Archive for November, 2006

Nixon and Watchmen

Posted November 1, 2006 By John C Wright

Jordan asks: Have you also noticed how it is in at least one piece of fiction (Alan Moore’s Watchmen) assumed merely as part of the background that Nixon would have made himself an authoritarian dictator, murdering his political opponents, if he had the power? And few fans objected to this, despite the fact that Nixon did in fact have the power to murder political opponents, but appears not to have used it, in real life?

SPOILER WARNING: My response written below gives away the ending of WATCHMAN, so if you haven’t read it—heck, if you haven’t read it, what in the world is wrong with you? Go out and buy a copy right now. No, don’t go out. Do it online.

Moore is a talented enough writer that he makes even his bad guys three-dimensional, realistic. So much so, that even the characters he despises, he portrays heroically.

For example, Moore admitted in an interview (I don’t have the link handy, sorry) that Rorschach was his portrayal of The Question, a Steve Ditko hero based on Ditko’s Ayn Rand philosophy. Moore thought The Question (and maybe Ditko) a nutcase, so he portrayed Rorschach as a nutcase, whose over-riding flaw, the heresy for which he is killed in the end, is his Manichaeism: that is, as a man who believes in right-and-wrong. Rorschach’s sin is that he lacks Kerry style “nuance” and Clinton style “depends on the definition of is” and ergo is too black and white. His name and his mask hint at his insanity and his “simplisme.”

Now, here is where the writing is better than the writer: the last frame of the last page of WATCHMAN is ambiguous. Rorschach may have won after all. If the truth comes out, then the manipulation and lies of Ozymandias, the smartest man on the planet, will turn out to be simply a crime, not a salvation from Nuclear War. Moore is good enough a writer to pose the question, “How does ‘the good ends justify the bad means’ work when the ends don’t actually turn out?” if you “do evil in order to achieve good” what happens when no good comes of it, and you are left having done evil in order to achieve …. nothing.

Killing a million people in New York to stop a Nuclear War? Ozymandias, who lacks human sympathy, might see the logic behind this horrible triage. But killing a millin people for nothing….? Ozymandias has drifted away from humanity like a sailor who lost his bearings, as the clever subnarrative of the narrative implies.

What I am driving at with that Moore’s own opinion of Rorschach does not affect his portrayal of him. That sounds like a paradox, doesn’t it? But Rorschach is still the favorite character of more than one person I know, people who like him for exactly the reasons Moore dislikes him.

In some other interview Moore expressed dismay that the Comedian, whom he meant to be a villain of the first water, a four-color G. Gordon Liddy, the arch-bugbear of the Left, was the favorite character of some of his readers. Moore did not know what he had done. He didn’t know why the character was appealing.

Moore’s portrayal of Nixon was sort of a Leftwing shorthand for “evil”—he used it much the same way a Jew is used as a stock character in novels of two centuries ago, a shorthand for greedy, or Negroes as a shorthand for lazy. (snarky comment) The difference is, I suppose, that the Jews and Blacks have a right to be angry for being called greedy and lazy, whereas we Vast Rightwing Conspirators must actually know we are Evil Incarnate, and are reluctantly filled with admiration for the Flower Children who are finally telling the world the truth about us. (/snarky comment)

But it did not bug me at the time, nor did sticking in Evil Cartoon Nixon break the suspension of disbelief for me—because anyone, Right or Left, can be corrupted by power, and if any administration, Donkey or Elephant, had a Doctor Manhattan in their arsenal, the temptations for abuse would be disturbing. Indeed, even a non-super superhero, like the Comedian, Rorschach and certainly by the end, Ozymandias, are shown to be corrupted by the power that heroes have over ordinary mortals. Even the Nite-Owl is not utterly immune: note the scene where he mentions (threatens) a barroom full of lowlifes that his flying ship is equipped with missiles.

Moore is trying to preach a bit of old-fashioned English anarchism to the Superhero fan, warning that it is dangerous to trust anyone with power. His message is subtle, and merely part of the background, and one need not agree or disagree to enjoy the tale, revolutionary for, of all things, its realism, smack in the middle of a genre famed for its unrealism.

This is what we call objectivity in art. If I paint an imaginary beautiful redhead, but I don’t like redheads, she won’t seem that beautiful to me: but a man whose tastes run to auburn curls, to him, she might be the next Ann-Margaret. It merely means I have painted accurately—which is a strange word to use for imaginary creations, but no word is really better. Moore in Watchman portrayed Comedian and Rorschach accurately.

I am also reminded of reading WAR AND PEACE—and I think I am justified in calling Moore the Tolstoy of comicbookdom, as the man is inspired by genius—where Tolstoy ends his most brilliant novel of all time with a foolish and boring lecture on determinism in history, which has nothing to do with, or is contradicted in places, by the behavior of his characters. Tolstoy created better than he knew. So with Moore.

