Abortion: destroying the female gender

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brings to light a statistic of which I was not aware:

The ratio of girls per 1,000 boys in these areas hovers around the 700s and 800s, with as few as 300 girls per 1,000 boys in some high-caste urban areas of Punjab. As investigative journalist argues in her 2007 book, “Disappearing Daughters: The Tragedy of Female Feticide,” “Female is akin to serial killing. But female is more like a holocaust. A whole gender is getting exterminated.” The problem extends beyond ….

A new study suggests that female feticide may be disturbingly common in some n communities. In an analysis of 2000 Census data published recently in the Proceedings of the , economists and examined the ratio of births among U.S.-born children of Chinese, Korean and Asian-Indian parents. They found “evidence of sex selection, most likely at the prenatal stage.”

Abortion was supposedly the ultimate guarantor of ’s rights in this, the age of enlightened post-. Equally, it’s supposed to be the ultimate expression of a woman’s right to “control her own body” (whatever that actually means).

And seems, now, to be shaping up as the tool or mechanism by which women will all but disappear from many regions of the world.

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Reader Mail: Time Immortal

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Another wave of atheists seems to be upon me; while I can’t quite set my watch by them, at least I can be assured that there will be periodic sources of content not related to doings on any other blog save this one, which I appreciate.

In this case, the amusingly-handled Aspentroll writes in with a few thoughts on this article.

“Atheism will endure, as it has for many ages now. But it will never dominate a free people, and in due course gives way to the spiritual. Falsehood must necessarily give way to truth in the end, or at least to a less severe falsehood.”

The word “” above could be replaced by the word “” or “” and the rest of the quote would be just as true.

Atheists believe that is a huge falsehood and to pattern your life on such a nebulous writing is in most cases dangerous. You cannot govern a country using the laws of the bible which seems to be what some “fundies” want. We would all be up in arms if Law was allowed in the US, because it is archaic and discriminatory against and free thought.

Atheism, and free thought is the only check and balance we have to keep overly zealous delusional people from taking over and spoiling what is a normal modern way of life.

Did the reader note the tacit suggestion that religious people are necessarily delusional? The footnote to this more recent article seems relevant to mention here.

A good first question I might ask is: what checks and balances exist to keep overly zealous atheists from taking over and spoiling what is a normal, modern way of life that, in the West at least (though it perhaps does not always realize it), benefits greatly from reserves of Christian moral capital built up over the centuries? History has demonstrated that those states which have made atheism an explicit policy of the state have inexorably become brutal and bloody-minded, and several examples of the trend persist to this day.

The article I cited previously addresses this point rather directly: it is within human nature to desire to believe, and when force of will fails to ensure that the populace does not stray back toward the spiritual, force of arms is a necessary recourse of the atheistic state. It might be easy to laugh this off as fallacy, but one observes that in the explicitly atheistic regimes in places such as the , , , and (an incomplete list of examples, but sufficient for our purposes) did have something of a penchant for murderously cracking down on spiritual movements and religions within their borders. Certain exceptions to the trend exist, of course, but only in those cases where the religion(s) in question — the Orthodox Church in Russia, the “Catholic” Church in China — has allowed itself to be co-opted by the state.

One possible objection is that the generally secular regimes in many Western nations do not actively persecute the religious faithful in their midst. While the statement about persecution is up for debate, it is generally true that secular Western states do not, at least, murderously persecute their religious citizens. But then, even in various Scandinavian nations, the itself is not explicit state policy, and most of those states still acknowledge that there is a Christian aspect to their origins.

As to the quote of mine that Apentroll cites in opening his message, it should be observed that his attempt to gainsay it, in the first sentence of his response to me, really amounts to little more than saying “I know you are, but what am I?” Although it sounds more reasonable than that on the surface — heck, it even sounds somewhat rational — the statement itself can be revealed to be something of a patent falsehood, on several levels, upon closer examination.

First off, Christianity’s aim — and the aim of true religion (as opposed to the various false teachings one can stumble across from time to time*) — is freedom. And by freedom, I don’t mean being free “from rules of conduct or social constraints” (as the all-too talented authors of the character of Durandal in the Marathon series of games so eloquently word it). I do, however, mean being free “to understand, to imagine, to make metaphor.”

Freethinking, a misnomer if ever there was one, actually ruins freedom. “Freethinkers supposedly want “the pursuit of ideas for their own sake,” but no one pursues ideas simply for their own sake, but in order to understand, to act or to believe, or to have some combination of these. Men pursue ideas so that they may understand the world, and they seek to understand the world to have wisdom. Men desire wisdom in order to live well, and part of living well is to pursue and know the Good, and the Good is that which fulfills human nature and causes it to flourish. The desire to know is a natural desire, one implanted in us as part of our created being; we yearn to know and to enter into the unknown because we yearn for unity with the One Who desires that all things be united in Him. If no religion had ever caused men to live virtuously and flourish, religion would have disappeared ages ago. If no religion had produced saints and cultivated the finest aspects of human nature, very few would adhere themselves to it and even then it would only be the mad and obsessive. There is nothing interesting in rehearsing the catalogue of crimes that religious adherents have committed against each other, since men have always been slaughtering and oppressing one another and they have tended to do more of it when they are less in thrall to their religious tradition than when they are strictly obedient to it. What is remarkable is how much at least some religions have contributed to the civilisation and edification of men, which would hardly seem probable if they were not much more than elaborate exercises in self-deception and nonsense.”

One point, in particular, that can be taken out of the above quotation is that “we yearn to know and to enter into the unknown because we yearn for unity with the One Who desires that all things be united in Him.” It is the result of no accident that science and discovery flourished in the Christian West after ending up misfiring almost everywhere else in the world (historically speaking). As David Warren notes, “[to] those who know some history, the modern sciences emerged in an unambiguously Christian milieu. They flourished, over centuries in the West, as the direct result of the Judaeo-Christian teaching that “God does not contradict Himself.” The whole notion of unalterable physical laws, and thus a universal order that will repay inquiry, is the product of a theological position unique to the West. It is a view that has been glimpsed in other civilizations, but could only be doggedly pursued in this one. Science was stillborn in all other civilizations.”

And the same is true of the wider concept of freedom. Nowhere else in the world, save in a West born out of Christendom, did the concept of human freedom, individual liberty, and human rights genuinely flourish. It did not, certainly, flourish in the ic world, nor in the castes of in , nor in any of the places where took hold, nor in…any other place, really, save for the West that Christendom birthed. Indeed, the ideas that man should be free and that all men are “equal” is, ultimately, only defensible from within a teleological framework, and then a Christian teleology.

And in the numerous examples one could draw out of the 19th and 20th centuries, one can observe that in those regimes where atheism has, so to speak, become the law of the land, not only has human freedom been impaired and/or outright trampled on, but so too has science, to say nothing of human rights.

Now, I will grant that I stand in agreement with Aspentroll’s objetion to governance by “fundies” — fundamentalism leaves a bad taste in my mouth. Equally, though, I don’t think that society has any right to demand that a politician leave his Christianity at the door when he takes office.

Atheists are welcome to consider the Bible a book of falsehoods; I consider it God’s inerrant, infallible revelation to the world**. Who is to say which of us is right? I will grant that many, many people have a poor understanding of exactly what the Bible teaches, and fundamentalists seem especially prone to this unfortunate reality. But is it genuinely dangerous to pattern one’s life on the core teachings of Scripture? Exactly how terrible a place would the world be to live in if we all actually followed what Christ taught? Exactly how terrible a place would the world be to live in if everyone followed, as a bare minimum, the and the , and patterned their lives on the concepts articulated therein?

