Saturday, August 31, 2013

I’m Thinking. Please. Be Quiet.


Tommi Musturi

SLAMMING doors, banging walls, bellowing strangers and whistling neighbors were the bane of the philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer’s existence. But it was only in later middle age, after he had moved with his beloved poodle to the commercial hub of Frankfurt, that his sense of being tortured by loud, often superfluous blasts of sound ripened into a philosophical diatribe. Then, around 1850, Schopenhauer pronounced noise to be the supreme archenemy of any serious thinker.
Readers shared their thoughts on this article.
His argument against noise was simple: A great mind can have great thoughts only if all its powers of concentration are brought to bear on one subject, in the same way that a concave mirror focuses light on one point. Just as a mighty army becomes useless if its soldiers are scattered helter-skelter, a great mind becomes ordinary the moment its energies are dispersed.
And nothing disrupts thought the way noise does, Schopenhauer declared, adding that even people who are not philosophers lose whatever ideas their brains can carry in consequence of brutish jolts of sound.
From the vantage point of our own auditory world, with its jets, jackhammers, HVAC systems, truck traffic, cellphones, horns, decibel-bloated restaurants and gyms on acoustical steroids, Schopenhauer’s mid-19th century complaints sound almost quaint. His biggest gripe of all was the “infernal cracking” of coachmen’s whips. (If you think a snapping line of rawhide’s a problem, buddy, try the Rumbler Siren.) But if noise did shatter thought in the past, has more noise in more places further diffused our cognitive activity?
Schopenhauer made a kind of plea for mono-tasking. Environmental noise calls attention to itself — splits our own attention, regardless of willpower. We jerk to the tug of noise like sonic marionettes. There’s good reason for this. Among mammals, hearing developed as an early warning system; the human ear derived from the listening apparatus of very small creatures. Their predators were very big, and there were many of them.
Mammalian hearing developed primarily as an animal-detector system — and it was crucial to hear every rustle from afar. The evolved ear is an extraordinary amplifier. By the time the brain registers a sound, our auditory mechanism has jacked the volume several hundredfold from the level at which the sound wave first started washing around the loopy whirls of our ears. This is why, in a reasonably quiet room, we actually can hear a pin drop. Think what a tiny quantity of sound energy is released by a needle striking a floor! Our ancestors needed such hypersensitivity, because every standout noise signified a potential threat.
There has been a transformation in our relationship to the environment over the millions of years since the prototype for human hearing evolved, but part of our brain hasn’t registered the makeover.
Every time a siren shrieks on the street, our conscious minds might ignore it, but other brain regions behave as if that siren were a predator barreling straight for us. Given how many sirens city dwellers are subject to over the course of an average day, and the attention-fracturing tension induced by loud sounds of every sort, it’s easy to see how sensitivity to noise, once an early warning system for approaching threats, has become a threat in itself.
Indeed, our capacity to tune out noises — a relatively recent adaptation — may itself pose a danger, since it allows us to neglect the physical damage that noise invariably wreaks. AHyena (Hypertension and Exposure to Noise Near Airports) study published in 2009 examined the effects of aircraft noise on sleeping subjects. The idea was to see what effect noise had, not only on those awakened by virtual fingernails raking the blackboard of the night sky, but on the hardy souls who actually slept through the thunder of overhead jets.
The findings were clear: even when people stayed asleep, the noise of planes taking off and landing caused blood pressure spikes, increased pulse rates and set off vasoconstriction and the release of stress hormones. Worse, these harmful cardiovascular responses continued to affect individuals for many hours after they had awakened and gone on with their days.
As Dr. Wolfgang Babisch, a lead researcher in the field, observed, there is no physiological habituation to noise. The stress of audible assault affects us psychologically even when we don’t consciously register noise.
In American culture, we tend to regard sensitivity to noise as a sign of weakness or killjoy prudery. To those who complain about sound levels on the streets, inside their homes and across a swath of public spaces like stadiums, beaches and parks, we say: “Suck it up. Relax and have a good time.” But the scientific evidence shows that loud sound is physically debilitating. A recent World Health Organization report on the burden of disease from environmental noise conservatively estimates that Western Europeans lose more than one million healthy life years annually as a consequence of noise-related disability and disease. Among environmental hazards, only air pollution causes more damage.
A while back, I was interviewed on a call-in radio station serving remote parts of Newfoundland. One caller lived in a village with just a few houses and almost no vehicular traffic. Her family had been sitting in the living room one evening when the power suddenly cut off. They simultaneously exhaled a sigh of relief. All at once, the many electronic devices around them (including the refrigerator, computers, generator, lamps and home entertainment systems and the unnatural ambient hum they generated and to which the family had become oblivious) went silent. The family members didn’t realize until the sound went off how loud it had become. Without knowing it, each family member’s mental energy was constantly diverted by and responsive to the threat posed by that sound.
Where does this leave those of us facing less restrained barrages? Could a critical mass of sound one day be reached that would make sustained thinking impossible?
Is quiet a precondition of democracy? The Supreme Court justice Felix Frankfurter suggested it might just be. “The men whose labors brought forth the Constitution of the United States had the street outside Independence Hall covered with earth so that their deliberations might not be disturbed by passing traffic,” he once wrote. “Our democracy presupposes the deliberative process as a condition of thought and of responsible choice by the electorate.”
The quiet in Independence Hall was not the silence of a monastic retreat, but one that encouraged listening to others and collaborative statesmanship; it was a silence that made them more receptive to the sound of the world around them.
Most likely Schopenhauer had in mind a similar sense of quiet when he chose to live in a big city rather than retiring from society: apparently he, too, believed it important to observe as much of life as possible. And when he moved to Frankfurt, he didn’t bring earplugs. He brought along a poodle known to bark on occasion, and the flute he loved to play after writing. Most people who are seeking more serenity from the acoustical environment aren’t asking for the silence of the tomb. We just believe we should be able to hear ourselves think.
George Prochnik is the author of the forthcoming book “The Impossible Exile.”

