Parries
March 2009
Namaste, Dharma Workmen
What do the Lost characters mostly want these days? It’s not to get off the island. Increasingly, the island is just where they live and love. If anything, they’ve found home—or, rather, their home found them.
February 2009
24, Lost Get Soft
When life gets fast, unlike how it’s lived by most of us out here in the dark, loyalties are quickly superceded by new circumstances. This is not despite values but because of them. Such Darwinian churn is a theme shared by the very different Lost and 24 and so might just be a defining one for our times.
The Curious Case of Benjamin Buddha
If someone is living life in reverse time while the rest of us are living it forwards, then our world is Buddhist, because such an impossibility falsifies reality, which must therefore be a dream.
January 2009
Shanghai Europe
So, finally, we stopped yesterday; the Israeli assault of late 2008/early 2009 on Gaza is over. With it, Israel lost moral purity and made vital strategic gains.
Panning for MacBook Pro
Even if it did nothing, was just a prop in a futuristic movie, the MacBook Pro would be impressive. It’s like a sculpture of my previous computer, the MacBook, except it’s actually an improved computer! So even though I’m looking at it now and touching it to write these words, I’m going to stop now just to look at it and touch it.
December 2008
Stop Yesterday
Is the goal of Israel’s assault on Gaza to discourage Hamas from firing rockets, or is it to render Hamas incapable of firing rockets? These are two very different projects, yet we are hearing about both from the government, which worryingly suggests that the government isn’t quite sure.
Short-circuiting Place-based Longing
If there is one tangible benefit to having lived in a variety of places it’s that it furnishes evidence of the futility of longing to be elsewhere.
October 2008
Ebullience, Please
A President of the United States must be ebullient. At the presidential debates we should have seen McCain like we saw him at the Al Smith dinner.
September 2008
History Tonight, McCain vs. Obama
McCain pulled through but he’d better improve, better get relaxed. This was the big one, and Obama came off a 21st century Brat Packer.
Encounter at Wetherspoone’s
As if those glass double doors belong to a wild saloon wherein one must repulse brigands just for a peaceful drink.
August 2008
A Crawl Across Crawley, Part 1
Irit, the Jam and I walk from Brighton to Gatwick Airport.
July 2008
Suddenly Seymour
Time was, Seymour Hersh’s dispatches were a cause for minor celebration. They were full- and deep-throated journalistic tours de force, possible changers of paradigms. But his latest, “Preparing the Battlefield” on funding covert ops in Iran, leaves too many clues that reveal precisely where he’s coming from.
June 2008
Another End of Times
With the recent reported training exercises over Crete, perhaps Israel’s strike on the Iranian regime’s machinery of genocide has already begun.
Dead Till Eilenspiegel
Beyond steadfastness and vigor in prosecuting Islamofascism, John McCain seems an American president I’d love even more than the great liberator George W. Bush (most of you just left, I know) because he is more American on immigration than either his party or the other.
All So Simple
First, there is a general moode and desire to write.
March 2008
Why AAPL
Apple’s operating system will, I believe, become in time the dominant one, and with a current market share of only 6% or so, that’s a lot more computers to sell. And as the only operating system seller that also sells the computers it runs on, as well as owning the shops they’re sold from, Apple stands to become a colossus, even a frightening one.
Clash of the Midgets
My phone! One of the reasons I didn’t want an iPhone is that I’m invested in the T9 text entry method and like it. But while I do like the Nokia N95’s slider, it creates discomfort when entering text because all the weight in the phone is further up.
January 2008
Dangers of the Gaza-Egypt border breach
Hamas may try to use Egyptian territory to stage cross-border attacks on Israel, aiming to operate in parts of the Sinai as Hezballah does in southern Lebanon.
Glick Dismisses Gaza Border Breach
Caroline Glick, the strident Jerusalem Post columnist, seems to see the Gaza-Egypt border breach as yet another in a long line of Israeli strategic disasters by incompetent leaders. I’m not convinced however of her arguments, mainly because she doesn’t make any.
Israel’s Greatest Victory Since Osirak
The great tactician Ariel Sharon steamrolled through Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza and today we see another step in the unfolding of this masterplan to staunch the damage caused by the victory of the Six Day War in 1967.
I Do Like Mondays
First procedure: clean out the 2-cup mokka from the previous usage. The sink here is metal and I enjoy lightly bashing the coffee holder against it to knock the damp grains out then putting them in the rubbish before swilling out the remains under the tap. The sound is just the same as baristas make in cafes.
