Appeared the day he died! Looks so totally exactly like him!
Author: Ophelia Benson
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Laura Secor: Behind Iran’s Silence
The Iranian authorities had an interest in making this story disappear, and they have done an effective job.
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Meet ‘the Family’: Creepy Secret Religious Group
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Iran: 5 Years in Jail for Insulting Sanctities
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New Culture Wars: History Classes in Texas
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Sotomayor Defends Herself
Did anyone mention Dred Scott? Plessy v Ferguson? Bradwell v Illinois?
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Free Speech in a Plural Society
The Conference Room, British Library, London
February 20, 2009Ian McEwan’s novel, Saturday, begins with the image of a sharp, bright light in the sky
that the neurosurgeon Henry Perowne sees from the corner of his eye on a restless
night when he is unable to sleep. It is a troubling time for Britain; it is February 15, 2003, the
day of the big march, where hundreds of thousands of people from around Britain are
going to come to central London, with the vain hope of stopping the impending war in
Iraq.Perowne is a liberal; he does not like torture – in fact, he has learned much about Iraq by
treating an Iraqi refugee fleeing the terror of Saddam Hussein. And yet, surrounded by
the prevailing orthodoxy of opinions among his friends and colleagues, in his
cosmopolitan home in Fitzrovia he cannot match the intensity of arguments, which his
daughter, for example, would articulate later that afternoon, after the march.Now let us take a step further back, and think of another explosion in the sky – the flight
AI 420, Bostan, blown up by extremists. Two men emerge from that explosion,
descending gently towards earth, still dressed impeccably, one’s hat not out of place, the
other able to sing an old Raj Kapoor song, as they are headed for “proper London, yaar,
Ellowen Deeowen.”They fall on windswept, chilly English coast. The Miltonian allusion is clear, and we are
to return to Milton momentarily.The two men are Saladin Chamcha – the man without a face but 1,001 voices, and
Gibreel Farishta, who acts in theological films in India, and who will soon hallucinate,
and imagine an alternate interpretation of the origin of a great faith, questioning the
source of our inspiration.Farishta and Chamcha are of course imagined; they are characters in Salman Rushdie’s
novel, The Satanic Verses, about which I will say more a bit later.What I’d like us to imagine is us descending from the sky, and arriving on an English
landscape today. And what will we see? We will see a thriving print media, questioning if
the prime minister was paying attention to the City, while he was opting for light
regulation of the financial sector, during his watch at Treasury. We will learn inane and
anodyne gossip about footballers and celebrities. We will see the Big Ben and we will
turn up at the Speakers Corner at Hyde Park, where all kinds of people will give vent to
all sorts of theories.From The Independent and The Guardian on one hand, and The Daily Telegraph and
The Mail on the other, we will see most opinions given space. Britain will look like the
post-card image of the mother of parliaments, the land of ancient liberties, of Magna
Carta, and of Milton’s Areopagitica.Now, let us pause for a moment and consider what else we might see, if we had the kind
of pinpoint accuracy that Google Earth provides these days. And if we look across the
park, there is the Science Museum, which, in 2007, decided to cancel a talk by James
Watson, the Nobel Prize-winning scientist, because in an interview in The Sunday
Times he said he was “inherently gloomy about the prospects for Africa” because “all
our social policies are based on the fact that their intelligence is the same as ours—
whereas all the testing says not really.”Inevitably, there was a furore, and the great and the good condemned Watson. The
board of the state-of-the-art Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in the US, where Watson
has spent decades pursuing advanced research, removed him from his administrative
responsibilities, pending further deliberation.Watson is a known maverick in the scientific community, and he has in the past made
provocative remarks. He is not a development or social policy expert. He later clarifiedhis position, saying we do not know enough about how genes determine our capacities in different environments.That should have been the end of it, and his initial remarks resembled the ramblings of
just the kind of people he says are not worth spending time with. His new book is
ironically called Avoid Boring People: Lessons from a Life in Science. Cheering the
museum for showing Watson the door, London’s ebullient mayor, Ken Livingstone, said
Watson’s views were “not welcome in a city like London, a diverse city whose very
success demonstrates the racist and nonsensical nature of (his) comments.” This, from
a mayor who did not have much of a problem inviting at tax-payer expense a cleric to
London, who supported suicide bombings in Israel, and who supported the death penalty
for gays.This is not at all to suggest that Watson’s views have scientific basis. The science of
intelligence is disputed; the Herrnstein-Murray hypothesis of intelligence being
distributed on a bell curve along racial lines has been challenged; and in the hands of a
mass murderer like Hitler, such “theories” can have catastrophic consequences. To be
fair, Watson has supported none of this, and in his mea culpa, he has shown how little
we know.Contrast British response to Watson’s remarks with the American reaction to the
fulminations of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian President, who has denied not only
the Holocaust, but the existence of homosexuals in his country. In September, Columbia
University faced considerable political pressure in the US, with many calling on the
university to withdraw an invitation made to the Iranian leader. Instead, Columbia went
ahead with its invitation, and then, asserting its own values, Columbia’s president, the
feisty Lee Bollinger, launched a blistering attack on Ahmadinejad’s record and the values
he espouses. In doing this, Bollinger gave a new meaning to the dictum attributed to
Voltaire: I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it. In
Britain, universities want to boycott academics merely for having an Israeli passport.
