Saturday, February 23, 2008

Late to the Party

I once lied that I was a huge Built to Spill fan to impress someone. I'm not sure if it was effective, and I have nothing but a vague sense of self-disgust to show for it. This beautiful, melancholic track that will not leave my internal jukebox may be my karmic justice. (Wouldn't it be great if every karmic punishment came in the form of a lovely song from a band you hadn't previously appreciated?)

Built to Spill -- Liar (streamed .wax)

The Necessity of Shock

I identified strongly with Dahlia Lithwick's commentaries (1, 2) on the state of torture in America. We are gradually losing our capacity to be appalled by descriptions and even direct visual evidence of inhumane treatment. The public and our elected officials are becoming inured to greater atrocities in the name of the national interest. The things that used to shock us are both continuing and gaining ambiguous (and sometimes outright) legitimacy while we are debating the legalities of even grosser violations of human rights. I recognize the need to protect the nation as best we can from violence, but surely there must be some means that the ends do not justify. The growing acceptability of torture epitomized by the waterboarding discussions and the encroachment of our rights as citizens epitomized by the PATRIOT Act bring to mind the quote often misattributed to Benjamin Franklin, ''Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.'' There are things we must not do as a nation, actions that we must not condone and crimes we must not pardon, regardless of their life-saving or catastrophe-averting potential. Aren't there?