Friday, April 22, 2005

Branch-stacking pays off in the Vatican

I've only a few moments to spare, so here are my two cents on Benedict XVI . . .

Apparently the cornerstone the new papacy will be a war on secularism and the "dictatorship of relativism." We can safely predict, then, that under Herr Ratzinger the Church will sink further into the mire of Culture War rhetoric. We're also told to expect a few surprises from Pope Benedict, who wants to revitalise the faith in Catholicism's "dark Continent." My prediction: He will fail miserably. And that will come as a surprise only to his hard-Right cheerleaders.

Ratzinger just doesn't understand secularism. Nor does he understand relativism, if he's going to bandy about oxymorons such as "dictatorship of relativism," and slap non-relativist ideologies like individualism, Marxism and liberalism with the "relativist" tag. Secularism and relativism are vital to religious freedom and religious harmony, and Europeans know this. Most Catholics know this. If the Pope wishes to arrest the downsizing of his Church in the West--a phenomenon which accelerated on his watch as Prefect of the Inquisition-cum-Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith--he should appreciate this too. Read more!

Thursday, April 14, 2005

It's all in the code

Today I came across a 2003 Ctheory article by Peter Lurie, Why the Web Will Win the Culture Wars for the Left, in which he argues that the deconstructionist nature of the Web favours the Left, regardless of how much conservative content the Web contains. Given that the Left has itself been for many years divided over deconstruction (and postmodernism), this is a most ironic observation. Read more!

Tuesday, April 12, 2005

Tutorials in "terrism" II

A self-described conservative columnist in the Tallahassee Democrat takes aim at Florida's "Academic Rights" Bill. Read more!

Monday, April 11, 2005

Tutorials in "terrism"

In On Line Opinion University of Sydney historian Dirk Moses launches a withering attack on Keith Windschuttle's fact-disadvantaged "Tutorials in Terrorism,"which appeared in the Oz on March 16th (but which has since turned up in some of the unlikeliest places).

Windschuttle has been invited to respond, but if you get bored waiting for his reply, why not while a few hours away playing Spec Ops: War on Terrorism--an online game I like to think of as "Mensa for conservatives." Read more!

Saturday, April 09, 2005

The Tao of Blogging

From DailyKos:

As a public service to the mainstream media, I'd like to present some handy talking points, clever similes, and general whatnots suitable for inclusion in your mainstream media pieces about the astounding and wondrous wondrousness of blogs. Here we go:

  • Blogs are as numerous as pebbles on a beach. If a blogger is particularly sharp, their blog might embed itself into your consciousness. If a pebble is particularly sharp, it might embed itself into the sole of your foot. Then magic dolphins will come to save you, and you will learn lessons about stuff.

  • Blogs are like racehorses. Some are fast, some aren't. Some are heavily drugged. The best ones know instinctively to always turn left.

  • Some prostitutes pretend to be journalists. Some journalists pretend to be prostitutes. Some bloggers laugh their asses off watching the general media trying to figure out the difference.

  • Having a blog without comments is like operating a chainsaw while wearing proper eye protection. Sure, you can do it, but it makes you a sissy.
  • A blog is like a friendly neighborhood bar where everybody knows your name. Except they only know your fake name, not your real one. So it's like a singles bar. Except nobody knows what sex you are, unless you tell them. And you might be lying. Then Cliff gets drunk and kills a guy.
  • The original political blogger was Atrios. Or maybe it was someone else, who cares. Atrios was later revealed to be Sidney Blumenthal.

  • Political blogging requires only two things: finding interesting stories, and having opinions about those stories. If your name is Glenn Reynolds, however, you can frequently outsource both parts.

  • If Mark Twain was living today, he'd be a blogger. If Henry David Thoreau was living today, he'd be a blogger. If Jesus was living today, he'd have the best Internet connectivity of anyone, and his site wouldn't have any popup ads for mortgage refinancing.

  • In the future, journalists will be replaced by bloggers. Bloggers will be replaced by journalists. Fox News will be replaced by a 200-foot-high granite monument of George Bush holding the Ten Commandments, which will be rocket-propelled and capable of firing 5000 armor-piercing rounds per minute. Sean Hannity will drive it around America drunkenly crushing all that oppose him.

  • My name is David Brooks, and I am fascinated with my newly discovered slice of America in which people do their own laundry. Do blue-state bloggers know this is happening?

  • The primary difference between liberal and conservative blogs can be summed up in one word. Unfortunately, only liberals know how to spell it.

  • Some blogs call themselves political. Some blogs call themselves personal. The sum of two squares is called Crossfire.