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Színes fotók a Titanicról/Titanic in color

A Titanic-ról számtalan fotó maradt fenn, de ezek mind fekete-fehér képek. Egy fiatalember aprólékos munkájának köszönhetően, mindezt most színesben is megnézhetitek.


ART.BLOG
Forrás: Titanic In Color2013-08-27 19:21



Anton Logvinenko a Titanic elsüllyedésének 100. évfordulója alkalmából
kiszínezett 100 fotót az óriás utasszállítóról. A képek eredetileg fekete-
fehérben készültek, ami nem biztos, hogy vissza tudja adni azt a pompát,
amit a hajó a XX. század elején képviselt.

A kiszínezett képeket elnézve könnyen el lehet képzelni, hogy milyen
lehetett a hajón az élet. A szivarszoba, az étterem, a pálmaház, a kabinok
és a hajófedélzet is életre kel a színektől. Így egy kicsit ti is
belecsöppenhettek a századelő luxusába.

Ide kattintva érhetitek el Anton weboldalát, ahol egy rövid regisztráció
után elétek tárul a Titanic csodálatos világa. A hajó alaprajzán, a megjelölt
pontokra kattintva nézhetitek meg, hogy az a rész milyen lehetett.



































VIDEÓ: ilyen lett a kiszínezett Titanic



Nyomj egy lájkot, ha tetszettek a képek!

Sentenced to death for a sip of water

As her religion faces persecution across the Middle East, a Christian woman explains why she faces hanging in Pakistan for the crime of ‘blasphemy’

By ASIA BIBI

To her neighbors, Aasiya Noreen “Asia” Bibi, a poor mother of five in the tiny village of Ittan Wali in central Pakistan, was guilty — guilty of being Christian in a nation that is 97% Muslim. For four years she has languished in a prison cell for this, facing death by hanging. Her new memoir, “Blasphemy,” was dictated to her husband from jail, who relayed it to French journalist Anne-Isabelle Tollet. Fifty percent of the proceeds the book will go to support Bibi and her family. Tollet says the situation is dire. Embarrassed by Bibi’s case but still refusing to release her because of angry protests by extremists, the Pakistan government has transferred her to a more remote prison, hoping the 42-year-old dies quietly behind bars, perhaps poisoned by another inmate. Already two government officials who have spoken out on her behalf have been murdered, including Minister for Minorities Shahbaz Bhatti, who was killed by the Taliban. In this excerpt, Bibi explains the simple “transgression” that led to her plight.
Daughters of Asia Bibi hold a photo of their mother, who has been in prison for four years.
Daughters of Asia Bibi hold a photo of their mother, who has been in prison for four years.
Asia Bibi
Chicago Review Press (2)
Asia Bibi


















