Author: Ophelia Benson

  • Amnesty International Outraged at Execution

    Darabi was executed despite having been given a two-month stay of execution by the Head of the Judiciary on 19 April.

  • Iran Has Executed Delara Derabi

    Early Friday morning Darabi made a desperate phone call to her parents, saying she could see the hangman’s noose.

  • How Pleasant to Know Mr Ham

    When I saw Bill Maher’s highly entertaining and hard-hitting documentary on world religion, Religulous,
    I was interested that one of his interviewees was Ken Ham, the head of Answers In Genesis
    (AIG) (not to be confused with the now-infamous insurance company), which is responsible for the Creation Museum in northern Kentucky, USA.

    Ham was given only a brief slot in the film, but I was fortunate (if that’s the right word) to have a much longer encounter with him just over one year ago at Liverpool University. I went to see give a talk called “Origins and Culture”. At the time I posted a bile-laden write-up on Liverpool Humanist Group’s website. After seeing Maher’s film, I thought the time was right to update the piece.

    For those not quite up to speed, AIG is a multi-mullion dollar Christian corporation which peddles ignorance of the worst kind. Even so, these fundamentalists deserve some credit for at least staying true to their scriptures as they believe that integrity of the Bible is threatened if it is cherry-picked.

    Jesus Christ is reported to have said at John 3:12 that if he cannot be relied on to tell people about earthly things, how can he be trusted to tell them about heavenly things? If they won’t swallow that the World was created in six literal days by a Creator who then rested on the seventh, how are they supposed to accept that the torture and execution of someone in which they had no say, two thousand years ago, in a remote and barbaric part of the Middle East will save their miserable souls?

    One has to wonder what AIG make of the darkest recesses of the Pentateuch where slavery is mandated and insolent children are to be stoned to death, but perhaps we had best not ask those kinds of questions.

    AIG have also spent millions building a Creation Museum which features Disney World-style animatronic dinosaurs alongside Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, as well as a stegosaurus complete with saddle and harness!

    I attended Liverpool University Sherrington’s Lecture Theatre on 31 March 2008 where Ham gave a two-part lecture on what AIG were all about.

    It was an appalling experience for an atheist to sit through. My blood boiled, my teeth gnashed and my choice as a non-believer was very much confirmed. It wasn’t just the scientific ignorance that this man was peddling; he was also selling something far more sinister: right-wing religious bigotry of a distinctly Falwell variety.

    In a nutshell, Ham’s line is that the Bible is the unalterable, infallible, unquestionable, literal Word of God. Everything in the Bible happened exactly as it is described, ifs, not buts, no metaphors, no allegories. Seven days means seven days, not a Hebrew term for a long period of time. People must choose between the Bible and human reason. Clearly Ham is a devotee of Martin Luther, the founder of Protestantism, who recommended that tearing out your eyes of reason was a prerequisite to being a Christian.

    Where scientific evidence and the Bible conflict, the Bible is always to be preferred and evidence must be massaged in order to fit it. According to Ham, we all start with “presuppositions”. Atheist scientists such as Richard Dawkins and Eugenie Scott start on the presupposition that God does not exist and the Bible is wrong; creationist scientists such as Kurt Wise start with the presupposition that God does exist and the Bible is correct. The differing conclusions result purely from differing interpretations of the same evidence.

    This position was demonstrated with a highly amusing video clip showing two scientists unearthing a dinosaur fossil in the desert. “Bob says that this fossil was formed after the corpse was covered in sediment from a rising river hundreds of millions of years ago. I on the other hand say it was covered by Noah’s Flood approximately 4,300 years ago, like it says in the Bible. You see, we have different perspectives on exactly the same piece of evidence.”

    Well, I’m glad we cleared that one up. I just hope I don’t get a creationist doctor if I ever find a lump in an embarrassing place and his interpretation of my symptoms is that I am being punished for the sins of my bloodline and must pray for heavenly forgiveness.

    It soon became clear, however, that Ham is not simply preaching good ol’ fashioned back-to-basics holiness; he is also touting religious xenophobia and intolerance of the kind that should be handled with the aid of a peg over one’s nose and a very long pair of tongs.