I very much doubt it would be a perfect place to live in…but I’ve no doubt that it would be a much better world. But then, had it exactly right when he noted that “the Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult, and left untried.”

I also agree with Aspentroll that it would be horrible if Islamic sharia law became the law of the land, in or anywhere else. I suspect that Aspentroll, however, has temporarily taken leave of and erroneously assumes that because some types of religious law are brutal and evil, all forms of religious law must necessarily also be brutal and evil. It’s a rather common logical fallacy among atheists to assert this — is particularly vulnerable to it.

The main problem with the assertion is that a thing may be true even if certain individuals don’t accept it as being true. This is easily understood in the case of the fundamentalist objection to e.g. the theory of and the geological research that has revealed the approximate age of the Earth. Young Earth Creationism insists, passionately, that is a mere 6,000 years old, and most creationists of this bent do not accept as truthful or valid the various discoveries made in the fields of , , and evolutionary (among others). That doesn’t mean that the theories and discoveries aren’t true, however.

The same is true in regard to atheistic assertions regarding religions. Aspentroll would hardly be the first atheist to look at, say, the evils perpetrated in the name of Islam and declare that all religions are murderous death cults obsessed with paedophilia and suicide belts. That might come as news to Buddhists, and indeed to most Christians, but not everyone can be counted on to let facts get in the way of good rhetoric, especially if it sells books with provocative titles. And yet, a more reasonable, rational person would notice that there are many critical differences between, say, Islam and , visible both by a close analysis of doctrine and by taking an honest, objective look at the actions of the followers of each respective on a global scale.

As previously noted, the creature we call a human being is wired to be a believer, and the only real question is what said human being will believe in. We’ve seen this played out through history, and we see its logical consequences played out in that movement which denies this very aspect of human nature: atheism. In individual atheists like or , we see the beginnings of post-atheistic spiritualism beginning to creep in. The same trend can be observed in , in the wake of the collapse of an explicitly atheistic regime. It’s regrettable that the that such people are gravitating towards is, quite often, some new form of (or “new” in that “same as the old boss” sense of the word), although it is good that people are also finding, or rediscovering, .

There seems to be a rather pernicious lie going around that religion and freedom are antithetical to one another; this is not completely true. It is true in regard to specific religions (e.g. Islam), but not in regard to the Christian truth. Indeed, it was a particularly Christian sense of telos that informed the very constraints, concepts, and ideals which enabled the West to value freedom. By contrast, the application of atheistic ideals as the formative values of a state has tended to be the true antithesis of freedom, of science, and of .

And in perhaps the most amusingly ironic twist, I just realized that if I re-worded ’s message to me and flipped the references to religion and atheism in every instance (and substituted the title of any New Atheist tract for “the bible”), the message itself would not only be a lot more truthful, but also a lot more historically defensible.

* * *

* this statement said with tongue firmly implanted in cheek

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Is religion opposed to science?

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For those who labour under the delusion that science and religion are in some way opposed and/or irreconcilable, it might do well to take a look at history:

History shows that the natural sciences grew out of Christian culture. As the sociologist has so convincingly shown (See especially : How Led to s, , Witch-Hunts, and the End of ), science was “still-born” in the great civilizations of the ancient world, except in Christian civilization.

Why is it that empirical science and the scientific method did not develop in (with its sophisticated society), in (with its philosophical schools), in (with its advanced mathematics), in (with its dedicated craftsmen and technologies), or even in ancient or ?

The answer is fairly straightforward. Science flourished in societies where a Christian mindset understood nature to be ordered, the work of an intelligent Creator. Science grew where people assumed that the natural world is intelligible and bears the handwriting of its author.

Far from being an obstacle to science, Christian soil was the necessary humus where science took root.

Christianity’s unapologetic support of science is borne out by the immense direct contribution of the Church to science itself. To take but one area — that of astronomy — of the - has written:

“The Roman Catholic Church gave more financial aid and social support to the study of for over six centuries, from the recovery of ancient learning during the late into the , than any other, and, probably, all other, institutions.”

Just as the Christian church patronized the arts, so it vigorously supported scientific research. The caricature of an obscurantist, ignorance-promoting church simply doesn’t correspond to historical truth.

Some of history’s greatest scientists — Newton, Pasteur, Galilei, Lavoisier, Kepler, Copernicus, Faraday, Maxwell, Bernard and Heisenberg — were all Christians, and the list doesn’t stop there. Some important scientists, such as astronomer , were actually Catholic priests!

is not against science, but against an absolutist reading of science. The empirical sciences cannot do everything, and hold no monopoly on knowledge and truth. Many important questions — the most important, really — fall outside the purview of science.

What is the meaning of life? How should people treat one another? What happens to us when we die?

No matter how long a white-coated scientist toils and sweats in his laboratory, his instruments will never reveal the answers to these questions. Science is the wrong tool for the job.

The saddest part, I think, is that this sort of thing was, at one time, obvious.

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Reader Mail: Responce

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Samuel Skinner writes in again to follow up on my previous reply to him. It seems that my prediction has come true; between Joel and Sam, it would appear that another atheist season is upon .

Perhaps it’s just my fuzzy memory, but I seem to recall another such season beginning at about this time last year. Weird.

I think I’m going to handle this one in an “interlinear” fashion as well, simply because it wanders between a bunch of topics and concepts; it will be easier to framework a response (and seem more coherent) to handle it paragraph by paragraph.

By “looking up on google”, I was refering to atheists basing on some something other than theistic premises. I didn’t mean to show it was the only way with that comment, just that it occurs.

That’s true to a point, although most such premises are…wanting? Yes, wanting, O Reader. Or, alternatively, they are somewhat hypocritical, as they are little more than an attempt to invoke a very (or very nearly) Christian moral sensibility without invoking the Christian deity. Of course, some sense of telos is still used in secular moral reasoning; absent an appeal to some manner of higher ideal, it is more or less impossible to suggest that there is any sort of concrete moral ideal.

Again, that’s not to say that believers are inherently more moral than atheists, nor is it to say that atheists are inherently immoral; it is simply to remark that we really cannot begin to discuss the idea that morality exists and/or that it has concrete tenets of any sort without first invoking something that atheists, on the surface at least, deny exists: something that transcends the human condition and this empirical realm in which we live.

Most people can agree that it is wrong to rape someone, or that it is wrong to kill someone. Most people can agree that men and women are human persons possessed of equal rights and dignity on the basis of their humanity alone. Behind each such concept is a moral imperative that cannot be justified from within a purely empirical or falsifiable framework, especially the notion that there is an innate dignity and equality that exists between all human beings (since all the evidence suggests that steep inequalities exist in terms of things like physical strength, level of intelligence, pain and temperature tolerance, and so on).

Scratch an atheist’s moral reasoning, I have discovered, and one very quickly finds a very subtle attempt to sneak a transcendental concept into what is ostensibly an argument from cold, concrete or in the best scientific tradition. Because one cannot compose a moral imperative without doing so at some level.

Um… it isn’t straw man or adhominum. You are saying that because of Christians we have all this wondeful things. Implied in that statement is that noone else would have been capable of doing such deeds.

