Author: Ophelia Benson

  • Meet ‘Focus on the Family’

    Bishop recalls youth: when ‘we see guys that don’t stand strong on principle, we call them “faggots”.’

  • David Luban on Bush’s New Torture Bill

    The real tragedy of the so-called compromise is what it does to the legacy of Nuremberg.

  • Senate Passes Bush’s Detainee Bill

    Bill strips detainees of a habeas corpus right to challenge their detentions in court.

  • Scott McLemee on Michael Bérubé

    The author assumes on the part of the reader both skepticism and an open mind.

  • Efraim Karsh on Karen Armstrong

    Her book is a thinly veiled hagiography, depicting the prophet as a quintessential man of peace.

  • Robert Birnbaum Interviews Sean Wilentz

    Combining the history of great men and the history of social forces.

  • Roger Scruton on Noam Chomsky

    The constructive criticism the US so much needs is sacrificed to self-righteous rage.

  • Here’s three on’s are sophisticated

    There is sophistication and then there is sophistication.

    In this age of terror fueled by the ideology of Islamic extremism, some old insights of the liberal historiography of the roots and nature of Nazism remain relevant. In works published in the 1960s and 1970s, two of Nazism’s preeminent historians…made a similar point about the political significance of ideological fanaticism…This underestimation, the refusal or inability to understand that Hitler meant what he said was thought to be a mark of political sophistication in the 1930s…The great classic of the postwar years which did take Nazi ideology seriously, Hannah Arendt’s The Origins of Totalitarianism, took specific issue with this liberal and left-wing reductionism. Arendt…redefined the meaning of political sophistication so that it came to mean a willingness to pay very close attention to the ravings and rantings of political fanatics. In so doing, she implicitly reversed the meaning of sophistication and naïveté.

    I’ve been there. No doubt most of us have. It’s the old ‘behind the mask’ thing, the old appearance and reality thing. Ideas are just the frosting, just the superstructure, just the defense mechanism, just the wishful thinking, just the presentation of self; the reality, underneath, is money or sex or power or status. Sometimes that’s true, of course; there are oceans of pious platitudes offered up to veil the greed or self-aggrandizement or strategy that is really at work. But that doesn’t mean it’s always true, nor that the safest bet is to assume that it’s always true. Some ideas are a lot more dangerous than mere self-interest or lust.

    It remains difficult for political and intellectual elites in liberal democracies to give fanaticism the causal impact it deserves…The traditions of liberal historiography of the Nazi era have powerfully addressed the problem of underestimation. Frank and frequent talk about what the radical Islamists are saying should not be primarily the preoccupation of right of center politicians and journalists…[I]n order that the history of radical Islam not again be the history of its underestimation, liberals should foster a kind of political sophistication that rests on the lessons of this most famous previous case of underestimation of political fanaticism.

    It’s not all that sophisticated to fall asleep at the switch.

  • Samira Mohyeddin on Hossein Derakhshan

    Slap in the face to all Iranians who have given their lives for freedom both in and outside of Iran.

  • Deutsche Oper Drops ‘Idomeneo’ over Jesus and Mo

    Director’s staging has a scene with severed heads of Poseidon, Muhammad, Jesus and Buddha.

  • Critics Condemn Opera Cancellation

    German politicians cautioned against taking self-censorship too far.

  • Germany Holds its First ‘Conference on Islam’

    The 30 participants are to address issues of coexistence of Muslims and non-Muslims in Germany.

  • Andre Glucksmann on Fanatic Warriors

    The end of the blocs liberated not only the democracies, but also homicidal and genocidal impulses.

  • Underestimating Fanaticism

    Refusal to understand Hitler meant what he said was thought to be a mark of political sophistication.

  • Why Self-censorship is Dangerous and Misguided

    It represents a huge victory for anyone who thinks terror is a legitimate means of political response.

  • Danny Postel and Samira Mohyeddin on Hossein Derakhshan

    Did you read this? I put it in News a few days ago. It’s Danny Postel’s openDemocracy comment on Hossein Derakhshan’s article, also in openDemocracy, about Ramin Jahanbegloo’s release from prison. It’s interesting. I thought Derakhshan’s article was quite worrying and depressing and discouraging, and Postel says that and a good deal more.

    Derakhshan asserts that Jahanbegloo’s “confession” was authentic – Indeed even “the possibility of it being imposed on him by his interrogators” is, according to his logic, “rule[d] out”. The most obvious and immediate question involved is: how in the world could Derakhshan lay claim to such knowledge, let alone rule out the very possibility that Jahanbegloo’s “confession” was coerced or imposed?

    Well, yes. One does wonder.

    Essential to Derakhshan’s assertion is his view that Jahanbegloo is in fact guilty. Of what? Of “indirectly helping the Bush administration in its plans for regime change in Iran through fomenting internal unrest and instability.” And how, precisely, did Jahanbegloo do that? By conducting “comparative analysis of socio-political change in contemporary east-central Europe and the Islamic Republic of Iran” with “financial support” from American think-tanks.

    That was the really depressing and discouraging bit. I have some reformist contacts inside Iran as well as outside, and I started to fret that perhaps I ought not to have such contacts, lest I contaminate them or implicate them or generally mix up their work with Bush’s plans. That’s a horrible thought: it would mean no one could try to reform or improve anything for fear of helping the colonialists. So I’m glad to see people rejecting Derakhshan’s argument with energy. Samira Mohyeddin for instance in an article at Iranian.com.

    First, let me begin by saying that I will not comment on Ramin Jahanbegloo because as far as I am concerned Jahanbegloo’s comments or retractions upon being released from prison are of no consequence and should be taken with a grain of salt, particularly while the government holds the deed to both his house and his mothers. It is unbelievably naive and audacious of Derakhshan to say that Jahanbegloo saw the error of his ways thanks to his interrogators. “Thanks to the work of the reformists who governed the country until 2005, Iran has passed the stage of state terror.” – Derakhshan…[T]his is an apalling statement at best, and a slap in the face to all those Iranians who have given their lives for the cause of freedom both in and outside of Iran…Would Hossein dare make such a statement to the son of Zahra Kazemi, who was indiscriminately raped, tortured, and murdered while in Evin prison? Would he have the audacity to make such statements to the family of Akbar Mohammadi who died in Evin just last month? Or to the family of 16 year old Atefeh Rajabi who was hung in the Iranian town of Neka for “engaging in acts incompatible with chastity”? Or to the family members of the thousands of prisoners of conscience who have perished in the jails of the Iran of the Islamic Republic over the past twenty-seven years?

    La lutte continue.

  • Taliban Commander says Amajan was ‘Executed’

    Most marriages in Afghanistan are forced; most forced marriages are of girls under 16.

  • Women’s Rights not a Priority in Afghanistan

    Sam Zarifi of Human Rights Watch: ‘A lot of small rights which women gained are now being wiped out.’

  • Hundreds of Women Gathered to Mourn Amajan

    ‘There is no security for anyone now in Kandahar,’ one woman said, sobbing through her veil.