Thursday, April 29, 2010

Oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8651333.stm
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100401/bs_afp/uspoliticsenergyoil_20100401033417

"There have been 509 fires, at least two fatalities and 12 serious injuries on oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico since 2006." -BusinessWeek

What bad timing that under a month after Obama unveiled a plan to expand offshore oil drilling in the Eastern US and Gulf of Mexico, the BP disaster occurred (11 workers suspected dead, thousands of barrels pouring into the Gulf across a 600-mile-wide area, with the slick heading towards wildlife protected wetlands). Maybe it's a sign. Obama has already ticked off much of his liberal base over concessions to the GOP/Wall Street, dithering on gays in the military, the painful passage of watered-down Obamacare, and inaction on immigration reform. Now this move has angered environmentalists.

Parts of Florida may be on the table as well, but the plan faces protest. It's funny that the flip-flopping FL GOP governor and US Senate hopeful Charlie Crist (who tends to vote anti-gay but is suspected to be a closet homosexual, but that's another story: http://www.pamshouseblend.com/diary/10933/npr-spikes-outrage-review-that-named-names) was historically against offshore FL drilling, but when he was touted as a possible running mate to pro-drilling McCain in 2008, he suddenly changed his mind. But now that President Obama is calling for the exact same drilling plans, he's against it again.

BP has had a bad safety run in the last decade. In 2005, their refinery at Texas City exploded, causing 15 deaths. In 2006, a corroded pipeline caused 1,500 barrels worth of oil to leak in AK's North Slope, and the next year they had a 2,000 gallon methanol leak in Prudhoe Bay. The company has paid hundreds of millions of dollars in fines from these accidents. Who knows how much the Gulf disaster will cost, in terms of dollars and environmental harm?

All the easily-accessible oil has been tapped in North America, and most of the world. Expanded offshore drilling through harder rock in deeper water (also areas in hurricane zones) is more expensive, complex, and dangerous. Is it worth the environmental risk and infrastructure investment to do this, just to add a few million barrels per year (and the US consumes 22M barrels per day)? So it's a drop in the bucket gain. Yes oil accidents are rare overall, but when mistakes happen, they really cause problems. Would it make more sense to just keep buying more foreign oil (by foreign, I mean Canada and Mexico mostly), or even affordable Brazilian ethanol, instead? But then US energy and farming companies have a shit fit.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

California may boycott Arizona over immgration law

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100427/ap_on_re_us/us_immigration_why_arizona_3
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=126206542
http://www.kqed.org/epArchive/R201004280900

Maybe you've been following this story, but Arizona recently passed a draconian anti-illegal immigrant bill that goes beyond even California's Prop. 187 that was deemed unconstitutional by the High Court. In brief, it permits AZ law enforcement to ask suspects to furnish documents proving their lawful immigration status, and to use race/appearance as a "factor" in pursuing suspects. And like the CA bill, it also blocks illegal immigrants' access to public services.

Regardless of whether we agree with the measure or not, 70% of AZ residents and most of their elected officials support it (the mayor of Phoenix is an exception, and plans to sue). Defenders of the law says that it merely enforces federal laws that Washington has continued to drop the ball on. Opponents say that it is bigoted racial profiling, and will in fact hurt the state economically. Due to enhanced border fortifications in CA and TX, AZ is now the main conduit for illegal southern entry into the US. The state has an estimated 0.5M illegals (official state pop. is 6.6M), and Border Patrol makes on average 900 arrests per day in AZ, accounting for 45% of their total workload. The drug trade is also a problem, with US authorities seizing on average 1.5 tons of pot per day, so no telling how much gets through (the AZ justice system is so overwhelmed that for a while it could only prosecute suspects caught with >500 pounds). Drug-related crime and murders occur at a higher rate in AZ (1 kidnapping per day) than all other states bordering Mexico.

So in response, leaders in the CA legislature and some CA cities have declared a boycott of AZ as protest (all non-essential state and city business and travel should be suspended). So AZ is the new Sudan or South Africa apparently. We know that boycotts are troublesome because they invariably hurt the people that we seek to defend. AZ Latinos and illegal immigrants also benefit from CA visitors spending money. And AZ has been one of the hardest-hit states in the housing bust, so their economy is quite fragile. CA does millions of dollars of business each day with AZ, though I'm sure this boycott will be more bark than bite. In addition, AZ holds the trump card that its private prison industry houses thousands of CA inmates. The Governator hasn't joined the protest because he doesn't want an angry AZ shipping all those inmates back to our overcrowded system.

I disagree with the law, but I understand that desperate times compel people to over-react with desperate measures. Due to federal impasse over immigration reform and a growing drug war, AZ feels the need to take matters into its own hands. It's no different than CA trying to enact stronger emissions legislation with the federal climate bill's future still uncertain. Civil rights groups are protesting the AZ law, and business groups are suing CA. All this anger and wasted effort is mostly due to Congressional gridlock and lack of political will in Washington. And while the gov't has pressured and aided Mexico to get together on in its drug war, where is the call for social and economic reform? Mexico and most of Latin America is feudal. The rich 1% control everything and the poor masses have nothing. So they dare to brave the horrible journey to the States because they have no other choice (see the film "Sin Nombre"). Where is the US pressure to reform Mexico's taxation and social services? Of course we need to get our own house in order first, but reforms south of the border must be included in any successful immigration overhaul.

Yes, some of this may be due to election year posturing, but tackling immigration is like playing with dynamite for campaigners. The topic hurts one's own party more than the opposition. Hard-line conservatives think we should get tougher on illegal immigration, and other states like UT are trying to follow AZ's lead. But Karl Rove and the Bushes question the law, and worry that the GOP will lose more Latino votes. Democrats are also sensitive to the Latino vote, but know that they can't be seen as soft on security either. Obama's hands are full with Wall Street reform, Afghanistan, and maybe resuscitating the climate bill, but lawmakers like Harry Reid all but forced the debate back to Congress, now that he is fighting for his Nevada Senate seat. That's not to say Congress will pass anything in 2010, but now it's on the agenda in a big way. Even Gavin Newsome's "outrage" over the bill that promoted him to issue a SF boycott of AZ occurred only after LA's city council made a similar proposal, and one councilwoman happens to be his chief rival for the CA Lt. Governor's post. So I guess it's the same old game. The politicians grandstand and squabble while the honest people on the front lines suffer.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

South Park Muhammad episodes

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/ynews_ts1763


http://content.usatoday.com/communities/ondeadline/post/2010/04/south-park-censored-after-warning-from-islamist-group/1



The episode:

http://www.xepisodes.com/southpark/episodes/1406/201.html



Jon Stewart's response:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/04/23/jon-stewart-stands-up-for_n_549178.html



It doesn't feel that long ago, but way back in 2006 we discussed the Danish Muhammad cartoons and their free speech, religious extremism implications (links at bottom). For you fellow South Park fans, you know that for their 200-201st episodes, they made a 2-part story basically ridiculing all the famous people that they have already ridiculed over their 14 seasons. The show's creators, Parker and Stone, probably want to feel like no one (or no prophet) is beyond their satire reach, so they tried to push the envelope to see how much Muhammad content Comedy Central/Viacom would let them get away with. The whole point of their story is that oft-ridiculed egomaniac celebrities like Tom Cruise want to steal Muhammad's magic "goo" that allows him to be impervious to insult. Of course that goo is the fear of violent backlash from angry Muslims, which most Tom Cruise fans won't replicate.



In episode 200, they were permitted to say the name Muhammad, but to never show an image of him (if he was in a scene, he was blocked by a large black rectangle with the words "CENSORED" on it). The closest they got was showing Muhammad supposedly hidden in a large teddy bear suit. After that, a small NYC-based group (Revolution Muslim) said on their website that Parker and Stone insulted their faith and should be careful, or they would "end up like Theo Van Gogh", the Dutch filmmaker who was murdered by a Muslim after he produced a controversial film about female mistreatment in Islam, where religious imagery was intercalated with bondage pornography. So of course the media community got all up in arms about this, rallying to poor South Park's defense. Jon Stewart did as well, in the video above. So for episode 201, everyone was on edge. Viacom and even some South Park staff "undermined" Parker and Stone by censoring much more content without their knowledge or approval. Now the name Muhammad would not be audible (masked by a bleep), and discussions about intimidation and fear were also censored. As a viewer, I thought that part was deliberate from Parker and Stone for humor, but apparently not. Though not ones to back away from controversy, Parker and Stone plan to fire back with episode 202. And apparently in Season 5, South Park did show a non-offensive depiction of Muhammad (see attachment), and never received any threats about it because they didn't make a big deal about it, unlike now.



