Currently Browsing: International
Posted by ROBERT STEIN | Oct 7th, 2011
The contest for the GOP presidential nomination is like one of those grade-school elocution contests, in which the winner was always the kid who declaimed the best, without the least idea of what he or she was talking about.
Herman Cain is spouting nonsense, but he does it with enough verbal dexterity to keep pundits busy pointing out that none of it makes sense while Tea Party voters lap it up.
Rick Perry,...
Posted by JOE GANDELMAN, Editor-In-Chief | Oct 7th, 2011
France is playing ketchup.
The food police are out in force in France in the form of the French government which is banning ketchup from schools. Students can put it on one bet-you-can-guess-which-one side dish but in general its now taboo. Why? It seems more of an attempt to protect French culture from those evil, pernicious, foreign cultural gastronomic invasions (read that U-n-i-t-e-d S-t-a-t-e-s’...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Oct 6th, 2011
As uncomfortable is it may make people in the United States – and especially in Mexico – this editorial from Spain’s La Vanguardia warns that with 30 percent of Mexico already in the hands of drug cartels, there may be no way other to take a President Perry up on his offer if Mexico is to avoid becoming a failed state.
The La Vanguardia editorial says in part:
Mexico City Mayor Marcelino...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Oct 5th, 2011
How worried are Japanese about the rise of China? Hiroshi Kawamoto form Japan’s Isen Shimbun, after closely examining what he considers the calamitous decade of U.S. behavior since 9-11, warns that closer ties to America is the only strategy that has any hope of preserving Japanese prosperity.
For Japan’s Isen Shimbun, Hiroshi Kawamoto writes in part:
Trying to return to the United States of the...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Oct 5th, 2011
Is the state of the world really as dire as world leaders who recently spoke at the U.N. General Assembly would lead us to believe? Have we all gotten carried away with gloom and doom? For Argentina’s Diario Decuyo, columnist Andrés Oppenheimer cites a recent report that asserts things are on the upswing almost everywhere, from life expectancy to education levels to the number of wars.
For the Diario...
Posted by JOERG WOLF | Oct 5th, 2011
Why do public school teachers have such a bad reputation in the US and get little pay?
That’s one of the things I don’t get. It’s quite different over here. The job is well paid and respected by most folks. As a country with little natural resources, Germany depends on innovation and a smart work force. Education is good for democracy, happiness etc. The children are our future, yade, yade.
The...
Posted by CAGLE CARTOONS | Oct 5th, 2011
Olle Johansson, Sweden
This copyrighted cartoon is licensed to run on TMV. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.
Posted by CAGLE CARTOONS | Oct 5th, 2011
Amanda Knox: A Cautionary Tale
Making Sense, by Michael Reagan
From now on, parents who plan to send their children abroad to study in a foreign nation should sit them down in front of the TV set and watch replays of the Amanda Knox saga. It has all the elements of a true-to-life lesson in the dangers of turning young men and women barely out of their teens into innocents abroad.
Youngsters — and many...
Posted by MICHAEL STICKINGS, Assistant Editor | Oct 4th, 2011
I had heard of Amanda Knox, the young American woman convicted of murder in Italy, but I didn’t think all that much about her case until I read The Monster of Florence, the fantastic book by crime writer Douglas Preston and Italian journalist Mario Spezi on perhaps the most notorious serial killer in Italian history — it includes an afterward on the Knox case, presented as yet another case of gross...
Posted by DORIAN DE WIND, Military Affairs Columnist | Oct 4th, 2011
Washington National Cathedral officials announced today that they plan to reopen the cathedral on Nov. 12, but that short-term repairs and continuing cathedral operations through the end of 2012 would cost $25 million.
Republican House Majority Leader Eric Cantor and Democratic House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi immediately called dueling press conferences.
At her conference, Pelosi stated that repairs of...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Oct 4th, 2011
Does the case of Amanda Knox, acquitted yesterday in connection with the rape and murder of her British roommate, confirm once again the barbarity and injustice of the American death penalty? Asserting that in the U.S., people are put to death on the basis of evidence at least as flimsy as that against Knox, La Repubblica columnist Vittorio Zucconi writes that the Knox case is yet one more reason for the U.S....
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Oct 3rd, 2011
Is America’s ‘No Tolerance’ approach to battling crime something for Europe and the rest of the world to emulate? According to Die Zeit columnist Dr. Eva Schweitzer, this may seem counter-intuitive and disturbing to European sensibilities, but cracking down on grand and petty crimes committed primarily by ethnic minorities is the very ‘glue’ that hold America’s multicultural...
Posted by DORIAN DE WIND, Military Affairs Columnist | Oct 2nd, 2011
The one-word-man deviated from his standard one-word script this morning on CNN’s State of the Union when discussing the recent drone strike that killed American-born terrorist Anwar al-Awlaki.