  • Some blogs are powerful, media-shaking tools for factchecking slanted journalism. These blogs are called Powerline, and the facts are whatever Hindrocket says they are you stupid liberals plotting against me with your sneaky memos and telephoto lenses and I hate you all.
Read more!

Meet Dr. Dino

Those narrow-minded evolutionists at The Panda's Thumb have uncovered further evidence that the lunatics have taken over the asylum in Bush America. Read more!

Friday, April 08, 2005

A sober view of His Holiness . . .

The English "high priest of lit crit" Terry Eagleton offers a eulogy that you can safely bet won't be getting an airing at the Pope's funeral today. My own views on the Incredible Popeman can be found at the Forsaken Inn.

Read more!

Wednesday, April 06, 2005

Young, dumb, and full of . . . . cash?

Well, Howard's battlers have been taking a hammering this week: interest rates increasing, a slowing economy . . . and now the release of a Monash University study which suggests that those fantastic and fantastically expensive private schools which promise to bestow upon their little darlings the Judaeo-Christian values and "superior" education that public school students don't get, actually disadvantage those little darlings once the training wheels are off in first-year university.

I wonder if this has anything to do with the "intellectual weakness of Australian conservatism" Gerard Henderson likes to talk about. Read more!

Tuesday, April 05, 2005

Dispatches from the Crisis in Masculinity

The Oz gleefully seizes upon the research of a visiting Dutch psychologist Martine Delfos, which apparently indicates "brain-based differences between the sexes" requiring "that educators need to develop a completely different approach in the classroom." (Single sex schools? Male-only scholarships?)

Meanwhile, in some dark corner of the United States where scientists aren't practising "faith-based science" . . . .

Oh, and there's this too. And this.
Read more!

"What Language does your Church Speak?"

This lexicon will help you ascertain whether the nice, friendly community church you attend has turned into the Republic of Gilead.

And on the subject of chillingly prophetic dystopias . . . Read more!

Belated hilarity

This is great, even if it is old . . . . Read more!

Monday, April 04, 2005

Flintwatch

On-line Opinion has a piece by David Flint on the subject of--wait for it--the "left-wing bias of Australia's media elite."

Before dissecting it, let's recall the words of fellow conservative Gerard Henderson, responding to Flint's 2003 book Twilight of the Elites:

If words have meaning, Professor David Flint AM would be regarded as the member of an elite. Educated in Sydney, London and Paris, he became a tenured professor in law. In 1997 the Howard Government appointed Flint as chairman of the Australian Broadcasting Authority, one of the most influential positions in Australian public life. According to Who's Who in Australia 2003, he is a member of Sydney's Union Club.
But Flint, notes Henderson, reckons he's not a member of an elite. This because Twilight of the Elites defines elitism as being "left-wing on social and cultural issues." To be more specific, elites are "(i) republican, (ii) favour reconciliation, (iii) are weak on border protection, (iv) oppose Australia's involvement in Iraq, (v) favour a significant increase in Australia's population, (vi) tolerate abortion and (vii) are soft on divorce." As a "conservative intellectual," Flint has "let down the team," according to Henderson, and he is symptomatic of "the inherent weakness of Australia's political conservatives compared with counterparts in Britain and the US."

I don't normally agree with Henderson, and I must admit when I first encountered his review of Twilight of the Elites, I felt he was being a touch hypocritical castigating Flint for using the term elite as "a brand, or label, and is used scores of times in Flint's book as a putdown for those he disagrees with"--when Henderson has his own favourite ad hominem which he routinely hurls at ideological enemies. Nonetheless, if Flint has valid criticisms to make of political bias in the media, he should get on with making them without recourse to a sneer word such as elite which adds nothing to the cogency of his arguments.

Flint's On-line Opinion piece is adapted from a speech he gave at the launch of his new book, Malice in Medialand. Flint is sore about the criticism he received last year that his association with Alan Jones while Flint was still Australian Broadcasting Association chairman constituted a conflict of interests. He's particularly sore at David Marr and ABC's Media Watch, which exposed the scandal. And he's clearly smarting still from a recent interview with Radio National's "Media Report," in which he was made to look a right dickhead as his contentions about media bias were clinically destroyed by the interviewer. Let's look at some of Flint's assertions:
A clear distinction must always, always, be made between the objective search for the truth, the news and opinion. In return, and with the obvious exception of the taxpayer-funded public broadcasters, the media are free to express their opinion however robust and partisan that may be.

