Christian philosophers distinguish between orientation and act, but this would not hold up in court.
Author: Ophelia Benson
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Archbishop Urges Catholics to Meddle in EU
‘A pluralist EU now more open to a structured dialogue with people of religious faith.’
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Bloody Sunday in Selma, Alabama
Sheyann Webb still has nightmares about the horsemen who thundered across the Edmund Pettus Bridge.
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Vatican: No Conflict Between Science and Religion
Plenty of room for ‘belief’ in evolution and ‘faith in God the creator.’ Just compartmentalize.
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The Plight of Migrant Workers in Saudi Arabia
More than 50% of Saudi Arabia’s workforce is made up of migrant workers (around 8 million of them) and the situation they find themselves in is often dire. Having none of the (limited) rights of Saudi nationals, these migrant workers find themselves as second class citizens at best and if ever there were a situation in which Apartheid analogies were appropriate, this is it.
Impoverished foreign workers are drawn to Saudi Arabia with the promise of a better life and the chance to send money back to their families. Workers come to Saudi Arabia using a sponsorship system, whereby their future employer agrees to certain conditions of employment and accommodation and on arrival takes possession of the worker’s passport, who then isn’t allowed to change jobs or leave the country without the sponsor’s permission. While the deals can sound appealing, they often don’t work out that way. For example, there is the case of Mohamed Sakoor, a Sri Lankan migrant:
The agent promised him a monthly salary of 800 Saudi riyals — about $213 — plus free food, housing, medical care and round-trip air fare.As soon as Sakoor arrived at the Riyadh airport, he began to think he had made a mistake. There was no one there to meet him as promised. He called the office of his Saudi sponsor and was rudely brushed off.
“If you have money, take a cab here,” he was told. “If you don’t have money, go back to Sri Lanka.”
Sakoor had no money and no prospects in Sri Lanka. So he spent the next two days at the airport, going hungry and sleeping on the terminal floor. He finally sold his watch to a taxi driver and got just enough cash to share the cab with four other new arrivals. They dropped him off at a restaurant owned by Sakoor’s sponsor.
Sakoor spent the next two nights at the restaurant before he finally started his job.
A typical day goes like this: to work at 7:30 a.m.; break from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m., when almost everything stops because of the heat; on the job again until at least 10:30 p.m.
Sakoor says it was three months before he got paid; now, his pay is routinely 20 days late. Despite what his contract says, he gets no overtime even if he works 14 or 15 hours a day, seven days a week, as he often does. But if he is five minutes late, he says, his sponsor will dock him half a day’s wages.
In two years, Sakoor has never missed work because of illness. If he did, he would lose more pay. The promise of medical care is a joke, he says — all anyone gets is a bottle of aspirin.
For migrant workers in Saudi Arabia, there is little chance to complain about such conditions. While trade unions were finally permitted in 2002, the Egyptian Organisation for Human Rights reports that ‘foreign workers are expressly excluded: only Saudi citizens can join labor unions (the condition is to be a Saudi of a minimum of 25 years old, and to have worked for not less than 2 years in a given company)’.
It will come as no surprise that female migrant workers fare particularly badly:
Female domestic workers have particular challenges and are vulnerable to exploitation. Some are forced to live in complete isolation and forbidden to leave the home in which they work. In addition to being overworked and underpaid, female migrant workers also face the risk of enduring physical and sexual abuse at the hands of their employers. Even when abuse is reported by foreign workers, it is extremely rare for Saudi employers to be prosecuted.
Tales of extreme working hours coupled with various forms of abuse, often sexual, are commonplace. Take this report from 2002, for example:
When 29-year-old Ramani Prianka accepted a job in Saudi Arabia, she thought it would be a pleasant way to earn more money than she could ever make in her native Sri Lanka.After all, she would be working indoors — as a housemaid — for a well-to-do, educated Saudi couple. He was the manager of a big hospital; she was the principal of a school.
How tough could it be? Very tough, Prianka quickly discovered. The house had 20 rooms and 13 bathrooms, and Prianka, the only maid, was expected to clean every one every day. There were nine children, and Prianka had to wash all their clothes and cook all their food. Seven days a week, she was up at 4:30 a.m. and never got to bed before midnight. All this for the equivalent of $26 a week.
After nine months, depressed and exhausted, Prianka had enough. As the family slept, she sneaked out of the villa, flagged down a taxi and told the driver to take her to the Embassy of the Republic of Sri Lanka.