Firstly, it was a straw-man argument that was previously made, O Reader; Sam responded to my suggestion of society’s reliance on Christian moral capital by dismantling the assertion that theists are more moral than atheists. Since I made no such claim in my original article, Sam’s invocation of that claim is an almost textbook example of a straw man argument — he regards my point as having been refuted when in fact all he has done is refuted a point I did not make in the first place.

Intellectual dishonesty? Perhaps. The charitable assumption would be carelessness, of course.

At any rate, Sam attempts to justify himself above, though not to great effect; my statement comes with no attached implication that “noone else would have been capable” of establishing Western society with the moral foundation and legal principles that it has. I’m fully willing to grant the possibility that another philosophical system, apart from , could have furnished a moral society. And indeed, there are other philosophies in the world.

Of course, in looking at different societies that have emerged around the world, I also tend to look on my above statement in the same light as Churchill looked upon democracy: Christianity may not have been the only system that could have given the West its moral and legal foundation, and it may not have been the best system upon which to base that moral and legal foundation; it is better than all the others that have been tried.

We can look at the ic world and observe that in Islam there is not a great lot of evidence that the Muslim religion would have furnished the West with the same concepts of equality and human dignity. Much the same can be said for (the most salient example of which is , which still struggles with the concept of a caste system). The failures of various flavours of animism are made evident in looking at , and even atheism has not had a good go of things when it has been made the official state “religious” stance — the most morally depraved regimes in human history (i.e. Stalin’s Soviet Union and Mao’s China) were very ardently atheistic.

An argument could be made in favour of Buddhism, except that Buddhism doesn’t really proseltyize and so never reached the West during its founding. And even then, those nations which comprise Buddhist majorities have either not done well, or have done well in part thanks to Western intervention.

In other words, when one takes as an example the rest of the world and the societies that have sprung up around every other flavour of philosophical conjecture, one is left with the distinct impression that while it is certainly possible that Christianity is not the only religion which might have furnished the West with its moral foundation, it is rather improbable that another religion, or any kind of secularism, would have done the job.

And like as not, the way history unfolded was that it was Christianity which formed the moral and philosophical foundation of the West, and it is Christianity’s influence which can be detected still in bills of rights and codes of law in most Western nations. That is not to say these nations are inherently “Christian,” nor is it in any way an attempt to imply, again, that Christians are the more moral — it is simply an observation of an historical reality. Christian principles built up most Western nations, and Christian soldiers fought and died to preserve them against outside aggressors (such as the Moors) during those key, formative centuries.

People aren’t inherently moral- psychopaths are a good example of those without “morality written upon their heart. In addition people have “written upon their heart” deeply immoral instinctions like tribalism.

I make two observations about Sam’s argument here.

Firstly, if one wants to refute the idea that not all people are inherently moral, one could do better than basing one’s objection on persons with some manner of disorder. I could, for example, assert that people are inherently possessed of a working pair of lungs; arguing that some people have does not actually disprove the statement, because asthma is a disorder, a deviation from the norm. And I am commenting on the norm. That psychopaths act immorally is regrettable and unfortunate, yes, but it does not mean that the in the normative sense, human beings do not have an innate moral sensibility etched into the fabric of their being. It just means that they are either a) ignoring it, or b) not perceiving it.

Secondly, I observe that if what Sam says is true, then Sam has just undermined the notion that any sort of humanistic morality can be composed; that is, he has argued that the best moral code that secularism could hope to promulgate is a sort of neutral amorality. This would seem to argue against his assertions, and mine, that theists are not the only ones who can be moral.

Now, the remark about is interesting, O Reader, and Sam posits that the instinct towards it is a) immoral and b) also written on the human heart. Tribalism certainly has its bad points, although to be fair it is like any other human instinct: the morality or immorality of it is dependent on what we do with it, as much as is the case with…say…the human sexual instinct.

Tribalism can lead to xenophobia and racism, it is true, just as the human sexual instinct can, if improperly exercised, result in things like rape. However, human beings are social creatures; we tend to fare poorly when we “go it alone.” The tribal instinct bonds us to other members of a “group” (whether of ethnic or other derivation) even when our relationships with other group members are strained.

Perhaps Sam does not believe in free will, and so does not make the connection between instinct and intentionality; I do not know. If, however, he does believe in free will, I am surprised that he has missed this key point. And if he does not believe in free will, then I am surprised that he feels the need to continue to argue the point with me, since the both of us are deterministically locked in to our respective philosophies, and it is thus a waste of oxygen to even engage in a debate about them.

Although I suppose it could be argued, in that case, that he can’t help himself. ;)

You seem to forget that we didn’t have much of a moral progress until after the 17th century. Change was little- serfdom, monarchy and a persons value based on blood were the rule for the day.

Sam is clinging here to a rather antiquated view of history. And no, O Reader, your good Author is not denying that things like kings and peasants did not exist. But Sam’s covert invocation of the concept of the is rather suspect, since for the last 70 years or so most historians have disputed that such an era even existed.

And in plain point of fact, the statement is false: a very concrete moral progress can be observed as one follows the historical evolution of the doctrine of , which is documented back to the very early days of the Christian community in and the Mediterranean area — that same doctrine would not be without an application in daily life. Codes of law and other derivations of moral systems have existed throughout history, and have undergone gradual changes as the moral awareness of human beings has expanded and been tempered.

The “moral capital” that you term didn’t occur due to the Greeks or 2000 years of Christian history. The increase in caring about human rights and civil liberties- not to mention the inherent worth of human beings- had to wait until the 19th century. That is where Western Civilizations moral capital comes from. You can point to philosophers from centuries past, but they had NO EFFECT!

Sam’s assertion, while interesting, would probably come as news to the people who drafted the (Christians, for the most part), as well as to , the British Christian who led the charge to disband slavery back in the 18th century.

Right and wrong aren’t entirely inherent in people. Feral children don’t have it for starters. You are forming observations of reality based on your philosophy, not the other way around.

Much as with Sam’s example of psychopaths, O Reader, feral children can be considered an exception apart from the rule; after all, humanity evolved in conditions not unlike those that feral children subsist in (indeed, early humans may even have had a rougher go of it, at least initially), and yet morality was able to flourish within each tribe (tribes often went to war with each other, of course). And at some point, that morality was able to expand to include other tribes as well (we know this because of the emergence of trade between groups).

in a couple of paragraphs, Sam will give examples of other early civilizations, some of them being “primitive” tribes, who likewise established moral imperatives. That he does not see this as further evidence of the intrinsic, nature of said imperatives is — to your good Author, at least — both tragic and amusing. But then, one is used to atheists abandoning and when the discussion turns to religion.

The reason people don’t practice “love everyone” is the reason the SHakers don’t exist. You are asking why people don’t attempt to live up to an impossible standard and them blaming them for failing. By impossible, I don’t mean people can’t achieve it- I mean it won’t work in the real world. Loving everyone leaves you open to those callus enough to us it against you.

Sam demonstrates his ignorance of history; the Shakers died out because they were one of the few Christian groups that did not believe in proselytism, and also practiced strict celibacy. When, as a group, you’re not out winning new converts and not giving birth to new members, you really can’t be expected to last forever, even if the initial response to your emergence is positive.

I find it hard to believe that Sam was unaware of Shaker doctrine regarding celibacy and conversion, however; it seems more likely that his statement above is a deliberate distortion of the truth in order to make a a point that is, unfortunately, only too easily disposed of.

once observed that “the Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult, and left untried.” I do believe that Sam has given us a most poignant example of this phenomenon.