Watson’s faux pas was not surprising, and, sadly, nor was the ease with which the
British establishment had forgotten its old commitment to free speech, because of the
assumed codes of behaviour of operating in a multicultural, plural society.This is hardly the first such instance. Just last week we have seen Britain convulsed in
another debate, over whether to allow the Dutch parliamentarian Geert Wilders into
London, to show his film, Fitna, at the House of Lords. Unlike Keith Vaz, the MP who
defended Wilders’s expulsion from Britain on Newsnight the other day, I have seen the
film; and it is, indeed, 15 minutes of unremitting boredom. But rather than let Maajid
Nawaz of the Quilliam Foundation debate with him in London, Vaz wanted Nawaz to fly
to Amsterdam to have his debate. But then Vaz has been through this before; he was
among the Labour Party MPs who marched with those who were protesting against The
Satanic Verses. A Man of All Seasons, he saw nothing wrong in phoning Rushdie a
week later, expressing his sympathies over protests. Biology has a word for it –
chameleon.We did the right thing in Britain in protecting Rushdie’s freedom to imagine and speak;
this country made good use of its tax-payers’ money by providing him with the protection
he so justly deserved. Freedom of speech is meaningless if we are not to bear its
consequences. But in the years that followed, we have seen the emergence of a climate
where almost anyone who wishes to take offence over what he or she does not like, is
able to get speech circumscribed. Let me turn to some such instances.
Last year, three men were detained after they allegedly tossed a petrol bomb at the
home-office of Martin Rynja, who runs the Gibson Square publishing firm. Gibson
Square has shown the courage – or audacity, or foolhardiness – to publish The Jewel of
Medina, a novel based on the life of Aisha, the Prophet Muhammad’s wife. This is
dangerous territory: Earlier this year, its American author Sherry Jones discovered that
Random House, which had decided to publish the novel and paid an advance for it,
changed its mind and dropped the book. The publishing house did so after receiving
unfavourable notices from a critic who was shown the manuscript, and following Internet
chatter that suggested that the book would be highly controversial. Ironically, Random
House publishes Salman Rushdie, who knows a thing or two about those who seek to
silence others. When Random House pulled out of publishing the book, Rushdie
expressed his disappointment, calling it “censorship by fear.”A couple of years ago the British government praised the British media for its restraint in
not republishing the Danish cartoons that have offended many Muslims. The state
department has also called those cartoons offensive. The problem though is that it
makes free expression a matter of accounting, of balancing costs and benefits. We are
all judges now, preferring the good of public safety to the harm of public disorder and
death threats. How did we get here?I do want to emphasize one aspect here: we have to decouple free speech from cultural
relativism. It is a British right, rooted in ancient liberties for which Lilleburn and John
Wilkes fought and went to jail, and which Milton campaigned with passion for. I was born
in India; and I derive my position not only from Voltaire’s defence of ideas he disagreed
with, or Milton in Areopagitica, or John Stuart Mill’s thoughts, but also from my own
traditions and thinkers, too. The Nobel Laureate Rabindranath Tagore wanted India to
awaken in that heaven of freedom “where the mind is without fear and the head is held
high”. Mahatma Gandhi had said “freedom is not worth having if it does not connote
freedom to err.”Freedom of expression, then, was not only the product of Western Enlightenment; it
belonged to all of us. And it included the right to say something outrageous, something
offensive and even something stupid. Speaking to Der Spiegel after the Danish cartoons
were published by Jyllands Posten, Pnina Werbner of Keele University said: “There’s a
difference between a novel of great merit […] and […] cartoons that are in many ways
trivial, have little artistic merit and are deliberately provocative and gratuitous.”
