Showing posts with label Book Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book Reviews. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 9, 2020

Review of Scott Horton's Fool's Errand from the December Greater Sturbridge Town & Country Living Magazine.

Was This Trip Necessary?


Fool's Errand: Time to End the War in Afghanistan 

By Scott Horton

The Libertarian Institute, 2017


By Richard Morchoe 


Scott Horton, author of Fool's Errand: Time to End the War in Afghanistan, begins the last section of the book thus: "The occupation of Afghanistan is not just America's longest foreign war.  It may also have the distinction of being both the least supported and least opposed war in our history."  Nineteen years on, it is a zombie conflict with its think tank and military supporters coming up with little rhyme or reason to be there other than to be there.


The people may not be following all that closely, but there is a constituency doing well, the suppliers of the war material are passionately supporting our sojourn over there.


Horton's Fool's Errand could be assigned as the text of a college survey course on our involvement even before the events of 911.  The book is exhaustively documented and foot noted.  Mr. Horton is director of the Libertarian Institute as well as editorial director of Antiwar.com.  He hosts Antiwar Radio Pacifica, 90.7 FM KPFK in Los Angeles, California, and also a podcast, the Scott Horton Show from Scott Horton.org.


As he is associated with Antiwar.com, it would not be difficult to observe that he probably looks at our Afghan involvement with a critical eye, if the title, Fool's Errand did not give it away.


Full disclosure, your reviewer has contributed content to Antiwar.com and has a slight acquaintance with Mr. Horton.


It is not easy to make sense of the long engagement in Afghanistan, maybe because it can't make sense.  A cliché analogy would be it is a hall of mirrors and that is as good as any.  We have lurched from one bad decision to another.


It goes without saying that the events of 911 did not just happen out of the blue.  George Bush's comment about hating our freedom does not hold up, as a read of Scott's book would demonstrate.  The lack of reason is accentuated when the rationale that we have to "Fight them over there so we don't have to fight them over here" is used.  Even when an attack happens in the "homeland” (e.g. the Boston Marathon Bombing) the answer does not change.


So, what did cause certain denizens of the Islamic east to carry out the attack on the Twin Towers and set off almost two decades of war?


Scott Horton cites University of Chicago professor Robert Pape who undertook a study of Islam to figure out the cause of suicide terrorism.  He was shocked when he found out that it was not religion that led to the attacks, but reaction to foreign occupation.


People of other faiths would also resort to self-destruction as part of their resistance.  Not so long ago, the Tamils, who are not Muslims, fought a long war of liberation against the Sri Lankan state and would use the tactic.


Pape and his grad students built a database "of every suicide attacker on earth since 1980."  The findings; these are not losers who have given up on life.  "The single most significant factor in determining whether someone would commit an act of suicide terrorism was the presence of foreign combat forces on the attacker’s territory."


It would have been a good idea to think about how Arabs and Muslims might react to our troops on Saudi soil or the first war against Iraq.  Nah, just go with hate us for our freedom as motive.


Anyway, no matter the motive, the attack of 911 was, murder most foul.  The United States had every reason to demand the extradition of the perpetrators and if refused, take military action to apprehend them.


But, as Scott writes, there was a fly in that ointment.


The Taliban were, and one must assume, still are, serious about their religion.  They were, however, not in love with al Qaeda.  Three months before 911, Mullah Omar gave an interview to a western journalist in which he expressed his displeasure with bin Laden.


Granted, the Taliban refused to just hand over their guest, but they knew the man was a hot potato and they needed at least a fig leaf of accommodation to drop him.  They offered to turn bin Laden over to a third country.  We wanted him and that was that.


Were the Taliban just stalling?  Horton looks at the words of Milton Bearden who had been the CIA station chief running the covert war in the 1980s, "We never heard what they were trying to say.  We had no common language.  Ours was, 'Give up bin Laden.'  They were saying, 'Do something to help us give him up'..."  


That the Taliban was trying to dance away from bin Laden never made the news at the time.  Even if they were being cute, it is undeniable that the Bush administration would settle for nothing but absolute compliance.  


We could not take yes for an answer.


Horton goes into much detail, but suffice it to say in the words of Lincoln, "and the war came."


