Abort! Abort! Abort!

Dear God, it’s like watching a car crash in slow motion…

Guardian – Support Tories over abortion, cardinal tells Catholics: The head of the Catholic church in England and Wales broke with tradition yesterday by questioning Labour policy and urging worshippers to support Conservative plans for a reduction of the legal time limit for abortions.

BBC – Will abortion become poll issue?: Recent remarks by politicians and churchmen have raised the prospect that abortion may, for the first time, become a big issue in a British general election. The highly-emotive subject has long been seen as virtually out of bounds for the parties during the cut and thrust of campaigning. But now, thanks to statements from the Archbishop of Westminster, Cardinal Cormac Murphy O’Connor, and Tory leader Michael Howard, it has been thrown onto the front pages.

Guardian – Keep abortion a conscience vote, says No 10: Downing Street sought to defuse the pre-election row over abortion today, urging that the issue remain one of conscience for MPs and not become a matter of party politics.

Guardian – Leaders join forces to cool abortion row: The Catholic hierarchy last night joined forces with both Labour and the Conservatives to head off a political row over abortion in the coming election after the Archbishop of Westminster suggested that religion should play a larger part in British politics. Michael Howard insisted he had not tried to make abortion an issue during a magazine interview and key aides stressed that it should remain a matter for MPs’ consciences.

That’s not going to work, I’m afraid. Right now, pro-life groups will be planning group attacks on MPs, and will no doubt use the same intimidating and number-inflating tactics used in the recent attempt to muscle the BBC. Stephen Green has yet to open his big fat mouth, but it’s only a matter of time, really.

Here’s one group already on the roll…

Evening Standard – Pro-life group to ‘name and shame’ MPs: Abortion was confirmed as a key general election issue today when it emerged that MPs are to be “named and shamed” by pro-life and religious groups.

And here’s the first poster-foetus…

Independent – Blair’s protests fail to quell abortion debate: Debate on whether the abortion laws should be changed is set to intensify as the Crown Prosecution Service decides on legal action against doctors who aborted a foetus for cleft-palate. The CPS is expected to announce its decision today on whether to prosecute two doctors in Hereford who were accused by a vicar of committing an offence by aborting a baby at 28 weeks for a minor ailment.

And here’s the right-wing press making it an issue by proclaiming that it is an issue and/or deciding to hold the debate anyway…

The Sun – Blair makes abortion plea

The Sun – Great abortion debate: Abortion has become a hot election issue after Britain’s leading Roman Catholic backed Michael Howard’s call for a lower time limit on the op. Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor told the country’s six million Catholics to ditch Labour after the Prime Minister revealed he was happy to leave the legal limit at 24 weeks.

Telegraph – Abortion becomes a general election issue

Telegraph – Blair on defensive as cardinal puts abortion at heart of general election

Daily Mail – Why this debate needs to be held: With an election only weeks away, it takes some courage for any political leader – particularly one who happens to be male – to raise questions about the abortion law, when the issue is so morally challenging and emotionally charged that many MPs would simply rather not raise their heads above the parapet. There is, after all, an unbridgeable gulf between those who think abortion wrong in almost all circumstances and those who believe with equal passion in a woman’s inalienable right to choose.

Did you get that? Apparently, it will be constructive to hold an emotionally charged debate in order to bridge an unbridgeable gulf. Clearly, it’s the responsible thing to do….

*sigh*

Independent: Abortion: The facts: Medical organisations say the law is humane, practical and working well. Pro-choice groups warn that any reduction in the time limit would be likely to affect the most vulnerable women – teenagers whose relationships have broken up and women waiting for the results of tests.

Guardian – Serious but settled: So, are Britain’s abortion laws now under attack from the Tory party, egged on by the Roman Catholic hierarchy? Militants on either side of the abortion divide may wish it so. But the truth is muddier and less melodramatic. Michael Howard’s alleged attempt to propel abortion on to the election agenda was hardly that. It consisted of an answer to a question posed to all the three party leaders by Cosmopolitan magazine. Mr Howard’s answer, that the 22-week limit might be reduced to 20 in the light of medical progress, is his own view. It is not Tory policy – abortion remains an issue of conscience and would be put to a free vote in this or any other parliament. Nor is it Catholic policy either; Catholics oppose abortion under all circumstances. If abortion has now become “a burning election issue”, as yesterday’s Daily Mail claimed, it is less Mr Howard’s doing than that of the press, which has inflated his comments, aided by a clumsy intervention by the Roman Catholic leader in England and Wales… Abortion a serious subject? Of course. But abortion a burning election issue? No. Forty years on, the legalisation of abortion is a settled matter. A generation has passed since the subject was last at the centre of our politics. It was Tony Blair who put it best in answer to Cosmopolitan. Nobody likes abortion, he said, but it is wrong to criminalise those who, in very difficult circumstances, make that choice. The debate will go on, he added, but there is no case for changing the law. That needed saying, and Mr Blair deserves credit for holding firm.

For now. I sense a weakness in the wind.

To close, I offer a quiet word or two on a turbulent priest…

Guardian Diary: And so to the entrance into the abortion debate of Cardinal Cormac Murphy O’Connor, who makes up in Irish names for what he lacks in moral consistency. “What is useful is not always what is right for society,” opines the head of the Catholic church in England, “and sometimes is very wrong.” Quite so. It was the cardinal who, when Bishop of Arundel, declined to report a priest he knew to be a paedophile to the police, instead awarding him a new chaplaincy. Here the man was able to continue the abuse for some years, before finally being convicted for crimes, among others, against a disabled child. The cardinal raging against expediency seems marginally less absurd than Cher expressing a distaste for Botox, but we wish him and his blind eye well.

