Reflections on life at “De Witte Wand”…

Category: Society

  • One Less Tourist Destination

    I admit that Pakistan was never very high on my list of places to visit before I die, but news that the Minister for Tourism has offered her resignation because she hugged her elderly instructor after completing a parachute jump for charity is reason enough to strike it off.
     
    There’s a serious message behind this, as Ophelia quite rightly opines:
    So petty tyrannical spiteful controlling interfering clerics get their way and yet another woman is prevented from working, living her life, having ordinary grown-up interactions, having fun, expressing joy and exuberance. The world is made just a little safer for narrowness and deprivation and general nothingness. 
  • Perfect What?

    I’m sorry, I think my jaw has just hit the table and my brains have dropped out. Perfect Petzzz? Alright, I know that I had a hankering for an Aibo – but that was ironical, OK? Somehow, I don’t think irony enters into this. I think that everyone (including Tom and Katie) are deadly, deadly serious. That’s the point at which I want the cockroaches to take over. We’ve clearly lost our minds.
  • The Nature of the Infection

    Neil Gaiman has reposted a terrific article called "The Nature of the Infection" on his blog. It’s about how ideas influence us in a viral fashion. For him, Dr Who has been a huge influence on how he perceives the world. He mentions a particular story – The War Games – as being instrumental in shaping his reality. I remember that story too, and can appreciate what it has done to Gaiman:
    These days, as a middle-aged and respectable author, I still feel a sense of indeterminate but infinite possibility on entering a lift, particularly a small one with white walls. That to date the doors that have opened have always done so in the same time, and world, and even the same building in which I started out seems merely fortuitous – evidence only of a lack of imagination on the part of the rest of the universe.
    I know exactly what he means – I have caught the same virus – but I can date the point of infection to long before Dr Who.
     
    It dates from growing up in my parent’s hotel. In the off-season, I had the run of the place. When I was six or seven, I used to shut myself in some of the large assortment of cupboards and wardrobes that were scattered through the bedrooms. I was quite convinced that when I came out of a cupboard I would be in a room that looked the same as the one which I had just left but that it was, in some mysterious fashion, totally different. And that beyond the room lay a hotel that was not the one I was in just a few moments ago…
  • Waste

    A sad, but typically thought-provoking post from Teju Cole over at Modal Minority. And I was reading it while listening to Rufus Wainwright’s Nobody’s Off The Hook from Release The Stars. Oh boy…
  • Not Just Wrong

    Ophelia makes a very good point about why people who invoke a higher authority are often mad, bad and dangerous to know.
  • IDAHO

    Today, May 17, is IDAHO day.
  • Amen

    Christopher Hitchens says it very well…
     
     
  • Cult, Religion, or Movement?

    The various channels of BBC TV provided an interesting comparison this evening.
     
    First up was Panorama, on BBC 1, with John Sweeney’s item on Scientology. The old joke goes: "what’s the difference betweeen a cult and a religion? Answer: about 2,000 years". How true this is. I think Sweeney – despite his totally understandable lapse – showed very clearly that Scientology is dangerous guff. Guff, because L. Ron Hubbard very successfully dreamed up this garbage, and dangerous, because Tom Davis was very clearly employing psychological tricks to unsettle Sweeney.
     
    But following this dip into the cesspool of Scientology, came an unexpected bracing from BBC Four with Scouting For Boys. Yes, the jokes are all too easy (scouting for boys?), but ultimately, the philosophy (note: not religion) of Baden-Powell came across as life-affirming. There is something positive about wanting to improve people’s sense of citizenship, and wanting to improve life for all. As his grandson said – he was a bit of a nutter, but it was clear that his heart was definitely in the right pace. Given the choice between people such as Tom Davis and Baden-Powell, then give me Baden-Powell every time.
  • Magnus Hirschfeld

    Jim Burroway, over at Box Turtle Bulletin, reminds us that today, 14th May, is a day of significance to LGBT folks. It marks the day, in 1868 when Magnus Hirschfeld was born; the day, in 1897, when Hirschfeld founded the Scientific-Humanitarian Committee; and the day, in 1935, when Hirschfeld died.
     
    As Burroway says, Hirschfeld organised "the Scientific Humanitarian Committee for the expressed purpose of advocating for the repeal of Paragraph 175, the German statute which criminalized sodomy. Paragraph 175 was the law that the Nazi’s would later use to send upwards of 15,000 gay men to concentration camps. The Scientific Humanitarian Committee is the first documented formal group to advocate for the civil rights of gays and lesbians".
  • Petal Fatigue

    Apparently, most of what we think we know about the 17th Century Dutch passion for tulips: Tulipmania, is simply not true. Damn, there goes another illusion…
  • Gunkanjima Island

    Via BLDBLOG, I came across an island off the coast of Japan called Gunkanjima. Its history is fascinating. And via the BLDBLOG entry, I found this documentary made of the island and the people who lived there. Haunting.
     