Even after the war started and, supposedly, finished, elements of the Taliban were trying to come to terms with the new regime and were rebuffed.  It should not have been a surprise when later on they would go back to war.


We were "nation building," but it did not seem to be going well.  Our lack of popularity among those we were uplifting was noted by journalist Chris Sands.  The insurgency may not have been an honorable enterprise, but Sands observed, "when civilians are killed by the Taliban in Kandahar, locals still blame the [U.S.-supported] government instead of the Taliban, who are "rarely the subject of the people's fury" in such circumstances."


The project seemed to be meandering such that Karzai, the president, was referred to as the Mayor of Kabul as the writ of the government did not seem to exceed the boundary of the capital.


What to do?  How about a surge, i.e. more troops?


This one would be different from the Iraq endeavor.  It would be baked in a think tank oven by "COINdistas."  COIN refers to Counter Insurgency warfare and it had its stars.


There were old neocon retreads as a supporting cast, but new faces were not wanting such as the Aussie COIN theorist, David Kilcullen.  General James Mattis, who would later become known for a role in the Trump administration, wrote the Counterinsurgency Field Manual, but the guy who really made his brand, such as it is, was General David Petraeus.


Petraeus was the man with a plan.  He and his confreres "promised Obama that with the plan they could have the Taliban sitting at the table, ready to concede to American terms within 18 months–by July 2011."  


That that did not happen was hardly an impediment to Petraeus.  He always claimed his escalation was working, with constant gains, albeit "fragile" and "reversible," which means not actual gains.


No matter that the resistance continued to grow, Dave's rep grew as well, until he and his amanuensis and mistress, Paula Broadwell, were caught sharing classified material.  He was slapped on the wrist with a misdemeanor conviction that might have been a felony for someone else.  Petraeus has not slunk away in disgrace, but is doing well.  You've heard of the term, "empty suit."  This guy was an empty uniform.


What is the point of it all?  Maybe there are riches beneath the soil, but the U.S., and certainly its people will not profit from them.  The Afghans will continue to extract wealth from the land in the form of opium, but your average Afghani will not become rich.


The Greek historian Herodotus related how the Spartan king, Pausanias, after the battle of Platea, contrasted the luxury of the captured Persian king's table as set for dinner and his own poor "spartan" supper.  Pausanias commented that the Persians had "come to rob us of our poverty."


Taliban members must think us that stupid.


History does not stop so, I reached out to Scott as to where we stand now.  He was kind enough to respond:


"Despite the fact that Donald Trump did not believe in the war in Afghanistan, in 2017, he sent more troops, and massively increased airstrikes, killing tens of thousands of people. He did so while at the same time successfully negotiating a withdrawal deal with the Taliban. The terms are that the U.S. will withdraw all combat forces by May 2021, as long as the Taliban agree not to allow international terrorists on their territory.


Joe Biden opposes this deal. He still wants to implement his plan from the Obama years: a garrison of thousands of "counter-terrorism" forces stationed there indefinitely.


Biden may or may not seek regime change against any more secular governments, but he certainly plans on continuing the "war on terrorism," which means war against troublesome radicals anywhere the U.S. military and CIA drone forces can find them from Nigeria to the Philippines.


In the seemingly unlikely chance that Trump is declared the winner of the election after-all, there will still be enormous pressure on him to cancel the deal and stay under the pretext of al Qaeda's return or the dangers of Afghan "ISIS."


Either way, the American people are going to have to insist that the deal is seen through and the U.S.'s role in that tragic war, and the rest of the terror wars, is finally brought to an end."












Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Review of Alex Berenson's Tell Your Children: The Truth About Marijuana, Mental Illness, and Violence


Below is my review of Tell Your Children as submitted to the editor of the Sturbridge Times Town & Country Living Magazine.

The review appeared in the May 2019 issue

America Gone to Pot

Tell Your Children: The Truth About Marijuana, Mental Illness, and Violence
By Alex Berenson
Free Press, 2019
Hardcover, 272 Pages
ISBN-10: 1982103663
ISBN-13: 978-1982103668
  
By Richard Morchoe

There is a sense of déjà vu in reading Tell Your Children: The Truth About Marijuana, Mental Illness, and Violence.

Except there isn't.  Déjà vu is the illusion or feeling something has already been experienced.  This is not an illusion.  We are over and over again looking at the question of legalized and medicalized marijuana.