Sam very correctly bemoans the fact that the world we live in is, for the most part, an uncharitable place, and harsh. What is unfortunate is that Sam’s proposed method of dealing with this (that is, refusing to love everyone — i.e. actively hating enemies) only serves to perpetuate the lack of charity and incredible harshness at work in the world today. In essence, Sam is saying, in one breath, that the world has no love in it, and in the next breath he is arguing that we should go on not loving, for this is the best response to our loveless world.

Do try not to get whiplash, O Reader.

What is truly unfortunate is that the standard being proposed — “love your enemies” — while difficult, is not impossible. Its primary form is forgiveness, and to understand that even those who persecute and hurt us are, nonetheless, human beings with a dignity equal to our own. And we must respect that, even if they do not; to do otherwise is simply to sink to the depths they have let themselves sink to, and to perpetuate hatred.

“Our faith binds us to extend forgiveness to them. And the fact they are impenitent does not give us license to hold on to bitterness toward them. The command is absolute: forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those (everybody, not just the people who have satisfied us emotionally by a serious act of contrition) who trespass against us.

The reasons for this are twofold. First, we aren’t God. But second, because we aren’t God, our insistence on holding on to unforgiveness (which we call “righteous anger”) hurts nobody but ourselves and those around us and, as a general rule simply gives power to the person who hurts us.

Case in point: the various people we all know who imagine that somehow or other, suckling at the breast of fury constitutes “doing something” about priest abuse, or the war, or some other issue that arouses passion. The reality is it does nothing–nothing whatsoever–about getting rid of bad clerics, helping victims, or bringing a single person closer to God or to the communion of saints. The only actual, practical results are that people who refuse to forgive evils committed are filled with bitterness, feel an ever weaker grip on their faith, “encourage” one another in small (but growing) ways to consider the possibility of schism, hatred of their country or the enemy, and nurture an ever deeper cynicism. St. James is right: the anger of man does not bring about the righteousness of God (James 1:20).

The command of Jesus is to extend forgiveness to enemies. It is not to pretend the sin never happened. It is not to pretend the impenitent person is penitent. It is not to be non-confrontational, or bend over and take it, or see no evil. It is not to refuse to take practical action, up to and including jailing or (in a just war) even killing your enemy. But it is to forgive nonetheless. It is to wish their good, to refuse to let cynicism master faith, hope, and charity, to hope for the best while keeping a firm eye on reality.

Some people believe they can play the “I don’t have to forgive until my enemy says “sorry” game”. If we buy that, we have to realize that a) we are directly disobeying Jesus Christ and b) the punishment for that sin is found in the sin itself. For, nine times out of ten, our unforgiveness is going to punish ourselves, not our enemy. We are going to be handing our happiness over — for the rest of our lives, mind you — to people who may not even know we exist, much less care. We are going to sentence ourselves to be chained to misery forever and to be slaves of people long dead. It’s folly. And it’s why Jesus is right. Refusal to extend forgiveness (for “justice’ sake”, as we always tell ourselves) is, I believe, one of the most deadly manifestations of pride in the world. It achieves nothing of what it promises (”Someday that jerk will say he’s sorry and you’ll be vindicated for all the world to see!”) and it ruins not just our life, but typically, the lives of those around us who must suffer our descent into unrequited rage.

Indeed, refusal to forgive trains us for nothing but misery. We think we will find peace when They say they’re sorry. But if we’ve trained ourselves to be bitter and cynical, we will be stuck there no matter what They say (because who can ever believe Them anyway?) And besides, if one of Them says sorry, there are always going to be plenty more who don’t. So we hold on to our bitterness in any event.”

Yes, the idea of loving one’s enemy is difficult — that is why so few people, including Sam, have made an honest go of it. And yet other people have; one recalls the nun who was shot dead in the street a couple of years ago during the riotous protests in many Muslim nations over the s. As she fell dying, her last words were “I forgive, I forgive.” Living the ideal is not impossible, because the ideal is not impossible. But it is difficult and frightening, and many people are — for lack of a better term — cowards.

Sam certainly is. He laments the fact that loving everyone “leaves you open to those callus enough to us it against you” — and he is certainly correct in his analysis of the fact love is related to vulnerability. When we love someone, we must allow ourselves to become vulnerable to that person…and that’s hard enough to do in a relationship with a girlfriend or wife, let alone in relation to nameless people who may or may not be cruel to us, and whom we may or may not have even met.

But equally: so what? So what if it leaves us open? So what if it’s difficult? What are we saying when we observe such things? Fundamentally, we are admitting our own cowardice. We are admitting that we are scared out of our skins at the thought of seeming vulnerable for even one moment. We are admitting that it terrifies us that someone might take advantage of us. Funnily, and this especially applies in our culture of casual and (which is not really at all), we take advantage of others all the time, and think nothing of it…but we are terrified of someone doing it to us.

And really, since this is a conversation between two men, it serves to note that men are particularly succeptible to fear of seeming vulnerable, and fear of being taken advantage of (despite the fact that many men think nothing of taking advantage of women when it suits their desires).

Sam is scared shitless of seeming vulnerable, as are most men. As am I, to my shame, from time to time. And yet it is to being vulnerable that we are called, O Reader, because it is in being vulnerable through our love for others that we can effect change, in our own lives and in the lives of others. And no, that doesn’t mean being a punching bag or doormat for other people (”turn the other cheek” is as much an expression of defiance as it is a call to abandon “eye for an eye” conceptions of morality). But it does mean that whenever someone wrongs us, the first thing we must see is not the wrong, but the fact that the person who wronged us nevertheless possesses an innate human dignity that is inalienable and irrevocable, by us or by any other. And even if they do not treat us with dignity, we must respond with it, because to do otherwise will only perpetuate the injustice — we would, essentially, become the very thing we would decry.

You are also wrong about all these things coming only from Christianity, or being crystalized pagan ideas. The Iriquoi Federation had the idea of individual freedom long before the West did, the Quakers were the first to take the utopian ideas seriously, the Aztecs were big on social mobility, the Mossi practiced Church-State seperation. It also happens that morality does not wither in modern hands. You seem to not know that until recently basic rights like speech, freedom from torture, and voting were not guarenteed. The bill of rights didn’t apply to states until recently.

Of course, O Reader, I can’t speak to the errors of n politicians and the applicability/non-applicability of the bill of rights to individual states. Being a Canadian, I’m used to a government that has tended to adopt a less “regional” view of the appointment of rights — both British Common Law and the Canadian were applied to the country as a whole (although provinces do have a barely-used ability to opt out of specific rights issues).

Likewise, I’m well enough aware that other cultures brought into being many of the same concepts that our own culture values. Certainly, that is to their credit. And yet, the Western notion of individual freedom doesn’t really come to us via any particular Native American tradition. The utopian ideals of the Quakers failed as surely as have the various utopian ideals of Socialists and Communists elsewhere in the world. Our notions of social mobility would seem to owe nothing in particular to Aztec tradition (and, as a bonus, we also did not inherit the Aztec tradition of ritual human sacrifice). Likewise, the predominantly North American concept of separation of church and state owes nothing in particular to the Mossi — it owes everything to the fact that a lot of people didn’t like the close ties between the British government and the Anglican Church, and wanted to practice their Christian faith without fearing state intervention in it.

