Hitchens, you fat fraud, you supported the killing, maiming and displacement of millions of people.

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[this is good]
I've been following Hitchens' trajectory since the beginning of the war, thinking at some point he would recant. But just four months ago on the last anniversary of the war, he was gloating about how he didn't get it wrong, he was still convinced the US invasion was right and true.

So this makes me laugh. It shows 1) he's not the big tough guy who would happily take on the Enemies of Democracy---he'd crumble on the battlefield in less than 11 seconds---and 2) he has been clueless about the war's purpose from the very beginning. This wasn't about bringing freedom to the citizens of Iraq, but gaining ultimate control over a key strategic area in central Asia and the Middle East: and you don't seize control of a place without convincing the people there that you have the means to crush them if they resist. (See Khan, Genghis.) Unfortunately for our troops, the Iraqis have decided this isn't going to happen, even if McCain gets into office and keeps us there for another 8 years.

But it goes to show that it's easy to cheer for a military engagement when you're not the one doing the engaging. And I've noticed that the ones who cheer the loudest are the ones least likely to serve (Hitchens, cough, cough).
But it goes to show that it's easy to cheer for a military engagement when you're not the one doing the engaging. And I've noticed that the ones who cheer the loudest are the ones least likely to serve (Hitchens, cough, cough).

Well said. I'm also wondering if he is sniffing the political wind, and thinking that a subtle shift in his Iraq war position might be timely.
He's always prided himself on going against the flow, at least among his supposedly fellow liberals---he still regards himself as being left of center!---and likes to compare himself to George Orwell, though I can't see Hitchens serving in Spain with the Republic. Too soft: which is something Orwell would have spotted immediately in a poseur like Hitchens.

But he's been one of those guys who sees the surge as evidence of American success in Iraq. Too bad he hasn't looked over his shoulder towards Afghanistan...
I don't see how anyone who allows himself to act as a pro-war neo-con stooge could ever declare himself to be left of centre, and retain any credibility. He's a fraud whose opinion can be bought, and shaped by, the highest bidder, and deep down, he knows it.

As for comparing himself to George Orwell, well that just illustrates how deluded he really is. He must have had one whisky too many when he made that comment.

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Snowy

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Snowy
Australia
"A human being is a part of the whole, called by us, "Universe," a part limited in time and space. He experiences himself, his thoughts and feelings as something separated from the rest -- a kind of optical delusion of his consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest to us. Our task must be to free ourselves from this prison by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty. Nobody is able to achieve this completely, but the striving for such achievement is in itself a part of the liberation and a foundation for inner security." : Albert Einstein - (1879-1955) Physicist and Professor, Nobel Prize 1921

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