But, first, credit where credit is due. Uncharacteristic as it is for him, Former Vice President Dick Cheney praised the U.S. drone strike that killed al-Awlaki and President Obama’s decision to carry it out:
I...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Oct 1st, 2011
Is the United States behind the times for retaining use of the death penalty? Continuing on with our current theme, this editorial from Colombia’s El Tiempo outlines why execution reflects so badly on the United States, and cites statistical evidence that in any case, it fails to deter murder.
The El Tiempo editorial says in part:
The tenacity with which the United States clings to this outdated and...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Oct 1st, 2011
The execution in Georgia of Troy Davis, who many both in and out of the United States believe to have been innocent of the murder charges against him, has once again highlighted the global opprobrium associated with America’s continuing use of the death penalty. According to French philosopher Daniel Salvatore Schiffer, writing for Le Nouvel Observateur, the fact that President Obama failed to mention...
Posted by OWEN GRAY, GUEST VOICE COLUMNIST | Oct 1st, 2011
On Tuesday, at the Museum of Civilization, David Frum argued in favour of the proposition that Pierre Trudeau was “Canada’s most disastrous prime minister:”
Pierre Trudeau was a spending fool. He believed in a state-led economy, and the longer he lasted in office, the more statist he became. The Foreign Investment Review Agency was succeeded by Petro-Canada. Petro-Canada was succeeded...
Posted by Guest Voice | Sep 30th, 2011
Mitt Romney Throws America’s Allies Under Bus for Political Gain
by David Solimini and Benjamin Lowe
This week, Mitt Romney clumsily waded into the discussion of Israel and Palestine. By calling for a wholesale re-evaluation of relations with dozens of countries, he called more than his own judgment into question.
Strong alliances are an essential element of American power. They are difficult to build,...
Posted by STEVEN SURANOVIC, Guest Voice Columnist | Sep 30th, 2011
As economic troubles around the world continue to mount there is increasing pressure upon politicians to do something forceful to revive their economies while deflecting criticism from themselves. One traditional method has always been to blame foreigners for one’s domestic troubles. In the 1980s
the US blamed Japan and worried that its economic strength would soon lead to a diminished US presence. Today...
Posted by ROBERT STEIN | Sep 30th, 2011
Osama bin Laden used to brag about making Americans so paranoid about terror attacks that just raising an al Qaeda flag would panic us into self-damage without any effort on his part.
His legacy comes back in headlines about the arrest of a 26-year-old Massachusetts man, who has been working for months with FBI sting agents to prepare attacks on the Capitol and Pentagon with remote-controlled aircraft, fake...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Sep 29th, 2011
Is Washington’s Jewish lobby an impenetrable barrier to the realization of a Palestinian state? Columnist Moqif Mattar of Rumallah’s Al-Hayat Al-Jadidah writes that regardless of the potential benefits of better U.S. ties to Arabs, keeping Palestinian lands under Israeli control is just as much an article of faith for America as it is for Israel.
For the Al-Hayat Al-Jadidah, Moqif Mattar writes...
Posted by JOE GANDELMAN, Editor-In-Chief | Sep 29th, 2011
As America moves into the 21s century it faces an increasingly vexing problem: what’s it to do about Pakistan? Is it friend or foe or an unacceptable combination of both? Is giving it sensitive information a national security risk? Does it have freelancing elements working against American interests? Or are these elements not really freelancing? Is it playing a double game? Is Pakistan covertly in the violence...
Posted by CAGLE CARTOONS | Sep 27th, 2011
David Fitzsimmons, The Arizona Star
This copyrighted cartoon is licensed to run on TMV. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Sep 27th, 2011
It seems that mild-mannered, coach-class flying U.S. Ambassador to China Gary Locke is making life uncomfortable for Beijing’s coddled, cloistered senior officials. In this thin-skinned editorial from the state-controlled Global Times, the Beijing regime criticizes Chinese media fawning over the new U.S. envoy, thereby exposing its own discomfort over the more extravagant behavior of its own senior officials.
The...
Posted by DR. CLARISSA PINKOLA ESTÉS, Managing Editor of TMV, and Columnist | Sep 27th, 2011
Some might remember in my book, Women Who Run With the Wolves, I wrote about the veiled Muslim women transgressing the stringent rules of their religious and political land that forbades women to drive cars… that when the war broke out and people were imperiled, they ran and started up the engines of the family automobiles and drove all over hill and dale to warn people and help people. The very same...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Sep 26th, 2011
The very blunt comments of outgoing Joint Chiefs Chairman Mike Mullen that Pakistan intelligence has been actively assisting the Haqqani terrorist network has triggered another tremendous upwelling of anti-American sentiment in that nation. These three editorials from Pakistan’s The Nation and The Frontier Post well illustrate the skyrocketing passion and anger toward America now felt in that country.
Just...