Basic Truths

Socialism Versus the Redemer

The Acton Institute is an ecumenical organization devoted to the study of the religion and liberty.  One of its principal scholars is Rev Robert Sirico, who has authored a recently released book entitled, Defending the Free Market: the Moral Case for Capitalism.  You can order it from Amazon, here.

Here is Robert Sirico being interviewed by Stuart Varney of Fox Business.  Definitely worth a look.
Hat Tip: Maria at NZ Conservative.
Watch the latest video at <a href=”http://video.foxbusiness.com”>video.foxbusiness.com</a>

Lachrymose and Absurd

Head Shaking, Side Splitting Stuff

The Guardian newspaper has long been an ardent cheerleader of the global warming cause. 

How apt, then, for the Guardian to raise a lament over the latest UN boondogglish talkfest on combating the greatest threat to sentient life ever faced on this planet.  Now, it is worth keeping in mind that the following piece is written in all seriousness.  One cannot suppress belly laughs at the tragi-comic opera, on the one hand, and that the author of this Guardian piece does not get the joke, on the other.

Bonn climate talks end in discord and disappointment

The latest round of international climate change talks finished on Friday in discord and disappointment, with some participants concerned that important progress made last year was being unpicked.

At the talks, countries were supposed to set out a workplan on negotiations that should result in a new global climate treaty, to be drafted by the end of 2015 and to come into force in 2020. But participants told the Guardian they were downbeat, disappointed and frustrated that the decision to work on a new treaty – reached after marathon late-running talks last December in Durban – was being questioned.

China and India, both rapidly growing economies with an increasing share of global emissions, have tried to delay talks on such a treaty. Instead of a workplan for the next three years to achieve the objective of a new pact, governments have only managed to draw up a partial agenda. “It’s incredibly frustrating to have achieved so little,” said one developed country participant. “We’re stepping backwards, not forwards.”

How long will this charade continue, one wonders.  Countries left, right, and centre are backing away.  Everyone else, with an ounce of realism in their heads, can see this thing is dead and buried.  But a few folk, doubtless salaried to promote the cause, keep plugging away. 

Connie Hedegaard, the EU climate chief, said: “The world cannot afford that a few want to backtrack from what was agreed in Durban only five months ago. Durban was – and is – a delicately balanced package where all elements must be delivered at the same pace. It is not a pick and choose menu. It is very worrisome that attempts to backtrack have been so obvious and time-consuming in the Bonn talks over the last two weeks.”

Wethinks Connie is in denial.  A few countries want to backtrack.  Every country outside the EU you mean.  Come on.  This is like a burlesque play where the entire the audience knows that the hero is actually a terrible fool.  But, no, wait–some progress was actually made.  More clarity was produced on “technical and legal details”.  That’s good. 

However, they agreed much of the detail that will be needed to extend the Kyoto protocol – currently the world’s only legally binding treaty on emissions cuts – beyond 2012 when its current provisions expire. . . . Chrisiana Figueres, the top climate change official at the United Nations, who presided over the two weeks of talks, said: “Work at this session has been productive. Countries can now press on to ensure elements are in place to adopt the Doha amendment to the Kyoto protocol. I am pleased to say that the Bonn meeting produced more clarity on the protocols’s technical and legal details and options to enable a smooth transition between the two commitment periods of the protocol.”

That sounds weighty and momentous.  But the following paragraph puts this “progress” in context.  

However, the only major developed countries that have agreed to continue the Kyoto protocol are those of the European Union. Canada and Japan have dropped out, and the US never ratified the 1997 accord. (Emphasis, ours)

Wethinks the European Union is not going to exist in its current form by year’s end.  More debt in order to pay off less developed countries will go down like cold vomit.  So much for Kyoto.  But hope springs eternal in the human breast it would seem.

Celine Charveriat, advocacy and campaigns director at Oxfam, said: “No progress was made to deliver the financial support that the world’s poorest and most vulnerable need to deal with the growing impacts of climate change. It is now vital that, at the next UN climate summit in Qatar in November, rich countries commit to an initial US$10-15bn to the Green Climate Fund between 2013 and 2015, as part of a broader financial package.

“At a time when ambitious emission reductions are more urgent than ever, developed countries in Bonn made no progress to close the gap between current climate targets and what is required to avoid the worst of climate change. Developed countries must improve on their current low level of ambition and accept higher reduction targets no later than at the Qatar summit.”

What part of the planet do these folk actually live on?  Disneyland?  Fantasyland?

Tove Maria Ryding, coordinator for climate policy at Greenpeace International, said: “Here in Bonn we’ve clearly seen that the climate crisis is not caused by lack of options and solutions, but lack of political action. It’s absurd to watch governments sit and point fingers and fight like little kids while the scientists explain about the terrifying impacts of climate change and the fact that we have all the technology we need to solve the problem while creating new green jobs.”

Yes, truly absurd.  But, dear Ms Ryding, you play your part so ardently, so passionately, so fulsomely.  Exquisite burlesque and parody. 

A photograph of the top climate change official at the United Nations accompanied the Guardian piece.  It says it all.

2012 Bonn climate talks , Christiana Figueres, Executive Secretary of UNFCCC
Christiana Figueres, Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), gives a press conference on May 25, 2012, at the end of a UN climate conference in Bonn, western Germany.

 

 

Douglas Wilson’s Letter From America

Silver on Top, and Black on the Bottom 

Theology – Life in the Regeneration
Written by Douglas Wilson
Sunday, 27 May 2012

It is bad when a blogger gets in over his head, or when a theologian does, or when a pamphlateer does, or when a connector-of-the-dots does. But, with all necessary qualifications made, it not bad when a preacher does. It is a preacher’s calling to get in over his head (2 Cor. 2:16). But he needs to be careful to do it the right way — there is a way to be in over your head in the pulpit which is just ordinary confusion, and there is a way that is the work of the Spirit of God.

I wrote earlier about the reunion of Christendom, and how it was going to be glorious. But precisely because it is going to be glorious, it will not the result of careful negotiations hammered out by the canon lawyers. As Lloyd-Jones once memorably put it, getting all the ecclesiastical corpses into one graveyard will not bring about a resurrection.

As a pamphleteer, as a blogger, I do find it necessary to argue for the absolute necessity of the new birth, as I am doing here. But for a preacher, much more than this is involved. The preacher declares words calculated to raise the dead, which is quite different than flattering the living. When the Spirit is pleased to move, He will do so. But the Spirit, when He moves, will not be like a little zephyr, stirring the gauzy curtains of our theological library. It will be more like a massive thunderhead, silver on the top and utterly black on the bottom, coming in from the west, and looking to soak absolutely everybody.

I am an evangelical, the son of evangelicals, and so I do insist on the absolute necessity of the new birth. That’s our wineskin. There is nothing wrong with wineskins, because wine always has to go into something. But there is something wrong with empty wineskins, and there is something wrong with the idea that trafficking in the idea of wine is the same thing as wine, which it isn’t.

The glories that are coming will be the result of what we are talking about, and not the result of our talking about it. Elegant formulations are necessary in their way, but they are also as dead as an idiom about doornails. Reformation and revival consists of the reality of the Spirit moving, and we cannot whistle Him up — we can’t do it with sacraments, we can’t do it with church music, and we can’t do by rolling up our shirt sleeves in order to preach a hot gospel. Here, hold your mouth this way, and maybe that will make the Spirit fall.

But the Spirit will fall. The thunderhead will roll in. And when it happens, the work of regeneration will be a gully washer and lots of ecclesiastics will be pretty upset. But many more of them will be soaked through, and it will become increasingly harder to preach little floating dust cloud sermons.

And it will not be preaching that ushers this in, but rather the folly of preaching. But mark it well — the Spirit never moves in such a way as to leave things right where He found them. The detritus of religiosity — whether prohibited by Scripture or required by it — will be either washed away or washed clean. I speak of icons, candles, sermon manuscripts, choral anthems, lectionaries, processionals, and white eucharistic table cloths. If you want it all to be washed clean, and not washed away, then fasten it to the plain teaching of Scriptures with the nails of evangelical faith, and use as many as you have.

When God pleases, and He showers us with kindness, we will be given the wisdom found in the old song, God Don’t Never Change . . .

God in the pulpit,
God way back at the door,
God in the amen corner,
God all over the floor.

Climate "Science"

Cherry Picking and Obfuscation

Climategate is now old news.  But still, the hits keep coming.  In the original scandal, the leading boffins at the Climatic Research Institute at the University of East Anglia were found to have engaged in a conspiracy to pervert the course of scientific inquiry.  They had “cooked the books”.  Instead of working with recorded data, they massaged and manufactured it to make it appear as if global temperatures had risen substantially toward the end of last century.

A couple of inquiries were held, which are almost universally agreed to have been whitewashes.  After all, the UK government, together with the Commentariat at large, had decided that global warming was real.  But, it appears that the corruption of scientific process has been systemic, not isolated.  Andrew Montford and Harold Ambler, writing in National Review Online, review the latest scandal.
 

Climategate Continues

Will a penalty be called for Keith Briffa’s excessively curved hockey stick?

By Andrew Montford & Harold Ambler
Climategate, the 2009 exposure of misconduct at the University of East Anglia, was a terrible blow to the reputation of climatology, and indeed to that of British and American science. Although that story hasn’t been in the news in recent months, new evidence of similar scientific wrongdoing continues to emerge, with a new scandal hitting the climate blogosphere just a few days ago.

And central to the newest story is one of the Climategate scientists: Keith Briffa, an expert in reconstructing historical temperature records from tree rings. More particularly, the recent scandal involves a tree-ring record Briffa prepared for a remote area of northern Russia called Yamal.

For many years, scientists have used tree-ring data to try to measure temperatures from the distant past, but the idea is problematic in and of itself. Why? Because tree-ring data reflect many variables besides temperature. Russian tree growth, like that of trees around the world, also reflects changes in humidity, precipitation, soil nutrients, competition for resources from other trees and plants, animal behavior, erosion, cloudiness, and on and on. But let’s pretend, if only for the sake of argument, that we can reliably determine the mean temperature 1,000 years ago or more using tree cores from a remote part of Russia. The central issue that emerges is: How do you choose the trees?

It was the way Briffa picked the trees to include in his analysis that piqued the interest of Steve McIntyre, a maverick amateur climatologist from Canada. The Climategate e-mails make it clear that McIntyre earned the public scorn of the most powerful U.N. climatologists, including James Hansen, Michael Mann, and Phil Jones, while simultaneously earning their fear and respect in private.

McIntyre noticed a few problems with the way Briffa chose the sampling of Russian trees, and he wrote to Briffa requesting the data Briffa used in a published tree-ring paper. Briffa declined. And so began a four-year saga involving multiple peer-reviewed journals, behind-the-scenes maneuvering by Briffa and his closest confidants, and a Freedom of Information Act request on the part of McIntyre that appears to be on the verge of being granted. Even without the final set of data, however, McIntyre has shown beyond the shadow of doubt that Briffa may have committed one of the worst sins, if not the worst, in climatology — that of cherry-picking data — when he assembled his data sample, which his clique of like-minded and very powerful peers have also used in paper after paper.

It was already known that the Yamal series contained a preposterously small amount of data. This by itself raised many questions: Why did Briffa include only half the number of cores covering the balmy interval known as the Medieval Warm Period that another scientist, one with whom he was acquainted, had reported for Yamal? And why were there so few cores in Briffa’s 20th century? By 1988, there were only twelve cores used in a year, an amazingly small number from the period that should have provided the easiest data. By 1990, the count was only ten, and it dropped to just five in 1995. Without an explanation of how the strange sampling of the available data had been performed, the suspicion of cherry-picking became overwhelming, particularly since the sharp 20th-century uptick in the series was almost entirely due to a single tree.

The intrigue deepened when one of the Climategate e-mails revealed that, as far back as 2006, Briffa had prepared a much more broadly based, and therefore more reliable, tree-ring record of the Yamal area. But strangely, he had decided to set this aside in favor of the much narrower record he eventually used.

The question of Yamal had rightly come up when Briffa was questioned by Climategate investigators. He told them that he had never considered including a wider sample than the one he went with in the end, and hadn’t had enough time to include a wider one. However, the specific issue of the suppressed record appears to have largely been passed over by the panel, and Briffa’s explanation, like so many others given to the Climategate inquiries, appears to have been accepted without question.

But the ruse has now been shot to pieces, by the recent decision from the U.K.’s information commissioner that Briffa can no longer withhold the list of sites he used in his suppressed regional record for the Yamal area. The disclosure of these sites has allowed McIntyre to calculate what the broad series would have looked like if Briffa had chosen to publish it. He has shown that it has no hint of the hockey-stick shape that Briffa’s cherry-picked data indicated. Briffa’s decision to publish an alarming but unreliable version of the Yamal series — instead of a more reliable and thoroughly unremarkable one — has been the talk of the climate blogosphere, with many prominent commentators openly speaking of dishonesty.

Two and a half years after the initial revelation of the Climategate e-mails, new controversies, on the part of the scientists and the investigators involved, continue to emerge. Many of the players involved are desperate to sweep the scandal under the rug. However, their machinations have only succeeded in bringing renewed attention to their questionable science and ugly behind-the-scenes shenanigans, reigniting hope that more complete and more independent investigations — on both sides of the Atlantic — will yet be performed.

Andrew Montford is the author of The Hockey Stick Illusion and the proprietor of the Bishop Hill blog. Harold Ambler is the author of Don’t Sell Your Coat and the operator of the blog talkingabouttheweather.com.

