War is declared

Andrew Sullivan on Bush’s bigotry amendment proposal. “Those of us who supported this president in 2000, who have backed him whole-heartedly during the war, who have endured scorn from our peers as a result, who trusted that this president was indeed a uniter rather than a divider, now know the truth.” He nails it elegantly — Bush is dragging the Constitution into the culture wars, and all for narrow re-election purposes. Unfortunately, abit of schadenfreude is in order here; too bad Sullivan didn’t see sooner how antithetical Bush is to his lifestyle and human dignity.

Defiant Downloads Rise From Underground

“More than 300 Web sites and blogs staged a 24-hour online protest yesterday over a record company’s efforts to stop them from offering downloadable copies of ‘The Grey Album.’ A popular underground collection of music, ‘The Grey Album’ mixes tracks from the Beatles’ classic White Album with raps from Jay-Z’s latest release, ‘The Black Album.’

The protesters billed the event as ‘Grey Tuesday,’ calling it ‘a day of coordinated civil disobedience,’ during which more than 150 sites offered the album for download. Recording industry lawyers saw it as 24 hours of mass copyright infringement and sent letters to the Web sites demanding that they not follow through on the protest.” —New York Times

A new way to view London:

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From a toilet. “Visitors to Britain will find a new stop on London’s site-seeing route this spring: a usable public toilet enclosed in one-way mirrored glass situated on a sidewalk near the River Thames. The contemporary art exhibit, which allows the user to see out while passers-by cannot peep in, toys with the concepts of privacy and voyeurism.”

Look on the dark side of life

Karen Armstrong starts with an observation about the popularity of children’s literature dealing with misery and sorrow (she mentions Jacqueline Wilson, with whom I am not familiar, but that darned Lemony Snicket series comes to mind) and ends up extolling the value of an unflinching look at the misery and sorrow that surrounds us in the real world.

“Increasingly it is becoming unacceptable to voice legitimate distress. If you lose your job, become chronically ill, or fall prey to loneliness or depression, you are likely to be told – often abrasively – to look on the bright side. With unseemly haste, people rush to put an optimistic gloss on a disaster or to suggest a patently unworkable solution. We seem to be cultivating an intolerance of pain – even our own. An acquaintance once told me that quite the most difficult aspect of her cancer was her friends’ strident insistence that she develop a positive attitude, and her guilt at being unable to do so.” —Guardian.UK

One of Armstrong’s corollaries is the danger of fundamentalist religion, with its ‘anaesthetic approach’ both in personal and political life. Although it is a sweeping generalization, this arguably predisposes fundamentalism against an all-embracing compassionate approach to others’ suffering. [I have previously aroused the ire of at least one FmH reader by endorsing another weblogger’s observation about the impaired capacity for empathy that underlies neo-conservatism.] Armstrong ends with where she must have begun, with the Buddhist outlook which is integral to her message; the centrality of suffering (rooted in impermanence) is embodied in the first of its Four Noble Truths. In a modern psychiatric context too, I have long been intrigued by the adaptive advantages that probably underlie the persistence of the depressive outlook in the modern psyche.