Karma

May 28th, 2008 6:33 pm | By

Ah, Buddhism – so spiritual, so compassionate, so deep.

Sharon Stone says the Chinese earthquake was bad karma.

“I thought, ‘Is that karma?’ When you are not nice, bad things happen to you.”

Ah right – we see that every day. Cosmic justice is dealt out with unerring accuracy and gratifying speed, day in day out. Well spotted, Ms Stone.

“I’m not happy about the way the Chinese are treating the Tibetans because I don’t think anyone should be unkind to anyone else,” Stone said in footage widely available on the internet. “And then all this earthquake and all this stuff happened, and I thought, is that karma?”

Yeah, that’s what it is all right. All those schoolchildren crushed … Read the rest



A different kind of thing

May 28th, 2008 1:36 pm | By

Oh, please.

From this week, astrologers, palm-readers, mediums and the like must display a kind of rationalist health warning. Wherever they sell their services, new consumer protection regulations require that they declare “for entertainment only”, because not “experimentally proven”…[I]t is tempting to raise a scientistic cheer. At last the quacks have been foiled, their bluff called! Until, that is, one asks what else in the marketplace of goods and services could pass a similar test.

Well nothing could, because ‘proven’ is the wrong word, which is not Mark Vernon’s fault if that’s really what the regulations themselves say and not just some journalist’s sloppy paraphrase. But the things that astrologers and mediums do or rather claim to do are … Read the rest



Repressive Law Renewed Instead of Reforms *

May 28th, 2008 | Filed by

Egyptian government’s abrupt extension of the state of emergency shows contempt for the rule of law.… Read the rest



Save the Children on Abuse by Peacekeepers *

May 28th, 2008 | Filed by

The report shows sexual abuse has been widely underreported because children are afraid to come forward.… Read the rest



Science Can’t Prove Nothin’ *

May 28th, 2008 | Filed by

Can’t prove a house is beautiful, so why make mediums warn their customers?… Read the rest



The End of Political Pandering on Religion? *

May 28th, 2008 | Filed by

No.… Read the rest



Radicalism as Reaction *

May 27th, 2008 | Filed by

The revolution was repressive from its start, flawed with a programmatic illiberalism and anti-intellectualism.… Read the rest



Normblog on the ‘Post-left’ *

May 27th, 2008 | Filed by

Are apologists for Islamism more unleft than were apologists for Stalinism? No.… Read the rest



Jeff Sharlet Reads Martha Nussbaum *

May 27th, 2008 | Filed by

Strengthening the hand of the theocons by underestimating the scope of the Christian nationalist challenge. … Read the rest



Another Agnostic Pipes Up *

May 27th, 2008 | Filed by

It is music in general that must be tossed out when you refuse to appreciate religion. Eh?… Read the rest



Sayed Pervez Kambaksh May Be Safe *

May 27th, 2008 | Filed by

Hamid Karzai has privately assured Kambaksh’s campaign team that he will be freed.… Read the rest



Evidence is for conformists

May 27th, 2008 | By Tim Goot-Brennan

I remember a friend telling me only a few days after the Sept 11 attacks that the World Trade Centre had been wired with bombs either by the government or by the owner. It was also pointed out to me that the dust around the World Trade Centre had fallen in the shape of Satan’s visage. I wouldn’t have predicted it at the time, but the crackpot impulse behind these ideas has become common currency. In one American poll, a third of respondents registered their belief that the Bush Administration either aided the attacks or declined to stop them.

More recently the cult of Zeitgeist: The Movie, made by someone called Peter Joseph, has been brought to my attention. … Read the rest



Strengthening the hand of the theocons

May 27th, 2008 11:05 am | By

Jeff Sharlet has some of the same qualms I have about Nussbaum on religion and freedom.

More worrisome are those liberal defenders of religious equality such as Nussbaum and Waldman, who actually do know better and yet strengthen the hand of the theocons by underestimating and even minimalizing the scope of the Christian nationalist challenge…The overlapping consensus model extends an assumption of good faith to all parties. That’s fine. But it fails when it rests too easily on assumptions about just what good faith is.

Precisely. That’s exactly what Nussbaum does – she backs up these assumptions about just what good faith is by citing easy examples, like Quaker non-violence, instead of hard ones, like raising girls to be subordinate … Read the rest



Passing for a Hagiographer of Freud *

May 26th, 2008 | Filed by

The well-documented fabrications and fudges in Freud’s early case studies go unmentioned. … Read the rest



What Shameless Repetition *

May 26th, 2008 | Filed by

Repetition can make promotional testimony seem eerily quantitative.… Read the rest



Morris Dickstein on Fiction and Political Fact *

May 26th, 2008 | Filed by

Public life determines private life; exploring that link is the sine qua non of good social and political fiction.… Read the rest



Gene Robinson and Christopher Hitchens *

May 26th, 2008 | Filed by

Robinson is patently kind and sincere, but he’s wrong; Hitchens can be rude and combative, but he’s right.… Read the rest



Scientology: Cult or Mirror to all Faiths?

May 26th, 2008 | By Carl Anders

What is the difference between Jack the Ripper and the Suffolk Strangler? Apart from that we actually know Steve Wright is the latter and he was caught, what separates them?

Jack the Ripper rejoices in a whole tourism and franchise industry centred on him. He has films, television programmes, documentaries, books, cups, ashtrays, t-shirts and tours. How does one serial killer become so profitable? Why are there no Suffolk tours or films starring Johnny Depp?

Of course, timing would seem the obvious answer: with no living immediate relatives of Jack the Ripper; we feel it is safe to exploit his legend. It is just too soon to do the same for Steve Wright.

For Jack the Ripper read “recognised” religion. … Read the rest



Ethically dubious

May 25th, 2008 6:10 pm | By

I sometimes notice an odd and unpleasant phenomenon: people on blogs and forums and discussion boards and the like will accuse other people of lying, and more than that, when shown to be wrong, will not withdraw the accusation, much less apologize. This is odd because in what is jestingly called real life, at least in my experience, that’s not done lightly. One doesn’t go around accusing people of lying when talking nose to nose; it doesn’t go down well. But when typing words on screen – people just step right up. Then if you tell them they’re mistaken and that they ought not to throw that accusation around so blithely, they simply vanish. Many of them do it anonymously, … Read the rest



A Spot of Freud-worship *

May 25th, 2008 | Filed by

How Freud might help us to think about Nazism. … Read the rest