Thursday, January 14, 2010

Legislating Morality: anti Christianity

CNSNews: "Christian Defense Group Publishes ‘Top 10 Anti-Christian Acts of 2009’", by Matt Cover and Pete Winn

The Christian Anti-Defamation Commission (CADC) published a list of what it views as the 10 worst “anti-Christian acts” of 2009, including the murder of a pro-life protester, expansion of federal hate-crimes laws, and controversial presidential appointments. The list, culled from a poll taken by subscribers to the CADC’s Web site and listeners on its radio programs, chronicles what the group’s members think were the most anti-Christian stories from the previous year.

CADC President Dr. Gary Cass told CNSNews.com that the list reflects the frustrations Christians feel with their society and their government. That the expansion of federal hate crimes laws was the top vote-getter on the list, for example, reflected the fear Christians have that they might be targeted for teaching their faith’s traditional opposition to homosexual behavior, which Christianity holds to be sinful. (...) >>>

Jan. 14, 2010
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Ludwig von Mises Institute: "Decline of the Rule of Law"

Political wisdom, dearly bought by the bitter experience of generations, is often lost through the gradual change in the meaning of the words which express its maxims. Though the phrases themselves may continue to receive lip service, they are slowly denuded of their original significance until they are dropped as empty and commonplace. Finally, an ideal for which people have passionately fought in the past falls into oblivion because it lacks a generally understood name.

If the history of politic-al concepts is in general of interest only to the specialist, in such situations there is often no other way of discovering what is happening in our time than to go back to the source in order to recover the original meaning of the debased verbal coin which we still use. Today this is certainly true of the conception of the Rule of Law which stood for the Englishman's ideal of liberty, but which seems now to have lost both its meaning and its appeal.

There can be little doubt about the source from which the Englishmen of the late Tudor and early Stuart period derived their new political ideal for which their sons fought in the 17th century; it was the rediscovery of the political philosophy of ancient Greece and Rome which, as Thomas Hobbes complained, inspired the new enthusiasm for liberty. (...)Isonomia, which appears in 1598 in John Florio's World of Wordes as an Italian word meaning "equalitie of lawes to all manner of persons," two years later, in its Englished form "isonomy," is already freely used by Philemon Holland in his translation of Livy to render the description of a state of equal laws for all and of responsibility of the magistrates. It continued to be used frequently throughout the 17th century, and "equality before the law," "government of law," and "rule of law," all seem to be later renderings of the concept earlier described by the Greek term.

The history of the word in ancient Greek is itself instructive. It was a very old term which had preceded demokratia as the name of a political ideal. To Herodotus it was "the most beautiful of all names" for a political order. The demand for equal laws for all which it expressed was originally aimed against tyranny, but later came to he accepted as a general principle from which the demand for democracy was derived. (...) >>>

Aug, 10, 2009
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WSJ: "Spain Is Moving to Rein In Its Crusading Judges"

Spain is moving to rein in its investigative judges from trying alleged crimes against humanity from around the world, a role that has led to high-profile cases against the governments of the U.S., China, Israel and others. Under pressure from irate foreign governments, Spain's Congress on Tuesday passed a resolution to limit the jurisdiction of the crusading judges to cases in which there is a clear Spanish connection -- and no home-country investigation already under way.

The six investigating judges of Spain's National Court, employing the so-called principle of universal jurisdiction, are now handling 13 cases involving events that took place in other countries, from Rwanda to Iraq. (...) the investigations by the judges, who are independent from the executive and legislative branches, have become a growing headache for the Spanish government. The Chinese government warned Spain that bilateral relations could be damaged over the case regarding Tibet crackdowns. The Israeli government strongly criticized the investigation into its 2002 attack on a Hamas leader, which killed 14 other people. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the case "makes a mockery out of international law." (...) >>>

May 20, 2009
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Politeia: "Wilders Fights Back ..."

