Burma: Hope Vetoed *

Jun 6th, 2008 | Filed by

China’s foreign policy is predicated on sovereignty: what happens in Burma or China stays in Burma or China.… Read the rest



US Prison Numbers Hit a New High *

Jun 6th, 2008 | Filed by

2.3 million, which is 762 per 100,000, the highest rate in the world. … Read the rest



Afghanistan: Violence Against Women Journalists *

Jun 6th, 2008 | Filed by

RSF is outraged by the failure to punish the murder of the director of Peace Radio last year.… Read the rest



Sex and the shantytown

Jun 5th, 2008 12:05 pm | By

If you’re a woman – don’t live in Sierra Leone if you can help it.

One in 8 women dies during pregnancy or childbirth, and women have an abysmal life expectancy of just 43 years, one of the lowest in the world. Girls can expect to receive only six years of schooling. On top of it all, the horrors of Sierra Leone’s decade-long civil war, in which perhaps a third of the country’s women and girls suffered sexual violence, haunt women today. Widows struggle to get by, survivors of wartime rape face stigma and discrimination, and men continue to assault women with impunity.

One in 8! One in 8!! That’s grotesque. But Papua New Guinea is not great either.… Read the rest



NY Times Weeps Over YFZ Ranch *

Jun 5th, 2008 | Filed by

‘The sect is now trying to put the pieces back together.’ We know; that’s the problem.… Read the rest



Peter Berkowitz Reviews Ibn Warraq *

Jun 5th, 2008 | Filed by

Said’s misrepresentations undermine the separation between scholarship and partisan pleading.… Read the rest



FP Lists The Worst Places to Be a Woman *

Jun 5th, 2008 | Filed by

Organized gang rape, early marriage, illiteracy, low life expectancy, accusations of sorcery, trafficking.… Read the rest



Blaming Denmark *

Jun 5th, 2008 | Filed by

Bombing naughty of course, but Denmark should have known better.… Read the rest



Archbishop of York Disses Secularism *

Jun 5th, 2008 | Filed by

Said human rights without a reference to God or the divine were left lacking essential safeguards. … Read the rest



Turkish Court Blocks Government’s Hijab Move *

Jun 5th, 2008 | Filed by

Rules that vote to ease ban on hijab at universities violated the constitution’s secular principles. … Read the rest



Denmark used to have a reputation

Jun 5th, 2008 11:45 am | By

Jakob Illeborg says Denmark should have known better.

[T]he hawkish approach taken by the Bush administration internationally is reflected by a similarly tough position on Islam and Muslims in Denmark. If the US is leading a global mission, the Danes have been fighting an inner mission, standing up against what is perceived, by some, as a threat to our democracy. Ever since the prophet cartoon crises of 2006 and 2008, Islamist extremists around the world have been threatening bloody revenge on Denmark.

So…maybe that’s why this ‘what’ is perceived by some as a threat to our democracy? Because of the, you know, threats? Of bloody revenge? For some cartoons? Could that have something to do with it? And could … Read the rest



Particularly insidious

Jun 5th, 2008 11:18 am | By

Very good take-down of Edward Said (and review of Ibn Warraq’s Defending the West). I don’t always agree with Peter Berkowitz (much less the Hoover Institution) but I do here.

Like the book it introduces, the preface exhibits a master propagandist at work, as he weaves together moderate and reasonable pronouncements with obscurantist rhetoric and sophisticated invective.

That’s how it’s done, of course – mixing the two so that the reasonable stuff provides cover for the obscurantist rhetoric.

Certainly, Said’s conclusions can be convenient. Learning Arabic, Turkish, and Persian, and studying the Koran and Islamic jurisprudence, Muslim poetry and philosophy, and the social and political structures and history of the peoples of the Middle East are exacting and arduous

Read the rest


Sisterhood is powerful

Jun 4th, 2008 6:00 pm | By

I love it when women push back against exclusion and demand their rights, don’t you?

Muslim extremist women are challenging al-Qaida’s refusal to include – or at least acknowledge – women in its ranks, in an emotional debate that gives rare insight into the gender conflicts lurking beneath one of the strictest strains of Islam. In response to a female questioner, al-Qaida No. 2 leader Ayman Al-Zawahri said in April that the terrorist group does not have women. A woman’s role, he said on the Internet audio recording, is limited to caring for the homes and children of al-Qaida fighters. His remarks have since prompted an outcry from fundamentalist women, who are fighting or pleading for the right to

Read the rest


Anthony Lane Sees Sex and the City *

Jun 4th, 2008 | Filed by

Goes in expecting a pleasant evening, comes out a hard-line Marxist.… Read the rest



The Neurodiversity Movement *

Jun 4th, 2008 | Filed by

A new wave of activists wants to celebrate atypical brain function as a positive identity, not a disability.… Read the rest



Tom Clark Disputes Ray Tallis on Free Will *

Jun 4th, 2008 | Filed by

Determinism is compatible with being recursively self-modifying beings that have reasons and intentions.… Read the rest



Feminism al-Qaida Style *

Jun 4th, 2008 | Filed by

Islamist women are challenging al-Qaida’s refusal to include women. Right on, sista!… Read the rest



Expanding Wahhabi Influence in Australia *

Jun 4th, 2008 | Filed by

Griffith University offered to ‘reshape’ its Islamic Research Unit in accordance with Saudi wishes. … Read the rest



More Comedy from West Midlands Police *

Jun 3rd, 2008 | Filed by

Cop sees preachers in a ‘Muslim area,’ says they are committing a hate crime.… Read the rest



Kenan Malik Reviews Raymond Tallis *

Jun 3rd, 2008 | Filed by

Tallis can digress entertainingly on anything from Heidegger to hiccups, from Beckett to the basilar membrane. … Read the rest