But he doesn’t want all the pesky baggage.… Read the rest
All entries by this author
Peshawar: Woman Murdered for Singing
May 3rd, 2009 | Filed by Ophelia BensonAyman Udas’s family believed it was sinful for a woman to perform on television. … Read the rest
During that time we didn’t hear a single protest
May 3rd, 2009 11:06 am | By Ophelia BensonA senior Shia cleric in Kabul stands up for democracy.
Supporters of the Afghan law which critics claim legalises marital rape and restricts the rights of women say they will oppose amending the legislation significantly. “A change in this law will be illegal and against democracy,” said Sayed Abdul Latif Sajadi, a senior Shia cleric in Kabul who played a leading role in drawing up the legislation and pushing it through parliament. “Any change will be against the wishes of four million people.”
Men. Against the wishes of four million men. He means any change will be against the wishes of four million men – women of course were not asked and not given any way to voice an … Read the rest
Shades of gray
May 2nd, 2009 4:49 pm | By Ophelia BensonSimon Blackburn has fun teasing John Gray. John Gray strikes me as a great dogmatic repetitive bore, so I enjoy seeing people teasing him.
The habit of abstraction enables Gray to position himself as a lone voice against a world of fantastical optimists: “All prevailing philosophies embody the fiction that human life can be changed at will,” he tells us sweepingly, naming no names. What? I suppose many philosophers do think that if you need to have a drink, you can change your life, a little, by doing so. Other things can be harder to do. But I challenge Gray to name a single philosopher who thinks we can change everything about our lives at will.
Oh, naming people … Read the rest
No innocent conduct will be captured
May 2nd, 2009 4:30 pm | By Ophelia BensonDepartment of Strange Ideas.
[W]hile the Constitution requires an offence of blasphemy it also, like the position in many other countries, expressly protects freedom of expression. …No innocent conduct will be captured. The revised provision in regard to blasphemy requires at least three elements to be present: that the material be grossly abusive or insulting in matters held sacred by a religion; that it must actually cause outrage among a substantial number of adherents of that religion; and, crucially, that there be an intent to cause such outrage.
Okay, that does clear things up: it will be a crime to produce ‘material’ that is grossly abusive or insulting in matters held sacred by a religion, if it causes outrage … Read the rest
No One Can Escape Religion, No One At All
May 2nd, 2009 | Filed by Ophelia Benson‘While science, logic and reason are on the side of the nonreligious, the cold, hard facts are just so cold and hard.’… Read the rest
EU Condemns Execution of Darabi
May 2nd, 2009 | Filed by Ophelia BensonInternational agreements prohibit death sentences being carried out on minors. … Read the rest
Amnesty International Outraged at Execution
May 2nd, 2009 | Filed by Ophelia BensonDarabi was executed despite having been given a two-month stay of execution by the Head of the Judiciary on 19 April. … Read the rest
Iran Has Executed Delara Derabi
May 2nd, 2009 | Filed by Ophelia BensonEarly Friday morning Darabi made a desperate phone call to her parents, saying she could see the hangman’s noose. … Read the rest
How Pleasant to Know Mr Ham
May 2nd, 2009 | By Ed TurnerWhen I saw Bill Maher’s highly entertaining and hard-hitting documentary on world religion, Religulous,
I was interested that one of his interviewees was Ken Ham, the head of Answers In Genesis
(AIG) (not to be confused with the now-infamous insurance company), which is responsible for the Creation Museum in northern Kentucky, USA.
Ham was given only a brief slot in the film, but I was fortunate (if that’s the right word) to have a much longer encounter with him just over one year ago at Liverpool University. I went to see give a talk called “Origins and Culture”. At the time I posted a bile-laden write-up on Liverpool Humanist Group’s website. After seeing Maher’s film, I thought the … Read the rest
Rosary-chanters Shut Down Euthanasia Debate
May 1st, 2009 | Filed by Ophelia BensonProtesters shouted that euthanasia was state-sponsored murder; Gardai were called, did not intervene.… Read the rest
Irish Constitution Requires Offence of Blasphemy
May 1st, 2009 | Filed by Ophelia BensonThe blasphemy has to be intentional. So that’s all right then.… Read the rest
Melanie Phillips Says Judge Jones was Wrong
May 1st, 2009 | Filed by Ophelia BensonThe decision in Kitzmiller v Dover Area School District was wrong; ID ‘comes out of science.’… Read the rest
Working in a Sexist Environment
May 1st, 2009 | Filed by Ophelia BensonCalling sexism a joke or ‘edgy’ or a way to stick it to the suits is not good enough.… Read the rest
Pitcairn Island’s History of Sex Abuse of Girls
May 1st, 2009 | Filed by Ophelia Benson‘It’s ingrained in the mentality of the men in Pitcairn that this is an OK thing to do.’… Read the rest
Edging slowly forward
May 1st, 2009 11:47 am | By Ophelia BensonG did a comment on ‘The downside of torture’ that needs to be out here in the daylight, so here it is. OB.
What is perhaps most appalling about this is that prosecuting torture has become nothing more than another tawdry political game. Barack Obama is, among other things, not just a Harvard Law graduate but an actual Constitutional scholar. He knows what an appalling clusterfuck the Bush Administration made of the Constitution with its denial of habeas corpus, secret prisons, torture, and all that. He knows what the morally and legally required path must be. But he is rather scrupulously avoiding that path.
Worse, Obama’s administration has in almost all terrorism-related court cases pushed the absurdly counter-Constitutional secrecy policies … Read the rest
The downside of torture
May 1st, 2009 11:39 am | By Ophelia BensonPhilippe Sands said on ‘Fresh Air’ that Judge Garzon attempted to prosecute a couple of people that the Bush administration had tortured and that the case collapsed because the evidence, being the product of torture, was not admissable in court. Sands said this is one reason Garzon has started a criminal investigation of some of Bush’s team: they (allegedly) not only violated international law, they also made it impossible for other courts to prosecute the objects of the torture.
He also discussed the irony of the fact that Chuckie Taylor was convicted in a US court for crimes he committed in Liberia; that was possible because the crimes he committed were violations of international law. States that have signed such … Read the rest
Dear mummy Nature
Apr 30th, 2009 12:18 pm | By Ophelia BensonI saw a horrible thing on tv last night, in a PBS show about the Kalahari. There are flamingos that nest in in an area of the Kalahari which slowly dries out during the nesting season, with the result that the chicks have to walk a hundred miles through the desert to get to water. They have to walk. A hundred miles. Through a desert. It’s as ridiculous as it sounds. They’re small, they’re feeble, it’s burning hot. It takes weeks.
250,000 leave; some years not one chick makes it.
Good planning! Wouldn’t you think the adults would manage to think ‘gee, maybe we should find a better place to nest’? Or that, failing to think that, they would … Read the rest
Tough Enough?
Apr 30th, 2009 | Filed by Ophelia BensonThe claim of courage in the commission of deeply immoral acts is to be deplored and not admired.… Read the rest
Ben Goldacre on Swine Flu and Hype
Apr 30th, 2009 | Filed by Ophelia BensonMedia pundit-seekers wanted him to say it’s all hype. But it isn’t. But they wanted him to say it is.… Read the rest