Steve McIntyre’s website details the latest stoush and exposed chicanery, blow by blow. 

 

Letter From America

Not Offending the World 

The Bible is pretty clear. It is our duty to be as inoffensive as possible. As far as it is possible, we are to live in peace with all men.

But–and it is a big but–the Bible is also clear that in this life we will likely suffer at the hands of Unbelieving men. It is de rigueur for the Christian life. The Gospel has its own offense, and in that offense we are to glory, not be ashamed.

When Paul and his colleagues went preaching the Gospel to Jews and Gentiles, the offense of the message transferred to umbrage against and rejection of the messengers. We are to glory in that transference: it means we are being honoured by God, allowed to follow in the footsteps of the Saviour of the world. David French writes an open letter about how he has came to realise this.

An Open Letter to Young, “Post-Partisan” Evangelicals

May 23, 2012 By David French

Dear fed-up idealists, I used to be you.
I know that’s hard to believe. After all, I’m pretty darn partisan. I’m a religious liberties lawyer, a pro-life activist, the founder of Evangelicals for Mitt, and the most recent winner of the American Conservative Union’s Ronald Reagan Award. I serve my country in uniform in the Army Reserves and am a veteran of the Iraq War. In other words, for a lot of you out there, I’m less role model than cautionary tale. I’m the guy you’re trying not to be — the guy you think is destroying our Christian witness. Heck, I’m the guy that even I used to hate.

How did this happen? Why did this happen? The short answer is that it happened because life happened — real life. So let’s take a trip back through time.

1991– Step 1: Despising my elders. 

 We called ourselves “Solomon’s Colonnade” after the temple area where Jesus delivered one of his many stinging rebukes to the religious leaders of the day. There were only a few of us, friends from college, but we were determined to upend the silly, partisan hypocrisy of the religious right. I blame Bono, really. I attended a U2 concert during the 1987 “Joshua Tree” tour, and was enthralled as Bono (a real rock star!) not spoke openly about his love for Jesus, he wound up his rousing mini-sermon with a passionate condemnation of the televangelists who were then dominating public religious life. His words were both shocking and exhilarating: “Here’s my message to the televangelists: get the f**k off my TV screen!”

Well, that generation of televangelists did eventually “get the f**k off” the TV screen — doomed by their own insatiable appetites — but that wasn’t enough for me. Simply put, I was convinced we hadn’t been doing church right, and my friends in Solomon’s Colonnade were going to do what we could to reboot the whole thing. We spent hours talking late into the night, discussing everything from ideal church governance to the right way to engage politics and the culture. We didn’t reach any consensus other than the consensus that we could do it better — whatever “it” was. And we had to do better.

I graduated from college, Solomon’s Colonnade faded into oblivion, but my goals didn’t change. Oh, I was philosophically conservative — a biblical literalist, an admirer of Edmund Burke, and very deeply pro-life — but I was convinced that the core, life-affirming values of my faith were being wasted and squandered by partisans and charlatans. Shortly after law school, while reflecting on the latest media-reported “outrage” from Jerry Falwell or Pat Robertson or James Dobson, I remember emailing my friends something like this: “There has to be a revolution in American Christianity. The old guard has to go, and we have to put Jesus at the center of all we do. I don’t have to lead the revolution, but at least let me drive the tank.”

How those words would come to haunt my conscience . . .

2004– Step 2: Encountering life. 

 I was living my dream. Sure, I was still pro-life (I co-founded Harvard Law School’s only pro-life student group), but you couldn’t categorize me! I had also written a then widely-read op-ed arguing that gay marriage was “inevitable” and that the state had forfeited any legal grounds for denying gay couples the “right” to marry. No labels for me! Shortly after publishing that op-ed, I found myself not only leading a nonpartisan free speech organization but also being profiled in a progressive Christian magazine (sadly defunct or I’d link the article) as an example of nonpartisan Christian leadership. My friends in Solomon’s Colonnade would have been so proud.

But I soon realized that my nonpartisanship had a steep price. I could be pro-life, but not too pro-life. You see, if you’re too pro-life; if you talk about too much, then you can’t be post-partisan. One political party is completely dedicated to legal protection of abortion on demand. The other political party is completely dedicated to repealing Roe v. Wade. If you talk too much about abortion, others will define you, and if you’re defined how can you be independent?

“No problem,” my hip inner voice said. Pro-life is really whole life. Anti-poverty programs, environmental advocacy — that’s all ‘pro-life’ in the broad sense, right? Can’t I be pro-life and maintain my independence?” But my rational inner voice quickly rebelled. If I’m “whole life” without talking about unborn children then I’m functionally pro-abortion, but if I’m “whole life” and bring unborn children into that conversation in any meaningful way, then I’m right back where I started. Besides, the effect on life of driving a Prius over a pickup truck can’t be measured with a (metaphorical) electron microscope. But if an abortion clinic shuts down or a young mom is persuaded not to abort, a real live human being is born — a person of incalculable worth.

Yes, I want them to grow and flourish in a just society, and yes I want them to have economic opportunity. But it’s tough to enjoy justice and opportunity when you’re dead. So I was pro-life. Firmly. Actively. I clung, however, to my marriage position — with even greater ferocity. But my rational voice rebelled once again against my hip inner voice. Didn’t no-fault divorce fly directly in the face of biblical marriage? Weren’t legal regimes that were focused entirely around adult self-actualization having measurable and devastating effects on our culture? Why then would we continue down the path of marriage as a legally recognized means of adult self-actualization rather than marriage as a legally-protected institution of cultural preservation?

Then, as a lawyer, I saw the catastrophic effects that normalization of same-sex relationships was having on religious liberty. And I realized I was wrong. As I decisively entered the “culture war” I discovered something shocking: there aren’t that many of us. (What’s that? Are you telling me that Christians aren’t obsessed with gays and abortion? That’s what all the polls say!) As I travelled around the country and spoke at churches, Tea Party rallies, and conferences, I realized that the number of Christians who truly fight the culture war is quite small. How small?

In 2011, I researched the budgets of the leading culture war organizations and compared them to the leading Christian anti-poverty organizations. Here’s what I found: How do those numbers stack up with leading Christian anti-poverty charities? Let’s look at just three: World Vision, Compassion International, and Samaritan’s Purse. Their total annual gross receipts (again, according to most recently available Form 990s) exceed $2.1 billion. The smallest of the three organizations (Samaritan’s Purse) has larger gross receipts than every major “pro-family” culture war organization in the United States combined. World Vision, the largest, not only takes in more than $1 billion per year, it also has more than 1,400 employees and 43,000 volunteers.

In other words, Christians are overwhelmingly focused with their money and their time on the poor, not on culture war issues. Then why are Christians portrayed differently? Because the media is obsessed with the sexual revolution and demonizes dissent. If news outlets focus on Christians only when engaged on culture war issues and ignores the much more extensive work we do for the poor in Africa, in Asia, and at home, then it’s no wonder the wider world sees us as politically-obsessed. Anyone who believes that Christians are in control of their own public image does not understand how public perceptions are created in this country. No one is in total control of their own image and reputation. Not even the President — and shame on me for not realizing that in my days of naive rage.

2007– Step 3: Becoming my elders.

I’ll never forget the day I met James Dobson. I was preparing to appear on a Focus on the Family broadcast highlighting a number of my cases on behalf of Christian students. In a very real way that broadcast would cement my transition (not that anyone cared about that but me) from “post-partisan” to firmly, completely “religious right.” I was joining Focus and many others in their long fight against cultural and legal trends that result in millions of aborted babies, millions of broken families, persistent poverty, and increasing inequality.

On that day, I was struck by Dr. Dobson’s humility and the humility of his staff. There was a palpable feeling that they were answering God’s call on their lives — serving their role in the Body of Christ, a role certainly no more important than that played by others but vital nonetheless.

Of course they’re not perfect. Of course I’m not perfect. Of course I’m in fact deeply flawed. But so are relief workers at World Vision. So is the pastor you may admire so much. So were each one of Jesus’ disciples and apostles. As we fight the culture war, we’re going to make mistakes, we’re not going to agree with each other, and sometimes I still get deeply frustrated at my own side. But I no longer believe the lie that there is a path for Christians through this culture that everyone will love — or even most people will love.

I no longer believe the lie that American Christians are “too political” and if we only spoke less about abortion we’d be more respected (the mainline denominations have taken that path for two generations, and they continue to lose members and cultural influence). So, “post-partisan” Christians, please ponder this:

First, as the price for your new path, are you willing to forego any effective voice at all for unborn children? Are you willing to keep silent when the secular world demands your silence? After all, that is the true price of non-partisanship — silence.

Second, if you believe that a more perfect imitation of Christ (more perfect than the elders you scorn) will lead to more love and regard for the Church, consider this: No one was more like Christ than Christ, and He wound up on a cross with only the tiniest handful of followers by His side. Follow Jesus, yes, but don’t think for a moment that will improve your image, and don’t be surprised if He takes you down much the same path He took the generation before you.

A Knife in the Dark

Europe Faces the Cutting Blade

Recent and forthcoming events in Europe represent a watershed one way or the other.  At the moment, things are on a knife-edge.  Will Greece stay (in the Euro) or go?  What will be the outcome of either scenario?

One the one side are the eurocrats, the endless ranks of  European bureaucrats and functionaries who not only sit in seried rows in Brussels, but who have been insinuated into every European nation, government, bureaucracy.  They are the political elite of Europe.  The privileged class whose entire existence depends upon the continuation of the grand experiment that is European monetary union.  To them the continuation of the Euro-zone represents all their hopes and dreams.  They are certain that should the Euro unravel, life as humanity now knows it will end.  Their watchtower warnings are heard on every hand.
 

Faced with a choice between increased government funding of Greece (presented as an easing of “austerity” and a “pro-growth” policy), on the one hand, and Greece sticking to the already agreed austerity regime, on the other,  in a heartbeat they would go for more spending, euphemistically called “collectivising Greek debt”.  Lenin would have approved the term.  It would be painless for them, after all.  The costs of more and more European financial aid for Greece (and Spain, and Italy, and Ireland) would be born eventually by (other) tax payers.  For the eurocrats this represents effective zero-personal cost.  (Tax rates for eurocrats are maintained at a favoured, concessional rate.)  Turkeys don’t vote for an early Christmas.

But pro-austerity forces (mainly in Germany) reason that to continue to fund the largesse of Greece is to throw good money after bad.  Better for Greece to get out now, before every country in Europe catches the Athenian malaise. These folk reason that if Greece is to get out from under the crushing mountain of debt and dependency funding, it has to exit the euro, devalue its currency drastically, and have a light at the end of the tunnel to help the electorate accept the bitter medicine.  At the moment, it is all pain with no hope of gain.  If you care for Greece, let it exit the euro.

Which way will it go?  Will Merkel blink? Will Greek voters decide that the risks of leaving the euro are too great and that Merkel is not bluffing?  In the forthcoming re-election, will they conclude that the radical left Greek party Syriza is a bridge too far?  Who knows?  It is a hard call.

The downstream options are: either the euro-zone collapses, resulting in a forced restructure into a much smaller euro-zone, or Germany’s return to the Deutschmark and the disillusion of the euro entirely; or, European governments double down on lending to Greece, radically increasing debt their own countries, causing a long, slow, lingering decline of European economies.  (This latter option, of course, is the Obama solution for the US.)

What do the tea-leaves tell us?  Christine Lagarde, head of the IMF, but also a member of the eurocrat class, recently participated in an extended  interview with the Guardian.  It’s vehemence is startling.

The International Monetary Fund has ratcheted up the pressure on crisis-hit Greece after its managing director, Christine Lagarde, said she has more sympathy for children deprived of decent schooling in sub-Saharan Africa than for many of those facing poverty in Athens.

In an uncompromising interview with the Guardian, Lagarde insists it is payback time for Greece and makes it clear that the IMF has no intention of softening the terms of the country’s austerity package. Using some of the bluntest language of the two-and-a-half-year debt crisis, she says Greek parents have to take responsibility if their children are being affected by spending cuts. “Parents have to pay their tax,” she says.  . . . Asked if she is essentially saying to the Greeks and others in Europe that they have had a nice time and it is now payback time, she responds: “That’s right.” (Emphasis, ours). 

Now, is this emphatic, blunt warning simply to help persuade Greek voters that Europe is not “bluffing”  at the far-left political parties in Greece are arguing?  But, should they not heed the warning, will the IMF and Europe blink, unable to have Greece go over the precipice?  It’s hard to tell.

But, let’s all be very clear here.  The simple root cause of the problem in Greece is reckless government spending, funded by borrowed money.  That state is now bankrupt.

Jürgen Fitschen, joint head of Germany’s biggest bank, Deutsche, described Greece as “a failed state … a corrupt state”.

That about sums it up.  But such corruption becomes characteristic when governments move from “tax and spend” to “borrow and spend”, and the people allow themselves to be bought off, their votes being suborned  by bribery on a grand scale.

It is not a Greek problem.  It is a Western malaise.  Greece is just the avatar of our future.  Unless . . . .  Unless the calamity and the lessons are so graphic and painful that a generation will arise saying, “Never again.”

We watch with great interest, knowing that He who sits in the heavens is constantly weighing men and nations. Ignore and break His law, and calamity eventually follows.

Postscript: Daniel Hannan recently was in Auckland and participated in an extensive interview on the European malaise with Leighton Smith.  It provides a fascinating insight from a European parliamentarian who believes the European experiment has failed dismally, and the monetary union will eventually be dismantled. Listen here.