Personally, I think all this is getting way overblown, just like the Danish cartoons. Maybe it's just a stunt for ratings from the South Park gang anyway, since they were running out of people to insult, and need something fresh to spice up a show that has been on the air for over a decade (prior to the Muhammad episode, their recent work was "The Tale of Scrotie McBoogerBalls" with random vomiting). I doubt anyone at Comedy Central or South Park Studios are really fearful of violent reprisals, though I'm sure most of them aren't booking a flight to Karachi any time soon. South Park has had experience with walking the fine line between slander lawsuits and fair-game satire, but their biggest religious foe has really been the Scientologists, not the Muslims, who actually got an anti-Scientology episode pulled (http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=124052961, http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5286835).



Revolution Muslim never directly threatened anyone. They made a not unreasonable prediction and warning based on recent facts, no different than your mother reminding you to brush your teeth before bed or risk getting cavities. And it's not like this small-time web-based group (their website was subsequently hacked after their South Park comments, and is currently down) matters in the global "clash of cultures". They are not a terrorist group, nor imams, so they have really no influence over, and do not speak for, the hundreds of millions of Muslims out there, most of whom have never heard of South Park, but they probably don't appreciate rich, rude foreigners insulting a major part of their identity.



As with the Danish cartoons, this row is not about the defense of free speech and all those other lofty, righteous intentions. Just like the Catholic Church claiming to be persecuted over their cover-ups of criminal sex abuse of minors, we in the Judeo-Christian West love to play the victim and martyr, even when we are in fact the perpetrator. We're just standing up for what we believe in, and these barbarians threaten us and want to take away our rights! Parker and Stone are rich, and don't need anyone's sympathy or defense. Plus, they mostly got rich by making fun of all the irrational, hypocritical, prudish, depraved, and stupid things we Americans do, many of which are not shared by the Muslims whom we often belittle and look down upon.



In addition, South Park is not high art and generally not much more edifying than my lame emails (and let me repeat that I am a big SP fan). If the crazy Muslims were trying to prevent us from enjoying Shakespeare or Beethoven, that is a different story. Of course fundamentalists like the Taliban do prohibit music and some other entertainment IN THEIR LAND, because they think it will lead to sinful behavior (and sometimes they're right, if you've ever been to a Marilyn Manson or Pussycat Dolls concert). Even if we disapprove of their ways, it's their land and their laws, so we can't really stop them unless we want to topple another regime. The Taliban never said that Westerners can't listen to music (or threatened us with violence if we do), though I'm sure they disapprove just as we do of their customs. That's the sad irony of all this: the Muslim-Western culture clash is so symbiotic and reflective. What applies to us applies to them, and what angers us is often the converse of what angers them.



I know South Park feels like they have creative license to satirize anything or anyone, and under US laws they do in most cases. They were being pretty sensitive and fair too, because in the same episode Jesus was watching internet porn and Buddha was snorting cocaine. I don't think the Dalai Lama or Pope have lost much sleep over it. It's one thing to inadvertently offend someone due to cultural differences. But to deliberately push another person's buttons isn't really defensible to me. They claim that Muslims are intimidating us into self-censorship, well we are provoking and pushing them, which could result in regrettable behavior, not that anyone has died over this. As far as I know, no European was hurt over the Danish cartoons either, even though some fatwas were probably issued and some KFCs got razed in the Middle East (no joke). If a kid at school keeps poking you in the belly, and taunts you with "Come on, hit me, hit me you little wimp!", we wouldn't be surprised if it ends badly. And that doesn't benefit anyone (the bully gets a bloody nose and the teased kid gets detention, and from then on the two kids hate each other and may fight again).



We are damn lucky compared to most poor Muslims. We can enjoy all the free speech that we want here, though it doesn't hurt to show a little discretion in regards to our audience. If Parker and Stone want to celebrate free speech, why don't they dress up like Klansmen and go hang out in Ninth Ward New Orleans? It's one thing to poke fun at silly media spectacles like Paris Hilton - they are rich and adored, they will survive. But many Muslims are poor and illiterate. Religion and family are all they have going for them, and we would be the same if we were born in their place. To egg them on from our comfy ivory tower in the West is low. Parker and Stone are spoiled; for a decade they have enjoyed their weekly bully pulpit, and no one has really challenged them. They can reach millions of households with their message, while the average Muslim has never even met an American and can't speak English. Sure, most of us think it's silly for Muslims to get so offended by others' ignorant "transgressions" against their prophet. But all of us have our irrational pet peeves. What if you really hate humming? If Parker and Stone came to your house and followed you around humming all day, you probably would get pissed at them too. Maybe you wouldn't kill them, but they wouldn't score points in your book. Does that mean Parker and Stone have to give up humming entirely? Of course not, but if they do, it would be more considerate if they don't do it in your presence, and ridicule you for your aversion to humming.



http://worldaffairs-manwnoname.blogspot.com/2010/04/more-on-cartoons.html

http://worldaffairs-manwnoname.blogspot.com/2010/04/danish-muhammad-cartoons.html

More on the Cartoons

http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/02/09/opinion/edpatrick.php








Webster defines "pornography" as creative activity of no literary or artistic value other than to stimulate sexual desire. What do you call "political satire" devoid of any constructive or meaningful message other than mocking provocation? Such content shouldn't be outlawed, but it should be given a similarly unsavory label to make people think twice (or at least recognize the social ramifications) before perusing or peddling in it. Fox News, Halliburton, and Wal-Mart are not illegal entities (though they do break laws and ethical standards at times), but they have a stigma associated with them that compromises their business somewhat. Similarly, cartoonists and journalists should pay a social price for their tasteless yet legal handiwork. We are all responsible for making sure our democracy and free market work as they were intended. We need to be diligent and careful, otherwise the system malfunctions. Then we end up celebrating our freedoms and fighting for our values by making a farce of them.







Self-serving journalists and conservatives are rallying to the support of the European press under fire, and some publications even reprinted the inflammatory images as a show of solidarity. Of course a number of people in the press claim that they are defending our values. But no one likes to see their livelihood in jeopardy, including journalists. I'm not saying that all of them think this way and are purely self-absorbed, but various retail corporations squash labor unions, politicians and lobbyists resist campaign finance reform, medical researchers dispute stem cell restrictions, and media affiliates naturally oppose external censorship. People don't like obstructions to their professional success. But are they willing to insult a worldwide religion, upset millions, and put innocents at risk, just to prove a point and protect the business?







The EPA hounds industry, the FDA watches pharmaceutical companies, and the SEC scrutinizes the stock markets (in theory). Apart from the threat of various lawsuits and fairly toothless government bodies (FCC, MPAA, etc.), speech is unregulated in the USA – as it should be. But we don't really have "free speech" in America, the Middle East, or anywhere else in the world (and it will never truly exist) because we regulate ourselves – again, as it should be. Corporations (including media corporations) won't produce material that will lose them money. Politicians won't say things that will cost them net votes. People in public won't behave in socially unacceptable ways, in general. Occasionally, individuals take a stand despite overwhelming disapproval and whatnot, because they believe that their message is worth the cost. But cost to whom? The Danish press and others made their point, but it benefited no one, and other people suffered who weren't even involved. No one asked the Danes to do this, maybe apart from a few anti-Muslims circles. No one asked for their help to reform the Muslim world and address Europe's immigrant tensions in the form of disrespectful cartoons. On the other hand, the people of Darfur are crying out for international involvement that the press often ignores. I suppose racy, stirring content sells, and other content is uninteresting or a downer. But let's be clear that the staff of Jyllands-Posten isn't heroic like Woodward and Bernstein in righting a wrong or fighting for civil liberties under siege. They did it of their own free will and probably cognizant of the risks, in order to focus on an issue that they instigated and exaggerated. That is pretty irresponsible to me, and betrays the very nature of the free press and journalistic ethos.







http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0713-06.htm



http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/?040830fa_fact1



http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/exhibitions/online/woodstein/







Supposedly, our love of freedom is stronger than intimidation of censorship and external backlash from fear-mongering "Islamofascists". The causes and repercussions of violence, ignorance, and protest in Islamic societies is a very valid and pertinent topic of debate/research. Discussions relating to the life of Mohammad are almost as ubiquitous and controversial to religious scholars as his Christian counterpart Jesus. Most journalists attended university, so they should be able to distinguish between productive discourse and petty lampooning. One is more valuable than the other in most situations. If you want to make a statement about Jihad or Mohammad or anything, there are dignified, educated, and USEFUL ways of doing so. Conduct some inquiries and do your homework, interview and take polls, analyze and form intelligent conclusions. Satirize all you want if it helps enlighten your audience. The press should know this already, and they probably do; but I guess it's easier for some people to merely attack, sensationalize, and caricature what they don't understand or accept. I value and defend freedom of expression (heck, I'm practicing it with y'all every week), but I won't support an idiotic, rabble-rousing stunt that doesn't edify, doesn't help anyone, and makes peaceful understanding all the more difficult.