As to whether morality withers in modern hands, O Reader, that’s up in the air, isn’t it? Yes, we have solidified the right to freedom of speech, and yes we have solidified the right of people to vote (even if a majority of people choose not to exercise that right in many jurisdictions). Torture is an interesting example for Sam to bring up, since even in the United States the debate over torture and the right of the government to engage in it is still up in the air. One also observes, O Reader, that states which have made atheism an explicit policy of the state — such as North Korea and China — regularly engage in very violent and brutal forms of torture. One also observes that in many parts of the world, Christians are at the forefront of the debate on the anti-torture side.

Then you state that Christianity is responsible for countries developing smoothly. Not thinking clearly, are you? Here- I’ll give it a better shot. “The countries that develop smoothly do so because of white people. Exceptions are, of course to be expected”. Here is the funny thing — although blantantly racist, my statement is MORE accurate than yours. The Catholic countries in the world are the poorest and unstable relative to their neighbors. The ones that did well are Western and Northern Europe, the United States and Japan. Of them only one is very religious. It happens to be the one that is the most immoral. Yep — good old U S of A.

Sam’s last statement (about criminality) is a common atheist argument, although it has been demonstrated that it is not a particularly truthful claim. Indeed, overall, those of a secular bent (including those who formally declare their ) are (roughly) three times more likely to commit a crime than those of a theistic bent.

Sam is right, in part, that Catholicism is the religion of some of the poorer nations on Earth. However, if one considers the 50 poorest nations — Afghanistan, Angola, Bangladesh, Benin, Bhutan, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cambodia, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Democratic Republic of Congo, Djibouti, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gambia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Haiti, Kiribati, Laos, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Maldives, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Myanmar, Nepal, Niger, Rwanda, Samoa, São Tomé and Príncipe, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Solomon Islands, Somalia, Sudan, East Timor, Togo, Tuvalu, Uganda, Tanzania, Vanuatu, Yemen, and Zambia — one observes that Christianity, and in particular Catholicism, is not the only religion represented in the list. Islam is also well-represented in the list, for example.

But then, Catholicism and Islam are also the predominant religion in some of the wealthier nations on Earth, as are other flavours of Christianity. In other words, no one religion has a license on poverty, nor necessarily on prosperity. However, one observes that the Western paragidm of scientific advancement — which can be correlated to Western prosperity — is firmly grounded in the concept of the university and related academic institutions, and one further observes that it was the Church which opened the first universities in Europe, and which established the foundations of modern academic tradition therein.

In fact, the best way to find out way a society was able to progress would be to actually examine it. I recomend “Guns, Germs and Steel”- it explains the situation rather well.

But, if you need a short version:

  • US - political stability, natural resources, large amounts of labor
  • - secure, resources, trade
  • - same as Canada
  • - waterways, steel production, early industrialization
  • - Steel, waterways

You get the idea. Japan and Scandanavia are the odd ones out. Claiming that these countries are better because of Christianity is false — they are better morally because they are rich. Wealth buys medical technology, food and enough resources to give to the poor and prevent secretarian infighting. The exception is oil wealth which leads to gold rush like situations.

As it happens, I’ve read Guns, Germs and Steel, actually. It was an interesting book, though I found it somewhat uncompelling.

An aside: I have broken up the text of Sam’s letter into paragraphs, but I have not deleted any portion of the text in Sam’s latest correspondence with me. I mention this, O Reader, simply as a disclaimer prior to noting that nowhere in the above listed nations do I see mention of Scandinavia (Germany is not a Scandinavian nation). Nor do I see mention of Japan. Sam gives us no data about these nations, which is a curious slip on his part given that both nations form the core of his attempt at yet another rebuttal in the paragraph that follows the list.

Still, we can pick apart Sam’s assertions in spite of the fact that he has neglected to include the two regions on the list.

Scandinavia, comprising , , and (and sometimes considered to also include and ), emerged during a period of Christianization almost a millenium ago, and the politics of the region were strongly influenced by the various tidal shifts in European Christendom that followed (such as the Reformation). Most Scandinavian nations have a national church of some kind (i.e. the Church of Norway, a derivative of Lutheranism). One also observes that the flags of pretty much every Scandinavian nation incorporate a cross in their design — representative of Christianity.

And even though Scandinavian nations in the modern era are not as Christian as they once were, this fact does not refute the idea that they are still banking on, and living on, reserves of Christian moral capital (in that their laws and views of rights own much to the Christian philosophy that is a part of their heritage).

Japan is an interesting example, although one observes that Japan’s prosperity in the modern era is as much due to the reconstruction efforts of the United States as it is to the technical ingenuity of the Japanese people themselves, which is also true of Japan’s style of government (many aspects of which are borrowed from Western political traditions). Even in this tiny, not particularly religious island, the subtle suggestion of Christian moral capital can be discerned.

Of course, O Reader, the above is not the really interesting concept. What is the really interesting concept, as far as Sam’s assertions go, is the statement made that Japan and Scandinavia “are better morally” — presumably, Sam is meaning to say that these two regions are morally superior to any of the five nations which he listed. Which, of course, begs the question: are they morally superior?

Japan has a notoriously high rate of suicide, and the sexual…ah…oddities that nation has come up with in recent decades are well known. Indeed, Japan is noted for a high rate of sexual repression among its population, and pornographic content is much more easily come by — and available in a much wider variety of forms — than in North America. Also, the status of women in Japanese society is still somewhat…suspect.

Meanwhile, many Scandinavian nations have legalized prostitution (there have even been cases that have percolated into the media of women being told that they will be denied unemployment benefits because the “job” of “prostitute” is available to them; whether all of these are from Scandinavian nations is not data I have on hand), and in a few places incest is taking the first tentative steps toward “normalization.” Incest! In Norway, about a quarter of all convicted criminals simply do not remember to show up for their sentence, which itself is not illegal.

And in both Scandinavia and Japan, the birthrate has fallen to such a low point that only massive immigration can sustain the populations of those countries at their current level. Since Japan doesn’t allow all that much immigration, they are headed for a demographic collapse that they are currently scrambling to offset with research into robotics (so that robots can take over aspects of life that traditionally would have been filled by children and grandchildren). In most Scandinavian countries, the future holds the promise of demographic inversion, in which Scandinavians will become a minority in their own countries.

At minimum, a nation needs a birthrate of about 2.1 live births per woman in order to sustain its population at a constant level. If the country wants to grow, even grow economically, the birthrate obviously has to be higher in order to provide a steady increase in the population proportionate to the increased demand for workers in a more vibrant economy. The new generation also enables former generations to “age out” and ease in to the social programs for which so many Scandinavian nations are known; these social programs obviously require a large tax base in order to provide funding for them.

Of course, in the wake of secularism sweeping in to the nations, the priorities of individuals have shifted somewhat, and more and more Scandinavian women are electing to avoid having kids altogether, or are limiting themselves to one child had some time after the age of thirty. Obviously, it’s their right to do so, but those choices are causing a major demographic problem for the nations in which they live — in essence, these nations are imperiled by the collective selfishness of their populations. That’s not particularly moral, and the effects could be dire.

Most of the immigration to Scandinavian countries is from Muslim nations, incidentally, and in most cases Muslims are the fastest-growing demographic group in those countries. How ironic, then: the secularism of the Scandinavians is but a temporary thing between their Christian origins and their Islamic future.