This argument suffers from inconsistency. If, so long as the clear separation of truth and opinion is observed, the non-taxpayer-funded media are "free to express their opinion however robust and partisan that may be," there is no reason why the same should not apply to the "taxpayer-funded public broadcasters. Conversely, if taxpayer-funded public broadcasters are not free to express their opinions, neither should this freedom extend to the commercial media. In other words, if as Flint believes it is possible for media outlets to separate truth from opinion, whether they are "taxpayer-funded" or not is irrelevant. Flint does not attempt to justify why public broadcasters should be treated differently from commercial broadcasters (he merely asserts that it is "obvious" that they should), nor does he suggest whose opinion, if not their own, public broadcasters should be expressing.
When the president of an English teachers’ association, who chairs a government curriculum committee, recently editorialised that his English teachers had failed because generations of former students had re-elected John Howard, he well and truly let the cat out of the bag. This was that much of our children’s tuition has been requisitioned to promote a left-wing political agenda, even in the teaching of English.
Nope--this is a hasty generalisation. To establish whether "much of our children's tuition has been requisitioned to promote a left-wing political agenda," there would need to be undertaken a thorough, rigourous, independent and objective investigation of Australian school curricula. Flint cannot leap to such a conclusion on the basis of the opinions of one individual. Even if he's the president of an English teacher's association. (As an aside, there are some interesting exchanges on this topic at Troppo Armadillo).
This is only part of that same long march by the left-wing intelligentsia, the elites, through so many of the institutions of our nation. This includes much of our elite media, which remain a significant agenda setter for all the other media. David Marr, the former presenter of ABC TV’s Media Watch has decreed that if journalists do not come from a “soft-leftie kind of culture” they should “get another job”.
Long March? Spectres of Mao aside, Flint has in another article been generous enough to publish Marr's comment in a (slightly) fuller context: "The natural culture of journalism is kind of vaguely soft-Left inquiry sceptical of authority. I mean, that's just the world out of which journalists come. If they don't come out of that world, they really can't be reporters. I mean, if you're not sceptical of authority, find another job. You know, just find another job. And that is kind of a soft-leftie kind of culture." The Radio National Big Ideas programme from which the comments have been taken is no longer available, so we can't really judge whether Flint is citing Marr judiciously. Marr makes no secret of his political inclinations (mind you, neither does Flint); nor does he make any bones about what he considers to be Flint's "kindergarten notion of balance": "That there is a left and that there is a right and you sit in the middle. That is just simply illusionary. I think all broadcasting must be fair, but the illusion that there is some kind of set spot where you can sit and that's impartial is simply nonsensical." But again, Flint is making a hasty generalisation. Marr's views on what he believes to be the "natural culture of journalism"--whatever their merits--do not by themselves constitute evidence of systemic left-wing media bias, much less the "long march by the left-wing intelligentsia, the elites, through so many of the institutions of our nation."
Accordingly, instead of objectively investigating and reporting on the great issues of the nation, the elite media now serve the public a never ending diet of partisan opinion disguised as facts based comment, often indistinguishable from the news, the items of which are regularly selected to be consistent with their agenda. A corps of campaigning political journalists has descended into the political arena as participants who are both unelected and unaccountable, unashamedly advancing an agenda that is out of touch and alien to the overwhelming majority of Australians. To put this takeover in context, what would the reaction be if instead of a left agenda, the elite media campaigned for a far right agenda, key features of which enjoyed the support and interest of only 10 per cent of the population?
First, Flint offers no definition for "the elite media." We can perhaps safely assume they include the ABC, the Age and the Sydney Morning Herald--given that for Flint, "elite" means "left-wing." (In which case, why doesn't he just say "left-wing?") Well, to use Flint's terms, if the elite media were to suddenly embrace a "far right agenda," they wouldn't be "elite" anymore, would they? He offers not even so much as a single example of what he considers to be "opinion disguised as facts." He curiously describes "elite" journalists as "both unelected and unaccountable"--is he suggesting we should elect journalists? He describes their "agenda" as "out of touch and alien to the overwhelming majority of Australians," enjoying the "support and interest of only 10 per cent of the population"--and he provides no empirical data to support this claim.
The problem with the Australian media is not in the robust opinions on the peoples’ forum - talkback radio - it is in the wider issue of the conversion of a once respected apprentice based trade, under firm editorial direction, into a buccaneering, uncontrollable commentariat, freer than ever before from editorial and managerial control. This malady dominates the columns of those once dignified, restrained and objective newspapers that formerly served as respected journals of record. It has also resulted in the elites requisitioning far too much of the national news and current affairs on the taxpayer-funded public broadcasting spectrum, thus demonstrating a suicidal tendency. Experience indicates that the axe, when it comes, is more likely to be wielded by a conservative Labor government.
Flint's flagrant embrace of double-standards here is breathtaking. Out of one corner of his mouth, he utters pieties about keeping facts separate from opinion; out of the the other, he celebrates the very forum ("the people's forum") which thrives upon not keeping facts separate from opinions--talkback radio. Again: if the "elite" media shouldn't do it, nor should the "people's" media. And how on earth does "firm editorial control"--or more seriously, the threat of the government "axe"-- contribute to the democracy, media freedom and freedom of speech Flint claims to champion?