Back to Winter

Dud Egyptian Liberals

Francis Fukuyama is sceptical of the much touted Arab Spring.  Looking at Egypt he concludes that nothing much will change as a result of the election.  Fukuyama’s “Last Man” apparently has not yet been found in Egypt.  The joyous annunciations of emerging Western secular democracies throughout the Arab world appear to be a bit premature.  A bit hyperbolic. A bit naive.

Here is Fukuyama’s survey of the candidates and parties currently heading the pack in Egypt.

It is hard to know whom to root for in Wednesday’s presidential election in Egypt. Two of the leading candidates, Amr Moussa and Ahmed Shafiq, were officials in the former Mubarak regime and are suspected of having ties to the military. Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh is a self-proclaimed liberal Islamist who was expelled from the Muslim Brotherhood, but who is for some reason being endorsed by the ultra-conservative Salafis. Lagging behind these three is Mohamed Morsi, candidate of the Muslim Brotherhood, an organization that came out of the starting blocks showing a moderate face but which has recently given out disturbing signals of a more conservative religious agenda. 

The elephant in the room which naive euphemists in the West refuse to see is the religion of Islam.  Egypt is an overwhelmingly Islamic country.  And Islam, when dominant, produces an authoritarian social order of chain of command and control.  “Islam” means submission to Allah and his rulers.

One of the reasons the Commentariat in the West does not grasp this abiding characteritistic of Islamic social order is because of  the secular West’s ignorance of theology and theological constructs.   Islam is a monotheistic religion to be sure.  But its god is unitarian.  There is no complexity or diversity within Allah.  There is no equal ultimacy of the One and the Many.  When a society becomes dominated by such a theology, society itself necessarily becomes authoritarian.  There can be no separation of church and state, or of family and state.

There are no limits to a unitary authority ruling everything on earth because the deity (Allah) itself is univocal. For example, Allah does not have a law for the family which establishes the existence and independence of the family over against the clergy, the mullahs, the law courts and the state–such that the will of Allah for the family makes the family autonomous in its own terms–beyond the will, word, or control of the state or the mullahs. Rather, Allah is allegedly omnipotent; his law is univocal; his authority manifests itself in an endless chain of superior to inferior to the still more inferior.  You either accept your place in the authoritative chain or being or you don’t.  If you don’t, you risk extermination as a rebel against Allah.

In this religious and social context, liberty of conscience (in the sense of being free from the control of human authorities) is impossible.  Therefore it is no surprise that in the Egyptian elections there are no liberal (that is, limited government) candidates. 

What is missing from this lineup of potentially electable candidates is a genuine liberal, that is, a candidate with no taint from the authoritarian past, and who does not advocate an Islamist agenda in some form.

Not surprising.  The only oddity is that folks like Fukuyama are surprised.  One suspects that were they more theologically literate they would not be thus blind-sided.  

Fukuyama asks why the uprising in Egypt has not produced a disciplined liberal political party contesting the elections.  His working assumption is shared by so many in the West: that is, underneath the skin of most Egyptians lies a western liberal heart waiting to break forth.

. . . . surely a liberal, modernizing leader could have appealed to the hopes of many Egyptians for economic growth and political freedom, and placed at least within the top four presidential candidates?

 Egyptians, you see, are just like us ordinary folk in the West.  Their religion has nothing (or very little) to do with their dreams, hopes, or aspirations.  The reported fact that just over eighty percent of Egyptians believe that converts to Christianity or another religion should be executed is irrelevant, because the “inner Egyptian” really seeks a secular public square. Just like us in the West. Really?  Yes, really!

Douglas Wilson’s Letter From America

Obama as Greek Bank 

Politics
Written by Douglas Wilson
Wednesday, 23 May 2012

At least inside my own head, whenever I do forecaster punditry, I feel like I always qualify what I say. Our lives are a mist, we know not what cometh, I am not a prophet or the son of a prophet, etc. But then some years down the road somebody chortles at me in the comments, saying, “Yeah? well, you said . . .” or something along those lines. And yeah, I said that, but I thought I qualified it, and I am not motivated enough to go hunting in the archives to see if I qualified it adequately, and what’s the use anymore, I think to myself.

But then my inner dogmatism bubbles to the surface once more, and I find it is time to pop off again. But not without qualifications.

That said, it seems to me that Obama is in serious trouble. But let me state this in terms of a flipped around thought experiment. Suppose there were a hard left president whose policies were deeply unpopular with the people, but who who had a mainline media that was completely in the tank for him. What would that look like?

It seems that it would look something like what we have now — clear and undeniable signs of major trouble, with those clear and undeniable signs not getting any major media play at all. That’s what it would look like.

Think about it. In the Democratic primary in West Virginia a few weeks back, a felon sitting in chokey in Texas got 42% of the vote against Obama. In Arkansas, a no-name opponent garnered 41% against Obama. In Kentucky, with no opponent whatever, “uncommitted” got 42% of the vote. This is among Democrats, and it is way worse than just soft support. Moreover, these are elections, not polls, and they are spontaneous, not orchestrated.

I am not writing any of this as a Romney cheerleader, obviously. But it seems to me that Obama is officially perceived as being about 10-15% above where he actually is, and he is being held up there by the sheer cussedness of a leftist media.

Obama’s support is like the solvency of a Greek bank. By all accounts, there should have been run on the banks months ago. And . . . maybe there was, and nobody is telling us about it.

War Games

Stupid Idiots

Shortly after 9/11 New Zealand passed its own anti-terrorism law, the Terrorism Suppression Act.  Its focus and intent was upon the threat of Islamic terrorists infiltrating into New Zealand and committing murder.  The passing of the law was a panic-stricken, rushed affair.  As is almost always the case, laws passed in haste produce decades of pain due to unforeseen adverse consequences.  NZ’s anti-terror act is a dog’s breakfast we are told. Even MP’s are now publicly repenting of their sins in acting in such ill advised haste.

What the panic-stricken parliamentarians never considered in drafting the law was home-grown terrorists.  But that is what we got.  A raggle-taggle bunch of deluded utopians, filled with their own sense of moment and self-importance.  Military-style training camps for armed assaults and revolution in the remote Te Uruwera forest were conducted.  A network of left-wing radicals and anarchists was developed, with links throughout the country.

The police were on to it.
  They used some of the powers granted under the anti-terrorism law.  The raggle-taggle mob was surveilled.  Communications were intercepted.  Hidden cameras installed.  Finally, the police raided remote Tuhoe country in the Uruwera’s, discombobulating the local population.  Understandably, having police descend in force, armed to the teeth, running around a village in and out of houses, whilst keeping inhabitants under their weapons was pretty frightening.

Nevertheless, the police nabbed the perps.  At the forefront was he whom the media has dubbed a “Maori activist”–probably the leading Maori activist, one Tame Iti.  Now, we don’t know Tame Iti personally, but by all accounts he is a bit of a lad, with a flair for the dramatic, the grand gesture.  But the point is that no-one takes him seriously.  He is a bit of a comic.  A likeable bloke, but a bit of a joke. 

Tame Iti

The media and the Chattering Classes, learning that Iti was involved up front and centre, dismissed the whole military-style training camp thing as harmless, naughty-boy stuff.  A bit of a laugh, really.  The police, therefore, in this elitist narrative, were framed as grossly overreacting, the terroriser of small children and frightened women.

This narrative played well with the public.  Anyone involved in the kinds of activities that had been going on in the Te Uruwera forest had to be a bit silly, idiotic even.  At best it was self-aggrandized high jinks; at worst it was idiotic.  Either way, it was so outlandish that the perps deserved pity more than anger.

The heart of the Crown’s case against Tame Iti and his cohorts was bled out when it was determined ex-post that the anti-terrorism act was so flawed, its powers and provisions could not apply.  Hence a lot of evidence was thrown out as inadmissible.  Naturally, this reinforced the dominant narrative about the whole affair.

Finally, Tame Iti and his chief cohort have been jailed for two and a half years on firearms charges–a much reduced charge, but nevertheless a criminal conviction.  Iti’s supporters are claiming that the sentence handed down was unduly harsh.  Iti remains the victim in their minds.  They are proud of him and what he has done.  No doubt his path to martyrdom is secure.

We believe Iti and his cohorts have been stupid, self-aggrandizing and detached from reality.  Yes, they have been more comical than Dad’s Army.  But the intent was clearly there to kill and maim others.  The police had probable cause in spades.  Iti and friends deserve their sentences–and a good deal more.  They should consider themselves fortunate that most of the evidence against them was ruled inadmissible. 

Below is NZ Police Commissioner, Peter Marshall’s defence for police actions on that fateful day in Tuhoe country.

Letter From the UK (about Spain)

A Cautionary Tale

Debt Fuelled Boom Ends in Spectacular Bust

The abridged article below illustrates why some large Spanish banks are under such stress.

Spanish property: Polaris golf resort homes crash to a third of original price

The Guardian

They were once Europe’s most ambitious holiday homes projects, vast developments financed by supersized loans from Spain’s cajas and banks. The properties were widely advertised on television in the UK to entice investors chasing the good life in the sun and hoping to profit from the property boom.

But five years on, the Polaris World holiday dream of sun-drenched apartments overlooking golf courses designed by Jack Nicklaus has turned sour. Apartments that once sold for €200,000 (£160,000) are struggling to fetch €60,000. The last resorts built are now ghost villages.

Welcome to Murcia, the very heart of Spain’s property boom and bust, where repossessions are sweeping the region and where losses are straining balance sheets of almost every Spanish bank.
  The drive along the dual carriageway from Murcia airport into desert-like scrub of the hinterland is a journey through the hubris of the credit-fuelled building boom, back to a time when more cement was mixed in Spain than in every other European country combined. Either side of the road lie unfinished and repossessed, golf resort developments.

Good roads complete with zebra crossings built to link homes that have never been constructed, simply stop in the middle of nowhere. Conference centres lie unused on the edge of vacant developments. Stores, restaurants and sports facilities have failed to materialise as the developers have run out of cash. Those who bought “luxury’ villas for €1m in the good times would be lucky to get a third for them now – if, that is, they could ever find a buyer happy to tolerate living on an unfinished complex.

At the heart of the boom was Polaris World, which built seven resorts on the Costa Calida, and inspired a number of copycat developments in what was once one of the poorest regions of Spain. The group, backed by cheap euro loans bought acres of agricultural land to build self-contained, gated holiday resorts each constructed around a golf course.

Promoted with a memorable TV campaign fronted by Jack Nicklaus and a very slick sales operation, Polaris convinced thousands of buyers – many from the UK – to pay top prices for property in the desert.
Many put down large deposits on more than one property hoping to cash in on rising values. At the peak of the market some made a profit, but as the financial crisis began to unfold in 2008, prices began to fall. The company kept building despite the slump in the prices of its existing developments. By 2010, Polaris World was forced to relinquish most of its assets – the golf courses and unsold properties – to a consortium of banks led by CAM Bank (Caja de Ahorros del Mediterraneo), the leading lender behind the Murcia building spree.

In December last year, CAM was sold to Banco Sabadell for just €1 – after Spain’s deposit guarantee fund injected €5.25bn into the stricken lender. . . .

At the massive La Torre resort this week, the golf courses were looking well-tended, – but no one was on them. The bars and restaurants except one, were closed, communal pools lie unused and a five star Intercontinental Hotel is bereft of visitors. For sale signs abound. . . .

The newest of the Polaris World resorts, El Valle, is perhaps the most surreal. The development, the furthest from the coast, comprises several hundred homes, but on the day of our visit, there were just four people on site – three of whom were staff. Everything is complete, and in good condition. And almost totally devoid of life.

At the Mosa Trajectum resort next door, one almost expects to see tumbleweed blowing down the main street. Here the golf course looked dry and less well-tended. The houses that had been started looked finished, but immaculate roads just stop as if someone had decided mid-project that enough was enough. The sales office, typically a vital feature of such developments was long abandoned..I called in At Polaris World’s glass-clad HQ for an explanation of what had gone wrong, when I revealed I was reporting for The Guardian. The spokeswoman said: “There’s nothing I can tell you. I don’t know anything.” the spokeswoman said.

The Games They Play

Political Polls and Wax Noses

The old saw has it that there are lies, damned lies, and statistics.  These days we might be justified in a bit of tweaking.  There are lies, damned lies, and opinion polls (which, after all, are a particular application of statistical maths). 

Many of our readers are likely too young to remember the election of Ronald Reagan, back in 1980.  Reagan, the arch-conservative Republican was running against the arch-liberal Democrat, Jimmy Carter.  Reagan won in a landslide–receiving (according to Wikipedia) the highest number of electoral votes ever won by a non-incumbent presidential candidate.  The odd thing about this, though, was that right up until the actual election, opinion polls were saying the race was neck and neck.
  “Too close to call,” the pundits said. It was a salutary lesson in treating opinion polls with a truckload of salt.  At the very least one should lift the covers and have a good look underneath at the poll itself, how it was constructed, sample size, and how the results were massaged.  Yes, massaged.

Here is a contemporary example of a wax-nose poll–one that belongs in Madam Tussauds rather than in political discourse.  Once again, it is found in the United States, where political partisanship is an abstract art-form amongst media and the Chattering Classes.  According to a recent Washington Post/ABC poll, Obama is edging out Romney.  Good news for the Democrats to be sure.  Any massaging here?  You bet.

