The administration's inadequate response to the crisis in Libya reveals a lack of courage and principle.
What can be asserted without proof can be dismissed without proof.
Welcome to an unofficial Christopher Hitchens site. dailyhitchens@post.com
Christopher Hitchens (1949 - 2011) was an Anglo-American author and journalist. His books made him a prominent public intellectual and a staple of talk shows and lecture circuits. He was a columnist and literary critic at Vanity Fair, Slate, The Atlantic, World Affairs, The Nation, Free Inquiry and a variety of other media outlets. He was named one of the world's "Top 100 Public Intellectuals" by Foreign Policy and Britain's Prospect.
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Christopher Hitchens and John Rodden discuss George Orwell on Think Tank with Ben Wattenberg.
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The Guardian In these final essays, Hitchens examines his own disbelief that writing – indistinguishable to him from living – is about to...
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A couple of clips of Christopher and Sam uploaded by retroprodigy40 Jewish Journal has two audio clips from the debate (20/24 min) htt...
American Inaction Favors Qaddafi
March 7, 2011
By Christopher Hitchens
"Our common speech contains numberless verbs with which to describe the infliction of violence or cruelty or brutality on others. It only really contains one common verb that describes the effect of violence or cruelty or brutality on those who, rather than suffering from it, inflict it. That verb is the verb to brutalize"
Read More (Slate)
What I Don’t See at the Revolution
By Christopher Hitchens
"When anatomizing revolutions, it always pays to consult the whiskered old veterans. Those trying to master a new language, wrote Karl Marx about the turmoil in France in the 19th century, invariably begin haltingly, by translating it back into the familiar tongue they already know. And with his colleague Friedrich Engels he defined a revolution as the midwife by whom the new society is born from the body of the old."
Read More (Vanity Fair)
Outspoken and outrageous: Christopher Hitchens
(CBS News) Steve Kroft profiles Vanity Fair columnist, author and public intellectual Christopher Hitchens, for whom nothing is off-limits when making his wry and often outrageous observations, including the cancer he is suffering from.
For main segment and web extras:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/03/06/60minutes/main20038931.shtml?tag=contentMain;cbsCarousel
Posted by Tom at 08:19 9 comments
Labels: 2011, 60 minutes, cancer, CBS News, Christopher Hitchens, interview, Steve Kroft
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