You may ask, hadn't the question gone away?  That was devoutly to be wished and if democracy changed anything, it should have by the miracle of a referendum.  Citizens of the region can head up the street to Leicester and purchase what they feel will make them happy and that was to be an end on to it.

Along comes Alex Berenson, author of Tell Your Children to inform us we have to go back to thinking about what we had wanted to forget.

At the beginning of his book, Mr. Berenson lets us know he was also surprised to be back discussing the subject like the rest of us.  After all, proponents of legalization have had it all their way, or so it seemed.  Studies said cannabis was safe, if not healthy.

Berenson had accepted it.  Heck, he'd toked in Amsterdam.  His mind might never have changed if he were not married to a forensic psychiatrist.

Alex and wife were talking about a case, "the usual horror story, somebody who'd cut up his grandmother" or something.  His wife, who deals with such stuff said, "Of course he was high, been smoking pot his whole life."

Alex replied, "Of course?"  His wife rejoined with, "Yeah, they all smoke."

All the propaganda of the last several years has been pro-cannabis.  The author was incredulous and his wife suggested he read the studies.

Alex Berenson had been a reporter for the New York Times, and had covered the Iraq war, Hurricane Katrina and the drug industry.  He had been away from that for several years having taken up the novel with success.

What his wife had started with the challenge would lead to Tell Your Children.  

Berenson read the studies and statistics and did leg work as well.  He put them together in Tell Your Children, and there is a lot.  Yet, one might accuse him of having a plot, as there is much anecdotal material in the book.  It is necessary from the standpoint that when a horrendous incident occurs, it is not often, if at all, connected to "weed."

One anecdote that is never cited by proponents is the story of Tom Forcade.  Forcade, a pseudonym, was the founder of High Times Magazine.  His journal pushed the liberalization of attitudes to drugs as Playboy did about sex.  Forcade was wildly successful.

Tom may have wanted the country to "mellow out," but he didn't.  

Forcade was transiting to paranoiaville.  Berenson quotes a long diatribe from a 1978 interview about how beleaguered he felt due to the numerous imaginary government agents out to get him.  Forcade lashed out saying "Effectively, I spent the last ten years in jail…" 

Three weeks later, he blew his brains out.

Forcade's staff smoked his ashes at the top of the World Trade Center and went on with the mission without him.  Berenson, the reporter, wrote it without comment.  The lack of any self-awareness from Forcade or his minions said it all.

The other anecdotes are as horrible, but are of tragedies that don't just self-victimize one person. Instead families and relationships can be brutally destroyed and multiple, mostly innocent, lives ended.

One can get into a statistics war where no one escapes the fog, but what seemed most convincing was at the beginning when his wife and he were making conversation.  Evidence unbidden lends weight.

Some statistics argue more convincingly even if not part of research.  When a law changes and rates increase, or decrease sharply over a short span of years, that says more than any study no matter how well planned and executed.  True, the interpretation can be subject to reporting biases, but the stats are there for all sides to chew over.

Your reviewer is not a man for numbers and charts, though he can read the odd table.  Ever cognizant of Mark Twain's dictum, "There are lies, damn lies, and statistics" I realized help would be needed for a more nuanced understanding.

I searched for some opposition to his outlook and it exists.  

Not unexpectedly, Rolling Stone weighed in.  The headline, "Is Alex Berenson Trolling Us With His Anti-Weed Book?" lacked for subtlety.  Had one not paid attention the subtitle, "A former ‘New York Times’ journalist wrote about a “hidden epidemic” cause(sic) by pot — but it seems he got the science wrong" would make sure the message got through.  The article, by Amanda Chicago Lewis, an investigative reporter covering cannabis, could be described as tendentious.

Searching for a more reasonable contrast to the author, I found it on a two and three quarter hour video of Berenson and two men not opposed to using pot at least in some circumstances.  The host, Joe Rogan, admits to being a user and the other guest, Dr. Michael Hart uses it in his practice.

Though there was much talking over each other, and both the host and the doctor made some good points for limited clinical use, Berenson held his own.  Other than on the edges of the discussion, he was far more right than wrong.  Tell Your Children stood up well.

