Author: Ophelia Benson

  • Blogger Hossein Derakhshan on trial in Iran

    He has been charged with “collaborating with enemy states, creating propaganda against the Islamic regime, insulting religious sanctity” and more.

  • Pragna Patel at protest the pope rally

    “Nor am I surprised to learn that the Muslim Council of Britain will be taking part in the papal visit.”

  • Ben Goldacre on medical ghostwriting

    Academics put their names on papers written by commercial medical writing companies working for drug companies.

  • Should science journalists take sides?

    If you just report what people have said, you’re a megaphone, not a journalist. Analysis is part of the job.

  • Salil Tripathi on the ‘incompetence Raj’

    This is not a failure of the Indian people or Indian culture. It is the Indian government who have failed so badly with the Commonwealth Games.

  • Ignore the logo, no matter how big it is

    I saw John Shook’s Huffington Post article on “O lord how awful are the ways of thy gnu atheists” a few days ago, and even read a bit of it, but I got bored so I didn’t finish, or comment on it. But Jerry did a post on it today, and the response has been energetic. A good many gnu atheists are irritated at yet another bucketful of crap being thrown at them by another atheist.

    In turn, Ron Lindsay is irritated that Jerry criticized the Center for Inquiry (where Shook works) because Shook wrote what he wrote.

    Jerry Coyne: I am extremely disappointed that you would make such an unsupported and rash accusation against CFI. If you can point out one instance where either I or someone speaking for CFI in an official capacity has gone out of his/her way to criticize CFI’s “atheist supporters for stridency, hostility, and ignorance,” please do so. If you cannot, please withdraw the statement.

    The trouble with that is that an onlooker would have no way of knowing that Shook was not speaking for CFI in an official capacity in the article, given that he was identified as “Director of Education and Senior Research Fellow, Center for Inquiry” at the top of the article. That looks to an impartial observer as if he is speaking in his official capacity.

    The same applies to the CFI blog, even though Ron Lindsay and Michael De Dora both like to insist that blog posts must be seen as the author’s independent opinions, not anything to do with CFI.

    But I think that’s an absurd expectation. Look at the CFI blog. Would anyone glance at that and think that the post that appeared below the banner at the top was nothing to do with CFI? Look at it! It’s not what you’d call inconspicuous.

    It’s odd for CFI officials to try to disavow things that have their name on it in GREAT BIG LETTERS.

  • A little list

    A beautiful takedown of Ahmedinejad by Muhhamad Sahimi at Frontline. One ludicrous boast after another countered with a statement of the reality.

    “Sakineh Mohammadi has not been condemned to death by stoning”:

    This is while activists have already posted a copy of the judiciary verdict and punishment for her, and the judiciary chief of East Azerbaijan province, where Mohammadi is from, has stated repeatedly that she will be executed as soon as Sadegh Larijani gives the go-ahead.

    Oh – er – ah – that’s a different Sakineh Mohammadi.

    “No one has been imprisoned for taking part in demonstrations”:

    This is while the Tehran police chief acknowledged last year that on the anniversary of the Revolution on February 12 alone, 20,000 people had been arrested.

    Oh – er – ah – um – yes but not for taking part in demonstrations. They all littered.

  • Australia’s “saint” exposed a paedophile priest

    And was excommunicated partly for revenge, a new documentary claims.

  • Scattering blessings

    The archbishop of Westminster is full of advice to fellow Catholics (I beg your pardon, I mean to his “flock”) on how they can make themselves disliked by pestering and nagging people.

    The Archbishop of Westminster says Catholics should be more ready to make the sign of the cross and say “God bless you” to people.

    The Archbishop called on Catholics to respond to the Pope’s hope that they would become “ever more conscious of their dignity as a priestly people”.

    Brilliant suggestions. Make intrusive public displays of superstitious gesturing and invoke something called a “blessing” from a non-existent being. Force your religious beliefs on people so that they will be impressed by your “dignity as a priestly people.” Act and talk goddy nonsense in public so that an admiring world can see how it’s done.

    Writing a week after the papal visit, Rev Nichols said: “With the blessings of this visit we can be more confident in our faith and more ready to speak about it and let it be seen each day.

    “A small step we can all take is to be quicker to say to others that we will pray for them, especially to those in distress.

    “Even the simple step of more regularly using the greeting ‘God bless you’, gently and naturally, would make a difference to the tone we set in our daily lives, as would the more frequent use of the sign of the cross.”

    Yes, it would make a difference, but not, as the archbish seems to think, in a good way. It’s passive-aggressive bullying, that kind of thing. It’s typical missionary coerciveness, and it is not attractive; it is rude and intrusive and self-important. It’s funny, in a way, but it’s really more depressing than funny – this eagerness to force unmitigated goddy bullshit on everyone.

  • Muhammad Sahimi on Ahmedinedjad’s lies

    Some of his lies are so brazen that even his supporters in Tehran have expressed astonishment and rebuked him.

  • Poll: 1 in 5 Americans believe Obama is a cactus

    The most Americans to identify the president as a water- retaining desert plant since he took office.

  • Archbishop urges Catholics to be more irritating

    Archbishop of Westminster says Catholics should be more ready to make the sign of the cross and say “God bless you” to people.

  • Geoffrey Robertson on the Holy See as Santa Claus state

    The world’s most absolute dictator presumes to lecture our present leaders on the sins of democratic society.