It turns out registered Republican voters were deliberately underweighted in the poll.  This from Mike Flynn of Breitbart News:

Specifically, the Post poll assumes a collapse in GOP turnout. The partisan breakdown of the poll is D-32, R-22, I-38. In other words, only 22% of the voters sampled were Republicans. If only 22% of voters in November were Republicans, it would be about the lowest turnout for the GOP in modern history. 

In 2010, 35% of voters were Republican. In 2008, the year Obama swept into the White House, 32% of voters were Republican. Even in 2006, the year Democrats took control of Congress, 36% of voters were Republican. . . .

I guess its possible that a huge chunk of the GOP simply disappeared in the last two years, but it seems unlikely. If you adjusted the poll sample to something approaching reality, it would probably show Romney with a sizable lead against Obama. Which the mandarins at the Post would dutifully report on page A-17.

Remember, the partisan screen on this poll isn’t an accident or quirk of the sample. It’s the direct result of specific choices made by the pollster to “weight” the sample to reflect demographic and other characteristics of the electorate. If 22% of the sample are Republicans, its because the pollster “weighted” the poll to be that way. (Emphasis, ours)

If this sort of nonsense continues, we expect that right up to polling day in the US presidential elections, the pollsters and mainstream media will be feverishly telling us that the race is “too close to call”.  And, if history were to repeat itself, Romney will win with a landslide. 

Behold Our Future

Rampant Infanticide in China

The following piece has been posted on The Blaze:

Accuracy in Media‘s investigative video team put together a fascinating video discussion with Reggie Littlejohn, president of Women’s Rights Without Frontiers (WRWF). The non-partisan, international coalition works to prevent forced abortion and human trafficking in China.

During her sit-down interview, Littlejohn discussed China’s infamous one-child policy, sterilizations, forced abortion and infanticide. While these elements are troubling, they are a part of daily life for Chinese men and women forced to live under sometimes brutal circumstances. . . .
Read the complete article, here.

When human beings turn away from the Living God, ceasing to believe He is the author and sustainer of every human life, and that He has created every human being in His image, belief in something fills the vacuum.  Nine times out to ten that “something” is the state.  See where it has led in China–to brutish, ignorant, barbaric tyranny.  Remember, however, the West is separated from China by degree, not kind.

Getting Off Scot-Free

Sick at Heart

Justice in this world of Unbelief is a pretty thing to behold.  The courts are beautiful in elevation; the joy of the nation.  They are both divertingly entertaining and instructive.

Recently in New Zealand we have been given an object lesson in avoiding the courts–for the most violent and evil acts.  You see, the context in which our Unbelieving system of justice works is like this:  evil is believed to be extrinsic to the human heart.  Evil acts, therefore, are the product of conditioning–whether biological, chemical, or social.  Evil is not truly evil, just different.  Morality amounts to nothing more than a general social convention.  Justice represents tricks the majority plays on other people and their actions it doesn’t like.  There is no such thing as genuine evil or wickedness. 

A subtle implication of this is that the more extreme and barbaric one’s crimes, the more likely it is that you will be treated as sick and needing help.
  Only someone who is truly sick would do such things, right?  So, if you are going to do crime it is best to do really sadistic, violent and perverted stuff.  Then the system will be biased towards regarding you with pity and condescension rather than retributive wrath.  It will rush to see you as the piteous victim of biological, genetic, chemical or social demons.

But now we have just been served up with a magnificent development on the theme.  If you do really violent, perverted stuff and then can get a psych to diagnose you with dementia, even mild dementia, you will not even go to trial–and you will enjoy name suppression to boot.  Off scot-free.  Now the most common symptom of dementia is memory loss.  So, if you plan and scheme to do terrible crimes, acting like a depraved animalistic brute,  and commit acts of barbaric savagery upon others, the Unbelieving justice system will be set up to paternalistically condescend to you.  But if you apparently have little or no memory of these acts, it will diagnose you as demented, and you will not even face trial.  Stupendous. 

Here is the “case”–as reported in Stuff.  (Disclaimer: we have yet to hear the other side, if there is one, so regard this as prima facie evidence of a cunning plan to get off scot-free. But since the court is reported as accepting the guilt of the non-accused on the balance of probabilities, it’s hard to see how the “other side” could change one’s view.)

A serial rapist who kept one of his teenage victims as a sex slave in a remote bush hut is expected to walk free from court because he has developed mild dementia. Court delays, including more than two years elapsing since he was first charged with abduction and rape, have also contributed to what one of his victims says is the justice system failing them.

A judge has accepted the man committed what amounted to hundreds of rapes involving four women – some aged as young as 15. But he is expected to walk free on the charges when he appears in court next month. He is also seeking permanent name suppression.  The  dragged-out court process has appalled one of his victims, who was 19 when she was lured to a remote part of the North Island and kept as a sex slave for five months. . . . “I was repeatedly terrorised with threats of torture, forced abortion with wire, starvation, being eaten alive by pigs, death and death to any babies born to me,” she told The Dominion Post.

She became pregnant to the man and says he shot a healthy pregnant cow, slit it open and threw its unborn calf to be devoured by semi-wild pigs, to demonstrate what he could do to her. In her statement to police she described the pregnancy ending violently as she was being raped. “I was cramping, in a lot of discomfort and groaning in pain. Clearly I was having a miscarriage. He knew I was pregnant. He knew I was bleeding. Clearly I was in pain, yet he continued to rape me.” Being repeatedly raped was one thing, but to violently experience the emotional pain of miscarriage during rape was “shattering beyond belief,” she said.

“My ability to protect the life within me was smashed to pieces. It affected me on how I viewed myself as a human being and a mother and added a different dimension to the power he held over me as a rapist.” Suppression orders mean The Dominion Post cannot reveal specific details of the woman’s ordeal, including dates and where the offending took place.

The woman was the first to complain to police, in September 2008. Three more victims subsequently came forward. She wants her own name suppression lifted – and she and the other victims want the man’s name suppression lifted so the public knows what he did. He was originally charged in December 2009 with four charges of rape, one of unlawful sexual connection and one of abduction. The charges increased in 2010 to 14, including a representative charge covering hundreds of rapes, and further charges were later laid as more complainants were spoken to. So far he has made 27 court appearances and up till the last two was deemed fit to stand trial.

However his lawyers obtained reports from a psychiatrist and a psychologist saying he has developed mild dementia and is now not fit to be tried. A judge has accepted the medical opinions after the Crown also obtained reports from a psychiatrist and psychologist. (Emphasis, ours)

 . . . . Despite her protests, she became a sex slave as the man moved her into his bedroom, raped her almost daily at will – and told her he would kill anyone who tried to help her. She said she was powerless, helpless and completely manipulated and feared that because of the remoteness he would easily track her down if she tried to escape.

Because he will not be criminally tried on rape charges, the judge has viewed the evidence and ruled that on the civil law test of the balance of probabilities the man was a rapist. She was also raped by him in another house where she heard details of a murder being planned and money being exchanged for the hit. He said no-one would know where she was because he would force her to write to her parents saying she had hitch-hiked to Auckland. The man forced her to do heavy labouring work and beat her when she plucked up the courage to ask him to allow her to leave. She eventually escaped using the man’s vehicle when he went bush with a visiting friend.

There you have it.  This perp was clearly sick, right?  He is even more sick now.  Unbelieving justice at work.  One of the Seven Wonders of the Universe.  We have little doubt that if he had been committed to trial, his mild dementia would have become acute within a matter of days. 

Letter From Australia

The Destruction Wrought by Environmentalism

Walter Starck, writing in Quadrant, indicts Environmentalism as a pathology upon society. 

. . . .A major contributor to our current societal malaise has been a tendency to moral crusades which have only exacerbated the problems they were intended to fix while generating an ongoing residue of collateral damage, unintended consequences, bureaucracy and repression. Over the past century major initiatives of this nature have included prohibition, the war on drugs, the war on terror and repeated efforts to impose or repress various political ideologies.

Although all these efforts have inflicted great suffering and socio-economic damage, probably none have resulted in such ongoing, widespread and ever increasing detriment as has environmentalism. While the benefits of cleaner air and water have been apparent and undeniable, the damage inflicted by misguided environmentalism has been largely unrecognised even though massively extensive and deleterious to human wellbeing.

Some Direct Damages of Misguided Environmentalism

  1. Tens of millions of deaths and debilitating infections by malaria which could have been prevented by indoor use of DDT with minimal environmental impact.
     
  2. Destruction of millions of Ha of rainforest to grow biofuels for an immeasurably trivial reduction in CO2 emissions.
     
  3. It has been estimated that as many as 20 million people have been robbed of their lands and forced into poverty as conservations refugees. After millennia of harmonious co-existence with their natural environment they have been driven out to “protect” it.
     
  4. Even in developed countries multitudes of honest, productive families of small farmers, stockmen and fishermen have also been stripped of a long standing sustainable livelihood to pander to the uninformed notions of green urbanites.
     
  5. In recent years significant increases in food prices have resulted from large areas of land being removed from food production in order to grow uneconomic subsidised biofuels. In addition food production has suffered from reductions in water rights, prohibition of native vegetation clearance, expansion of parks along with myriad environmental restrictions and demands that reduce productivity or increase cost with little or no actual environmental benefit. A further direct consequence has been an increase in malnutrition, especially in underdeveloped countries dependent on staple food imports. This affects tens of millions of people and the trend is getting worse not better.
     
  6. One of the more serious effects of misguided environmentalism has also been the corruption of science. This is resulting in a marked dulling of our most effective tool for informed decision making at a time when it is needed more than ever to deal with an increasingly complex world. In the environmental sciences repeated exposures of junk science and concerted scientific misconduct along with exaggerated predictions which fail their reality test have damaged public trust in all science. Lavish funding for agenda driven junk science has also resulted in a virtual abandonment of sound basic research in favour of research aimed at promoting the existence of purported threats. 

Benefits Denied through Environmentalism

  1. Ignorance and ill-founded fears about genetically modified crops has prevented their introduction in many places. While reasonable prudence is warranted in the adoption of this powerful technology, its blanket prohibition is unwarranted by extensive experience as well as our best scientific understanding. The benefits of increased production, disease resistance, and nutritional improvements as well as the reduced use of fertilisers, pesticides and herbicides are huge. They amount to hundreds of billions of dollars per year in addition to more and better food for billions of people.
     
  2. Unbelievably the GMO hysteria has extended even to the rejection of food aid in a famine in Africa because of concerns about it possibly containing GM material. Apparently the eco-logic is that it is better to starve than to risk an undefined possibility of some unhealthy effect from eating GM food which is consumed by hundreds of millions of people elsewhere with no adverse consequences known.
     
  3. The energy from fossil fuels is the very foundation of modern society   and its rising cost is now having a damaging economic impact on all developed economies. Despite its vital importance, however, increasing imposts, restrictions and liabilities have become a major impediment to production. It appears probable that we are headed for a severe energy crisis including some nations with large natural reserves such as the U.S. and Australia. Certainly the increasing cost of energy is already having a significant negative impact on the prosperity of millions of people even in the most prosperous nations.

  4. Although aquaculture has been highly successful in producing affordable high quality animal protein with minimal environmental detriment it has also become subject to increasing restrictions, prohibitions and costs imposed on the basis of ill-founded environmental concerns. At the same time recent large scale clinical and epidemiological studies have found strong correlation between increased seafood consumption and significant health benefits. These encompass a broad spectrum of major disorders including cardiovascular diseases, a variety of immune related disorders and neurological development and functioning. There is strong indication that increased seafood consumption in most Western nations could save billions of dollars annually in health care costs along with a greatly improved quality of life for tens of millions of people. Although globally there is limited potential for further increasing production in wild caught fisheries, there is great potential for expanded aquaculture. The only real impediment is misguided environmentalism. 

Repression and loss of freedom and opportunity imposed by environmentalism

  1. Hunting, fishing and camping for recreational and food supplementation purposes have long been healthy activities open to people of all ages and social classes. Over the past few decades, however, increasingly harsh, restrictive, complex and costly regulations enacted under the banner of environmental management have taken much of the fun as well as the affordability out of these activities.
     
  2. Strong property rights have been a core element of long standing in the development of Western democracies. A person’s home has been their castle and private property was indeed private. However, that is now history. The new eco-fascism is busy imposing myriad restrictions and demands regarding what one can, cannot and must do on one’s own land. Land ownership is becoming more a matter of onerous, ever increasing and arbitrary obligations than of any secure rights. Land holding is effectually in the process of being transformed into a new form of serfdom with the state as the true owner and the liege lord to whom all obligations must be paid and permissions sought.
     
  3. For millennia fishermen were among the freest of people, the industry was open to anyone and the price of entry was only time and effort. The ideal of fisheries management was to maximise the sustainable yield. Then came the development of academically trained office based eco-management conducted by experts in theoretical ideas about things they have never seen and about which little is actually known. Management claims have expanded to include the entire marine ecosystem with a focus on the maintenance of species diversity and community resiliency while protecting from an endless array of possible threats, all with an eye to erring on the side of precaution. The favourite tool has become the computer model which can be readily adjusted to provide any desired result, lends an aura of high tech certainty and is safely inaccessible to independent examination. The freedom to fish has been transformed into privatised, corporatized, tradable rights accompanied by blizzards of paperwork. The result has been a declining industry with ageing participants and no new generation coming on to replace them. The rights to the most valuable fisheries are all becoming the private property of corporations and investors to be fished by struggling share croppers who bear all the risk and effort but enjoy only a minority of the profit.