Prianka was not the only Sri Lankan maid to seek refuge in the embassy’s safe house this hot June morning. There was Pushpa Chandra, 30, who was sick of fighting off sexual advances from her sponsor’s teenage son. And as tears slid down her smooth brown cheeks, a tiny 26-year-old woman whispered that she had been raped by her sponsor’s adult son.
Now, she sobbed, she thought she was pregnant.
Last year, at least 2,800 Sri Lankan housemaids ran away from their Saudi sponsors, claiming they had been overworked, sexually abused or physically mistreated by jealous wives. They are among the countless foreign “guest workers” in Saudi Arabia who live and work under conditions that are sometimes compared to modern-day slavery.
The situation remains much the same. In 2007 – the most recent year that Amnesty International has been able to visit Saudi Arabia – Amnesty reported that ‘[d]iscrimination fuelled violence against women, with foreign domestic workers particularly at risk of abuses such as beatings, rape and even murder, and non-payment of wages’.
That same year, Human Rights Watch expressed its concerns about the treatment of migrant workers in Saudi Arabia, stating that ‘[n]ot only do the authorities typically fail to investigate or prosecute abusive employers, the criminal justice system also obstructs abused workers from seeking redress’. Tenaganita reports:
According to HRW, approximately 2 million women from Indonesia, Sri Lanka, the Philippines, and other countries work as domestic helpers here. Many of them face a slew of problems, from late payment of salaries, extended working hours, beatings, and sexual assault, during the length of a typical two-year contract.
An indication of how bad things can get for domestic workers are the shelters for runaway maids run by both the Philippine and Indonesian diplomatic missions in Riyadh and Jeddah.
“There are around 300 maids now at our shelter in Riyadh, which is down from around 560 maids a few months ago, and there are around 45 maids at the shelter in Jeddah,” says Eddy Zulfuat, vice consul at the Indonesian Embassy in Riyadh.
HRW found that female migrant workers ‘are routinely underpaid, overworked, confined to the workplace, or subject to verbal, physical, and sexual abuse. Despite being victims of abuse themselves, many domestic workers are subject to counteraccusations, including theft, adultery or fornication (in cases of rape), or witchcraft’.
In 2000, Amnesty reported that:
Many migrant workers suffer at the hands of their employers, on whom they are completely dependent. Some are not paid. Some are beaten. Some are raped. If arrested, foreign nationals may be deceived or coerced into signing a confession in Arabic, a language they may not understand. They are frequently tortured and ill-treated. They are more likely than Saudi Arabians to be sentenced to death and the judicial punishments of flogging and amputation.
They are forced to suffer in silence and solitude. They are given no information about the system that will decide their fate and sometimes no clue as to the nature of that fate, even if it is the death penalty. They are usually denied prompt contact with their friends, family or consular officials, and are never allowed legal representation in court. Almost all of them lack the support, influence or money to seek pardon, commutation or reduction of their sentence.
By 2007 the only ‘improvement’ was that marginally more Saudi citizens were now being executed than foreign nationals. The situation remained appalling:
Human Rights Watch interviewed Sri Lankan domestic workers sentenced to prison and whipping in Saudi Arabia after their employers had raped and impregnated them. Three months ago, an Indonesian domestic worker in al-Qasim province was sentenced to 10 years in prison and 2,000 lashes for witchcraft, a reduction from an original sentence of death. The Indonesian embassy did not learn about the arrest, detention or trial of the worker until one month after the sentencing.
Whether as victims or defendants, foreigners confront several serious problems in getting a fair investigation or trial in Saudi Arabia’s criminal justice system. Many migrant workers do not have access to interpreters, legal aid or basic information about their cases. The Saudi government often takes months or years to inform foreign missions if their nationals have been arrested or hospitalized, preventing them from extending badly needed assistance.
Given this situation, where is the outcry? When it comes to the systematic discrimination and abuse meted out to over half of Saudi Arabia’s workforce, there is silence in the West. While Israel-bashing is fast becoming something of an international pastime, we hear next to nothing of this human rights nightmare in Saudi Arabia. Major solidarity campaigns? No. Academic boycotts? No. Protest rallies? No. Demonstrations outside Saudi embassies? No. Petitions to the government? No. Boycott Saudi oil? You must be joking!
Selective outrage? Yes, indeed.