    “There’s no such thing as neutrality. If you’re not pro-Jesus, you’re anti-Jesus” Ham told his flock. So the other four billion people who are not Christians presently residing on the plant are completely wrong, evil and must be opposed to the last? We have tribalism to add to the man’s list of faith-based misdemeanours?

    Gay marriage and abortion were repeatedly flagged up in Ham’s PowerPoint slides as personifying what’s wrong with our society. Ham is also out to control the minds of today’s youth. His tables and graphs of statistics showed that many young people abandon the faith in which they were raised by their parents because they are asking too many questions…

    That’s right; free thought and free enquiry is a very bad thing indeed. We obviously haven’t brainwashed the little tykes enough. They are getting ideas of their own and want to lead their own lives. This is clearly the fault of teachers and the education system and needs to be changed right now.

    Atheists generally were denounced as having no morals and there were also the predictable ad-hominem attacks against scientists such as Charles Darwin and Richard Dawkins. Ham grossly mis-portrayed Darwin’s Descent of Man as a racist manifesto that divides humans into different species according to their colour with Aborigines as the closest human descendants of apes. Ham was able to get away with this – as he himself practically admitted – since Descent is relatively unknown compared with The Origin of Species.

    The aim of this was portray evolution as leading to racism, which a bit like saying that Einsteinian physics is immoral and genocidal because it resulted in the atomic bomb. It also gives the laughable impression that racial discrimination was not an issue before Darwin published his theory when exactly the opposite is true, as Christians ought to know only too well.

    Just to set the record straight, Darwin was no more and probably a lot less racist than any of his contemporaries. Whilst he did consider blacks to be less intelligent than whites and called them “savages”, he was a passionate abolitionist of slavery and deplored eugenics, stating very clearly that such a programme of exterminating the weakest in society could only ever have a contingent benefit on the species.

    The truly sinister side to Ham’s theology is that he believes in the cruel Old Testament God (so brilliantly summarised by Richard Dawkins at the beginning of Chapter 2 of The God Delusion) which became apparent in his explanation as to why God allows so much pain and suffering. Forget theodicy, none of Richard Swinburne’s logical gymnastics for this guy, the reason why there is so much evil in the World is because God is angry with us all.

    No, God does not allow evil for its eventual good to the human race. No, we shouldn’t all have faith and hope for a better future. Instead, we are all paying for the original sin of Adam and Eve eating that damn apple. We all instinctively reject God and have been paying for it ever since. We are lucky even to be here in the first place since we are not worthy of our very existence. The only way of saving our miserable souls is to accept good old JC into our hearts. Cue slide of Hitler and Auschwitz victims: this was OUR fault!

    I remember wincing; visions of Jerry Falwell’s appearance on Pat Robertson’s The 700 Club on 13 September 2001 attributing the destruction of the World Trade Center two days earlier to God’s wrath at feminists and homosexuals abounded in my head. All the same though, I had to admire the guy for dispensing with the hollow consolations of theodicy and his sheer gall to blame the Holocaust on every member of the human race whether they were involved or not.

    The final nail in the evening’s coffin was that the audience were lapping it up like rabid dogs. They wanted it all to be true. I heard one audience member say to another before the talk started that they had come to “get educated”. Being the centre of a divine design, despite the designer treating them like his plaything and caking them in his own excrement, was better than being at the centre of nothing. The solipsism of the theistic mind knows no bounds; the desire to remain a slave burns ever brighter; we have to be responsible for it all somehow.

    But who in their right mind would want this to true? Christopher Hitchens has pointed out that Charles Darwin, author of The Origin of Species and Abraham Lincoln, former US president, victor in the American Civil War and freer of the slaves, were both born on the same day; 12 February 1809. Despite Lincoln’s monumental achievements in respect of freedom, equality and civil rights, Darwin was the greater emancipator of the two.

    Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection freed the human species of the shackles imposed by the pre-scientific ignorance of the Abrahamic religions. He showed that, disease and suffering had all been part of the natural order for millions of years before man came on the scene. There was no reason any longer to fear an invisible, unalterable celestial Big Brother in sky who had created us sick, ordered us to be sound and is now punishing us for our natural shortcomings.