. . . . To make matters worse, environmentalism has also become heavily infected with the intellectual malignancy of political correctness wherein certain attitudes, beliefs and perspectives are deemed to be so unarguably true and proper as to be beyond any questioning or critical examination. To attempt to do so is not simply to be mistaken. It is evidence of moral degeneration and wilful evil.

This then brings us to the mother of all environmental threats, Anthropogenic Global Warming (a.k.a. Climate Change). AGW has been the eco-saviour’s ultimate wet dream. In the short term it has afforded healthy portions of fame, fortune, authority and great righteousness. Further along it promises to save the world, punish unbelievers and bring about a fair, harmonious, balanced, sustainable restoration of Eden. The fact that all such dreams of ideal societies have had a 100% track record of failure is not even a consideration. To the faithful every time, this time is always different and each time the believers are certain they “know” the truth and surely couldn’t be wrong because it is confirmed by all their fellow believers and politically correct as well. . . .

The climate change delusion is now in its terminal battle with reality. The proclamations of the alarmists are growing more and more unhinged from the actual climate in which we exist. Increasingly costly and restricted energy supplies are having growing impact on people’s lives. Green energy has failed miserably to deliver cheap, adequate and reliable power or to result in any meaningful reduction in CO2 emissions. It exists only because of subsidies which render it an indulgence we can no longer afford. Then, to top everything off, the science on which all the claims have been based has been repeatedly exposed as corrupted by incompetence, inappropriate methods, unexplained adjustments to data, cherry picking of evidence, exaggeration, suppressing or ignoring conflicting findings and even outright fraud. . . . 


Moral crusades have a repeated history of imposing pain and ending in grief. There is nothing to indicate this one is any different. It’s time to recognise it for what it is, consign it to the rubbish bin of history and begin thinking about how to undo the damage.



Reading List for Even Older Kids

Mining Hidden Treasures

Justin Taylor has been reproducing a reading list collated by Calvary Classical School.  He has kindly imbedded links to Amazon for all the recommended titles.   The list overall naturally contains a bias towards US history; however, for other countries this can be appropriately substituted by books dealing with one’s own national history.  In New Zealand, for example, William Williams Christianity Among the New Zealanders would be appropriate for Year Eight.)

There is an additional benefit from studying a list such as this.  It provides a comparative measure for reading levels and standards in our own Christian schools.
  Note, for example, that Calvary Classical School sets down the salient plays of Shakespeare as standard reading for Year Eight.  Would our own reading programme, together with instruction in English language, have prepared our pupils for Shakespeare, Dickens, Hemingway, and Jane Austen as is the case at Calvary Classical?  (The complete list in PDF format is appended at the end of this post).

A Classical Christian School’s Reading List: Years 6-8

It’s taken me a lot longer than I could have imagined, but I’ve now published a reading list for years 1-3, a reading list for years 4-5, and now here below is a reading list for grades 6-8. I’ve also produced a printable PDF of all the books in one document. (See below) These are from the lists provided by Calvary Classical School—a classical Christian school in Hampton, VA.
A couple of notes on the nomenclature below: “+” indicates that any title in that series would be acceptable.
Some titles also contain a label: L – Language, V – Violence, C – Coarse actions, M – Mature theme
Again, I hope this proves fruitful for many Christian families, schools, and homeschooling co-ops.


Year Six Reading List
Read in class or assigned for outside reading:
Adams, Richard. Watership Down
Bishop, Claire. Twenty and Ten
Crane, Stephen. The Red Badge of Courage
Doyle, Arthur Conan. Sherlock Holmes (excerpts)
Lewis, C. S. The Magician’s Nephew
Lewis, C. S. The Last Battle
Orwell, George. Animal Farm
ten Boom, Corrie. The Hiding Place
Level 1
Alexander, Lloyd. The Prydain Chronicles +
Bradbury, Ray. The Martian Chronicles
Kjelgaard, James. Big Red +
Lester, Julius. The Tales of Uncle Remus
Rawlings, Marjorie. The Yearling
Sorensen, Virginia. Miracles on Maple Hill
Speare, Elizabeth. The Bronze Bow
Van Leeuwen, Jean. Bound for Oregon
Level 2
Baum, Frank L. The Wizard of Oz
Bradbury, Ray. Fahrenheit 451
Dickens, Charles. A Christmas Carol
Eareckson, Joni. Joni
Fisher, Dorothy. Understood Betsy
Irving, Washington. Rip Van Winkle
Irving, Washington. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
Jacques, Brian. Marlfox +
London, Jack. White Fang
Marshall, Catherine. Christy
O’Hara, Mary. My Friend Flicka
Sterling, Dorothy. Freedom Train
Taylor, Theodore. The Cay
Trapp, Maria Augusta. The Story of Trapp Family Singers
Twain, Mark. The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
Twain, Mark. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Level 3
Field, Rachel. Hitty: Her First Hundred Years
Henty, G. H. By Right of Conquest
Henty, G. H. In the Reign of Terror
Kipling, Rudyard. The Jungle Book
London, Jack. The Call of the Wild
Orczy, Emmuska. The Scarlet Pimpernel
Stevenson, Robert Louis. Kidnapped
Taylor, Mildred. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry
Tunnell, Michael. Candy Bomber
Twain, Mark. The Prince and the Pauper
Verne, Jules. Around the World in Eighty Days
Wells, H. G. War of the Worlds
Yates, Elizabeth. Amos Fortune, Free Man


Seventh Grade Reading List
Following is the list of adopted titles used for the seventh grade reading program. Although certain titles are assigned to specific grades, when necessary, teachers may use a list of titles above or below their grade. It is desired that at least 5 adopted books are read each year. Some books will be assigned and read in class, and others will be assigned for outside reading. Every effort has been made to pick the best available literature. As with everything, each book must be read with scripture as our final standard. All Landmark books are acceptable on the literature list.
Aldrich, Thomas. The Story of a Bad Boy
Brother Andrew. God’s Smuggler
Bunyan, John. The Pilgrim’s Progress (original)
DeJong, Meindert. The House of Sixty Fathers
DeKruif, Paul. Microbe Hunters
Dickens, Charles. Nicholas Nickleby
Dickens, Charles. Oliver Twist
Dumas, Alexandre. The Count of Monte Cristo
Dumas, Alexandre. The Three Musketeers
Eaton, Jeanette. David Livingstone, Foe of Darkness
Field, Rachel. Calico Bush
Forester, C. S. Horatio Hornblower
Freedman, Ben. Mrs. Mike
Grant, George. The Last Crusader
Henry, O. The Best Short Stories of O. Henry
Henty, G. A. By Pike and Dyke +
Henty, G. A. In Freedom’s Cause +
Hugo, Victor. Les Miserables
Kipling, Rudyard. Captains Courageous
Latham, Jean Lee. This Dear-Bought Land
Lewis, C. S. Out of the Silent Planet
Lewis, C. S. Perelandra
Lewis, C. S. That Hideous Strength
Little, Paul. Know What You Believe
Little, Paul. Know Why You Believe
MacDonald, George. The Baronet’s Song
O’Dell, Scott. Streams to the River, River to the Sea
O’Dell, Scott. The Hawk That Dare Not Hunt By Day
Orczy, Baroness. The Scarlet Pimpernel
Seredy, Kate. The Good Master
Speare, Elizabeth George. The Bronze Bow
Stevenson, Robert Louis. The Black Arrow
Stevenson, Robert Louis. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Thomson, Andy. Morning Star of the Reformation


Seventh Grade History List

This year in history the students will be studying Explorers to 1815. Students will be reading numerous books from this time period in class. Outside reading is also encouraged, especially historical fiction which engages the imagination and makes the time period come alive. We encourage you to read aloud with your children from books that may be above their reading level. Suggestions for reading are offered below. We are endeavoring to purchase as many of these titles as possible for the classroom.
Four books must be read from the following list:
Bliven, Bruce. The American Revolution (Landmark) – H
Blos, Joan. A Gathering of Days: A New England Girl’s Journal – H, NN, YC
Bond, Douglas. Guns of Thunder
Bond, Douglas. Rebel’s Keep
Calabro, Marian. The Perilous Journey of the Donner Party – H, NN
Carter, Alice. The American Revolution
Collins, David. Noah Webster: Master of Words
Cooper, James Fenimore. The Last of the Mohicans – H, NN, YC
Cousins, Margaret. Ben Franklin of Old Philadelphia (Landmark) – H
Cox, Clinton. Mark Twain – H, NN, YC
Cox, Clinton. Undying Glory: True Story of the Massachusetts 54th Regiment – H, NN
Dafoe, Daniel. Robinson Crusoe – H, NN, YC
Daugherty, James. Of Courage Undaunted – H, NN
Daugherty, James. The Landing of the Pilgrims – CCS, H
de Trevino, Elizabeth. I, Juan de Pareja – H, NN, YC
DK Eyewitness. North American Indian – NN
Forbes, Esther. Johnny Tremain – CCS, H, NN, YC
Forbes, Esther. Paul Revere and the World He Lived In – H, NN
Foster, Genevieve. George Washington’s World – H
Freedman, Russell. Out of Darkness: The Story of Louis Braille – H, NN, YC
Fritz, Jean. The Double Life of Pocahontas – H, NN, YC
Fritz, Jean. Why Not, Lafayette? – H, NN, YC
Hamilton, Alexander, et al. The Federalist Papers – H, NN, YC
Haugaard, Erik. Cromwell’s Boy – H
Jackson, Shirley. The Witchcraft of Salem Village – H, YC
Lasky, Kathryn. Jahanara: Princess of Princesses – H, NN, YC
Lawton, Wendy. The Captive Princess
Lawton, Wendy. The Tinker’s Daughter – CCS
Mansfield, Stephen. Forgotten Founding Father: George Whitefield – CRPC
McPherson, Joyce. The Ocean of Truth: The Story of Isaac Newton
Murphy, Jim. A Young Patriot – H, NN, YC
Newman, Shirlee. The African Slave Trade – H, NN, YC
O’Dell, Scott. Streams to the River, River to the Sea – H, NN
Roosevelt, T. and Lodge, H. Hero Tales from American History
Savery, Constance. The Reb and the Redcoats
Schanzer, Rosalyn. How We Crossed the West – NN, YC
Severance, John. Thomas Jefferson: Architect of Democracy – H, NN
Speare, Elizabeth. George. The Witch of Blackbird Pond – CCS, H, NN, YC
Speare, Elizabeth George. Calico Captive – H, NN, YC
Speare, Elizabeth George. The Sign of the Beaver – CCS, H, NN, YC
Stevenson, Robert Louis. Kidnapped– H, NN, YC
Stevenson, Robert Louis. Treasure Island – H, NN, YC
Vaughn, David. Give Me Liberty – CRPC, YC
Yates, Elizabeth. Amos Fortune, Free Man – H, NN, YC


Eighth Grade Reading List
Following is the list of adopted titles used for the eighth grade reading program. Although certain titles are assigned to specific grades, when necessary, teachers may use a list of titles above or below their grade. It is desired that at least 5 adopted books are read each year. Some books will be assigned and read in class, and others will be assigned for outside reading. Every effort has been made to pick the best available literature. As with everything, each book must be read with Scripture as our final standard. All Landmark books are acceptable on the literature list.
Austen, Jane. Emma +
Austen, Jane. Northhanger Abbey +
Austen, Jane. Pride and Prejudice +
Braithwaite, Edward. To Sir, with Love
Chesterton, G. K. The Complete Father Brown
Chesterton, G. K. The Best of Father Brown
Colson, Charles. Born Again
Defoe, Daniel. Robinson Crusoe
DeKruif, Paul. Microbe Hunters
Dickens, Charles. A Tale of Two Cities +
Dickens, Charles. David Copperfield +
Douglas, Lloyd C. The Robe
Forester, C. S. Horatio Hornblower +
Gilbreth & Carey. Cheaper By the Dozen – L
Gilbreth & Carey. Bells on Their Toes – L
Henry, O. Best Short Stories of O. Henry
Herriot, James. All Creatures Great and Small – L
Herriot, James. All Things Bright and Beautiful – L
Herriot, James. All Things Wise and Wonderful – L
Lee, Harper. To Kill a Mockingbird – M
Lewis, C. S. The Screwtape Letters
Scott, Sir Walter. Ivanhoe
Shakespeare, William. Hamlet
Shakespeare, William. Julius Caesar
Shakespeare, William. Macbeth
Shakespeare, William. Much Ado About Nothing
Shakespeare, William. Othello
Shakespeare, William. Twelfth Night
Sheldon, Charles. In His Steps – C
Swift, Jonathan. Gulliver’s Travels
ten Boom, Corrie. The Hiding Place – V
Twain, Mark. A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court
Twain, Mark. The Adventures of Tom Sawyer – L
Twain, Mark. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn – L
Wallace, Lew. Ben Hur
White, T. H. The Sword in the Stone