     
  • The Past Is Another Country

    Christopher Hitchens has an excellent article about his visit back to London’s Finsbury Park area, where he grew up. He finds it has changed, and in ways not necessarily for the better. A consumate wordsmith, he makes you smile before you realise the full import of what he has just written. For example:
    Until he was jailed last year on charges of soliciting murder and inciting racial hatred, a man known to the police of several countries as Abu Hamza al-Masri was the imam of the Finsbury Park Mosque. He was a conspicuous figure because, having lost the use of an eye and both hands in an exchange of views in Afghanistan, he sported an opaque eye plus a hook to theatrical effect. Not as nice as he looked, Abu Hamza was nonetheless unfailingly generous with his hospitality. Overnight guests at his mosque’s sleeping quarters have included Richard Reid, the man in whose honor we now all have to take off our shoes at the airport, and Zacarias Moussaoui, the missing team member of September 11, 2001.
    The "exchange of views" is very droll, and that "not as nice as he looked" phrase is a brilliant touch. Go and read the whole article. The Q&A session accompanying the article is worth reading too.
  • Wonders Never Cease

    For the first time ever, I can agree with something that Inayat Bungawala has written. Staggering.
  • No Words

    Sometimes, I just feel like giving up in despair. That quip of the last post: Homo sapiens 1.0 seems horribly true; we are in desparate need of some new brain software. Anything to make this sort of thing history (my emphases):
    What happened next was captured in a mobile phone video. It shows a dark-haired girl dressed in a red track suit top and black underwear with blood streaming from her face. As she tries to rise to her feet she is kicked and hit on the head with a concrete block. Armed and uniformed police stand by watching her being killed over several minutes. Many in the crowd hold up their phone cameras to record the scene. Nobody tries to help her as she is battered to death.
    I’ll let Twisty Farmer speak for me. I cannot, and do not want to, watch the video.
     
  • Us Fanatical Atheists

    Dan Gardner has penned a good article that pretty much sums up my approach. Meanwhile, Our Maddy Of The Sorrows continues to take the Goldilocks view. Sorry, Madeleine, I’m with Dan on this one.
     
    Update: one of the things that irritates me about Ms. Bunting is her blasé way of misrepresenting the authors with whom she disagrees. Take this current piece for example. Here she is on Sam Harris:
    In another passage Harris goes even further, and reaches a disturbing conclusion that "some propositions are so dangerous that it may even be ethical to kill people for believing them". This sounds like exactly the kind of argument put forward by those who ran the Inquisition.  
    This quote is not from Harris’ latest book, but in fact from an earlier one, The End of Faith. The full quote is rather more illuminating than Ms. Bunting would have us believe:
    The link between belief and behavior raise the stakes considerably. Some propositions are so dangerous that it may even be ethical to kill people for believing them. This may seem an extraordinary claim, but it merely enunciates an ordinary fact about the world in which we live. Certain beliefs place their adherents beyond the reach of every peaceful means of persuasion, while inspiring them to commit acts of extraordinary violence against others. There is, in fact, no talking to some people. If they cannot be captured, and they often cannot, otherwise tolerant people may be justified in killing them in self-defense. This is what the United States attempted in Afghanistan, and it is what we and other Western powers are bound to attempt, at an even greater cost to ourselves and to innocents abroad, elsewhere in the Muslim world. We will continue to spill blood in what is, at bottom, a war of ideas. 
    I read Harris as making an observation, rather than a commitment to a course of action. I also note his use of the word "may". I rather suspect that those who ran the Inquisiton had no such doubts and freely used the words "should" and "must".
     
    Bunting then brings up some of the questions that are now being asked of religion:
    Scientists have argued that faith was a byproduct of our development of the imagination or a way of increasing the social bonding mechanisms. Does that make religion an important evolutionary step but now no longer needed – the equivalent of the appendix? Or a crucial part of the explanation for successful human evolution to date? Does religion still have an important role in human wellbeing? In recent years, research has thrown up some remarkable benefits – the faithful live longer, recover from surgery quicker, are happier, less prone to mental illness and so the list goes on. If religion declines, what gaps does it leave in the functioning of individuals and social groups?
    Excellent points, but then she goes and claims:
    This isn’t the kind of debate that the New Atheists are interested in (with the possible exception of Dennett, who in an interview last year was far more open to discussion than his book would indicate); theirs is a political battle, not an attempt to advance human understanding.
    Er, excuse me? This is a blatant misrepresentation. Both Dawkins and Dennett expressly address these points in their latest books. Dawkins devotes two chapters of The God Delusion to them; chapter 5: The Roots of Religion and chapter 6: The Roots of Morality. Damnit, even the subheadings of chapter 5 are points like: direct advantages of religion; religion as a by-product of something else; psychologically primed for religion.  And as for poor old Daniel Dannett – the whole of his last book, Breaking The Spell, went in depth into all these points and more. And what she is wittering on about when she claims that "Dennett … was far more open to discussion than his book would indicate" I simply cannot imagine. Really, I wonder whether we have in fact been reading the same books at all.
     