This article also appeared at Harry’s Place.
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Lentils
It’s interesting to notice how hard it is to think without thinking morally. I suppose it can be done, but one would have to be ruthlessly, dedicatedly, vigilantly selfish and solipsistic. Psychopaths can do that, by definition, but it must be very difficult for everyone else. (Autistic people are another exception but autism is a disability, so that’s a separate issue.) We think with our emotions, as Antonio Damasio has helped to make even clearer than it was before; most of our emotions are related to attraction or aversion; once we become aware, at about age 4, that other people have minds just as we do, we understand that other people have likes and dislikes just as we do. This means that we start to learn very early in life that which we need to know in order to think morally. It is possible to avoid or delay or enfeeble this learning process – but it’s not easy. If our parents and siblings don’t teach us, then other people do, sooner or later. We have to be very dense not to understand that if we hurt people, they don’t like it, and we have to be very callous not to eventually get to the thought that we ought not to do things to people that they don’t like.
Of course, after that there is the challenging and stimulating process of rationalizing our desires to hurt or damage or hinder people. It’s hard to be entirely solipsistic, but it’s easy to come up with reasons to explain why certain people must be subordinated or exploited or enslaved or raped or tortured or killed or all those. One quick and easy method is just to invoke a deity – ‘God says so.’ Custom, tradition, our people, the tribe, the nation can serve the same purpose. Secular liberals who oppose subordination and slavery and torture don’t have it so easy – we have to come up with something better than a one or two word label for our moral reasons. This takes awhile, and a number of words; this fact often leads observers to think that secular liberals have a weaker case than theists and traditionalists do. That’s wrong. Theists and traditionalists are the ones who have the weaker case; ‘God says so’ and ‘we have always done it this way’ are worthless reasons for doing anything. But fortunately we are not cats or wolves; we can decide to eat lentils instead of animals and we can spend time and words explaining why cruelty is bad.
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12 Indian Women Burn to Death Every Hour
Equality of the sexes is guaranteed in the constitution but remains a distant dream.
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Women’s Rights in Afghanistan
Mariam was 11 when her parents sold her to a blind 41-year-old cleric. She is one of the lucky ones.
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Obama Will End ‘Conscience’ Rule
Medical workers will have to do their jobs.
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Cop Wants Gun Back Because He is a Christian
Never mind the anti-psychotic medications, this is a religious freedom case.
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Russell Blackford on Belief and Evidence
Some people are beyond arguments based on ordinary standards of evidence, and they cannot be reached.
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The Weight of a Mustard Seed
The human cogs of the torture machine seemed as unhappy as their victims. Which meant, I thought as I scribbled in a notebook, ‘There’s no rational explanation for the machine’s existence at all.’
Not least of the problems facing coalition authorities after the fall of Saddam Hussein was the question of ‘de-Ba’athification’. In a country where there was one agent of the state for every twenty civilians, where the five secret police forces were themselves monitored by additional secret police forces, where almost everyone from military generals to primary school teachers were forced into collusion with Ba’athist ideology… where did you draw the line? Where does the forced complicity of the Iraqi barber forced at gunpoint to inform on his or her clients become the conscious evil of the high-ranking believer?
For as the Ba’ath Party psychologist Dr Laith tells us, ‘It was as if I had two or more personalities. I would do my best as an officer with my duties and then I would come home and speak against the regime. All Iraqis have two or more characters.’ American journalist Wendell Steavenson wanted to do for Ba’athism what Hannah Arendt and Robert Lifton had done for Nazism: to understand the perpetrators as well as the victims.
She focuses on Kemal Sachet, a Ba’athist general and military hero who fell in and out of favour under Saddam’s system of capricious evil. Through the character of Sachet, she speaks to his family, his colleagues and his friends, drawing an expansive picture of a people staring at the blood on their trembling hands. We are constantly aware of the backdrop: a traumatised and disintegrating nation pummelled by coalition forces and psychotic terrorists. Steavenson: ‘I always wore a big black tent abaya as disguise in the back of the car, texted my whereabouts to a friend every hour, and took care never to walk down the street.’