Even though the question of the legal status of marijuana has been debated since the 60s, Alex Berenson has made the case convincingly that, at the least, the conversation has been way too short and the rush to legalize too quick.

What now?  Berenson has no illusions as to where our society stands at this point in time.  He is not for restarting the drug war, but sees decriminalization as reasonable.

Legalization, however, has many bad results not the least for young people.  Per Alex, "Most of all, legalization signals that marijuana is not dangerous and encourages teen use.  The states with the highest rates of youth marijuana use all allow legalized recreational sales or medical sales with very loose conditions."

Berenson has asserted much in his book, but he has backed it up well.  If there were two points your reviewer might want to emphasize, the first would be, Marijuana is not medicine.  The second, marijuana is associated with violence.

People like George Soros, a big funder mentioned in the book and busy bodies like Rick Steeves who contributed to our repeal campaign, should give some thought for what their responsibility is.  Senators Schumer and Booker, who are pushing legalization nationally might as well.  As Mark Anthony said, "The evil that men do lives long after them."

As a postscript, the reviewer has two friends he has known for decades.  They are cannabis users of long standing, and have never been involved in a hint of violence.  That, however, does not invalidate Berenson's work.


Monday, March 11, 2019

Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and The Drug Company That Addicted America Review

Below is my review as submitted to the editor for the December issue of the Sturbridge Times Town & Country Living Magazine

Please note, since the review, much has come out about how much management knew about the addictive nature of what they were selling and it is not to managements credit.

Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and The Drug Company That Addicted America
By Beth Macy


By now, few have not heard about the opioid crisis.  Governor, Charlie Baker, has recently signed his second piece of legislation to deal with the problem.  It is not new here in Sturbridge Country as several years ago a local doctor closed his practice due to prescription irregularities.

In an episode of his cable TV show, Anthony Bourdain spotlighted the problem, mostly in the old Massachusetts town of Greenfield.  The segment was well done in discussing what seems an epidemic.

However problematic Opioid addiction may be here in the Commonwealth, we are not the epicenter.

Beth Macy may not have found “ground zero,” but the Appalachian region she writes about should not be discounted in consideration for the dubious honor.

Macy has written Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and The Drug Company That Addicted America.  She chronicles the Opioid explosion that has ravaged not an inner city but the coal country that had already been blighted by economic hard times.

Actually, she might have discovered ground zero, not in the old mill towns of the Bay State or lumber camps of rural Maine or her Appalachian home region she has obvious affection for.  The subtitle, The Drug Company That Addicted America, pinpoints a successful pharmaceutical company as the origin of the plague. 

The Sackler family had built Purdue Pharma from a tiny company when they purchased it in 1952 into a powerhouse.  The company developed OxyContin and had gotten Food and Drug Administration approval in 1995.  

The Sacklers were private and more known for their philanthropy than the drug business.  That may be different since Dopesick’s publication.

It is not as if the author avers that the men were sitting around a boardroom planning to devastate rural America by hooking people on a powerful derivative of the opium poppy.  The company “touted the safety of its new opioid-delivery system everywhere its merchants went.  “If you take the medicine like it is prescribed, the risk of addiction when taking the opioid is one-half of 1 percent.” said Dr. J. David Haddox, a pain specialist who became the company’s point man for the drug.””

The Sacklers may have believed this and even that they were doing good.  Doing good was not what Purdue Pharma did best.  Selling was far and away the most important company value, or so it would seem, as they were champions at it.

Purdue Pharma is an easy and valid target, but hardly the whole story.  The region’s coal economy and factories were, like much of the industrialized US, somewhat played out.  Ms. Macy was in the right place at the right time, or maybe in the wrong place at the right time to chronicle the disaster.

Beth Macy reported for the Roanoke Times for about a decade and a half until 2014.  Since, she has been writing essays and op-eds for The New York Times as well as other venues and radio.  Harvard awarded her a Nieman Fellowship in 2010.

Before Dopesick, she had written a couple of other books.  Factory Man: How One Furniture Maker Battled Offshoring, Stayed Local --- and Helped Save an American Townwas published in 2014.  Her Truevine: Two Brothers, a Kidnapping, and a Mother’s Quest; A True Story of the Jim Crow Southcame out in 2016.  Both books garnered positive reviews.

