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John Baker's Blog

Reflections of a working writer and reader

Writing is not necessarily something to be ashamed of, but do it in private and wash your hands afterwards. Robert Heinlein

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What’s Left at Hay?

A debate by the authors of two recent books, each in their way challenging the current parameters of Liberalism, both in the UK and the USA, brought together a crowd of perhaps four hundred people at the Hay Festival.

Stephen Marshall’s book, Wolves in Sheep’s Clothing, examines what he sees as the sell-out of American radicalism. Nick Cohen’s What’s Left? How Liberals Lost Their Way, takes British liberal intellectuals to task for choking on their own jargon and becoming apologists for Islamic fundamentalism.

Cohen began the debate by asserting that the last few years had seen the traditional political Left refusing to confront the policies of the far Right. He attacked Ken Livingstone for aligning himself with the Islamist religious Right and went on to say that the Left had worked itself into a position where it had become no threat to anyone.

This had come about mainly through an adherence to relativism and to fear. Fear, he said, has led to passivity.

Stephen Marshall spoke of his time on the front line in Iraq, where an American tank commander had told him that the war was about globalization. When Americans talk about freedom, he told us, they mean capitalism.

He went on to say that the people, civilians, in both Iraq and Afghanistan, regard democracy as “that which bombs us.”

When the debate was thrown open, there was a danger of sectarian elements hogging the floor, but the audience were sufficiently fired up by this point to ensure that that didn’t happen.

Nick Cohen’s message was that during much of the 20th century the tide of history seemed to be with us, but because history seemed to be against us at this stage, we should not be afraid of open debate, and of standing up for real principles. We would be lost without our enemies.

I’ve only covered a little of the debate here, but I was conscious while it was going on, and with such a huge and involved audience, that the Hay Festival continues to provide the kind of platform that is sadly missed in the age of information.

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Plain English

Dick Jones’ tells his students to read, to read anything & everything. Make it a habit. Regard every unfamiliar word, phrase, term, figure of speech as a challenge to understanding that must be met. Master language & you need never be manipulated, exploited, controlled, owned by anyone.
If you enjoyed this post, subscribe to my [...]

continue reading . . . Plain English

American KidLit

Two books for American kids that should never have been published. Why Mommy Is a Democrat is about a single-mother squirrel intent on brainwashing her children and turning them into liberals.
Help! Mom! There Are Liberals Under My Bed! is about a couple of enterprising kids who are harassed and brow-beaten both in their dreams and [...]

continue reading . . . American KidLit

Press Freedom Index

Reporters sans frontières (Reporters without Borders) latest press freedom index shows North Korea, Turkmenistan, and Eritrea as the worst violators of press freedom. They remain with Burma, Cuba and China at the bottom of the list.
France, the United States and Japan slip further into the repression of media criticism, while Mauritania and Haiti gain [...]

continue reading . . . Press Freedom Index

Must reads

Out Stealing Timber I
Looking to be understood?
A Writer’s Notebook I
(La Peste) The Plague by Albert Camus - a review
Saddest Books Revisited
The Glass Menagerie - a review
Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
Bhagdad Burning
Five things Feminism has done for me
Learning to Write I
Read extracts from my novels

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