Author: Ophelia Benson

  • At least notice where you are

    Howard Jacobson is a bit harsh but he’s right.

    [I]t is irresponsible, so many years after Don Quixote messed up everything he touched, and when there is no shortage of international report, to be quite so determinedly unaware of where you are and what you’re doing and what the consequences might be. And that irresponsibility is compounded when you come home having narrowly escaped a lashing or worse, tell everyone what a great time you had and how lovely the people are, and express the hope that what happened to you won’t put anybody else off going.

    I had the same thought, and I don’t suppose I’m the only one. No, thanks, I don’t think I will rush off for an adventure holiday in Sudan just now.

    As for her refusal to be judgemental about it: at best it is a worthless show of magnanimity if she hasn’t a clue what the furore was about or how it relates to the treatment of other women or dissenters in that country, at worst it smacks of Stockholm Syndrome – that masochistic compulsion (especially incident to lovers of the simplicities of the Third World) to fall in love with your captors and torturers. It behoves you if you insist on travelling – against my advice that you stay resolutely at home – at least to notice where you are. And to bring back a better report from what…must be an ideological hell to live in, than how nice everybody was to you…With her release it’s business as before: half the world can go on thinking it has a right to imprison and execute whenever it considers its feelings hurt. So tell me what, now the dust has settled, is cultural “understanding”. Accepting the inhumanity of whatever society one finds oneself in? Acknowledging the primacy of local sensibilities, however closed-minded, however uneducated and raw, however severe the penalties for outraging them?…No Danish cartoon affair, this. Even the most vehemently touchy parties could agree it was an innocent mistake. No harm done because no hurt intended. But where does that leave us if we believe we should be able to give a teddy bear any name we like?

    Just so; hence the interest of the fact that Bunglawala was obliging enough to say explicitly that if it is intentional then…he has no sympathy for the criminal. That’s where that leaves us.

  • Stephen Law Discusses With Ibrahim Lawson

    Religious education, critical thinking for children, the nuclear option in argument.

  • What is ‘Cultural Understanding’?

    Half the world can go on thinking it has a right to imprison and execute whenever it considers its feelings hurt.

  • California Diocese Leaves Episcopal Church

    Diocese of San Joaquin the first to break from US church over its relatively liberal views on homosexuality.

  • Muslim ‘Apostates’ Threatened

    Religious persecution of the kind Sofia suffers is increasingly common in Britain today.

  • Debate on Apostasy in Islam

    ‘Sir, if you become an apostate, your punishment is death.’

  • Children Accused as Witches in Nigeria

    Tortured, driven out, killed, while Evangelical preachers drive around in Mercedes.

  • Galloway Goes Creationist

    His baby doesn’t look like an accident of evolutionary chance to him. Ah – persuasive.

  • Barbara Forrest on Chris Comer’s Forced Resignation

    One wonders why TEA would even want to remain ‘neutral’ concerning the ID movement’s goal.

  • Austin Statesman on Texas Education Agency

    ‘An employee shouldn’t look like they are siding with one camp over another,’ Agency spokeswoman said.

  • Why Are Islam’s Moderates so Quiet?

    Ayaan Hirsi Ali ponders the silence about ‘the Qatif girl,’ Taslima Nasreen, Gillian Gibbons.

  • Profundity in Texas

    Mitt Romney – not surprisingly – says lots and lots of irritating things in that collection of platitudes and errors he offered up in Texas yesterday – at the George Bush I ‘library.’ It would be silly and otiose to analyze them in much detail – it’s not as if there’s any reason to expect the speech to be sensible or well-argued or grown-up or coherent. But there are some remarks that are so outrageous I just…

    When I place my hand on the Bible and take the oath of office, that oath becomes my highest promise to God.

    It would be nice if it became his highest promise to his fellow-citizens instead.

    I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and the Savior of mankind. My church’s beliefs about Christ may not all be the same as those of other faiths. Each religion has its own unique doctrines and history. These are not bases for criticism but rather a test of our tolerance. Religious tolerance would be a shallow principle indeed if it were reserved only for faiths with which we agree.

    ‘Tolerance’ of course is only relevant when we’re talking about opinion. It’s silly to talk about tolerance when you actually want to get at the truth of something – tolerance comes in handy when the subject is a human invented story that people want to believe is literally true but realize they can’t actually demonstrate is literally true. It becomes a matter of ‘I’ll tolerate your myth if you’ll tolerate my myth and that way neither of us will have to confront the likelihood that both myths are just myths and not literally true.’ The last sentence is a terrific summing-up of that – religious tolerance is deep because it will tolerate anything – which doesn’t mean actually believing the anything is true. Except of course one’s own anything. Which is true. But the others aren’t. But it doesn’t do to say so when running for President. Twirl, repeat, twirl.

    Americans acknowledge that liberty is a gift of God, not an indulgence of government…[W]e can be deeply thankful that we live in a land where reason and religion are friends and allies in the cause of liberty…Any believer in religious freedom, any person who has knelt in prayer to the Almighty, has a friend and ally in me. And so it is for hundreds of millions of our countrymen: we do not insist on a single strain of religion – rather, we welcome our nation’s symphony of faith.

    Well here’s one American who doesn’t ‘acknowledge’ that liberty is a gift of God, and I’m reliably informed that there are others. And as for reason and religion being friends and allies – well the whole speech demonstrates why they’re not: it’s nonsense throughout, and blithely ignores (when it should ‘acknowledge’) its own nonsenicality.

  • NCSE Latest on the Comer Controversy

    ‘We were actually told in a meeting that if creationism is the party line, we have to abide by it.’

  • NPR’s Science Friday Talks to Christine Comer

    Way too brief and superficial, but interesting.

  • Text of Romney’s Paean to ‘Faith in America’

    ‘We do not insist on a single strain of religion – rather, we welcome our nation’s symphony of faith.’

  • Romney Tries to Square the Circle

    Will ‘separate the affairs of government from any religion’ but ‘will not separate us from the God who gave us liberty.’

  • Hitchens on Hanukkah

    An explicit celebration of the original victory of bloody-minded faith over enlightenment and reason.

  • Creationist Biologist Sues Over Dismissal

    Suit raises the question: Can people work in a scientific field if they don’t believe in its basic tenets?

  • Hitchens on Romney’s Nonsense

    Would he expect a Scientologist to be able to avoid questions about L. Ron Hubbard?

  • Cleric Issues Orders to Taslima Nasreen

    ‘The apology must bear her assurance that she will desist from repeating such venomous writing that may have any inkling of blasphemy.’