Showing posts with label media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label media. Show all posts

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Smelling salts! Stat!

OH NOES!! The Chaser boys have offended some people again with a song that appears to take the piss out of dead celebrities, including Steve Irwin, Princess Di, Kerry Packer and Stan Zemanek (but is really just commenting on the hypocrisy of eulogizing those whom we found cause to dislike when they were still breathing).



Cue the hyperventilating . . .

"CHASERS WAR ON GOOD TASTE" wails Ninemsn. "To disrespect people have passed [sic] is cruel!" moans Deb of Adelaide, in the Ninemsn forum on the topic. On the ABC's own message board (and according to News.com, "Irate viewers rang the ABC switchboard to complain about the song after it aired and talkback radio hosts were inundated with comments about its content"), habbo1 whines: "A long time fan of Chaser, great dissapointment in the cringe factor that was last night 'dead celebrity bashing.' Juvenile, pathetic humour that we are to expect from Commercial TV's attempt to be 'controversial.'" I'm certain there's more to come. (UPDATE: And I was right.)

What a bunch of tightarse, whinging fuckpigs (as Billy Connolly would say).

This reminds me of when Sean Hannity was sooking about what a big meanie Christopher Hitchens was for the latter's criticisms of the late Jerry Falwell:



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Monday, July 02, 2007

Australian idiocracy: Ninemsn polls


One of the more obvious signs that the idiots are taking over the asylum is the increasing tendency to confuse fact with opinion, as the current NineMSN poll shown above demonstrates. If you can't make it out, it reads: "Are young Australian Muslims vulnerable to being radicalised?" As the focus of a research paper or conference it makes perfect sense: there's a problem to be investigated, data to be collected, arguments to be advanced and results to be subjected to the scrutiny of one's peers. But what light can be shed on this topic by the kneejerk response of your average punter signing out of Hotmail? If the answer is "none," then what purpose is served by such a poll in the first place? They might as well have a poll on whether Europa features a liquid ocean beneath its icy crust.

This reminds me of former Education Minister Brendan Nelson's flirtation with the teaching of intelligent design in schools, on the grounds that "it should be taught in schools alongside evolution if that is the wish of parents." In other words, in 2005 the Federal Government believed that the religious opinions of parents should determine what gets taught as fact in a science classroom. Welcome to idiocracy.
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Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Today's Religion Report: Falwell the racist

Today's Religion Report (Radio National) features an interview with John Shelby Spong on the late Jerry Falwell's roots as a racist and segregationist in Lynchburg, Virginia.

So of course FOX's Sean Hannity and guest Ralph Reed were justified in calling Christopher Hitchens a big meanie for not joining the rest of conservative America in paying due tribute to the recently departed bigoted hatemonger.

I'll be teaching when the show is broadcast in Perth, so I'll have to download the podcast later.

UPDATE: Falwell's even inspired Christian terrorism (only we're probably not allowed to call it that, since the perpetrators are--you know--Christian):

Even in death, the Rev. Jerry Falwell rouses the most volatile of emotions.
A small group of protesters gathered near the funeral services to criticize the man who mobilized Christian evangelicals and made them a major force in American politics -- often by playing on social prejudices.
A group of students from Falwell's Liberty University staged a counterprotest.
And Campbell County authorities arrested a Liberty University student for having
several homemade bombs in his car.
The student, 19-year-old Mark D. Uhl of Amissville, Va., reportedly told authorities that he was making the bombs to stop protesters from disrupting the funeral service. The devices were made of a combination of gasoline and detergent, a law enforcement official told ABC News' Pierre Thomas. They were "slow burn," according to the official, and would not have been very destructive.

But Rachael Kohn told me that people in prayer singing "Praise Jesus" wouldn't do this kind of thing.

Via Dispatches from the Culture Wars. Read more!