Any attempt to understand a perpetrator of evil involves the risk of misunderstanding: to tease out the tiny flickers of humanity inside terrible men, the cheesy filial in-jokes, the annual donations to some orphanage or hospital, the mawkish horror of the SS guard who buys marzipan for his daughter on the way back from a shift at the ovens. Yet although Steavenson writes about Sachet’s personal life, she does not succumb to the slobbering awe that afflicts even radicals when they are faced with undeniable power. In the book she argues with and contradicts her subjects – there is a great passage where she debates Muslim grievances with a supporter of the ‘resistance’ – but her narrative seeks less to understand than to tell a story, never forgetting that context is all.
Yet Sachet seems to have been quite humane by the Ba’ath’s miserable standards, deploring the senseless loss of life caused by Saddam’s invasion of Kuwait, and once helping to clean out a storm drain in his general’s uniform. Indeed, Sachet’s later life appears marked by a series of urges towards good deeds, but Steavenson is sceptical as to whether these were attempts at genuine atonement or a last-minute scramble for a place in heaven. ‘He gave money to the needy,’ Steavenson writes, ‘He thought of Allah and his kingdom of heaven and compensated his guilt with humility. When he held the hand of a frail old man dying in a hospital bed he would say to himself, ‘Ten credits.’ Sachet fears Saddam during his lifetime, but as the grave looms before him he realises that the only dictator that counts is the one in the sky. The title of Steavenson’s book comes from a Koranic verse about the scales of justice on which every soul is weighed. One good or evil deed can cause a decisive swing, even ‘if there be (no more than) the weight of a mustard seed’.
Ultimately, Steavenson’s book is a study of what Kant called ‘moral luck’ and what Stephen King called ‘black serendipity’. Most people in democratic countries will never be in a position where they are complicit with killing and oppression – although haven’t we all met some pompous bully in a position of minor authority, and thought something like: ‘Stalin would have loved you’? But what if you are born under dictatorship? What if you are conscripted to a fascist army? What if the fascist army comes to your village and threaten to shoot your children unless you collaborate? Can you redeem yourself with little acts of kindness and subversion?
This is your descent into the moral swamp of what another Ba’athist doctor calls ‘Yes… But’; ‘What could I do?; ‘ But I helped many, many people!; ‘I suffered also, you know’; and the ultimate trumping, ‘You cannot understand what it is like to live under such a regime!’
A travelogue with the language and scope of a novel, Steavenson’s book will be essential reading for historians studying the political literature of Iraq: a nation that, like the souls of the dead, still hangs in the balance.
The Weight of a Mustard Seed, Wendell Steavenson, Atlantic 2009
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Ah but who decides what ‘murder’ is?
We’ve been visited lately by someone who has (by his own admission) only just realized that different cultures have different moralities, and who has drawn sweeping conclusions from that fact, which he offers to us as if we had never heard that different cultures have different moralities. This is unenlightening and uninteresting – but the larger subject is interesting.
An irony in this is that part of his claim (entangled though it is in overgeneralization, oversimplification, rhetoric, and confusion) is one that I’ve talked about here more than once. It is true that there is a popular claim that ‘we all agree’ or ‘we can all agree’ on certain basics about morality. I think that claim is dead wrong, and often dangerous (because it can lead to such total confusion about what is going on). It may be true that ‘we can all agree’ on certain forms of words – but that doesn’t mean we agree on the moral substance, because the words can always mean different things, and they often do. For example: it might well be possible to get everyone around an imagined global conference table to agree that murder is wrong, but that just moves the issue back (or forward) a step, because people can always define murder in such a way that it doesn’t include the particular killing they want to do. This move works on all sorts of things. Rape doesn’t include husbands forcing sex on their wives, or soldiers forcing sex on ‘rebels’ or ‘the enemy’ or ‘traitors’ or whatever word is needed to make the object deserving of the subject’s action. That is all it takes to make an otherwise prohibited action perfectly acceptable or indeed meritorious.
Irshad Manji talks about this* with respect to a much-cited Koranic verse that repudiates killing – with a much less-cited proviso ‘except as punishment for murder or other villainy in the land.’ ‘Other villainy’ covers a lot of territory; it covers pretty much anything an aspirant killer might want it to cover.
Another version we often see is the remarkably fatuous assumption that people who commit ‘honour’ murders of daughters or wives or sisters ‘loved’ them despite murdering them. This is just a way of redescribing reality so that it’s a little bit consoling. Yes, he strangled his own teenage daughter because she didn’t want to wear hijab, but he loved her all the same. No, because if he had loved her, her life would have been a great deal more important to him than whether or not she wore hijab. Beware of the consoling lie, because it trains us to accept horrors.