I’m the victim of a cruel, collective injustice.
I’ve been locked up, handcuffed and chained, banished from the world and waiting to die. I don’t know how long I’ve got left to live. Every time my cell door opens my heart beats faster. My life is in God’s hands and I don’t know what’s going to happen to me. It’s a brutal, cruel existence. But I am innocent. I’m guilty only of being presumed guilty. I’m starting to wonder whether being a Christian in Pakistan today is not just a failing, or a mark against you, but actually a crime.
But though I’m kept in a tiny, windowless cell, I want my voice and my anger to be heard. I want the whole world to know that I’m going to be hanged for helping my neighbor. I’m guilty of having shown someone sympathy. What did I do wrong? I drank water from a well belonging to Muslim women, using “their” cup, in the burning heat of the midday sun.
I, Asia Bibi, have been sentenced to death because I was thirsty. I’m a prisoner because I used the same cup as those Muslim women, because water served by a Christian woman was regarded as unclean by my stupid fellow fruit-pickers.
That day, June 14, 2009, is imprinted on my memory. I can still see every detail.
That morning I got up earlier than usual, to take part in the big falsa-berry harvest. I’d been told about it by Farah, our lovely local shopkeeper. “Why don’t you go falsa picking tomorrow in that field just outside the village? You know the one; it belongs to the Nadeems, the rich family who live in Lahore. The pay is 250 rupees.”
Because it was Sunday, my husband Ashiq wasn’t working in the brickworks. While I was getting ready to go to work he was still fast asleep in the big family bed with two of our daughters, who were also worn out after a long week at school. I looked at them with love before I left the room, and thanked God for giving me such a wonderful family.
When I got to the field, around 15 women were already at work, picking away, their backs hidden by the tall bushes. It was going to be a physically exhausting day in such heat, but I needed those 250 rupees.
Some of the women greeted me with a smile. I recognized my neighbor, Musarat, who was the seamstress in my village. I gave her a little wave, but she turned back to the bushes again at once. Musarat wasn’t really an agricultural worker and I didn’t often see her in the fields, so I realized times must be hard for her family. In the end, it was just our lot to be poor, all of us.
A hard-faced woman dressed in clothes that had been mended many times came over to me with an old yellow bowl.
“If you fill the bowl you get 250 rupees,” she said without really looking at me.
I looked at the huge bowl and thought I would never finish before sunset. Looking at the other women’s bowls, I also realized mine was much bigger. They were reminding me that I’m a Christian.
The sun was beating down, and by midday it was like working in an oven. I was dripping with sweat and I could hardly think or move for the suffocating heat. In my mind, I could see the river beside my village. If only I could have jumped into that cool water!
But since the river was nowhere near, I freed myself from my bushes and walked over to the nearby well. Already I could sense the coolness rising up from the depths.
I pull up a bucketful of water and dip in the old metal cup resting on the side of the well. The cool water is all I can think of. I gulp it down and I feel better; I pull myself together.
Then I start to hear muttering. I pay no attention and fill the cup again, this time holding it out to a woman next to me who looks like she’s in pain. She smiles and reaches out . . . At exactly the moment Musarat pokes her ferrety nose out from the bush, her eyes full of hate:
“Don’t drink that water, it’s haram!”
Musarat addresses all the pickers, who have suddenly stopped work at the sound of the word “haram,” the Islamic term for anything forbidden by God.
“Listen, all of you, this Christian has dirtied the water in the well by drinking from our cup and dipping it back several times. Now the water is unclean and we can’t drink it! Because of her!”
It’s so unfair that for once I decide to defend myself and stand up to the old witch.
“I think Jesus would see if differently from Mohammed.”
Musarat is furious. “How dare you think for the Prophet, you filthy animal!”
Three other women start shouting even louder.
“That’s right, you’re just a filthy Christian! You’ve contaminated our water and now you dare speak for the Prophet! Stupid bitch, your Jesus didn’t even have a proper father, he was a bastard, don’t you know that.”
Musarat comes over as though she’s going to hit me and yells: “You should convert to Islam to redeem yourself for your filthy religion.”
I feel a pain deep inside. We Christians have always stayed silent: We’ve been taught since we were babies never to say anything, to keep quiet because we’re a minority. But I’m stubborn too and now I want to react, I want to defend my faith. I take a deep breath and fill my lungs with courage.
“I’m not going to convert. I believe in my religion and in Jesus Christ, who died on the cross for the sins of mankind. What did your Prophet Mohammed ever do to save mankind? And why should it be me that converts instead of you?”
