Delivered to Ptown today completely fixed. A wonderful Machead friend, who saved my hard drive, reinstalled all my data. I feel restored. Great service: a few days, urgent delivery and all seems well.
THOUGHT POLICE IN BRITAIN: A man has been convicted of “hate speech” and may face jail time because he got into an argument with some Muslims in which he said things he probably shouldn’t have. Notice that the Muslims, who opined, in the argument, that September 11’s victims “deserved to die” face no such state-enforced sanctions. After all, they weren’t insulting anyone’s religion! Britain is now a country where free speech doesn’t really exist. With no First Amendment, the anti-hate do-gooders have complete license to intimidate and jail people whose views they find objectionable. The same characters are doing all they can to achieve the same result here. In Provincetown, for example, people are being encouraged by the cops to report not just hate crimes, but “hate incidents” in which politically incorrect speech can be monitored by the authorities. Chilling – especially in a place where free speech has traditionally been upheld.
THOUGHT POLICE IN FRANCE: Writers are not immune either. Oriana Fallaci is now facing criminal charges for speaking her mind against extreme Islamism. Her lawyer is the exquisitely named Christophe Bigot.
MORE CATHOLIC CORRUPTION: Jimmy Breslin has a great, tabloid column on a very spoilt New York bishop. Hey, but at least he’s not gay!
FRENCH ANTI-AMERICANISM: Really interesting review of some recent books in France analysing the role anti-Americanism plays in French culture and politics. It’s from the Herald Tribune and includes this quote from Philippe Roger’s “L’ennemi americain“:
At the highest point of discord in a divided France (in 1898), anti-Americanism is the only ‘French passion’ that calms the other passions, effaces antagonisms and reconciles the harshest adversaries. Patching things up at the expense of the United States or, at the least, halting hostilities between French factions in the face of a supposed common enemy will remain a constant of political and intellectual life.
In other words, the tide may be turning a little, at least among some self-aware elites.
ROMENESKO WATCH: Jim Romenesko’s MediaNews blog is probably the most-read journalism blog on the web. He covers every minor story out there on the media and most major ones. So why won’t he link to stories criticizing the new slant of the New York Times? This week, for example, major pieces in the Weekly Standard and the New York Post, not to mention Kausfiles and this site, all alerted readers to what seems like extraordinary bias in the presentation (yet again) of a New York Times poll. Romenesko won’t touch the story. Previous mentions of criticism of the Times get filed in small print as a the whinings of a bunch of right-wing loonies. Romenesko is free to link to whatever he wants. But he has an agenda for the left and pretends he doesn’t. Of course, that’s precisely what endears him to the New York Times.
NO WONDER HE’S SO OUT OF IT: Leftist brontosaurus Lewis Lapham of Harpers’ doesn’t have a computer. Figures.
CLINTON’S LOOT: No it’s not a huge scandal. And they’ve donated their loot to the Presidential Library. But what’s amazing about the gifts showered on the Clintons by criminals, influence peddlars and occasional statesmen is that the givers obviously thought they could try it on. In Denise Rich’s case, it was a gift that kept on giving.
RACE MATTERS: Fascinating science story in the Times Monday, which a reader alerted me to. It tells a disturbing story of the possible distortion of science to ensure that racial differences be understood entirely in terms of environment, rather than having anything to do with genes.To those of us who have witnessed first hand the brutal intolerance displayed by some social constructionists on the matter of racial and ethnic differences, the pressure for this kind of scientific sleight of hand is no surprise. But the latest discovery of earlier fudging shows how deep this politicization of science has gone:
The new report raises the issue of whether an earlier generation’s efforts to play down the role of genetics in fields like behavior and racial variation may not have been carried to extremes. Dr. Steven Pinker, who assigns a larger role to genetics in shaping behavior in his new book, “The Blank Slate,” said it was not Boas but his disciples, including the anthropologists Ruth Benedict, Margaret Mead and Ashley Montagu, who “helped establish the blank-slate, social-constructionist, antibiology mindset of the social sciences.” Dr. Thomas said that “once we anthropologists said race doesn’t exist, we have ignored it since then.” In that context, the reanalysis of Boas’s data “really does have far-reaching ramifications,” he said.
In some ways, I pity these researchers. Disturbing the doctrines of the left means payback, big time. I hope they’re ready for the backlash.
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: “Foremost among the attitudes which affect the making of our policy is American empiricism and its quest for certainty: nothing is ‘true’ unless it is ‘objective,’ and it is not ‘objective’ unless it is part of experience. This makes for the absence of dogmatism and for the ease of social relations. But it has pernicious consequences in the conduct of policy. Policy is the art of weighing probabilities; mastery of it lies in grasping the nuances of possibilities. To attempt to conduct it as a science must lead to rigidity. For only the risks are certain; the opportunities are conjectural. One cannot be ‘sure’ about the implications of events until they have happened and when they have occurred it is too late to do anything about them. Empricism in foreign policy leads to a penchant for ad hoc solutions. The rejection of dogmatism inclines our policy-makers to postpone committing themselves until thee facts are in; but by the time the facts are in, a crisis has usually developed or an opportunitiy has passed. Our policy is, therefore, geared to dealing with emergencies; it finds difficulty in developing the long-range program that might forestall them.” – Henry Kissinger, “The Need for Doctrine,” from the book “Nuclear Weapons And Foreign Policy” (New York: Harper & Row, 1957), pg. 424.
ONE IN FIVE? Gallup has just released a poll that finds that Americans believe that one out of five people is homosexual. What to make of this bizarre finding? Even the most desperate boosters of gay rights place the upper limit at around 10 percent; for what it’s worth, I incline more to the 2 – 3 percent fig
ure, but no one knows for sure. So why the exaggeration? I think it’s part of the phenomenon whereby straight people say that gay people keep talking about the subject. We don’t. It’s just that straights are still uncomfortable and notice very clearly when the subject comes up. When I was editing The New Republic, for example, we made an effort to include gay stories the same way we’d include any newsworthy or controversial subjects. But some readers thought that by mere inclusion of gays at all, we’d become a gay magazine. I remember being told by another journalist that TNR had run four gay cover-stories in a year. We’d run one. The exaggeration of the size and power of tiny minorities – mainly gays and Jews – is, in fact, a common feature of social and psychological fear of the other. That’s what we’re picking up in this poll. And it’s as disturbing as it’s out of touch.