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#1 | |
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The more I read of Hitchins, the more I like him. I recently came across his comments on Pope John Paul II.
From http://slate.msn.com/id/2116443/ Quote:
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#2 |
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I used to love reading Hitchens's columns in the Nation way back when, but during the post-9/11 era, he jumped ship to become a neoconservative hack. Since then, it seems Hitchens retains very little of his former wit and acuity. I thought his attack on Fahrenheit 911 (discussed elsewhere) was half-assed, and merely repeated incoherent arguments that he had used against anti-Iraq-war folks before the invasion.
I recently saw him on a BookTV panel with Francine Prose and Michael Korda. He was shilling a new Jefferson bio, and scornfully related that Jefferson & his wife used to while away the hours at Monticello reading aloud passages from Tristram Shandy. The other panelists may have been too intimidated by Hitchens's reputation to point out that Sterne's work is one of the acknowledged masterworks of its era. |
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#3 |
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Money quotes by Hitchens from my vault:
"Being religious is like living in North Korea. You have endless opportunities to praise The Leader, to thank Him for giving you everything, to thank Him for looking after you, to thank Him for all his boundless gifts, to thank Him for all His tireless efforts on your behalf. A Celestial North Korea is what the religious believer wants, but there are two differences: you *can* defect from North Korea, and you can die and just cease to exist. But if you're a religious believer, The Leader goes on persecuting you after you're dead -- you have to go on praising Him forever, and thanking Him for being born... this is servility squared." "It may very well be that everything, including this evening, is nothing but a grand cosmic joke. I personally often have the feeling that we are born into a losing struggle. My investigations suggest that none of us come out of this a winner. But there is something--there is something in us that refuses to be ruled by fools or frauds or knaves or hereditary dolts in the meantime--in this short vale between being expelled from the uterus and hitting the opposite wall that's studded with nails." "It's obviously too much to expect that a Bronze Age demagogue should have remembered to condemn drug abuse, drunken driving, or offenses against gender equality, or to demand prayer in the schools. Still, to have left rape and child abuse and genocide and slavery out of the account is to have been negligent to some degree, even by the lax standards of the time. I wonder what would happen if secularists were now to insist that the verses of the Bible that actually recommend enslavement, mutilation, stoning, and mass murder of civilians be incised on the walls of, say, public libraries? There are many more than 10 commandments in the Old Testament, and I live for the day when Americans are obliged to observe all of them, including the ox-goring and witch-burning ones. (Who is Judge Moore to pick and choose?) Too many editorialists have described the recent flap as a silly confrontation with exhibitionist fundamentalism, when the true problem is our failure to recognize that religion is not just incongruent with morality but in essential ways incompatible with it." We need more people like him around. |
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#4 |
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He's done some good work - his work on Mother Theresa with the title "The Missionary Position" - some public figures will not mention that title. He's done some stuff you want to overlook, like supporting Bush, as if going after a few Islamic extremists makes up for what he's doing in this country.
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#5 | |
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I always liked this one, and kept it bookmarked. I think one of Hiero5ant's quotes came from it.
Link. Another quote: Quote:
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#6 |
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I enjoy him and find him very entertaining. His takes on religious sacred cows always provoke overt squirminess and visible visceral revulsion in the mainstream talking heads [Mathews, Scarborough etc.]. And he's usually right.
And all the better is the fact that he's not easily pigeonholed as a liberal since he gave up his The Nation membership card. Conservatives dislike him for his intellectualism and anti-religion, liberals dislike him for his squabbles with The Nation and his pro-Iraq War stance. I like him because he says what he thinks. But he does come off as a pompous blowhard at times, and probably interpersonally would be a bit, um, difficult. I wish he were more visible though as I enjoy hearing his rants. |
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#7 |
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He's good at ripping people after they die. Before they die too sometimes.
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#8 | |
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#9 |
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1) It's Hitchens, not Hitchins.
2) The website, for those interested, is http://hitchensweb.com/ 3) Lo and behold, I wake up this morning and another missive of his finds its way onto my screen: "Then again, hundreds of thousands of young Americans are now patrolling and guarding hazardous frontiers in Afghanistan and Iraq. Is there a single thinking person who does not hope that secular forces arise in both countries, and who does not realize that the success of our cause depends on a wall of separation, in Islamic society, between church and state? How can we maintain this cause abroad and subvert it at home?" http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110006649 Keep them coming, Hitch. "Irrelevant", indeed. |
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#10 |
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Yup. Almost no one speaks as courageously and scathingly about superstition/religion in anything remotely smacking of mainstream journalism.
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