That’s when the hatred bursts from all side. All around me the women start screaming. One of them grabs my bowl and tips the berries into her own. Another one shoves and Musarat spits in my face with all the scorn she can manage. A foot lashes out and they push me. Even when I run home, I can still hear them complaining.
Five days later, I went to work fruit picking in another field. I’ve almost filled my bowl when I hear what sounds like a rioting crowd. I step back from my bush, wondering what’s going on, and in the distance I see dozens of men and women striding along towards our field, waving their arms in the air.
I catch the cruel eyes of Musarat. Her expression is self-righteous and full of scorn. I shiver as I suddenly realize that she hasn’t let it go. I can tell she’s out for revenge. The excited crowd are closer now; they are coming into the field and now they’re standing in front of me, threatening and shouting.
“Filthy bitch! We’re taking you back to the village! You insulted our Prophet! You’ll pay for that with your life!”
They all start yelling:
“Death! Death to the Christian!”
The angry crowd is pressing closer and closer around me. I’m half lying on the ground when two men grab me by the arms to drag me away. I call out in a desperate, feeble voice:
“I haven’t done anything! Let me go, please! I haven’t done anything wrong!”
Just then someone hits me in the face. My nose really hurts and I’m bleeding. They drag me along, semi-conscious, like a stubborn donkey. I can only submit and pray that it will all stop soon. I look at the crowd, apparently jubilant that I’ve put up so little resistance. I stagger as the blows rain down on my legs, my back and the back of my head. I tell myself that when we get to the village perhaps my sufferings will be over. But when we arrive there it’s worse: there are even more people and the crowd turn more and more aggressive, calling all the louder for my death.
More and more people join the crowd as they push me towards the home of the village headman. I recognize the house — it’s the only one that has a garden with grass growing in it. They throw me to the ground. The village imam speaks to me: “I’ve been told you’ve insulted our Prophet. You know what happens to anyone who attacks the holy Prophet Mohammed. You can redeem yourself only by conversion or death.”
“I haven’t done anything! Please! I beg you! I’ve done nothing wrong!”
The qari with his long, well-combed beard, turns to Musarat and the three women who were there on the day of the falsa harvest.
“Did she speak ill of Muslims and our holy Prophet Mohammed?”
“Yes, she insulted them,” replies Musarat, and the others join in:
“It’s true, she insulted our religion.”
“If you don’t want to die,” says the young mullah, “you must convert to Islam. Are you willing to redeem yourself by becoming a good Muslim?”
Sobbing, I reply:
“No, I don’t want to change my religion. But please believe me, I didn’t do what these women say, I didn’t insult your religion. Please have mercy on me.”
I put my hands together and plead with him. But he is unmoved.
“You’re lying! Everyone says you committed this blasphemy and that’s proof enough. Christians must comply with the law of Pakistan, which forbids any derogatory remarks about the holy Prophet. Since you won’t convert and the Prophet cannot defend himself, we shall avenge him.”
He turns on his heel and the angry crowd falls on me. I’m beaten with sticks and spat at. I think I’m going to die. Then they ask me again:
“Will you convert to a religion worthy of the name?”
“No, please, I’m a Christian, but I beg you . . . ”
And they go on beating me with the same fury as before.
I was barely conscious and could hardly feel the pain of my wounds by the time the police arrived. Two policemen threw me in their van, to cheers from the angry crowd, and a few minutes later I was in the police station in Nankana Sahib.
In the police chief’s office they sat me down on a bench. I asked for water and compresses for the wounds on my legs, which were streaming with blood. A young policeman threw me an old dishcloth and spat out at me:
“Here, and don’t get it everywhere.”
One of my arms really hurt and I thought it might be broken. Just then I saw the qari come in with Musarat and her gang. With me sitting there they told the police chief that I insulted the Prophet Mohammed. From outside the police station I could hear shouts:
“Death to the Christian!”
After writing up the report the policeman turned and called to me in a nasty voice:
“So what have you got to say for yourself?”
“I’m innocent! It’s not true! I didn’t insult the Prophet!”
Immediately after I’d protested my innocence I was manhandled into the police van and driven away. During the journey I passed out from pain and only came back to myself as we were arriving at Sheikhupura prison, where I was thrown into a cell.
Since that day I haven’t left prison.
Excerpted with permission from “Blasphemy: A Memoir” by Asia Bibi as told to Anne-Isabelle Tollet, published by Chicago Review Press.

