March 19, 2006

Culture

Theatre of Citizenship

by Alex Harrowell

Everyone’s been terribly worried about France. First of all, last autumn’s carburning outbreak saw a lot of people who really ought to know better gathering to hail the end of days and the Islamofascist conquest of Eurabia, or something. Now, the students are out on the streets to protest the government’s new labour laws, and [...]

March 16, 2006

Minorities and integration

Wisdom of the Ages

by Doug Merrill

The Roman Empire has won significance, and its rulers became famous and mighty, because numerous nobles and sages from various countries congregated there [...] As settlers come from various countries and provinces, they bring with them various languages and customs, various instructive concepts and weapons, which decorate and glorify the royal court, but intimidate foreign [...]

March 5, 2006

Minorities and integration

Ilan Halimi: clichés turning lethal

by Guy La Roche

There was a big uproar in France during the past few weeks caused by the horrifying murder of Ilan Halimi, a 23 year old Jewish shop clerk, by a gang of hoodlums who called themselves, very aptly, “The Barbarians”.
Halimi was abducted by the gang on January 21st. On Monday 13th he was found naked, gagged [...]

February 22, 2006

Culture

David Irving: My Part in His Downfall

by Alex Harrowell

David Irving, as no doubt we all know, is beginning his new career as a jailbird, in the great grey walls of the Josefstadt prison next to the even greater and greyer Landesgericht between Vienna’s city hall and its university. Now, there are plenty of facile things to say about this: freedom of expression is [...]

February 1, 2006

Minorities and integration

Kosovo, Kosovo, Kosovo…

by Douglas Muir

Just ran across this article at Radio Free Europe. Short version: Russia has decided that independence for Kosovo is probably inevitable, and has decided to milk it for maximum benefit to Russia. Putin’s saying, fine, independence for Kosovo — but then apply “universal principles”, and give independence to the Russian-supported breakaway republics of [...]

November 18, 2005

Minorities and integration

Multiculturalism vs. “multiculturalism”

by Scott MacMillan

I’m not alone in thinking that our last debate about multiculturalism was marred by the fact that nobody seemed to agree on what the word actually meant. The following bit from a Christian Science Monitor opinion piece caught be eye:
Supposedly [European authorities] were enlightened “multiculturalists” who respected differences; for many, the real reason was a [...]

November 14, 2005

Minorities and integration

When Chams Attack

by Douglas Muir

Greece and Albania are having a small diplomatic tiff. If reading about that sort of thing interests you, read on.
So: two weeks ago, Greek President Karolos Papoulias’ was scheduled to meet with Albanian President Alfred Moisiu, in the southern Albanian town of Sarande. I’m pretty sure this was the first meeting of Greek [...]

November 10, 2005

Minorities and integration

France: some perspectives

by Guy La Roche

Thanks to Juan Cole I do not have to spend a great amount of time writing and explaining some key elements needed to understand multiculturalism, or the absence of it, in France. I’l give you a few quotes to digest and discuss.
The young people from North African societies such as Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia are [...]

November 9, 2005

Minorities and integration

“Multiculturalism”? As if!

by Scott MacMillan

I’m going to barf if one more person writes that “multiculturalism” has somehow contributed to the riots in France. How exactly you square “multiculturalism” with France’s ban on the headscarf – and the fact that French is, officially, about as un-multicultural as you can get – is beyond me.
If you ask me, I’d hazard [...]

Minorities and integration

Oh for those peaceful days of the ’50s and ’60s

by Matthew Turner

There’s a letter in today’s (UK-based) Daily Telegraph by that famous KGB-defector and media-darling, Oleg Gordiesvsky:
Sir - France always had a cult of revolution. The French public fully supported extremist political parties, Communists and Trotskyists, which had political violence as an integral part of their programmes.
Now they are reaping the fruits of it.
Oleg Gordievsky, [...]

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