Insulting Sartre Became a Rite of Passage *

Dec 8th, 2003 | Filed by

Foucault called one of his books ‘the effort of a 19th-century man to imagine the 20th century.’… Read the rest



Channel 5

Dec 8th, 2003 1:59 am | By

I thought this was quite interesting too. Just exactly what I thought, when I heard that bit of dialogue the other day.

A number of senior doctors have boycotted a debate to be shown after Channel Five’s drama documentary on Andrew Wakefield, because they say it is biased and emotive in its portrayal of the scientist behind alleged links between the MMR vaccination and autism…David Elliman, consultant community paediatrician at Great Ormond Street children’s hospital, said: “The film is very, very partial. It’s very much this one man against the medical establishment, who is the only man who listens to children and to parents – paediatricians don’t and GPs don’t.

Exactly. And it’s so tediously familiar – Lorenzo’s stinking Oil … Read the rest



Don’t Go Out Alone

Dec 7th, 2003 9:35 pm | By

Well all right, if you can’t imprison and confine and repress women by putting them in purdah, or making them wear bags whenever they go outside, or slicing their genitals off, or smashing their feet, or whipping them with car antennas if they show a bit of hair or wrist – well hell, just get serious and stab them to death. That’ll teach them! I mean they’ve got a hell of a nerve thinking they get to go outside on their own, haven’t they. Who do they think they are? Adults? Responsible human beings like other people? Of course they’re not! They should be safely inside their houses, preferably in their kitchens, doing what women are supposed to be doing.… Read the rest



Doctors Boycott TV Drama on MMR Jab *

Dec 7th, 2003 | Filed by

Channel 5’s docudrama is biased and emotive, senior doctors say.… Read the rest



Totalizing Ideologies *

Dec 7th, 2003 | Filed by

What are the words to ‘The Red Flag’ again?… Read the rest



Scientists Slam Nobel Loser *

Dec 7th, 2003 | Filed by

Supporters of creationist claim he is shunned because of his religion, but colleagues don’t believe it.… Read the rest



The Second Half of the List *

Dec 7th, 2003 | Filed by

McEwan, Motion, Paulin, Pinker, Tomalin, Tremain, Tyler, Warner, Weldon.… Read the rest



Barnes, Byatt, Drabble, Holmes, Holroyd *

Dec 7th, 2003 | Filed by

Crick, Fenton, Kermode – writers choose their favorite books of the year. … Read the rest



Predecessor of the Fashionable Dictionary *

Dec 6th, 2003 | Filed by

Ambrose Bierce’s version of the satirical lexicon.… Read the rest



Danny Postel Reviews John Gray *

Dec 6th, 2003 | Filed by

Twists and turns on the ideological road.… Read the rest



Homophobic Reggae Star ‘Should Be Arrested’ *

Dec 6th, 2003 | Filed by

Gay rights group call for the arrest of reggae star Bounty Killer.… Read the rest



Executives of ‘Radio Machete’ Found Guilty *

Dec 6th, 2003 | Filed by

They used a radio station and a newspaper to inflame ethnic hatred that led to genocide in Rwanda.… Read the rest



Habermas on Adorno *

Dec 6th, 2003 | Filed by

There were irritating gaps in the Frankfurt canon of philosophers.… Read the rest



Radio Machete

Dec 6th, 2003 2:07 am | By

Ah, and just when I was talking about Rwanda, here is this story. How very interesting. The first time media executives have been convicted since the Nurenberg trials. Well that’s too bad, for a start, because Serbian radio was also used to whip up murderous ethnic hatreds. But it’s better than nothing.

In the first verdict of its kind since the Nuremberg trials, an international court today convicted three Rwandan news media executives of genocide for helping to incite a killing spree by machete-wielding gangs who slaughtered about 800,000 Tutsis in neighboring Rwanda in early 1994. A three judge panel found that the three defendants used a radio station and a twice-monthly newspaper to inflame ethnic hatred that eventually led

Read the rest


Lots of People

Dec 5th, 2003 9:48 pm | By

Another interesting point at normblog. Well I can’t help it if he says something that catches my attention twice in three days. That’s just how things fall out sometimes. And really, this is something I’ve been mulling over for a couple of weeks or more, ever since re-reading Philip Gourevitch’s book on Rwanda. Longer than that really, maybe since last spring – maybe around the time Fareed Zakaria’s book on democracy was published. It wasn’t the book itself (which I haven’t read in any case) that sparked the pondering, it was the air of surprise in some of the reviews, that someone could make some shrewd and pertinent comments about democracy which recognized that democracy has some tensions or dangers. … Read the rest



Non-Mainstream Opinion and Blogs *

Dec 5th, 2003 | Filed by

There are more pro-war left than anti-war left bloggers.… Read the rest



Edward Skidelsky on George Steiner *

Dec 5th, 2003 | Filed by

Jeremiads are no substitute for understanding.… Read the rest



What Is He Laughing At?

Dec 5th, 2003 1:58 am | By

There was more of interest in that Start the Week than just the tv drama about the MMR issue. There was also a guy who’s written a book called A Dictionary of Idiocy, which is interesting because we have a little dictionary ourselves, so we’re interested in other examples of the genre. This one doesn’t sound much good though, frankly, at least not if the writer is anything to go by. He kept laughing too much, when nothing was all that funny. It’s always so embarrassing when people do that on chat shows and the people they’re chatting with don’t join them, but in fact get less and less giggly as they get more so. There was Stephen Bayley roaring … Read the rest



What Silence?

Dec 4th, 2003 7:37 pm | By

Front Row yesterday included discussion of and a clip from a Channel 5 drama called ‘Hear the Silence’ about the controversy over the MMR jab and autism. Monday’s Start the Week also discussed the drama, with Juliet Stevenson who stars in it.

The bit of dialogue we heard on Front Row confirmed my worst expectations of what such a drama would be like. Oh great, thought I when Mark Lawson first described the subject matter. Plucky victimized parent takes on medical establishment and shows how wrong it is about everything, thus convincing everyone that MMR jab causes autism. And sure enough – the bit of dialogue was well-acted, to be sure, but it was also utterly predictable. Chilly rational uncaring … Read the rest



Paul Johnson on Art *

Dec 4th, 2003 | Filed by

He values both order and innovation, Joe Phelan says.… Read the rest