The Latest(ish)
Peacekeeping Fiascoes of the 1990s: Causes, Solutions, and U.S. Interests, by Frederick Fleitz. With his good intentions and his blue helmet, the U.N. peacekeeper was an icon of post-World War II internationalism. He was G.I. Joe for the Eleanor Roosevelt set, muscular assurance that the days of the feeble League of Nations would never return. And for a while it seemed to work. The record was far from perfect, but from Cyprus to West New Guinea to Namibia, the presence of relatively small numbers of U.N. troops was sufficient to separate warring forces and supervise the return to peace. The [...]
Keepers Without Peace
December 23, 2002
"Peacekeeping Fiascoes of the 1990s: Causes, Solutions, and U.S. Interests," by Frederick Fleitz.; published originally in National Review
MOST people go to Las Vegas for the gambling. Dazzled by neon, crazed by greed and Wayne Newton, they challenge the odds, trying to outwit the trickster goddess, Lady Luck herself. But I was there for a different, wilier adversary. I was in town for the chicken. It was pay- hack time, a chance for the revenge I’d seen waiting for since that shameful, sultry night in Manhattan’s Chinatown all those years ago. You know the sort of evening—too much Tsingtao, not enough sense. Next thing, you’re in a seedy airless room doing something you shouldn’t: in my case, playing [...]
Chick-Tac-Toe
December 23, 2002
There’s a gift shop at the entrance to New York’s new Museum of Sex with “edible body chocolate,” “Kama Sutra” oils, nudie pens, and books such as New York Girls, Fetish Girls, Forbidden Erotica, Strip Flips, Peek — Photographs from the Kinsey Institute, The Adventures of Sweet Gwendoline, and Bob Flanagan: Supermasochist — but none of this was enough for one downtown Jezebel, grumpy in Winona black as she gazed idly at pictures of Bob Flanagan’s tortured form. “You’d think,” she grumbled, “that there would be more here than this. There ought to be, like, you know, toys.” After all [...]
Sex in the City
December 3, 2002
Museum of Sex; published originally in National Review Online