Don’t get me started on his American Gothic run of SWAMP THING. Brilliant, despite a really weak ending.

These days he writes porn. Alas, if only he would use his great powers for good, rather than for evil! 

In all honesty, knowing now what creepy things Mr. Moore preaches in real life, I am not sure if I could reread his magnus opis with any great enjoyment. Knowing more about Nixon now than I did in my youth might make the casual character assassination harder to stomach.

The loss is mine, a self-inflicted wound: I know a friend who won’t listen to Wagner because Wagner was an anti-Semite, so the most beautiful music in the world is silent to him.

Would that I were more forgiving, so that my joy in even childish pleasures (comic books, for one) might be more. 

(Certainly I would have not a single reader in the world, if I had to wait to find only patrons who agreed with me on all points. Heck, I barely even agree with myself on all points, and then only by the slimmest of margins: what an opinionated boor I am! I shall boycott my own writings immediately, in protest! Then I will buy a Dixie Chicks album just so that I can immediately thereafter stop buying them! THAT will show them!)

4 Comments so far. Join the Conversation

ACLU Drops Case Against Patriot Act

Posted November 1, 2006 By John C Wright

As an attorney, this story always bothered me. In most issues, I can see what argument the other side would make, if for no other reason than being prepared to counter them. But every time I looked at the Patriot Act, I simply could not see, in the wording of the Act, what possible interpretations its opponants feared. It was not like the Anti-Sedition Act of WWI or the various security measures (Japanese Internment) of the FDR Administration. People would try to explain to me what they feared, and the arguments simply did not make sense.

Example: the Patriot Act allows for the FBI to look at your library card records and see what you checked out. Not only does this not alarm me, this makes me laugh and loll my tongue. Communication between you and your library is not privileged communication and never has been. It is not even private communication, in the sense that a reasonable man expects the communication to be secure from public notice. Why? Because the library is a public institution, run by the state and local government, paid for by tax money. A library is not even the phone company; and the phone company records, in the eyes of the law, are not privileged communications, not even private. If you dial a  number, you know or should know the operator knows what number was dialed and when: because she, or the computer she runs, placed the call. The police do not even need a warrant to examine phone company dialing records. Likewise, when you check a book out from the library, you know or should know that the librarian keeps a record thereof. In the eyes of the law, you are not the owner of said book, you are a bailee, holding public property in your hands. The privileged relationship which exists between lawyer-client, patient-doctor, man-and-wife simply is not present, never has been, and there is no way in law or logic such a relationship could exist. The hue and cry over this issue was beyond absurd: it was a fraud. Only people illiterate in the law would be fooled by this argument.

And there were no facts, no examples of anyone who actually had been oppressed, or deprived of a civil right, or afraid to check out a book, or anything.  This is one example of many, one argument of many arguments. I cannot actually call it an argument: it was hysteria.
 
So! Now that the ACLU has dropped the case against the Patriot Act, does this mean the hysteria will die down? Can we take this as evidence that the sharp young lawyers have examined the law with a fne tooth comb, and concluded it has no Constitutional unsoundness?

Don’t hold your breath,  friends.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/10/28/AR2006102801001.html

2 Comments so far. Join the Conversation

Fair and Balanced II

Posted November 1, 2006 By John C Wright

An exchange that Mitt Romney had with a reporter. The reporter is lecturing him on transportation. Here it is:

Reporter: With so much unknown, economically, when it comes to Commonwealth woes, with the dollar amount on the Big Dig repairs, and anything that’s found in this, stem to stern, that you…unknown, with outside agencies saying that almost every transportation agency in the state is facing a budget deficit, and with your own transportation finance commission recommending keeping the western tolls in place, among a number of different options, why then is the administration foregoing possible revenue, and actually adding to the transportation burden that the Commonwealth, outside of…

MR: Do you have a point of view on this?

Reporter: Well, I represent a number of people, Governor.

MR: No, I represent the people. You’re supposed to be unbiased.

You tell ’em, Mitt.

3 Comments so far. Join the Conversation

Totalitarian toleration

Posted November 1, 2006 By John C Wright

An interesting quote from an interesting article: The author is talking about how respect for other religions should not demand the faithful of any faith to give up their unique claims to truth. Instead, since Jews and Muslim, Hindu, Sikh, and Buddhist acknowledge a reality man cannot comprehend, this author suggests each regard the other with respect, studying the other to gain greater and richer understanding of his own faith. He concludes with this–

“The new imperialism of western relativism imposes tolerance in the manner of a totalitarian system, forcing the religions of the world to give up all that is most dear to them in return for a vague ultimate Reality that no one can recognize as their own. Any religious diversity that truly matters is obliterated in return for an ambiguous, secure unity that supposedly brings peace. Is this not the essence of totalitarianism? ”

http://www.blessed-sacrament.org/christianityandother.html

22 Comments so far. Join the Conversation