The Small Adventures - Part 2
There in the empty restaurant by the water at Dieppe I had toast with foie gras, a carafe of red wine, a huge plate of mussels and chips, and finally a creme brulee. Somehow, though I’ve eaten in restaurants hundreds of times, I felt grown up sitting there alone on my travels.
December 2007
The Small Adventures
Of course we were late for the train. We enquired frantically among the taxis for one who would accept the two dogs—mine and Davide’s—and take us to Termini Station so I could catch the 11pm train to Milan that would be one third of our journey to Britain.
Tony Blair and the Four-State Vision
Ariel Sharon’s disengagement policy reflected an understanding that ownership of the Palestinian issue is shared with Egypt and Jordan. Once Tony Blair acquires this view, he can help facilitate an end to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Spooked, They’ll Annoint Rudy
Because of the recent US National Intelligence Report, the electorate will turn to someone who demonstrates not only the ideological conviction required to continue to prosecute Islamism, but also the administrative savvy to reform entrenched bureacracies.
October 2007
A Restoration and Return
There she was, sitting outside the apartment block! How did she do it? Dogs must have some sort of navigational sense we don’t understand.
Curs to Fate
Yesterday I lost Jam in Villa Borghese, the central park here in Rome. She has not turned up since.
This Trip’s Last Day
I went to Astor Place Haircutters. I crossed Manhattan Bridge on foot. I walked west along Canal St, seeking a bamboo steamer.
I, Thou and Pastor Bob
At Rome I felt queasy that they would paint and revere scenes that occured in Israel, but here, looking at the Calvary Church campus, I felt that the religious energy is actually here, that we are far enough away from the places of the events themselves that they can finally become abstracted and spiritualized and kept relevant. An ocean and a small continent separate Fort Lauderdale from Afula.
September 2007
The Big and Easy
The moon is shining through these tropical September clouds, directly above a neighbor’s palm tree, and it’s completely full. An airplane is landing at a nearby airfield. I ramble, unable to reach what I mean, perhaps because what I mean is an almost meaningless jumble of contradictory thoughts that are less thoughts than incomplete attempts to label fleeting tumbling emotions.

ixPix
Good for the People
Tuesday, June 30th, 2009; Brighton, East Sussex, England
Jam’s Place
Thursday, June 11th, 2009; Brighton, East Sussex, England
Picnic’s Chicks
Sunday, May 24th, 2009; Brighton, East Sussex, England
Who Do You Think You are Kidding, Mr Finjan?
Sunday, May 24th, 2009; Brighton, East Sussex, England
Reminds Me of Chigley
Saturday, May 2nd, 2009; London, England
Magic Pavilion
Thursday, April 23rd, 2009; Brighton, East Sussex, England
Canal House
Saturday, April 18th, 2009; London, England
Brighton Life
Tuesday, March 31st, 2009; Brighton, East Sussex, England
Still the Same Old Life
Tuesday, March 31st, 2009; Brighton, East Sussex, England
Homes Sweet Homes
Sunday, March 29th, 2009; London, England
Still Life with Pretty
Sunday, March 29th, 2009; London, England
Glib Glug
Saturday, February 21st, 2009; Brighton, East Sussex, England
A Hard Day’s Hike
Saturday, January 31st, 2009; East Sussex, England
First House, 35 Years On
Monday, December 8th, 2008; Newton Mearns, Renfrewshire, Scotland
Around the Back at the Mearns Cross Shopping Centre
Monday, December 8th, 2008; Newton Mearns, Renfrewshire, Scotland
Miserable-looking Yet Mythic Mearns
Monday, December 8th, 2008; Newton Mearns, Renfrewshire, Scotland
Signs of the Old Times
Monday, December 8th, 2008; Scotland
Thames View
Thursday, November 20th, 2008; London, England
A Favorite Spot of Mine, Too
Tuesday, November 18th, 2008; Ein Bokek, Israel
A View to a Bark
Sunday, October 12th, 2008; East Sussex, England
Happy at Gatwick
Wednesday, September 10th, 2008; Gatwick Airport, Surrey, England
At Notting Hill Carnival 2008
Monday, August 25th, 2008; London, England
Crossing the Thames
Sunday, August 24th, 2008; London, England
The Climb After Crossing the M25
Sunday, August 10th, 2008; London, England
Back of the Pub
Sunday, July 27th, 2008; East Sussex, England
Jam at the Indian Monument
Sunday, July 27th, 2008; Brighton, East Sussex, England
Magic Garden
Friday, July 4th, 2008; England
The Family Shardik
Saturday, June 21st, 2008; Brighton, East Sussex, England
Cadbury’s Blighty
Saturday, June 21st, 2008; Brighton, East Sussex, England
Father’s Day
Sunday, June 15th, 2008; New Forest, Dorset, England
Classical Structure Somehow
Thursday, June 12th, 2008; Hyde Park, London, England