  • Henning Mankell: argue with Sweden Democrats

    “It was precisely the refusal of the other parties, from left and right, to debate with the SD that allowed them to grow from nothing to 6% of the vote.”

  • Larry King: Now why don’t you interview Mina Ahadi and Sajjad Ghaderzadeh?‏

    Larry King’s overly cordial interview with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad failed to press the head of a repressive Islamic Republic of Iran on many issues raised, including on the Iran stoning case of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani.
     
    When asked about the stoning case, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad replied: ‘This lady’s case has not been completely examined yet. No verdict has been issued yet. She is accused of being — of murdering her husband. And I don’t think in the world if someone is accused of murdering their husband, people would pour on the streets and rally in support of her.’ Without correcting the facts on the case, King then went on to say: ‘If they were going to stone her, they would.’ Ahmadinejad then said: ‘She has been accused of the murder of her husband. There is no verdict issued. No verdict, no sentence has been passed… And it is not about a stoning case at all. There’s no stoning sentence here at all. A person in Germany made this claim, which was untrue. Our judiciary also said it was a false statement.’
     
    Given the public outcry against stoning, it is understandable why Ahmadinejad prefers to lie on the issue.
     
    In fact, however, a number of government officials have confirmed and defended the stoning sentence. In an interview on 8 September, Foreign Ministry Spokesman, Ramin Mehmanparast, said that Ms Ashtiani’s stoning sentence was under review by the Supreme Court (english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2010/09/201098122526772598.html). In July 2010, Mohammad Javad Larijani, head of the Human Rights Department of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s Judiciary, told IRNA state news agency that stoning is in the Islamic Republic’s constitution and therefore the law. He went on to say that Ms Ashtiani’s case has gone through the routine procedures and that there is no ambiguities surrounding it. He added that protests would not affect judges or the execution of sentences since stoning is part of the sacred Sharia of Islam (http://www.radiofarda.com/archive/news/20100709/143/143.html?id=2095819). Also in July, Malek Ajdar Sharifi, the top judicial official in the province where Ashtiani was convicted, said the verdict has been halted due to humanitarian reservations and upon the order of the judiciary chief, and would not be carried out for the moment. (http://www.rferl.org/content/Iran_To_Review_Womans_Stoning_Execution/2096579.html)
     
    Furthermore, the International Committee against Stoning has provided the actual court verdict sentencing Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani to death by stoning. In the Judgement (ref no. 38 – 85/6/19, dated 10 September 2006, Case reference number:  94 – 84/6 Province Criminal [Court], Reference number of the Head Penal Office:  237 – 84/11/18) the plaintiff is listed as the ‘Honourable Prosecutor of the General and Revolutionary Court of Tabriz’, the accused is listed as ‘Mrs Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, daughter of Asqar, of Tabriz address (Tabriz Prison)’ and the charge is listed as ‘Adultery [Zena-ye Mohseneh’]. Court documents can be found here: http://stopstonningnow.com/wpress/4059.
     
    Additionally, Ms. Ashtiani has been acquitted of murder. Even the man convicted of her husband’s murder has not been executed. In Iran, under Diyeh laws, the family of the victim can ask for the death penalty to be revoked. Ms Ashtiani’s son explains why he and his 17 year old sister spared the man’s life in an interview saying: ‘He is the father of a little girl who is three years old, who cried many tears before us. We, my sister and I, did not want to be the cause of his execution.’ (http://stopstonningnow.com/wpress/3618)
     
    Clearly the regime hopes to brand Ms Ashtiani a murderer in order to push back the immense international campaign in her defence. This, however, is unlikely given the outrage surrounding this case in particular and the barbaric practice of stoning in general. This is largely due to Ms Ashtiani’s children who pleaded for international support when she was to be imminently stoned to death and Mina Ahadi who is referred to by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as a ‘person in Germany.’ Mina Ahadi accepts Ahmadinejad’s ‘accusation’ with pride http://stopstonningnow.com/wpress/4097.
     
    Ms Ashtiani’s son, Sajjad Ghaderzadeh, has called on US media networks to organise a debate between him and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (http://stopstonningnow.com/wpress/4059).
     
    Larry King and Christiane Amanpour: You have interviewed Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Now why don’t you interview Mina Ahadi and Sajjad Ghaderzadeh for the truth on Ms Ashtiani’s case, stoning and the regime in Iran?
    September 24, 2010
     
    Notes:
     
    1. You can see the video of the Larry King interview here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CQmdv1l4Zm0
     
    2. For more information, contact:
     
    Mina Ahadi, International Committee Against Stoning and International Committee Against Executions, minaahadi@aol.com, 0049 1775692413; http://notonemoreexecution.org/; http://stopstonningnow.com.
     
    Maryam Namazie, Iran Solidarity, iransolidaritynow@gmail.com, 0044 7719166731, Iran Solidarity: www.iransolidarity.org.uk; http://iransolidarity.blogspot.com/.
  • Deaf abuse victim is suing the pope

    The headmaster of St. John’s School for the Deaf raped and molested as many as 200 deaf boys, according to court and church documents.

  • Johann Hari on Liberal Democrats as hostages

    They twitch nervously as they mouth supportive platitudes about Cameron’s planned cuts.

  • Paul Sims asks: is burning the Koran a crime?

    Kenan Malik notes, “There are two notions of incitement that all too often get conflated.”

  • UK: six guys arrested for burning a Koran

    They were arrested on suspicion of inciting racial hatred and released on bail pending further inquiries.