Monday, May 21, 2007

The Bill Muehlenberg Trophy: Rachael Kohn's war on "atheistic scientists"

This morning my girlfriend, who teaches in an Anglican high school, received an email being passed around the offices of several religious schools in the Perth metro area entitled "Antidote to Root of All Evil."

The antidote in question is a critique of Richard Dawkins' Root of All Evil by Rachael Kohn in the SMH, which very quickly (and very disappointingly) descends into an anti-atheist, anti-science rant.

Kohn takes issue with the comparison Dawkins apparently draws between Ted Haggard's Pentecostal megachurch brand of worship and Nazi rallies.

To the scientist Dawkins, a room full of people waving their hands and singing "Praise Jesus" is evil because it is irrational. By definition, believers obedient to a God which cannot be proved to exist, and whose dictums are based on mythical stories that have no basis in fact, are as dangerous as the Brownshirts.
Dawkins is not accusing Haggard and his followers of being Brownshirts, of course. What he is doing is pointing out what megachurch Christianity and Nazi rallies have in common: unquestioning dogmatism--the sheer absence of critical and reflective thinking that is the hallmark of every kind of fundamentalism--be it religious or ideological.

So when Kohn argues that "what Dawkins failed to acknowledge in his encounter with Haggard is that the Nazi program of eugenics and extermination was not dictated by an unseen god," she is missing Dawkins' point entirely.
But there is more in this that should put the scientist masquerading as a moral philosopher on guard. Nazism's propaganda was written with the help of a legion of scholars from the hard and soft sciences, from anthropologists, philologists, psychologists and economists to biologists, zoologists and doctors.
So what? No-one is claiming that scientists are incapable of folly, ignorance or despicable behaviour; nor is anyone suggesting that the fruits of scientific research cannot be put to heinous uses. Certainly Dawkins is advancing neither proposition in Root of All Evil. The important distinction for him is not between scientists and believers (how could it be--many scientists are believers), but rather between science and faith. He is pitting the fallibilism and skepticism of science against the parochialism and dogmatism of faith, and what he's suggesting is that Nazism and megachurch fundamentalism both exhibit the latter characteristics. Hence, the comparison holds.
The Nazi example is not unique but was repeated elsewhere, such as in Stalinist Eastern Europe and Mao's China. It is no doubt occurring in Iran, where dissidence is virtually impossible. The point is not the political ideology, but the readiness of "rational" scientific types to help mad regimes to deliver untold suffering to millions.
Kohn is contradicting herself here. If dissidence is virtually impossible in these regimes--it will be as impossible for "rational scientific types" as for anyone else--whether we're talking about China, Eastern Europe or Iran. In any case, the point is the political ideology--and the fact that the Stalinism and Maoism that held sway in Eastern Europe and China respectively have far more in common with religious fundamentalism (of both the Islamic and the Christian kind) than they do with the tradition of freethinking and skepticism embraced by many atheists.

But no rant is complete without a strawman argument:
The trouble with the present flight from religion to the welcoming embrace of atheistic scientists and philosophers is that they offer precious little more than a new conviction that religion is the cause of evil in the world. In other words, these scientists deliver a message akin to that of the fire-and-brimstone preachers who bellowed about the dangers of sin, only they warn from their secular pulpits of the dangers of religion.
No, Rachael: if atheists and scientists (who may or may not be atheists, but don't let that stop Kohn throwing us all into the same box) have a message to deliver, it is that the benefits to humankind of reason and critical-reflective (as opposed to dogmatic and parochial) thinking are manifold and demonstrable. Every advance we have made towards liberty and democracy--be it racial equality, gay rights, women's rights, etc.--has been made in spite of the vehement opposition religious traditionalists. It is the latter, and not freethinkers, who have held us back every time--and Kohn may want to take a few minutes out from her thoughtless science-bashing to give that some thought.