    Ham argued that if evolution and the Big Bang are correct than this is in direct contradiction with Genesis 1 – 11 as there would have been millions of years of death without sin. Well… yeah. And life is all the better for knowing this.

    We ought to be ecstatic that the specious nonsense that fundamentalists like Ham are peddling is precisely that. We should hold our arms aloft that there is no evidence for the God of Abraham. We should sink to our knees and kiss the Earth that there is no good reason to believe that Noah’s Flood ever happened. We should feel eternal gratitude to scientists like Newton, Darwin and Einstein for providing us with an alternative to the metaphysical lies of monotheism.

    One of Ken Ham’s books is called Why Won’t They Listen? (I’m sorry Ken, but the temptation for sarcasm is too great to resist: it’s because you’re talking codswallop, that’s why!) That night he bemoaned the continual decline in church attendances in both the US and the UK. “We are both Christian countries, but somehow we are becoming less Christian”.

    “Hallelujah!” say I. Let’s hope it’s a lasting vogue.

  • Rosary-chanters Shut Down Euthanasia Debate

    Protesters shouted that euthanasia was state-sponsored murder; Gardai were called, did not intervene.

  • Irish Constitution Requires Offence of Blasphemy

    The blasphemy has to be intentional. So that’s all right then.

  • Melanie Phillips Says Judge Jones was Wrong

    The decision in Kitzmiller v Dover Area School District was wrong; ID ‘comes out of science.’

  • Working in a Sexist Environment

    Calling sexism a joke or ‘edgy’ or a way to stick it to the suits is not good enough.

  • Pitcairn Island’s History of Sex Abuse of Girls

    ‘It’s ingrained in the mentality of the men in Pitcairn that this is an OK thing to do.’

  • Edging slowly forward

    G did a comment on ‘The downside of torture’ that needs to be out here in the daylight, so here it is. OB.

    What is perhaps most appalling about this is that prosecuting torture has become nothing more than another tawdry political game. Barack Obama is, among other things, not just a Harvard Law graduate but an actual Constitutional scholar. He knows what an appalling clusterfuck the Bush Administration made of the Constitution with its denial of habeas corpus, secret prisons, torture, and all that. He knows what the morally and legally required path must be. But he is rather scrupulously avoiding that path.

    Worse, Obama’s administration has in almost all terrorism-related court cases pushed the absurdly counter-Constitutional secrecy policies and claims of authority to defy law at whim of the Bush administration. I am fairly certain that this is not, as some have claimed, out of the desire to preserve those claimed powers for his own use. Rather, I think it is fairly clear that his stated political position of “moving forward” and “not looking back” – i.e. avoiding politically troublesome legal prosecutions of Bush administration criminal acts – absolutely requires that he perpetuate the official legal cover-ups for those activities as long as possible. It is a delaying tactic.

    I think Obama has decided that it would be too politically costly to prosecute Bush Administration war crimes at this time. (Sadly, he may be right. Recent polls show that less than half of all Americans support legal investigations of torture and all that, and the ugly reality of such prosecutions would only make them less popular as they proceeded.) But I think Obama also realizes that investigations and prosecutions must happen eventually, both for the good of the nation and for the sake of U.S. standing in the community of nations. So he talks about moving forward and insists that he doesn’t want prosecutions, but he never quite entirely rules out future legal action: Instead, he has officially left that decision it in the hands of his Attorney General (where it belongs, incidentally) – but A.G. Eric Holder will of course not pursue anything until given the go ahead by President Obama.

    Meanwhile, the torture memos are released and an al Qaeda operative (Ali al-Marri) is successfully prosecuted in ordinary Federal court without any of the unnecessary and unconstitutional measures introduced by the Bush administration to hold “enemy combatants” indefinitely without trial. (Watch Rachel Maddow’s report on the al-Marri case here. Rachel’s money quote, commenting on the successful prosecution of al-Marri without the Bush system of eternal imprisonment without charges or trial, torture, and so on: “So we end up, at the end of this – after all these years and all of these Constitutional crises one after the other provoked by this system – ending up being able to charge people and bring evidence against them as if we are a normal country under the rule of law.”)

