Sebastian Bennett

Sebastian Bennett is a foreign affairs officer in the nation’s capital. He has held a number of jobs in government, including as an aide to a Senator on Capitol Hill and as a presidential management fellow at a major federal department. Sebastian has also worked for think tanks, both in the nation’s capital and in Madrid. He was also a White House Intern. Sebastian has a post-graduate degree in international relations. Due to the sensitive nature of his current position, he is writing for The Daily Dissident, which he co-founded, under an assumed name.

What you really need to know about Baltimore, from a reporter who’s lived there for over 30 years

Baltimore's leadership - its mayor, city council president, police chief, and many others - are black, and yet the city is experiencing nasty riots.  How is this explained?  It simply cannot be about race?  Or is it?  Yes - on both counts.  This is about deeply-ingrained social injustices that include but are not limited to race.  This is what happens in Gilded Age America.     Continue Reading...

God and Profits

The so-called prosperity gospel positing that wealth is a sign of God's grace and not, as much of the Bible underscores, an indication of moral corruption, is widely prescribed to in the US.  The marriage of Christianity and capitalism is a recent union, however.  It dates to the early 20th century and endures to this day.  It's not a natural pairing, though, and may well not last indefinitely. Continue Reading...

Where George W. Bush was Right

The West, America in particular, cozies up to secular Middle East tyrants.  Purportedly, this is done for strategic reasons, as such leaders, however unsavory, are far better than the jihadist alternatives.  Yet somehow this never ends well.  The reason?  Because tyranny has a way of radicalizing the opposition, which eventually leads to chaos and disorder.  Yet we don't learn.  Shame on us. Continue Reading...

Israel Chooses the Path to Apartheid

For years, longer even, liberals Jews, especially in America, and especially liberal Jews in America, have believed that Israel genuinely believes in a two-state solution.  Sure, the settlements kept expanding, and governments in Jerusalem, both left and right, have acted in ways that seemed to undermine such faith.  Yet such faith endured.  No longer.  The election of an outwardly bigoted Netanyahu should put that myth to rest. Continue Reading...

Postwar Rape: Were Americans As Bad as the Soviets?

Over 1.5 million US GIs advanced deep into Germany at the close of WWII.  They stayed in large numbers for some time - US troops are still stationed in Germany - and, according to one historian, raped as many as 190,000 German women by the time West Germany regained sovereignty in 1955, with most of the assaults taking place in the months immediately following the US invasion of Nazi Germany.  If true, this would doubtlessly undermine the Continue Reading...

The fatal flaw in the Iran deal

The Washington Post's Charles Krauthammer may be a supercilious, smug SOB and shamelessly unrepentant Iraq War advocate, but his blistering take-down of Obama's apparent negotiating stance vis-a-vis Iran is worth pondering.  We quite possibly have Tehran on the ropes, so why not go for the jugular?  A fair question.  Very fair. Continue Reading...

How to Make It In Conservative America (If You Aren’t White)

How do you get ahead in a party that is overwhelmingly white and that has pockets - deep pockets - of racism?  Simple: If you can't beat 'em, join 'em.  That has worked well for conservative performance artist Dinesh D'Souza, an Indian immigrant who has embraced bigoted whites to become one of their own, a token "darkie" that will do their intellectual bidding.  Brilliant! Continue Reading...

Bill O’Reilly Has His Own Brian Williams Problem

Who's looking out for you?  Not Bill O'Reilly.  He's looking out for himself, even if that means, well, stretching the truth - okay, outright lying.  His stock in trade is lamenting the "liberal media" and the pointy-nose elitists and, of course, defending the interests of the working man.  It's all bogus, of course, from top to bottom.  Here's a snapshot of some of his lies. Continue Reading...

There’s Always Room for Rum Cake

What is the success for a long marriage?  Luck, at least according to Arlene Alda, wife (of 57 years) of Alan Alda, the well-known actor.  And humor.  And economic stability.  But luck most of all.  “Most likely one of us will die first,” Arlene Alda observes.  “I can’t even contemplate what that might be for either of us.  Meanwhile, we’re doing what we should be doing. Living.”  A touching vignette.     Continue Reading...

Hezbollah, Israel, and a Fragmenting Middle East

Want to understand recent events in the Middle East?  Forgeddaboutit!  Can't be done.  The place is too fragmented, too complex, too abstruse.  This isn't to say it's not worth giving it a shot.  A good place to start is the following article, which recounts the most recent hostilities between Hezbollah and Israel and which lends insight to the three-dimensional chess game that is being played in the region. Continue Reading...

Save Us From Washington’s Visionaries

Quick, what is Obama's biggest foreign policy triumph?  Killing bin Laden?  Withdrawing (mostly) from Iraq and Afghanistan?  The much-ballyhooed pivot to Asia?  It's not an impressive list.  Maybe topping the accomplishments is his not screwing up.  Giving his predecessors shambolic tenure, this may not be such a bad thing.  Still, it's not all that impressive, either.  A shame. Continue Reading...

When Art Is Dangerous (or Not)

Does art have a role in society?  Not really. Kurt Vonnegut once likened the cumulative firepower of all the art and literature directed against the Vietnam War to “the explosive force of a very large banana-cream pie."  Art, it seems, is just another commodity like pork bellies and oil, with its value determined in dollars and cents.  Which is why the recent attacks against Charlie Hebdo in Paris was strangely affirming by demonstrating that art Continue Reading...

Deported by Association: American Follows Husband to Brazil

President Obama has bravely confronted some longstanding problems with the nation's immigration system by attempting to positively reconcile the status 12 million-plus undocumented immigrants, some of whom came to this country as children and are American in every way yet nevertheless lack citizenship.  However, the Obama administration has also aggressively deported well over a million others, sometimes with ruinous consequences to families.  Continue Reading...