(...) Mr Moszkowicz just explained, the move to skip the minor Courts is rarely used, and is justified given the general interest and portent of the matter, as was indeed true in the Bouterse case. He expects a verdict in 10 to 14 days (...) what precisely constitutes hate speech and what in effect is hatred itself? The definition is increasingly, not an involuntary, emotional reaction to an injustice or an injury, but ideological whim. From the concept 'Islamophobia' we already know that 'fear' has undergone a similar slide: not a involuntary, emotional reaction to threat or injury, but again ideological whim. This truly is the stuff of Orwellian doublespeak ... we are in deep trouble. (...) >>>

Feb 3, 2009
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Soeren Kern lists the free speech victims in postmodern Europe so far and breaks the news of fresh EU legislation under way, he incidentally stumbles upon the workings of the dialectics, and issues a dire warning for Obama America ...

PJM: "Europe’s War on Free Speech"

(...) At the European level, meanwhile, government ministers from the 27 member states of the European Union are debating a draft EU Directive that aims to outlaw discrimination and “harassment” in the provision of goods and services. The new legislation would, for example, shut down Christian adoption agencies if they refuse to provide same-sex couples with children. Indeed, the definition of “harassment” is so broad that even moderate explanations of Christian beliefs on sexual conduct or other religions could be considered a crime. (...)
Not only are European elites using hate crime legislation to silence people with opinions that do not conform to official state policies. They are also dividing Europeans into two groups (the majority and the minority), each with different rights and responsibilities. The minority (Muslims, homosexuals, Socialists) is imposing its will upon the majority (non-Muslim, heterosexuals, non-Socialists) by aggressively prosecuting those who refuse to fall into line.
Europeans lack an American-like First Amendment, which means they can be punished for expressing the “wrong” opinions. But Europe’s war on free speech should serve as a warning to Americans about the perils of complacency. Indeed, the Obama administration says it intends to “strengthen federal hate crimes legislation, expand hate crimes protection (...) >>>

Jan 31, 2009
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To Archive>>>

Background and clarification on subject matter:

The Lighthouse: "EU Phobia: More Crimes Against the Ideology"

In a post "Victim obsession leading to more oppression, not less in modern Britain" former University teacher John Ray from Brisbane, Australian gives a review on a book called, "Religious Discrimination and Hatred Law", in which practising barrister Neil Addison provides the first comprehensive survey of legislation concerning religion in diverse areas such as criminal law, discrimination, employment and harassment, and charts the growing role of courts in regulating this messy dimension of society.

Addison is concerned about the legal expansion into a complicated moral aspect of human life, and fears that a new generation of laws will remove people's powers to criticise, challenge or defend their religious (or non-religious) views.

He "sees the expansion of law into the terrain of religion as part of 'a new type of philosophy': 'We used to have laws because we considered them necessary, but now it seems we have laws because they are desirable. If something is regarded as good or bad, we use the law to direct it. In effect, we're trying to legislate morality.'

For Addison, the law has now become a tool for some groups to impose their moral positions on others, whether it is the ban on smoking or the ban on foxhunting or restrictions on what we can say about minority groups ... but it is not the function of civil law to prescribe everything that is morally right and to forbid everything that is morally wrong >>>
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Eurabia: another transnational stealth operation

Each form of statehood is equally valid. It's an apparatus for the legitimization of dictators. Here's the Facebook Group:

Europe News: "Here comes EuroMed: 14 days left to protest!", by Henrik R Clausen

The Euro-Mediterranean Partnership, also known as EuroMed, has been pretty much under the radar for 15 years. When it caused some public discussion in 2007, it was renamed ”Union for the Mediterranean”, and quietly permitted to proceed. Not much was heard of it, but now EuropeNews has the scoop: It is being established now – and we have a window of merely 14 days to protest it. The news is tucked away in this discreet ANSAmed news item: (...)