But who decides artistic merit? What constitutes provocation? In the neat world of
academic distinctions, Werbner may be able to separate the two and say, Rushdie yes,
cartoons no. But the assassin will target both. If the priority is to avoid provoking him, we
have lost the battle already, for he wants total silence. To take a sartorial analogy, it is
like telling women not to wear miniskirts because they’ll inflame passions. There are no
half-measures, like checking the appropriate length of the skirt. In such a circumscribed
universe, it is hijab or bust.Rynja, who published Sherry Jones’s novel, says he opposes censorship and
champions free speech. Gibson Square has also published Robert Pape’s study of
suicide terrorism, “Dying to Win”, and its forthcoming titles include the memoir of
Levrenti Beria, Stalin’s KGB chief, by his son Sergio, and a book about the killing of
Father Popieluszko, which led to the unravelling of Polish Communism. If anything,
Gibson Square is an equal opportunity offender.It is in that spirit that I wish to emphasise that mine is not a tantrum about one particular
religion. In December 2004, the Birmingham Repertory staged a play called Behzti
(Dishonour) which dealt with a rape and murder in a Sikh community centre. Before
staging the play, the company had held discussions with leaders of the local Sikh
community to gauge their feelings and likely response. Those discussions did not really
help; once the play was performed, a group of angry Sikhs protested, and one day, they
stormed the theatre. Fearing escalating tension and further public unrest, the authorities
suggested to the theatre company that it should reconsider the programme. The theatre
group closed the production.Instead of standing up for Britain’s ‘ancient liberties’, then minister in charge of racial
equality, Fiona Mactaggart, said: ‘When people are moved by theatre to protest … it is a
great thing… that is a sign of the free speech which is so much a part of the British
tradition.’ Some of us will be visiting the exhibition later this afternoon; I doubt if there are
many documents which show those aspects of the British tradition in good light.
In a post-modernist twist, the minister had transformed the notion of protest theatre –
one which forces audiences to think again and demand social change – into one where
those resisting change protest against the play, to prevent it from being staged in the
first place. And somehow, in Mactaggart’s Orwellian universe, that protest, which
stifles free speech, becomes a sign of freedom of expression, and, weirdly enough, a
part of the British tradition. Suddenly, it is no longer traditional to tolerate views you
disagree with; tradition has come to mean that you impose your views violently on
others, or to prevent others from hearing views with which you disagree.And yet, if tradition is to mean a set of customs or practices that have evolved over time,
then Mactaggart may have been on to something. For acquiescing with bullies seems to
be the emerging tradition in Britain. This is where we have come, twenty years after the
fatwa. Some blinked at that time, so others taking offence believe they, too, will get the
rest of us to blink, if they shout loudly enough. Lack of resolve at the first time,
rewarding those who called for a ban on the book, and honouring with a Knightood Iqbal
Sacranie, former head of a Muslim organisation in Britain, even though he had not
objected to calls for Rushdie’s death has emboldened others : they think they, too,
should get away with it. This is mutually-assured madness.This leads to narrowing our public dialogue and discourse. It has now become
acceptable for anyone upset over anything to demand an apology at best, or a ban, at
worst. That they don’t succeed each time is a good thing, but for how long?
It is time to say: enough.The same month Sikhs were expressing their disapproval in Birmingham,
James Anstice, a lecturer, was upset because Madam Tussaud’s museum in
London had displayed a nativity scene in which the football star David
Beckham and his wife Victoria, or ‘Posh Spice’, were dressed up as
Joseph and Mary. Actors Hugh Grant and Samuel Jackson were shepherds,
Kylie Minogue was an angel, and George W Bush, Tony Blair and the Duke of
Edinburgh stood in as the three wise men. Anstice was angry about this, and he
destroyed the Beckham statue. The next year at his trial, he was given a light fine and
discharged conditionally. In early 2005, some 47,000 Christians complained to the
British Broadcasting Corporation over its screening of Jerry Springer: The Opera, and a
Christian group even launched a private blasphemy suit against the corporation. If the
show is not blasphemous, a spokesman of the group, Christian Voice, said, ‘Nothing in
Britain is sacred.’In 2006, a group of self-proclaimed Hindu activists attacked Asia House, an art gallery in
central London, which was showing the works of Maqbul Fida Husain, who is 92 years old,
and is easily India’s most widely-known painter. The reason for their anger: Husain
has depicted Hindu deities in the nude. Husain has been the target of a vicious
campaign in India where over a thousand spurious cases against him have been filed.
