Tuesday, January 1, 2013

The Return of Authoritarian Great Powers. By Azar Gat.

The Return of Authoritarian Great Powers. By Azar Gat. Foreign Affairs, July/August 2007.

The Counterrevolution in Military Affairs. By Ralph Peters.

The Counterrevolution in Military Affairs. By Ralph Peters. The Weekly Standard, February 6, 2006.

What Can We Do to Stop Massacres? By Jeffrey Goldberg

What Can We Do to Stop Massacres? By Jeffrey Goldberg. The Atlantic, December 14, 2012.

The Case for More Guns (and More Gun Control). By Jeffrey Goldberg.

The Case for More Guns (and More Gun Control). By Jeffrey Goldberg. The Atlantic, December 2012. Also find it here.

Inside the home of the queen of freebies: Householder saves £20,000 by furnishing her semi-detached with online cast-offs. By David Wilkes.

Inside the home of the queen of freebies: Householder saves £20,000 by furnishing her semi-detached with online cast-offs. By David Wilkes. Daily Mail, January 1, 2013.

Deport me? If America won’t change its crazy gun laws . . . I may deport myself. By Piers Morgan.

Deport me? If America won’t change its crazy gun laws . . . I may deport myself. By Piers Morgan. Daily Mail, December 29, 2012.

China’s Singular Sexual Revolution. By Mara Hvistendahl.

China’s Singular Sexual Revolution. By Mara Hvistendahl. Los Angeles Review of Books, December 16, 2012.

Misery is Humanitarians’ Gift to Aleppo. By Walter Russell Mead

Misery is Humanitarians’ Gift to Aleppo. By Walter Russell Mead. Via Meadia, December 27, 2012.

The Death of Compromise. By David Brooks

The Death of Compromise: There’s No More Middle in the Middle East. By David Brooks. The Weekly Standard, July 2/July 9, 2001.

A Burden Too Heavy to Put Down. By David Brooks. New York Times, November 4, 2003. Also here.

Actions, Not Words. By Dov S. Zakheim

Actions, Not Words. By Dov S. Zakheim. The National Interest, December 28, 2012.

Biblical Standards for Marriage. By Esther J. Hamori.

Biblical Standards for Marriage. By Esther J. Hamori. The Huffington Post, May 29, 2012.

Voices of God: Religious Diversity in the Bible. By Esther J. Hamori.

Voices of God: Religious Diversity in the Bible. By Esther J. Hamori. The Huffington Post, July 30, 2012.

Are the Palestinians Ready to Share a State with Jordan? By Daoud Kuttab.

Are the Palestinians Ready to Share a State with Jordan? By Daoud Kuttab. The Atlantic, December 26, 2012.

Stiff-necked People: How to Secure Israel’s Future. By Ehud Barak.

Stiff-necked People: How to Secure Israel’s Future. By Ehud Barak. Prospect, December 12, 2012.

The Geopolitics of Scripture. By Dov S. Zakheim.

The Geopolitics of Scripture. By Dov S. Zakheim. The American Interest, July/August 2012. Also here.

Existential Threats to Israel: Learning from the Ancient Past. By Steven R. David. Israel Affairs, October 2012.
 



 



Transcript: The NRA’s Press Conference Reacting to the Sandy Hook Shooting.

Transcript: The NRA’s Press Conference Reacting to the Sandy Hook Shooting. Washington Examiner, December 21. 2012.

Video of NRA Press Conference. YouTube.


The End of the University as We Know It. By Nathan Harden.

The End of the University as We Know It. By Nathan Harden. The American Interest, January/February 2013. Also here.

Does Online Ed Spell Doom for Traditional Universities. By Walter Russell Mead. Via Meadia, December 16, 2013.

Harden:

What about the destruction these changes will cause? Think again of the music industry analogy. Today, when you drive down music row in Nashville, a street formerly dominated by the offices of record labels and music publishing companies, you see a lot of empty buildings and rental signs. The contraction in the music industry has been relentless since the Mp3 and the iPod emerged. This isn’t just because piracy is easier now; it’s also because consumers have been given, for the first time, the opportunity to break the album down into individual songs. They can purchase the one or two songs they want and leave the rest. Higher education is about to become like that.

