Monday 9 November 2009

Jobs at Telegraph

Sunday, 8th November 2009

Not science but garbage

11:55pm


In the Sunday Telegraph, Alasdair Palmer nails the sacked former government drugs adviser Professor David Nutt and the ludicrous idea that he represents ‘science’ against ‘prejudice’:

For instance, he recognises that ‘cannabis is associated with an increased experience of psychotic disorders’, which include schizophrenia, but he then minimises the significance, claiming that ‘schizophrenia seems to be disappearing, even though cannabis use has increased markedly in the last 30 years’. But there is no consensus at all that schizophrenia is disappearing: on the contrary, most psychiatrists and psychologists think the incidence of the illness is increasing, or at least constant.

Furthermore, the best study on the relationship between cannabis and psychotic disorders, from Dunedin in New Zealand, found that teenagers who use cannabis heavily are significantly more likely to

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Multiculturalism kills

11:29pm


More evidence of America’s Jihad Denial Derangement Syndrome. It turns out that fellow students of the army psychiatrist Nidal Hasan who murdered 13 and wounded dozens more in a jihadi attack on Fort Hood had complained to the faculty about his anti-American propaganda – but were too afraid to file a formal complaint for fear of being accused of prejudice:

However, classmate Finnell said that Hasan made a presentation during their studies ‘that justified suicide bombing’ and spewed ‘anti-American propaganda’ as he argued the war on terror was ‘a war against Islam.’ Finnell said he and at least one other student complained about Hasan, surprised that someone with ‘this type of vile ideology’ would be allowed to wear an officer’s uniform. But Finnell said no one filed a formal, written complaint about Hasan's comments out of fear

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Jihadi Denial Syndrome reaches epidemic proportions

1:09pm


After the 7/7 London transport bombings woke at least some people up to the phenomenon of British ‘sleeper’ Islamic terrorism – and, equally important, to the way this was continuing to be denied by the British establishment – the reaction across the pond was, to say the least, complacent. What on earth had happened to the British lion? Americans asked, scratching their heads in amazement at how a country which had once stood united in determination to fight the enemies of democracy on the beaches was now apparently indifferent to the spread of jihadi fanaticism and support for religiously inspired violence amongst its own citizens. Americans were particularly astounded that Islamists were even being recruited to serve in the British police and other parts of the establishment.

The fact was, however, as I have written and said on a number...

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Thursday, 5th November 2009

Britain's Quisling party

9:03am


So now we finally have the unequivocal answer to the question some of us have been insistently asking: what is the point of the Conservative party? The answer is, bleakly, there is none.

There is today one overwhelmingly important issue of issues, the meta-issue without the resolution of which it is pointless to address any other issue. It is the issue of whether the United Kingdom is to continue as a sovereign nation able to govern itself in accordance with its own laws, culture and traditions or not. The Lisbon constitutional treaty which, with the Czech Republic’s agonised capitulation, has now been ratified by every member of the EU does away with the sovereignty of member nations that it has been steadily eroding for so many years in pursuit of the goal of creating a European super-state.

This anti-democratic entity,...

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Wednesday, 4th November 2009

The deep green sophistry of 'religious' equivalence

5:38pm

It’s official -- putting plastic bottles into the recycling bin or going on a Greenpeace demo is akin to having a religious experience.

Rupert Dickinson, who was made redundant by a London property company, claimed that it had discriminated against him on account of his subscription to the theory of man-made global warming and other environmental issues which he said constituted a ‘philosophical’ belief.

In any rational universe, he would be sent away with a flea in his ear for trying it on. But this is not such a world. At an Employment Appeal Tribunal Mr Justice Burton ruled that because of his belief in climate change Dickinson was entitled to the same protection against discrimination as someone with religious convictions.

How hilarious is this?! When sceptics like me observe that man-made global warming resembles religious zealotry because it is...

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Tuesday, 3rd November 2009

Britain's timid Jews

5:57pm


Isi Leibler has written a fierce denunciation in the Jerusalem Post of Britain’s Jewish community leadership for their supine and craven response to the way Britain’s political and intellectual class is throwing Israel ever more brazenly under the bus. I agree with all that he says. However, I fear that his hope that British Jews get rid of these leaders and replace them by individuals who are prepared to mount a proper defence of Israel in the face of this verbal pogrom is tragically unrealisable.

This is because Britain’s Jewish community leadership is, first, congenitally supine and, second, historically ambivalent towards Israel. Having always been terrified of the dread accusation of ‘dual loyalty’ – the bigoted taunt that has always been flung at Jews wherever in the diaspora they have lived, long predating Israel’s rebirth in 1948 – they...

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Melanie Phillips

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Melanie Phillips is a Daily Mail columnist. She also writes for the Jewish Chronicle and is a panellist on BBC Radio Four's Moral Maze. Her most recent book is 'Londonistan', published by Encounter and Gibson Square.

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