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Jul 2007
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Friday, July 20, 2007
As an American, almost the only thing I know about Tony Blair from our media is that he was a consistent defender of the Iraq War, which to me is quite an amazing and honorable feat. However, as Blair stepped down this month as leader of his country, Theodore Dalrymple wrote this eye-opening essay as a parting shot. As a British citizen, Dalrymple offers a close-up view of the inner workings of Blair's government that is not very nice to behold.
When Tony Blair announced his resignation after ten years as prime minister of the United Kingdom, his voice choked with emotion and he nearly shed a tear. He asked his audience to believe that he had always done what he thought was right. He would have been nearer the mark had he said that he always thought that what was right was whatever he had done.
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In a confessional mood, Blair admitted that he had sometimes fallen short of what was expected of him. He did not give specifics, but we were expected to admire his candor and humility in making such an admission. It is no coincidence, however, that Blair reached maturity at the time of the publication of the famous book Psychobabble, which dissects the modern tendency to indulge in self-obsession without self-examination. Here was a mea culpa without the culpa. Bless me, people (Blair appeared to be saying), for I have sinned: but please don’t ask me to say how.
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But how history will judge him overall, and whether it will absolve him (to adapt slightly a phrase coined by a famous, though now ailing, Antillean dictator), is another matter. Strictly speaking, history doesn’t absolve, or for that matter vindicate, anybody; only people absolve or vindicate, and except in the most obvious cases of villainy or sainthood, they come to different conclusions, using basically the same evidence. There can thus be no definitive judgment of Blair, especially one contemporaneous with his departure. Still, I will try.
...[for sake of space, I will direct you to read his column for the many reasons Dalrymple gives for his withering opinion of Blair]...
Blair, then, is no hero. Many in Britain believe that he has been the worst prime minister in recent British history, morally and possibly financially corrupt, shallow and egotistical, a man who combined the qualities of Elmer Gantry with those of Juan Domingo Perón. America should think twice about taking him to its heart now that he has stepped down.
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2 comments:
have you seen the movie : THE QUEEN?
just curious. i think you might like it.
I haven't, but sometime I would like to see it. Thanks for the recommendation. Did you like it?
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