Freedom means being able to wear a veil

[Daniel]

Sea_of_vieled_women

There has been a vibrant debate about whether Muslim women should be entitled to wear a veil in public. Now the debate has reached a new pitch with this story:

A man who was being hunted for the murder of a policewoman is understood to have escaped from Britain by disguising himself as a veiled Muslim woman.

Does this conclude the argument?

I don’t think it does.

Despite my opposition to all kinds of fundamentalism, I think that a liberal society ought to be able to withstand a few people exercising their free choice to wear a veil. And it is important to understand that, difficult though it is for many us to comprehend, it is a free choice.

This story is not about the veil, it is about airport security. It is unbelievable that they are busy checking my 6 year old son’s bottle of still water, causing huge queues, while letting a wanted man waltz through security dressed as a woman, without having arrangements in place to check his face.

A retraction: New Yorkers are polite

[Daniel]

One or two readers have, ahem, replied to my suggestion that New Yorkers are not polite. Michael Hauptman goes one further and destroys my theory altogether.

He writes:

I’m sure you meant it humo(u)rously

Er, yes.

And then he continues:

But the truth is somewhat otherwise. I would like to point you to this little gem, in which NY ranked as the politest city in the world. Yes, the world.

He then links to this.

I withdraw. Unfortunately this leaves me with only nine things in my list. So I add:

10. Billy Beane.

Dissing cousins

[Clive]

If there’s one thing that has driven me mad about American conservatism lately, it’s the spate of columns and books banging on about the imminent "end of Europe". Show me the the phrase "death spiral" one more time, and I’ll tear up all my back issues of National Review. All right, the continent faces its share of problems, demographic and otherwise, and there’s enough dumb anti-Americanism washing around to keep Michael Moore supplied with hamburgers for many lifetimes. But let’s have a little more nuance, please, and less of this kind of talk radio hype:

In brief: Europeans are lazy, unwilling to fight for anything and willing to surrender to anyone; they are fascinated by decadence; they favour the bureaucracy over the corporation; they are unable to assimilate their immigrants; they no longer have children; they no longer produce much of cultural or scientific significance; they have lost their religious vocation and they no longer hold their lives to be meaningful.

Behind the shrill tone, I sometimes sense a desperate urge to forget some of the difficulties America faces at home and in certain corners of the globe. (Is unchecked Mexican immigration a glowing example of multiethnic politics?) I haven’t yet got a copy of Mark Steyn’s bestseller, "America Alone", but veteran German journalist Josef Joffe – a Fellow at the Hoover Institution – offers some perspective in the New York Sun:

He has got punch, wit, and smarts, and if he were teaching in a North American humanities department, they would send him off to "sensitivity training" for life, without parole….This book is a relentlessly funny and felicitous polemic, but as in any polemic, its sparkling insights don’t quite add up to a watertight brief. Sentences are honed to the sharpest, wittiest point, but, in the end, they leave you breathless and with a sense of de trop. You begin to scratch your head once your look past the sheer delight of reading.

Above all, Joffe  doesn’t buy the "Eurabia" thesis, which has become common currency in certain parts of the Right:

There are only 20 million self-righteous and embittered Muslims in Europe — and 430 million soi-disant Euro-weenies. It will take a while before the former overwhelm the latter — a couple of hundred years at least. Meanwhile, these secular and Christian folks are not amoebae or lemmings, driven to their demise by forces they neither understand nor control. If September 11, 2001, was no wake-up call, July 7, 2005, in Britain was, and so were the murder of Theo van Gogh in Amsterdam and a spate of foiled terror attacks since then.

Those Euros are beginning to see multiculturalism as an unforeseen passport to "parallel universes" in their inner and outer cities; they are taking a hard look at their mosques, and what is taught in them; and they are tightening up on immigration. The new buzzword is "integration," which is a more correct moniker for "assimilation." Nor is America as exceptional as Mr. Steyn would have us believe. Berkeley is more like Berlin than Boise when it comes to the siren call of multiculturalism and "Otherism."

None of this is to say the dangers are imaginary. History hasn’t ended. But some of the Cassandras have a habit of sounding as crudely deterministic as any old school Marxist.

Patricia Barber, diva

[Clive]

The woman is on a roll right now. It’s hard to describe the music of Chicago singer-pianist Patricia Barber. Maybe Diana Krall meets Joni Mitchell comes close. I posted "Gotcha" on my own site not long ago. Apologies if you’ve heard it before; I really can’t resist sharing it with a wider audience. (Try to ignore the chat at the start and in the middle.)

Barber’s latest album, "Mythologies" (inspired by Ovid, no less) is my favourite release of the past year. If you’ve never heard her before, however, her previous CD, "Live: A Fortnight in France", is an even better place to start. As you can see from her fascinating travel diary, she’s been in Russia this month. Before that, she and her musicians got robbed on the train to Amsterdam: "The heist was brilliantly executed, like a magic show." Can’t imagine that happening to the likes of J-Lo. (Does she even know what a train looks like?)