Daily Office:
Tuesday

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Matins: French Muslims are doing what black New Yorkers have been doing for years: sending their children to Catholic schools. Katrin Bennhold reports.

Tierce: I was tempted not to post today — not to add more noise to an already overloaded network. The only thing worth talking about is how to tell working Americans that yesterday’s rejected bailout may be all that stands between them and a credit lockdown that might freeze their everyday lives. (Credit isn’t just a matter of consumer credit debt. It lubricates most commercial relationships as essentially as oil lubricates an engine.) And it’s rather late in the day for that conversation.

Sext: Front-page news, buried on page A6: “Olmert Says Israel Must Leave West Bank.” I didn’t believe my eyes!

Compline: Édouard came across a bit of video that hasn’t been run on any of the major sites that we’ve seen. Chant after me: “The bailout is bullshit! You broke it, you bought it!”

Oremus…

§ Matins. No laïcité (secularism) to worry about there — and, as a special bonus, the students learn to behave themselves or else.

“It’s ironic,” he said, “but today the Catholic Church is more tolerant of — and knowledgeable about — Islam than the French state.”

“Tolerant” wouldn’t be my word — and there’s nothing ironic about unfanatical religious people banding together in freedom from godlessness. But it’s the insistence on good manners that’s the real draw. Rail against the patriarchal outlook as I do, there still seems to me to be one group of people who benefit from paternalism far more than they might lose by it: children.

§ Tierce. What I’d really like to tell working Americans is this: we voted for the clowns who aided and abetted the free-fall-market that has finally spun off its axle. Maybe you didn’t vote for the Republicans, but we Americans did: that’s how democracy operates.

§ Sext. “We face the need to decide but are not willing to tell ourselves, yes, this is what we have to do. We have to reach an agreement with the Palestinians, the meaning of which of which is that in practice we will withdraw from almost all the territories, if not all the territories. We will leave a percentage of these territories in our hands, but will have to give the Palestinians a similar percentage, because without that there will be no peace.”

§ Compline. We’ve just come back from a very fun dinner with Édouard and le copain. I had an inkling that Édouard would not let anyone interrupt Kathleen’s explanation of the credit crunch, and I was right. But it wasn’t all work. Kathleen told two of her best stories (the mouse story and the Lord & Taylor story), le copain nous a raconté sa version des faits, and Édouard assured me that “Jersey” (as in the island and the state) is indeed a corruption of “Caesarea.” Who knew? Nobody in Jersey; that’s for sure Aaron.

One Response to “Daily Office:
Tuesday”

  1. George says:

    Indeed, that is the way democracy works. And, very soon if the elitist suits don’t do something correctly that in some measure saves the markets, the credit markets in particular, something that preserves some measure of useful equity in the grunt’s retirement funds, we might very well find out how armed insurrection, or perhaps even revolution, works. We might best let the grunts revel in the small victory of yesterday’s vote but ask yourself how would Tienanmen Square play out here in the face of busted retirement funds for hundreds of thousands of citizens and massive foreclosure evictions? The grunts very definitely needs to get their big boy pants on and start paying attention, getting involved and most of all educated, no doubt. But, the expert elites who pretend to act in every one’s best interest had best start actually doing that very thing rather than flim flamming the dumb grunts any further or any longer. This is very near the end for the elites in the suits and apathetic dumb grunts both unless some serious changes occur on both sides of the socio-political involvement and responsibility aisle. Remember, oligarchs are not bound to speak Russian and they are opportunists of the highest order. This is it folks, what may very well be last signal event and the last chance to take a new path before something like the “Putin System” takes hold here. From a review of Alex Keyssar’s book The Right to Vote: The Contested History of Democracy in the United States

    “Turnout is low among precisely the same groups of people who used to be disfranchised,” Keyssar said. “I don’t think that’s a coincidence.”

    Everyone votes, everyone wins, that’s how I feel about it. What we need November fifth is a mandate not a muddle. Given the current set of events it is critical that everyone be encouraged to vote and that of course requires that those of us who encourage also educate.