Wag the Dog anyone?    Or would you like a free copy of Dante's Inferno?
We seem to be on our way to discovering the value of old Art.    Which sin
gets the worst ring of hell?     How would we do?     How would the
pretender to our Presidency do?    Meanwhile it is a long way from
fundamentalism to the maturity of Dante.   A few years back the
fundamentalist laity took over the mosques and fired all of their
professional Mullahs or was that churches and seminaries?   Same song 2nd
verse.    What was the reason Pat Robertson gave for believing that we
should vote for his Presidency?    A good man?    A fine theologian?    A
gradaute of Yale with the Clinton's and GWB?    No,  he claimed to be a good
businessman running a huge media company based on selling Jesus like a used
car salesman.

This group is so dumb that they would believe my criticisms are prejudice
against their "civil rights."    In my sojourn with them I listened to over
four thousand sermons and read the book many times.   They were not all bad
and the book is good as books go but they don't deserve the credit or power
that they have and their systematic theology is poor system's thinking.
Of course Chris Matthews and the Irish Media mullahs make the same complaint
for the Catholics when you complain about their sophistication as well.
Yes I sang in a lot of their churches and just as many synagogues but the
Jews never, I repeat, never tried to sell their religion to me except for
one poor Cantor who liked my singing and thought if I would convert I would
have been a good Cantor.   He died not long after that and I thought it
might have been guilt for his obvious breach of the rules.    But I do teach
both groups and find the core work of the spirituality to be a joy and
gospel is fun and always was.    But don't take the politics seriously, it
will play with your head.

There are mature Catholics, Baptists, Methodists and Moslems out there.    I
meet them everyday in the Art world and they are not the Sopranos.      They
are not the same as the people who think that "simple-minded" is better
because it doesn't desturb their making a buck.     When the fundamentalists
and Irish media mafia entered the political arena what did they expect, that
we wouldn't look at what they actually say?      This article is Kristof but
don't forget Krugman.    Today is a double whammy in the NYTimes.

Cousin REH



October 1, 2002
Iraq's Little Secret
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF


AGHDAD, Iraq - The White House is right that Iraq is by far the most
repressive country in the entire Middle East - but that's true only if
you're a man.
To see how many Arab countries are in some ways even more repressive to
women, consider how an invasion might play out. If American ground troops
are allowed to storm across the desert from Saudi Arabia into Iraq, then
American servicewomen will theoretically not be able to drive vehicles as
long as they are in Saudi Arabia and will be advised to wear an abaya over
their heads. As soon as they cross the border into enemy Iraq, they'll feel
as if they are entering the free world: they can legally drive, uncover
their heads, and even call men idiots.
Iraqi women routinely boss men and serve in non-combat positions in the
army. Indeed, if Iraq attacks us with smallpox, we'll have a woman to thank:
Dr. Rihab Rashida Taha, the head of Iraq's biological warfare program, who
is also known to weapons inspectors as Dr. Germ.
A man can stop a woman on the street in Baghdad and ask for directions
without causing a scandal. Men and women can pray at the mosque together, go
to restaurants together, swim together, court together or quarrel together.
Girls compete in after-school sports almost as often as boys, and Iraqi
television broadcasts women's sports as well as men's.
"No one thinks that sports are just for men," said Nadia Yasser, the captain
of the Iraqi national women's soccer team. "It's true that my mother was a
bit concerned at first when I took up soccer, but I insisted, and so she
accepted it and just started praying for me."
The point is not to be soft on Saddam Hussein, whose rash wars and policies
have killed hundreds of thousands of women as well as men. Iraqi women would
be much better off with Saddam gone, and in any case the relative equality
of women in Iraq has little to do with his leadership. Iraq has been
civilized more than twice as long as Britain, after all (it was old when
Babylon arose), and Iraq got its first woman doctor back in 1922. Then the
Iran-Iraq war boosted equality by sending men to the front lines and forced
women to fill in as factory workers, bus drivers and government officials.
Still, we shouldn't demonize all of Iraq - just its demon of a ruler - and
it's worth pondering this contrast between an enemy that empowers women and
allies that repress them. This gap should shame us as well as these allies,
reminding us to use our political capital to nudge Arab countries to respect
the human rights not just of Kurds or Shiites, but also of women.
More broadly, in a region where women are treated as doormats, Iraq offers
an example of how an Arab country can adhere to Islam and yet provide women
with opportunities.
"I look at women in Saudi Arabia, and I feel sorry for them," said Thuha
Farook, a young woman doctor in Basra. "They can't learn. They can't improve
themselves."
At the Basra Maternity and Pediatric Teaching Hospital, 25 of the 26
students in ob-gyn are women. Across town, 54 percent of Basra University's
students are female.
Iraqi women who work typically get six months' maternity leave at full pay
and another six months at half pay. Subsidized day care is usually available
at the workplace. Female circumcision, still common in American allies like
Egypt and Nigeria, is absent in Iraq.
To be sure, aside from brutal political repression that is gender-blind,
Iraqi women also endure groping on crowded buses and an occasional honor
killing, in which a man kills a daughter or sister for being unchaste. Honor
killings typically result in a six-month prison sentence in Iraq; they
sometimes go completely unpunished in other countries.
A glance around any Baghdad street also demonstrates that Iraq doesn't have
hang-ups about the female body that neighboring countries do. A man can
travel widely in the Arab world and know about women's legs only by hearsay,
but careful reporting in Iraq confirms that Arab women do have knees: In
Baghdad I saw women volleyball players who felt uninhibited enough to roll
up their sweats.
So as we invade Iraq for its barbaric and repressive ways, our allies in the
Muslim world should feel deeply embarrassed that a rogue state offers women
more equality than they do.

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