http://news.yahoo.com/s/ucac/20060209/cm_ucac/calvinandhobbesandmuhammad







I don't think European-American media and governments have behaved as good ambassadors of Western values and freedoms, in general and especially during this fiasco. We're not setting a good example, and we're not helping the efforts of reformist Muslims, nor convincing their hesitant compatriots under repressive regimes, harboring radical beliefs, or with little access to alternative viewpoints. We assure them that no "Clash of Civilizations" à la Samuel Huntington really exists, and we do want to make their lives better. Yet we have a shaky record in cultural tolerance and mutual understanding. The fact that the reasonable Muslim masses have chosen to support religious extremists over their pro-Western rivals time and time again is a sad testament to our failings. And still today, it seems that we haven't learned from our mistakes. It's hard to build trust and persuade foreign peoples to embrace an unfamiliar concept like free speech, especially when they witness us using that freedom to satirize and gravely insult the standard-bearer of their religion.







http://www.historyorb.com/world/clashofcivilizations.shtml



http://www.georgetown.edu/faculty/irvinem/CCT510/Sources/Huntington-ClashofCivilizations-1993.html







I can understand why moderate, reformist Muslims are really frustrated. They have the precarious duty to bridge the gap between hostile worlds, they have no trustworthy allies, and yet they must denounce and answer for bad behavior on both sides. Basically, they are the divorce court delegated to broker a fair outcome among bitter adversaries with a rocky past. But when things fall apart, they're blamed for not doing a better job. They are sandwiched in between the extremist, militant, and ignorant wing of their faith and their Western partners who much too often stab them in the back when they should be helping. The former may alienate them as phony Muslims and Infidel sympathizers, and the latter has trouble distinguishing them from the radicals (or doesn't bother to try). The West claims to desire to work hand-in-hand with them to improve human rights, oppose fundamentalist Islam, and promote democracy in the Muslim world, yet sometimes we don't show up. In addition, Western regimes often think of their own political survival, and may abandon progressive Muslims in preference of corrupt oil despots. Our inflammatory, insensitive actions have made their difficult job all the more challenging.







http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/london/4700482.stm



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/london/4705342.stm







However, if some Muslims are tired of being labeled as violent terrorists by the West, then maybe they shouldn't freak out and destroy things every time a controversy breaks. They have the universal right to defend their dignity, culture, and all else they hold dear. But how they go about such defense is a more complicated affair. The different codes of law in different nations permit various forms of defense, protest, and justice. Of course certain people take matters into their own hands and forge their own solution. Actions deemed acceptable, heroic, or criminal are constantly varying with time and place. History and posterity can judge the merits of each decision, depending on who remembers and who writes history. Rosa Parks refused to give up her bus seat in defiance of the status quo, Black September felt that taking Jewish athletes hostage would advance Palestinian liberation, Greenpeace advocates chained themselves to old-growth trees despite pepper spray attacks from the police, the Bush Administration persuaded the country that we needed to invade Iraq to prevent another 9/11, and some newspapers reprinted the Mohammad cartoons despite Muslim condemnation. The diversity of such defensive actions mirrors the diversity of human life. But good defense need not involve the hurting of others.







How do Muslims defend Islam? It's the billion-dollar question. If the goal is peaceful coexistence and acceptance with the Judeo-Christian West (if they trust us to honor our part of the bargain), then violent reactions do more harm than good. They only reinforce the "angry, barbaric Muslim" stereotype in the West that contributes to xenophobia, distrust, and aggression. We're even less willing to make concessions to Muslim states if they behave in ways we find deplorable. If fundamentalists like Osama label the West as the unremitting enemy of Islam, then their followers must resist by any means necessary, including the vile yet effective practice of suicide bombing. Therefore, we shouldn't act the part either, validating Al Qaeda's intolerance and giving them a reason to hate and attack us. The more military presence we pour into the Middle East, and the more threats our leaders make on camera, the more Muslims will be edgy and oversensitive. Conversely, if some Westerners think that Islam is incompatible, if not outright antagonistic, with our way of life, they choose to fight back as well. Preemptive doctrine was established in the National Security Strategy because the Bush Administration felt that we must destroy terrorists and unfriendly regimes before they do the same to us. The president recently stated that intelligence groups had thwarted at least ten major attacks on Western soft targets. That is delightful news, but we will be hard pressed to maintain such a stellar security record if we plan to continue the preemptive doctrine.







Unfortunately, it's a slippery slope with mutual distrust and hostility. People retaliate by hurting innocents who had nothing to do with the original insult or crime. Ignorant persons may victimize whomever is available and resembling their perceived enemy. During World War II, the US government decided to imprison and dispossess Japanese-Americans on the West Coast who had nothing to do with Pearl Harbor, yet did nothing to ethnic Japanese in Hawaii because they were essential to the territory's economy. Among many such incidents in the 1980's, laid-off autoworkers in Detroit beat a Chinese-American to death because he resembled the Japanese that were out-competing US auto companies. Post-9/11 hysteria generated assaults on Sikh-Indian-Americans, because their tradition headwear fit the generic Middle Eastern stereotype. And now, Vandals defaced Muslim graves in Denmark after the overseas embassy attacks and flag burnings.







http://www.infoplease.com/spot/internment1.html



http://us_asians.tripod.com/articles-vincentchin.html



http://gbgm-umc.org/umw/legislative/hatecrimes.html



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4708312.stm







So obviously, Ann Coulter and others are wrong if they think that vengeful extremists only come in dark-skinned, Allah-praising form. But how do we stop angry people from striking out against innocents? I think it starts with honest leadership, which can be in short supply during conflict times. Governments and executives need to spread awareness, fess up to their involvement in the problem, and make a plea, or better yet, a mandate for temperance. For example, former General Motors Chairman Roger Smith should have cut the excuses and reminded people that it was his decision to lay off thousands of employees to increase profits. Bush and his supporters have done a poor job in assuaging anti-Arab/Muslim sentiments and activities in this country. Token condemnations of hate speech won't do. Leaders have to communicate and people have to realize that it's unpatriotic, unbecoming, and terribly ignorant (not to mention unlawful) to abuse people as some did after 9/11, or destroy property as others did in the wake of the cartoon outrage. Vengeance and hate crimes must be punished to the fullest extent of the law, not merely downplayed or swept under the rug. This also applies to misconduct by our intelligence and military forces abroad. But I know of no regime or leader that would sacrifice eminence and accept blame just to protect some minorities or foreign nationals from harm.







http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/B8A7432E-F762-4287-9DA4-30D354FC23B4.htm



http://www.amperspective.com/html/the_fbi_witch_hunt.html







Surely Islam is not aiding its cause when some of its followers overreact with counter-productive vengeance, even to such terrible and unnecessary humiliation from the Mohammad cartoons. Justice is vital to many people, and it can either be earned through dignified behavior or imposed by force. As we have seen during the World War periods, only one type of justice is genuine and lasting. Proper justice must be consensual from all parties involved, which makes it very difficult to achieve, especially when adversaries continue to be hostile, small-minded, and distrustful. The West has wronged the Muslim world time and time again, and sometimes their radical fringe has sought justice by responding to the West with more wrongdoing. Some hardliners would argue that Islamist intolerance and violence is unprovoked and inexcusable under all circumstances. This may be true, but does that justify our aggressive retaliation in turn? From a cynical perspective, why should they respect and accept our values when we don't seem to respect and accept theirs? Why should they shun violence and practice tolerance when we don't seem to either? Conversely, why should we give them the benefit of the doubt when all we hear from the Middle East are riots, human rights abuses, and bloodshed? Why should we embrace Islam when many of its followers do disservice to the faith? Obviously, we need to look past these incompatible typecasts and engage in real discussion. Ideology and stereotypes aside, what do Westerners want, and what do Muslims want? I think we'll be surprised how much we have in common, and how much of the conflict is just political muckraking between rival ideologues.







As we all know, "an eye for an eye" makes the world go blind. Unfortunately, many of us have not realized the blind folly of our actions and prejudices. Sometimes conservative elements in the West and the fundamentalist Muslim world act like two blind men flailing in a fistfight (I hope they do not draw the mainstream into the fray as well). They can't knock each other out, but still swing away (via words, bombs, oil, sanctions, etc.). With each punch that doesn't connect, they get more and more frustrated and angry. Yet with every miss, innocent bystanders have the chance to be hurt instead. In turn they get pissed off too, and maybe take sides against the person who hit them. This is not the way to conduct diplomacy and cultural outreach.







