Thursday, August 31

Often discrimination is in the eye of the beholder
by
ContraTory
on Thu 31 Aug 2006 15:25 BST
On 29th August 2006 The Law Society published a report entitled "Career experiences of gay and lesbian solicitors."
The report explained,
"There is a large body of work, including a growing body of research undertaken by the Law Society, which explores how social divisions of ethnicity, race and gender impact on workplace experiences and career choices. To date there has been a gap in consideration of sexual orientation in this equation — something that this research begins to address with the encouragement and support of the Law Society Equality and Diversity Committee."
Under the heading "Sample" we are informed,
"Qualitative in-depth interviews were conducted with a sample of fifteen gay men and ten lesbians [my emphasis], who were working as solicitors in private practice or the employed sector, through regions of the South-West, London and the North-West."
This report came to be mentioned in the Guardian earlier in the week and had prompted me to post an article about one of its sillier recommendations. Having now read the report, I am even less impressed.
The common weakness of much "research" these days is that it is just assumed there is a problem that has to be resolved, in this instance sexual orientation discrimination, and the researcher goes looking for it. If the Law Society is going to undertake this sort of research, it must do it properly, with carefully chosen, representative samples. It would have been helpful to establish for instance, what heterosexual respondents thought. If, as was likely, they had thought the atmosphere at work was not particularly accepting and inclusive, that finding would have had considerable weight. It is very foolish to create policy in reliance upon a survey involving such a small unrepresentative sample.
The Law Society research was interesting in one respect in that when discussing the factors that determined whether a gay would "out" at work, those factors seemed to comprise self-imposed constraints. These included; the age of the solicitor; self-confidence; and the desire or ability to maintain a double life.
Too often individuals who perceive that they are significantly different to the majority ascribe to that majority a viewpoint which in fact mirrors their own doubts and negative feelings about themselves. What is not understood by many who consider themselves to be part of a minority group, any minority group, is that the "homogenous, unsympathetic majority" are mostly possessed of a complete indifference to their dissimilarity and accordingly cannot discriminate against them on that basis.
I can say without any fear of contradiction that nothing is more likely to drive a wedge between people of differing preferences than for one group to claim to be discriminated against merely by members of the other group being themselves. Those who wish to transform and mould Society into their own image should dwell upon that fact long and hard.
Career experiences of gay and lesbian solicitors
Saturday, August 26

We have lost our sense of proportion
by
ContraTory
on Sat 26 Aug 2006 14:52 BST
So, Celtic goalkeeper Artur Boruc has been cautioned because he made a religious gesture, crossing himself, in front of Ranger's fans at Ibrox Park on 12th February 2006. According to the Police (a view supported by the Procurator Fiscal):
"On this occasion, the actions included a combination of behaviour before a crowd in the charged atmosphere of an "Old Firm" match which provoked alarm and crowd trouble and as such constituted a breach of the peace."
My word, those Rangers fans must be extraordinarily over-sensitive fellows.
In response, a spokesman for the Catholic Church, Peter Kearney, is reported to have said that the Procurator Fiscal's [decision that a caution was warranted] was "alarming" and that,
"It is extremely regrettable that Scotland seems to have made itself one of the few countries in the world where this simply religious gesture is considered an offence."
Of course, we have been here before. In January 1998 Paul Gascoigne, then a Rangers player, was given a warning by the Scottish FA after miming playing the flute during a game against Celtic. One might deduce that Celtic supporters, like their Rangers brethren, are also exceptionally sensitive.
A thin skin is not just the preserve of the clearly very over-sensitive Scots, however. People south of the border have become upset over the smallest thing too. The sight of a "Bollocks to Blair" T-shirt has been known to make some tearful, so much so that they have felt constrained to report the matter to the local constabulary, who true to their oath, have felt the offender's collar. Signs suggesting that the dog of the household might consume calling Jehovah's Witnesses has turned the stomach of others.
Unlike Artur Boruc, previous offenders have not had Scottish Nationalist leader Alex Salmond or the Roman Catholic Church on their side. Perhaps this particular piece of nonsense can be nipped in the bud, but I suspect not.
Over the course of the past twenty years or more, the ever-widening concept of "causing offence" has become too ingrained. Those legislators who were so anxious to prescribe for instance racial abuse, never foresaw the unintended consequences of their actions, that is to say, that all people come to believe that they have a right not to be insulted. Legislation in favour of one group raises a legitimate expectation in another that they are entitled to protection as well. Our political leaders and judiciary readily accept that calling a person of Asian extraction a "Paki" is unacceptable, reprehensible, wrong and worthy of prescription by the Law. On the other hand for example, an insult delivered against someone who is not a member of an acknowledged minority group, is considered unacceptable, reprehensible, wrong, but otherwise just one of those things. It is not "just one of those things". An insult, is an insult, is an insult.
If the Law protects one group against insult, then arguably it must protect us all. A mindset has developed that those who feel offended can and should have those who insult them at the very least "spoken to" by the Police and with luck, prosecuted. It is all very immature. Insulting behaviour has always said more about the person delivering it than the person receiving it. Only a few years ago a black male was convicted of threatening and abusive behaviour by virtue of having called a conductress a "black bitch". On the Law as it stands, the case was correctly decided, but the whole situation has become absurd. We have lost a sense of proportion. "Bollocks to Blair"
Thursday, August 10

