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May 7, 2002

Animal Passions

Pim Fortuyn update, from the Norwegian Blogger: Pim Fortuyn was killed by a 32 year old animal rights activist and left-winger, who was offended by Fortuyns suggestion to restart the fur trade. Apparently Fortuyn has actively spoken for removing the ban on fur trading in the Netherlands, something that our animal activist, who has participated in the struggle against medical tests on animals, did not like to hear. […]I don’t

Where there’s a Will, there’s Yaweh

In response to George Will’s indictment of the anti-semitism coming out of Europe (“‘Final Solution,’ Phase 2”), European Commissioner for external relations (huh?) Chris Patten carefully crafts this silly rejoinder (“Stop Blaming Europe”), published as an Op-Ed piece in today’s Washington Post: Anti-American prejudice in Europe is repugnant. It comes as a shock to me to find in a country I love and admire the mirror-image of this — a

Where there’s a Will, there’s Yaweh

In response to George Will’s indictment of the anti-semitism coming out of Europe (“‘Final Solution,’ Phase 2”), European Commissioner for external relations (huh?) Chris Patten carefully crafts this silly rejoinder (“Stop Blaming Europe”), published as an Op-Ed piece in today’s Washington Post: Anti-American prejudice in Europe is repugnant. It comes as a shock to me to find in a country I love and admire the mirror-image of this — a

Color weal

Writing for The American Prospect, Aaron Marr Page counsels conservatives to “tone down the outrage over affirmative action.” After all, observes Page, “the use of racial preferences has been legally sanctioned by the Supreme Court since the 1978 Regents of the University of California v. Bakke decision upheld ‘the attainment of a diverse student body’ as a compelling state interest. The schools are not breaking the law as it exists

Speech Impediments

I’ve posted on this type of thing before, but we can never be reminded enough of the role universities play in the suppression of free speech. To that end, here’s University of Alabama professor of English Diane Roberts, writing on “free speech zones” in The New Republic: Free speech zones first emerged in the late 1980s. And since then they have grown increasingly common at America’s public universities. Berkeley, the

U.N.-conscionable

“The U.N. General Assembly scheduled an emergency session Tuesday, with Arab and developing nations pressing to condemn Israel for alleged atrocities in the Jenin refugee camp and for blocking a U.N. fact-finding mission from looking into the fighting in the camp. A draft resolution introduced by Sudan on behalf of the Arab Group of nations and by South Africa on behalf of the Nonaligned Movement of developing countries would ask

(Your Love is like) Bad Medicine

Prozac? No need. Have yourself a Pez, instead: A new analysis has found that in the majority of trials conducted by drug companies in recent decades, sugar pills have done as well as — or better than — antidepressants. Companies have had to conduct numerous trials to get two that show a positive result, which is the Food and Drug Administration’s minimum for approval. What’s more, the sugar pills, or