Regardless of who is our real enemy, we should try to ascertain how we can prevent such an enemy from hurting us, with the minimum sacrifice possible on our part. This is equally valid from the Muslim world's perspective. It makes no sense to become vengeful, harsh, and violent if it only serves to strengthen your enemy's resolve to oppose and defeat you. This is what the USA and other nations didn't understand in previous conflicts in Algeria, Vietnam, Palestine, and Afghanistan, and what we still haven't figured out in Iraq and the larger War on Terror. The terrorists responsible for 9/11 also maddened a sleeping giant and put the entire Middle East in the crosshairs. Scores of Muslims have suffered and died because of what they did and the anticipated American countermeasures – how does that glorify Allah and defeat the "Great Satan"? However, the overly aggressive US response has played into their hands in Iraq, as our military forces have bogged down battling another elusive, zealous insurgency and our diplomatic credibility has greatly waned. And let us remember what Abraham Lincoln said: "I destroy my enemies when I make them my friends." Violent reprisal is not the only response at our disposal for dealing with hostile forces, and may render both Muslims and Westerners less safe in the end.







Those with cooler heads and enlightened sensibilities should try to persuade their fellow Muslims that angry retaliation erodes sympathy and turns people off from their argument. They don't want to behave like imperialistic Yankees, do they? We don't want to sink down to the level of Islamist militants, do we? Nonviolent resistance is a very daunting task that involves much personal risk, but it's probably vital. I am sure that MLK, Nelson Mandela, Mahatma Gandhi, the Dalai Lama, and their followers wanted to ring the necks of their American, Apartheid, British, and Chinese oppressors on many occasions. But they knew that such moves would betray their core beliefs, play into their opponents' hands, and forfeit the moral high ground that they needed to garner widespread protest and achieve victory. I know that we moderates and progressives in the West are asking a lot of Muslim reformers. Maybe we're asking too much and not doing enough to help them. But if moderate Muslims do believe in their movement, they must find a way to persuade the mainstream to shun the extremists, calm down, and pursue peaceful alternatives. Imagine the worldwide shockwaves of a billion Muslims united in a peaceful "for shame" protest of the cartoons and Western racism/ignorance. Jyllands-Posten and their supporters would be up a creek. Imagine the impact of the USA and her allies withdrawing soldiers and aid from repressive Middle Eastern regimes after 9/11. Extremists like Al Qaeda would have much less traction with everyday Muslims. Americans strongly believe in self-empowerment. If we want change, understanding, and peace, we can start by practicing it.

Danish Muhammad Cartoons

(From 2006)

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/4693292.stm




http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/4677976.stm



http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5196323



http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/02/07/news/europe.php







This controversy is out of control already, so I don't mean to beat a dead horse. All sides are taking past each other and refuse to empathize so much that I don't really have the stomach to comment a lot. But a brief discourse from me is still seven pages!







THE DANISH CARTOONS







http://michellemalkin.com/archives/004413.htm







Here are the actual cartoons from the Danish paper. Some are clearly harmless, and others are obviously pejorative and slanted. Even online, it was terribly hard to find them (ABC, New York Sun, and Philadelphia Inquirer were some of the few outlets to display the images). But leave it to humanitarian Michelle Malkin to provide them for us. Of course the anti-Muslim right wing in the USA are quick to support the Europeans (that's a first) in the name of free speech/press. I find this peculiar, since such hardliners are wont to suppress Bush criticism, castigate the "elite liberal bias" of the media, and denounce any "unpatriotic" thought against the War on Terror. But we can't really expect most media pundits to keep their heads and not exacerbate such controversies, because they feed on hype and anger like crack fiends.







http://www.kcrw.com/cgi-bin/db/kcrw.pl?show_code=tp&air_date=2/6/06&tmplt_type=Show



http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5194727



http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5193894







To elevate the debate, here are some discussions from NPR affiliates. This is the big problem: the Danish paper made a direct request to cartoonists for explicitly provocative images depicting the prophet Mohammad (after the fact, Jyllands-Posten newspaper denies calling for offensive cartoons in particular). That publication has had a long history of harsh editorials against immigrants, and calling for such measures as "reeducation camps" and surveillance of vagrant Muslim youths. In a nation like Denmark with biting satirical tradition, the cartoons were an experiment to ascertain if journalists/illustrators were scared to make controversial depictions and risk backlash. The message is valid, but the messenger is suspect. Unfortunately, Denmark has been one of the least receptive Western European nations to Muslim immigrants, and was under investigation by the UN since 2001 for various racist/discriminatory issues (http://www.faklen.dk/en/doc/somalia.shtml). So this row is not just about journalistic freedoms. Maybe their intent was benign and comical, but they should have known that furor and violence would probably ensue. They have the right to publish anything suitable under the law, but greatly overstepped their bounds and put others at risk. Let psychologists or other researchers do a controlled study on media self-censorship or anti-Muslim-immigrant sentiments in Europe, where the results will actually hold value for the world community, events won't spiral out of control, and innocents won't suffer needlessly.







THE CULTURAL DIVIDE: EUROPE







Some Americans may take offense to every little thing that contradicts their worldview, but Europeans enjoy satire and often hold nothing sacred. They can laugh at themselves, their own cultures, us Yankees, and sometimes other cultures. Humans deserve to live as they want under agreed-upon local and international laws/standards of decency. If they want to exercise their freedoms and expect others to not take it the wrong way, then they should give such respect to everyone else – and most Westerners usually do. No one is blaming Europeans for their idiosyncrasies and penchant for criticism, except when some "Old Europe" nations dared to oppose Bush's Coalition and the invasion of Iraq. But we have to understand that others take offense even when it's not intended. To make matters worse, the perpetrators and their supporters don't think it's a big deal, and may not care or try to understand why Muslims are so angry.







http://www.cfr.org/publication.html?id=8218



http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/1006/p06s02-woeu.html



http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4191408



www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/RL33166.pdf







As the case with the French riots, people already realized (and probably experience it daily) that relations with Muslim immigrants in Europe were not stellar, but never thought it could explode as we have seen. Westerners usually don't spend time in immigrant housing projects, in unemployment lines, or in makeshift, graffiti-laden mosques. They don't witness all the things Muslims are upset about, and may not understand that their dry satire and blasé irreverence often fan the fires. Like Americans and Katrina, their ignorance and apathy for "Les Misérables" have compounded the insult, outrage, and turmoil. And one thing that the wretched and despondent often cling to with all their might is religion. This is true all over the globe, because no hardships or mistreatment can purge it from their souls. Religion may be their last defense against despair, and people will behave irrationally and commit harsh acts to prevent others from threatening that sacred refuge. Apart from the relatively few Westerners who have suffered from Muslim violence/prejudice, Europeans don't know what it feels like to be the victim, the "problem", the outsider, or the unwelcomed. It's easy for the majority to ignore/mistreat minorities and then wonder why they harbor so much discontent. Most European states depend on immigrant labor for their very survival, from poorer Eastern European states or the Islamic/African world. Yet they understandably harbor some hostility for the altering of their traditional societies, frustration at the failure of their integration efforts, and even worry about Turkey's incorporation into the EU, making Europe "too Muslim" (despite the obvious economic incentives).







http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salman_Rushdie#The_Satanic_Verses_controversy



http://www.webcurrent.com/rushdie.html



http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3974179.stm







The Danes practically baited Muslim extremists and invited a firestorm. It was a childish dare that degenerated into yellow journalism. With huge Muslim populations in Europe and previous terror attacks in the recent past, you'd think the editors would take notice and show more restraint and caution. You don't dangle a tuna in front of a shark when you're in the water too. The history of Muslim-Western cultural clashes speaks for itself. I'm sure the newspaper executives felt shielded from any repercussions, but now the 12 journalists involved have decided to go into hiding like the fictional writer Salman Rushdie after The Satanic Verses hit the shelves. At least Rushdie's case was more defensible, because he was writing modern allegory indirectly based on the life of Mohammad derived from a controversial early Muslim text (that current Muslims denounce as blasphemous myth). Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini issued a $3M bounty and fatwah for Rushdie's head, which was less about the defense of Islam and more about inciting fanaticism/solidarity over a faux-controversy for political gain. Dutch director Theo Van Gogh (descendant of the suicidal genius painter) was murdered in 2004 after making his film "Submission" about the mistreatment of females in Muslim societies. He was a fringe artist to begin with, so his work never reached the mainstream to generate an international response. Van Gogh ignored numerous death threats until he was finally killed. The film was callous and brash, but was meant to protest a perceived injustice and give a voice to victimized Muslim women, not to ridicule others in a petty manner and mock an entire faith with no clear purpose, as the irresponsible Danes did.