Gay Day at the Park
Thursday, June 12th, 2008; Hyde Park, London, England
Hot Piping
Sunday, May 18th, 2008; Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, United States
Forlorn Sundown Strip
Sunday, May 11th, 2008; Fort Lauderdale, Florida, United States
Indiana Jones and the Krispies of Coco
Sunday, May 11th, 2008; Fort Lauderdale, Florida, United States
Across the Universe
Saturday, May 10th, 2008; Key Largo, Florida, United States
Sanctuary’s Path
Saturday, May 10th, 2008; Key Largo, Florida, United States
Sweetlife
Saturday, April 26th, 2008; Brighton, East Sussex, England
Tel Aviv New View
Thursday, April 17th, 2008; Tel Aviv, Israel
Tabletop Aroma
Friday, April 11th, 2008; Ein Bokek, Israel
Early Morning Ein Bokek
Friday, April 11th, 2008; Ein Bokek, Israel
Vroom of Arabia
Thursday, April 10th, 2008; Israel
Preston Park’s Church
Saturday, March 1st, 2008; Brighton, East Sussex, England
Bagjam
Sunday, February 3rd, 2008; Shoreham, East Sussex, England
The Man and City
Sunday, November 18th, 2007; London, England
New Station at St Pancras
Thursday, November 15th, 2007; London, England
New Pedestrian Bridge
Thursday, November 15th, 2007; London, England
Guy Fawkes Night parade
Monday, November 5th, 2007; Lewes, East Sussex, England
Jam’s UK Arrival
Friday, October 26th, 2007; Brighton, East Sussex, England
Typica Romana
Tuesday, October 16th, 2007; Rome, Lazio, Italy
Howdy!
This web site belongs to Adam Khan. If found, please contact me at (JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
Parries is the blog, ixPix the photoblog. Words listed are those I needed to look up, the Books those I recently read.
Latmag, Queen of Letters, is astounding 800-word excerpts, and the Trail links to web pages that I appreciated and hope you will too.
Latmag

May 2005
David Pryce-Jones, “Jews, Arabs, and French Diplomacy: A Special Report”
The Zionists Must Understand
“ The Zionists must understand once and for all that there can be no question of constituting an independent Jewish state in Palestine, or even forming some sovereign Jewish body. ”
September 2003
Charles Darwin, The Expression of Emotion in Man and Animals, Chapter 1, General Principles of Expression
Purposeless Remnants of Habitual Movements
“ It is well known that cats dislike wetting their feet, owing, it is probable, to their having aboriginally inhabited the dry country of Egypt; and when they wet their feet they shake them violently. My daughter poured some water into a glass close to the head of a kitten; and it immediately shook its feet in the usual manner; so that here we have an habitual movement falsely excited by an associated sound instead of by the sense of touch. ”
Edward Lear, Journals of a Landscape Painter in the Balkans
Were it Not for this Protector
“ Not the least annoyance was that given me by the persevering attentions of a mad or fanatic dervish, of most singular appearance as well as conduct. His note of ‘Shaitán’ was frequently sounded; and as he twirled about, and performed many curious antics, he frequently advanced to me, shaking a long hooked stick, covered with jingling ornaments, in my very face, pointing to the Kawas with menacing looks, as though he would say, “Were it not for this protector you should he annihilated, you infidel!” ”
August 2003
Robert Graves, I, Claudius
Ask Me Anything
“ The drink was as remarkable as the food, and Caligula became so lively as the meal went on that, deprecating his own generosity to Herod in the past as something hardly worth mentioning, he now promised to give him whatever it lay in his power to grant. “Ask me anything, my dearest Herod,” he said, “And it shall be yours.” He repeated: “Absolutely anything. I swear by my own Divinity that I will grant it.” ”
the United Nations, The Declaration of the Universal Human Rights of Man
Born Free and Equal
“ On December 10, 1948, the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted and proclaimed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Following this historic act the Assembly called upon all Member countries to publicize the text of the Declaration and “to cause it to be disseminated, displayed, read and expounded principally in schools and other educational institutions, without distinctions based on the political status of countries or territories.” ”
George Orwell, a letter (the new book referred to is 1984)
You Have to Leave Glasgow about 8am
“ We also have to shoot rabbits when the larder gets low, and grow vegetables, though of course I haven’t been here long enough to get much return from the ground yet, as it was simply a jungle when I got here. With all this you can imagine that I don’t do much work however I have actually begun my new book and hope to have done four or five chapters by the time I come back in October. ”