Then there's this howler:
The villain in this has above all been the unelected and unaccountable US Supreme Court, which in this and other fields has unashamedly usurped for itself a legislative role.
No, David. It's called the separation of powers. Nobody has "usurped" anything.
While part of the answer here lies in more freedom from overbroad laws, in return for more responsibility, another part of the answer is already being provided via the market by readers, listeners and viewers. They are losing confidence in the elite media, relying more and more on alternatives such as talkback, tabloid and the internet. The power of the internet was well demonstrated in the US when a humble blogger exposed a fraudulent attack on the reputation of George W. Bush, which led to the downfall of Dan Rather.

Flint is only partly correct here: people are seeking alternatives--but it never occurs to him that some of this drift can be attributed to the commercial media's predominantly conservative biases (there are a lot of left-wing blogs around too, you know). Which are perfectly fine as far as Flint is concerned: he's only interested in the "elite" media's upholding of journalistic standards. The commercial media, as he says, are free to be as partisan as they like.

(And couldn't the downfall of Dan Rather due to efforts of a "humble blogger" be considered Malice in Medialand?)


Read more!

Terri Schiavo -- Bride of 'Compassionate Conservatism'

CTHEORY has an engaging (if idiosyncratic) take on the Terri Schiavo case. Read more!

The economics of ressentiment

Alan Breward, industry economist with the Victorian State Government, takes a swipe at economic rationalists in this piece on housing affordability, aired on ABC Radio National's "Ockham's Razor." Breward maintains that "[b]ecause of what economic rationalists have done and said, Australia’s economic prosperity now depends on a lie;" and his piece constitutes a warning to "democracy's soil," the aspirationals, not to be misled by the dodgy use of statistics of some of Australia's major financial institutions in trying to reassure us how easy it is to manage a mortgage.

There's more good news for Howard's Battlers: interest rates are set to rise again and we're heading for higher inflation. There's even talk of a recession.

But don't worry. Take out a second mortgage, buy another home theatre unit, book your next holiday trip to Bali, and you'll feel right as rain in Jesusland again. Read more!

The Maiden Bleg: Council for National Policy

What can people tell me about the Council for National Policy? My attention was drawn to it by Terry Lane's column in the Age on Left Behind II, the second film adaptation of Tim La Hayes's Left Behind novels. La Hayes, it turn out, is a Council for National Policy member, as is "a virtual who's who of the Hard Right," according to an unofficial page on the organization (which seems to be a little outdated). Apparently it is no accident that the group receives little media coverage, because it is highly secretive.

A more recent article published on the website of Americans United for Separation of Church and State offers a much more detailed account of the Council, describing it as an "umbrella organization of right-wing leaders [founded in 1981] who gather regularly to plot strategy, share ideas and fund causes and candidates to advance the far-right agenda." According to this article, the Council has financial links with Coors and Amway; identities who have been affiliated with it include former US Attorney-General John Ashcroft and current Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson; and figures who have addressed its meetings include President George W. Bush (as a nominee), UN Ambassador nominee John Bolton, current Attorney-General Alberto Gonzales, Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, and Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas.

The group last year conferred an honorarium upon Republican Senator Bill Frist, a leading figure in the US Congress's recent intervention in the Terri Schiavo case. According to the Americans United article, when "Frist (R-Tenn.) accepted a 'Thomas Jefferson Award' from a national group at the Plaza Hotel in New York City in August, the media weren’t notified. In fact, they weren’t welcome to attend.

'The media should not know when or where we meet or who takes part in our programs, before or after a meeting,' reads one of the cardinal rules of the organization that honored Frist."

Conspiracy theory--or is there more to all this?

Read more!

Sunday, April 03, 2005

Oil-for-food and Dick Cheney

This week, an inquiry into the UN's "Oil-for-food" programme in Iraq cleared Secretary-General Kofi Annan of any wrongdoing, while implicating his son Kojo. Since then, many on the Right in the U.S. from the Heritage Foundation to Republican Senator Norm Coleman have been baying for his blood. For the New York Post, Annan's "continued presence at the head of the United Nations remains an embarrassment."