    Not having yet read Christopher Hitchens’ book, I can’t comment on the accuracy of her representation of his words, but I did see this comment by Wilk1978 on her article:
    I’m sorry if other commentors have already pointed this out, as I don’t have time to read through all of the comments, but Ms. Bunting blatantly misrepresents what Mr. Hitchens says about these historical figures. He points that various Christian critics (he calls them heartless) have argued that Muhammad had epilepsy, and calls such debates pointless and irrelevant. His critique of Gandhi is not that he was an obscurantist, but that he was an anti-modern traditionalist who wanted to retard the process of economic and technological development in India. He idealized the Indian village, poverty-stricken thought it may have been (and still is). He was also, according to Hitchens, opposed to conciliation with Muslims, and his intransigence in turn gave the upper hand to Muslim hardliners and facilitated partition. Finally, Ms. Bunting’s distortion of what Hitchens says about Martin Luther King is probably the most grotesque. Hitchens writes a glowing, respectful section on King. His main point is to contrast the humanistic, compassionate spirituality of King with the parochial, dogmatic, hateful Christianity of many of those who opposed the Civil Rights Movement (often based on biblical convictions). Hitchens states that, to the extent that Christians must necessarily believe in a hell for non-believers (something that Jesus spoke of on several occasions), King, who never spoke of such punishment even for his political opponents, cannot be considered a true Christian. That is the gist of Hitchens’s argument. One might disagree with it, but Ms. Bunting completely distorts it, willingly or not I can’t tell. Finally, she writes that Hitchens suggests that King plagiarized his doctoral dissertation. This is an accusation that many who seek to demonize King and his legacy has made. Hitchens’s point is that this very well might be true, but that it doesn’t really matter, because it doesn’t detract from King’s moral character and accomplishments. His point was that King, like the rest of us, was a human with his own foibles, and that King’s critics (mostly ignorant, outright racist southerners nostalgic for the old days) are wrong to use these foibles as evidence of King’s corruption.
     
    Bunting may or may not have a point regarding whether these atheists will have much success in converting others to their unbelief, rather than merely preaching to the choir. But the fact that she manages to so completely misread one of the books that she attacks makes me far less likely to give her much attention.  
    Misreading of the books that she attacks seems to be a common failing of hers.
     
  • The Pink List

    The Independent On Sunday has published this year’s version of its Pink List – their annual celebration of the great and the gay in British life. I was somewhat surprised to see Derek Jacobi marked as a "new" entry onto the list. I would have thought that Jacobi deserved a place on the list from the very first time the IoS produced it.
  • A Cruel Punishment

    As Ophelia says, over at ButterfliesAndWheels, I don’t understand the morality behind this. The Irish Health Service (i.e. the persons in it who have taken this decision) seems to want to inflict a cruel and unusual punishment on this young woman.
  • Topsy-Turvy

    That women continue to be oppressed in all sorts of subtle, and often not-so-subtle, ways does not surprise me. So the latest news that the Iranian government are enforcing "correct" Islamic dress codes on women (tell me, do the men ever get the same treatment?) raised simply a sigh of resignation with me. But what really caught my eye was the quote from Sae’ed Mortazavi, Tehran’s public prosecutor:
    "These women who appear in public like decadent models, endanger the security and dignity of young men".
    Er, hello? I’m sure he absolutely believes that nonsense. In any rational world he’d be laughed out of office; the horrifying thing is that he probably reflects majority opinion in Iran. Terrifying.
     
    Oh, by the way, don’t assume that this is just a nasty little result of Islam; Christian men can be equally stupid. It seems to me that men, and stupidity, are the common denominators here…
  • Homophobia in Jamaica

    Terrance, over at The Republic of T, points out the hypocrisy of Jamaica’s Public Defender when responding to the homophobia that seems to be endemic in Jamaican society. Terrance also includes evidence of the homophobia – a rather disturbing video of a mob attacking someone waiting for a bus. It’s worth reading Terrance’s blog entry, and I strongly advise that you do.