All entries by this author

Libby Anne on masters and slaves, men and women *

Sep 4th, 2011 | Filed by

Debi Pearl reveals that all the talk about men’s and women’s roles being different but equal is
nothing but rhetorical flourish.… Read the rest



Spiegel on Wikileaks: a disaster in six acts *

Sep 4th, 2011 | Filed by

A chain of careless mistakes, coincidences, indiscretions and confusion means that no potential whistleblower would feel comfortable turning to a leaking platform now.… Read the rest



Glenn Greenwald on Wikileaks *

Sep 4th, 2011 | Filed by

Many of those condemning WikiLeaks care nothing about harm to civilians as long as it’s done by the U.S. government and military.… Read the rest



The fawning glitterati

Sep 3rd, 2011 6:14 pm | By

Terry Glavin doesn’t think much of Julian Assange.

Julian Assange, the Wikileaks archgeek, radical-chic avatar, the Chinese
Communist Party’s nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize, Michael Moore’s
joint-venturer, absconding debtor, American celebrity pornographer Larry Flynt’s fair-haired boy, darling of Cindy Sheehan, Medea Benjamin, Bianca Jagger…

Lo, Assange hath now been found to have released more than 1,000 cables outing individual political activists – several thousand tagged as sources who could be placed in danger – and more than 150 cables outing whistleblowers, people persecuted by their governments, and victims of sex crimes.

Such is his courage in speaking truth to power that Assange had already prompted Zimbabwe’s chief executioner to set up a commission to pursue treason charges against

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(This is a syndicated post. Read the original at FreeThoughtBlogs.)



Read this article

Sep 3rd, 2011 4:59 pm | By

In case you’ve missed it – I posted an article at Other B&W by the author of the Love, Joy, Feminism blog. It’s a must-read. She tells us what it’s like to grow up in the Patriarchal/Quiverfull world, and what it’s all about, and what it took away from her.

A wife and mother was all I wanted to be, because any dream of anything else was nipped in the bud before it ever took root. I truly believed that this was what God wanted of me, and that serving my family and raising my siblings was serving God. And I gloried in it.

That’s one of those philosophy thought experiments it’s interesting to puzzle over – if you … Read the rest

(This is a syndicated post. Read the original at FreeThoughtBlogs.)



Terry Glavin on Julian Assange, narcissist of the decade *

Sep 3rd, 2011 | Filed by

He released more than 1,000 cables outing individual political activists and more than 150 cables outing whistleblowers and people persecuted by their governments.… Read the rest



My life as a daughter of Christian Patriarchy

Sep 3rd, 2011 | By Libby Anne

Deep within America, beyond your typical evangelicals and run of the mill fundamentalists, nurtured within the homeschool movement and growing by the day, are the Christian Patriarchy and Quiverfull movements. This is where I grew up.

I learned that women are to be homemakers while men are to be protectors and providers. I was taught that a woman should not have a career, but should rather keep the home and raise the children and submit to her husband, who was her god-given head and authority. I learned that homeschooling is the only godly way to raise children, because to send them to public school is to turn a child over to the government and the secular humanists. I was taught … Read the rest



Dahlia Lithwick on Cheney and why the law matters *

Sep 3rd, 2011 | Filed by

The reason Cheney keeps saying that torture is “legal” is because he has a clutch of worthless legal memoranda saying so.… Read the rest



Maryam Namazie battles media’s cone of silence on sharia *

Sep 3rd, 2011 | Filed by

“Human rights are not Western – they are universal. Can we please just have the same rights, thank you very much,” Ms Namazie said.… Read the rest



Maryam Namzie on sharia on ABC News *

Sep 3rd, 2011 | Filed by

“The more critical we are publicly, the easier it will be for others to step forward and do the same.”… Read the rest



A pox on compassion

Sep 3rd, 2011 11:43 am | By

Eric has a post on Christian interference and coercion with respect to assisted suicide. One aspect in particular hooked my attention.

Christians who are anti-choice-in-dying have been complaining for some time now that it’s not just about pain. In fact, they point out that of those in Oregon who choose assisted suicide very few are in intense pain. It is, they say, because of loss of independence, loss of dignity, loss of control that people choose to end their lives, not just because the pain is unrelenting and uncontrollable. And that is true. Choice in dying is not just about pain. It is about choice. It is to provide choice for people who do not want to go on living

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(This is a syndicated post. Read the original at FreeThoughtBlogs.)