And again in 2006, on a Sunday afternoon, London’s most famous street in the city’s
East End, Brick Lane, saw a bunch of 60 men and women marching up and down,
seeking to stop the filming of Monica Ali’s acclaimed eponymous novel. They claimed
Brick Lane dishonoured the Sylheti Bangladeshi community. They succeeded partly; the
production company had to move elsewhere, but the film got made. However, when it
was premiered, the royal family avoided attending the event, for fear of offending the
Bangladeshi community.The protesters at Brick Lane were careful to emphasise that their problem with the novel
was not so much about faith, as about the way Bangladeshis were presented in the
novel, which takes the notion of such protests to a different level, moving it beyond faith,
and into the realm of any specific interest group. Indeed, intolerance has moved beyond
religion: In 2002, Paul Kelleher (since jailed for causing criminal damage) beheaded a
statue of former prime minister Margaret Thatcher using his cricket bat at London’s
Guildhall. The Conservative Party at one point forced its then MP (and now London
mayor) Boris Johnson to apologise to Liverpudlians because a Spectator editorial (he
edited the magazine at that time) said Liverpool’s residents wallowed in victimhood – a
remark that upset Liverpudlians.Let us spend a few minutes over Bradford, to understand why. There, a group
of Muslims decided to burn copies of The Satanic Verses, whose main thrust was that it
was a post-modern fable about migration and the hybridisation that follows, where
identities no longer remain pristine and pure, but intermingle, transforming themselves
and the society around them.Rushdie dared to imagine an alternate universe, with a central character hallucinating
and going mad, who thinks he is at the focal point of the birth of a great religion, and
pictures himself at its centre, visualising himself as the messenger. In so doing, he goes
deep into the abiding mystery of Islam: did Satan, at any stage, deceive Mohammed into
believing that there was nothing wrong in worshipping Lat, Uzza and Manat, the pagan
goddesses of the pre-Islamic world? Did Mohammed realise the mistake when
Archangel Gabriel told him so, and then he disowned the verses, bringing Islam
back to its monotheistic path?Far from being an insult, here was an imaginative way to explore the nature and
meaning of inspiration. Rushdie explained once: “The main character (an Indian movie
star) is going insane. He decides to step out of his life and step away from it. He is losing
his mind and is becoming convinced that he is, in some way, the Archangel….
(The novel) is about angels and devils and about how it’s very difficult to establish ideas
of morality in a world, which has become so uncertain that it is difficult to even agree on
what is happening. When one can’t agree on a description of reality, it is very hard to
agree on whether that reality is good or evil, right or wrong. Angels and devils are
becoming confused ideas…. What is supposed to be angelic often has disastrous
results, and what is supposed to be demonic is quite often something with which one
must have sympathy. It (the novel) is an attempt to come to grips with a sense of the
crumbling moral fabric or at least for the reconstruction of old simplicities. It is also about
the attempt of somebody like myself who is basically a person without a formal religion,
to make some kind of accommodation with the renewed force of religion in the world;
what it means, what the religious experience is.’It was an attempt to come to grips with the disunities and discontinuities around us, to
discover an inner moral core, binding our fabric – was misinterpreted as an attack on a
faith, and that interpretation has clouded any meaningful discourse on the novel.
But this, as readers of Rushdie would probably infer from another of his novels,
Haroun and the Sea of Stories, was P2C2E, or a Process Too Complicated To Explain.
Far easier for the imam, then, to proclaim: ‘Death to Rushdie’, for raising doubt, for his
certainties must prevail.To be sure, once the fatwa was declared, many authors, politicians, editors, and
academics came to Rushdie’s defence. The advocacy group ARTICLE 19 – derived from
the Universal Declaration, also on display here – which was founded in 1987, almost as
if it was prescient of the Rushdie affair that was to unfold within two years, proved not
only its relevance, but also its integrity by standing up for the novelist during those
difficult years. Rushdie has described those years of exile as his “plague” years, when
few wanted to associate with him. This was the time when bookshops were being
threatened with bombs, and a few retailers decided not to stock the novel. (Some staff
at retailers like B Dalton’s protested; they insisted that their management should not
cave in). Police on Indian streets had shot at demonstrators, killing over a dozen people,
some of whom wanted to march to the British Council library in Bombay and raze it,
because they mistakenly thought the library carried copies of the book. I remember it
vividly; as a young reporter I walked alongside that procession; I also spoke to police
officers who had given the orders to shoot.Elsewhere in the world too there were demonstrations in front of British embassies.
