Lashing out

In Britain, heretics get a metaphorical lashing
Yes, there are huge cultural differences between Sudan and the UK – but the elites on both sides of the divide share one important pastime in common: the policing of morality.

Thankfully no one in Britain is given 40 lashes. Instead they’re given a metaphorical lashing. Those who offend public morality or ridicule conventional wisdom are not tied up and beaten, but they are beaten up in the press and political circles and are frequently hounded from their jobs. The difference in Britain is that the metaphorical lashers pose as the guardians of PC, liberal morality, keen to protect the public from outdated and offensive ideas, while in Sudan the literal lashers are closed-minded clerics who lose the plot over any inappropriate mention of Muhammad. Yet both have in common a deep intolerance of ‘unacceptable’ ideas and a desire to monitor and clamp down on blasphemy: whether it’s secular blasphemy against liberal conventions here, or literal blasphemy against archaic conventions over there.

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Scientific method

BBC: UK among school science leaders
The UK is among the better performers in an international league table on school science, although there is a wide achievement gap. A study of science ability among 15-year-olds in 57 countries ranked the UK between 12th and 18th place.
Daily Mail: British schools slide down world league for sciences from 4th to 14th
Britain has tumbled down another education league table - this time in science. In six years, the UK has slumped from fourth to 14th place in a table of 15-year-olds' performance in science tests. Our schools trail major European countries such as Germany and the Netherlands, as well as smaller nations such as Estonia and Liechtenstein.
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Skin and gristle?! Speak for yourself.

I don't do a 'Quote of the Day' but if I did this would be it. From DSquared in Jamie's comments section:
...I think the penis contains very little muscle tissue and a lot of thick-walled blood vessels, so sauteed penis is basically going to be a lump of skin and gristle. I would guess that if you're going to eat it, you would need to braise it very slowly - then maybe you could deep-fry it, like the Spanish do with pigs' ears.


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Cutting edge journalism

I'm buying my granddaughter an iPod for Christmas so I did a bit of surfing and came across this  'prescient' piece by David Smith, technology correspondent of The Observer:

Why the iPod is losing its cool:
The iPod, the digital music player beloved of everyone from Coldplay's Chris Martin to President George Bush, is in danger of losing its sheen. Sales are declining at an unprecedented rate. Industry experts talk of a 'backlash' and of the iPod 'wilting away before our eyes'. Most disastrously, Apple's signature pocket device with white earphones may simply have become too common to be cool.
This piece was dated September 2006. I expect Mr Smith is still pulling a decent salary for his insightful scribblings. I'd stick to writing strictly about technology if I were him and leave marketing and business commentary to the grown -ups. The demise of Apple is predicted every year by certain tech journalist and every year Apple comes back and bites their collective arses. According to Smith the reason he was sure the iPod would fail is because it's not cool. And why was it no longer cool?  - because it's been too successful!

You've got to laugh.

You can now buy iPods in vending machines in the US. How uncool is that? Ha, ha!

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'To hell with good intentions'



This post by Tim Worstall on 'iatrogenic-deaths' prompted my memory of the great Ivan Illich who popularised the term 'iatrogenic' (meaning roughly, doctor-induced harm) in his seminal 1975 work 'Medical Nemesis: The Appropriation of Health'.

From his Guardian obituary in 2002:
He worked in 10 languages; he was a jet-age ascetic with few possessions; he explored Asia and South America on foot; and his obligations to his many collaborators led to a constant criss-crossing of the globe in the last two decades.

Best known for his polemical writings against western institutions from the 1970s, which were easily caricatured by the right and were, equally, disdained by the left for their attacks on the welfare state, in the last 20 years of his life he became an officially forgotten, troublesome figure (like Noam Chomsky today in mainstream America). This position obscures the true importance of his contribution. His critique of modernity was founded on a deep understanding of the birth of institutions in the 13th century, a critical period in church history which enlightened all of his work, whether about gender, reading or materiality. He was far more significant as an archaeologist of ideas, someone who helped us to see the present in a truer and richer perspective, than as an ideologue.
This is what he had to say on the American desire to 'do good' in the world:
"The compulsion to do good is an innate American trait. Only North Americans seem to believe that they always should, may, and actually can choose somebody with whom to share their 'blessings'. Ultimately, this attitude leads to bombing people into the acceptance of 'gifts'..."
And here's Anthony Daniels (aka Theodore Dalrymple) who admired Illich and was irritated by him in equal measure:

