Monday, September 25, 2006

Voice of Reason #2

A stunning admission from the Washington Post...


Liberal Media?


The "mainstream media presents itself as unbiased, when in fact there are built into it many biases, and they are overwhelmingly to the left."

The man who made that comment is not some rabid right-wing critic but Thomas Edsall, a Washington Post political reporter for a quarter-century who recently accepted an early retirement offer.

In an interview with conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt, Edsall said he is pro-choice on abortion and does not think he has ever voted for a Republican presidential candidate. He said he believes that reporters vote Democratic by somewhere between 15 to 1 and 25 to 1.

Edsall, who now writes for the New Republic and has just finished a book called "Building Red America," also said that journalists have an inherent "suspicion" of the military, and he agreed "to a certain degree" with the argument that Fox News and conservative radio became popular because many people, in Hewitt's words, "got sick and tired of being spoon-fed liberal dross" by the New York Times, Los Angeles Times and Washington Post.

In an interview, Edsall says the main problem is "an inability to empathize with the way many people in red states think and feel" but that it is "possible" for journalists to set aside their views and report fairly.

© 2006 The Washington Post Company

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Friday, September 22, 2006

Voice of Reason

Here's an article from today's Washington Post. The commentary is on the recent statements of Pope Benedict XVI and the predictable response from the "Islamic World". This piece hits the nail right on the head.

Tolerance: A Two-Way Street

By Charles Krauthammer
Friday, September 22, 2006; A17

Religious fanatics, regardless of what name they give their jealous god, invariably have one thing in common: no sense of humor. Particularly about themselves. It's hard to imagine Torquemada taking a joke well.

Today's Islamists seem to have not even a sense of irony. They fail to see the richness of the following sequence. The pope makes a reference to a 14th-century Byzantine emperor's remark about Islam imposing itself by the sword, and to protest this linking of Islam and violence:

· In the West Bank and Gaza, Muslims attack seven churches.

· In London, the ever-dependable radical Anjem Choudary tells demonstrators at Westminster Cathedral that the pope is now condemned to death.

· In Mogadishu, Somali religious leader Abubukar Hassan Malin calls on Muslims to "hunt down" the pope. The pope not being quite at hand, they do the next best thing: shoot dead, execution-style, an Italian nun who worked in a children's hospital.

"How dare you say Islam is a violent religion? I'll kill you for it" is not exactly the best way to go about refuting the charge. But of course, refuting is not the point here. The point is intimidation.

First Salman Rushdie. Then the false Newsweek report about Koran-flushing at Guantanamo Bay. Then the Danish cartoons. And now a line from a scholarly disquisition on rationalism and faith given in German at a German university by the pope.

And the intimidation succeeds: politicians bowing and scraping to the mob over the cartoons; Saturday's craven New York Times editorial telling the pope to apologize; the plague of self-censorship about anything remotely controversial about Islam -- this in a culture in which a half-naked pop star blithely stages a mock crucifixion as the highlight of her latest concert tour.

In today's world, religious sensitivity is a one-way street. The rules of the road are enforced by Islamic mobs and abjectly followed by Western media, politicians and religious leaders.

The fact is that all three monotheistic religions have in their long histories wielded the sword. The Book of Joshua is knee-deep in blood. The real Hanukkah story, so absurdly twinned (by calendric accident) with the Christian festival of peace, is about a savage insurgency and civil war.

Christianity more than matched that lurid history with the Crusades, an ecumenical blood bath that began with the slaughter of Jews in the Rhineland, a kind of preseason warm-up to the featured massacres to come against the Muslims, with the sacking of the capital of Byzantium (the Fourth Crusade) thrown in for good measure.

And Islam, of course, spread with great speed from Arabia across the Mediterranean and into Europe. It was not all benign persuasion. After all, what were Islamic armies doing at Poitiers in 732 and the gates of Vienna in 1683? Tourism?

However, the inconvenient truth is that after centuries of religious wars, Christendom long ago gave it up. It is a simple and undeniable fact that the violent purveyors of monotheistic religion today are self-proclaimed warriors for Islam who shout "God is great" as they slit the throats of infidels -- such as those of the flight crews on Sept. 11, 2001 -- and are then celebrated as heroes and martyrs.

Just one month ago, two journalists were kidnapped in Gaza and were released only after their forced conversion to Islam. Where were the protests in the Islamic world at that act -- rather than the charge -- of forced conversion?

