Uncategorized Blog

A Second Term for Barack Obama

I’m greatly relieved that Barack Obama has been reelected to serve a second term as President of the United States. True, he’s been disappointing in many ways, such as his failure to close Guantanamo Bay, his use of drone strikes in Pakistan, and his failure to reform broken financial systems. But his opponent Mitt Romney would have been worse on just about every issue, beholden to a party where the extreme right wield far too much influence.

There is a lot of wailing and gnashing of teeth in right-wing circles this morning. For example, it’s hard to believe Donald Trump’s Twitter feed is for real.

Actually, Mr Trump, we’re not laughing at America. We are laughing at you.

Those election night tweets have been compared to the final rant of the villain-of-the-week in Scooby Doo just before he’s hauled off to jail. “We would have achieved everlasting hegemony if it hadn’t been for those meddling liberal voters“.

Given the sort of insults the right used to throw about during the Cold War, the irony is that the plutocrats, theocrats and Galtiopaths would probably feel right at home in Vladimir Putin’s Russia. I wonder how many of them will actually relocate?

Of course the real reason Romney lost is because the hard right of his own party was a big turn-off for moderates. Every time he tried to tack towards the political centre, a troglodyte from the far right would pop out spouting some medieval drivel more appropriate for the Taliban. The likes of Todd “Legitimate rape” Aiken or Charlie Fuqua probably cost him the election.

One interesting link – If Muslim-Americans voted the way they did before 9/11, Romney would have won.

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Republican Candidate Calls For Execution of Naughty Children

Yes, an Arkansas Republican election candidate really does believe in executing rebellious children. From Charlie Fuqua’s book “God’s Law”

The maintenance of civil order in society rests on the foundation of family discipline. Therefore, a child who disrespects his parents must be permanently removed from society in a way that gives an example to all other children of the importance of respect for parents. The death penalty for rebellioius children is not something to be taken lightly. The guidelines for administering the death penalty to rebellious children are given in Deut 21:18-21:

Well, I say “book”, it looks like more a self-published stream-of-consciousness screed than something from a reputable publisher. Quotes like that give one a glimpse into the dark heart of the Dominionist movement, that element of the US religious right that wants to turn their nation into a totalitarian theocracy based on strict Old Testament law. I do wonder if Fuqua’s desire to solve the “Muslim problem” by expelling everyone of that faith from the country is because he thinks Sharia law is dangerously liberal. It’s all frightening stuff, although it’s hard to tell from this side of the Atlantic how widespread such thinking is.

What’s disturbing is this extremist lunatic is running for election with Republican support. They also have guy in the same election who appears to be pro-slavery. Yes I am aware that the US has a quite different electroral and party system to Britain, where central parties can veto candidates whose views are so out of line with the party’s values that they become an electoral liabilty.

So, for anyone in the US reading this: just how widespread is Fuqua’s thinking?

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Why I’m Pro-Choice

Stories like this are the reason why, despite being a Christian, I have absolutely no time for the so-called “Pro-Life” movement. Strong moral principles are a fine thing, but when they end up causing this level of life-destroying suffering, the only word I can come up with is “Evil”. Seriously, just go and read it.

To my eyes there is something profoundly wrong with the idea that it’s acceptable to sacrifice the well-being of completely blameless individuals for the sake of some nebulously-defined “greater good”. And no amount of bogus ‘slippery slope’ arguments will change that. It’s the same logic that justifies executing an innocent man on the grounds that it still serves as a deterrent to crime, something I’ve actually heard rightwing types advocate.

There is a dark sociopathy about this form of Conservatism.

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People with Lives, Opinions or a Soul Need Not Apply

“We only recruit boring, beige corporate-type people. We only emply conformant drones with no passion for anything. It can be assumed that out staff will be second or third rate talents as a result of this, and we therefore recommend you do not buy our products or services. We also believe employment discrimination leglislation does not apply to us”

“Alternatively, we might just be a bunch of trolls, because this did come from a comment the Daily Mail website”.

(Thanks to Mikko Hypponen on Twitter for the link)

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Freedom of Speech, or Terrorism by Proxy?

In an ideal world people would be free to express any opinion, no matter how offensive it might be. The appropriate response should be ridicule. Or to ignore them altogether as beneath contempt.

But we don’t live in such a world.

