I have a fondness for Charlton Heston, the actor. Not because of the parts he played in epic, blockbuster films like Ben Hur and The Greatest Story Ever Told, but because of his roles in "smaller" films. I particularly enjoyed his portrayal of Cardinal Richelieu in Richard Lester's Musketeer movies. I'm a fan of his work in Soylent Green. I like what he did in Touch of Evil.
A CICERONIAN LAWYER'S MUSINGS ON LAW, PHILOSOPHY, CURRENT AFFAIRS, LITERATURE, HISTORY AND LIVING LIFE SECUNDUM NATURAM
Thursday, October 26, 2023
From Their Cold, Dead Hands
I have a fondness for Charlton Heston, the actor. Not because of the parts he played in epic, blockbuster films like Ben Hur and The Greatest Story Ever Told, but because of his roles in "smaller" films. I particularly enjoyed his portrayal of Cardinal Richelieu in Richard Lester's Musketeer movies. I'm a fan of his work in Soylent Green. I like what he did in Touch of Evil.
Friday, October 20, 2023
Caveat Scriptor: The Harvard Student Statement and the Backlash
"Let the writer beware." That, I think and hope, is the English translation of Caveat Scriptor. I have a disturbing feeling that it may mean "Beware of the Writer" which isn't what I intend to say in this case, though I might in other cases.
"The Statement" being referred to is, as you might suspect, that issued, jointly we're told, by certain Harvard students and student organizations in response to the attacks made by Hamas earlier this month against Israel, targeting civilians primarily if not exclusively.
That statement is relatively short, or at least versions of it I've seen which purport to be accurate are short. It doesn't refer to Hamas. It does, however, assert that Israel is solely responsible for the violence perpetrated by Hamas, refers to the government of Israel as an apartheid regime, and claims that the Palestinians have been repressed by Israel and compelled to live in an open-air prison for two decades. It states that the violence Israel will perpetuate in responding to the attacks will be the responsibility of Israel alone.
Some of Harvard's corporate donors have responded to the statement and what they consider the insufficiently outraged response to it by its administrators by demanding that the names of those students making or joining in the statements and, presumably, what lawyers may call their personal identifying information, be disclosed. The donors are concerned that unless they are disclosed they may, inadvertently, hire them. Presumably, they'll refuse to do so if they learn who they are and may be inclined to vilify them as well. Given the virulence of their response to the statement, they may hope that others will also refuse to hire them as well and join in blacklisting them. Not surprisingly, some students have expressed regret at their temerity.
The Statement is clearly wrong, and even reprehensibly so, in ascribing sole responsibility for the attacks by Hamas on Israel and attributing no responsibility to Hamas. One may sympathize with the plight of the Palestinian people without supporting the murderous and brutal actions of a terrorist organization, which is all Hamas appears to be. As far as I'm aware, Hamas itself has taken no action to benefit the Palestinians; it has merely committed itself to the destruction of Israel--which is not likely to ever take place. While it's true The Statement makes no mention of Hamas, it's clearly intended to refer to the recent attacks by Hamas, and absolves it of any guilt for its atrocities, which is deplorable.
Nevertheless, I have to admit I find the reactions of the donors in question to be rather surprising, for a number of reasons. Let me note, first, that many people of my age and slightly older than me said and did things while college students not all that different from what those who wrote or joined in The Statement have said and done. It happens that at that time, the U.S. itself was being blamed for violence perpetrated by others, some of whom were student activists, some of whom were from North Vietnam, some of whom were black, some of whom were South African, some of whom were communists--I could go on.
We Boomers while in college and (for a time) afterwards were rabid political and social critics and protesters, and quite ready to blame those we perceived as the oppressors for the violence of those we thought were oppressed by them. Some of us were violent in the cause of the oppressed, or so we thought. The Statement considered in that context isn't unique or uniquely reprehensible. I wonder whether those who now condemn The Statement are Boomers who regret or have forgotten their own youthful conduct.
Let me note also that college students are often naive, foolish, immature, thoughtless, subject to peer-pressure and privileged, and may act stupidly and irresponsibly. I, personally, do not think or have reason to believe that students at Harvard are more intelligent, sophisticated, reasonable and discerning than students at other colleges. I think they can be just as stupid and callous as their less favored brothers and sisters.
It therefore isn't apparent to me that condemning Harvard for failing to condemn the students in question with sufficient ferocity, ceasing donations to that institution, and seeking to expose and blacklist the students in question in a way which may negatively impact their careers and future lives, is appropriate or even sensible. It serves to call attention to The Statement, in fact. When the financially High and Mighty among us begin to throw their weight around to get their way and seek vengeance against those who disturb them, particularly insignificants like undergraduates, it isn't a pretty or inspiring sight.
Wednesday, October 11, 2023
The Never-Ending (Horror) Story
Monday, October 2, 2023
Social Media and the Roman Empire
It seems there is a trend, fostered for God knows what reasons by Social Media such as TikTok, by which women ask men how often they think of the Roman Empire. Supposedly, the men have responded that they think of it quite often. Just what these men consider the Roman Empire to be, or what it is about the Roman Empire they think about (there was a lot involved in it, after all) isn't clear.
Nor is it clear whether this trend actually exists, or how it arose if it exists, or the extent to which it exists. These days, it seems possible that a woman may have asked a man about the Roman Empire one day and posted the response on Social Media, whereupon women all over the world having read of it began asking men about it or at least claimed they had done so. Such things are possible in these unfortunate times, where it seems anyone may be an "influencer" or can claim to be one. I can only say that I see the trend mentioned in posts and headlines.
The fact that there is a "trend" having been noted somewhere, sometime, somehow by someone, various and sundry pundits and pontificators have pondered why there is such a trend and, of course, what it means. What it means to some is that men are vulnerable and confused about themselves, and apparently long for the good old days of Rome, where it is said the patriarchy reigned free and undisturbed, and women kept in their place. Alternatively, men may just want to repress and dominate women and think fondly of an era and place where that took place with greater ease than it does now.
Our current fascination with sex and gender issues makes it unsurprising that speculations and conclusions of this nature abound. But explanation of the fascination with Rome and its empire is found easily enough because its memory is everywhere, and in some respects and forms it still exists. The Catholic Church is in many respects a ghost of the Empire. Portions of Latin are used in discourse, and in the law, medicine and science, and of course the Romance languages are derivations of it. Roman Ruins, still spectacular in many ways, lie throughout Europe, the U.K., North Africa, and large parts of Asia.
Its impact on law and government is immense in the West., and not merely in the continent of Europe. The government of the U.S. was inspired by it and mimicked it. Christianity was born and developed in the Empire, and its history and that of the Christian religion are intermixed.
Movies and books based on Roman history have been made and written for many years. Roman architecture can be seen in many public buildings. Nations are compared to it. Its authors are still read and studied. There's really no getting away from it, in the West.
This is not to mention the fact that, in the history of the West, there has been no other nation or form of government which ruled over so many diverse peoples and regions so successfully and for so long in all of history.
It seems unlikely, then, that the popularity of the Roman Empire is due to feelings of sexual inadequacy or insecurity or urge to dominate being experienced by modern men. It seems rather peculiar that there are those who come to this conclusion; it may say more about them than anything else.
Rome was a patriarchal society, no doubt. It was military and imperialistic, cruel and hierarchical. It can be maintained, though, that this is the case regarding its successors as well, and it's unclear it was any worse than other empires and nations that came after it, even relative to the rights of women, who could not vote until recently, could not freely divorce until recently, and whose legal rights were minimal until recently. Women were, in fact, less free and had less rights in many respects after the dissolution of the Empire than they had during the Empire.