He argued first that the health of a population had very little to do with its access to doctors and to medical care, and that the tangible benefits that doctors conferred were more than outweighed by the tangible harm that they did. He argued second (and more importantly) that the medical enterprise gave rise to unrealistic expectations in the population it served, disguising from it the fact that suffering was an inevitable part of human life and thus deforming its entire personality. Furthermore, medicine as a profession had inbuilt imperialist pretensions: more and more of ordinary human life came under its jurisdiction.
He wasn't an easy read. An extremely complex character and something of a paradox himself he nevertheless produced works which forced his readers toTHINK and, in many cases, fundamentally changed the way they thought about subjects such as health, education, work and institutions:

His fundamental argument, widely admired in some quarters and ridiculed and caricatured in others, was that once our institutions developed beyond a certain scale, they became perverse, counterproductive to the beneficial ends for which they were originally conceived. The end result of this paradoxical counter-productivity was schools which make people dumb, complacent and unquestioning; hospitals which produce disease; prisons which make people violent; travel at high speed which creates traffic jams; and ‘aid and development’ agencies which create more and more ‘needy’ and ‘underconsuming’ people.

Part of the problem is that Illich’s work does not come easily. His erudition and the fiery complexity of his style and thought make it difficult to unravel the many threads in his polemics. The other part of the problem is that undermining long-inculcated certainties in people’s lives tends to create anxiety in them, especially when the critique of those certainties rings true, but they do not know what to do about it. Too often the response is simple denial.
If you've never come across Illich and you've got a spare hour or so do yourself a favour. Forget those tedious blog posts analyzing the scandal of Labour party funding or what Nadine Dorries had for breakfast and get your teeth into some real intellectual meat:

Ivan Illich 1926 - 2002.

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Long tail short change

There's No Money In The Long Tail of the Blogosphere
It is often forgotten that money is to be made by leveraging the collective long tail, however, making money while being part of the long tail is very difficult. Specifically, in the blogosphere, the vast majority of blogs have very few readers. It is not realistic to expect these blogs to make money. As the enthusiasm and the incentive in the long tail begin to wear off, what would be the impact on the businesses that depend on them? Likely, the impact is going to be large.

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Mad bollocks #937

'I saw Madeleine being dragged towards the marina,' says new witness
He told the Daily Mirror: "It was very, very dark and it was hard to make out exactly what the couple looked like. But through the gloom I could see a very suspicious-looking man and woman, with a child who fitted Madeleine's description.

It was hard to see what the couple looked like because it was VERY, VERY DARK.

Not dark. Not, very dark. But very, very dark.

But, no matter, the child fitted Madeleine's description. And here's the photo to prove it:



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Storm in a teacup. Some storm, some teacup

Teacher charged over teddy row
The British teacher, Gillian Gibbons, has been charged in Sudan with insulting religion, inciting hatred and showing contempt for religious beliefs.

The Muslim Council of Britain reacted angrily to the news, saying it was "appalled" and demanded Mrs Gibbons' immediate release. "This is a disgraceful decision and defies common sense. There was clearly no intention on the part of the teacher to deliberately insult the Islamic faith," said Secretary-General Dr Muhammad Abdul Bari, in a strongly-worded statement. "We call upon the Sudanese President, Omar al-Bashir, to intervene in this case without delay to ensure that Ms Gibbons is freed from this quite shameful ordeal," said Dr Bari.
As Jamie points out "what you have is a hostage taking by the Sudanese government, or factions thereof". Presumably for some internal political reasons? In any case we need to see some strong language from the government on this. Apart from anything else, this is a gift to bigots, which is, no doubt, why the Muslim Council were quick to condemn the actions of the Sudanese government. Having said that we musn't allow fear of being labelled a bigot prevent us from calling this what it is - intolerant, stupid, religiously-justified persecution of a decent and good woman.  The statement from the 'moderate' SAU doesn't exactly inspire confidence:

Earlier, the Sudanese Embassy in London said the situation was a "storm in a teacup" and signalled that the teacher could be released soon, attributing the incident to a cultural misunderstanding. But Sudan's top clerics have called for the full measure of the law to be used against Mrs Gibbons and labelled her actions part of a Western plot against Islam. "What has happened was not haphazard or carried out of ignorance, but rather a calculated action and another ring in the circles of plotting against Islam," the Sudanese Assembly of the Ulemas said in a statement. The semi-official clerics body is considered relatively moderate (sic) and is believed to have the ear of the Sudanese government.

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Mmm, now if Jonathan King were an interrogator...

Reason Magazine - Ticking Bombast
Let’s say you’ve caught a suspect and you’re sure he’s a terrorist, and you’re sure there’s a nuclear bomb somewhere in Manhattan, and you’re sure he knows where it is, and you’re sure this particular terrorist has been trained to resist torture just long enough that you could never get the true location of the bomb out of him in time. But you’re also sure this particular terrorist is a pervert! And he tells you that if you’ll rape your own child in front of him, he’ll tell you exactly where the bomb is and how to disarm it. And you’re sure that he will, because your intelligence is that good in exactly that way.
Via TT

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