Tragically, Hitoshi Igarashi, the Japanese translator of The Satanic Verses, was
murdered. Ettore Capriolo, its Italian translator, was wounded in an attack, as was
William Nygaard, its Norwegian publisher. That attack shook the senses of Oslo
residents: driving me to his home one day, a classmate of mine called Tore, now an
international investor who wishes he had more time to read good books, slowed his car
near the spot where Nygaard was attacked, and shook his head as he told me: ‘That
was wrong, very wrong. How can anyone attack a publisher?’What a Norwegian investor understood so instinctively was lost on some men and
women of letters in London, paving the way for the collective acquiescence that
followed. The fatwa was the time to stand up, unequivocally, supporting free speech, free
expression, creativity, and imagination. A roll-call of those who blinked, then: In India,
Khushwant Singh, himself never one to shun controversy, told Penguin India, as its
editorial advisor, not to publish the book, because doing so would invite violent
repercussions. In Britain, Germaine Greer refused to sign the petition supporting The
Satanic Verses, because it was ‘about his own troubles,’ adding that Rushdie was ‘a
megalomaniac, an Englishman with a dark skin.’ While not condoning Rushdie’s
persecution, John Le Carre called the novel an affront to Muslim sensibilities. He then
added there was ‘no law in life or nature that says great religions may be insulted with
impunity.’ Edward de Bono, the lateral thinking guru, suggested that if Rushdie had the
right to speak – and in the process offend some – then the reader had the right to feel
offended. Roald Dahl, John Berger, Paul Johnson, and Hugh Trevor-Roper too thought
writing the book was somehow Rushdie’s mistake and he had invited trouble.
Would they also blame the young girl wearing a miniskirt for attracting wolf whistles, if
not a sexual assault, for inviting trouble?The comparison with the miniskirt is not coincidental, nor facetious. As Rushdie noted in
an essay subsequently, those who opposed his work were also those against rock
music, miniskirts, and kissing in public. They were against individuals who stand out,
who take charge of their own lives. (As Christopher Hitchens astutely noted after the
failed bombs at London’s nightclubs that greeted Gordon Brown’s assumption of office
as Britain’s prime minister, the terrorists had targeted locations where young people
gather, precisely because they objected to hedonistic liberalism).Writers noted that danger: If Brick Lane has a message, it is of the gradual assertion of
an immigrant woman’s identity, even in a claustrophobic surrounding. Ali’s protagonist is
a 19-year-old woman called Nazneen, who has come to London in an arranged
marriage. Her husband wants her to stay at home and bear children. Ultimately, he
leaves Britain, but she chooses to stay on. If anything, the predominantly male
protesters against the filming were troubled by this portrait of an emancipated woman,
because she threatened their hierarchy and control over their lives. ‘This is England,’ a
friend, Razia, tells Nazneen. ‘You can do whatever you like.’ Ten years earlier, in The
Black Album, Hanif Kureishi had warned us of what lay ahead if the fundamentalists
were ignored. In The Satanic Verses, Rushdie had presciently called that ghetto ‘the city
visible but unseen’.No one was questioning a reader’s right to feel offended. The issue was what the
offended person would do in response. You don’t kill a chef who produces a bad meal.
You don’t tear up the movie screen when a film disappoints you. You don’t demand your
money back if a novel you buy turns out to be not to your liking. You switch the channel
you don’t like, you turn off the radio, or you close the book. You don’t go to that
restaurant again. You move on.And yet, such reasonable responses are not considered enough by the fundamentalists,
and their liberal supporters felt it was wrong even to imagine an alternate universe. And
why? Because doing so would offend some people, and they might act irrationally.
If I were a Muslim, I’d find that offensive: that’s so hugely patronising about millions of
Muslims whose main concerns in life are completely different from what self-nominated
leaders of their faith claim to be.The very idea of curbing one’s freedom over perceived offence was preposterous; it runs
counter to the very notion of dialogue, argument, and debate, on which liberal,
democratic, civilised societies were built. And yet, when the crunch came, a few Labour
Party MPs like Vaz marched in solidarity with some Muslims protesting Rushdie. Worse,
Iqbal Sacranie, who later headed the Muslim Council of Britain, was to say: ‘Death,
perhaps, is a bit too easy for him… his mind must be tormented for the rest of his life
unless he asks for forgiveness to Almighty Allah.’ To its shame, the Labour Government
knighted Sacranie before knighting Rushdie, indicating a peculiar sense of priorities.
