Indictments over Italian quake cause a furor *

Jun 15th, 2011 | Filed by

Discussion of the Italian indictments was “intense” during meetings this week at the Southern California Earthquake Center, said its director.… Read the rest



We will be coerced to violate our deepest beliefs

Jun 15th, 2011 3:56 pm | By

We’ve encountered Archbishop Timothy Dolan before. He wrote a blog post about the Catholic church’s way with those sexy little children who keep seducing its dear innocent priests, or rather about the world’s harsh attitude to the church’s way with the tiny little harlots.

What causes us Catholics to bristle is not only the latest revelations of sickening sexual abuse by priests, and blindness on the part of some who wrongly reassigned them — such stories, unending though they appear to be, are fair enough, — but also that the sexual abuse of minors is presented as a tragedy unique to the Church alone.

Italics his. Self-pity and moral obtuseness also his.

Now he’s pitying himself over gay marriage and … Read the rest



Archbishop Timothy Dolan on gay marriage *

Jun 15th, 2011 | Filed by

“We believers worry that we will be coerced to violate our deepest beliefs to accommodate the newest state decree.”… Read the rest



Maryam Namazie speech at Dublin Atheist Conference *

Jun 15th, 2011 | Filed by

“Islam matters to us today because we are living under an Islamic Inquisition, and not because it is becoming more ‘popular,’ as its proponents like to argue.”… Read the rest



Bill aims to curb sharia courts in Britain *

Jun 15th, 2011 | Filed by

A parliamentary Bill would stop UK sharia courts claiming that they have legal jurisdiction over criminal or family law.… Read the rest



US opposed minimum wage rise in Haiti *

Jun 15th, 2011 | Filed by

US embassy in Haiti worked closely with factory owners to aggressively block a paltry minimum wage rise for assembly zone workers.… Read the rest



Orellana to the infirmary

Jun 15th, 2011 10:20 am | By

Update: I got this partly wrong, because the Guardian article is at least misleading.

Oh.my.god. I didn’t know about this.

Marta Orellana says she was playing with friends at the orphanage when the summons sounded: “Orellana to the infirmary. Orellana to the infirmary.”

Waiting for her were several doctors she had never seen before. Tall men with fair complexions who spoke what she guessed was English, plus a Guatemalan doctor. They had syringes and little bottles.

They ordered her to lie down and open her legs. Embarrassed, she locked her knees together and shook her head. The Guatemalan medic slapped her cheek and she began to cry. “I did what I was told,” she recalls.

And they infected her with Read the rest



Guatemala: victims of US syphilis study *

Jun 15th, 2011 | Filed by

The US infected orphan children and others with syphilis in the 1940s, to test penicillin.… Read the rest



Afghanistan worst place in the world for women *

Jun 15th, 2011 | Filed by

Then DR Congo, Pakistan, India and Somalia, survey by Thomson Reuters Foundation finds.… Read the rest



Kampala school closes over “witchcraft” *

Jun 15th, 2011 | Filed by

Pupils of Nakasongola Junior Academy were sent home indefinitely after what the school called ‘escalated incidences of evil spirit attacks.’… Read the rest



Brum Skeptic in Pub podcast with J and M author *

Jun 14th, 2011 | Filed by

“It’s a very badly-drawn religious satire…”… Read the rest



Well thinking

Jun 14th, 2011 3:51 pm | By

Oh honestly. Not good enough.

Ten years ago, the BBC was always telling us how bloody marvellous the euro was. Now – for reasons I can’t quite fathom – it’s assisted suicide.

Really? Can’t fathom? Well try harder.

It’s really not that difficult. Something is going to kill us – you, me, all of us. We don’t know what it will be. We do know it could be slow and horrible. We’re afraid of that. Some of us would like to know we (and others who want it) have the option of cutting it short; knowing that would relieve one of the fears.

Now can you fathom it? I’ll tell you what I can’t fathom: I can’t fathom why … Read the rest



The impartial Christian Institute

Jun 14th, 2011 12:02 pm | By

Oh I love it when people with an agenda accuse other people of bias.

A BBC film on assisted suicide was “biased”, critics have said.

Care Not Killing campaigners said Choosing to Die, which shows a British man with motor neurone disease dying, was “pro-assisted suicide propaganda loosely dressed up as a documentary”.

And the ex-Bishop of Rochester, Michael Nazir Ali, said it “glorified
suicide”.

The Bishop of Exeter, the Right Reverend Michael Langrish, said he wanted to see “much more emphasis put on supporting people in living, than assisting them in dying”.

Oh well then – ! If Care Not Killing campaigners and a bishop say it’s propaganda, well, they certainly are unimpeachable authorities on how to … Read the rest



The science of seeing what you want to see *

Jun 14th, 2011 | Filed by

The weapons we need to defend scientific objectivity are themselves social practices, Kenan Malik points out.… Read the rest



Christian Institute calls BBC one-sided *

Jun 14th, 2011 | Filed by

Yes really.… Read the rest



Critics accuse Pratchett documentary of “bias” *

Jun 14th, 2011 | Filed by

Care Not Killing campaigners and bishops line up to find bias in others.… Read the rest



Nick Clarke on Terry Pratchett and assisted suicide *

Jun 14th, 2011 | Filed by

Those who would declare, on religious grounds, that life is not ours to take under any circumstances have a lot of work to do.… Read the rest



Terry Pratchett on assisted suicide documentary *

Jun 14th, 2011 | Filed by

“Do you still believe you were right to show it?” They do.… Read the rest



Sunshine and oranges

Jun 13th, 2011 5:27 pm | By

Remember: religion makes people nicer.

On treacherous building sites little boys were flogged if they slowed down,  carrying loads of bricks up the scaffolding, lime burns lacerating their legs,  hands blistered and cut. This was not Dickensian England; this was Australia and  it was happening until 1970.

In 1946, at the age of 10, Hennessey was sent from an orphanage in England to  the brutal Bindoon Boys Town in Western Australia….

”The brothers and sisters were all together,” he says. ”And then they  started grabbing the girls away from their brothers. I can still hear the  screams of these kids being separated. Some of them never saw their sisters  again. I still have nightmares.”

Life at Bindoon, run

Read the rest


Define “mainstream”

Jun 13th, 2011 12:19 pm | By

They’re still doing it…

The Independent’s first paragraph:

Britain’s largest mainstream Muslim organisation will today call for “robust action” to combat Islamophobic attacks amid fears of growing violence and under-reporting of hate crimes.

You already know what that organization is, right? And it is: it’s the MCB. But what is “mainstream” about the MCB? It is, notoriously, reactionary and male-dominated. More genuinely “mainstream” Muslims don’t consider it mainstream at all, and fume at the media habit of calling it mainstream and treating it as mainstream.

Taji Mustafa, spokesman for Hizb ut-Tahrir in Britain, said: “Xenophobic attacks on Muslims have increased under successive governments. In a manipulative alliance with some sections of the media, they have demonised Islam as part

Read the rest