Far-right hatemongers Pastor Terry Jones and the shadowy “Sam Bacile” were fully aware that what they did would provoke a violent reaction, and they went ahead and did it anyway. It’s not the first time one Jones’ stunts has resulted in deaths on the other side of the world. Morally, if not legally, they share at least some responsibility for the death of the US ambassador to Libya and all the others that died. “Terrorism by proxy” is the phrase that comes to mind.

Those who use this tragedy as an excuse for one-sided attacks on Islam or Muslims while defending Islamophobes who shout “Fire!” in a crowded theatre are part of the problem, not part of the solution.

This is not a “clash of civilisations” between Islam and The West. It’s a clash between civilisation on one side, and demagoguery and mob rule on the other. Jones, “Bacile” and their fundamentalist and racist apologists are essentially on the same side as the Islamist extremists who whipped up the mob in Bengazi.

Yes, freedom of speech is an essential element of a properly functioning democracy. But should that really extend to deliberately inflammatory speech that gets people killed? One sometimes wonders the true agenda of those who are quick to defend outright hate speech. Do they really believe in free speech as an absolute? Or do they have more sympathy with the hate than they’re prepared to admit?

For more background, this is essential reading, especially on the background and possible agenda of the convicted fraudster using the pseudonym of “Sam Bacile”.

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Grant Shapps, Government Minister and Web Spammer

You know those so-called “splogs” or spam blogs that have sprung up like Kudzu all over the web? They’re made up entirely of contact scraped from other sides and served up slathered in advertising. They pollute search engine results by using all kinds of dirty tricks to game search engine algorithms to make them appear above the legitimate sites they steal content from. They’re purely parasitical, bilking money from Google Adsense without creating anything of value, and stealing traffic as well as content from real sites.

Well, it turns out Tory minister Grant Shapps is behind many Splogs.

Yes, a government minister is a spammer and snake-oil “Internet Marketing Guru”, using the false name of “Michael Green”.

If you run a business under a false name, the default assumption has to be that you’re doing something dodgy, doesn’t it?

Two things immediately come to mind. Firstly, the whole thing is a perfect metaphor for the moral bankrupcy of the Conservative party. Secondly, it shows the establishment’s double standards when it comes to intellectual property. We have a government prepared to extradite Richard O’Dwyer to the US to face a lengthy prison term for copyright violation “because downloading a movie without paying is just like stealing a car”. Then we have a minister whose whole business is founded on theft of other people’s intellectual property. Seems that different standards apply if it’s the “little people” doing the stealing rather than being stolen from.

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RIP Neil Armstrong

RIP Neil Armstrong, first man on the moon.

The moon landings where the first historical event I can remember. It’s just the sort of thing that captures the imagination of an eight-year old.

I have no time for those who dismiss the entire Apollo programme as a grand folly. Shouldn’t the ingenuity and resources have been directed to solving practical problems on Earth, they say. But they surely miss the point. It’s grand projects like the space program that inspire people to pursue careers in science or engineering, who then grow up to help solve the world’s practical problems. Otherwise children will want to become financiers or marketeers, and the mess we’re in today is the consequence of that.

Quite often when I look up into the night sky and see the full moon, I stop and think. Neil Armstrong went there. And he came back. His footsteps are still there, undisturbed.

So rest in peace, Neil. You are one of the names people will remember in a thousand years time.

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Send in the Drones?

Does banking fraud on such a massive scale it can crash whole economies do far more harm to our prosperity and well-being than any act of terrorism?

How much money do you have to steal before it’s closer to an act of war than a common crime?

Is a corrupt banking system now a greater threat to our way of life than Al-Queda?

Does this mean we should start blowing them to bits with flying killer robots?

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What The Liberal Democrats need to do now

So the Liberal Democrats, to nobody’s real surprise, did very badly in last week’s local government elections.

Part of it is down to the fact that government parties always do badly in mid-term council elections, and this is a new experience for the Liberal Democrats having not been in government before. It’s unfair on hard-working local councillors who lose seats through no fault of their own, but sadly that’s the way that it is as long as voters are more interested in “Sending a message to Westminster” than they are about electing a local council over local issues.