The fatwa has made the taking of offence the norm. The beheading of a statue in
London, the attack on a theatre in Birmingham, the killing of a film-maker in Amsterdam,
the assassination of a translator in Tokyo, the ransacking of a research institute in India
– have occurred with relative impunity, because such attacks don’t appear surprising
anymore. Taking offence is becoming the norm. We have come to expect that if
someone writes, or paints, or imagines something that others find offensive, the
offended party will take the law in its hands and impose silence.This should outrage us. Instead, some of us have been telling the writers to think more
pleasant thoughts, the artists to curb their imagination, the playwrights to tackle safer
topics, and not provoke the beast within all communities and religions. The next step will
be to tell the student not to walk to the Chinese tank commander, ask the
Burmese monks to accept their fate and not confront the authorities.When prison guards refused to give him a pencil or a notebook, Alexander Solzhenitsyn
began memorising the novel he wanted to write, while in the Soviet gulag. On the island
of Buru, Pramoedya Ananta Toer did the same, and when he was finally released, the
world was richer, with his Buru Quartet. They lived in extreme, closed societies, where
words were precious, where words had to be smuggled in – and out. (I took several
copies of Pramoedya’s books to Indonesia during many visits there during the Suharto
era, for friends in Jakarta who could not buy the banned books). In Ray Bradbury’s
Fahrenheit 451, after books are obliterated people walk around an island, reciting great
works of literature – when words are suppressed in one form, they emerge in another
form – to keep books alive.In Haroun and the Sea of Stories, the Prince of Silence and the Foe of Speech is called
Khattam-Shud, ruling a land called Chup (silence), which has a cult that promotes
muteness. It is a land at peace, in harmony. But that outward stability conceals inner
fragility. Such societies force people to live a lie: that their contrived cheer and forced
harmony are superior. Open societies appear brittle and frail because they are
cacophonous, where everyone can contradict everyone else, and where nothing is
sacred. But, Rushdie wrote: ‘All those arguments and debates, all that openness, had
created powerful bonds of fellowship between them… The Chupwalas (those from the
silent land) turned out to be a disunited rabble, suspicious and distrustful of one another.
The land of Gup (talk) is bathed in endless sunshine, while over in Chup, it is always the
middle of the night.’It is time to move firmly on the side of noise and light, if we are not to continue to
circumscribe our thoughts, watch our words, and swallow our meanings. The alternative
is the middle of that dark night. And the bright light visible in the sky may not be a
shining star, but an exploding plane.Everyone has the right to speak; the right not to listen; and the right to be a schmuck
(like David Irving, who deserves his freedom as much as does Orhan Pamuk). Maybe
those Danish cartoonists are schmucks, and the European editors are only trying to
provoke. We should still support those rights. Otherwise, we have to swallow our words
and thoughts. And if we do that, we shall have little to talk about and less to debate. And
our conversation with those whom we must not provoke will only be about agreeable
topics, like the weather – whose unpredictable performance has brought us here today. -
At long last, have you no…
I want to say a few brisk words about a new piece by Mooney and Kirshenbaum in Newsweek. First a few extracts.
As soon as Francis Collins, an evangelical Christian geneticist who headed up the pioneering Human Genome Project during the 1990s, was floated as the possible new director of the National Institutes of Health-he was officially named to the post on Wednesday-the criticisms began flying. Evolutionary biologist Jerry Coyne of the University of Chicago, for one, said Collins is too public with his faith…The poster boy for the so-called New Atheist movement today is biologist Richard Dawkins…The New Atheist science blogger PZ Myers, for instance, has publicly desecrated a consecrated communion wafer, presumably taken from a Catholic mass, and put a picture of it, pierced by a rusty nail and thrown in the trash, on the Internet.
I’ve had it with these two. I’ve had it with their passive-aggressive whiny tattling nonsense, their mindless bulldog persistence, their refusal to pay attention to the abundant highly reasonable and cogent criticisms they’ve received, and above all with their petulant name-calling finger-pointing hatred of an invented group called “New Atheists” and real people such as Dawkins and Coyne and Myers. They’re not as clever or as learned or as interesting or as funny or as good at writing or even as polite or decent or civil as Dawkins and Coyne and Myers. They’re a nasty pair, bent on attacking their betters in hopes of flogging a wretchedly bad book. The hell with them.
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Mooney and Kirshenbaum Jump the Shark
They write an article for Newsweek all about what meanies Jerry Coyne and PZ Myers are. No, really.