Kohn closes with an attack on Michael Onfray's The Atheist Manifesto. I haven't read the book myself, but apparently it entails a Marxist critique of religion. Why this should in and of itself be a problem Kohn doesn't deign to inform us--I guess the sheer mention of Marx is supposed to set off a big red flashing light in our heads and send our critical faculties into meltdown as we search under our beds with a flashlight. (Lazy argument being another hallmark of the rant.) She complains that Onfray presents a "comic-book" view of religion--in a piece that itself presents a comic-book view of science and nonbelief. She complains that "Onfray does not accept the sociological truth that religion has not only accommodated the laws and ethos of a democratic state but in a pervasive way supports it." Supports it? In what sense? It is the religious who oppose the full enfranchisement of the gay and lesbian community. It is the religious who want to dictate to women what they should do with their own bodies. It is the religious who (as this article demonstrates) regularly attack science when its discoveries come into conflict with theological presuppositions. It is the religious who want tear down the wall of separation between church and state--even though, ironically, it is the existence of such a wall that guarantees religious freedom. How exactly does any of this support democracy?

Kohn's closing line is priceless:
If Germany in 1933 had been invaded by people in prayer singing "Praise Jesus" instead of Nazis in jackboots it would not have presided over the worst mass killing in history.
Bullshit. People in prayer singing "Praise Jesus" lynched African-Americans in their thousands in the Deep South. People in prayer singing "Praise Jesus" have blown up abortion clinics and murdered their staff. People in prayer singing "Praise Jesus" abused children under their power while other people in prayer singing "Praise Jesus" covered for them. And Rachael: people in prayer singing "Praise Jesus" were complicit in the Nazi extermination of millions of undesirables.

Cross-posted at Punditocracy Watch
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Tuesday, March 27, 2007

On message


Gerard Henderson, in today's Sydney Morning Herald, on Work Choices:

. . . over the past year about 250,000 jobs were created, real wages increased and industrial disputes were at their lowest levels since records were introduced just before World War I.
John Howard, speaking with Radio National Breakfast's Fran Kelly on Work Choices:
We've had, what, more than a quarter of a million more jobs created, wages have continued to rise strongly and strikes at their lowest level since 1913.
Why don't the two of them just get together and write a fucking jingle?

(HT: Mikey) Read more!

Friday, March 16, 2007

Post-postmodernity: the age of the bogan

Hotdogs: pseudo-modernist

Alan Kirby, in the latest issue of Philosophy Now magazine, muses on the death of postmodernism, and what comes after . . .
The cultural products of pseudo-modernism are also exceptionally banal, as I’ve hinted. The content of pseudo-modern films tends to be solely the acts which beget and which end life. This puerile primitivism of the script stands in stark contrast to the sophistication of contemporary cinema’s technical effects. Much text messaging and emailing is vapid in comparison with what people of all educational levels used to put into letters. A triteness, a shallowness dominates all. The pseudo-modern era, at least so far, is a cultural desert. Although we may grow so used to the new terms that we can adapt them for meaningful artistic expression (and then the pejorative label I have given pseudo-modernism may no longer be appropriate), for now we are confronted by a storm of human activity producing almost nothing of any lasting or even reproducible cultural value – anything which human beings might look at again and appreciate in fifty or two hundred years time.
Bogans. He's talking about bogans.

(See also: John Surname) Read more!

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Pandagon on Coulter

Amanda Marcotte reflects on the role Ann Coulter plays in red-blooded red-staters' fantasies as a fuckable WASP bitch.

While I abhor it when men who take cheap shots at her fuckability, one can safely state that Coulter does have this exaggerated femininity, and appears to cultivate it. But I wouldn’t characterize it as American so much as the exaggerated version of the stereotype of the bitchy WASP—not the girl you marry, of course, but the one you party with while listening to your yacht rock while your baby factory wife stays at home tending your heirs. Or, in the other fantasy of the yuppie good life, the fantasizing man is the confirmed bachelor banging the skinny, bitchy blondes in his abundant spare time. Think of Bill Maher’s own view of himself or maybe Chevy Chase’s character in Caddyshack.