I wonder, then, what those who are calling for Kofi Annan's head would have to say about a report published in October 2004 on Halliburton's involvement in the oil-for-food programme? It appears that under Dick Cheney's tenure,
"Halliburton and its subsidiaries were one of several American and foreign oil supply companies that helped Iraq increase its crude exports from $4 billion in 1997 to nearly $18 billion in 2000 by skirting U.S. laws and selling Iraq spare parts so it could repair its oil fields and pump more oil." Furthermore, "U.N. documents show that Halliburton's affiliates have had controversial dealings with the Iraqi regime during Cheney's tenure at the company and played a part in helping Saddam Hussein illegally pocket billions of dollars under the U.N.'s oil-for-food program." Sure, Cheney sang loudly and proudly from the Bush administration/PNAC hymn sheet in the lead-up to the 2003 invasion, but back when he was Halliburton's CEO he was pushing the UN Security Council to lift "an 11-year embargo on sales of civilian goods, including oil related equipment, to Iraq." Sanctions such as these, you see, "unfairly punish U.S. companies."

Remember, as Dick says: "The problem is that the good Lord didn't see fit to always put oil and gas resources where there are democratic governments." But we can always change that, can't we Dick? Read more!

Saturday, April 02, 2005

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN apologises to its readers

In the latest issue of Scientific American, the editors have admitted that their magazine has heretofore been "hideously one-sided" in its attitude towards issues such as creationism, missile defence and global warming. They declare that from now on, their magazine "will be dedicated purely to science, fair and balanced science, and not just the science that scientists say is science. And it will start on April Fools' Day."

You can hear the editorial on the Saturday April 2 2005 edition of ABC Radio National's "The Science Show." Presenter Robyn Williams concurs with the Scientific American editors that the disposition of "The Science Show" towards "intelligent design", etc. will alter some time "after hell freezes over." This will doubtless be offered as further indication of the ABC's left-wing bias. Read more!

Friday, April 01, 2005

"Ladies and gentlemen, these are not assertions."

Not that it comes as a great shock to anyone, but former US Secretary of State and girlie-man Colin Powell has gone all Gallic on us and criticised President Bush, in an interview with the German magazine Stern, for misleading him about Saddam Hussein's military capabilities pre-2003. For the record, here is the full transcript (before it's taken down) of what Powell presented to members of the UN Security Council in February 2003: Secretary of State Addresses the UN Security Council.

This comes on the back of a new report which finds that US intelligence agencies were--wait for it--"'dead wrong' in most of their judgements about Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction used to justify the invasion of Iraq. Of course, that doesn't faze Australia's Lord Downer, who argues that Australia went to war on the basis of Iraq's failure to comply with "something like 17 mandatory Security Council resolutions." Downer goes on to remind us that the "US-led coalition made it perfectly clear that they thought the world would be a better place without Saddam Hussein. 'I know some people don't agree with that, and on that point I diverge with those who think the world would be a better place if we'd left Saddam Hussein in power.'"

No, you arrogant prick. This isn't about whether the world would be a better place without Saddam Hussein in power--a point on which nobody disagrees with you, as you well know. Regime change was never the Howard government's justification for taking Australia to war--as Howard himself declared in March 2003 in an address to the National Press Club: " Disarmament rather than regime change is Australia's primary policy goal." Read more!

"Politics for Kids"

For your entertainment and enlightenment, US writer Bill Shein presents an elementary civics lesson . . . Read more!

Hard times ahead for Bush?

The Christian Science Monitor analyses George W. Bush's recent slump in popularity (Bush faces decline in approval ratings), pointing to--among other reasons--the fact that his interference in the late Terri Schiavo case has not gone down well with many Americans (which means that a majority of Americans are abandoning democratic principles by opposing the will of the majority). The Monitor also suggests that "the perception of success and the spread of democracy works against Bush" by causing people to focus on (relatively) more "mundane" issues such as rising petrol prices and Bush's unpopular plans to "reform" social security. Incidentally, His Majesty's Loyal Opposition the Democrats don't get off lightly in the article, either.

So it looks like interesting times are ahead for US politics, because on the other side of the ledger, the Republicans are gearing up to take the small 'l' out of liberal democracy by limiting the powers of the judiciary and the abilities of academics to exercise their First Amendment rights without a lawyer close at hand. (See also: Targeted by Conservatives for Teaching Philosophy) Read more!