What is right is contested

Sep 5th, 2008 6:06 pm | By

Ah, Norm took issue with Julian’s piece too.

By his choice of example Julian makes life too easy for himself. Mockery of the weak is an egregious practice of course. But what if someone makes a criticism of Islam – or any religion – in perfectly measured terms and some take offence, perceiving this criticism as mockery? What if the satirical treatment of a sacred figure in a work of fiction arouses anger, pleas for censorship, death threats? What if it is disputed between different parties whether certain images or statements are offensive or not? In such cases, the right to say what you think – within the usual limits concerning incitement to violence and defamation – trumps

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Duck on the Menu *

Sep 5th, 2008 | Filed by

Julian Baggini’s new book, expanding ‘Bad Moves’ column, is now published.… Read the rest



Ben’s Placebo Programme on Radio 4 *

Sep 5th, 2008 | Filed by

Studies suggest that the placebo effect can have a significant impact on the course of a wide range of illnesses.… Read the rest



More From Ben’s Book: Medicalisation of Life *

Sep 5th, 2008 | Filed by

Alt therapists, media, big pharma all sell us bio-medical explanations for problems that are social or personal.… Read the rest



From Ben Goldacre’s New Book *

Sep 5th, 2008 | Filed by

Journalists and editors have finally demonstrated that they can pose a serious risk to public health.… Read the rest



AC Grayling Deals With Steve Fuller *

Sep 5th, 2008 | Filed by

Fuller seems to forget Popper’s killer point, namely, a theory that explains everything explains nothing.… Read the rest



Letters for September, 2008

Sep 5th, 2008 | By

Letters for September, 2008.… Read the rest



Think twice before mocking

Sep 4th, 2008 6:03 pm | By

I don’t entirely agree with Julian here. (Maybe all the commenters have said what I’m going to say; I don’t read comments at Comment is Free any more and haven’t read these. If they’ve already said this just go watch Sarah Palin re-runs or something.)

The piece is about religion and mockery and free speech and the predictability of what people say about them.

But isn’t mockery good, and any belief system incapable of putting up with it deficient in some way? That’s true, but you can’t just ignore the background against which lampooning takes place. Christians, for example, are not oppressed, despite what some wannabe martyrs would have us believe. British Muslims, in contrast, are a somewhat beleaguered

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Joke Obscenity Filters *

Sep 4th, 2008 | Filed by

‘Assassination’ becomes ‘buttbuttination,’ ‘passenger’ is ‘pbuttenger,’ and ‘passerby’ is ‘pbutterby.’… Read the rest



Our Brains Do Not Intuitively Grasp Probabilities *

Sep 4th, 2008 | Filed by

Thanks to confirmation bias, we remember the coincidences and forget the vast sea of meaningless data.… Read the rest



Racism and Sexism or Neoliberalism? *

Sep 4th, 2008 | Filed by

It is exploitation, not discrimination, that is the primary producer of inequality today. … Read the rest



Carlin Romano on Bernard-Henri Lévy *

Sep 4th, 2008 | Filed by

It’s that openness to being shaken in his beliefs that makes Lévy more appealing than many of his detractors.… Read the rest



Anti-Wahhabist Journalist Killed in Dagestan *

Sep 4th, 2008 | Filed by

Alishayev was an editor at an Islamic tv station who made a documentary countering Wahhabism.… Read the rest



Julian Baggini on Free Speech and Mockery *

Sep 4th, 2008 | Filed by

While comedy speaking truth to power is funny, the powerful laughing at the weak is not.… Read the rest



They’re getting closer

Sep 3rd, 2008 7:29 pm | By

Spare a thought for the unfortunate people of Yemen. They’re getting their very own Saudi-style virtue squad, which they didn’t even ask for and don’t actually very much want.

For many Yemenis, and for women in particular, this was another alarming sign of the growth of Salafi extremism — an unwelcome import from neighbouring Saudi Arabia where the “mutaween” religious police are part of the scenery. “These people scare the hell out of me,” complained Nadia al-Sakkaf, the editor of the Yemen Times.

Yeah they’d scare me too if they turned up where I live.

The first signs appeared a few months ago in the Red Sea port of Hodeida, where young men and women began to be accosted

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Contentious Polygamy Law in Iran *

Sep 3rd, 2008 | Filed by

The proposed Family Support Bill would allow a man to marry a second wife without the permission of the first. … Read the rest



Iran Sentences Women’s Rights Activists *

Sep 3rd, 2008 | Filed by

Six months in prison for writing feminist articles on a website.… Read the rest



Emergence of ‘Morality Police’ in Yemen *

Sep 3rd, 2008 | Filed by

A setback for women, already battling 70% illiteracy and one of the biggest gender gaps on earth.… Read the rest



Egyptian Women Describe Sexual Harassment *

Sep 3rd, 2008 | Filed by

‘I get harassed 100 times a day. I tried everything to stop it but it doesn’t stop.’… Read the rest



Harper Collins Australia Apologizes for Offending *

Sep 3rd, 2008 | Filed by

Book teaches girls to play didgeridoo; some ‘indigenous leaders’ say this is taboo.… Read the rest