The Department for Transport’s new advice to air passengers
by
ContraTory
on Thu 10 Aug 2006 08:40 BST
According to the BBC News website this morning, one part of the heightened security arrangements for flights require that,
“Any liquids discovered must be removed from the passenger”
Does this mean that airport security is going to take the piss?
The Department for Transport’s new advice to air passengers
Wednesday, August 2

Mel Gibson’s faux pas
by
ContraTory
on Wed 02 Aug 2006 15:33 BST
I understand that one of the consequences of Mel Gibson’s outburst against the Jewish Police Officer who arrested him in Malibu for an offence of drink-driving last week was that one of his new projects, a mini series which was to have been entitled “Holocaust”, has now been shelved. This might prove to be good news. Given his predilection for starring in epics whose historical accuracy was severely challenged in a very particular respect as evidenced in “Braveheart” and “The Patriot”, there was always the suspicion on this side of the Pond that Mr Gibson’s series might have sought to cast the English as the villains of the piece and the Nazis as poor schmucks who took the rap. Perhaps we should be thankful for small mercies. In all other respects I wish Mr Gibson a successful and speedy rehabilitation.
Thursday, July 20

Richard Brunstrom: Chief Constable and now humble Blogger
by
ContraTory
on Thu 20 Jul 2006 14:52 BST
I have always felt that there was something of the wailing siren about Richard Brunstrom. Not the police variety of siren you understand; rather that of Broadmoor when someone has gone AWOL.
Perhaps he is just the victim of a bad press. If so, no doubt he will set the record straight in his new blog.
Brunstrom's Blog
Michael Horsnell's article in The Times
Association of British Drivers
BBC News - Brunstrom: Road to controversy
Jasper Gerrard meets Richard Brunstrom
Tuesday, June 13

Radio 1 DJ Chris Moyles criticised for being politically incorrect
by
ContraTory
on Tue 13 Jun 2006 22:09 BST
For all lovers of the wider concept of freedom of expression, this should make us warm to Mr Moyles, for a start. It is not the first time he has been singled out and criticised for amongst other things, being allegedly homophobic. In an article in The Guardian on 7th June 2006 he was roundly condemned by a contemporary, Tim Lusher. A cause of Mr Lusher’s angst appears to have arisen not so much by virtue Mr Moyles’ perceived homophobia but rather his use of the word gay to mean rubbish. Apparently, to the under-twenty-eights, this is the current meaning of the word gay. I can understand Mr Lusher’s irritation in this respect. I was more than a little miffed when the meaning of gay transmuted from “full of or disposed to joy and mirth; light-hearted, exuberantly cheerful, sportive, merry”. Mr Lusher’s Guardian article leads me to imagine him to be a rather po-faced, humourless, politically correct individual.
By all accounts, our Mr Moyles behaves occasionally in a coarse, insulting and rude manner to all and sundry during his radio programme and worst of all, he swears. This makes me like him even more. His target audience appear to think he is good and worth tuning into, insulted or no. The ratings certainly prove it. He is very popular. Some people have felt constrained to complain about him, but not that many. Curiously, the BBC has shown remarkably good sense and judgment by avoiding censuring Mr Moyles, but giving a general warning to all of its Radio 1 DJ’s concerning “watching their language”, as reported in The Times today.
There are numerous, vociferous minorities who are all too ready to tell us how to think and how we should behave, so as not to upset their sensitivities. They should be told to grow up and get a life, whoever they are.
Tuesday, June 6

Democracy begins at home
by
ContraTory
on Tue 06 Jun 2006 12:45 BST
How ironic that whilst our servicemen and women were trying to help create a democratic Iraq, most were denied the chance to vote in our last General Election;
“…a damning indictment of the Government”
says Liam Fox, the Shadow Defence Secretary. Quite.
Saturday, May 27

Coming soon...
by
ContraTory
on Sat 27 May 2006 10:29 BST
My imaginary, regular reader cannot have failed to notice that of late my blog cupboard has been bare. It is not a matter of "writers' block", because people who write drivel suffer no such condition. It has been more a case of "War and Peace" syndrome, where what had been intended to be a short, incisive critique of something silly someone had done or said somewhere, turned into a ten thousand word thesis. Frantic editing is now taking place, so something entirely worthless is bound to emerge sooner or later....very much later if that imaginary reader's luck holds.
Saturday, April 29

