I have friends who are such committed Bush-haters that they find it impossible to believe that he has ever done anything morally right or geopolitically beneficial; when I point out that his global AIDS initiative has saved thousands and possibly millions of lives, they quietly admit they didn't realize that.
It's very cheap and easy for a lame-duck president to make financial commitments his administration will never have to keep. Bush's extension is aimed at keeping his AIDS initiative going after 2008, by which time he will have left office. But his successor will pay a political price if he or she breaks this funding promise.
None of this, of course, makes up for Bush's blunders in the Middle East and elsewhere, but at least give the guy his props. He's showing people overseas that the United States isn't just about bombs and oil.
Thoughts
Best To Keep Our Money To Ourselves
Submitted on February 15th, 2008 by Chuck_JohnsonI wrote an article critical of Bono's visit to the Claremont McKenna several months ago. The title of my piece was "Bono: Friend of Poverty, not the Poor."
Michael Knox Beran makes the case much more eloquently than I ever did in today's issue of City Journal. (It sure is nice to find out that you aren't alone in fighting against a ridiculous policy of foreign aid.) The subtitle of the piece is "trendy paternalism is keeping Africa in chains."
The entire piece is worth reading, especially the comparisons between the Bonos of the world and Kurtz, the protagonist of Heart of Darkness. The similarities are very disturbing indeed.
My favorite lines (and the most hopeful) of the entire piece are reproduced here.
Yes!
I have no doubt that history will judge us very harshly for all the experiments we have sanctioned on the African peoples -- from the powe(red) to ethical chocolate and everything in between -- in much the same way history judges the progressives who stole Native American children from their families in the hopes of Christianizing them.
I only pray that we move away from this social(ist) entrepreneurship garbage once and for all and begin to see our friends in Africa (and elsewhere) as potential partners, not souls in need of secular salvation.
RE: Bush in Africa
Submitted on February 15th, 2008 by Jim LakelyThey should greet Dubya warmly. And good on Joel for finding a blue-stater willing to admit that Bush has done more for Africa -- especially on AIDS -- than any previous president. And, really, any single person in the world.
I was struck by Bush's pre-trip speech, in which he declared that the days of the West's "paternalistic" treatment of Africa should come to an end:
Bush has good standing to say such things, since his $15 billion AIDS program is one of the more sucessful aid programs in Africa going these days. But good luck.
Despite all the concerts, pleadings from Bono and Bob Geldolf, etc., Africa has been a black hole of corruption into which billions of aid has been poured to little good effect. In fact:
A better, long-term answer to Africa's economic woes is to promote free trade -- and freedom -- on the continent. But such free-market solutions always come off as sounding "mean." So the money just continues to flow into the pit that only empowers tyrants and exasperates the misery of their victims. Meanwhile, we're supposed to feel good about ourselves because we're "doing something."