Why there is no peace in the Middle East

http://www.buzzfeed.com/andrewkaczynski/the-middle-east-explained-in-one-excellent-letter-to-the-edi


Sunday, August 25, 2013

Bill Watterson Answers Fan's Questions




Andrews McMeel Publishing asked 
people to submit queries as a way 
to promote The Complete Calvin 
and Hobbes book. The collection 
includes every comic Watterson did 
from his feature's launch in 1985 
until its swan song in 1996 — when 
Calvin and Hobbes was running in 
more than 2,400 newspapers via 
Universal Press Syndicate.
Q: Are the adventures of Calvin and Hobbes similar to your own childhood, or is the strip a way for you to create stories you never experienced as a kid? - Mark Mulvey, Port Murray, NJ
A: I'd say the fictional and nonfictional aspects were pretty densely interwoven. While Calvin definitely reflects certain aspects of my personality, I never had imaginary animal friends, I generally stayed out of trouble, I did fairly well in school, etc., so the strip is not literally autobiographical.
Often I used the strip to talk about things that interested me as an adult, and of course, a lot of Calvin's adventures were drawn simply because I thought the idea was funny. In any given strip, the amount of invention varied. Keep in mind that comic strips are typically written in a certain amount of panic, and I made it all up as I went along. I just wrote what I thought about.
Q: What do you think of the comics section since your retirement nearly 10 years ago? - Charles Brubaker, Martin, TN
A: It took a while, but now I read the comics almost like a normal person. This is not a great age of newspaper comics, but there are a few strips I enjoy. Things could be better, things could be worse.
Q: How would Calvin the six-year-old be different today in 2005 versus 1985-1995? - Meghan Bolton, Columbia, MD
A: I usually tried to keep the strip relatively unanchored in time. Calvin's toys, for example, were mostly a wagon and a cardboard box, rather than anything up to date. I suppose a 2005 Calvin would be different, not because it's a different era, but because I think about some different things at this point in my life.
Q: So many of Calvin and Hobbes strips had some kind of moral/theological element that I wonder what your religious upbringing was and if it influenced that. (For instance, the "Love the sinner, hate the sin" strip as well as many Santa-related Christmas strips.) I'm guessing you were raised Catholic? - Suzanne Kaufmann, Charlottesville, VA
A: Actually, I've never attended any church.
Q: Many young cartoonists are using the Internet to display their work instead of, or in concert with, print media because there are few barriers to entry and the medium provides the freedom to experiment with form, content, and color. Given your concerns over the state of newspaper comics, what do you think of this development? –Ben Gamboa, Whittier, CA
A: To be honest, I don't keep up with this. The Internet may well provide a new outlet for cartoonists, but I imagine it's very hard to stand out from the sea of garbage, attract a large audience, or make money. Newspapers are still the major leagues for comic strips . . . but I wouldn't care to bet how long they'll stay that way.
Q: Did you ever have a real-life situation that you sorted out through depiction of a similar incident between Calvin and Hobbes? If so, can you describe the situation and the impact your strip had on it—i.e., did the people in your life realize they had made it into your strip? – Kodi Tillery, Kansas City, KS
A: I tried not to use my life that directly—whenever I started to cross that line, it felt exploitive. Real-life issues gave me a subject to work with, but then I made up the stories. Inconvenient facts were deleted, details were moved around, and wholly fictitious parts were added, all to fit the needs of the strip. My family certainly recognized the context of a lot of strips, but I tried to keep the true parts as just the starting point.
Q: You have been very persistent in not becoming a public figure, and I respect that a great deal. Is there anything you would wish to tell the fans who do not understand your wishes and why it is important to you not to claim the spotlight? – Alan Taylor, Lubbock, TX
A: My impression is that those who don't get it, don't care to get it.
Q: What attributes do you wish were seen more commonly among children? –Matthew Atkinson, Oklahoma City, OK
A: Good parents!
Q: You've often cited Herriman, Kelly, Schulz, etc., as comic strip inspirations. But who inspires you most in the fields of painting and printmaking? –Timothy Hulsizer, Keene, NH
A: At the moment, I'm looking mostly at artists from the 1600s, but I study any artist who tackles the particular issues I'm working with. Titian one day, de Kooning another. It wasn't my intention, but over the years, I've pieced together a modest understanding of art history that way.
Q: What led you to resist merchandising Calvin and Hobbes? – Nick Samoyedny, Tarrytown, NY
A: For starters, I clearly miscalculated how popular it would be to show Calvin urinating on a Ford logo. . . . Actually, I wasn't against all merchandising when I started the strip, but each product I considered seemed to violate the spirit of the strip, contradict its message, and take me away from the work I loved. If my syndicate had let it go at that, the decision would have taken maybe 30 seconds of my life.
Q: Displayed not only through characteristics of Calvin and Hobbes, but also through your unique style of art, storytelling, and layout, you seem to stress the individual. You spoke to outcasts or people who did not seem to fit the "norms" of society (myself included) and no doubt made it feel OK for people to be different. Was that your intention when starting Calvin and Hobbes and how do you feel about individualism and originality? –Jonathan Fang, Riverside, CA
A: I guess one thing I like about Calvin is that whether he fits in with the wider world or not is almost beside the point, because he can't help but be himself. Of course, when I started Calvin and Hobbes, my intention was simply to have a job cartooning. I had very few big ideas of where my work was going until it got there, but looking back, I think the strip generally shows my values on these subjects.
Q: Was there anything you wanted to include but couldn't because of the syndicate, the editor, or the public? If so, what and how did you deal with the situation? –Meghan Bolton, Columbia, MD
A: That was never a problem. I wasn't trying to push those kinds of boundaries.
Q: Most cartoonists say they prefer the spontaneity and energy of their initial pencil sketches to their finished ink drawings. Do you have any thoughts on this as it seems that in your work it is the ink drawings that have the great spontaneous energy? –Jyrki Vainio, Lahti, Finland
A: My pencil sketches were just minuscule notations of who was talking, so I have no particular reverence for them. In my case, the finished pictures captured more of the visual impact I was after. In fact, I did as little preparatory pencil work for the finished strip as possible, so the inking would be a real drawing encounter, and not a sterile tracing of pencil lines. Ink is a wonderful medium all on its own.
Q: Is there anything about the strip you would change if you could go back? (NOT that it needs change! I think it is perfect the way it is.) –Dara Card, Orem, UT
A: Well, let's just say that when I read the strip now, I see the work of a much younger man.
Q: What books do you keep reading over and over again? –KT Misener, Ontario, Canada
A: Hmm. Suddenly I feel very shallow.

