All entries by this author

To uphold the dignity of human life

Jan 12th, 2011 1:16 pm | By

I’ve been reading the bishop of Phoenix again. (I have my reasons. I’m doing a talk at CFI Vancouver in a couple of weeks, and I intend to draw on the bish.) I’ve been doing a close reading, as one might with a poem or a PR release. I noticed some things. Here’s one of them.

The decisions regarding life and death, morality and immorality as they relate to medical ethics are at the forefront of the Church’s mission today. As a result, the Church and her bishops have a heightened moral responsibility to remain actively engaged in these discussions and debates.

Look at what he’s saying there. He’s saying that decisions regarding life and death are at the forefront … Read the rest



Shock-horror over sex education in Pakistan *

Jan 12th, 2011 | Filed by

Dr Mobin Akhtar wants to clear up distressing misconceptions about sex via education. He gets threats.… Read the rest



Coyne on Pigliucci on atheism and anger *

Jan 12th, 2011 | Filed by

Most of us, even including those who used to be religious, have legitimate reasons—beyond religious indoctrinationto be angry.… Read the rest



Sarah Palin was puzzled, then concerned, now sad *

Jan 12th, 2011 | Filed by

About “the irresponsible statements” of other people. She has never said an irresponsible word in her life.… Read the rest



Sarah Palin protests “irresponsible statements” *

Jan 12th, 2011 | Filed by

Also raves about a “blood libel,” clearly having no idea what that means.… Read the rest



Welcome to Sunnybrook Funny Farm

Jan 11th, 2011 6:22 pm | By

Eww!

I was browsing Churchandstate.org, via a post on Eric’s blog, and what did I find but a fetid little abomination called “the stay-at-home-daughters movement.” As in “stay at home because you are inferior and subordinate and your Duty in life is to be a conduit for child production and a domestic servant.”

The stay-at-home-daughters movement, which is promoted by Vision Forum, encourages young girls and single women to forgo college and outside employment in favor of training as “keepers at home” until they marry. Young women pursuing their own ambitions and goals are viewed as selfish and antifamily; marriage is not a choice or one piece of a larger life plan, but the ultimate goal. Stay-at-home daughters

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Meet the Christian Patriarchy Movement *

Jan 11th, 2011 | Filed by

Young women pursuing their own ambitions and goals are viewed as selfish and antifamily.… Read the rest



No such bill of grievances

Jan 11th, 2011 11:56 am | By

Hitchens notes a difference between Mumtaz Qadri, and Paul Foot and Nelson Mandela.

A decision to resort to violence was not something to be undertaken without great care—and stated in terms that were addressed to reasonable people. From his prison cell, Nelson Mandela had joined the great tradition of the French philosophes, of Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine, of Marx and Engels in 1848, and of Jawaharlal Nehru in the 1930s—of men and women who felt the historic obligation to make a stand and to define it.

In other words, to give reasons.

Now look at the grinning face of Mumtaz Qadri, the man who last week destroyed a great human being. He did not explain. He boasted.

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Hitchens on Salman Taseer *

Jan 11th, 2011 | Filed by

“Jihadists” don’t even bother to make a case that violence is needed.… Read the rest



The context of Loughner’s adventure *

Jan 11th, 2011 | Filed by

The context was the anti-government, pro-gun, xenophobic populism that flourishes in the dry and angry climate of Arizona.… Read the rest



Buffalo, NY: wife-beheader says she abused him *

Jan 11th, 2011 | Filed by

“Domestic violence is not about gender, it’s about control,” Muzzammil Hassan wrote. “Who is the master, who is the slave?”… Read the rest



Jesus and Mo do a new song *

Jan 11th, 2011 | Filed by

Tonight we are going to insist that our religious beliefs be treated with the unquestioning respect we imagine they deserve.… Read the rest



Lars Hedegaard on free speech *

Jan 10th, 2011 | Filed by

The mighty do not fear free speech as an abstract idea but as the beginning of the end of their privileges.… Read the rest



Freedom of speech in Denmark *

Jan 10th, 2011 | Filed by

Lars Hedegaard, President of The International Free Press Society, is about to go on trial for discussing family rapes in areas dominated by Muslim culture.… Read the rest



Yasmin Alibhai Brown on culturally- sanctioned injustices *

Jan 10th, 2011 | Filed by

Fear of racism should no longer be the veil covering up hard truths.… Read the rest



Massive Karachi rally to support blasphemy law *

Jan 10th, 2011 | Filed by

The rally was attended by all major Muslim groups and sects in the city, including “moderates” and conservatives.… Read the rest



The barometer is falling

Jan 10th, 2011 10:39 am | By

Oh god…it’s the usual problem, the problem I’ve been having so often lately, especially in the last week. It’s the problem of reading about something that’s so disgusting it’s hard to keep reading. It’s the surge of fear and loathing at the malevolence and brute stupidity and more malevolence in fellow human beings. Like this:

is in jail, desperately praying that she won’t be executed. Her neighbours are hoping she will be.”Why hasn’t she been killed yet?” said Maafia Bibi , a 20-year-old woman standing at the gate of the house next door. Her eyes glitter behind a scarf that covered her face. “You journalists keep coming here asking questions but the issue is resolved. Why has she not been

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Aasia Bibi’s neighbors want her dead *

Jan 10th, 2011 | Filed by

Bibi was sentenced to hang on mere hearsay – a Kafkaesque twist that seems to bother few in her village.… Read the rest



Listen to the banned

Jan 9th, 2011 4:59 pm | By

You know Deeyah? She’s doing a great thing.

Now a project to recognise the contribution of some of the world’s most important protest singers has been pulled together by a woman who was forced to give up performing on stage because of threats made on her life. Listen To The Banned is an album including the work of 14 international artists, all of whom have experienced imprisonment, censorship, harassment or violence because of their music.

Deeyah, a classically trained singer born in Norway, of Pakistani and Afghan parents, had a burgeoning career in pop music when she had to leave Norway because of harassment and disapproval from hardline Islamic groups. She moved to the US and then the UK,

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Banned singers join to produce an album *

Jan 9th, 2011 | Filed by

Listen To The Banned includes the work of 14 international artists who have experienced imprisonment, censorship, harassment or violence because of their music.… Read the rest