Or more simply: you are wrong.

The Reader may disagree, but I do not feel that Sam has adequately demonstrated that I am incorrect. Moreover, he himself has been caught in several rather obvious errors.

Christian ideals do not inherently lead to the principle of individual worth.

And absent at least some concept of telos, O Reader, the ideal of individual worth is meaningless. According to purely secular categories, there is no innate dignity to a human being, and no inherent equality between human beings in general.

Facism is an excellent example — and only managed to seize control in Catholic countries.

Sam is fudging history, O Reader.

Fascism is a bit of a nebulous term, and could be applied to several different governments. Imperial Japan circa 1940 could be called a fascist state, for example, and Japan was not a particularly Catholic country at all. Germany, where Naziism (regarded as the ultimate example of fascism) emerged, was more a Lutheran state than anything else. Italy was a Catholic state, but Mussolini was an atheist who converted to Catholicism only in the final months of his life, well after being driven out of power.

It is a case of hindsight — of course they went towards individual freedom — look at all the strands for it. The same case could be made for totalitarianism — does not God rule over mankind unquestioned?

One thing that puzzles me is how atheists pronounce so confidently on the falsehood and delusional nature of religion, and yet utterly fail to demonstrate any comprehension of what the religion teaches. It often seems as if the whole philosophical conjecture we call “atheism” is pre-supposed on nothing more than a series of straw man arguments and deliberate distortions of readily-available facts.

Certainly, “rules” over all…but to say that God is unquestioned even by His own is stunningly inaccurate. God is above all creation, and is the final arbiter and judge of right and wrong. But how each human being lives out the call to morality is not dictated by God; it is left up to each of us to decide. How each human being responds to the commandments of God and Christ is not dictated by God, nor do we follow those stipulations as though mere puppets on strings; again, we are left to choose whether or not we will abide by each tenet.

It seems at first a contradiction: God is at once transcendent and holds all authority, and yet is completely “hands off” where human conduct and morality is concerned. He is at once personal and present, and yet gives us space to work in, even if the works we do are immoral. And yet, that is the nature of God.

But then, as has been speculated, perhaps Sam does not believe in free will. Certainly, as an atheist, he would be consistent in his beliefs if he did not, in fact, believe in the idea that human beings can make their own choices; after all, all we are (in the atheist view) is a meaty outer shell encapsulating a bundle of opportunistic, deterministic chemical reactions that we have no control over.

Why should a human ruler not be given the same power?

Humans are not God, ergo humans should not wield similar power. God is incorruptible; humans are highly corruptible, ergo humans should not wield similar power. God does not sin; humans are tempted and do sin, ergo humans should not wield similar power. God is perfect; humans are imperfect, ergo humans should not wield similar power.

Don’t lives only have meaning in the service of God?

Note the tragic blindness of the secular, O Reader — the inability to understand that all human life has intrinsic meaning, regardless of the actions of the person doing the living.

To answer Sam directly, livs do not have meaning only in the service of God — lives find their ultimate meaning in carrying out God’s will, which is a very different concept indeed. All lives — whether the person doing the living believes in God or not — have an intrinsic, inalienable value that flows to them from God, for all human beings are a part of God’s creation, and are loved by Him.

Why not do the same for the state?

The state is not God, ergo the state should not wield similar power. God is incorruptible; the state is highly corruptible, ergo the state should not wield similar power. God does not sin; the state is tempted and does sin, ergo the state should not wield similar power. God is perfect; the state is imperfect, ergo the state should not wield similar power.

As always faith has no true shape — only what people put in. And garbage in, garbage out…

Perhaps it is fitting to end this missive with the , which demonstrates rather easily that faith does have a very definite, concrete shape to it:

We believe (I believe) in one God, the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, and of all things visible and invisible. And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son of God, and born of the Father before all ages. (God of God) light of light, true God of true God. Begotten not made, consubstantial to the Father, by whom all things were made. Who for us men and for our salvation came down from heaven. And was incarnate of the Holy Ghost and of the Virgin Mary and was made man; was crucified also for us under Pontius Pilate, suffered and was buried; and the third day rose again according to the Scriptures. And ascended into heaven, sits at the right hand of the Father, and shall come again with glory to judge the living and the dead, of whose Kingdom there shall be no end. And (I believe) in the Holy Ghost, the Lord and Giver of life, who proceeds from the Father (and the Son), who together with the Father and the Son is to be adored and glorified, who spoke by the Prophets. And one holy, catholic, and apostolic Church. We confess (I confess) one baptism for the remission of sins. And we look for (I look for) the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come. Amen.

That is a very solid definition of the “shape” of the Christian , and since the fourth century this creed has been a decisive and exceptionally handy “tool” in analyzing whether a particular belief, denomination, or theological theory is Christian or not. And it continues to be useful in that regard, which is why Christians everywhere continue to profess it.

As for the notion of “garbage in, garbage out,” Sam is describing many things with that closing remark — and even his own atheism is not immune.

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Get married by phone, divorced by text message

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Apparently, the glorious religion of allows for s to be conducted via telephone. That’s right, folks — a guy in can get married to a girl in in a five minute long-distance call, and after the exchange of a dowry (it’s easier than ever to send money over the Internet!) the marriage is legal — at least according to Islamic law.

Long-distance marriages can be dialled up under law and then used to sponsor loved ones into , Muslim leaders say.

Two Muslim leaders have told the are permissible under Islamic law and require two witnesses and imams here and abroad to conduct the vows, which may have the bride in Pakistan and the groom in Toronto.

Once completed, a marriage certificate is obtained abroad legitimately in Muslim countries and can be used by the groom for sponsoring his new wife to Canada, one imam said.

, of the , said he conducted a telephone marriage between a student in Toronto and his about-to-be wife in .

“He was a university student and couldn’t leave,” Ali said. “It is a civil contract and the vows were conducted over the phone.”

A marriage certificate was obtained and the student was able to sponsor his wife to Canada, he said.

The vow takes less than five minutes and a is exchanged to seal the ceremony, Ali said.

‘NOT WIDESPREAD’

“These telephone marriages are taking place but are not widespread,” said the former lawyer for the attorney-general’s office. “The parties must know each other and have developed a relationship. Most of the times the couple have been introduced by family members,” Ali said. “In many cases one person may not be able to leave the country.”

Imam , of Ja’ffari Islamic Centre, in Toronto, said: “These marriages are perfectly acceptable under sharia law … the marriage certificate is taken to the Canadian embassy where it is recognized.”

Well, that’s nice, Mr. Rizvi. But sharia is not the law in Canada, and there is no reason why these “telephone marriages” should be viewed as legal in Canada, even if they are perfectly legal in other countries or barbaric legal systems that hail from the 7th century.

Perhaps I’m just being old-fashioned, but I’m of the opinion that if you can’t either be man enough to get married whilst in the same room as your wife-to-be, you shouldn’t get married. If, for whatever reason, you can’t afford to fly out to where your wife-to-be is situated so as to be wed to her, then you shouldn’t go ahead with it. I mean, if you don’t even have the money to fly to…India or Pakistan or wherever…then how the heck can you afford to support your wife and family in the first place?