Taken from that point of view, the conservative dude obsession with Coulter makes perfect sense. Most wingnuts aren’t going to be That Guy—leaving the wife home to tend the baby while you go out to fuck bitchy, skinny blondes tends to be out of the reach of your average wingnut. Anyway, even if you can get away, it’s unlikely that said bitchy, skinny blondes will give you the time of day. But then there’s Coulter on the TV and she wants you to know that she loves you and thinks you’re a hot manly man and totally like the Chevy Chase character and the only thing you have to do in order to get into her good graces is vote Republican and hate liberals, those fags. Framed that way, there’s no mystery to her appeal.

Meanwhile, the Huffington Post suggests that Coulter's recent shark-jumping (which has resulted in advertisers and newspapers dumping her left, right and centre--so to speak) has wrong-footed the Republicans, exposing their homophobia as the bigotry that dare not speak its name among "respectable" conservatives. ("No, Arthur, you have us all wrong. It's not bigotry: it's 'compassion.'") Read more!

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Journalism teacher threatened with sack over student newspaper editorial about TEH ANAL SEX GAYS

If aspiring young reporters want to get a sense of what it must be like to be a journalist in a theocracy or a banana-republic, they should look no further than the case of a high school principal in Woodlan, Indiana, who is threatening to fire a journalism teacher over a student editorial in the school newspaper calling for GASP!! SHOCK!! HORROR!! tolerance towards gays and lesbians. The tinpot dictator principal is also demanding that all future stories be vetted by himself personally, and has issued a written warning to the teacher in charge "for exposing students to inappropriate material".

The full editorial is available via the previous link, but here's the gist of it:

The editorial in question was Chase’s first-person appeal for tolerance and equal protections for gays and lesbians. She said she was inspired by a friend who told her he was gay.

“Would it be so hard to just accept (gays and lesbians) as human beings who have feelings just like everyone else?” she wrote. “Being homosexual doesn’t make a person inhuman, it makes them just a little bit different than the rest of the world. And for living in a society that tells you to always be yourself, it’s a hard price to pay.”

A sobering reality-check, one would think, for all those doe-eyed and naive students who were under the impression that their country still values a free press.

(Via Dispatches from the Culture Wars)

UPDATE: The war on TEH GAYS continues closer to home in small-town Tasmania, where a gay couple have become the subject of a hate-mail campaign because of their plans to open a residential development in the town of Penguin. Evidently the pamphlets were of the COVER YOUR ARSES AND LOCK UP YOUR 15-YEAR OLD SONS!!!!!!! kind that Western Australians endured a few years back prior to the Gallop Labor government's gay law reforms.

Rodney Croome, who played a leading role in the push to reform Tasmanian law regarding homosexuality in the late 1990s, takes the fact that the mayor of Penguin almost immediately condemned the hate mail campaign as a sign that things are improving:
Beyond a dramatic shift in laws and attitudes, Tasmania has witnessed a demographic transformation with hundreds of same-sex couples moving to the state's regional and rural areas from interstate and overseas. Many of these couples have started small tourism and food production businesses, established strong links to their adopted districts and profoundly impacted on local attitudes to same-sex relationships.

Sometimes there is a backlash to this impact. But just as often gay immigrants are embraced. Indeed the intensity of both responses often match. Of this, there is no better example than Penguin.

In short then, Penguin lies on the fault line in Tasmanian identity. Whenever the tectonic plates we call the old and new Tasmania shift Penguin quakes.
Read his full post here. Read more!

Thursday, February 15, 2007

Why is the Murdoch press anti-science?

Biologist and regular Panda's Thumb contributor Ian Musgrave fisks the editorial in Wednesday's Australian. Read more!

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Paula Zahn Attacking Atheists UPDATE

Blogger onegoodmove has CNN's follow-up interview with Richard Dawkins, who does a brilliant job. There is also a somewhat less edifying panel discussion involving Ellen Johnson, who took over the leadership of American Atheists after the death of Madalyn Murray O'Hair, the Rev. Jesse Lee Peterson, pushing the "We are a Christian Nation" line, and Air America's Rachel Maddow (affiliation unknown).