For nearly a thousand years the university system has looked just about the same: professors, classrooms, students in chairs. The lecture and the library have been at the center of it all. At its best, traditional classroom education offers the chance for intelligent and enthusiastic students to engage a professor and one another in debate and dialogue. But typical American college education rarely lives up to this ideal. Deep engagement with texts and passionate learning aren’t the prevailing characteristics of most college classrooms today anyway. More common are grade inflation, poor student discipline, and apathetic teachers rubber-stamping students just to keep them paying tuition for one more term.

If you ask students what they value most about the residential college experience, they’ll often speak of the unique social experience it provides: the chance to live among one’s peers and practice being independent in a sheltered environment, where many of life’s daily necessities like cooking and cleaning are taken care of. It’s not unlike what summer camp does at an earlier age. For some, college offers the chance to form meaningful friendships and explore unique extracurricular activities. Then, of course, there are the Animal House parties and hookups, which do take their toll: In their research for their book Academically Adrift, Richard Arum and Josipa Roksa found that 45 percent of the students they surveyed said they had no significant gains in knowledge after two years of college. Consider the possibility that, for the average student, traditional in-classroom university education has proven so ineffective that an online setting could scarcely be worse. But to recognize that would require unvarnished honesty about the present state of play. That’s highly unlikely, especially coming from present university incumbents.

The open-source educational marketplace will give everyone access to the best universities in the world. This will inevitably spell disaster for colleges and universities that are perceived as second rate. Likewise, the most popular professors will enjoy massive influence as they teach vast global courses with registrants numbering in the hundreds of thousands (even though “most popular” may well equate to most entertaining rather than to most rigorous). Meanwhile, professors who are less popular, even if they are better but more demanding instructors, will be squeezed out. Fair or not, a reduction in the number of faculty needed to teach the world’s students will result. For this reason, pursuing a Ph.D. in the liberal arts is one of the riskiest career moves one could make today. Because much of the teaching work can be scaled, automated or even duplicated by recording and replaying the same lecture over and over again on video, demand for instructors will decline.

The Writing Revolution. By Peg Tyre.

The Writing Revolution. By Peg Tyre. The Atlantic, October 2012. Also find it here.

Nature and Nature’s God. By Walter Russell Mead

Nature and Nature’s God. By Walter Russell Mead. Via Meadia, October 29, 2012.

Democracy at Work in Israel. By Walter Russell Mead.

Democracy at Work in Israel. By Walter Russell Mead. Via Meadia, January 1, 2013.

Ann Coulter Rails Against NRA’s Wayne LaPierre. By Jeff Poor

Ann Coulter Rails Against NRA’s Wayne LaPierre. By Jeff Poor. The Daily Caller, December 31, 2012.

Egypt Official: Israel Will Be Wiped Out in a Decade. By Roi Kais.

Egypt Official: Israel Will Be Wiped Out in a Decade. By Roi Kais. Ynet News, January 1, 2013.

Top Brotherhood Official Essam el-Erian Predicts Israel’s Destruction. By Joel Himelfarb. The Counter Jihad Report, January 3, 2013. Also find it here.

Essam el-Erian: “Israel will fall within 10 years, Jewish occupiers must leave.” By Amir Mizroch. Israel Hayom, January 1, 2013.

Egyptian Jews encouraged to go home, so Palestinians can. Albawaba, December 31, 2012.

Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood Official Issam Al-’Aryan Calls upon Egyptian Jews to Return to Egypt “to Make Room for the Palestinians.” Video. MEMRI TV, Clip No. 3696, December 27, 2012. Also at YouTube.

More on Egypt and Morsi here.



The Round World Made Flat. By Jackson Lears.

The Round World Made Flat: The Curious Neoliberal Social Scientism of Jared Diamond. By Jackson Lears. Bookforum, December 2012/January 2013.

The Year the Arab Spring Went Bad. By F. Gregory Gause, III.

The Year the Arab Spring Went Bad. By F. Gregory Gause, III. Foreign Policy, December 31, 2012. Also find it here.