People disagree about morality, and pious platitudes about all agreeing on the basics are just wrong. But it doesn’t follow from that, and it isn’t true, that nothing is better or worse than anything else, or that there is no way to choose among competing moralities, or that there is nothing to say about morality, or that it is possible to stand outside morality. Morality is a forced choice for anyone who acts in the world, which means all of us who are not comatose. We have to act in order to live, and acting means making moral choices all the time. We have to make them whether we want to or not. That being the case, it is as well to think carefully about them.
*As I’ve mentioned before, more than once; excuse the repetition, but things keep coming up, you know.
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CIA Destroyed 92 Interrogation Tapes
As Congress and the courts were intensifying scrutiny of CIA’s detention and interrogation program.
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Forced Religion in the US Military
Federal lawsuit accuses military of ignoring laws and policies banning mandatory religious practices.
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Cherie Blair Says Christians Are Marginalized
Also notes that women are marginalized by Christianity. She seems a tad confused.
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Paween Mushtakhel in Hiding as Taleban Return
Her husband was murdered after defying months of phone warnings to stop his wife appearing on television.
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An Atheist Writes a Commentary on the Bible
Even if the principles of morality were in need of foundations, the Bible would be too nefarious for the purpose.
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Life in Kabul, again
Paween Mushtakhel loved acting, and was very successful at it; now she wishes she had never discovered the stage.
In December her husband was murdered by unknown gunmen outside their home after defying months of telephone warnings to stop his wife appearing on television. “I killed my husband with my acting,” [she] says…She has spent the past three months in hiding, fearful for her life and those of her two young children. Her only option, she says, is to flee the country. She is not alone. There is an unease bordering on dread among many working women as the restrictions of the Taleban era begin to encroach again on the relative liberalism of Afghanistan’s cities. “The atmosphere has changed,” she said. “Day by day women can work less and less.”
Well god hates women, after all, so what do you expect.
Mushtakhel reels off a list of high-risk professions for Afghan women: serving in parliament, working for foreign aid agencies, journalism, medicine, teaching, performing as an actress, singer or dancer. The Taleban justifies its attacks on such women by alleging that they are a cover for immoral acts and prostitution. Western employers and managers concur privately that women Afghan employees have begun to resign rather face the risks…The murder of Afghanistan’s most celebrated female police officer, Malalai Kakar, in September was a grim milestone. It was followed by a stream of killings of women journalists, teachers and workers, including four Western female aid workers in the past year.
All in the name of justice, compassion and mercy, no doubt.
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Once you eat the cake, it’s gone
Well which is it? Cherie Blair seems to want to have it both ways, or all ways. She says Christians are ‘marginalized in society.’
‘Everywhere you look today churches are being closed, Christians are often being marginalised and faith is something few people like to discuss openly.’…She added: ‘People used to suggest that Tony and George would actually pray together and that never happened of course.’
But why ‘of course’? If it’s worrying or upsetting or unfair that ‘Christians are often being marginalised’ then why is it ‘of course’ that Tony and George would not actually pray together?
The problem here is that there are very good reasons for citizens to be alarmed if their heads of state are praying together, because it would seem to imply that they are handing some of their duties and decisions over to a non-existent deity. But then that would be why ‘Christians are often being marginalised,’ too. If it’s true that Christians are being marginzalized, then that is at least partly because the rest of us think Christianity lacks rational foundations – but Cherie Blair seems to be at least partly aware of that when she says ‘of course’ Tony and George would never pray together. If Christianity were self-evidently reasonable, then why would it be a problem if Tony and George did pray together? She can’t have it both ways. She can’t pretend ‘faith’ is perfectly sensible and not worthy of being marginalized and at the same time treat as ludicrous the idea that Tony and George would pray together.
[Cherie] Blair said women were “virtually invisible” in the public face of Christianity and that its failure to recover from the social changes of the 1960s was one of its “fundamental weaknesses”. “Until the traditional churches fully resolve their relationship with the female half of the population, how can they expect Christianity to have a future in the modern world?” she asked.
Quite. So why does Cherie Blair expect the rest of us to refrain from ‘marginalizing’ (i.e. ignoring, dismissing, disagreeing with, mocking) Christianity? She doesn’t say, at least not in this piece. She doesn’t seem to be terribly reflective on the subject, frankly.