Eighth Grade History List
This year in history the students will be studying 1815 to Present. Students will be reading numerous books from this time period in class. Outside reading is also encouraged, especially historical fiction which engages the imagination and makes the time period come alive. We encourage you to read aloud with your children from books that may be above their reading level. Suggestions for reading are offered below. We are endeavoring to purchase as many of these titles as possible for the classroom
Four books must be read from the following list:
Abernathy, Alta. Bud & Me: The True Adventure of the Abernathy Boys
Ambrose, Stephen. The Good Fight: How WWII Was Won – H, YC
Beatty, Patricia. Turn Homeward, Hannalee – H, YC
Bierman, Carol. Journey to Ellis Island – NN, YC
Bliven, Bruce. Invasion: The Story of D-Day – H
Bradley, James. Flags of Our Fathers – H, NN, YC
Brown, Dee. Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee – CCS classroom, H, NN, YC
Catton, Bruce. A Stillness At Appomattox – CCS classroom, H, NN, YC
Cornelissen, Cornelia. Soft Rain: A Story of the Cherokee Trail of Tears – NN, YC
Crockett, Davy. Davy Crockett: His Own Story
Derry, Joseph T. Story of the Confederate States – H, NN
De Vries, Anne. Journey Through the Night
Doswell, Paul. War Stories: True Stories from the First and Second World Wars
Frank, Anne. The Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition – H, NN, YC
Freedman, Russell. Immigrant Kids – H, NN
Grant, George. Carry a Big Stick: The Uncommon Heroism of T. Roosevelt – CPRC
Hemingway, Ernest. The Old Man and the Sea – H, NN, YC
Henty, G. A. With Lee in Virginia
Hersey, John. Hiroshima – H, NN, YC
Hunt, Irene. Across Five Aprils – H, NN, YC
Ingold, Jeanette. Hitch – NN, YC
Irwin, James. Destination: Moon
Kantor, MacKinlay. Gettysburg – H
Lester, Julius. To Be A Slave – H, NN
Levitin, Sonia. Journey to America – H, YC
Linnea, Sharon. Raoul Wallenberg: The Man Who Stopped Death – NN
Mansfield, Stephen. Never Give In: The Extraordinary Character of Winston Churchill
Marrin, Albert. The Yanks Are Coming – H, YC
Marrin, Albert. Stalin: Russia’s Man of Steel – NN
Marrin, Albert. Hitler – H, NN
Marrin, Albert. America and Vietnam: The Elephant and the Tiger – H, NN
McMurdie, Jean McAnlis. Land of the Morning
McMurdie, William. Hey, Mac!
Murphy, Jim. The Boys’ War: Confederate & Union Soldiers Talk About the Civil War – H, NN, YC
Nolan, Peggy. The Spy Who Came in from the Sea
O’Grady, Captain Scott. Basher Five-two – NN, YC
Prins, Piet. The Lonely Sentinel (The Shadow Series) +
Raven, Margot. Theis Mercedes and the Chocolate Pilot – H, NN, YC
Reynolds, Quentin. The Wright Brothers – H, NN
Serraillier, Ian. Escape From Warsaw
Sperry, Armstrong. All Sail Set – H
Steele, William. We Were There on the Oregon Trail – NN
Steele, William. We Were There with the Pony Express
Taylor, Theodore. Air Raid—Pearl Harbor! – H, NN
Taylor, Mildred. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry– H, NN, YC
ten Boom, Corrie. The Hiding Place– CRPC, CCS, H, NN, YC
Trapp, Maria Augusta. The Story of Trapp Family Singers – H, NN, YC
Van Leeuwen, Jean. Bound for Oregon – YC
Velde, Vivian. A Coming Evil
Wilkins, J. Steven. Call of Duty: The Sterling Nobility of Robert E. Lee
Winik, Jay. April 1865: The Month That Saved America – H, NN, YC
York, Alvin. Sergeant York and the Great War — CCS

The complete list in PDF format can be accessed and downloaded here.

Douglas Wilson’s Letter From America

That Seamy Chain of Syllogisms 

Political Dualism – Mere Christendom
Written by Douglas Wilson
 Thursday, 17 May 2012

Marriage is a political act, and not an individual choice. How you marry is a way of testifying to what city you belong to. Who defines marriage? The difficulty we are having in our generation in answering this question shows how theology shapes and drives everything.

If God created the world, and put one man and one woman in it, married them to each other, and established that as a pattern for the rest of human history, then marriage should be defined in accordance with that reality. If He did nothing of the kind, and we actually evolved out of the primordial goo, then we get to shape and define it however we would like it to go.

One other item of Christian theology has to be taken into account, and that is the reality of the fall into sin.
The Christian approach to marriage in the context of mere Christendom deals with both of these realities — the creational given of male and female, and the sinful propensity we have to hump the world. Creational sexuality and sinful sexuality are both factors.

Our laws about marriage must therefore do two things, not just one. They must honor what God has established in the first place, and they must restrain (by not honoring with the recognition of marriage) any of the other forms of sexual congress that sinful men have come up with.

When Jesus taught on divorce, He appeals to the creation pattern.

“And he answered and said unto them, Have ye not read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male and female, And said, For this cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife: and they twain shall be one flesh? Wherefore they are no more twain, but one flesh. What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put asunder” (Matt. 19:4-6).

Reasoning by analogy from this, we can see other expressions of sexuality are excluded. A man should not be allowed to marry himself. It is not good that man should be alone (Gen. 2:18). A man should not be allowed to marry multiple wives. God said that He would make a helper suitable to him (Gen. 1:18). Bestiality is excluded. Adam did not find a helper suitable to him among the animals (Gen. 2:20).

Homosexuality is excluded because God brought Adam a woman, and not another man (Gen. 2:22). And divorce is excluded because God is the one who brought the man and woman together (Matt. 19:6).
But of course if none of this happened, and our ancestors climbed down out of the trees circa 15 million years ago, then evolutionary shape shifting is the order of the day, and there is absolutely no reason to not let people marry whoever or whatever they want.

The marriage debates are a prime illustration of why governmental neutrality on basic religious issues is an impossibility. He who says A must eventually say B, and now that we are getting to the end of this seamy chain of syllogisms, we are confronted with the demand to allow homosexuals to marry. But this is not the end of it, and shows why it is so important to get down to first principles.

The secularists want to say that in addition to straights, we have a range of options with the fetching label of GLBTQ. Anybody who thinks that list of letters won’t grow just isn’t paying attention. Pederasty, bestiality, hetero-polygamy, hetero-polyandry, and bisexual-polyoptions are all waiting in the wings.

The reason why homosexual marriage won’t end the debates (and the hate crimes of those who take up the wrong side of the debate) is that these marriage “reforms” clearly have not solved the problems of the bisexuals. With our arbitrary limitation of marital status to two and only two people, we are plainly telling the bisexual that he must choose between a heterosexual marriage or a homosexual marriage, but that he can’t do both. “But I am both!” he wails . . . suppose this poor little buster wants to express all of his sexual yearnings within the holy bonds of matrimony, and the clerk down at the county courthouse, just seething with hate, won’t give him a license with a place on it for three signatures. And then the Muslim guy, next in line, wants one with a place for four signatures.

This is all perfectly irrational, of course, but the real problem with rational consistency lies with those Christians who want to fight this latest onslaught without resorting to Genesis and the foundational authority of God’s Word (in short, without fighting for mere Christendom). What these secularists (or sexularists, that works too) are advocating is perfectly consistent with their premises, and with the sexual history of the human race (a sinful sexual history). This is why Christians can’t fight this on the basis of “traditional values.” The sexual traditions of humanity, considered apart from God’s Word, have contained way too many child brides, harems, serial polygamists, and concubines to provide us with the appropriate guidance here.

If you want a knock down argument for mere Christendom, look no further than a marriage referendum on a state ballot near you.

The Omniscient Bureaucratic Plan

Government As Papa

We are all familiar with the inevitable stupidity, wastefulness, inanity and bizarre outcomes when life is ordered by government bureaus, laying down regulation upon regulation.

God’s created world is fearfully and wonderfully complex.  Nuclear physicists are only now beginning to realise just how complex.  Human beings, unique as the image bearers of God Himself upon the planet, are likewise subtle, complex, variegated, diverse, and complex.  Consequently, a bureaucratic plan setting out to order human actions is doomed before it starts.  Its outcomes and results are inevitably bizarre and would be laughable if they were not also sinister.

Here is just one example:

KAYSVILLE — Davis High School has been fined $15,000 after they were caught selling soda pop during lunch hour, which is a violation of federal law.  The federally mandated law prohibits the sale of carbonated beverages after lunch is served. The program is an effort to help fight childhood obesity and to have young students make better food choices.

The mandate allows for carbonated beverages to be sold before lunch, but restricts students from buying lunch, then purchasing carbonated drinks afterward.  “Before lunch you can come and buy a carbonated beverage. You can take it into the cafeteria and eat your lunch, but you can’t first go buy school lunch then come out in the hallway and buy a drink,” said Davis High Principal Dee Burton.  Principal Burton said he does not understand the law with rules that seem to be contradictory.

“We can sell a Snickers bar, but can’t sell licorice. We can’t sell Swedish Fish, we can’t sell Starburst, we can’t sell Skittles, but we can sell ice cream, we can sell the Snickers bar, Milky Ways, all that stuff,” said Burton. The school is bound to obey the law, however, if they want the $15,000 the federal government gives to subsidize their school lunch program. 

Burton said the money they will use to pay the fine was typically used to help pay for their music and arts department among other school activities.  Burton said his pop machines will continue to stay completely unplugged until they can figure out how to get them all into a room with a door that can be shut and locked during the lunch hour.

The ultimate security for the average Westerner is the Bureaucratic Plan.  Most would read the story above and respond by calling for a better Plan.  Revise the Plan! would be their reflexive, conditioned demand.

Those more astute and aware of idolatry’s invidious insinuations into the heart would reject the very concept of the Plan itself.   It has replaced a belief in the providence of God.  Any grand aspiration is too risky unless it be regulated by the Plan.  Whereas in other cultures risks are willingly accepted and exploited in an attempt to move forward, in the West there is a dread of unforeseen or negative consequences.  A Bureaucratic Plan must be set up to mitigate risks and bad outcomes from the beginning. “Do I dare?” asked Prufrock.  Not without government rules and regulations holding our hands.

But creation itself is far, far too complex to be so rationalistically structured, micro-managed, and paternalistically ordered.  Human action, much more so, due to human creativity, inventiveness, coupled with human perversions.  The more comprehensive the Bureaucratic Plan, the greater the damage, folly, and harm done.  The spheres of human action lawfully subject to state administration must be severely restricted–lest we suffer the consequences.  The folly and tyranny of the Bureaucratic Plan will be our inevitable lot.

Cede to the government the power, for example, to provide health and wellbeing and the inevitable Plan to deliver the false promise will end up overreaching, seeking to control every human action.  All actions could “legitimately”  be coded healthy or not; all could be regulated as approved or not. 

Should one breathe upon another?  Do we dare, or do we not?  What does the Plan say?  Should we drink soda before lunch or after?  What does the Plan say?  The United State used to profess that it was in God they trusted.  Now the trust of that people lies is in the endless Bureaucratic Plan.  Layers upon layers of rules and regulations, the unending Sarah Lee effect, seek to replace the good providence of God. 

“In God we trust”, or “In Government we trust”?  The United States along with all Western nations made their choice about a century ago.  Luther once famously quipped that the only part of the human anatomy not laid claim to by the popes of his day was the rear-end.  The bureaucratic popes of our day have gone way, way beyond that.  Isn’t life under the Bureaucratic Plan just grand? 

Scientific Breeding

Taking Control of Evolution

“Eugenics” is currently a dirty word, a blasphemy.  However, we have conveniently overlooked that a mere seventy years ago it was perfectly respectable in both Britain and the United States.  The intellectual elite generally believed selective breeding was a key to overcome the dark past of the human race and facilitate a new dawn of civilisation. 

Then along came Adolf and the Nazis who not only took the idea seriously, but actively institutionalised it, making it official policy within the Reich.  For this scientific advance, the Nazis were accorded a good deal of respect before the war amongst the intelligentsia, on both sides of the Atlantic.  With the demise of Nazi Germany, however, and the horror of the “Ultimate Solution” exposed, the attraction of eugenics in the West suffered collateral damage. It was no longer fashionable in the salons.

Nevertheless, eugenics are still being promoted within academia in the West–tellingly without scandal or notoriety.
  This implies that in time it is likely to come back with great force and popular attraction. It is there.  It lurks.  It will come back.  Abortion–a wildly popular horror amongst elites in the West–is after all soft-eugenics.  It controls breeding for other social ends.  It is a very small step indeed between abortion and full blown eugenics, ideologically and ethically.

When there is no Christian foundation, but mere ether on which to ground social ethics, things can change rapidly.  Witness homosexual “marriage” –a mere thirty ago such a notion would have been regarded universally as either abhorrent or fanciful; consequently it was never debated because it would have been seen as outrageous or insane.  Now, the Commentariat is screaming for it, demanding it.  A complete ethical volte-face within half a lifetime.  Rapid change indeed. 

David Bentley Hart describes the on-going percolation of eugenics within academia–without controversy or scandal:

One would think it would be more scandalous than it is, for instance, that a number of respected philosophers, scientists, medical lecturers, and other “bioethicists” in the academic world not only continue to argue the case for eugenics, but do so in such robustly merciless terms.  The late Joseph Fletcher, for example, who was hardly an obscure or insignificant public philosopher, openly complained that modern medicine continues to contaminate our gene pool by preserving inferior genetic types, and advocated using legal coercion–including forced abortions–to improve the quality of the race.  It was necessary, he maintained, to do everything possible to spare society the burden of “idiots” and “diseased” specimens, and to discourage or prevent the genetically substandard from reproducing.  Indeed, he asserted, reproduction is not a right, and the law should set a minimum standard of health that any child should be required to meet before he or she might be granted entry into the world.

He also favoured Linus Pauling’s proposed policy of segregating genetic inferiors into an immediately recognisable caste by affixing indelible marks to their brows, and suggested society might benefit from genetically engineering a subhuman caste of slave workers to perform dangerous or degrading jobs.