THE CULTURAL DIVIDE: THE ISLAMIC WORLD







Jokes, caricatures, and stereotypes depicting Muslims as terrorists or barbarians are plentiful and clichéd. The Danish cartoonists did nothing groundbreaking, and there was little merit in their efforts. It is abundantly clear that Mohammad is not the enemy of the West. Some of his followers hate Westerners, our values, and wish for all of us to die or convert, but that has nothing to do with the sacred image of a religious figure. Why would they choose to depict him in such shameful ways? Most people love sardonic cartoons of unsavory characters like Osama, Saddam, and the Ayatollahs. Satirize and criticize them all you like, because their poor actions and beliefs justify it. There is just no need, no good purpose, and no logic in satirizing Mohammad. It is no coincidence that Mohammad is the most common male name in all of recorded human history. He had his share of controversial features and his message was imperfect, but he is revered by billions of people. Some things just have to be taboo and "hands off"; or rather we should attack Mohammad's wayward followers instead of the man himself. By comparison, how would we feel if the foreign media mocked our religion and heritage? Many westerners would be up in arms, protest, and probably burn mosques, if Muslims portrayed the Virgin Mary as a whore, Jesus as a queer, or the Holocaust as a joke (as Iranian president Ahmadinejad did, unfortunately). These abominations are no worse than drawing Mohammad as a thug.







Western insensitivity and lack of remorse have exacerbated the conflict. Conversely, Muslim populations have behaved very badly as well. The Bible says god told Moses that he forbade idol worship, and punished the Jews for their iconoclasm. Islam takes it to a much higher degree, as any representations of Allah and Mohammad are forbidden. So again, just because it is permitted in our society doesn't mean that others won't take serious umbrage. Outside of the UN confines, we have no right to tell others how to live, just as they have no right to dictate terms to us. Even though we may not target them directly, we should exercise caution if they could be indirectly influenced by our actions. In the global community, word travels fast and the butterfly effect is rampant. We should hope that Muslims respect non-Muslims, our free speech, and different customs. But we can't always expect others to tolerate all our culturally incompatible practices, especially when they feel deeply dishonored as a result. It goes way beyond debate over burkhas and beards. Those are by-products of religious interpretations, but the cartoons mock the heart and the messenger of the religion itself. It's much worse than "your momma" jokes and way beyond personal. It's their faith and what they hold most dear; why can't we realize the impact of these actions? Bombs and embargos might be much easier to stomach in comparison. We can criticize the repressive regime, the terrorists, and their deplorable actions, but it makes no sense to attack their heritage. Mohammad did not cause 9/11 or the immigrant problems in Europe. Let's place the blame on the right people, even if it requires some introspection and remorse.







While much of the world community has struggled to unite against Iran's nuclear ambitions, the cartoons have definitely galvanized and unified the Muslim world against certain elements of the West. Despite the gravity of this insult, some Muslims are expectedly overreacting, and opportunist figures are manipulating their anger. They can protest in their cities or boycott the newspapers in question, but torching foreign offices or withdrawing diplomats just make matters worse and doesn't restore dignity to their prophet. Why are Muslims killing Muslims over Western ignorance and insensitivity? Hostile regimes in Syria and Iran with poor human rights records and disdain for Jews are still crying foul and calling for retributions against the West. Washington thinks that enemy nations will utilize the turmoil to further anti-American or anti-Western sentiment/violence. Unfortunately, the West's prior penchant for hypocrisy creates an opening that they may be able to exploit. An Iranian publication is issuing a contest for humorous or offensive depictions of the Holocaust, just to see if the world community is equally uncaring and pro-free-speech of Muslim-inspired content derogatory to Judeo-Christians.







http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4694876.stm



http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/02/07/news/web.0207toon.iran.php







Just as current Muslim-Western tensions have nothing to do with Mohammad himself or the practice of Islam in general, this controversy has nothing to do with Jews and Americans, yet they are thrown into the mix because of what they represent. Jews and Muslims have a history of enmity, and America is the proverbial puppet master of the West. As my previous emails/blogs have described, the US and Israel are seen as the enemies of Islam due to a tragic history of distrust, hostility, and brutalities from all sides. I don't know if one can argue who is right or wrong, but obviously many Muslims have serious and justifiable grievances with the policies and activities against them. Many Muslims feel that Western intrusions are jeopardizing their traditional values and religious beliefs. This is probably why extremist groups like Al Qaeda, the Iranian theocracy, and Hamas have significant grassroots support that often catches us by surprise.







http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060208/ap_on_re_mi_ea/prophet_drawings_135;_ylt=AtrwJjjRsuoBBlcp.uwFlsXbEfQA;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl







The cartoon chaos inspired mass protests and sometimes bloodshed at US and other Western military/diplomatic stations in the Persian Gulf and Afghanistan. Many moderate Muslims and intellectuals are vehemently protesting the cartoons, but refrain from violence and lawlessness. Much worse, some hateful ideologues and terrorists seek to persuade others that the USA and the West are out to get them, in order to boost support and recruitment. They have no real platform and nothing positive to contribute to Muslim society, so they rely on hate to further their short-term agenda of violence. It's always easier to hate an enemy than work constructively to solve a problem. They want to capitalize on every little offense to Islam in order to convince their followers that we are the enemy to fight, so we should avoid trapping ourselves in that position. They may be oversensitive and excessive, but we shouldn't give them a reason. After Abu Ghraib and other scandals that gained us nothing in return for political hara-kiri, why do we continue to give them ammunition to use against us?







Some American patriots loathe flag burning, yet Koran desecration barely fazes them. After the Koran abuse controversy, we should have learned a lot about the Muslim response to perceived blasphemy, and the need to tread lightly. Most Muslims did not read the inflammatory Newsweek article or even know the location of Guantanámo on a map, yet word traveled fast. They became enraged at the news, and agitators whipped up the masses to march and engage in unrest. In Iraq and elsewhere, Westerners were attacked and taken hostage, and the government was furious at "the press" for behaving so irresponsibly and putting Americans in danger. While investigators concluded that Koran abuse did take place in US prisons, the White House's rage was more centered on journalists' improprieties, not the actual cultural insensitivity itself. Few people in the US government were vocally remorseful about Koran desecration, which probably made matters worse. The Defense Department boasted that we treat prisoners so humanely and they should be lucky to even have personal copies of the Koran, when other countries wouldn't grant such luxuries to inmates. But depriving detainees of religious material or insulting their culture will cause even more backlash against us and hamper our interests in the Middle East. Therefore, it just makes more sense to play good cop for our own benefit, and we shouldn't pretend that we're so gracious to Muslim detainees out of the goodness of our heart.







http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4587679.stm



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4585281.stm



http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4658943







Maybe a lot of Muslims already believe that Westerners hate them, and are just waiting for the "proof" to justify their fears. They're just waiting for the next slip-up to become angry at us, so our only defense is to carefully watch our step until they stop waiting and start believing that we mean them no harm. Sensible people may be able to see through overt propaganda and lies, but we can't reverse their anti-Western hostility if we keep reinforcing it through callous actions against Muslims. Yes, this does require more effort and sensitivity on our part, measures that indignant Western hardliners may be unwilling to endorse. But we can either make the minimal effort to refrain from insulting an entire faith, or keep reading headlines about angry mobs and burning buildings. It's not that difficult, but we really need to choose whether we want to reduce or inflame anti-Western sentiments among Muslim peoples, and then behave accordingly.







FINAL COMMENTS







I recently wrote about the religion of Islam, and unfortunately the contentious points that I alluded to are rearing their ugly heads again. The post-cartoon violence and furor will not be the last incident of Muslim-Western conflict and potential "cultural incompatibility", but what can we do to ameliorate relations and calm emotions?







http://www.adl.org/PresRele/ASUS_12/4444_12.htm



http://www.kcrw.org/cgi-bin/db/kcrw.pl?show_code=tp&air_date=12/23/05&tmplt_type=show



http://mediamatters.org/items/200511100014



http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ideas_opinions/story/261414p-223885c.html







Some Westerners are quite angry because they feel that we must constantly bend over backwards to respect and accommodate Islam or they'll sick suicide bombers on us, while no other creeds or races get such "preferential treatment" (maybe apart from the Jews due to post-Holocaust remorse, and German law even bans hate speech). Religion has inspired many great works over the centuries, but is also a major source of human conflict. After the release of "The Passion of the Christ", some American Jews did worry about anti-Semitism over the negative portrayal of their people. During the recent holiday season, the American Right protested the supposed "War on Christmas", manifested in the use of Happy Holidays/Season's Greetings in the marketplace instead of more religious salutations. Some feel that secularists and liberals hate Christianity and constantly attempt to purge it from American life, even though the USA is about 80% Christian with millions of safe, free places of worship located in every state. Maybe it was a faux-issue geared towards firing up the conservative base and embracing victim complex, as some Muslim groups and governments did to their people during this cartoon controversy. However, prickly Christians really don't have much to fear over debates on intelligent design, prayer in school, and "In God We Trust" on currency. Yes, the battles over abortion and gay marriage may be central to the tenets of their faith, but Muslims are in an entirely different boat. Many Muslims are literally under attack, or at least mistreated like second-class citizens in the West. Some Muslim states are run by corrupt cabals that shame Mohammad's example of leadership. Foreign troops occupy or have strong presence in multiple Muslim nations. And insensitive Western treatment of Islam rears its ugly head in the media every so often. These realities arouse real fears of persecution among Muslims, so naturally they are defensive and oversensitive at times. Some civic and religious leaders are looking for any minor offense to exploit into holy war, because anger and the threat of persecution have always been tremendous motivational tools.







