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What Genocide?

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  • What Genocide?

    WHAT GENOCIDE?
    By Michael Weiss

    Slate
    http://www.slate.com/id/2175700/
    Oct 11 2007

    Bloggers are aghast that President Bush came out against a House
    resolution that would recognize the Armenian genocide. Also,
    Palestinians return to a Lebanese refugee camp formerly besieged by
    Islamists. And bloggers assess the discoveries made by this year's
    Nobel laureates in science.

    What genocide? Beginning in 1915, up to 1.5 million Armenians were
    slaughtered or displaced by the dying Ottoman Empire, an event that
    modern Turkey refuses to acknowledge, to the point of criminalizing
    the discussion of it. The House foreign affairs committee voted
    Wednesday 27-21 in favor of a symbolic resolution that would recognize
    the Armenian genocide, much to the chagrin of Turkey's Islamist
    government, one of the United States' strongest allies in the Middle
    East. President Bush said "this resolution is not the right response
    to these historic mass killings." Bloggers think otherwise.

    El Matador, an Irish nationalist who writes at ElBlogador, thinks
    realpolitik is back with a vengeance: "For Bush and many of his
    predecessors, it has nothing to do with what is right or wrong,
    but rather a question of what suits the American Presidency best.

    Morality and justice don't come into it. We saw the same sort of
    buffoonery during US interventions in Latin America in the 1970s. It
    seems that some people never learn."

    "Guy Fawkes" at lefty Daily Kos is appalled: "No less a monster than
    Adolf Hitler, when asked by one of his subordinates about whether
    the world would sit back and watch while they massacred thousands of
    untermenschen, responded that nobody remembered now what happened to
    the Armenians. Now it is happening again."

    Even some stalwart defenders of the administration can't stomach this
    latest maneuver. Conservative Pam at Atlas Shrugs writes: "If the
    President won't call genocide genocide and he won't utter the name
    of the mortal enemy we face, Islamism, we are in for a world of pain."

    In a lengthy, informational post, Baron Bodissey at the Gates of Vienna
    looks at the issues that led acknowledgement of the atrocities to be
    repressed after World War I and then moves to present day, asking:
    "And why is our relationship with Turkey strained? What have we done
    to offend them? Is it strained because of that nasty little business
    in the run-up to the Iraq War in 2003, when the Turks denied the
    United States permission to enter northern Iraq via Turkey?"

    which caused "numerous additional American casualties, and allowed
    thousands of Baathists, criminals, and terrorists - who otherwise
    would have been interdicted by a northern front - to escape."

    "The irony of someone named Bush jilting the Armenians," according to
    Countenance Blog, "is that, in 1988, the first George Bush had the
    Armenian-American Governor of California, George Deukmejian ... on
    his short list for a running mate. I wonder how he feels today, as he
    sees the son of the man who might well have made him Vice-President
    diss his own people like this."

    Finally, Joey Kurtzman, my colleague at Jewcy, has called for the
    firing of Anti-Defamation League Director Abe Foxman for the ADL's
    refusal to recognize the Armenian genocide. At the Daily Shvitz blog,
    Kurtzman reminds readers that George W. Bush once spoke differently
    about historical fact when he was trying to drum up support for his
    tax policy: "The Armenians were subjected to a genocidal campaign
    that defies comprehension and commands all decent people to remember
    and acknowledge the facts and lessons of an awful crime in a century
    of bloody crimes against humanity."

    Read more about Bush and the Armenian genocide.

    Homeward bound: Today, 500 Palestinians returned to the Nahr al Bared
    refugee camp in Lebanon months after fleeing a battle scene between
    the Lebanese Army and Fatah al-Islam, a jihadist group. More than
    30,000 residents had been displaced and their homes destroyed during
    the conflict.

    At Time's Middle East Blog, Beirut correspondent Andrew Lee Butters
    says: "[Nahr al Bared] is a dangerous place, littered with land mines,
    booby traps, and unexploded ordinance -- yesterday three soldiers
    were wounded and one was killed by explosions. But in the meantime,
    camp residents are living in schools and makeshift shelters in other --
    already overcrowded -- Palestinan camps around Lebanon."

    Mustapha at Lebanese blog Beirut Spring points out: "One of the
    factors that will push the problem to the limelights is the imminent
    shortage in reconstruction cash. Only $37 million of the 382.5$
    million estimated for reconstruction and relief have been pledged."

    And Sursock, a Lebanese socialist blog, claims to have seen a
    confidential report on the reconstruction of the refugee camp: "Out
    go the tight alleys and close quarter community housing, and in comes
    European style housing blocs separated by wide roads ... [to] provide
    better entry for armoured patrols and thus leaving the Palestinian
    less able to defend their areas. The Humvees supplied recently by
    the US would fulfill this task." Also: "Lebanese army will be running
    'security' in the new camp. This takes us back to the 1950s and 1960s
    when Palestinians lived in fear of the internal security services
    known as Deuxieme Bureau."

    Read more about the refugees' return.

    Nobel's lab squad: Nobel Prize winners in chemistry, physics, and
    medicine have been announced. Among the recipients is Mario R.

    Cappechi, a refugee from the Nazis who helped develop-along with
    his co-winners Martin J. Evans and Oliver Smithies-"gene targeting"
    in mice, a procedure involving the use of embryonic stem cells. Also,
    the physics prize went to Peter Gruenberg and Albert Fert for their
    discovery of "giant magnetoresistance," without which the iPod would
    have been impossible.

    At Wired's Science blog, readers e-mailed blogger Brandon Keim to
    set him straight on the importance of knockout genes: "Very often,
    the knockout mouse gives you the most direct insight into what that
    gene does, and where it does it. Only once we understand the function
    of all these do we have a clear picture, and can thus intervene
    with treatments."

    "Fert and Grunberg foresaw that computer technology would reduce
    the size of our world," hymns Myra Per-Lee at Inventor Spot, "as
    more and more information demanded storage. Information is stored
    in differently magnetized areas on a hard drive, or memory. Some
    direction of magnetization corresponds to the binary zero, other
    directions to the binary value of one."
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