It is remarkable that an ambassador of a non-democratic nation has been appointed to head the Union. Now, it should not be assumed that the European Union, run by a non-elected Commission and having a non-elected President, should care too much about such details. But since the 16 non-EU states of the Mediterranean Union does include decent democracies (Israel, Croatia) as well as more dubious ones (Albania, Bosnia, Turkey), it would seem appropriate to appoint a representative from a democratic country to head the Union. There are more remarkable passages in that piece. (...) >>>

Jan. 14, 2010
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"The Barcelona Deal - the deal that the EU does not want us to know"

May 15, 2009
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Anders Gravers Notes on Facebook: "Conference about the Euro-Mediterranean Project"

Stop Islamisation of Europe, SIOE, is holding a conference in the Joint Hall of Folketinget, the Danish Parliament, on Tuesday the 26th. May 2009 between 1:oo pm and 5:oo pm. Guest speakers of international calibre from abroad will be joining the panel. The EU Speakers and chosen members of the parliament have been invited. The conference is being held because the members of the parliament and the media have not informed the Danish people about the Euro-Mediterranean project which is to be launched next year if they keep their own schedule. The Euro-Mediterranean project will become a new Great EU where the Mediterranean Sea will become a domestic sea. The North African countries, primarily Muslim, will join in an agreement from 2010 to 2012 (the initial phase) where people and goods can cross the borders unrestricted. (...) >>>


May 4, 2009
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Balder: "Free Muslim Immigration to Europe"

Secret European Union-agreements with 10 European and North African Countries

Abstract from the Barcelona - Euro Mediterranean Declaration of 1995:

The Euro Mediterranean Declaration was agreed upon by the EU, Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt, Jordan, the Palestinian Authority, Syria, Lebanon, Turkey and Israel and comprises:

Comprehensive political partnership, among other things about:

1. Establishing a free trade area and economic integration to begin in the year of 2010
2. Considerably more money for the partners
3. Cultural partnership.

Respect for Islam Is Guaranteed by the EU (...) >>>

Mar 19, 2009
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NRO: "Bat Yeor: Geert Wilders and the fight for Europe - Does defending Western values constitute “inciting hatred”?"

(...) a Dutch appeals court had ordered prosecutors to begin criminal proceedings against Wilders for “inciting hatred and discrimination” and “insulting Muslim worshippers” through his public statements and his 2008 film, Fitna. The order to proceed with the criminal prosecution resulted from pressure put on European states and on the UN Human Rights Council by the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC). The OIC’s aim is to punish and suppress any alleged Islamophobia, around the world but particularly in Europe, and it has been a leader in creating the conditions that made the U.K.’s Wilders ban possible.


The OIC is one of the largest intergovernmental organizations in the world. It encompasses 56 Muslim states plus the Palestinian Authority. Spread over four continents, it claims to speak in the name of the ummah (the universal Muslim community), which numbers about 1.3 billion. The OIC’s mission is to unite all Muslims worldwide by rooting them in the Koran and the Sunnah - the core of traditional Islamic civilization and values. It aims at strengthening solidarity and cooperation among all its members, in order to protect the interests of Muslims everywhere and to galvanize the ummah into a unified body.

The OIC is a unique organization - one that has no equivalent in the world. It unites the religious, economic, military, and political strength of 56 states. By contrast, the European Union represents half as many states and is a secular body only, and the Vatican - which speaks for the world’s 1.1 billion Catholics - is devoid of any political power. Many Muslims in the West resist the OIC’s tutelage and oppose its efforts to supplant Western law with sharia. But the OIC’s resources are formidable. (...) the OIC seeks to become the reincarnation of the Caliphate. (...) Geert Wilders is the latest victim of this enormous world machinery. His crime is maintaining that Europe’s civilization is rooted in the values of Jerusalem, Athens, Rome, and the Enlightenment - and not in Mecca, Baghdad, Andalusia, and al-Kods. (...) >>>

Feb 16, 2009
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A cut and dry case of racial and religious discrimination, but who will object and take to the Courts, like they did with Wilders on much murkier grounds?