Where is the protest over the constant stream of vilification of Christianity and Judaism issuing from the official newspapers, mosques and religious authorities of Arab nations? When Sheik 'Atiyyah Saqr issues a fatwa declaring Jews "apes and pigs"? When Sheik Abd al-Aziz Fawzan al-Fawzan, professor of Islamic law, says on Saudi TV that "someone who denies Allah, worships Christ, son of Mary, and claims that God is one-third of a trinity. . . . Don't you hate the faith of such a polytheist?"

Where are the demonstrations, where are the parliamentary resolutions, where are the demands for retraction when the Mufti Sheik Ali Gum'a incites readers of al-Ahram, the Egyptian government daily, against "the true and hideous face of the blood-suckers . . . who prepare [Passover] matzos from human blood"?

The pope gives offense and the Mujaheddin al-Shura Council in Iraq declares that it "will break up the cross, spill the liquor and impose the 'jizya' [head] tax; then the only thing acceptable is conversion or the sword." This to protest the accusation that Islam might be spread by the sword.

As I said. No sense of irony.

letters@charleskrauthammer.com

© 2006 The Washington Post Company


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Thursday, September 21, 2006

A good way to start

With my first, brief post to the blogosphere, I will hope to show that I am at least marginally informed of what's going on in the world and perhaps capable of some insightful commentary.

My results from the Weekly World News Quiz found at http://news.bbc.co.uk

Weekly world news quiz
The week in questions graphic

It's the end of another week... Just how much do you remember about the headlines from the past seven days?

Test your knowledge of world news events in our quiz.

When you've got your result, why not e-mail the quiz to your friends to see how they measure up?

You got 6 right!
Genius
Question 1
In a speech at the UN this week Venezuela's Hugo Chavez said about George W Bush: "The devil came here yesterday..." How does the quote end?
A: "And most of you have sold your souls"
B: "It still smells of sulphur"
C: "And I come today to save you"

The answer was B
Mr Chavez went on to criticise the UN system, which he said was "worthless".

Read more: Chavez tells UN Bush is 'devil'


Question 2
What blunder has left Jerusalem tourist officials red-faced?
A: An official pamphlet named it as the birthplace of Christ
B: They listed the West Bank barrier as a visitor attraction
C: Leaflets were distributed which suggested the city did not exist

The answer was C
A translation error on a sightseeing pamphlet meant it read "Jerusalem - there's no such city!", rather than "Jerusalem - there's no city like it!". Tens of thousands of the leaflets, translated from Hebrew to English, were distributed before the mistake was spotted.

Read more: Jerusalem is lost in translation


Question 3
How have US officials pressed fish into service in the "war on terror"?
A: To help "sniff out" liquid explosives
B: To safeguard public drinking water from toxic agents
C: A programme has been launched to develop "cyber fish" fitted with tiny microphones to "spy on" potential enemies

The answer was B
San Francisco, Washington and New York are using bluegills - also known as sunfish - to watch out for chemical and biological agents.

Read more: Fish enlisted in US terror fight


Question 4
Why did Chinese police remove a German art student from the terracotta warrior museum in the ancient capital, Xian?
A: He dressed himself up and posed as one of the warriors
B: He 'wrapped' some of the warriors in pink plastic paper
C: He placed masks of Hollywood screen icons over some of the faces

The answer was A
Pablo Wendel, made up like an ancient warrior, jumped into a pit showcasing the 2,200-year-old pottery soldiers and stood motionless for several minutes.

Read more: New recruit joins Terracotta Army


Question 5
Which Holywood actor has begged world leaders to take action against violence in Sudan's Darfour region?
A: Sean Penn
B: Leonardo DiCaprio
C: George Clooney

The answer was C
Clooney made an impassioned speech to the UN Security Council, telling council members genocide was taking place "on your watch". He said how they responded would be their legacy.

Read more: Clooney begs UN to act on Darfur


Question 6
The son of a renowned 20th Century writer has just completed one of his deceased father's unfinished works. Who was the author?
A: Ernest Hemingway
B: JRR Tolkien
C: Kingsley Amis

The answer was B
Christopher Tolkien has spent 30 years working on The Children of Hurin, which The Lord of the Rings author started in 1918 and later abandoned.

Read more: Son completes unfinished Tolkien


Question 7
Hungary was thrown into crisis this week after a "lies" speech given by the prime minister was leaked. How did he describe the government?
A: Boneheaded
B: Blundering
C: Bird-brained

The answer was A
Ferenc Gyurcsany's admission came after Hungarian radio played a tape of a meeting he had with his Socialist MPs a few weeks after the election. On it he says the party had lied to the public and his "boneheaded" government failed to introduce any real policies.

Read more: We lied to win, says Hungary PM



Notice it said, "Genius"... Until next time!