Response of the Holy See to the Government of Ireland *

Sep 3rd, 2011 | Filed by

It wasn’t the Holy See’s fault. Ireland is far far far away from the Holy See, and the Holy See can’t help that. The Holy See is way sorry but shut up about it.… Read the rest



Vatican retorts to Irish government *

Sep 3rd, 2011 | Filed by

Cardinal Sean Brady says it’s wonderful; Archbishop Diarmuid Martin says it’s terrific; Fr Lombardi says how serene the Vatican is.… Read the rest



How to patronize the wimminz

Sep 2nd, 2011 5:16 pm | By

William Hamby has a rather annoying article on women in atheism. (The annoying quality is probably inevitable. We get tired of being written about. We get tired of men saying about women. That’s probably unfair; we’d probably get tired of men not saying, too; but all the same – it gets tiresome having men say about women.) He bases it, for some reason, on the elevator thing – and as G Felis points out, he does it rather snidely. He makes an arbitrary and unexplained distinction between “radical” and “mainstream” feminists that boils down to agree-with-Watson and disagree-with-Watson respectively, and I have to say that’s not consistent with usage over the past four decades or so. Agreeing with Watson … Read the rest

(This is a syndicated post. Read the original at FreeThoughtBlogs.)



Snipping around the edges

Sep 2nd, 2011 4:37 pm | By

Suzanne Moore is not persuaded by the new gang of anti-abortionists.

Now this new breed of anti-abortionists snip round the edges of the process with their strategies of delay … er, sorry, “independent counselling”. But beware their language of care. This is not about care but about control. This control absolutely depends on shame: sexual shame. This shame keeps us quiet. Shame keeps us locked into individual guilt. Shame even makes us stupidly grateful that we are allowed to have any choice at all.

This whole debate around counselling pivots on the idea of deep and private shame, positing the idea of counselling being used to sell an evil procedure. Women are always “vulnerable” dupes, never simply adults who

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(This is a syndicated post. Read the original at FreeThoughtBlogs.)



A thoroughly disreputable approach

Sep 2nd, 2011 3:45 pm | By

Oh honestly. Bad scientists, no cookie.

The editor of a science journal has resigned after admitting that a recent paper
casting doubt on man-made climate change should not have been published.

The paper was outside the journal’s field.

Publishing in “off-topic” journals is generally frowned on in scientific
circles, partly because editors may lack the specialist knowledge and contacts
needed to run a thorough peer review process.

“The problem is that comparable studies published by other authors have already been refuted…, a fact which was ignored by Spencer and Braswell in their paper and, unfortunately, not picked up by the reviewers.

“In other words, the problem I see with the paper… is not that it declared
a minority

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(This is a syndicated post. Read the original at FreeThoughtBlogs.)



Elsie Dinsmore

Sep 2nd, 2011 3:03 pm | By

Ever read any Elsie Dinsmore books? No, neither have I. I know the name, because it’s a byword for slushy pious Victorian dogoodery, though I don’t remember where – Little Women? Which is no slouch in the slushy pious Victorian dogoodery department itself, so maybe not. Mark Twain? Possibly.

They’re now big with the Incredibly Christian set. Rethinking Vision Forum is not impressed. But the part I really liked is from a comment there. The commenter read the first Elsie when she was a child and asked her mother what she thought of it.

“What a wet blanket.  That girl did nothing but cry all the time.  I think every page her eyes filled with tears and

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(This is a syndicated post. Read the original at FreeThoughtBlogs.)



He taught me critical thinking

Sep 2nd, 2011 11:24 am | By

Another escapee is Libby Anne. She gives a ten-part account of being a good child of Patriarchy and then of being turned around.

The childhood is by no means all horrible, even seen from the outside. Much of it is quite appealing.

I also enjoyed gardening. We always had large gardens, and we children did a great deal of the tending and weeding, sometimes waking at dawn in the summer months to weed before the summer heat. In addition to learning to garden, I found books at a homeschool convention about edible plants and medicinal herbs and set out to teach myself these important skills. I learned that dandelions could be eaten in salads, that plantain was good

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(This is a syndicated post. Read the original at FreeThoughtBlogs.)



Eric MacDonald on women’s rights all over again *

Sep 2nd, 2011 | Filed by

The case for women’s freedom must be made again and again, until the religious disease is cured; so long as religion is present on the political stage, every freedom we enjoy is in danger.… Read the rest



Religious rules do not trump child protection laws *

Sep 2nd, 2011 | Filed by

The Irish justice minister had to reiterate this in response to Cardinal Sean Brady’s fuss about the “sacred and treasured” rite of confession.… Read the rest