    The torture memos and the al-Marri prosecution (along with several other clues) give me the distinct impression that the Obama administration is playing a game of slowly exposing both the brutal reality and the complete ineffectiveness of the Bush administration’s illegal methods, and will keep doing so until the point where the public and the political landscape not only support, but demand investigations and prosecutions.

    I don’t know what bothers me more: the manipulative and corrosive character of this political game, or the fact that the American public and U.S. elected officials are so incredibly stupid and venal that such manipulative tactics are probably necessary – and hopefully effective.

  • The downside of torture

    Philippe Sands said on ‘Fresh Air’ that Judge Garzon attempted to prosecute a couple of people that the Bush administration had tortured and that the case collapsed because the evidence, being the product of torture, was not admissable in court. Sands said this is one reason Garzon has started a criminal investigation of some of Bush’s team: they (allegedly) not only violated international law, they also made it impossible for other courts to prosecute the objects of the torture.

    He also discussed the irony of the fact that Chuckie Taylor was convicted in a US court for crimes he committed in Liberia; that was possible because the crimes he committed were violations of international law. States that have signed such laws have an obligation – not permission, but an obligation – to act on such violations when they have the ability to do so. He also said he was shocked that Jay Bybee still insists that waterboarding was legal; he says Bybee is a federal judge, and US federal courts are highly respected even outside the US, and the honourable thing for Bybee to do would be to admit that in the frantic atmosphere of the time he made a mistake.

    In the frantic atmosphere of the time a lot of people neglected to ask necessary questions.

    In a series of high-level meetings in 2002, without a single dissent from cabinet members or lawmakers, the United States for the first time officially embraced the brutal methods of interrogation it had always condemned. This extraordinary consensus was possible, an examination by The New York Times shows, largely because no one involved – not the top two C.I.A. officials who were pushing the program, not the senior aides to President George W. Bush, not the leaders of the Senate and House Intelligence Committees – investigated the gruesome origins of the techniques they were approving with little debate.

    And the result is…they screwed up.

    The top officials [Tenet] briefed did not learn that waterboarding had been prosecuted by the United States in war-crimes trials after World War II and was a well-documented favorite of despotic governments since the Spanish Inquisition; one waterboard used under Pol Pot was even on display at the genocide museum in Cambodia.

    Well that’s a distinguished legacy to be part of.

  • Dear mummy Nature

    I saw a horrible thing on tv last night, in a PBS show about the Kalahari. There are flamingos that nest in in an area of the Kalahari which slowly dries out during the nesting season, with the result that the chicks have to walk a hundred miles through the desert to get to water. They have to walk. A hundred miles. Through a desert. It’s as ridiculous as it sounds. They’re small, they’re feeble, it’s burning hot. It takes weeks.

    250,000 leave; some years not one chick makes it.

    Good planning! Wouldn’t you think the adults would manage to think ‘gee, maybe we should find a better place to nest’? Or that, failing to think that, they would all quickly die off because they couldn’t keep the numbers up? But apparently that’s not happening. So instead you get this disgusting trek of misery. One revolting detail is that the chicks’ wing tips pick up mud as they trudge along, and the mud hardens and just hangs there, so they’re all staggering along with these heavy blobs dragging them down. It’s a truly sickening sight – one wants to arrest all the parents for abuse.

    Another tale for the Devil’s Chaplain.

  • Tough Enough?

    The claim of courage in the commission of deeply immoral acts is to be deplored and not admired.

  • Ben Goldacre on Swine Flu and Hype

    Media pundit-seekers wanted him to say it’s all hype. But it isn’t. But they wanted him to say it is.

  • No One Investigated the Origins of Waterboarding

    The consensus was possible because no one investigated the gruesome origins of the techniques.

  • Garzon Opens Guantanamo Investigation

    Judge Garzon cites universal justice: crimes committed in one country may be prosecuted in another.