Oh, right…claim additional welfare benefits, I forgot. This is blatant parasitism — nothing more. And Canada shouldn’t allow it. Oh, that’s not to say that Canada has any ability to dictate what sharia law does and does not stipulate (pity — we could at least overhaul the inability of Muslim law to differentiate between hair and breasts*), but Canada does have every right to dictate whether or not it accepts as valid the stipulations of sharia law. I think the proper response to these telephone marriages is a simple one as well: “you can live with your new wife, sir, in the country which the marriage certificate was issued in. Or you can live in Canada and spare us the farce.”

Still, there’s one advantage men who get married this way have: they can get divorced by text message if they get bored with the phone wife. I wonder…does sharia permit a Muslim man to marry his limit of four wives all by phone? Or does he only get one?

(In Soviet Russia, hat tips you: FreeMarkSteyn)

Update: Welcome, Steynians!

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* I bet that gets really confusing when it comes time to feed babies…

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Hindu daily mag discusses honour killings

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Interesting observations:

Health promoter echoes this observation. The Kashyaps migrated from to 18 years ago and have a teenaged daughter. “We have to accept that our children, who are either born or raised here, will be influenced by the society they are living in. The key is to be totally clued into what is happening in their lives. We have to know them, their friends, what their interests are and talk to them about everything under the sun. It has to be an open relationship,” she says.

While there is a consensus on the need for open communication, there is no formula on how to bridge the gap between the culture that parents have grown up in and the one in which they are raising their children. “The main problem,” says , 18, who studies at , “is that our parents continue to live mentally in the country of their origin, whether it is India, , or . They expect us to behave and dress like our cousins back home. But they do not understand that things have changed there, too, and our cousins are not as traditional as our parents think.”

She also highlights the contradiction that marks the behaviour of many first-generation immigrants. Most want their children to excel in academics and integrate/assimilate into the society but are not willing to accept the western influences.

ANGER AND DISAPPOINTMENT

, 22, recalls the anger and disappointment she felt at being unable to attend birthday parties or go for sleepovers. She fumes at the preferential treatment accorded to boys over girls, citing various examples of gender-based division of labour at home and also a stricter conduct code for girls.

“I think our parents carry their fears from back home and that is what dictates their behaviour, especially towards girls,” says Ashima.

Example:

The task of balancing the East and West is understandably an onerous one. , IT professional and a father of two girls, says his challenge is to ensure that “our (Indian) culture is retained at least to some extent without conflicting with our life here”.

His comment is representative of many first-generation immigrants: “As an Indian living in Canada, I still have my values and need to fulfil my duty and bring up my daughters, get them married to an Indian boy within our culture. I don’t want my daughters to deviate and go out of our culture.” He wants his daughters to integrate well into the Canadian society and “behave like them” when they are in Canadian spaces - but within “Indian cultural limits”. He believes that is possible because the country offers an opportunity for people to occupy different spaces.

“It all boils down to what kind of person you are and I believe that children can be moulded. But communication channels have to be open. Even if it is something against my own beliefs I should be willing to listen and reason with them.” This position may be fraught with contradictions but is the predominant one.

Unfortunately, this is one of those “you can’t have it both ways” situations. Either the daughters of parents of and Indian immigrants will not deviate from the culture of their parents’ homeland, or they will integrate well into Canadian society. Oh, I’ll grant that there is plenty of room for crossover…but there are also plenty of mutually exclusive ideals that exist in one, and not in the other, as well. The issue of whom to marry is a particularly good one — above, Mr. Swaminathan is quite open about the fact that he insists that his daughters not marry outside their culture, that they settle down with “an Indian boy.” You can’t impress that belief upon someone and still expect them to “behave like” Canadians, because that’s just not how Canadians look at the issue of .

(It’s probably true that a majority of people marry someone who is culturally and racially similar to them, but as a general rule the “Canadian way” is that you marry the person you fall in love with and feel called to be wedded to, regardless of what country they or their parents came from, and regardless of what particular shade their skin might have.)

The issue of how to dress is similar, with approximately the same considerations and ramifications. But the really important consideration in all of this is what happens when, in keeping with the values of Canadian society, a child — especially a daughter — decides to “go Canuck” and start dressing in jeans and t-shirts (and not in dresses and hijab), exercising her free right to attire herself. What is the reaction of the parents then? If the parents are still living “mentally in the country of their origin,” to what extent will they object when one of their kids does just that? To what extent will they respect Canadian values? To what extent will they attempt to impose the values of the “old country?” Will violence or murder be the result of that? Which culture takes precedence — the one left behind, or the one now all around? If the former, why was that culture left behind in the first place?

We should be asking these sorts of pointed questions of potential immigrants.

(In Soviet Russia, hat tips you: Kathy Shaidle)

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Your daily “Something is Wrong in the World of Islam” post

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One tends to find so many examples on a daily basis that it is becoming prudent to just lump them all together in one glorious catch-all posting. Or, at least, it saves me some time, which I like.

First, from : “Asian youths” throw rocks at Memorial participants. This is the British press, so we need to translate: “Asian youths” overwhelmingly means teenaged-to-twentysomething young men of Arabic or Indian sub-continental extract. Oh, I’ll grant that it could mean, you know, what we usually tend to think the term “Asian” means. But the anti-Jewish angle is significant: how many incidences of violence against have been recorded where persons of Chinese, Japanese, or Korean extract are the perpetrators?

Here’s the money quote from the article, though:

The tour was organised by leading local historian , who was later asked by police if he wanted officers to accompany him in future, but declined.

“That would be admitting there are ‘no go’ areas,” he said.

(…)

“I looked over the fence and saw four Asian youths throwing stones. They were laughing, then ran away.”

Just some aspiring young jihadists out having a laugh and throwing some rocks at the Jooooooos. Another typical day in (istan). Interestingly, the issue of “no-go areas” (i.e. areas where Muslims have effectively taken over and rendered it unsafe for non-Muslims to travel through or past) rears its head again, although in typical Brit PC fashion, the man who organized the tour to the Holocaust memorial is too afraid of being labeled a racist* to acknowledge the existence of a very real problem.

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Which brings us to item #2.

Apparently, it is also becoming increasingly common in Britain for teachers, police, and others in positions of authority to refuse to report s as crimes, for fear of being branded as racist by Muslim spokesmen or hauled in front of a human rights tribunal (yes, has them too).

The authors said families withdraw teenage daughters from school because they fear men will be unwilling to marry them if they are educated.

Many men brought up here want “freshies” - women “uncontaminated” by ideas of independence.

of the Roshni Asian Women’s Aid, a refuge in , said: “We’ve had women who have disappeared from the education system. We don’t know if they’ve been taken abroad or killed or anything.”

Activists say there are particular problems with taxi firms who return women fleeing from abuse.

It’s those damnable cab drivers again!

I wonder if there wouldn’t be a noticeable drop in the number of honour killings in Western nations if a comprehensive ban prohibiting persons of ern, n, or n sub-continental extract from driving cabs?

More seriously, though, the above is illustrative of just why more and more people are making noise about the human rights commissions (s). We are fighting for true freedom of expression in , a right that we, as Canadian citizens, are supposedly ensured by the anyhow, but which increasingly seems to be under threat from our self-styled “betters”, in particular.

And a part of that freedom of expression is the freedom to call a spade a spade. If we let the HRCs’ powers take us to the point where police can be hauled before them for the “crime” of being “anti-Muslim” simply because they made the attempt to investigate a possible honour killing, and if we let the HRCs’ powers take us to the point where teachers can be hauled before them for the “crime” of being “anti-Muslim” simply because they made the attempt to intervene in a case of obvious abuse of a female Muslim child by her male relatives in accordance with law, then we — all of us: every Canadian citizen who values his or her rights and freedoms, and who kind of likes what Canada is — have lost. We will, at that point, have turned over the keys to the country to the barbarians and the savages.

