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To: aculeus; Lando Lincoln; quidnunc; .cnI redruM; Valin; yonif; SJackson; dennisw; monkeyshine; ...
David Gelernter:

...Bush's greatness is often misunderstood. He is great not because he showed America how to react to 9/11 but because he showed us how to deal with a still bigger event--the end of the Cold War. The collapse of the Soviet Union in 1989 left us facing two related problems, one moral and one practical. Neither President Clinton nor the first Bush found solutions--but it's not surprising that the right answers took time to discover, and an event like 9/11 to bring them into focus.

In moral terms: If you are the biggest boy on the playground and there are no adults around, the playground is your responsibility. It is your duty to prevent outrages--because your moral code demands that outrages be prevented, and (for now) you are the only one who can prevent them.

If you are one of the two biggest boys, and the other one orders you not to protect the weak lest he bash you and everyone else he can grab--then your position is more complicated. Your duty depends on the nature of the outrage that ought to be stopped, and on other circumstances. This was America's position during the Cold War: Our moral obligation to overthrow tyrants was limited by the Soviet threat of hot war, maybe nuclear war.

But things are different today. We are the one and only biggest boy. We can run from our moral duty but we can't hide. If there is to be justice in the world, we must create it. No one else will act if the biggest boy won't. Some of us turn to the United Nations the way we wish we could turn to our parents. It's not easy to say, "The responsibility is mine and I must wield it." But that's what the United States has to say. No U.N. agency or fairy godmother will bail us out.

...But there are limits to our power. We must pick our tyrants carefully, keeping in mind not only justice but our practical interests and the worldwide consequences of what we intend. Our duty in this area is like our obligation to show charity. We have no power to help everyone and no right to help no one.

***

...We have paid a steep price in Iraq, a thousand dead; but if you choose duty, you must choose to pay. Speaking for America, the president has said: We choose duty. What do we get in return? Nothing. Except the privilege of looking at ourselves in the mirror, and facing history and our children.


Nailed It!
Moral Clarity BUMP !

This ping list is not author-specific for articles I'd like to share. Some for perfect moral clarity, some for provocative thoughts; or simply interesting articles I'd hate to miss myself. (I don't have to agree with the author 100% to feel the need to share an article.) I will try not to abuse the ping list and not to annoy you too much, but on some days there is more of good stuff that is worthy attention. I keep separate PING lists for my favorite authors Victor Davis Hanson, Lee Harris, David Warren, Orson Scott Card. You are welcome in or out, just freepmail me (and note which PING list you are talking about).

33 posted on 09/08/2004 7:19:51 AM PDT by Tolik
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http://www.cs.yale.edu/people/gelernter.html

David Gelernter

Professor of Computer Science

B.A., Yale University, 1976
Ph.D., The State University of New York at Stony Brook, 1982
Joined Yale Faculty 1982

Office Location: AKW 107
Telephone: 203.432.1278

David Gelernter.

David Gelernter is professor of computer science at Yale, chief scientist at Mirror Worlds Technologies, contributing editor at the Weekly Standard and member of the National Council of the Arts. He's the author of several books and many technical articles; also essays, art criticism and fiction. The "tuple spaces" introduced in Carriero and Gelernter's Linda system (1983) are the basis of many computer-communication and distributed programming systems worldwide. "Mirror Worlds" (1991) "foresaw" the World Wide Web (Reuters, 3/20/01) and was "one of the inspirations for Java"; the "lifestreams" system (first implemented by Eric Freeman at Yale) is the basis for Mirror Worlds Technologies' software. "Breaking out of the box" (NY Times magazine, '97) forecast and described the advent of less-ugly computers (Apple's iMac arrived in '98). Gelernter's essays are widely anthologized (for example in J. Brockman, ed., "The Next Fifty Years: new essays from 25 of the world's leading scientists" (Vintage, 2002), R. Stolley, ed., "Life Magazine - Century of Change," (Little Brown, 2001), and the ACM's 50th Anniversary collection).

He's the author of "The Muse in the Machine" (1994, about poetry and AI), the novel "1939" (1995), "Machine Beauty" (1998, about aesthetics and technology) and other books; he's published in Commentary, ArtNews, Washington Post and many others. Recent talks include the Bradley Lecture at the American Enterprise Institute, keynotes at Agenda 2003, Intl. Wireless World, PC Expo, and the 2002 Organick Lecture in Computer Science at Univ Utah.