E. M. Forster, Aspects of the Novel
Curious Shockheads
“ Curiosity is one of the lowest of the human faculties. You will have noticed in daily life that when people are inquisitive they nearly always have bad memories and are usually stupid at bottom. ”
January 2003
Peter Davison, an interview with Stanley Plumly
On The and Story
“ The subtext of narrative is time, the subtext of time is mortality, the subtext of mortality is emotion. Try to remove the narrative sense of things and you take out the heart, the cause of the effect. ”
December 2002
Jack London, Call of the Wild
A Dog’s Daydream
“ Sometimes as he crouched there, blinking dreamily at the flames, it seemed that the flames were of another fire, and that as he crouched by this other fire he saw another and different man from the half-breed cook before him. This other man was shorter of leg and longer of arm, with muscles that were stringy and knotty rather than rounded and swelling. ”
Jim Nollman, Dolphin Dreamtime
Musical Turkey Gobble
“ When I began to play the song, the turkey first stared, then dropped its wings right into the dirt. Then it shook its wings vigorously, raising a small cloud of dust, and began advancing step by haughty step in my direction. Four steps forward, then four steps back. Every so often, the red wattles on its throat would suddenly turn a deep blue color. And then, just as quickly, they would return to red again. And every single time I hit that certain high note at the end of the song’s third measure, the turkey would let out a gobble. ”
Francis Fukuyama, “Social Capital and Civil Society”
People Need People
“ There are serious problems with a culture of unbridled individualism, in which the breaking of rules becomes, in a sense, the only remaining rule. The first has to do with the fact that moral values and social rules are not simply arbitrary constraints on individual choice but the precondition for any kind of cooperative enterprise. Indeed, social scientists have recently begun to refer to a society’s stock of shared values as “social capital.” ”
Benjamin Franklin, The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin
Public Library One
“ On this little fund we began. The books were imported; the library was opened one day in the week for lending to subscribers, on their promissory notes to pay double the value if not returned. The institution soon manifested its utility, was imitated by other towns, and in other provinces. The libraries were augmented by donations; reading became fashionable; and our people, having no publick amusements to divert their attention from study, became better acquainted with books, and in a few years were observed by strangers to be better instructed and more intelligent than people of same rank generally are in other countries. ”
Henry Kissinger, The White House Years
The Meeting Went Badly
“ Ford was unfamiliar with Israeli negotiating methods, which reject the biblical assurance that the meek shall inherit the earth, and he grew even more restless when he discovered that the Israeli request would draw down the reserve stocks of the American military and hence affect the readiness of American armed forces. ”
Frances Cress Wesling
The Original White Man’s Burden
“ Adam and Eve’s shame for their nakedness indicates their rejection and shame of their pale white bodies – colorless or naked – when compared to the black- and brown-skinned normals; their use of fig leaves to cover their genitals (as they are depicted) implies the shame and rejection of their genital apparatus, including their genes… ”
Stephen Jay Rubin, The James Bond Films
Now He Only Paints Guitars
“ The archetypal Bond fight is spectacular and, although over in seconds, it is generally choreographed like a ballet, with shots of stuntmen and stars intermixed, and edited tightly. His performance in the test fight won Lazenby the role of Bond. ”
Trail
Tue 30 Jun ’09
John Podhoretz on Year One: he’s not hugely impressed with this one either, but though I liked it and was glad to see it in the cinema, I guess he’s right.
Thu 25 Jun ’09
Tue 23 Jun ’09
Mon 22 Jun ’09
Old dogs “are funny in new and unexpected ways. But, above all, they seem at peace.”
Sun 21 Jun ’09
David Brooks writes the first beautiful prose on the Iranian protests—see paragraphs 3 and 4. And it stays lyrical as well as wise. Brooks’s best ever?
I have to say, Tom Friedman’s column on Iran sounds like a presidential speech.
Tirade against Britain by Iran’s foreign minister, Manoucher Mottaki. The mid-sized Satan?
Valuable lessons learned in 4 nasty days at Deep Springs College [via Brian]. I was there for 9 months and didn’t get it as clearly as the author does.