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Richard Dawkins is not an Islamophobe


An attack on the renowned atheist as anti-Muslim is really designed to squelch honest conversation about religion


Richard Dawkins is not an IslamophobeRichard Dawkins (Credit: Reuters/Andrew Winning)
No doubt, Nathan Lean, the editor in chief of an Islam-positive online entity called Aslan Media, fired off his recent denunciation of Richard Dawkins’ alleged “Twitter rampage” about the paucity of Muslims among Nobel Prize laureates, and heaved a sigh of satisfaction.  Mission accomplished!  Godless biologist slapped down, “Islamophobia” denounced!
Lean would do well to stiffen up, however.  In tapping out a risible parody of a reasoned critique, he unwittingly both beclowns himself and lends credence to the very scientist and arguments he seeks to discredit.  His piece is full of wrongheaded thinking and blundering jabs at Dawkins for pointing out uncomfortable truths about the state of science, or, rather, the lack of it, in Muslim countries.  Lean purports to “expose” the “ugly underbelly of [Dawkins’] rational atheistic disguise,” but has authored a tract consisting almost wholly of politically correct shibboleths and befuddled assertions that insult his readers’ intelligence and aim to squelch honest debate about Islam and its role in the world today.  If one believes in free speech, one cannot let what he wrote go unchallenged.
Lean starts out by accusing Dawkins of “simple-minded anti-Muslim Twitter trolling.”  What first excites his ire is Dawkins’ Aug. 8 tweet that, “All the world’s Muslims have fewer Nobel Prizes than Trinity College, Cambridge.  They did great things in the Middle Ages, though.”  Lean does not – indeed cannot — contest Dawkins’ factuality here, but snaps back in his essay by loudly impugning the messenger’s motives: “who in the hell cares apart from people like Dawkins who hope either to embarrass or discredit the faith group by pointing out such arbitrary things?”
Well, apparently Lean cares, and cares a lot, as the strangely truculent vehemence of his response shows.  In a false concession to conventions of free speech, he allows that, “to be sure, it’s always okay to criticize religious beliefs” since “no religion should be immune from — or its followers resistant to — well-intentioned and reasonable inquiries about faith claims.”  But straightaway he slips into obscurantist double Dutch: “there’s a difference between problematizing a religion’s tenets and persecuting its adherents.  There’s also a difference between raising legitimate concerns about doctrines, scriptures and the rationale of one’s beliefs, and hurling insults that shift the tenor of the debate into a machismo register better suited for high school locker rooms.”
Persecuting?  No definition of “persecution” fits Dawkins’ factually accurate, if often humorously acerbic, tweets about Islam.  Lean’s charge appears to be purposefully overblown to soften readers up for underhanded accusations of bigotry to come.  None of the tweets he adduces can be characterized as “insults,” hurled or delivered otherwise.  As for the “machismo register,” well, in his lofty state of dudgeon Lean apparently forgets that both he and his opponent use “hell” in an exclamatory sense.  And if, as Lean would have it, Dawkins does have a right to tweet his opinions on Islam, it’s a limited right, one to be exercised in strict accordance with boundaries Lean establishes post factum concerning which facts cited meet criteria of legitimacy, the tone in which they are cited, and their potential for causing offense.
The fact Dawkins presents – that so few Muslims have won Nobel Prizes — does raise legitimate (pace Lean) questions that Dawkins himself addresses in a blog post about the controversy he stirred up by his tweet.  He points out that in view of the grandiose claims advanced by some Muslims for the “science” contained in the Quran, it’s rather depressing to note that not much by way of science has come out of the Muslim world in the past 500 years, and it behooves us, and certainly Muslims, to ask why.  Dawkins also wonders why Jewish people, with infinitesimal demographic stature, have won 120 Nobels, whereas the 1.6 billion-strong Muslim world can boast of only 10 (and six of those were Peace Prizes).  At the risk of being labeled an “Islamophobe,” I will here hazard a proximate cause: There are few universities with science faculties of note in the Islamic world.  According to accepted rankings, the top 200 to 400 universities are located predominantly in the United States, Canada and Europe; only three are to be found in Muslim-majority countries.