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Item #3 is yet another suicide bombing, this time in the i town of . One person was killed, and another ten injured. One suicide bomber managed to self-detonate, while the other was shot dead by an Israeli policeman.

The terrorist organization is claiming responsibility, but Kateland wonders how this smaller group came up with the resources to carry out the attack. She wonders if perhaps is employing the use of fronts.

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Item #4 is another page from our “if you can’t obey the rules, don’t work there” file: Muslim women workers in Britain’s health system are committing hygeine violations in order to conform with Sharia law’s unreasonable standards of modesty.

female workers are ignoring Britain’s Department of Health rules requiring medics to be “bare below the elbow” because they consider showing any skin — outside the hands and face — immodest.

The guidelines were put into place to stave off the spread of infectious killer bugs like and , which have been implicated in the deaths of hundreds of hospital patients, according to the paper.

Hygiene experts said the standard should hold for all workers — even if it goes against their .

“I don’t think it would be right to make an exemption for people on any grounds. The policy of bare below the elbows has to be applied universally,” Dr. , professor of microbiology at told the Telegraph.

Some fear the enforcing the rules will open the door to lawsuits charging discrimination against female Muslims working within the medical professions.

The , for one, has issued a statement that “no practicing Muslim woman — doctor, medical student, nurse or patient — should be forced to bare her arms below the elbow,” according to paper.

I’ve worked in kitchens before, and the hygeine standards at those restaurants were pretty strict. I wasn’t married at the time, but had I been, not even the fact that it was my wedding ring would have prevented my managed from objecting to the gold band on my left ring finger. Rings are actually very unsafe things to wear in a kitchen, because they trap all sorts of bacteria. And the danger isn’t just to the customers, but to the cook himself even after he goes home; nothing says “bad Tuesday” like accidentally contaminating one’s breakfast with bacteria from the five chicken pizzas one made during the course of Monday evening.

I love what my ring stands for, and wear it to signify the highest devotion possible to my wife. If I felt that it would be improper of me to take the ring off in order to work in a kitchen, I would turn in my apron and find a different job. Either that, or I would put the ring on a chain and keep it safely tucked inside my shirt while I worked.

The point is, I’d either meet the requirements of my employer, or I’d leave the job behind.

This is not me being hard on modesty; I’m a huge fan of modesty. But this is me being hard on unreasonable standards of modesty that know no flexibility even when the lives of others are potentially at stake. Showing the forearms is not unreasonable by any measure — they’re just forearms, after all — and if the choice has to be made between rolling up one’s sleeves and potentially giving a patient a septic infection, then the choice should be obvious: roll up your damn sleeves. If for some reason you feel you are unable to do this, you are welcome to seek employment in a career that does not require your sleeves to be rolled up.

Just don’t expect that the entire British medical system should roll over for you, and don’t expect that you’ll be given the “right” to potentially endanger the health and lives of patients by becoming a transmission vector for superbugs simply because it is more important, in your mind, that Britain adapt to your barbaric code of law.

* * *

Item #5: Husbands in the U.K. with multiple wives will be allowed to claim additional welfare benefits for said additional brides. Even though is illegal in Britain, as long as the wedding took place in a nation that treats as legal the additional benefits can and will be granted.

* * *

Item #6: speaking of suicide bombers, did you hear the one about the ic terrorists who strapped bombs to women with and then remote-detonated them when people stopped to render aid?

Yes, O Reader, that is the sort of vermin that the West is up against. Just in case there wasn’t enough evidence already pointing out what flavour of evil these people are.

And proving that both stupidity and slavish devotion to are alive and well among the progressive left:

For the record, assuming it’s true, I think it’s just horrible that whoever was behind this latest disaster used Down’s women to perpetrate the bombings but I don’t see it as a sign of desperation. I see it as a sign of adaptation and a brilliant one at that.

The above sort of thinking is another example of why I continue to hammer on atheism as being the gravest threat to human liberty that humanity has ever concocted for itself. Not only is it just disgustingly wrong, but it actually serves to justify, in a weird sort of way, the actions of the jihadists. Oh, I know that he “think[s] it’s just horrible” that these women were used in this way, but all that pretending at disgust fades by the last sentence, which openly praises the ingenuity and adaptation that the terrorists displayed in employing this latest murder tactic. How brilliant of them!

* * *

Item #7: that British bishop who warned about “” (see link, above) is now under police protection, in fear of his life. How did Britain’s Muslims respond to the claim that Muslim immigrants had created several communities into which it was unsafe for to wander?

Death threats.

Gee, thanks, guys…don’t try and do anything now to dispel the public’s already negative image of you!

As I’ve said before, and will say again now, I really want to have a higher opinion of Islam and of the people who practice that religion. The problem, for me at any rate, is that there are too many examples — from too many different places around the world! — that make it so very difficult to look at Islam, and at the Islamic world, with anything but disgust.

* * *

* are we still caught up in this idiocy? It is not, by definition, racist to criticize Islam, because Islam is not a race!

(In Soviet Russia, hat tips you: Kathy Shaidle)

Update: Welcome, Steynians!

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Egypt calls for bandwidth rationing

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In the wake of that undersea cable failing (it now appears that two cables were accidentally severed!), has called on its -using citizens to curb the amount of time they spend online, and what content they access when browsing.

Egypt’s Internet situation is in dire straits after two undersea cables in the were accidentally severed yesterday, cutting off much of the country’s access to the outside world. 70 percent of the nation’s Internet has been disconnected, according to Egypt’s Ministry of Communications and Information Technology, with phone calls to and the US also being disrupted. As a result, the ministry has launched an emergency task force to deal with the situation and has asked the general public to avoid downloading more bandwidth-intensive items for now in order to allow businesses priority.

It’s not just Egypt, either; other countries throughout the also suffered outages, with some being completely disconnected. And both and Egypt, which run high-volume call centers, have taken a major hit in communications because of the disruption.

“Two of our cables are affected; everyone will go onto a third cable,” ministry spokesperson told the AFP. “But that will not be enough . [...] People should know how to use the Internet because people who download music and films are going to affect businesses who have more important things to do.

You know, in 2006, Egypt was the #3 hotspot in the world from which Google-searches for the keyword “sex” originated. One wonders if this sort of failure would be sufficient to create a noticeable dip in the revenues of the industry?

Probably not, unfortunately, but one can always hope.

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Single point of failure

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Tens of millions of users across the and have been left without access to the web after a technical fault cut millions of connections.

The outage, which is being blamed on a fault in a single undersea cable, has severely restricted internet access in countries including , and and left huge numbers of people struggling to get online.

Observers say that the digital blackout first struck yesterday morning, with the Egypt’s communications ministry suggesting it was caused by a cut in a major internet pipeline linking it to Europe.

The line in question runs under , from in to in Egypt. It is not clear what caused the break. The cable is one of only a handful of connections, and part of the world’s longest undersea cable, 24,500 miles long, running from , through the Middle East and India before terminating in and Japan.

Oops.

On the plus side, though, I’m willing to bet that incidences of attacks launched against anti-jihad websites went down a point or two.

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Twenty years ago