I respect the argument that it betrays our freedom and values if we succumb to self-censorship and the intimidation by others of our unpopular opinions. But self-censorship is different than a plain call for common sense and sensitivity. I know that the political correctness and diversity movements are ridiculous and farfetched at times, but would we prefer the opposite extreme of intolerance and indifference? In the USA, we have a legal right to wear a KKK outfit in Harlem, or park our brand new Mercedes Benz in the bad Hunter's Point neighborhood of San Francisco. But why would we want to? What good purpose would it serve and what could it cost us? What sort of principle are we risking our necks to defend? Some causes are definitely worth fighting and dying for, depending on your values and beliefs – but some "principled stands" are just foolish and reckless.







Well aware of the probable repercussions, the European papers decided to publish clearly offensive content that would cause trauma and humiliation for thousands, if not millions. People in the Middle East who never hurt a Westerner now feel disgraced by them, and the world should pay attention. People who had no prior fight with non-Muslims now have a reason to be upset, insulted, or at least disappointed and suspicious. Is a low class publicity stunt exercising free speech worth this much backlash and negative sentiment? Knowing full well that Muslim extremists love to exacerbate any tension to spark the Islamic world's furor, why would those Europeans take such a risk and stubbornly cling to their narrow agenda? As we see time and time again, the worst conflicts occur between obstinate extremists on both sides who won't back down.







http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/2420305.stm







"Family values" Americans were enraged over Janet Jackson's pasty, yet few raise a finger to oppose the genocide in Darfur. The Vatican and other Christian organizations called for a boycott or repeal of various media from South Park to "The Last Temptation of Christ" due to offensive or blasphemous content, yet it took centuries for them to finally speak out against the Inquisition and Crusades. Yes, it is true that Muslims seem to be the only ones destroying things and killing people over insults to their faith (Northern Ireland notwithstanding). Blowhard Christians in the West may protest offensive media and behavior, but rarely do they harm anyone. Yet their actions do have negative effects on others, and I doubt that Jesus would want his persecuted followers to respond with more bigotry in turn. Many "Christians" have been implicated in hate crimes against gays, including the murder of a homosexual college student and then taunting the mourners at his funeral. It's true that Islam seems to be the only religion that involves mass stampede deaths claiming hundred of pilgrims, or worldwide protests that often result in Muslim riot police killing Muslim dissidents. Within and beyond America's borders, the world can be a brutal place, but that does not mean that we are somehow better than them, or immune to such destructive and hateful actions if forced into extreme situations.







http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/195158.stm



http://www.nbc10.com/news/4077250/detail.html



http://www.cbc.ca/story/canada/national/2005/06/08/christ050608.html







Since the "yelling fire in a crowded theater" argument is plainly obvious, I'll just add one point. Just because we have the right to do something doesn't necessitate that we must do such a thing to celebrate our freedoms. What are the consequences, and is the gain worth it? We are legally entitled to patronize brothels in Nevada or start a hate website, but we don't need to if there's no good reason and the expenses are great (economic, moral, and human costs alike). We cannot use the law to shield us from bad behavior, especially when others will suffer as a result. As many pro-war Americans claim, freedom isn't free. You pay a price if you exercise your freedoms in questionable ways. Some might think that the US media's hesitance to show the controversial cartoons is a capitulation to the Muslim extremists and gangs of destructive thugs. That is possible, but from another angle it's just the smarter thing to do.







I hope you believe that we can still be true to ourselves and coexist with Muslims. We don't have to live in a bunker in fear of Islam, but there's nothing wrong with treading lightly when needed. The Spanish felt that it was a greater risk to continue their support of the Iraq War and incur terrorist reprisals, so they withdrew and haven't been attacked since. The USA and others do not approve of Iran's nuclear programs, but it's a greater cost to invade rather than pursue peaceful coercion, so we choose not to wage war. Just because we can do a thing doesn't mean we must do that thing. So if the choice is: insult Muslims and incur violent backlash, or behave politely and coexist peacefully, then it's a no-brainer. Surely it's not that simple, but it's a positive starting point. US mainstream media (minus Fox News) constantly check themselves to avoid offensive, inaccurate content, because one gaffe can cost millions and end careers. Maybe we take it too far, and maybe the Europeans are too explicit. Unfortunately, many Muslims are hypersensitive, overreacting, and easily manipulated by hate-mongers. Surely we must work to spread awareness and mitigate cultural hostility, but we should also respect that they act out often for good reason.







So if we can save lives and reduce discontent by not publishing or condemning derogatory media with minimal artistic or intellectual merit, I think it's a fair trade. Again, it is mostly up to us. If we're tired of singing this tune, then we must be fair and respectful if we expect fairness and respect in return. We should work to curb religious extremism and inflammatory content everywhere, whether in Tennessee or Tehran. This is not a call for repression and censorship, because the use of force and the law has its limitations. But if we can raise the dignity of discourse in the public sphere, reduce homegrown religious hypocrisy/sensationalism, and improve our rapport with the Middle East – that is half the battle. When we celebrate diversity yet make irresponsible, dangerous behavior socially unacceptable, hopefully the Muslim world will follow suit.
 
----------
 
My roommate actually happens to be Danish so it was interesting


talking to him about this stuff. Actually, he hates Denmark so he

thinks the Danes deserve the protests, embassy fires and whatnot.

But, he told me some hot Israeli chick came up to him and

complimented him on being Danish. A couple of quick points here.

I do not believe these cartoons would ever have seen the light of

day in the US (not in a mainstream newspaper anyways). Every

editor would have caught it, and DECIDED not to print it.



On this front, we need to be aware that there is a difference

between the US and Europe. Despite all the negative situations,

the US is still way better about immigration than any country in

Europe. Most of the American venom is targeted towards hating

black people. As I heard a speaker put it recently, "every

immigrant group is temporarily black in the US." The Eastern Euros

went through it, so did the Southern Euros, as did the the Chinese

and the Latinos are going through it now. So, of course the Danish

newspaper was baiting the Muslim population, but they were given an

implicit green light by discrimination in the population.



While I agree with your assessment of the Islamic religion,

unfortunately religion and practice are completely different

things. Let's face facts, if Krishna or Moses had been

caricatured, Danish embassies would not be burning in India or

Israel. Fundamentalism is particularly strong and has been merged

with political purpose in the Islamic movements.



So, in some sense, this is an utterly predictable situation.

Europeans hate Muslims, and the Muslim population is more

reactionary than most other populations. This impasse can only

occur when both conditions are present (or when the Western power

actively engages in suppressing Muslim populations as the US does).

The easiest way to get rid of the situation, then, is to build

restraint into the European system. The EU, and its rules, would

go a long way to making this come true. The funny thing is that

there isn't an analyst, academic or streetwalker that doesn't

realize that if the EU could come to fruition it would totally

dominate the world within 10 years of creation (much bigger economy

than the US with better social programming). But the Europeans hate

everyone else too much.



So, in summation, while the Muslim population is reactionary the

real problem lies with the Europeans (the French are THE WORST on

this front...hence the riots). I don't believe this is about

Americans or Christians (although in Lebanon hatred was directed at

those groups as well), it is about Europeans.



They need to get their act together.
 
------------
 
Well put and thanks for your comments. Yes I agree; Europe and the US deal with immigrants and Islam very differently. While we actively bomb them from time to time, the Euros prefer latent or overt domestic discrimination I suppose. Of course Britain is seen as more tolerant of diversity yet complicit in US/Israeli aggression in the Middle East. Actually on NPR a guest commented that Chirac is the most popular European leader to Muslims because France vehemently opposed the Iraq War. I don't know if those sentiments have changed after the French riots, but Chirac wasn't really seen as the source of Muslim "persecution" versus hardliners like Le Pen and Sarkozy. Actually Chirac and de Villepin were calling for more outreach and social work for discontent or impoverished immigrants to quell the anger.




