil from the Persian Gulf, (2) maintaining the Jewish State in the region, and (3) preventing another great power from dominating the region.

The U.S. pried Egypt out of the Soviet orbit during the Cold War. It is certainly the case that nations chose to play one super power off against another in order to maximize their financial and military support. Egypt is no different. The U.S. had to rely on the Saudis as the bulwark against revolutionary Iran after the fall of the Pahlavi regime. Revolutionary Iran was and is an enemy of the United States. A capitulation to Iran by throwing Saudi Arabia over the side would hardly be in U.S. interests.

Fracking has turned the United States into the world’s swing producer, but the United States is not self sufficient in energy. Thus, the claim that the U.S. is no longer dependent on Middle East oil is bogus. An appeal to autarky is foolish. This is socialist banana republic thinking. The U.S. is too integrated into the world economy to think that risking tumult in global oil supplies is something that won’t affect the United States.

As to the case of the Yemen proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran. Because ISIS and al Qaeda have acquired a foothold in Yemen as a base of operations is a complete smokescreen. Al Qaeda has been operating in Yemen since the 1990s, before the current proxy war. ISIS has global appeal to jihadis world wide (Boko Haram, which had no institutional ties ISIS has pledged allegiance). They are likely to back a winner.

My only conclusion based on the recommendations made in the article is that Cooper has been infected with the idea that Iranian hegemony in the Gulf would be stabilizing. There are not a few in the State Department and the foreign policy team in current administration holding out hope for this. However, those that do, fail to understand the religious dynamics of the region. The goal of the international community is to prevent the region from being consumed in a broad Sunni-Shia conflict. Putting out fires are what superpowers do. There is no grand solution to the multitude of interrelated conflicts in the region, but limiting the chaos is what the benign hegemon does. Britain did it since the 18th century. And the U.S. has been carrying that mantle since 1945, no one else is stepping up to do it.

This is the fundamental failure of those who seek ultimate solutions. Perfection is the enemy of the good. Cooper’s essay is an example.

Bacon is a hate crime?

This is absurd.  The FBI offering a $5,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of the person responsible for placing bacon on the doors of a mosque.  They are investigating the desecration as a hate crime.  Hate crime legislation was intended to add penalties to violent crimes committed on account of the victim’s race, gender, identity or sexual orientation.  In this case the crime is littering!  The DA could try to argue an implied threat, but it is doubtful that it could be upheld in court.  Instead this is grandstanding and an attempt to warn off more serious crimes against Muslims that are violent, such as the firebombing of a mosque in Tracy, California.  At least offer the reward for crimes that aren’t misdemeanors.

There is no place for religious intolerance in the United States.  Religious pluralism has characterized the United States since its founding, albeit, until the late 19th Century a pluralism of Christian denominations and a few Sephardic Jews.  Patriotic Americans who think they are doing good by terrorizing Muslims, need to leave it to the FBI to penetrate those mosques that are being used to incite terrorism.  Not every Muslim is a member of some fifth column.  This is the same “dual loyalty” libel leveled against Jews, even by the Obama administration.

Neopatrimonialism versus Geography

Bloomberg has a book review that claims, yet again, that what prevents African countries from developing is neopatrimonialism.  Neopatrimonialism is a political structure where a network of patron-client relationships turn the political competition for control of the state into a zero-sum game between rival networks who flow the benefits of the state down the network.  It is a pretty typical system, Mexican politics works this way, for example.  The best way to know you are dealing with neopatrimonialism is when it is not what you do but who you know that allows you to provide for your family and advance your career.  To a Western meritocratic society, neopatrimonialism is corrupt.

Neopatrimonialism is not the only or even the greatest determinant for the lack of development in Africa.  I highly recommend Jeffry Herbst’s, States and Power in Africa, for a very insightful analysis of the challenges posed by geography in Africa and the continuities with the pre-colonial past and the legacy of colonialism.  From the pre-colonial past, he determines that Africa has always been sparsely populated and poor due to the generally inhospitable environment in many parts of Africa.  For example, trypanosomiasis in the lowlands of East Africa prevent the domestication and use of horses, as well as being life threatening to humans.  The Sahel with its periods of drought cause crop failures, desiccation of pastures, and induce the usual response of populations to environmental degradation: migration.  However mass migrations are anathema to nation-states.

From the colonial period, the “colonialism on the cheap” left most new states in Africa without a developed infrastructure to project governmental authority into the hinterland.  Combine that with difficult and challenging geographies–for example, large hinterlands–add in multiple ethnicities and religions and you get insurgencies, since the state is unable to extend its monopoly on violence to the hinterlands and exert political control.  Only the settler colonies, where large white minorities settled, do you have the infrastructure to permit state control, such as South Africa, Botswana, and Zimbabwe.

We are finding that fault line wars, wars of identity between rival civilizations, are particularly a problem at the southern margins of Islamic Africa.  There is a low level conflict in Kenya and outright war in the Central African Republic, Nigeria, and Mali.  The division of Sudan was an attempt by the international community to create a more stable configuration, sort of like the carving up of India into India, Pakistan and Bangladesh.

Russia: A Great Power?

Contrast these two stories: firefighters will be going unpaid in December and Russia rearms.  In documents leaked to the media in the Sverdlovsk region, the ministry responsible for emergency services and civil defense told its employees that they needed to take out pay day loans because the ministry didn’t have money to pay them and that they would be paid in January.  At the same time the Kremlin has ambitious plans to rearm adding submarines, fixed and rotary wing aircraft, air defense missiles, and, more troubling, tanks and self-propelled artillery.  The artillery is troubling, because its main use would be against its neighbors.

The military expenditures are to bring Russia back into great power status, but for how long?  It is not sustainable at current oil prices, since Russia is essentially a petro state.  Iranian oil soon hits the market depressing prices further.  It can’t pay its firefighters.

Historically, the Russian people have demonstrated tremendous fortitude, enduring great privation, for political aims.  Will that trend continue or has consumerism taken hold of the population to create a populist backlash to the authoritarianism of the Putin regime?