I'm still shocked, even though I shouldn't be, when people call me a pacifist. They look at the facts that I write regularly for Antiwar.com and that I oppose every war the U.S. government is involved in, as well as virtually every war the U.S. has been in since the...
Peacemaking at a Raiders’ Game
I'm still shocked, even though I shouldn't be, when people call me a pacifist. They look at the facts that I write regularly for Antiwar.com and that I oppose every war the U.S. government is involved in, as well as virtually every war the U.S. has been in since the...
Meet the New Boss;
Same as the Old Boss
"And so, to all other peoples and governments who are watching today, from the grandest capitals to the small village where my father was born: know that America is a friend of each nation and every man, woman, and child who seeks a future of peace and dignity,...
Silent Night
In my Veterans Day column last month, I quoted free-market economist and World War II veteran Richard Timberlake, who wrote: "Yet, any U.S. soldier or airman who thought even briefly about his job of trying to kill and destroy 'the enemy,' knew that he was not...
A Veterans Day Tribute
Every Veterans Day, I try to do something special to remember or honor a veteran. I don't like the standard flag-waving event that this day has become for many people. In many Veterans Day speeches, the speakers talk about the hundreds of thousands of American...
Central Planning at Home
and Abroad
"The man of system … seems to imagine that he can arrange the different members of a great society with as much ease as the hand arranges the different pieces upon a chessboard…" - Adam Smith, The Theory of Moral Sentiments One reason it has taken me so long...
A Star Is Born
[Author's note: As some of you may have noticed, I took August off. I needed to and I have come back fresh. I will be writing at least one article a month from now on, and occasionally two.] One of my biggest frustrations when watching debates is that most of them...
‘Fisking’ or ‘Hendersoning’?
My previous article on Antiwar.com, "Fisking Feith's Faulty Case for War," led to an unusually high number of thoughtful criticisms. The feedback I typically get to my articles on Antiwar.com falls into one of two categories: (1) agreement with me on pretty...
Fisking Feith’s
Faulty Case for War
Douglas Feith, an undersecretary of defense in the Bush administration from 2001 to 2005 and an early supporter of the U.S. invasion of Iraq, recently wrote a remarkable defense of the war. His article, "Why We Went to War in Iraq," was published on the July 3 opinion...
The Supreme Court Gets One Right
Imagine that you're a non-U.S. citizen living outside the United States. A U.S. government official decides that you're an enemy of the United States, captures you and takes you to a prison outside the United States. You're not wearing the military uniform of a...