Elsevier: "Morocco expands list of forbidden names" (digest)

Morocco is expanding the list of acceptable names it sends to European municipalities. Civil servants warn parents that non-compliance could land them 'in trouble'. A number of Dutch Labor Party MPs have raised objections to the list, calling it 'Islamization'. Western names have already been dropped some time ago; the new list also forbids names of Berber origin because they contradictory to the Islamic identity and are 'meaningless', according to the advice. >>>

Jan 28, 2009
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Brussels Journal: "The Council of Europe Fights "Islamophobia""

I recently wrote an essay regarding how the Council of Europe, in close cooperation with the European Union, the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), the Arab League and other Islamic organizations, are working to combat "Islamophobia" in Europe by all means necessary. Now the French blog Galliawatch takes a look at the CoE as well . This should be considered required reading for all those numerous people who still stubbornly dismiss Eurabia as a "conspiracy theory."

The CoE and the EU are implementing policies aimed to rewrite school textbooks throughout the European continent in order to provide a positive and non-threatening view of Islam. They are thus indoctrinating our children to accept Islam.They are doing this behind our backs, without consulting us, and they can do so because the EU is constructed as a top-down organization where all crucial decisions are taken behind closed doors and imposed on the general public by an unelected oligarchy, who may or may not be bought and paid for by our enemies. Yes, this is a massive betrayal, but we should remember (...) >>>

Updated: 15th Aug. 2008
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Memri: "Libyan Leader Al-Qadhafi's Objection to Mediterranean Union: Libyans Cannot Form a Union with Europeans Who Walk Around Naked"

"We Arabs Are Not United... So How Can We Possibly Unite with Scotland, Benelux, Scandinavia, the Baltic Countries, the Israelis[?]" (...) What union? I will not advise my people to join such a 'salad.' It would cause us grave problems. North Africa and the Arab countries in the Middle East would be entering an international minefield, extending all the way to the North Pole. Why would I want to get my country into such a mess? "I have good relations with France, Italy, Europe, the EU, Brussels, I don't need anything else. I don't need a union. How can we possibly be united? We do not share a culture, a religion, a language, or policies. Our disagreements on these issues are as deep as can be. Do we share a culture with Europe? Absolutely not. We each have our own culture. Our cultures are completely different. In Scandinavia, people walk around naked. Can you walk around naked in Tunisia, Algeria, Egypt, or Libya? They would stone you and throw you into a mental hospital. But in Scandinavia, it is common to see people walk around naked. That's their culture. Is it conceivable for a union to be formed between somebody naked and somebody who considers this to be crazy? This is an example of the differences between our cultures. We do not even share the same religion. (...) >>>

Updated: 16th July 2008
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Related:

- "The Unholy Alliance"
- "In Defense of Liberty"
- "The Jihad Project"
- "Stop Islamization of Europe"
- "Islamization=Apartheid"
- "Apostating Islam"
- "Muslims versus Sharia"

To archive >>>

Friday, January 8, 2010

Boekestijn Blogs

Arend Jan Boekestijn (1959) is a Dutch historian and former MP. He held a seat in Parliament for the Right-wing liberal VVD party from 2006 to2009.

He studied history and political science at the VU University in Amsterdam. From 1986 to 1989 he was employed at the European University Institute in Florence. In 1989 he became a lecturer at the University of Utrecht.

His main subjects are the history of European states during the 19th and 20th Century and European integration.

He's a pundit, columnist and author and self-identifies as a neo conservative. As an MP he dealt primarily with the development aid portfolio. On this subject he recently released a book, "De Prijs van een Slecht Geweten" (The Price of a Bad Conscience).

Wiki in Dutch, in English. Blog.

Posted on Politeia:

- "On the Road to Nationhood - Part I: "Losing the war is not an option" (original article in Dutch)
- "How to Put Development Aid to Work: "The Price of a Bad Conscience"(original post in Dutch)

Posted on Plein 2010 (Dutch):

- "Bezuinig op de Derde Wereld"

Elsewhere:

- NRC: "An imminent revolution in Dutch foreign aid?"

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