After going after Dawkins’ “Twitter rant,” Lean might have left good (or bad) enough alone, and ended there.  But no, he chose to launch another broadside against the scientist and decisively squib himself.  In March, the University College of London, a secular institution whose website proclaims it to be “the first university to welcome female students on equal terms with men,”allowed its premises to be used for a debate titled “Islam and Atheism.”  Nonbelief’s advocate at the event, the professor Lawrence Krauss, agreed to take part on the condition that there be no segregation of the audience by sex.  The Islamic host organization acceded, but, once the participates were onstage, nonetheless tried to seat women apart from men.  Dawkins, who was in attendance, tweeted, “Who the hell do these Muslims think they are?  At UCL of all places, tried to segregate the sexes in debate between @LKrauss1 and a Muslim.”  He followed up with, “How has UCL come to this: cowardly capitulation to Muslims?”  Krauss threatened to walk out, and the host relented.
Lean, in another feint to fair-mindedness, notes that segregation by sex was “without question, a poor decision, and one that many protested,” but then proceeds to jump on Dawkins for doing just that.  Since he professes to agree with the substance of Dawkins’ complaint, he muddles the issue, voicing no real problem with Dawkins’ objection to what happened, but finding, however, “normative statements like that” deeply troubling, indicative of a politically incorrect hamartia, Islamophobia.  “Dawkins is quick to grab the biggest brush he can find and paint ‘the Muslims,’ or ‘Muslims,’ or even ‘Islam’ with one broad stroke.”  As evidence, he then offers a Dawkins tweet from February (but dates it in March, after the debate, surely to create the impression of an unhinged, post-UCL “rant”): “Islam is the greatest force for evil in the world today.”
“The greatest force for evil?  How is that even quantifiable and what constitutes evil?“ Lean thunders back, as if blithely unaware of 9/11, suicide bombings, honor killings, acid attacks against women, and so on, and as though his issue here with Dawkins were purely metaphysical.  He then adds that, “For a scientist, Dawkins rarely provides any qualification, context or evidence for his hypotheses.  He doesn’t often give names or reveal identities that could help us better understand exactly whom it is that he targets.”
This is not true and I think that Lean knows it.  Dawkins’ claim to fame as an atheist is his masterly, detailed denunciation of theistic religion, “The God Delusion,” which Lean himself brings up in another jeremiad against him (and celebrity nonbelievers Christopher Hitchens and Sam Harris) he published earlier in the year.  He is baiting and switching, clumsily and ineptly trying to deflect readers’ attention from Dawkins’ outspoken declaration (and therefore from “evil’s” ineluctable associations these days with atrocities committed, if nothing else, in the name of Islam).  Let’s not forget what prompted Lean to take to his computer keyboard here: Dawkins’ outrage at an attempt to segregate an audience according to Islamic tradition, something that should never, ever have taken place in the West at an avowedly secular educational institution purporting to “welcome female students.”  Outrage, and plenty of it, is the proper response.
Lean then delves deep into obfuscation, saying that his metaphysical objections to Dawkins’ tweet about evil are, after all his huffing and puffing, “beside the point.”  His real problem with the scientist turns out to be his reductionism: He sees Muslims as “’Muslims,’ not fathers, sons, daughters, mothers, bankers, lawyers or doctors.  They’re not informed by any other identity that makes them complex human beings; it’s ‘Islam’ that always animates these faceless people.”
It’s a pretty safe bet that perpetrators of terrorist acts (partly as a result of which Dawkins calls Islam a “force for evil”) are not acting based on beliefs they hold as fathers, mothers, bankers and lawyers, if they are any of these things.  Dawkins is speaking of the faith and ideology animating those who identify themselves as Muslims.  The last time I checked, the only thing differentiating a Muslim from a non-Muslim was, in fact, a professed belief in Islam – hence Islam is the pertinent factor here in the makeup of “these faceless people.”  Lean surely understood this well, but hoped to paint Dawkins as absurdly reductive, when bald reductionism is necessary to establish who belongs to the Muslim umma and who does not – that is, that people of every ilk, nationality and profession, married, single or whatever, must heed the truths inscribed in Islamic “holy” scriptures to win candidacy for eternal salvation, or else.
Lean finally gets to the gravamen of his complaint about Dawkins and his tweets: his supposed concealed agenda.  Here as earlier, he prefers to first assail Dawkins’ integrity as a thinker, stating that he “has long represented himself, and his beliefs about the world and its creation, as originating from an intellectual and scientific place,” which troubles him, since “some may consider [Dawkins’] bellicose ramblings to be reflective of his studied background and thus more salient than the mouthy insults of Islamophobes like Pamela Geller or Robert Spencer …”  To advance this agenda, which Lean inelegantly implies is Islamophobia possessed of an “ugly underbelly” and wearing a “rational atheistic disguise,” Dawkins drags in the Nobel Prize.  Lean generously allows that a Nobel is “an honorable recognition like no other,” but it is, portentously, an “accolade created by a Swedish philanthropist and awarded by an all-white committee of Scandinavians,” and thus should not be used as “a measuring stick for Muslim contributions in the world.”