Sat 20 Jun ’09
Withering observations on Obama’s lukewarm reaction to events in Iran by William Kristol (Obama as “resolutely irresolute”) and Fred Barnes (rejecting Obama’s “false choices” meme).
“Unless Mousavi withdraws and leads his followers in a renewed quietist retreat,” writes Reuel Marc Gerecht, “the Islamic revolution, which shook the Muslim world 30 years ago, will now become either a real laboratory of democracy or a crude and violent dictatorship that might rival the Baathist regimes of Iraq and Syria in its savagery. Either outcome would be momentous.”
Thu 18 Jun ’09
“Let’s Call the Whole Thing Off”. Seriously, why marry, if it’s less stable —as it is in the USA—than not doing so?
Caddyshack is a Marx Bros movie, Ramis explains.
Wed 17 Jun ’09
Spengler provides the first interesting look at the Iranian presidential election, arguing that the ayatollahs must appear militant to fend off their main true threat: not Israel, not the US, not the Saudis, but the Sunni Taliban in Pakistan.
Mon 15 Jun ’09
Sometimes it just works. Charlie Rose with the Broadway cast of Waiting for Godot: Nathan Lane, John Goodman, Bill Irwin and John Glover.
Netanyahu placates Obama; Administration “welcomes the important step forward”.
Krauthammer tells it like it is on the Obama Cairo speech: cheap condescension, moral abdication and ambivalence towards the country he leads.
Sat 13 Jun ’09
John Bolton lists Iran’s likely responses to an Israeli attack. Plus: he says “quantum of solace”!
Mon 8 Jun ’09
Glick parses Obama’s giving Israel the finger in Cairo.
Thu 4 Jun ’09
Mon 1 Jun ’09
At last, someone takes on gay marriage.
Yep, John Podhoretz wasn’t too impressed with Star Trek either.
Sun 31 May ’09
Joe Lieberman points out the unprecedented convergence of concerns about Iran among Arabs and Israelis alike—and that some of the strongest alliances in history have been forged among old antagonists when confronted by a new, common threat.
Tue 19 May ’09
Fred Barnes seems to be growing consistently to the right of Charles Krauthammer in this transcript of their reactions on Fox News’ Special Report to the first Obama/Netanyahu meeting.
Sat 9 May ’09
Big piece on Israel by an Australian.
Thu 7 May ’09
Subways to scale. [via Subtraction]
JJ Abrahms on Charlie Rose. Charlie at 28:20: “Lost. People that I know love it, love it, love it.”
Sun 3 May ’09
Fascinating, brief, accessible article on bone in nytimes/science. Wish nytimes.com had a donations box.
Cool bendy Manhattan map.
Wed 29 Apr ’09
Tue 28 Apr ’09
Interview with Avigdor Lieberman, Israel’s new Foreign Minister.
Spengler’s first as David P Goldman, lamenting what seems the end of Anglo-Saxon dominance.
Mon 27 Apr ’09
Brief recent photo essay of North Korea by the brave Tomas van Houtryve.
Sun 26 Apr ’09
On the bullying of and subsequent sad decline of the SAT. Yet another story of American self-immolation.
Mark Steyn isn’t even trying to be funny any more. In “The End of the World as We Know It”= he expresses what I’m thinking and feeling, that we’re in deep trouble because Americans voted impetuously and like spoilt children for a Feelgood o’Balma that’s going to stop feeling good mighty fast as Americans realize that given the choice, and if you can’t have both, it is indeed better to be feared than loved—and in America’s case, better for everyone.
Sat 25 Apr ’09
Look at these fucking hipsters—fun photoblog.
Fri 24 Apr ’09
The Atlantic finally realizes that maybe the Palestinians don’t really want a state. But see the weasel-words at the end designed to keep this radical position within the pale of polite society/nonsense.
Tue 21 Apr ’09
Shots of Disney’s recycling of Snow White in various subsequent films.
Sun 19 Apr ’09
Spengler, revealed.
Apart from his tiresome and overly-revealing reference in every piece to Iraq as a disaster—which, fair enough, most hacks do—John Lancaster’s London Review of Books pieces make a fun collection.
Fri 17 Apr ’09
A “a reticence-free zone”: wow, David Brooks turns his laser vision to Israel, and let me tell you something habibi he is nobody’s frier. Now pass me that Fizzy Bubalech.
Thu 16 Apr ’09
A tantalizing glimpse into the mindset of the Germans during the Final Solution—this book review rollicks along.
Dharma Initiative magazine ads circa 1977.
If we could see as a telescope.
Michael Caine easy, free, articulate and enthusiastic on Charlie Rose.