The Tories did badly as well. Nadine Dorries, recently described as the “Tories’ equivalent of Lembit Öpik”, is taking of leadership challenges, and demanding the return of traditional Tory values of anti-Europeanism and homophobia, oblivious to the fact that the Tories didn’t actually win the last general election, which is precisely why we have a coalition government.

Some sectarian Labour types are gleefully prophesying the end of the Liberal Democrats altogether “So that we can get back to proper two-party politics”. But The Liberal Democrats are not going to disappear any time soon, no matter what the tribalist wing of the Labour party would love to happen. It’s precisely because of their tribalist machine-driven politics that a party like The Liberal Democrats are necessary in the first place

But I do think this may well mark the turning point in the coalition.

The coalition hasn’t worked as well as many people had hoped. LibDem blogger Jonathan Calder, who enthusiastically supported the coalition in the early days rightly says

It was inevitable that the Coalition would run into trouble. One of the constituent parties had long been out of power, had leaders with no experience of government, and hordes of backbenchers and activists with bizarre views and little concept of party discipline.

I’m talking about the Conservatives.

To quote a former US president, “It’s the economy, stupid”. And the Very Big Stupid in question is Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne, whose policies have failed in a way just about everybody but himself had predicted. If there is one thing Nadine Dorries is right about, it is that it’s time for him to go.

George Osborne is facing a double-whammy here. Not only is he hopelessly compromised by close association with the Murdoch clan in the still-unfolding scandal which may yet engulf the Prime Minister himself, but he’s proved himself spectacularly incompetent at his job. And the entire country is paying the price.

The way he allowed himself to be “intellectually persuaded” by ideological nonsense about Laffer Curves shows far out of his depth he is. Osborne doesn’t just not know the price of milk, his understanding of economics is reminiscent of the typical 17-year old libertarian troll on the internet. He comes over as a prime example of the Dunning-Kruger effect in action; he understands so little he doesn’t realise how little he understands.

At this point, the Liberal Democrats in Parliament have reached the point where they have nothing to lose from rocking the boat. The price of their remaining in government must be the removal of George Osborne as chancellor, and his replacement by someone who is both experienced and a pragmatist rather than an intellectually-challenged ideologue.

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Anders Breivik and the Anarcho-Fascists

The way the Norwegian authorities have given terrorist Anders Breivik a very public trial has generated a lot of controversy. I have read a lot of people arguing that it’s giving him a platform for his poisonous ideas. The counter-argument is that showing him for what he is will serve to discredit everything he stands for.

Breivik may or may not be insane, but it would be far too convenient for some people to dismiss his “Crazy Talk” as the ravings of an isolated madman who’s actions took place in a vacuum. But that doesn’t wash. Too much of what he says had been common currency in far-right circles for years. It’s not just from openly fascist or crypto-fascist fringe groups on the internet either, but, as I’ve previously mentioned, from semi-respectable columnists in large-circulation national newspapers too.

And there are a frighteningly large number of people who think like him. Just look at how they’ve overrun the comment sections of many online articles about the trial.

Like it or not, Anders Breivik’s terrorist atrocity was the 9/11 of the Freepi.

The rightwing press are predictably attempting to scapegoat video games to deflect attention from just how extensively Breivik cited their own columnists. Rock, Paper, Shotgun has a comprehensive takedown of their attempt at a distracting moral panic. Meanwhile Breivik’s closer online confederates on both sides of the Atlantic are desperately flailing, citing his copying of Al-Qaeda’s methods in an entirely unconvincing attempt to prove this despicable act of terrorism has nothing to do with them.

This really ought to serve as a wake-up call on the threat posed by the far-right, who have been gaining strength in recent years, especially now we’re in a deep recession. They have an increasing transatlantic dimension, with the openly racist faction of the “Tea Party” forging closer and closer links with various European neo-Fascist groups. A few right-wingers predictably complain that the left are trying to politicise the tragedy. But when faced with a terrorist atrocity that was a clear and deliberate attack on European social democracy, what is anybody supposed to do?

Freepi – coined by Teresa Nielsen-Hayden of Making Light to describe the post-9/11 wingnut right.

Anarcho-Fascist – A conflation of “Anarcho-Capitalist” and “Crypto-Fascist” I originally used to describe a particularly loopy blogger and troll a few years back. Today it seems an appropriate descriptor for anyone that runs an Islamophobic hate site with a name like “Atlas Shrugs”.

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