Adam Weinstein

Adam Weinstein

Engagement Editor

I'm Mother Jones' engagement editor and Tumblrizer, specializing in explanatory journalism and new-media reporting. As a Navy vet and ex-Iraq contractor, I'm also committed to articulating all things martial—good, bad, and weird—to new audiences.

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Adam Weinstein is Mother Jones' engagement editor, having previously served the magazine as its national security reporter and copy editor. Before that, he worked at the Wall Street Journal, the Village Voice, and the Tallahassee Democrat. He's written for the New York Times, New York magazine, GQ, and Newsweek. A Navy veteran, two-day Jeopardy champion and ex-political scientist, he also did a recession-fueled stint as a military contractor in Iraq. For more about Adam and his writing, click here.

GOP Bullies Kid on Health Care

| Thu Mar. 18, 2010 6:59 PM PDT

Unsatisfied with simply denying 30 million Americans health care coverage, crying crocodile tears for the Constitution, and labeling skeptics of their point of view "socialist," right-wing retrogressives have decided they need to up the ante to halt Democratic reforms. They need to bash a kid.

The kid in question is 11-year-old Marcelas Owens, who has become a young public crusader for health insurance reform since his mother, 27-year-old fast-food worker Tifanny Owens, contracted pulmonary hypertension, lost her job due to her poor health, lost her insurance due to her unemployment, and finally died, leaving Marcelas in the care of his grandmother.

In most people's books, that would make Marcelas a sympathetic soul, deserving of compassion and maybe a little assistance. If that's how you feel about it, don't tell Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Michelle Malkin, or the semiliterates who run this "news" site. McClatchy's Les Blumenthal collected the right-wingers' anti-Marcelas vitriol in a rusty bucket and splashed it out all over the Internet, recording for posterity their emphatic "Yes!" in reply to the question: Are you douchier than a fifth-grader?

As the late sportscaster George Michael used to say, let's go to the tape:

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The Right: Weak on Israel, War

| Thu Mar. 18, 2010 3:18 PM PDT

When you spend a lot of time in Iraq as I have—or, alternatively, when you spend a lot of time in the US hanging around certain war hawks who never spent time in Iraq—you're bound to hear about the concept of wasta. It's an Arabic term, one that roughly translates to "pull" or "clout," and it usually refers to one's standing to deal with the local mover-and-shaker sheikhs. But to hear the neocons tell it, wasta is the reason we went to Iraq, the reason we support Israel's most imprudent iron-fist moves, the reason for George W. Bush's cowboy diplomacy: It's that sandy, desert-heat-tempered combination of "old hatreds, confessional violence, ethnic bigotry and a culture of corruption" that only comprehends strength and only respects violence. Thugs like Saddam Hussein, Hamas, and the Al Aqsa Martyrs had wasta in the Arab world, and the only way to spread American- or Israeli-style democracy in the region was to win the wasta war. Hence the original neocon's cry, "peace through strength." The Arab will respect us as soon as he's been "liberated"—or, if necessary, broken—by us. 

Ignore the racism implicit in that worldview for a minute, and just take the neocon thesis at face value. Because there's good news and bad news. The good news is, in some sense, they were right: It turns out sentiment toward the US on "the Arab street" largely depends on how powerful America appears. The bad news is, Arabs think America's wasta is pretty much at an all-time low. And the reason for US weakness is not a Democratic administration: It's the failure of the neocons' grand game.

How do we know? According to Foreign Policy's Mark Perry, Gen. David Petraeus, the chief of US Central Command, had his staff brief Joint Chiefs Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen in January on Arab-Israeli affairs. The point of the presentation, Perry says, was to stress how bad things had gotten:

The 33-slide, 45-minute PowerPoint briefing stunned Mullen. The briefers reported that there was a growing perception among Arab leaders that the U.S. was incapable of standing up to Israel, that CENTCOM's mostly Arab constituency was losing faith in American promises, that Israeli intransigence on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was jeopardizing U.S. standing in the region, and that [US negotiator and former senator George] Mitchell himself was (as a senior Pentagon officer later bluntly described it) "too old, too slow...and too late."

That the US military is now dipping its feathers in these controversial waters tells you just how far our standing has fallen in the Middle East, and how much of a threat has been posed to our security by neoconservative overreach. The message seems to be that peace can come through strength...but contrary to what Bill Kristol, Charles Krauthammer, and Fox News might have you believe, strength doesn't come from annexing Iraq as a 51st state. Or from rolling over to the anti-Palestinian whims of Israeli Likudniks like Arik Sharon and Bibi Netanyahu. (Our own estimable Kevin Drum the other day expressed his disbelief that Netanyahu could show up Vice President Joe Biden as he did last week in announcing new Israeli settlements in East Jerusalem.) 

Hopefully, Petraeus' concern is also a sign of changes to come in the US-Israel relationship—changes that will truly favor American security. "There are important and powerful lobbies in America: the NRA, the American Medical Association, the lawyers -- and the Israeli lobby," Perry says, "but no lobby is as important, or as powerful, as the U.S. military."  

Barbiegate: What We Learned

| Thu Mar. 11, 2010 1:58 AM PST

It's been a busy week for Mother Jones. We've been bursting Karl Rove's bubble of fantasy—again. We've exposed more Blackwater hijinks than you can shake an M-16 at. We've called shenanigans on the White House's pointless nuclear-lobby concessions to conservatives.

But for some reason, Barbie was the big hit.

A short note about Wal-Mart selling black and white Barbie dolls, side by side, for different prices, captured a lot of eyeballs yesterday. Along with the ire of regular readers, casual visitors, and grumpy right-wing trolls. Commenting on the piece, one reader, Karenn Sloh, summed up the zeitgeist of the crowd: "Complaints like the one in this article are the reason that liberals don't get taken seriously."

Granted! This is a non-story story. A blog post, actually. But it gets written for the same reason that it gets read so widely: It's a great inkblot test for what's on people's minds. Does it say something about race? Sure, even if it's not anything meaningful, or anything we can really agree on. Is it reason enough to hate Wal-Mart? Depends how you already felt about Wal-Mart. Is it an indictment of the free market? Maybe in a narrow sense—more on that below.

But beyond the race-baiting, the trolls, and the rants, some people made very salient points, and in doing so, they gave the story a life—and a news value—all its own. The real story, it seems, is about competing notions on gender and the free market in our culture.

VIDEO: How to Win an Oscar

| Wed Mar. 10, 2010 4:52 PM PST

Ever wonder what a modern Academy Award "best picture" winner has that other movies don't? A couple of NYU grads have an answer, in the form of a faux-blockbuster movie trailer. They call themselves BriTANicK ("rhymes with 'Titanic'"), and if you think their take is funny—or sadly true—you can seek them out at the upcoming South by Southwest film (and music!) festival in Austin, Texas.

Your Own Glenn Beck Video!

| Wed Mar. 10, 2010 2:50 PM PST

AlterNet is hosting a spiffy new video feature sponsored by MoveOn.org, SEIU, and Brave New Films that enables you to put yourself in the center of one of Glenn Beck's inane conspiracy theories. Not just you, but your friends, your employer, your hometown, and your photos (if you're into the Facebook thing). Sure to be a viral classic, it kind of has to be seen to be appreciated. Go make yours now! Here's mine:

 

 

Strangely, Beck's rantings about me are uncannily similar to those of many commenters on this Wal-Mart/Barbie story...Huh!

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