As you said, in the US it's a "black-white thing", and in Europe it's an immigrant-indigenous issue. America has been a land of immigrants, and despite the tragic relations with Native Americans and black slaves in particular, US immigrants are forced to get along with each other. Surely older immigrants like the Irish and Poles still beat down on recent immigrants like Mexicans and Hmong. But many economic sectors have been very mutlicultural (especially science, and even organized crime and the Confederate leadership, as you told me!), because Americans are still united in the pursuit of wealth, glory, and Manifest Destiny. Since Europe is a lot more micro-ethnically diverse and still grapples with the legacies of colonialism, the situation is very different. Immigrants and refugees came to America, while Europeans exported their settlers, armed forces, and culture (plus deadly diseases) all over the place. Very rarely did colonized people settle to Europe prior to WWII. Like our Jared Diamond conversation, they're used to "cultivating primitive cultures" abroad, and not familiar with absorbing minorities or diverse peoples within their borders. Europeans have never really accepted Jews, Gypsies, Moors, or other Diaspora people, and still there is tension over Basques, Corsicans, Northern Ireland Catholics, and other agitators/separatists. Recent Muslim immigrants are an even stiffer shock to the system, since they're entering European cities at a faster rate and larger quantities than ever before (and they're absolutely vital economically, despite their low education/employment rates).



Europeans like their cultures and their way of life, as they should (hence the "non" votes to the EU Constitution that attempts to render their economy more American). Our heritage is worth defending, but of course it's not perfect and changes must come (like the reduction of prejudice). Surely many Euros believe that Muslim immigrants should learn to act like them and assimilate, rather than "bending over backwards" to accommodate foreigners and all their cultural idiosyncrasies (the US backlash against illegal Latino immigration echoes these sentiments somewhat). Why should they don religious attire in our secular schools? Why should they refuse to learn our language and eat our foods? Diversity has different connotations on each side of the Atlantic. Of course satire and caustic free speech are also European traditions. As you said, no mainstream American media source would have touched those cartoons with a ten-foot pole. Self-censorship, "for shame" knee-jerk reactions, and pandering to pollsters are rampant in American media compared to Europe. Just look at the BBC versus CNN, sexual content and profanity in mainstream entertainment, and official political discourse. Brave journalists in Russia face death to criticize Putin, yet the Democrats barely utter a peep after Bush's ridiculous State of the Union speech. Of course violence is quite prevalent in US culture, and we have to commend Fox News for their comfort with offensive, opinionated rhetoric. So Europeans are accustomed to being inflammatory, irreverent, and rarely take things personally. Unfortunately, they expect others to be similarly nonchalant, which is rarely the case in the Middle East. When I think of Muslim nations, empathy and temperance don't really come to mind. The American mainstream is thin-skinned, religious, and short fused compared to Europe's. The lower-income, uneducated, and fundamentalist elements of Muslim society are even worse. But really can we blame them, considering the harsh environments in which they exist? Arab-Muslim fundamentalism only developed in response to Western colonization and economic exploitation in the region.







So yes, it seems that Muslims overreact regarding religious insults a lot worse than people of other faiths. Few Christians or others would burn embassies to avenge an offense, but with mouthpieces like Falwell and Roberson, we can't be so sure. Is it worse for an ignorant mob to torch a building, or an educated, wealthy ideologue with massive audience reach to claim that Sharon is dying because of god's punishment over Gaza? People like them are the embarrassing Western equivalent of Ahmadinejad. But as you said, the rage is more sociopolitical than spiritual. Despite our fetish for capital punishment and weapons ownership, Americans rarely resolve domestic disputes with violence. Surely we have nasty tongues and our foreign policy is quite brutal at times, but our society is fairly peaceful and orderly versus the rest of the world. Of course this is the case, because we won – we're the last superpower! Our "culture" may be violent, but our social institutions are not (minus the unfortunate souls at the mercy of law enforcement and penal system). But in the Muslim world, Sharia law manifests itself in some very gruesome ways among fundamentalists and the ignorant. Therefore violence is institutionalized in the Islamic world. It's "righteous" or "justified" to resolve adultery with stoning, theft with the removal of a finger, or Islamic blasphemy with Jihad. This is terribly generalized, and plenty of Muslims people/leaders denounce suicide bombing and honor killings, as well as the call for calm and sanity after the cartoon row. But whether they like it our not, some of their ruling parties and religious leaders endorse such harsh behaviors as part of god's will and social decorum, in their view.







So probably everyday Muslims have more of a penchant to respond to insults/challenges with violence for retribution. We responded to 9/11 with violence against others who had nothing to do with the attack, but when cooler heads prevail, the USA can be a just and humane nation. After the tragic experiences of the World Wars, Europeans are very slow to anger and violence. Gun ownership is prohibited or vastly curtailed in most nations, and capital punishment is totally nonexistent (apart from Belarus). Only France, UK, and Russia have nuclear weapons, and Europe's cumulative defense spending and incidence of violent crime are minimal compared to America's. Surely they export a ton of weapons to Third World hotspots, but domestically they are very civil and nonviolent. They are much more careful and metered with their responses, preferring negotiation and analysis instead of brash actions like certain American cowboy leaders. That being said, it really puzzles me why Europeans treat immigrants so harshly. Maybe it's the legacies of colonialism again, like the conflicts with the IRA, Algerians, and Yugoslavians. They have to know that despair, anger, and unrest will eventually haunt them to avenge their unjust practices. Maybe their national-cultural pride precludes their ability to treat immigrants better. But for a continent that has spurned violence and injustice so well as so rapidly after WWII (the most terrible ethno-nationlistic conflict in human history), they should know better. You're right – they need to clean up their act and show the world what the EU stands for.







I think Muslims are tired of being labeled as barbarian and terrorists. They are tired of being disrespected and treated unequally by us. Most people in the West forget that modern Muslim fanatics evolved and intensified in direct response to the West. Our military-economic activities in the region have engendered much of the backlash, extremism, and fundamentalist reactionaries. The Mohammad cartoons only add fuel to the fires, especially because many in the West are so obstinate and unrepentant about the controversy. The Danish paper refused to back down, and Kopenhagen declined to engage in a dialogue with Muslim leaders to assuage the conflict. Westerners seem more concerned with the defense of free speech rather than rectifying one of the most egregious, blasphemous depictions of Mohammad in mainstream society. Fringe elements push offensive, disgusting, and useless content all the time on the Web and other media. But now a billion plus followers have to see their prophet depicted as impudently as Daffy Duck, even with a bomb on his head.







Surely the violent response, economic embargoes, and whatnot are counter-productive by the Muslim world, but angry people don't think very rationally. Unless you're Jesus or Buddha, when you are wronged you want to hurt someone else. Would the Muslim leaders rather have their followers at their throats if they didn't respond with enough fury at the West? Some agitators are playing to the crowd or inciting the mobs, some figures are reasonably upset and demand recompense, but some leaders are just caving to the anger and getting the protesters off their backs. So the whole shit-storm is out of control, and the Muslim world and Europe have reached an impasse, as you said. Maybe relations will deteriorate before they improve, if ever. Unfortunately, the USA is viewed as Europe's keeper, and we've committed our share of improprieties in the Middle East. So we're thrown into the mix even further, since we're already seen as an extension of Israel. The Bush White House offered token, vague condemnations of culturally insensitive content, but was much quicker to condemn the protests and reactionary violence (it's never the West's fault and always the Muslims'). Chirac and many other leaders denounced the cartoons and all hateful content, since they don't want to jeopardize their citizens abroad and permit the fires to spread to their backyards too.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4693628.stm



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4691878.stm







But of course American conservatives are angry at Bush and the other "capitulators" for not taking a stronger stand for "free speech" in defense of Denmark, Western values, and in opposition of radical Islam's intimidation and violent tendencies against us.







http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20060208/pl_afp/europeislammediaus_060208183556

Friday, April 16, 2010

Political debate from the other side of the pond

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/election-2010/7596176/Election-debate-Nick-Clegg-emerges-victorious.html
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newsvideo/uk-politics-video/7596907/Leaders-TV-election-debate-video-highlights.html

This was the UK's first US-style televised PM debate as far as I know, since Britons elect their local Parliamentarians, who in turn nominate the PM, so it's not like the PM candidates have to directly court voters. But as the most visible emissaries of their party's platform, I guess it makes sense. Wow, their speech actually go beyond one-liners and two-syllable words, and they don't have to pause for pointless audience applause! At least the conservative Cameron got pwned while the centrist long shot Clegg shined.

The first debate focused on domestic issues, and subsequent ones will cover foreign affairs and the economy.

Monday, April 12, 2010

A medical explanation for Tiger Woods' promiscuity?

http://www.emory.edu/EMORY_REPORT/erarchive/2004/July/er%20july%2019/monogamy.html

This can't help his golf swing (not that he needs much), but it might help with his infidelity problem. An Emory Univ. lab studied two cousin vole species (a type of rodent): prairie vole and meadow vole. The former has monogamous mating practices (very rare in nature), and the latter is promiscuous. Those rodents are nearly identical, but differ in a gene that controls the expression of the vasopressin receptor in the ventral pallidum. In laymen terms, there's a certain molecule that captures neurotransmitter signals in a prominent pleasure/reward center of the brain. It's abundant in the monogamous voles and absent in the promiscuous voles. When the scientists spliced in the monogamous vole's gene into the promiscuous vole's brain, their behavior changed and became monogamous with their current mates. I wonder if the converse would happen if they knocked out the gene in the monogamous voles.