For timeliness, however, Dopesick was, and, will be an important reporter's story.  It is happening now and will continue into the future and our ability to come to terms with the abundantly available chemicals may never happen.  From that point of view, her book’s ending can only be artificial.

Macy provides us with intimate portrayals of those dealing with or succumbing to the problem.  Some of them, such as Dr. Art Van Zee came to Appalachia because he wanted to practice in an underserved community and found one.  His match is his wife, Sue Ella Koback.  Shades of Loretta Lynn, Sue was a coal miner’s daughter from over the mountain in Kentucky.

Dr. Van Zee comes off as a hero.  She describes his struggle with the corporate interest as chronicled by another author as a “David-versus-Goliath battle.”  As the book goes on, he is always fighting that good fight.  How he avoids burn-out seems a mystery. 

Where the good doctor is somewhat mild mannered, Sue Ella seems, as the author put it, “a firecracker lawyer.”  When the abovementioned Dr. J. David Haddox told a parent meeting about a somewhat exculpatory open letter they were going to run in a local newspaper, Sue Ella blew up at him.  The letter did not run.

There are many more stories in Dopesick.  Some even hopeful, and others not. Granted, once OxyContin and drugs like it get control of a victim, the brain structure will be changed and the odds are not good.

One of the hopeful ones is Spencer Mumpower.  Spencer was not on OxyContin, but was a full-fledged heroin addict who sold a drug friend the dose that would kill him.  With some tough love from mom, she refused to bail him out, he started the turnaround.

Once out before trial, he continued the process.  Eventually sentenced, he served his time and came out clean to continue the new life.  A small triumph, but a victory nonetheless.

There is little uplift in the story of Ronnie Jones.  Even so, he comes off as a sympathetic character and that is a problem.

The TV series, The Sopranos did the same thing for the eponymous Tony.  It made a vicious criminal who murdered with impunity into a lovable teddy bear.

The author did not seem to be trying to make the criminal Jones into a Nobel prize level humanitarian.  She does document his crimes in detail.  Having a long interview with the man in prison and getting to know him does allow him to be seen as a complex character and not the sum of his crimes and that is not horrible reporting.  Even so, his wrongdoing is so large that unlike the fictional Tony Soprano, it should dwarf anything of his life that we might want to like.

Is there any optimism in the struggle Beth Macy has written about?  She endorses Drug Courts stating that they “remain among the country’s models for preventing recidivism and relapse, with intensive daily monitoring of participants---and swift consequences.”  If one successfully completes the program, charges can be dropped.

That is heartening, but there is no victory lap.  Graduates of the Drug Court program are “roughly a half or to a third less likely to return to return to crime or drugs than regular probationers.”  This means half to two thirds will. 

Still, the drug court program does offer hope.  Beth tells us parents approach one judge out shopping to beg him to place their kids in the program.

Drug court coupled with MAT or medication assisted treatment seem to work better than much else according to Beth.  MAT is not allowed everywhere; 12 Step programs don’t favor it.  Some see value according to the author, ““We’ve had thirteen babies born to mothers on MAT, and not one of those babies had NAS (neonatal abstinence syndrome),” Tazewell County judge Jack Hurley told me”

Encouraging yes, but not a solution.

The story Beth follows the longest in the book is the saddest.  The drug problems may have started in the coal camps, but more upscale areas were not left untouched.  Tess Henry lived in affluent venues as a child.  The author follows the young woman with a loving mom and a seemingly smooth life.  

Tess was subject to anxiety from an early age, but that does not seem to have been the cause of her downfall.  She experimented in college, but it was a 30-day opioid prescription of codeine cough syrup and hydrocodone at an urgent-care center to treat bronchitis that seemed to do the trick.

Her drug filled odyssey is woven into the book as the author discusses other matters as well.  Beth would come back to the young lady who was spiraling down with occasional slight glimmers of hope until the last chapter where the inevitable is reported.  Tess had been hustling as a prostitute in Las Vegas and was found by a homeless man in a dumpster.

Tess’s return home ends the book, but hardly the story.  Part Three is titled “A Broken System.”  Notwithstanding the author’s favoring of Drug Court and MAT, the system is fractured and we are not yet near any solution.  

Of course, more attempts to solve it will be made and Beth Macy will be covering the story with the same skill and clarity, we should all hope.