Representative Publications:
Bullet. "Three programming systems and a computational 'model of everything,'" in Peter J. Denning, ed., ACM’s new [still untitled] Visions-of-computing Anthology, forthcoming, mid-August '01.
Bullet. "Twentieth Century Machines," in R. Stolley, ed., LIFE Century of Change (2000).
Bullet. "Computers and the pursuit of happiness," COMMENTARY, Dec 2000.
Bullet. "Now that the PC is dead...," WALL STREET JOURNAL "millennium issue," Jan 1, 2000

http://www.weeklystandard.com/Search/FreeSearch.asp?Search=Both&chrAuthor=David+Gelernter&intRecordStart=1

Source

Date

David Gelernter’s Archive

Weekly Standard

09/13/2004

Bush's Greatness   From the September 13, 2004 issue: There's a good reason he infuriates the reactionary left.
Weekly Standard

06/21/2004

What Ronald Reagan Understood  From the June 21, 2004 issue: He faced down the totalitarians and the appeasers.
Weekly Standard

05/24/2004

It's America's War  From the May 24, 2004 issue: But too many Democrats think it's Bush's war.
Weekly Standard

04/05/2004

The Holocaust Shrug  From the April 5, 2004 issue: Why is there so much indifference to the liberation of Iraq?
Daily Standard

11/11/2003

Don't Quit as We Did in Vietnam  From the November 9, 2003 Los Angeles Times: Yes, we are haunted by Vietnam, and God forbid we shoul
Weekly Standard

11/03/2003

Onward, Christian Soldier!  From the November 3, 2003 issue: The jihad against General Boykin.
Weekly Standard

10/06/2003

Bush's Rhetoric Deficit  From the October 6, 2003 issue: In making the case for the war, he downplays his strongest argument:
$  Weekly Standard

09/29/2003

Apres Spam  The next email crisis.
Weekly Standard

06/23/2003

The Next Great American Newspaper  From the June 23, 2003 issue: Replacing the New York Times.
Weekly Standard

04/14/2003

Why Fascists Fight  From the April 14, 2003 issue: The Japanese and Germans did, so why should the Baathists be any diff
Daily Standard

03/24/2003

Wrong Answer We should worry about winning the war, not making friends.
Weekly Standard

03/17/2003

Replacing the United Nations  From the March 17, 2003 issue: Make way for the Big Three.
Daily Standard

02/04/2003

Why Are We in Space?  Statecraft and leadership is a matter of seeing the wave as it gathers, deciding whether it is good
$  Weekly Standard

02/03/2003

GWB & JFK  There's one thing Bush could learn from the president he most resembles.
$  Weekly Standard

10/07/2002

A New Synagogue in the Old City  Architecture matters.
Weekly Standard

09/23/2002

The Roots of European Appeasement  It's the 1920s all over again.
Weekly Standard

08/12/2002

No Trophies for Terrorists  Israel should keep cameras away from scenes of carnage.
$  Weekly Standard

06/10/2002

On the Jewish Question  A conversation across generations.
Weekly Standard 

05/20/2002

A Nation Like Ours  Why Americans stand with Israel.
Daily Standard

05/10/2002

A Nation Like Ours from the May 20, 2002 issue: Why Americans stand with Israel.
$  Weekly Standard

04/22/2002

Europe to Israel--Drop Dead Why self-defense by the Jewish state is verboten.
Weekly Standard

03/25/2002

The Suicide of the Palestinians  Beyond barbarism in the Middle East.
Daily Standard

03/15/2002

The Suicide of the Palestinians  From the March 25, 2002 issue: Beyond barbarism in the Middle East.
Weekly Standard

09/30/1996

Skyscraper Lust  From the September 30, 1996 issue: So what's wrong with having the world's tallest building?

 

Text of letter from Unabomber to Gelernter
April 24, 1995

[here] is the text of the letter sent by the Unabomber in 1995 to one of his victims, David Gelernter of Yale University. Gelernter suffered extensive wounds to his abdomen, chest, face and hands in the June 1993 bombing. The letter was mailed from Oakland on the same date as three other letters and a package bomb that killed Sacramento timber lobbyist Gilbert B. Murray.


34 posted on 09/08/2004 7:21:41 AM PDT by Tolik
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To: Tolik
Speaking for America, the president has said: We choose duty.

The only time we hear the word duty from our Democrat friends is when some moral poseur like JF'nK uses it.

44 posted on 09/08/2004 11:01:24 AM PDT by metesky ("Brethren, leave us go amongst them." Rev. Capt. Samuel Johnston Clayton - Ward Bond- The Searchers)
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To: Tolik

Bump! You've pinged me to his articles but until now I haven't read them. Now that I read a few, I know why you pinged me! Thanks.


49 posted on 09/09/2004 6:53:33 PM PDT by monkeyshine
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