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Jerry Coyne Reviews Unscientific America
For a book advocating science literacy, it offers surprisingly little evidence to support its claims.
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Ben Goldacre and Evidence-based Revenge
Taking revenge ends up making people feel worse, not better.
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Saudi Arabia Still Treats Women Like Children
‘It needs to stop requiring adult women to seek permission from men, not just pretend to stop it.’
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Yasmin Alibhai-Brown on Wearing the Burqa
‘Neo-conservative Islamic codes spread like swine flu, an infection few seem able to resist.’
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Libel Laws Threaten to Stifle Scientific Debate
BMJ: ‘Weak science sheltered from criticism by officious laws means bad medicine.’
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Knowledge of the Bible in Decline in UK
That’s too bad, people are missing some good poetry and stories and rants.
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Cats Manipulate Humans by Purring
Cats use a special ‘soliciting purr’ to annoy their humans into granting their every wish.
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Sudan: Women Whipped for Wearing Trousers
Several Sudanese women have been flogged for dressing “indecently”, says a local journalist among them.
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Karen Armstrong Explains What Religion Is
‘Religious doctrines make no sense unless accompanied by such spiritual exercises as yoga and a consistently compassionate lifestyle.’
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Questions still outstanding
I’ve made a list of questions for Chris Mooney (largely for him, since he’s done nearly all the posting on the subject and the questions arise from his posts as well as his book with Sheril Kirshenbaum). He’s ignored or evaded many questions over the last few weeks, and I thought it would be useful to have a list of the most pressing ones. Feel free to suggest additions.
1) What do you want? What do you mean? You say religion is private so we have no business prying into what people believe, but Kenneth Miller and Karl Giberson wrote books, Francis Collins wrote a book and has a website. The National Center for Science Education has a website. Are you saying we can’t dispute claims made in books and on websites? If yes, you’re making a grotesque demand. If no – what are you saying?
2) How do you know overt atheism causes people to be hostile to science? How does that work? What is your evidence?
3) How do you know it doesn’t work the other way? Instead or in addition? How do you know the increased availability of atheism doesn’t make some, perhaps many, people feel more at liberty to explore science, follow the evidence wherever it goes, and the like?
4) How do you explain the fact that theism has had pervasive automatic respect and deference for many decades yet the public-science gap has not narrowed?
5) Do you have any evidence that the putative ‘new’ atheism caused a spike in public hostility to science? Can you point to even a correlation?
6) Do you have any concern that your advice is in sharp conflict with the whole idea of free inquiry, free thought, freedom of debate, discussion, argument? Do you have any sense at all that it is, in general, a bad idea to impose prior restraints and inhibitions on what it is okay (acceptable, advisable) to discuss? Do you worry at all about the general effects of this timid, placating, cautious, apologetic imposition of taboos and ‘ssssh’ and ‘don’t mention that’ on public debate? Do you really think your reasons are good enough to trump those possible concerns? Do they, for instance, rise to the level of the reasons it’s best to avoid racial or sexual or ethnic or national epithets in public discussion? And are their attendant risks as small? Do we lose as little of substance by not saying there is no good reason to believe God exists as we do by not calling women ‘bitches’?
7) Do you take enough care to present your critics’ views accurately? You admitted on Daily Kos that you got Dawkins wrong in your book. Are you thoroughly confident that you haven’t made other such mistakes, in the book and on your blog? I know I’ve seen other inaccuracies of that kind, and pointed some of them out to you. (Just one example: you said “The New Atheist critics don’t like [what Eugenie Scott says], it seems, because they want to force people to be “rational” and completely justify their views to a very high standard, or else reject them.” Can you see what is wrong with that? I pointed it out at the time. Do you see the problem? Do you worry that it is pervasive?) Have you noticed that this has happened many times? Does it prompt you to worry more about a tendency to strawman anyone you disagree with?
8) Do you understand the need to be clear about terminology and to avoid ambiguity and equivocation? In particular, do you now see that there is a difference – an important difference, one that’s central to this disagreement – between saying that people can combine science and religion ‘in their lives,’ that ‘you really can have both in your life’, and saying that science and religion are epistemically compatible?
9) Do you understand the implications of the Pew study, which spells out the fact that a large percentage of people simply ignore the findings of science whenever they contradict their religious beliefs? Do you understand that that is not epistemic compatibility but its opposite? Do you have any qualms at all about telling scientists and atheists to just acquiesce in that?
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Big stupid honking mistake!
