HRW’s Filipino flap flops

How things work: the well-known group that calls itself Human Rights Watch doesn’t like conservative sexual attitudes. One result of those attitudes in the Philippines is a low HIV rate (in a nation of 80,000,000 people, a total of 2,000 known and an additional 4,000 estimated infections). Another is that the Filipino government accommodates cultural … More ...

Inhuman rights

Theodore Dalrymple has a rather slight but nonetheless helpful piece on what’s wrong with rights. His basic point seems to be that when something becomes a “right” there’s no further need for civility, reasonableness or mutual accommodation, so the more rights the more brutish social life becomes.

Academic adventures

The exhilarating marketplace of ideas and free thought, Anno Domini 2004:

  • Renowned sociologist Alan Wolfe included a stupidly tendentious and disingenuous attack on Paul Gottfried in a stupidly tendentious and disingenuous piece about Carl Schmitt and conservatives in the Chronicle of Higher Education, and the mag denied Gottfried even a brief reply. (The point
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God and the state in Europe and America

So why are the Americans more religious than the Europeans? There have been a variety of explanations:

  • Europeans are immoral, untrustworthy, and don’t bathe.
  • Americans are provincial, stupid and inferior. (Gress alludes sympathetically to that view when he speaks of the condescending smiles with which European conservatives would greet a speech by Stephen Tonsor.)
  • American
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And yet more dialogue …

The exchange keeps rolling (previous parts here, here, here and here). Here’s an edited version of the most recent installment:

Liberal Lawyer: On what basis do you claim that representational democracy with divided powers and charters guaranteeing individual rights were inventions of Catholicism?

Jim Kalb: I said “representative government with distributed powers

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