What Next for Humanity? *

Aug 9th, 2006 | Filed by

Spiked asks scientists, philosophers, thinkers.… Read the rest



Jesus and Mo Discuss Doubt *

Aug 9th, 2006 | Filed by

What about humans alone in a meaningless universe?… Read the rest



Time for the West to Embrace its own Secularism *

Aug 9th, 2006 | Filed by

‘The tricky part of tolerance is that those who invoke it as victims hate it in principle.’… Read the rest



Ibn Warraq on The Need for Qur’anic Criticism *

Aug 9th, 2006 | Filed by

What we need is a radical Enlightenment.… Read the rest



Writers Remember Barbara Epstein *

Aug 9th, 2006 | Filed by

Gore Vidal, Alison Lurie, Pankaj Mishra, Elizabeth Hardwick, many more.… Read the rest



Adam Phillips on William Empson *

Aug 9th, 2006 | Filed by

Believed the Christian God was a device invented to stop people having the kinds of mind that could be changed.… Read the rest



Scott McLemee on George Scialabba *

Aug 9th, 2006 | Filed by

He has read his way through a canon or two; but his thinking is not, as the saying goes, ‘professionalized.’… Read the rest



More Wonkette Syndrome

Aug 8th, 2006 11:01 pm | By

And speaking of Wonkers, Ian B sent me a lovely little piece from the Wall Street Journal the other day, that’s more of the same kind of bowl of warm spit. Written by one Charlotte Hays – which sounds like a woman’s name to me. Ingratitude, thou marble-hearted fiend. Does Charlotte Hays think she’d be writing for the WSJ without feminism? Hmm?

Perhaps the nicest thing about attending the National Organization for Women’s 40th birthday event last weekend was that I didn’t have to pack a lot of fancy party clothes – the dress code was strictly old feminist. The mindset was of the same vintage. Though there was a “summit” for young feminists on Friday before the conference got

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Wonkette Syndrome

Aug 8th, 2006 10:46 pm | By

I wonder if Katherine Rake has been reading Wonkette.

Roll up, roll up, for a spot of that old favourite, feminist-bashing. Anyone can have a go, it’s easy. Trot out that readymade mythological figure of the dungaree-clad, scary, hairy and humourless feminist.

Don’t forget ‘fixated’ and ‘so angry’ – they go with the humourless bit. And as for rolling up – the comments are depressing. Actually they’re more like disgusting. And that’s at the Guardian! So men in the rest of the world are even more misogynist and contempt-filled – how encouraging.

And we now also have to contend with the hypersexualisation of our culture, a phenomenon that has developed and snowballed with hardly a murmur of dissent. Against

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Karma, Meet Egolessness

Aug 8th, 2006 9:45 pm | By

Any Buddhists out there? I have a question. Or not so much a question as something I don’t get. (I know of at least one Buddhist out there. Maybe I’ll email her, or maybe she’ll say something here before I get around to it.) This morning I was reading a book about feminism and world religions – called Feminism and World Religions – and in the essay on Buddhism Rita Gross tells us that many Buddhists explain male dominance as a result of karma: everyone’s ‘current position’ is a result of karma from the past, so women’s inferiority results from ‘negative karma’ so they have to bear it gracefully, which will probably lead to the good karma of rebirth as … Read the rest



Armageddon Fans Look Forward to WWIII *

Aug 8th, 2006 | Filed by

Evangelist claims confrontation with Iran is necessary to fulfill God’s plan for the future of the world.… Read the rest



Girl Executed for Being Raped *

Aug 8th, 2006 | Filed by

When Atefah realised her case was hopeless, she threw off her veil in protest. Fatal move.… Read the rest



Ah Yes – There’s a Lot of That Around *

Aug 8th, 2006 | Filed by

‘Ever since I became a religious person, I’ve noticed how much our country is deteriorating.’… Read the rest



Why Does Feminism Provoke Hostility? *

Aug 8th, 2006 | Filed by

Because subordinated women clean the toilets. Simple.… Read the rest



‘We are all Hizbullah now.’ Really? *

Aug 8th, 2006 | Filed by

The moral idiocy of the sentiment betrayed the higher purpose of the march.… Read the rest



Separate Kitchens for Stem Cells *

Aug 8th, 2006 | Filed by

When science becomes politicized science, it also becomes unkosher.… Read the rest



Communitywatch

Aug 7th, 2006 10:47 pm | By

Just a little update on community. Because I know we’re all slightly worried that the idea of community is so out of fashion and that people don’t get reminded often enough that we all live in A Community and we are all members of A Community (just one though – mind now) and we must all respect other people’s Communities as they must respect ours. So it is good to see that in some few corners of the media, respect for The Community is not quite dead yet.

For instance there is this nice little BBC article which uses the word no fewer than twelve times. Not bad for such a short piece! I feel all cuddly as I read … Read the rest



Zoom

Aug 7th, 2006 7:38 pm | By

I spent most of the past three days working on a sudden rush job. Now I’m all speeded up like something in a cartoon. Hurry hurry hurry, do it as fast as possible. I should do some big long-delayed project like, um, tidying my desk; I’d probably get it done in two minutes. But…nah. I’m not in the mood. All rushed out.… Read the rest



Community Talk

Aug 7th, 2006 7:22 pm | By

Well, Ash Kotak talks good sense, at least.

As for the “Brick Lane community” response, Greer is assuming a community speaks with one voice; it is patronising and arrogant. Any community is made up of a group of individuals. However a community together tries to protect and uphold common values, not everyone will support them all the time. This Brick Lane media-generated controversy has reinforced the truth that a community which has little voice – and some of those within it who have no voice – will continue to remain invisible.

Eg-zacktly. And the dang Guardian and the dang BBC don’t help by calling twenty people ‘the community’ all the time. Which surely they must be beginning dimly to … Read the rest



The Undead

Aug 7th, 2006 7:11 pm | By

They’re ba-ack. The dear Department for the Promotion of Virtue and the Discouragement of Vice is making a comeback. Nostalgic, innit.

Behind a desk in a spartan government office, a bearded official says he is swamped with job applicants for a proposed department to promote virtue and discourage vice, which would send out religious monitors to uncover and correct un-Islamic behavior in the populace.

I bet. I bet he’s swamped with applicants who want to go out to uncover and correct things that other people are doing – laughing, singing, talking to friends, going outside; sinister stuff like that. Uncover it and correct it, quick, before everything goes to hell.

The cabinet also approved reviving the Department for the Promotion

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