One disclaimer: rodents have a much stronger male sex drive than humans, so observed differences may be more pronounced. So what about in married humans? A more recent study showed that there is a correlation between the number of vasopressin receptors in the ventral pallidum and longevity of their relationship. General interpretation: the gene helps a male derive more pleasure/reward from the "romantic" interactions of monogamy, thereby making him more content with his mate and less likely to be pushed to promiscuity by his sex drive impulses. Other males, maybe like Tiger, could be genetically predisposed to enjoy monogamy less, and therefore pursue more carnal pleasure to compensate. Combine that with maybe an unusually strong libido in those men, and you have a biological recipe for cheating, which would appear to be hereditary as well. Some say that people cheat because they saw their parents cheat when they were young, but maybe it also has to do with the offspring inheriting the parents' "cheating" genes. Of course we'd like to think that we are not slaves to our impulses and nature, but they obviously play a role.

Maybe instead of Buddhism, Tiger needs a gene transplant! Though I'm sure the right combination of healthy habits, mental discipline, and honest communication can overcome these genetic predispositions for promiscuity.

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could this possibly be a new country western song?  your cheatin' genes? 
and, does this make tiger a rat?

let's just say that we are same as the mouse.  wouldnt it be a kicker if Tiger had the pleasure/reward gene or molecule thing? 

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Don't knock on Tiger.  He's fulfilling his destiny of changing society's outlook on human beings.  He's showing that us that we as humans have not evolved all that much and that we should just give into our animal instincts.  He's even dumb enough to get caught...and he went to Stanford! 

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Haha yeah his therapist should order a DNA test to see if he is missing the gene, then it's not his fault right? He can do a country duo with Garth Brooks about his problems!

That shameless Nike commercial of a "repentant" Tiger with the voice-over of his dead father just made me sick though, and Tiger said he loved it. How the hell does Tiger's personal stuff have anything to do with Nike trying to sell more product? I bet some 6-fig marketing a-hole in Beaverton felt really proud of himself after brainstorming this travesty. They are not his publicists, or are they? I thought their commercials depict sweaty jocks smashing each other; what's with this touchy-feely introspective crap? Don't they know that for every gullible consumer who might have been swayed by this ad (swayed to do what, I'd like to know), three more will be turned off or driven to ridicule it?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=56vI-YBqamw&feature=related
SNL parody: http://news.gather.com/viewArticle.action?articleId=281474978165388&nav=Groupspace

Sorry this thread has degenerated into pop culture gossip, but I guess that has a place in our discussion club too!

PS - did you see that someone paid to fly a mocking Tiger banner over Augusta last week? The PGA guys must have convinced the FAA to shut them down over "safety violations".

http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2010/04/08/plane-drags-banner-message-tiger-woods-sky-masters-tournament/

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Wikileaks military video of civilian deaths

http://collateralmurder.com/

i don't like to circumvent this emailing group, but i think it imperative that all who pay taxes in this country see what we're buying in iraq.  it's raw footage so scroll into it about 5-6 minutes and start watching.  I'm warning you, it's very graphic, but you must see this.  It's the real face of war.  

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We thought this type of stuff only happened in Vietnam or Hollywood. Some general always apologizes when a stray cruise missile kills dozens of innocents, but this time the killers were engaging their victims in plain sight. "6 individuals with AK-47s?" I thought pilots were supposed to have good vision. They didn't dress like insurgents and they didn't move like insurgents. The chopper fired at unarmed people trying to get the wounded to safety - that can't be permissible in the Rules of Engagement and Geneva Conventions. Even during the brutality of WWI there would be ceasefires to collect the dead and wounded. And just imagine how many such incidents were not exposed or taped during the 8+ years our forces have been in the Middle East.

The pro-life critics of the health bill said that they didn't want their tax dollars to fund abortion murders. Well, many more of our tax dollars are funding unprovoked military murders in other nations, and they are OK with that? And it's not like America's national security would be compromised by 10 people walking down a street in Baghdad. When the Russians do something like this in Chechnya, or the Sudanese army in Darfur, we call it what it is, a war crime. We don't deny it and make excuses for them. 
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Reddit thread discussing said video.  There has been a lot of anticipation for this video and the reaction it will get from the public and changes it may cause to our Iraq policy.  Also quite a bit of trouble went to stopping wiki leaks from releasing the video.  
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Thanks for the link. I see where the Vet is coming from, but if you're in a war where EVERYTHING could be a threat, soldiers are stressed out to the point of lethal mistakes, and a slaughter can justifiably occur in accordance with the ROEs, then maybe pragmatically and morally, we need to re-evaluate our entire participation in such a conflict. I sympathize that those scared 19-year olds have an impossible job to do - so maybe they shouldn't be trying. Our leaders need to rethink our tactics and strategy, so that events like this and Haditha don't hang on the snap decisions of stressed out young men with guns. Take human error as much out of the equation as you can, right? Some may say, "well that's just war". Exactly. If war is this insane, then maybe it's not the best course of action.

And some great news from our other front:

KABUL — Afghan President Hamid Karzai threatened over the weekend to quit the political process and join the Taliban if he continued to come under outside pressure to reform, several members of parliament said Monday.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/04/05/karzais-taliban-threat-af_n_526373.html 
Wartime nation building is a fool's errand.

Friday, April 2, 2010

The Bextra affair

CNN and others have investigated Pfizer and its illegal marketing of Bextra, a COX-2 inhibitor pain drug that it developed with Pharmacia (a smaller company that it later purchased, which shows you how confidently they felt about Bextra). The drug is in the same family as Vioxx (with similar side effects too). Sales began in 2001 and Pfizer wanted to market it as an acute post-surgery painkiller like Vicodin (and many times pricier than Vicodin too). But due to possible cardiovascular side-effects, the FDA only approved Bextra for arthritis and menstrual cramps (maybe worth the risk there!), which really put a dent in Pfizer's profit projections. So the Pfizer sales force was instructed to "encourage" doctors to prescribe Bextra off-label for non-approved indications, such as the intended purpose of post-surgery analgesia. This is completely illegal, but email evidence showed a Florida sales manager instructing his staff to lie to doctors that Bextra got the "all clear" from the FDA for 40 mg doses (even though the FDA's maximum safe dose was half that, and came with health warnings).

Like in my previous Fosamax-Merck email, Pfizer also set up an "education fund" to sponsor doctors who would conduct pro-Bextra research, present favorable findings, and encourage more widespread use. Eventually the FDA had enough, and shut down Bextra and all these antics in 2005. Until then, it's estimated that half of Bextra's $1.7B profits came from off-label use. But prosecuting Pfizer for such a high crime became problematic. By law, any healthcare company convicted of a major fraud is prohibited from doing business with Medicare/aid. Even though Pfizer fit the case, they were "too big to punish". Excluding them from Medicare/aid would essentially put the world's biggest pharma and a major corporate lobbying force out of business (and over 50,000 Americans out of a job), and prevent millions of patients from consuming dozens of Pfizer products (in some cases, life-extending medications without competing products). Ironically corrupt and compassionate interests aligned to spare Pfizer. The Feds decided to slap the biggest government fine in history on Pfizer, $1.2B, and the company also paid out $1B in a class-action settlement for Bextra and 12 other illegally-promoted products. However intimidating that sounds, the $2B hit was a mere 3 months of profit for Pfizer - a slap on the wrist. Just imagine how many billions of extra sales Pfizer has made over the years from improper marketing.   

And just so the prosecutors could claim that they followed the letter of the law, they did ban Pfizer from doing business with Medicare/aid, sort of. From CNN: According to court documents, Pfizer Inc. owns (a) Pharmacia Corp., which owns (b) Pharmacia & Upjohn LLC, which owns (c) Pharmacia & Upjohn Co. LLC, which in turn owns (d) Pharmacia & Upjohn Co. Inc. The Feds shut down Pharmacia & Upjohn Co. Inc., a great-grandson subsidiary of Pfizer, which as far as anyone can tell, is just a name on paper that hasn't done a single dollar of business ever. Would you believe it was founded in 2007 on the same day that Pfizer plead guilty to a federal kickback case unrelated to Bextra? So basically it only existed to take the heat for Pfizer's transgressions.

This is how healthcare works, which is why I'm sick of working in it.

http://www.cnn.com/2010/HEALTH/04/02/pfizer.bextra/index.html?iref=allsearch
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bextra