Now was Fletcher some lone, eccentric voice in the desert.  Peter Singer argues for the right to infanticide for parents of defective babies, and he and James Rachels have been tireless advocates for more expansive and flexible euthanasia policies, applicable at every stage of life, unencumbered by archaic Christian mystifications about the sanctity of every life.

“Transhumanists” like Lee Silver look forward to the day when humanity will take responsibility for its own evolution, by throwing off antique moral constraints and allowing ourselves to use genetic engineering in order to transform future generations of our offspring into gods (possessed even, perhaps, of immortality). . . .  [David Bentley Hart, Atheist Delusions: The Christian Revolution and Its Fashionable Enemies (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009), p.234f.]

Baring widespread repentance throughout the West we expect that eugenics will become far more acceptable and popular in the next thirty years amongst the elites and the Commentariat.

Greedy Capitalists, Venal Politicians, and Voters

 Have Some More Money

J P Morgan, the biggest bank in the US, has lost a couple of billion dollars on a bad trade.  What’s the odd billion amongst friends, eh?  Oh, no.  Gasp!  Horror.  Something must be wrong within the innards of what President Obama has described as “one of our better run banks”. 

A phalanx of police and federal officials has descended upon the once-shining-knight, now tarnished JP Morgan to investigate what happened.  No doubt it will add to the swelling chorus for more regulation, controls, rules, and compliance that failed the last time in 2008 and have failed in their object ever since. 

The truth appears much, much more simple, yet sinister.
  But we can guarantee the root of the problems, the original cause, will not be addressed.  The reason?  The root of the cause gets far, far too close to the regime of US government itself.  It seems that Reagan’s dictum still holds true: government is not the solution to the problem, it is the problem.

Chriss W. Street has written the background piece which explains what appears to have happened in one of the “better run banks”.  Granted, it is early days yet, but his diagnosis has a ring of truth about it. 

After five years of miserable unemployment and virtually no growth, it seems clear the Federal Reserve’s $2 trillion increase in bank lending at zero interest rates has been better at expanding the international derivatives markets than expanding the American economy. The Federal Reserve owns much of the blame for this phenomenon. By keeping interest rates so low, banks were unable to make a rate of return above their cost of capital on traditional lending.

In an effort to stimulate the economy, the Fed has created out of thin air billions upon billions of dollars at near to zero cost to the wholesale borrowers.  The inane and naive idea was that these lovely banks would borrow the money from the Fed at little or no cost.  They in turn would rush out into the US heartland and on-lend that money to businesses and consumers at a low, but reasonable cost.  The end result?  Business would expand, employment would pick up, economic recovery would be underway.  The Fed has been following the classic Keynsian playbook.  When the pump is dry, to get re-started it needs to be primed with water, allowing it to turn over, which in turn creates the pump’s suction will actually start to pump “real” water.  Then away it goes.  Hey presto–an economic recovery bursts forth. 

But banks have a duty to generate a return for shareholders. This classic Keynsian play forgets one little detail.  Those that borrow billions from the Fed’s free money spigot are human beings.  They are animal spirits, with, strangely enough, an overwhelming desire to maximise returns and profits for their owners. That’s what they are paid to do, and they get paid well when they are successful.  So, instead of taking the Fed’s “free” money and thinking let’s invest in mainstreet Ohio businesses or rust-belt Detroit battlers–which is a long, risky, low-return, granular strategy–where can we get the biggest bang for the billions of bucks the Fed has just created?  We owe it to our shareholders and to our bonuses to find an answer to that question.  JP Morgan asked the question, and got an answer.

The answer was in the form of a “big macro picture”.  The world was stabilising after the global credit crunch of 2008.  Gummints were back in control.  They had removed most of the risks.  All would be well going forward.  (Doubtless the billions of new dollars floating around in the JP Morgan vaults gave strong supportive testimony to this “big picture”.)  So, interest rates were going to fall.  Particularly in Europe where the Euro was stabilising due to the sterling work of Merkel and Sarkozy and the European Central Bank.  We can make quick money off this.  Quick money beats slow, risky money every time.

Achilles Macris, J.P. Morgan’s CIO in their London office, began using the bank’s access to cheap capital from the Fed to amass a huge over-the-counter derivative gamble that high yield and sovereign debt interest rates would fall, after MF Global suffered a $1.2 billion loss on similar bets and was forced to file for bankruptcy last October 30th. Morgan’s gamble became very profitable after December 21 when the European Central Bank (ECB) began making $640 billion of three year loans at 1% interest, referred to as “Long Term Refinancing Operations” (LTROs), available to the banks of Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain (PIIGS). By the end of December, J.P. Morgan’s total derivative exposure was $70.2 trillion on just $1.8 trillion of bank assets, according to the U. S. Controller of the Currency.

Morgan is reported to have continued heavy derivative buying in January and February. Its profits soared again when the ECB announced LTRO2 as another $714 billion in three year low-interest loans to PIIGS banks.

The plan was working.  Now at this point, we need to dismiss as utterly fabricated the notion that a few rogue traders were at fault.  There is no way that such a huge exposure would be kept hidden from executives.  The bank’s internal regulations, risk management, reporting and controls would make that impossible.  We have no doubt that the senior executives would be up to this to their eyeballs.  They were booking the profit of the strategy to their accounts daily–as all the investment banks do. Their behaviour at the time lends weight to this:

The stock of J.P. Morgan vaulted from $29 per share in December to $45 a share in March as rumors swirled that Achilles Macris and his London team of 6 had already made $2-3 billion as high yield and sovereign debt interest rates continued to fall. A jubilant Jamie Dimon announced that J.P. Morgan would increase its dividend and buy back $15 billion of its stock.

But the problem with “big macro picture” strategies is that they always oversimplify reality.  In the oversimplification, risk becomes far more concentrated.  So, when a few uppity Greek voters began to make it clear they thought their government had taken austerity a step too far, suddenly risk returned to the debt markets in Europe.  Interest rates began to rise. 

Everything seemed rainbows and unicorns for J.P. Morgan until two weeks ago, when France and Greece elected hardcore leftist candidates who want to abandon austerity spending cuts and increase social welfare spending. Interest rates on the PIIGS sovereign debt shot back up and J.P. Morgan appears to have suffered a $4-5 billion loss. It also appears the bank has been unable to limit its losses to $2 billion by selling out of their enormous derivative positions.

The Fed provided the easy money capital for US investment banks once again to speculate at will.  Worse, the provision of this easy money confirmed the “big macro picture” which they developed as quick a money making strategy. 

Jamie Dimon tried to dismiss the losses by promising heads will roll, but Congressional hearings will soon illuminate to American taxpayers that the Fed has provided the capital that has allowed America’s three largest banks to engage in $173 trillion in leveraged derivative speculation:

JP Morgan Chase Bank
Derivative Position $70,1517,56,000,000
Total Assets $1,811,678,000,000
Leverage Ratio 38.5

Citibank National Bank
Derivative Position $52,102,260,000,000
Total Assets $1,288,658,000,000
Leverage Ratio 40.3

Bank of America
Derivative Position $50,102,260,000,000
Total Assets $1,451,890,000,000
Leverage Ratio 33.4

Of course the Fed’s “free money” was itself leveraged up many, many times over to create gargantuan derivative positions.

The derivative exposure of these three banks alone exceeds 11 times the American economy and 2.7 times the economies of all the nations on earth. On December 30th, the derivatives leverage ratio of these three banks stood at 37 times. Menacingly, this leverage ratio exceeds the average leverage ratio of 32 times assets for Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns and Merrill Lynch, shortly before the shock of their collapse instigated the start of the Great Recession in 2008.  (Emphasis, ours)

Have these investment banks not learnt, we hear you ask?  Nonsense.  Of course they have learnt very well the lessons of 2008 and 2009.  They have learnt that in the end the bigger you are, the more you become sacrosanct to the state–too big to fail.  The Treasury and the Fed will always come to the party and bail you out–that’s the real lesson, and they have learned it all too well.  Meanwhile the Fed happily continues to throw money at them, pouring gasoline on the smouldering fire of animal spirits.

Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank President Thomas Hoenig in a recent interview warned that an extended period of ultra-low interest rates invites speculative behavior: “When you have zero rates that go on indefinitely, you are inviting future problems.” The recent J.P. Morgan derivatives fiasco has demonstrated that the Fed’s zero interest rate policy has encouraged risky financial speculation that is highly dangerous and potentially destructive.

The fundamental, systemic problem here is not the investment banks.  It is those governments which give them billions upon billions of cheap, easy, electronic money, zero cost money to play with with the ultimate protection of a government bailout.  All in a vain, completely discredited Keynsian attempt to get the economy moving again. 

Reagan was right: virtually without exception the gummint is the problem, or at best, it makes the problem far, far worse. 

(Postscript: some will point out that big investment banks were allowed to fail in 2008,9 and their shareholders and bondholders took not just a haircut, but a scalping.  True.  Then the government lost its nerve and recommenced the big bailout.  President Obama ran up 6 trillion dollars of debt, and the Fed exploded its liabilities in an historic manner to accomplish it.  The result?  The big investment banks that survived are even more of an oligopoly than before, risk is more concentrated, and the systemic problem has worsened.)

Letter From America (About Geert Wilders)

The Spirit of Geert Wilders 

A foreword to Wilders’ Marked for Death.

“. . . In 21st-century Amsterdam, you’re free to smoke marijuana and pick out a half-naked sex partner from the front window of her shop. But you can be put on trial for holding the wrong opinion about a bloke who died in the seventh century.”

By Mark Steyn
May 14, 2012
National Review Online

When I was asked to write a foreword to Geert Wilders’ new book, my first reaction, to be honest, was to pass. Mr. Wilders lives under 24/7 armed guard because significant numbers of motivated people wish to kill him, and it seemed to me, as someone who’s attracted more than enough homicidal attention over the years, that sharing space in these pages was likely to lead to an uptick in my own death threats. Who needs it? Why not just plead too crowded a schedule and suggest the author try elsewhere? I would imagine Geert Wilders gets quite a lot of this.

And then I took a stroll in the woods, and felt vaguely ashamed at the ease with which I was willing to hand a small victory to his enemies
. After I saw off the Islamic enforcers in my own country, their frontman crowed to The Canadian Arab News that, even though the Canadian Islamic Congress had struck out in three different jurisdictions in their attempt to criminalize my writing about Islam, the lawsuits had cost my magazine (he boasted) two million bucks, and thereby “attained our strategic objective — to increase the cost of publishing anti-Islamic material.”

In the Netherlands, Mr. Wilders’ foes, whether murderous jihadists or the multicultural establishment, share the same “strategic objective” — to increase the cost of associating with him beyond that which most people are willing to bear. It is not easy to be Geert Wilders. He has spent almost a decade in a strange, claustrophobic, transient, and tenuous existence little different from kidnap victims or, in his words, a political prisoner. He is under round-the-clock guard because of explicit threats to murder him by Muslim extremists.
Yet he’s the one who gets put on trial for incitement.

In 21st-century Amsterdam, you’re free to smoke marijuana and pick out a half-naked sex partner from the front window of her shop. But you can be put on trial for holding the wrong opinion about a bloke who died in the seventh century.

And, although Mr. Wilders was eventually acquitted by his kangaroo court, the determination to place him beyond the pale is unceasing: “The far-right anti-immigration party of Geert Wilders” (The Financial Times) . . . “Far-right leader Geert Wilders” (The Guardian) . . . “Extreme right anti-Islam politician Geert Wilders” (Agence France-Presse) is “at the fringes of mainstream politics” (Time) . . . Mr. Wilders is so far out on the far-right extreme fringe that his party is the third biggest in parliament. Indeed, the present Dutch government governs only through the support of Wilders’ Party for Freedom. So he’s “extreme” and “far-right” and out on the “fringe,” but the seven parties that got far fewer votes than him are “mainstream”? That right there is a lot of what’s wrong with European political discourse and its media coverage: Maybe he only seems so “extreme” and “far-right” because they’re the ones out on the fringe.

And so a Dutch parliamentarian lands at Heathrow to fulfill a public appearance and is immediately deported by the government of a nation that was once the crucible of liberty. The British Home Office banned Mr. Wilders as a threat to “public security” — not because he was threatening any member of the public, but because prominent Muslims were threatening him: The Labour-party peer Lord Ahmed pledged to bring a 10,000-strong mob to lay siege to the House of Lords if Wilders went ahead with his speaking engagement there.

Yet it’s not enough to denormalize the man himself, you also have to make an example of those who decide to find out what he’s like for themselves. The South Australian senator Cory Bernardi met Mr. Wilders on a trip to the Netherlands and came home to headlines like “Senator Under Fire For Ties To Wilders” (The Sydney Morning Herald) and “Calls For Cory Bernardi’s Scalp Over Geert Wilders” (The Australian). Members not only of the opposing party but even of his own called for Senator Bernardi to be fired from his post as parliamentary secretary to the Leader of Her Majesty’s Loyal Opposition. And why stop there? A government spokesman “declined to say if he believed Mr Abbott should have Senator Bernardi expelled from the Liberal Party.” If only Bernardi had shot the breeze with more respectable figures — Hugo Chávez, say, or a spokesperson for Hamas. I’m pleased to report that, while sharing a platform with me in Adelaide some months later, Bernardi declared that, as a freeborn citizen, he wasn’t going to be told who he’s allowed to meet with.