But hats off to CNN for rectifying the abysmal segment that aired a few days ago. Read more!

Monday, February 12, 2007

Paula Zahn: Attacking Atheists Remixed

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This is a remix of the CNN "panel discussion" about atheism (the one that included no atheists), answering some of the idiotic talking points raised by the panelists.

Richard Dawkins will appear on the same programme today. Read more!

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

The ABC of cognitive xenophobia

That the changes at the ABC are typical of the mentality of the authoritarian right goes without saying (see the excellent posts by MrLefty, BrokenLeftLeg and Ninglun on this topic). The more interesting question is: what does this development reveal to us about authoritarian right-wing thinking and in particular, its inability to countenance dissent?

The cognitive linguist George Lakoff, whose focus on the role played by metaphor in social and political reasoning has generated some fascinating insights into the shape of the contemporary political scene in the US (and arguably, by extension, Australia), suggests that we understand conservatism in terms of what he calls "The Strict Father Model."

Life is seen as fundamentally difficult and the world as fundamentally dangerous. Evil is conceptualized as a force in the world, and it is the father's job to support his family and protect it from evils -- both external and internal. External evils include enemies, hardships, and temptations. Internal evils come in the form of uncontrolled desires and are as threatening as external ones. The father embodies the values needed to make one's way in the world and to support a family: he is morally strong, self-disciplined, frugal, temperate, and restrained. He sets an example by holding himself to high standards. He insists on his moral authority, commands obedience, and when he doesn't get it, metes out retribution as fairly and justly as he knows how. It is his job to protect and support his family, and he believes that safety comes out of strength.

In addition to support and protection, the father's primary duty is tell his children what is right and wrong, punish them when they do wrong, and to bring them up to be self-disciplined and self-reliant. Through self-denial, the children can build strength against internal evils. In this way, he teaches his children to be self-disciplined, industrious, polite, trustworthy, and respectful of authority.
For Lakoff, the Strict Father Model helps to explain the many apparent contradictions in conservative thinking. Including, for our purposes, it's selective statism: by which I mean its tendency to favour maximum government intervention in certain domains in spite of its rhetorical commitment to limited government. So how does the ABC fit into this scenario? Perhaps, on the one hand, it constitutes an internal evil, threatening to lead the children astray. On the other hand, perhaps the ABC itself is the disobedient child. Either way: the ABC represents a threat to the Father's values--and more importantly, his authority--and must be silenced. Not reasoned with. Not engaged with in the "marketplace of ideas." (A Strict Father never reasons with a disobedient child, because by doing so he would have to relinquish his authority and meet with the child on its own terms.) Silenced--in this case by stacking the ABC board with the Howard faithful.

Then again, there is something rather infantile, is there not, about the way the authoritarian right responds to dissenting views. If you cast your mind back to my posts on the Queensland schoolgirl who refused to complete an assignment because the task involved contemplating sharing a planetoid with homosexuals, you'll recall a statement from her mother:
She was being challenged, but she should not be challenged like that at her age.
I remarked then that this sentiment represents the fundamentalist mindset in a nutshell. Insofar as members of the authoritarian right are ideological fundamentalists in their own way, the mother's statement is emblematic of their own disposition towards challenging ideas. (I call it "cognitive xenophobia.") And they only have two methods of dealing with ideas and opinions they find challenging: if they have limited control over the source, they cry "SHUT UP!" (in the style of Bill O'Reilly, or perhaps the Internet Squadristi that Bruce has talked about); if they have a greater degree of control over the source, as they do with the ABC, they muzzle it. Both methods, I submit, are infantile.

