Mr. Roboto!

The New Romney?:

For all that, Romney is still Romney. I remember sitting amazed at a Romney town hall in New Hampshire in 2008 when he didn’t express any empathy for a girl who stood up and asked a question about stem cells against the backdrop of her cousin who had suffered a terrible injury. I thought of that event when, at the Hopkinton town hall, a college-age girl asked Romney why he would say that ideally, children should be raised by a man and woman — as he did when asked about gay marriage — when she was raised by her mother and grandmother. At least a warm, sympathetic word or two seemed in order, but Romney basically reverted to his standard answer on gay marriage.

In such circumstances it’s as if he doesn’t see persons, only disembodied data points to be slotted into his hard drive so he can download the appropriate response….

Wait, this is a criticism! Give me a candidate who deals in data points! But alas, I’m not the typical voter. If Mitt Romney gets nominated we may see the broad outlines of a campaign which similarities to 1988, when a robotic technocratic Massachusetts governor was running for the Democrats. Of course Romney has been dealt a much “better” economic card. So the American people may yet vote for the Mormon robot! In 2008 they voted for a black liberal with a long association with a black nationalist preacher who regularly expressed anti-American views.

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments

Tunisia vs. Egypt

Last winter and spring I expressed very qualified and modest optimism about the prospects for a liberal democracy in Tunisia, and far less of one in Egypt. Some updates….

Tunisian Police Stop Hardline Attack On TV Station:

Tunisian police on Sunday arrested dozens of Islamist demonstrators set on attacking the offices of a television channel that had shown the award-winning film “Persepolis,” officials said.

The assault is the latest in a rise in attacks against perceived symbols of secularism by hardcore Muslims in Tunisia ahead of this month’s election. Once suppressed by the former regime, conservative Muslims are increasingly making themselves heard in the country’s politics.

Interior Ministry spokesman Hichem Meddeb said police blocked the attackers before they could reach the offices of the Nessma private television channel in the center of Tunis and arrested around 50 of them.

Still very qualified, as “moderate Islamists” are odds on favorite to come to power in the elections next month. But, Tunisia does have an active and robust secular segment of society which may resist any steamrolling. In contrast, Egypt….

Church Protests in Cairo Turn Deadly:

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

The blind leading the more blind

Michael Totten points to this piece in The New Republic which sheds some light on the cult of personality around the Assad family which has developed amongst the Alawites. Based on the piece Totten declares that the Alawites are definitively not Muslims. This is problematic on two levels. First, Totten is an atheist last I checked. Who is he to declare takfir? For the unbelievers all organized superstitions are equally fallacious, and distinctions between kinds of fantasy should never be made into a precise science. Second, the argument that the Alawites are not Muslims is not as clear as Totten and his source make them out to be. I actually lean toward the proposition that the Alawite alignment with orthodox Shia Islam is a political calculation, and that the sect does come out of the esoteric and syncretistic religious milieu which has long been submerged amongst the alpine fringes of the Near East. Some groups, such as the Druze and the Yezidis, have become definitely non-Muslim (the Druze in particular are post-Muslim, in that their Muslim origins are clear). Others, such as the Alawites, have shifted toward a more Muslim identity.

But that’s neither here nor there. The New Republic piece is littered with error or misleading assertions. You have to know something about the facts to catch those errors though, and most people simply don’t know facts, whether through laziness or stupidity. The author of the piece observes that “Yemen is a stronghold of the Sunnis.” This isn’t really true. Yemen has one of the highest fractions of Shia in the Muslim world, probably higher than Lebanon, and certainly higher than Syria. The current president of Yemen, Ali Abdullah Saleh, is by origin a Shia. Granted, the Shia of Yemen are peculiar in that their beliefs and practices verge closer to Sunni Islam than most Shia. They are the flip side of the quasi-Shia Alawites, being quasi-Sunni. But this subtly is totally elided. Then the author states that “It’s very un-Islamic to read esoteric meanings into the Koran.” This is just not true! From Wikipedia:

Continue reading

Posted in Religion | 8 Comments

On the Uselessness of Bioethics

Of all the useless ‘disciplines’ that have come along in recent years one of the more irritating is bioethics (typified perhaps best by the waste of taxpayer dollars that was George W. Bush’s fatuous “Council on Bioethics”). Writing on Reason‘s blog, here’s Ron Bailey with another example of bioethicists at work:

The Washington Post is reporting that privately funded researchers have now managed to use human eggs to produce lines of stem cells for the first time. To achieve this, the researchers installed the nuclei of skin cells in unfertilized human eggs. However, this means that the cells so produced contain three sets of chromosomes. The goal of a lot of embryonic stem cell research is to create tissues that are suitable for transplant by being genetlcally matched to specific patients. This technique does not do this, but may be a step in that direction. Of course, this new research is once again stirring ethical debate, and the Post reports one of the sillier comments:

“They have created human embryos. They are abnormal, but they are still human embryos,” said Daniel P. Sulmasy, a professor of medicine and ethics at the University of Chicago. “Anyone who is opposed to the deliberate creation and destruction of human embryos, as I am, would be opposed to this research.”