For every independent-minded soul like Senator Bernardi, Lord Pearson of Rannoch, or Baroness Cox (who arranged a screening of Wilders’ film Fitna at the House of Lords), there are a thousand other public figures who get the message: Steer clear of Islam unless you want your life consumed — and steer clear of Wilders if you want to be left in peace.

But in the end the quiet life isn’t an option. It’s not necessary to agree with everything Mr. Wilders says in this book — or, in fact, anything he says — to recognize that, when the leader of the third-biggest party in one of the oldest democratic legislatures on earth has to live under constant threat of murder and be forced to live in “safe houses” for almost a decade, something is badly wrong in “the most tolerant country in Europe” — and that we have a responsibility to address it honestly, before it gets worse.

A decade ago, in the run-up to the toppling of Saddam, many media pundits had a standard line on Iraq: It’s an artificial entity cobbled together from parties who don’t belong in the same state. And I used to joke that anyone who thinks Iraq’s various components are incompatible ought to take a look at the Netherlands. If Sunni and Shia, Kurds and Arabs can’t be expected to have enough in common to make a functioning state, what do you call a jurisdiction split between post-Christian bi-swinging stoners and anti-whoring anti-sodomite anti-everything-you-dig Muslims? If Kurdistan’s an awkward fit in Iraq, how well does Pornostan fit in the Islamic Republic of the Netherlands?

The years roll on, and the gag gets a little sadder. “The most tolerant country in Europe” is an increasingly incoherent polity where gays are bashed, uncovered women get jeered in the street, and you can’t do The Diary of Anne Frank as your school play lest the Gestapo walk-ons are greeted by audience cries of “She’s in the attic!”

According to one survey, 20 percent of history teachers have abandoned certain, ah, problematic aspects of the Second World War because, in classes of a particular, ahem, demographic disposition, pupils don’t believe the Holocaust happened, and, if it did, the Germans should have finished the job and we wouldn’t have all these problems today. More inventive instructors artfully woo their Jew-despising students by comparing the Holocaust to “Islamophobia” — we all remember those Jewish terrorists hijacking Fokkers and flying them into the Reichstag, right? What about gangs of young Jews preying on the elderly, as Muslim youth do in Wilders’ old neighborhood of Kanaleneiland?

As for “Islamophobia,” it’s so bad that it’s, er, the Jews who are leaving. “Sixty per cent of Amsterdam’s orthodox community intends to emigrate from Holland,” says Benzion Evers, the son of the city’s chief rabbi, five of whose children had already left by 2010. Frommer’s bestselling travel guide to “Europe’s most tolerant city” acknowledges that “Jewish visitors who dress in a way that clearly identifies them as Jewish” are at risk of attack, but discreetly attributes it to “the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.” “Jews with a conscience should leave Holland, where they and their children have no future,” advised Frits Bolkestein, former Dutch Liberal leader. “Anti-Semitism will continue to exist, because the Moroccan and Turkish youngsters don’t care about efforts for reconciliation.”

If you’re wondering what else those “youngsters” don’t care for, ask Chris Crain, editor of The Washington Blade, the gay newspaper of America’s capital. Seeking a break from the Christian fundamentalist redneck theocrats of the Republican party, he and his boyfriend decided to treat themselves to a vacation in Amsterdam, “arguably the ‘gay-friendliest’ place on the planet.” Strolling through the streets of the city center, they were set upon by a gang of seven “youngsters,” punched, beaten, and kicked to the ground. Perplexed by the increasing violence, Amsterdam officials commissioned a study to determine, as Der Spiegel put it, “why Moroccan men are targeting the city’s gays.”

Gee, that’s a toughie. Beats me. The geniuses at the University of Amsterdam concluded that the attackers felt “stigmatized by society” and “may be struggling with their own sexual identity.”

Bingo! Telling Moroccan youths they’re closeted gays seems just the ticket to reduce tensions in the city! While you’re at it, a lot of those Turks seem a bit light on their loafers, don’t you think?  But not to worry. In the “most tolerant nation in Europe,” there’s still plenty of tolerance. What won’t the Dutch tolerate? In 2006, the justice minister, Piet Hein Donner, suggested there would be nothing wrong with sharia if a majority of Dutch people voted in favor of it — as, indeed, they’re doing very enthusiastically in Egypt and other polities blessed by the Arab Spring. Mr. Donner’s previous response to “Islamic radicalism” was (as the author recalls in the pages ahead) to propose a new blasphemy law for the Netherlands.

In this back-to-front world, Piet Hein Donner and the University of Amsterdam researchers and the prosecutors of the Openbaar Ministrie who staged his show trial are “mainstream” — and Geert Wilders is the “far” “extreme” “fringe.” How wide is that fringe? Mr. Wilders cites a poll in which 57 percent of people say that mass immigration was the biggest single mistake in Dutch history. If the importation of large Muslim populations into the West was indeed a mistake, it was also an entirely unnecessary one. Some nations (the Dutch, French, and British) might be considered to owe a certain post-colonial debt to their former subject peoples, but Sweden? Germany? From Malmö to Mannheim, Islam transformed societies that had hitherto had virtually no connection with the Muslim world.

Even if you disagree with that 57 percent of Dutch poll respondents, the experience of Amsterdam’s chief rabbi and the gay-bashed editor and the elderly residents of Kanaleneiland suggests at the very minimum that the Islamization of Continental cities poses something of a challenge to Eutopia’s famous “tolerance.” Yet the same political class responsible for this unprecedented “demographic substitution” (in the words of French demographer Michèle Tribalat) insists the subject remain beyond discussion. The British novelist Martin Amis asked Tony Blair if, at meetings with his fellow prime ministers, the Continental demographic picture was part of the “European conversation.” Mr. Blair replied, with disarming honesty, “It’s a subterranean conversation” — i.e., the fellows who got us into this mess can’t figure out a way to talk about it in public, other than in the smiley-face banalities of an ever more shopworn cultural relativism.

That’s not enough for Geert Wilders. Unlike most of his critics, he has traveled widely in the Muslim world. Unlike them, he has read the Koran — and re-read it, on all those interminable nights holed up in some dreary safe house denied the consolations of family and friends. One way to think about what is happening is to imagine it the other way round. Rotterdam has a Muslim mayor, a Moroccan passport holder born the son of a Berber imam. How would the Saudis feel about an Italian Catholic mayor in Riyadh? The Jordanians about an American Jewish mayor in Zarqa? Would the citizens of Cairo and Kabul agree to become minorities in their own hometowns simply because broaching the subject would be too impolite?

To pose the question is to expose its absurdity. From Nigeria to Pakistan, the Muslim world is intolerant even of ancient established minorities. In Iraq half the Christian population has fled, in 2010 the last church in Afghanistan was razed to the ground, and in both cases this confessional version of ethnic cleansing occurred on America’s watch. Multiculturalism is a unicultural phenomenon.

But Europe’s political establishment insists that unprecedented transformative immigration can only be discussed within the conventional pieties: We tell ourselves that, in a multicultural society, the nice gay couple at Number 27 and the polygamous Muslim with four child-brides in identical niqabs at Number 29 Elm Street can live side by side, each contributing to the rich, vibrant tapestry of diversity. And anyone who says otherwise has to be cast into outer darkness.

Geert Wilders thinks we ought to be able to talk about this — and indeed, as citizens of the oldest, freest societies on earth, have a duty to do so. Without him and a few other brave souls, the views of 57 percent of the Dutch electorate would be unrepresented in parliament. Which is a pretty odd thing in a democratic society, when you think about it. Most of the problems confronting the Western world today arise from policies on which the political class is in complete agreement: At election time in Europe, the average voter has a choice between a left-of-center party and an ever so mildly right-of-left-of-center party and, whichever he votes for, they’re generally in complete agreement on everything from mass immigration to unsustainable welfare programs to climate change. And they’re ruthless about delegitimizing anyone who wants a broader debate.

In that Cory Bernardi flap Down Under, for example, I’m struck by how much of the Aussie coverage relied on the same lazy shorthand about Geert Wilders.

From The Sydney Morning Herald:
“Geert Wilders, who holds the balance of power in the Dutch parliament, likened the Koran to Mein Kampf and called the Prophet Muhammad a pedophile . . . ”

The Australian:
“He provoked outrage among the Netherlands’ Muslim community after branding Islam a violent religion, likening the Koran to Hitler’s Mein Kampf and calling the Prophet Mohammed a pedophile.”

Tony Eastley on ABC Radio:
“Geert Wilders, who controls the balance of power in the Netherlands’ parliament, has outraged Dutch Muslims by comparing the Koran to Hitler’s work Mein Kampf and calling the Prophet Muhammad a pedophile . . . ”

Golly, you’d almost think all these hardworking investigative reporters were just cutting-and-pasting the same lazy précis rather than looking up what the guy actually says. The man who emerges in the following pages is not the grunting thug of media demonology but a well-read, well-traveled, elegant, and perceptive analyst who quotes such “extreme” “fringe” figures as Churchill and Jefferson.

As to those endlessly reprised Oz media talking points, Mein Kampf is banned in much of Europe; and Holocaust denial is also criminalized; and, when a French law on Armenian-genocide denial was struck down, President Sarkozy announced he would immediately draw up another genocide-denial law to replace it.

In Canada, the Court of Queen’s Bench upheld a lower-court conviction of “hate speech” for a man who merely listed the chapter and verse of various Biblical injunctions on homosexuality. Yet, in a Western world ever more comfortable in regulating, policing, and criminalizing books, speech, and ideas, the state’s deference to Islam grows ever more fawning. “The Prophet Mohammed” (as otherwise impeccably secular Westerners now reflexively refer to him) is an ever greater beneficiary of our willingness to torture logic and law and liberty in ever more inane ways in the cause of accommodating Islam.

Consider the case of Elisabeth Sabaditsch-Wolff, a Viennese housewife who has lived in several Muslim countries. She was hauled into an Austrian court for calling Mohammed a pedophile on the grounds that he consummated his marriage when his bride, Aisha, was nine years old. Mrs. Sabaditsch-Wolff was found guilty and fined 480 euros. The judge’s reasoning was fascinating:

Pedophilia is factually incorrect, since pedophilia is a sexual preference which solely or mainly is directed towards children. Nevertheless, it does not apply to Mohammad. He was still married to Aisha when she was 18.

So you’re not a pedophile if you deflower the kid in fourth grade but keep her around till high school? There’s a useful tip if you’re planning a hiking holiday in the Alps. Or is this another of those dispensations that is not of universal application?

A man who confronts such nonsense head on will not want for enemies. Still, it’s remarkable how the establishment barely bothers to disguise its wish for Wilders to meet the same swift and definitive end as Pim Fortuyn and Theo van Gogh. The judge at his show trial opted to deny the defendant the level of courtroom security afforded to Mohammed Bouyeri, van Gogh’s murderer. Henk Hofland, voted the Netherlands’ “Journalist of the Century” (as the author wryly notes), asked the authorities to remove Wilders’ police protection so that he could know what it’s like to live in permanent fear for his life. While Wilders’ film Fitna is deemed to be “inflammatory,” the movie De moord op Geert Wilders (The Assassination of Geert Wilders) is so non-inflammatory and respectable that it was produced and promoted by a government-funded radio station. You’d almost get the impression that, as the website Gates of Vienna suggested, the Dutch state is channeling Henry II: “Who will rid me of this turbulent blond?”

There’s no shortage of volunteers. In the Low Countries, a disturbing pattern has emerged: Those who seek to analyze Islam outside the very narrow bounds of Eutopian political discourse wind up either banned (Belgium’s Vlaams Blok), forced into exile (Ayaan Hirsi Ali), or killed (Fortuyn, van Gogh). How speedily “the most tolerant country in Europe” has adopted “shoot the messenger” as an all-purpose cure-all for “Islamophobia.”

It’s not “ironic” that the most liberal country in western Europe should be the most advanced in its descent into a profoundly illiberal hell. It was entirely foreseeable, and all Geert Wilders is doing is stating the obvious: A society that becomes more Muslim will have less of everything else, including individual liberty.

I have no desire to end up living like Geert Wilders or Kurt Westergaard, never mind dead as Fortuyn and van Gogh. But I also wish to live in truth, as a free man, and I do not like the shriveled vision of freedom offered by the Dutch Openbaar Ministrie, the British immigration authorities, the Austrian courts, Canada’s “human rights” tribunals, and the other useful idiots of Islamic imperialism. So it is necessary for more of us to do what Ayaan Hirsi Ali recommends: share the risk. So that the next time a novel or a cartoon provokes a fatwa, it will be republished worldwide and send the Islamic enforcers a message: Killing one of us won’t do it. You’d better have a great credit line at the Bank of Jihad because you’ll have to kill us all.

As Geert Wilders says of the Muslim world’s general stagnation, “It’s the culture, stupid.” And our culture is already retreating into pre-emptive capitulation, and into a crimped, furtive, (Blair again) subterranean future. As John Milton wrote in his Areopagitica of 1644, “Give me the liberty to know, to utter, and to argue freely according to conscience.” It is a tragedy that Milton’s battles have to be re-fought three-and-a-half centuries on, but the Western world is shuffling into a psychological bondage of its own making. Geert Wilders is not ready to surrender without exercising his right to know, to utter, and to argue freely — in print, on screen, and at the ballot box. We should cherish that spirit, while we can.

 Mark Steyn, a National Review columnist, is the author of After America: Get Ready for Armageddon. This article is adapted from his foreword to Geert Wilders’ Marked for Death: Islam’s War against the West and Me.