Cristina Odone occupies the first three paragraphs of her review of Does God Hate Women? pointing out a factual mistake – the name of one Afghan woman murdered for acting like a human being with a mind exchanged for the name of a different Afghan woman murdered for acting like a human being with a mind.
It’s a fair cop. The mistake is real. It’s mine. I have no idea how I managed it, but I did.
I didn’t realize I’d done it until the literary editor of The Observer asked our publisher (who asked us) about it, and I looked it up. That was Thursday I think. Jeremy and I had a set-to this morning about whether or not I would say it was mine. He told me not to the minute we both read the review. I said of course I’m going to! He said please don’t – and I wavered. But I also pointed out how damn near impossible that would be – and he admitted as much – and then I had him.
Of course I have to! I’d have bugs crawling under my skin for the rest of my life if I didn’t. His objections are as nothing in comparison. He wouldn’t let me fry, so I’m not about to let him fry. That’s it.
He did however insist that I should say that he is adamant that the responsibility is joint. Like so:
It is entirely fair that we should cop to it together. Look, if it had turned out that people had loved the book because you wrote some particularly devastating critique of something then I would have benefitted. It just happens that you made a tiny slip, and we`re going to get a little flak because of it. But structurally that`s no different. Given that I would have benefitted in the first instance means it`s fair that I`m disbenefitted in the second. (And anyway, I don`t suppose it`ll be much more than this review, and maybe a bit of crowing from the usual suspects.)
Fair enough. As long as I don’t have to creep around like Raskolnikov with a Horrible Crime on my conscience, he can have his say.
Now – as for what Odone concludes from my stupid mistake –
In the rush to drive home their point about all religions’ oppression of women, Ophelia Benson and Jeremy Stangroom shoved one woman’s narrative under another woman’s name: their priority is to make their case, not mourn a martyr.
I don’t know what that means. I don’t think Odone knows what that means. Mine was certainly a dumb-ass stupid clumsy mistake – but it also certainly wasn’t because we think either woman is unimportant, or subordinate to our making a point in our book, or anything like that. If anything it’s because we think both (and all) are important. As I said, I don’t know how I made the mistake, but the only explanation I can come up with is that both names were in my head and I somehow switched them while writing. That would be because both women matter to me, not because neither does or because one matters more than the other. In other words…the basic story is that there is a lot of material here, about horrible things done to women simply because they are women, and that I scrambled two bits of information about two such women. That stands for…having such women on my mind, not whatever other cynical thing Odone is gesturing at.
Still – to do her justice – Odone is critical of the book, but not to the point of being untruthful. She doesn’t follow the lead of Madeleine Bunting or Sholto Byrnes. She doesn’t just scream and throw things, or say we do nothing but rant from page 1 to page 178. That makes a nice change.
But there is some apologetic nonsense, all the same (and not surprisingly, since Odone is a vocal – or should I say New, or Militant? – Catholic.)
For millennia, women have found in God their greatest ally and muse – witness the writings of mystics such as Julian of Norwich and the charitable work of peasant Muslim women. For centuries, the most powerful and liberated women were the abbesses, nuns and consecrated virgins who devoted themselves to God. Women such as Maryam, Jesus’s mother, and Khadija, Muhammad’s first wife (and boss), play crucial roles in the Qur’an.
Well what choice did they have? No doubt they did, but then God was a given, wasn’t it, so it was either find in God an ally and muse, or do without. You might as well say the restaurant lobsters make a cozy home in that little tank where they wait their turn to be boiled.
Does God Hate Women? takes us on a terrible journey, where innocent women struggle – often in vain – against an oppressive culture. We should never forget these martyrs, and with their graphic descriptions of female circumcision and multiple rape, Benson and Stangroom ensure we won’t. But in explaining how God is dragged into this systemic abuse, the authors are guilty of the flawed logic they abhor in macho regimes. An attractive woman in a miniskirt who walks down the street is not responsible for the men who, distorting her attitude, read it as an invitation to rape; so God, in his many guises, cannot be held responsible for the men who distort his message into an invitation to abuse others.
Well – props for giving us that much credit, I must say. That’s a pretty generous reading, from a believer. But the last bit doesn’t really make sense, and in any case it’s beside the point. It’s not really God we’re holding responsible, since we don’t think there is any God; it is indeed the men who distort or adapt or use or anything you like the putative message. It’s religion’s power to sanctify and protect injustices that we are holding responsible.
And it’s my stupidity I’m holding responsible for the name-switch mistake. Don’t let nobody tell you different.