If the Nobel should not be used as “a measuring stick for Muslim contributions in the world,” then Lean should state just what measuring stick he would employ, at least to gauge contributions to science, which, after all, is what Dawkins was talking about.  But he does not.  He once again blatantly obscures the matter at hand – the dearth of Muslim Nobel laureates – this time by conflating race with religion, groundlessly giving readers to think that racist Scandinavians are depriving deserving Muslim candidates of their prizes based on skin color.
What Lean is doing here is deleterious to free speech: he is trying to equate criticism of a religion (whose followers, in this case, mostly happen to be nonwhite) with racism.  This sophistry cannot be allowed to stand.  “Islamophobia” is nothing more than a quack pseudo-diagnosis suggesting pathological prejudice against, and fear of, a supposedly neutral subject, Islam, in the way agoraphobic folk cringe at open places or claustrophobes dread an elevator.  Based on the erroneous premise that those who criticize Islam are somehow ill, the term, along with its adjective “Islamophobic,” should be banished from our lexicon as pernicious to rational thinking.  People, regardless of race or creed, deserve equal rights and respect; religions, which are essentially hallowed ideologies, merit no a priori respect, but, rather, gimlet-eyed scrutiny, the same scrutiny one would apply to, say, communism, conservatism or liberalism.  No one has a right to wield religion as a shield – or as a sword.
Lean dribbles on into criticizing Dawkins for “bemoaning what he sees as [Muslims’] lack of contribution to modern science (and their supposedly violent nature), supposing that it’s their religion that’s to blame for the deficiency,” when, opines Lean, “education, poverty, unemployment, economic malaise, corruption and state-dominated institutions” are other “serious obstacles for advancement.”  He proceeds to deal Dawkins his less than rapier version of a coup de grâce: “Muslim Nobel Prizes to date: 10.  Dawkins Nobel Prizes to date: zero.  That too, is a ‘fact,’ Mr. Dawkins.”  (Note the quotes around “fact,” implying that the very nature of what a fact is is open to question.)  The egregious absurdity of this flailing put-down – a single scientist in 2013 and his Nobel record, vis-à-vis that of a billion and a half Muslims extending back to 1901, the year the first Nobel was awarded — redounds to the ridicule of one person alone: Lean.
Because it so endeavors to steer us away from Dawkins’ statement of fact – about the scarcity of Nobel laureates from the Islamic world — Lean’s shoddy philippic invariably gets us wondering just why there have been so few Muslim winners.  Might it have something to do with the notion of revealed truths, the kind forming the basis of Islam (and Christianity too) that must trump empirical evidence and inherently hamper the spirit of inquiry?  Could it be that Islamic or Islam-based laws and mores might de facto imperil creative thinkers and their thoughts, stultifying their efforts to deal with the societal problems Lean himself enumerates?  And perhaps most important of all, might not the second-rate status of women in the Muslim world interfere with their ability to better their societies and help them move ahead?
For Dawkins, says Lean, “everything great about the West is the result of secularism and everything miserable about the rest is the fault of religion.”  This is Lean’s reductionism, not Dawkins’, but, I grant, he’s not far off the mark.  The Industrial and scientific revolutions, modern medicine, political pluralism, freedom of speech and even freedom of religion (re both, see the U.S. Constitution, First Amendment), equal rights, and all sorts of movements aiming to ameliorate humankind’s lot came about in the West after it smashed the shackles of religion, and those governing in its name, imposed on us for centuries.  We should not shy away from declaring this truth loudly and forcefully, and from defending it whenever and wherever it is necessary to do so.
Surely, Lean imagined that he could mount the podium shouting “Islamophobe!” at Dawkins and hold forth unopposed, or he would not have ventured into print with such a maladroit, bungling critique.  But the age of politically correct timidity in the face of religious zealots and their apologist shills has, thankfully, come to an end.
Jeffrey Tayler is a contributing editor at The Atlantic and the author of six nonfiction books, including Facing the Congo and Murderers in Mausoleums.

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