Thursday, February 26, 2009

Free Speechifying Part Deux

The fight for free speech has a very real and measurable impact. I'll let Christopher Hitchens take over:
"two decades ago the theocratic head of a foreign state offered a large sum of money, in his own name, in public, to suborn the murder of a writer of fiction who was not himself an Iranian."
Three people died as a result of this and Salmon Rushdie had to spend the good part of 20 years under police protection. Note the importance of this. Some dude, in another country, not known to you, decides that what you say or write about is unacceptable, and commands his followers to hunt you down and kill you if they can. They then make life so difficult for you and anyone involved with you that the ideas you speak of are no longer spoken of because you know, who the hell wants to be on the end of a credible death threat?

The ever so notorious Mohammed cartoons, that caused so much trouble, riots, property damage and death, that no sane publisher in the West is going to attempt the same. The media is constantly pushing our leaders to enter into "dialogue" with Muslims, to see if we can resolve the differences. Interfaith leaders (read: religious leaders from different denominations) keep telling us we must keep open a dialogue with our "Muslim brothers" so that such terrible things as the current Pope quoting an Emperor from the middle ages does not happen, or Burger King stops making blasphemous sunday cup lids, or any other multitude of evil offensive things the West generally does to offend Muslims.
“Where does [the dialogue] start? Would it start, for instance, with making a joke? Contra Mr Khomeini – not a funny man. Or, would it start with an article, perhaps? Would it start, perhaps, with a film? It did, a few years ago, with Submission, and Theo van Gogh was killed. Could it start with making a joke, perhaps? A joke in a cartoon? Well, apparently not, because we know there were burnings and killings and lootings and rioting across the globe in reaction to those cartoons. If you’re going to start a dialogue, what could you do that would be smaller than drawing a cartoon? This dialogue which we keep on being offered is not reciprocated.”
--Douglas Murray, 9th Oct 2007, Debate topic:
We should not be reluctant to assert the superiority of Western values


Another dread cartoon that offended the "wrong" people (notwithstanding their deliberate misunderstanding of the image)

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Infrared Photos

Because they look really cool. Go check 'em out (via david thompson)

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Free Speechifying Part 1

The "right" to free speech is a difficult one to understand. The fact that our civilization is literally built on this right is one often forgotten and obscured. Today, organizations with names ending in "... Human Rights Commissions" are gradually eroding this right to free speech in the name of political correctness. The central axiom of political correctness is the idea that one must not utter nor think thoughts that could be harmful to others, because causing offense, as opposed to causing grievous bodily harm or property damage, is the worst sin one could commit.

How did we get here? Have the populations in liberal democracies been lulled into thinking that things are how they are and will ever be? Real blood was spilled in the major conflicts of the last century (WW1 and WW2) on the "idea" of freedom. Men, women and children sacrificed creature comforts, food and property, and in many instances their lives, so that the "idea" of liberal democracy could thrive. Central to the idea of a liberal democracy is the concept that dissent can be voiced, heard and then hopefully resolved in a manner that avoids bloodshed. I don't believe this is the "end-game" of liberal democracies, just that this is where we are now.
It has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all the others that have been tried.
-- Sir Winston Churchill (1874 - 1965) - source: http://www.quotationspage.com/quote/364.html
[also attributed to Mark Twain - Jack]
The right to free speech can be boiled down to the right to offend. It is inevitable that the free exchange of ideas, that certain ideas will offend people. Copernicus would never have published his heliocentric theory (that the sun is the center of the solar system and not Earth) in the 16th century if he was worried about the potential offense to the religious authorities of the day. His theories became the foundations on which Newton and others built our current day understanding of the solar system. Not a bad trade off for the potential to cause offense.

Among western countries, the Canadian Human Rights commissions have been the most active in prosecuting "incorrect thoughts". Canadian agent provocateur Ezra Levant has been on the wrong side of a Human Rights action and had to spend over $100,000 defending himself. The hypocrisy of the action is well documented. The commissions only want more power in the pursuit of an impossible, politically correct future. As Mark Steyn said when commenting about these Human Wrongs Rights commissions:
"When you subordinate legal principles to ideological fashion, you place genuine liberties in peril and that's the state in Ontario today. If you don't believe in free speech for people you loathe, you don't believe in free speech at all."
The last word from a column in The Australian:
"But the West is killing free speech slowly - by more subtle means - through state-sponsored censorship under the grand name of protecting human rights."
What a change that would make if those institutions so interested in "human rights" actually focused on real human rights, as opposed to the PC garbage they promote.

Links:

Copernicus Reference:

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Friday, February 13, 2009

Alternative Ideas

(via Melanie Phillips)

From the charter of IPCC, the primo organization that along with the Goracle and his posse, are the ones pretty much responsible for the entire Warming hysteria:
"Its role is to assess on a comprehensive, objective, open and transparent basis the latest scientific, technical and socio-economic literature produced worldwide relevant to the understanding of the risk of human-induced climate change, its observed and projected impacts and options for adaptation and mitigation. "
Sounds pretty objective to me. Waddareckon the odds are that they would consider any alternative hypothesis (such as say, natural climate cycles) ?

(idea for this post kinda stolen from here)

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Hypocrisy, thy name is Peace

A good column describing the hypocrisy of Western "peace" movements when it comes to the Arab-Israeli conflict.

Some of the juice:
"For the many Americans, the math is pretty simple. Leaders who want to promote the well-being of the people they lead do not launch rockets into neighboring territory from densely populated civilian neighborhoods and people who merely want a state of their own do not go about screaming incessantly about destroying somebody else's."
It would be nice if the media were to pick up on that particular point.
"On this score, Christian peacemakers are doing what pacifists have always done - avert their eyes from those aspects of reality would force them to come to grips with human sin in a meaningful manner. "
Could be a problem with all religions on that one, but I'll keep that diatribe for another day.

Links

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Words fail me

Before you jump on a high horse to decry the evil American Imperialist crusaders in Iraq, take a moment to examine the tactics of the other guys:

From AP (via LGF):
"In a separate prison interview with The Associated Press, with interrogators nearby, the woman said she was part of a plot in which young women were raped and then sent to her for matronly advice. She said she would try to persuade the victims to become suicide bombers as their only escape from the shame and to reclaim their honor."
...
"She said she was "able to persuade women to become suicide bombers ... broken women, especially those who were raped."
A noble resistance indeed.