And what I think is a pretty good indication of the ‘facts’ you can expect from pro-life groups in the coming days…

Bloggerheads – Carriers & Barriers – Condoms, AIDS and the HIV Virus

This is not going to be pretty. This is not going to be pretty at all…








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A Happy Birthday for Tony Blair?

It’s just occurred to me that – if the general election takes place when everyone expects it will – then Tony Blair will have something to celebrate on the following day no matter what happens.








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Living in a Tory wonderland

Murdoch’s bitch-slapping of Blair continues in The Sun, with news that the NHS is in crisis and patients are sleeping in offices.

They urge you to buy today’s paper so you can; see the shocking picture that sums up the disgraceful state of the NHS – a hospital so overcrowded that patients are forced to sleep in an OFFICE… It shows that despite 398 billion being pumped into health in the eight years since Tony Blair came to power, the state of medical services is still a scandal.

There’s not much to see, really; just a desk, a filing cabinet, and… an empty bed!

Still, their cartoonist manages to convey this shocking state of affairs by comparing the arrangement to a gypsy camp.

And the Page 3 girl is onside, of course…

Today Ruth (22, from Kent, and badly in need of a sandwich) is horrified to learn (that) patients are being housed in offices. She says: “It’s quite disgraceful that this should happen because there is no room on the wards. How would NHS bosses like that to happen to their sick relatives?”

Meanwhile, the Tories may or may not be making an issue of abortion (read post *and* comments).

Also, Neil has popped up to point out the following detail on the Conservative website: Any person living in the United Kingdom is eligible to join the Conservative Party. Applicants are not required to be registered voters or UK nationals.

Perhaps we should do a recruitment drive targeting all them illegal terrorist asylum seekers that want to sleep with our jobs and blow up our women.








Posted in Page 3 - News in Briefs | 1 Comment

The myth of liberal bias… again

New York Times – Under Bush, a New Age of Prepackaged Television News: Under the Bush administration, the federal government has aggressively used a well-established tool of public relations: the prepackaged, ready-to-serve news report that major corporations have long distributed to TV stations to pitch everything from headache remedies to auto insurance. In all, at least 20 federal agencies, including the Defense Department and the Census Bureau, have made and distributed hundreds of television news segments in the past four years, records and interviews show. Many were subsequently broadcast on local stations across the country without any acknowledgement of the government’s role in their production.

And all the while we keep hearing about the liberal bias of the media. Well…

Editor and Publisher – Study Finds No Media Bias on War, Hits Fox News As Most One-Sided: (The Project for Excellence in Journalism) examined more than 2,000 stories on the war in Iraq and found that 25% of the stories were negative and 20% were positive. “The majority of stories were just news,” said the project’s director, Tom Rosenstiel. Fox News Channel was twice as likely to be positive than negative, while CNN and MSNBC were evenhanded.

Washington Post – On Fox News, No Shortage of Opinion, Study Finds: In covering the Iraq war last year, 73 percent of the stories on Fox News included the opinions of the anchors and journalists reporting them, a new study says. By contrast, 29 percent of the war reports on MSNBC and 2 percent of those on CNN included the journalists’ own views.

Have you got that? The sector of the media that the Bushies claim is rotten with liberal bias isn’t biased at all. The only bias comes from the right. Along with some outright propaganda.

(Cheers to Chris for the heads-up.)








Posted in George W. Bush | 2 Comments

Star Wars Episode III – final trailer

The third and final trailer for Star Wars Episode III is now available the the great unwashed at the official Star Wars site.

Those of you in the cheap seats may have to settle for the transcript. If you want a copy to keep for yourself and you have an impressively-wide pipe, you can download a full hi-res version here (35Mb Quicktime). If you have an aversion to Quicktime, there’s a Flash version of the trailer here.

The big news (at least for Brickish geeks like me) is that there are new Star Wars Lego products on the way.

UPDATE – See also; That’s My Vader!








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Gigs in London

A rather fine Australian musician I know is headed for our shores in June (don’t worry; he’s marrying one of their women and doesn’t want your job), and I was wondering if any readers knew of venues in London that would be suitable for a one-off gig. Little help?








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Speaking as someone who only recently gave a damn…

Simon Jenkins – Under my keyboard the desk shakes. The bloggers are on the march

Europhobia – The more time people spend online, the more interested in politics they become








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Justification for war fading away before our eyes

Underblog – Curiouser and Curiouser: So now they say that the 13 page document was not “the” legal advice at all (although it is known that it contained legal advice)! They are making the absurd claim that the 2-page answer given to parliament was the full legal advice.

Next, we’ll find that the “full legal advice” was the draft for the 2-page answer… which was scribbled on the back of a cocktail napkin (or perhaps Camp David stationary circa 2002).








Posted in It's War! It's Legal! It's Lovely! | 1 Comment

The War on Tories

Observer – Chaos: how war on terror became a political dogfight: If anyone seriously thought that security would fade as an election issue, the rhetoric and propaganda of the past 24 hours should provide ample evidence that it will be at the heart of the campaign. For Labour, it is clear that the war on terror and the war against the Tories have become indistinguishable.

Told you so.

Also…

Sctosman – The long battle ends, now the war begins: The Tories belatedly making their way to their pre-election rally in Brighton proclaimed the outcome a victory for their uncompromising stance on the bill, citing the compromise that the new laws will be reviewed next year as a cave-in by Tony Blair. And yet, despite the opposition’s crowing, Blair, Clarke and his predecessor, David Blunkett, got exactly the powers they had been seeking all along.

Nick Barlow – The wrong kind of steel in the backbone
Returning Officers – LibDem conspiracy theory








Posted in The War on Stupid | 2 Comments

For those who need to reset their minds before bed

Kitten anime, war, space war, a bumpcopter and erm… something else.








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