The mature way of dealing with perceived "bias" at the ABC--the only mature way--would have been to allow the ABC to operate with full editorial independence. If, as a consequence of that independence, the ABC leans to the left in its coverage of certain issues--then so be it. ("Tough," as a conservative would say.) That's not bias; that's independence. There are always going to be domains within a democracy in which those whose political views lean one way outnumber those whose political views lean the other way. As long as such disparities are not the result of artificial constraints--such as, say, discriminatory hiring policies--then the best thing that you can do is to just deal with it. But deal with it maturely--and I mean that in the Kantian sense--by the free exercise of your own reason. (That means that when you encounter an idea that challenges your worldvew, don't just try to silence it: enage with it.)

When you point out to conservatives their hypocrisy in highlighting left-wing bias at the ABC, but ignoring the right-wing bias of the commercial media, they respond with a stock answer: "The commercial media isn't funded by our taxes, and we don't want our taxes paying for left-wing views." Well, they aren't. What your taxes are paying for is an independent ABC--an ABC that is a public broadcaster as opposed to an official state broadcaster: and I can ony repeat that if, as a consequence of that independence, the ABC leans left more than it does right in its approach to certain topics, you just have accept that as part-and-parcel of the ABC's independence. Let me put it this way: part of the price you have to pay, for living in a liberal democracy in which journalists, broadcasters, writers, editors and artists can go about their business without living in fear of government retribution for saying the wrong thing, is that sometimes you will encounter views with which you disagree.

Which brings us back to the authoritarian right. The authoritarian right doesn't want to encounter dissenting views. Its notion of "free speech" is to bury itself in an echo chamber of rightwing chatter so that it never has to be troubled with ideas that challenge its own understanding of the world. Not only is that immature: it demonstrates an antipathy towards liberal democracy and pluralism. Given that these guys are in charge of the country right now, that's troubling.

UPDATE: More at Sarah's, Mikey Capital's, Tim Dunlop's and Barista. Read more!

Thursday, September 21, 2006

Naomi Robson is the smarterest journalist in the world

Perhaps it's true what they say about the state of the education system in Australia--when it churns out credulous morons like this:

As far as I am concerned, Naomi Robson is good with her job and a terrific good reporter. All the comments being made against her were all doings of someone who would like to ruin her reputation as TT reporter. What happened in the last episode with Wa Wa was beyond her control even if they send someone there to cover the rescue. Naomi is a victim of people who got nothing to do but destroy people the same way as Jessica Rowe. Thank you Peter Meakin in retaining Naomi in the program as she is doing an excellent job. I am not only a fan of Naomi but I admire her professionalism.
Claire of Sydney
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! They laughed at Einstein, too. Read more!

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Understatement of the day

". . . we don't decide what sorts of stories to do based on journalistic credibility. That's more an ABC judgement."
Peter Meakin, Seven news and current affairs director
In the same report the ABC, no doubt smirking from ear to ear, points out the obvious parallels between the Today Tonight crew's ill-fated West Papua venture and the Frontline episode "Playing the Ego Card." (That's the one where Mike goes to PNG to boost his journalistic credibility.)

Sarah suggests that the venture, however ill-considered, indicates that Today Tonight might be turning over a new leaf in appearing to pursue a more "serious" story. (You know, as opposed to soup diets and infomercials and the like.) And I have to admit that was my first reaction, too . . . until I discovered which story the TT crew were actually chasing in the old East Indies . . .



CANNIBALS.

JUST MILES FROM OUR NATION'S DOORSTEP.

IS YOUR FAMILY SAFE?

Naomi Robson reports from West Papua on the threat from our North . . .

UPDATE: Via Sarah:
Robson and a Today Tonight crew say they were trying to save a Papuan orphan from being eaten by his cannibal tribe when they were detained by Indonesian authorities this week.

[...]

Today Tonight was following up on a Nine Network report about an orphaned boy, Wah-Wah, who was going to be killed and eaten at some stage in the next 10 years.

When Nine refused to go in and rescue the boy, Today Tonight stepped in, leading to the crew being detained, the program claimed
This is the high-water-mark of aspirational television, peeps!
Read more!