  • Spanish Court To Investigate Bush’s ‘Torture Team’

    Chuckie Taylor was convicted in the US for crimes committed in Liberia.

  • HRW on Testing Justice

    The backlog of untested rape kits in Los Angeles County is larger than previously reported.

  • Kristof Asks: Is Rape Serious?

    The refusal to test rape kits seems a throwback to antediluvian skepticism about rape as a traumatic crime.

  • Where I left off

    Oh all right – I quit too soon. It’s too annoying to leave.

    [A]ttacking them in broad and often hilarious strokes…allows him to develop an extended interpretive summary of what he describes as mainstream Christian doctrine, a subject about which (as he repeatedly reminds us) the Ditchkins duo, along with the Western intellectual elite in general, knows almost nothing. Eagleton’s terminology is deliberately provocative, and some Christians won’t find his account of their beliefs, colored as it clearly is by the Catholic “liberation theology” of his youth, to be mainstream at all.

    Well exactly – a great many Christians won’t find his account of their beliefs to be mainstream at all. So in what sense is he justified in pitching a gigantic name-calling fit at the ‘new’ atheists for knowing nothing of his peculiar idiosyncratic personal version of what Christian belief is? His ‘terminology is deliberately provocative,’ which being interpreted, means he says his version of Christian belief is mainstream when it is no such thing and then screams bloody murder at people who don’t buy his version. ‘Provocative’ is a desperately polite way of describing such a way of proceeding.

    I did a post on the same bait-and-switch a couple of years ago, the one in which he said God was no more a person than his left foot was – whatever he said; but I can’t find the post and don’t have time to keep looking. But this is familiar stuff – which doesn’t make it any less irritating.

    Horrible man. Revisit this loathsome outburst on the occasion of Salman Rushdie’s K, if you want more evidence of that. He’s an intellectual thug.

  • One wit spots another

    Terry Eagleton has at least one fan anyway.

    Eagleton…is determined not to commit the same elementary errors he ascribes to such foes as biologist Richard Dawkins and political journalist Christopher Hitchens. (Those two, collectively dubbed “Ditchkins” by Eagleton, are the self-appointed leaders of public atheism and the authors of bestselling books on the subject, Dawkins’ “The God Delusion” and Hitchens’ “God Is Not Great.”)

    He gets it right by saying Eagleton ascribes these elementary errors, but then he promptly labels Dawkins and Hitchens ‘foes’ – why are they foes? Because Eagleton doesn’t like what they’ve written. That doesn’t really make them his foes, it just makes them people he is quarreling with. ‘Foes’ is more ascribing. And then, what is that ‘self-appointed leaders of public atheism’ doing there? They’re not self-appointed leaders of anything; they wrote books about something. Eagleton writes books about things; now he is busy ascribing things to ‘foes’; does that make him a self-appointed leader of public anti-Ditchkinsism? Not particularly. We’re all allowed to write books without being labeled self-appointed leaders of something or other. (And this ‘Ditchkins’ thing…that’s just childish.)

    [Eagleton] freely admits that what Christian doctrine teaches about the universe and the fate of man may not be true, or even plausible. But as he then puts it, “Critics of the most enduring form of popular culture in human history have a moral obligation to confront that case at its most persuasive, rather than grabbing themselves a victory on the cheap by savaging it as so much garbage and gobbledygook.”

    That’s just populist bullying. Why do they? Why can’t critics of any form of popular culture – no matter how enduring, how popular, how ‘authentic,’ how anything you like – just criticize whatever they think is bad about it? In argument it’s better to argue with the strongest case, but in criticism, you can go after the worst stuff, because that’s your point. There’s no ‘moral obligation’ to be deferential to the most enduring form of popular culture in human history; how pompous to say there is.

    Still, attacking them in broad and often hilarious strokes – he depicts Dawkins as a tweedy, cloistered Oxford don sneering at the credulous nature of the common people, and Hitchens as a bootlicking neocon propagandist and secular jihadist – lends his book considerable entertainment value.

    Hilarious? That’s hilarious? Oookay, if that’s the taste level, I won’t bother reading any more.