Since there is no way that these triploid “embryos” could develop into babies, one is left to wonder on which chromosome Sulmasy thinks the gene allowing for the installation of a human soul must reside?

“Bioethics” is simply someone’s opinion draped in fancy language. And it’s frequently not that well-informed. To the scrap heap with it.

Posted in Science & Faith | Tagged , | 2 Comments

The Machines That We Are

Via the New Scientist:

You can now experience the world through someone else’s eyes by tapping into their brain activity. Jack Gallant and colleagues at the University of California, Berkeley developed a technique that uses brain scans to reconstruct what a person is seeing. In the video above, it’s used to recreate film clips that a person is watching.

The team first measured brain activity produced while a person watched hours of movies. They used this data to create a model that can predict the neural activity that would be elicited by any given movie.

Then brain activity was recorded while a volunteer watched a new set of videos and the model was used to select the clips they were most likely viewing. Combining the model’s best guesses produced a blurry but reasonable approximation of the original clip.

Posted in science | Tagged | 2 Comments

Render unto the Taxpayer

From the New York Times:

This weekend, hundreds of pastors, including some of the nation’s evangelical leaders, will climb into their pulpits to preach about American politics, flouting a decades-old law that prohibits tax-exempt churches and other charities from campaigning on election issues.

The sermons, on what is called Pulpit Freedom Sunday, essentially represent a form of biblical bait, an effort by some churches to goad the Internal Revenue Service into court battles over the divide between religion and politics.

The Alliance Defense Fund, a nonprofit legal defense group whose founders include James Dobson, the founder of Focus on the Family, sponsors the annual event, which started with 33 pastors in 2008. This year, Glenn Beck has been promoting it, calling for 1,000 religious leaders to sign on and generating additional interest at the beginning of a presidential election cycle.

“There should be no government intrusion in the pulpit,” said the Rev. James Garlow, senior pastor at Skyline Church in La Mesa, Calif., who led preachers in the battle to pass California’s Proposition 8, which banned same-sex marriage. “The freedom of speech and the freedom of religion promised under the First Amendment means pastors have full authority to say what they want to say.”

Of course they should, but they shouldn’t get a tax break while doing so.

Posted in Church & State | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

Did Dawkins Blink?

Writing in the WSJ, Meghan Cox Gurdon reviews Richard Dawkins’s new science book for young folk:

…That young people might come to see poetic magic in the scientific method and the natural world is not, however, sufficient for the author of “The God Delusion,” the 2006 best seller. A crusading atheist, Mr. Dawkins has ridden his hobbyhorse into the children’s section of the bookstore. There is no doubt that he hopes to relieve young readers of any primitive vestigial religious belief to which they might cling.

In each chapter, dramatized by Dave McKean’s colorful graphic artwork, the author recounts the “made-up” and “fun” stories of various religious traditions. We are invited to smile at the idea of miracles and to regard as charmingly quaint such colorful individuals as the Hopi spider-woman goddess, the Tasmanian god Dromerdeener and the famous “Jewish preacher” who turned water into wine. Mr. Dawkins ranges widely across all manner of religious belief, so it is worth noting that he never mentions Muhammad or Islam. Perhaps he did not want to offend.

Tsk, tsk, did Dawkins blink?

On the other hand, reading the conclusion of the review made me warm to the book despite that lapse:

His tone throughout alternates between real delight over how things work and avuncular pity for the people who persist in seeing an author behind the machinery of the universe. Mr. Dawkins is rather like a subversive relative who comes to dinner and, while father is banging on about the Divine Plan, catches the attention of the teenagers at the table and rolls his eyes. There is no plan, winks Mr. Dawkins, nor any divinity. There is just the “magic” of the universe unfolding. If that is the view you wish your children to have of the cosmos, then “The Magic of Reality” will suit you very well.

Update

It seems like the answer to the question whether Dawkins blinked is no. Thanks to Prasad in the comments for the heads-up. According to a commenter (or should that be commentator: I never know) on Richard Dawkins’s site, the book includes this passage (on p.247) :

People who would laugh at the idea that a pumpkin could turn into a coach, and who know perfectly well that silk handkerchiefs don’t really turn into rabbits, are quite happy to believe that a prophet turned water into wine or, as devotees of another religion would have it, flew to heaven on a winged horse.

The chap on the winged horse was, of course, you know who.

So, apologies, Professor — and well played.