The Liberal Democrats need your support: give generously
by
ContraTory
on Sat 29 Apr 2006 15:57 BST
I am given to understand that the Liberal Democrats have about 73,000 members. As it appears likely that Michael Brown's £2.4 million donation might have to be repaid sooner or later, plans should be made to meet this liability, now. Might I suggest that each and every party member contribute the sum of £32.88 to party funds without delay? That is all it takes to preserve a great party. You know it is worth it.
Saturday, April 22

When hypothesis becomes fact
by
ContraTory
on Sat 22 Apr 2006 22:53 BST
It is curious how certain hypotheses gain currency and quickly become accepted as an established fact, sometimes against the weight of evidence.
In the mid nineteen eighties I happened upon a BBC television programme examining the matter of heart disease. The earnest presenter, a doctor, adamantly asserted that the “fatty heart hypothesis” was not a hypothesis, but a proven fact. If you eat a fatty diet and don’t do any exercise, your arteries clog up and you die of a heart attack - plain and simple. It seemed a fairly sound argument to me. On the other hand I found his stridency jarring. Other experts thought they were possessed of evidence undermining the fatty heart “fact” and this irritated the presenter, who saw them as heretics.
A few years later, I happened upon another programme about a body that had been discovered in a glacier in the Alps. The body had been frozen intact, with the remains of clothes and some belongings. After examination by an assortment of experts, it was established that the individual had died about four thousand years ago. He had been almost certainly a nomadic shepherd. Forensic examination showed that he had not died of any illness nor had he been killed. It was believed that he had been caught in a sudden blizzard and died of exposure. Examination of his bones suggested that he was aged about forty years or so old.
It was possible to make a number of assumptions about his life style. The glacier in which his body was frozen and transported down to the lowlands over the course of four thousand years, started life high in the Alps, where until the last century there had still been a tradition of shepherds moving livestock up and down the mountains through the passing of the seasons. Thus he had not enjoyed a sedentary life style – it was not possible for him to have done so. He had never eaten processed or fatty foods. He had not been afflicted by any of the vices of soft, lazy, easy late-twentieth century living. Yet examination showed that his arteries had fatty deposits just like your average, overweight, unfit company executive. Oh well, it's back to the drawing board.
I was reminded of this when a number of scientists, who had been routinely ignored for years, published an open letter challenging the orthodoxy of “global warming”. It was then disclosed elsewhere that the purportedly inevitable, inexorable increase in global temperature had fizzled out in 1998. The global warming theorists may yet be proved to be right. Then again, they might be shown to be as misguided as flat earthers.
Wednesday, April 19

Parents and Teachers (in that order) are to blame for the breakdown of respect in modern Britain
by
ContraTory
on Wed 19 Apr 2006 19:31 BST
So, Brian Galvin, the new president of the National Union of Schoolmasters and Union of Women Teachers (NASUWT) would have us believe that Baroness Thatcher is to blame for our current social ills. Unfortunately, he did not prepare his homework; I mean speech, quite as well as he should. In addressing his union’s annual conference in Birmingham last week he confided that “over liberalised attitudes in the 1960s and 1970s had also contributed to social ills.”
Now, bearing in mind that the Milk Snatcher did not have “over liberalised” tendencies and that those over liberal attitudes complained of pre-dated her Government by up to twenty years, doesn’t Mr Galvin’s argument contain the seeds of its own destruction?
Oh, and by the way, which profession was at the vanguard of introducing “liberalised” ideas into our schools during the 1960’s and 1970’s and making them orthodoxy during the 1980’s and 1990’s?
Three out of ten, Mr Galvin.
Wednesday, March 8

Natallie Evans should count her blessings
by
ContraTory
on Wed 08 Mar 2006 13:57 GMT
She is by all accounts, one very lucky lady.
It would appear that from early in her relationship with her former fiancé Howard Johnston, "they were trying for a baby". It was when she failed to conceive that she sought medical assistance and then was diagnosed with tumours in her ovaries. In consequence, she required surgery that would result in her being unable to have children. What followed has been well documented.
Now, let us just assume for one moment that Miss Evans had not met Mr Johnston nor any other partner who wanted children "from day one" (as she alleges, did Mr Johnston) at that particular point in time. Is it safe to assume her ovarian cancer might then have passed unnoticed for a longer, potentially fatal, period of time?
Too often we overlook or discount our good fortune as ours by right. Perhaps Miss Evans should reflect upon the fact that she is still possessed of her own life.
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