Posted in Science & Faith | Tagged | 4 Comments

Other People’s Money

In its combination of sanctimony, self-importance and taxpayer-funded extravagance, here—from Germany—is a perfect little tale of today’s political class:

Education Minister Annette Schavan flew to a personal audience with Pope Benedict XVI using a military jet, at a cost of around €150,000 – despite commercial flights being available – according to a report in Der Spiegel.
Her trip with three advisors involved a general audience and a short private conversation, after which the minister reported that he was looking forward to his trip to Germany. And although there were several commercial connections between Berlin and Rome, Schavan used a Bundeswehr jet, at a cost of around €150,000, the magazine reported on Saturday – she said she could not have fitted everything in otherwise.
Guidelines say that ministers should only resort to such measures, “when the journey cannot be undertaken by using public transport or cars, or if other crucial official business cannot be conducted without using the airforce’s airplanes.”
Schavan said that she could not have made it to a reception of the German ambassador on the evening before her meeting with the pope if she had taken a commercial flight. She had been taking part in the Islam conference in Berlin that afternoon until at least 3 p.m.
Her spokesman said her return journey by military jet was also necessary because she had to deliver a speech to the expert forum on education in the economy in Nordhorn, Lower Saxony, as soon as she arrived back in Germany.

Ah yes. Well, I’m sure the meeting with the pope was of vital importance, as indeed must have been the minister’s attendance at the ambassador’s reception and, of course, the not-to-be-missed “expert forum on education”.

Posted in politics | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Ismael & the Holy Thugs

From the Guardian, a reminder (as if one were needed) that religion will always be with us:

In a country that wakes up every Monday morning to a dismal tally of weekend murders, it is no surprise that people have turned to the saints for help. But the holy men invoked in Venezuela are anything but virtuous. In a nation with one of the highest murder rates in the world – a staggering 14,000 a year on average – where locals often joke that they would be safer if they lived in Baghdad, even the beatified carry guns.

Welcome to the cult of Ismael and the Holy Thugs, a curious blend of spiritualism and hero worship that comes with its own quirky iconography: chiefly garish figurines with baseball caps on back to front, cigarettes dangling from their mouths and guns stuffed into their belts. Ismael and his posse are the latest addition to the María Lionza cult, a religion that believes the dead coexist with the living and can be channelled through medium-like people.

Read the whole thing.

Posted in culture | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

The way we were

Remember this, Entitled to Their Opinions, Yes. But Their Facts?:

Under “Muslim law as it is universally understood,” Luttwak wrote, Obama was born a Muslim, and his “conversion” to Christianity was an act of apostasy, a capital offense and “the worst of all crimes that a Muslim can commit.” While no Muslim country would be likely to prosecute him, Luttwak said, a state visit to such a nation would present serious security challenges “because the very act of protecting him would be sinful for Islamic security guards.”

Luttwak wrote that given those facts, Obama was a Muslim and his mother’s Christian background was irrelevant. But Sherman A. Jackson, a professor of Arabic and Islamic studies at the University of Michigan, cited an ancient Islamic jurist, Ibn al-Qasim, who said, “If you divorce a Christian woman and ignore your child from her to the point that the child grows up to be a Christian, the child is to be left,” meaning left to make his own choice. Jackson said that there was not total agreement among Islamic jurists on the point, but Luttwak’s assertion to the contrary was wrong.

Khaled Abou El Fadl, a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, School of Law, said the majority opinion among Islamic jurists is that the law of apostasy can apply only to individuals who knowingly decide to be Muslims and later renege. One school of thought, he said, is that an individual must be at least a teenager to make the choice. Obama’s campaign told The Los Angeles Times last year that he “has never been a practicing Muslim.” As a young adult, he chose to be baptized as a Christian.

Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na’im, a professor of law at Emory University, said that Sharia, or Islamic law, including the law of apostasy, does not apply to an American or anyone outside the Muslim world. Of the more than 40 countries where Muslims are the majority, he said, Sharia is the official legal system only in Saudi Arabia and Iran, and even there apostasy is unevenly prosecuted, and apostates often wind up in prison, not executed.

Several of the scholars agreed that, in classical Sharia, apostasy is a capital crime, but they said that Islamic thinking is evolving. Mahmoud Ayoub, a professor of Islamic studies and comparative religion at the Pacific School of Religion in Berkeley, Calif., said, “Whether (apostasy) is punishable by death or not, there are different opinions.”

Last year, Egypt’s highest Islamic cleric, Sheik Ali Gomaa, the grand mufti, spoke out against killing apostates. He said punishment for those abandoning the religion would come in the afterlife.

All the scholars argued that Luttwak had a rigid, simplistic view of Islam that failed to take into account its many strains and the subtleties of its religious law, which is separate from the secular laws in almost all Islamic nations. The Islamic press and television have reported extensively on the United States presidential election, they said, and Obama’s Muslim roots and his Christian religion are well known, yet there have been no suggestions in the Islamic world that he is an apostate.

Now, Iranian pastor refuses to renounce Christianity, faces execution:
Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments