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When one’s IQ is less than one’s shoe size, and we’re only talking one shoe…

By skepticlawyer

I am stealing this observation from regular commenter Nick Ferrett, because it bears repeating:

So Tony Hodges, the PM’s senior media advisor has resigned after disclosing to the tent embassy people that Abbott was at the Lobby Restaurant with Gillard. OK, you people are now officially too stupid to be in government. Leave aside the morality of it. You’re just too stupid. If you can’t boil water with your IQ, please bugger off and let someone else have a go.

This is what Tony Abbott actually said:

Look, I can understand why the tent embassy was established all those years ago. I think a lot has changed for the better since then. We had the historic apology just a few years ago, one of the genuine achievements of Kevin Rudd as Prime Minister. We had the proposal which is currently for national consideration to recognise indigenous people in the Constitution. I think the indigenous people of Australia can be very proud of the respect in which they are held by every Australian and yes, I think a lot has changed since then and I think it probably is time to move on from that.

Tony Abbott gives me the screaming heaves, he really does. He’s the worst sort of godbothering big government conservative. But he did not call for the tent embassy to be ‘torn down’ and he did not ‘incite a riot’. Any rioting – as is usually the case – was the responsibility of the rioters.

There is speculation in the media that Tony Hodges misquoted Abbott, making his comments more aggressive. In a perverse way, I hope that’s true, because to respond to the above with violence suggests that at least some people in Australia have made their way into political cloud-cuckoo-land.

In other news, apparently Julia Gillard’s lost shoe is now being sold on Ebay.

Australia Day shenannigans

By Legal Eagle

Lukas Coch via Associated Press Australia

I have to say that I am pretty unimpressed with the actions of the activists who forced Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard to flee the Lobby Restaurant yesterday, where she was attending an Australia Day function to celebrate emergency services. For non-Australian readers, yesterday was Australia Day, a public holiday which falls on the anniversary of the landing of the First Fleet in Australia. It is an emotionally charged day for many indigenous people, many of whom believe that it should be regarded as Invasion Day, and see it as a day for sorrow, not celebration.

The whole thing started when, earlier on Australia Day, Opposition Leader Tony Abbott was asked about the significance of the 40th anniversary of the Aboriginal Tent Embassy outside Parliament House. Abbott said:

“I think the indigenous people of Australia can be very proud of the respect in which they are held by every Australian. I think a lot has changed since then, and I think it probably is time to move on from that.

Although some have seen Abbott’s comments as deliberately inflammatory, personally, I do not think he would have intended them to start a riot. Later, The Australian reports, Tony Abbott and Julia Gillard were attending an event celebrating Australian emergency services at the Lobby when a version of Abbott’s words filtered through to the people gathered to celebrate the anniversary of the Tent Embassy. Elder Barbara Shaw told the audience that Abbott wanted to tear down the site. About one hundred protestors ran to the Lobby Restaurant and started banging on the glass walls, shouting slogans. Gillard and Abbott became concerned that the glass walls of the restaurant would break, and Gillard’s minders arranged for them to leave the restaurant. In the confusion, Gillard tripped and lost her shoe – the picture above shows her fleeing to her car.

The Tent Embassy leader, Michael Anderson, admitted that he had not heard Tony Abbott’s exact words before the protest began, and that the words had been misinterpreted, but remained unrepentant:

The protesters had misinterpreted those [Abbott's] comments, Mr Anderson said.

However he said the only people that owed an apology to the Prime Minister after yesterday’s drama were the police.

“No I don’t owe the Prime Minister an apology. I’ll tell you what though, the security guards do,” Mr Anderson said.

“Because we were after Tony Abbott and not the Prime Minister and I think the security people overreacted and let’s put things into perspective here. Tony Abbott wasn’t even invited there, he invited himself. I think he came here as an agent provocateur deliberately.”

Other Aboriginal leaders have condemned the actions of the protesters in no uncertain terms:

…Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Mick Gooda condemned the protest and accused the activists of showing disrespect to Ms Gillard and Mr Abbott.

“I think the issues they raised 40 years ago are as relevant today . . . (but) I’ve got to condemn the behaviour in the strongest possible terms,” Mr Gooda said.

“People are allowed to protest and raise issues but it’s disrespectful to our Prime Minister and the Opposition Leader. I think it was absolutely appalling.”

Former ALP president and indigenous leader Warren Mundine labelled the activists a “disgrace”, said the embassy had long ceased to be relevant for most Aborigines and had been “hijacked by a motley crew of people” from outside the indigenous mainstream.

“No human being, let alone the Prime Minister of this country, should be treated in such a manner,” Mr Mundine said.

“It’s a disgrace and anyone who was involved in it should be prosecuted as far as the law can take it.”

Sue Gordon, the former chairwoman of the Northern Territory intervention, said the right to protest did not include the right to be violent.

“Regardless of what people might think of the Prime Minister, she’s still the Prime Minister,” Dr Gordon said. She said the views of tent embassy activists did not reflect those of indigenous people in remote Australia.

Mr Anderson has responded by criticising Mr Gooda and Mr Mundine:

They do not represent us. …They were not elected by us, they were just appointed by the government not Aboriginal people. They’re just interested in representing the middle to upper-class indigenous Australians and paying off their mortgage.”

(What’s wrong with wanting to pay off your mortgage, I have to wonder? – showing my own bourgeois prejudices… :-P ) The incident has received widespread coverage in overseas media.

Now, I understand that some indigenous people regard the Tent Embassy as sacred ground, and that they would be upset and distressed at reports that the Embassy was being disbanded. Personally I would not endorse Abbott’s comment: obviously the Tent Embassy is important to many indigenous people, and it provides a constant reminder of ongoing issues for indigenous people in Australia.

However, my concern with activism is always how best to get the message across to the majority of people. (Perhaps it is because what persuasion is what litigators and academics are all about, and I am both). I do not think that this incident will help the Tent Embassy’s cause or profile in any way. As this article in the Guardian points out, people often regard the perpetrators of mob violence as “mindless and irrational”, although it is really more complex than that, and often riots represent an indication that a group has “a sense of illegitimacy about how they are treated by others…they see collective confrontation as the only means of redressing the situation.”  Nonetheless, if the members of the Tent Embassy want to achieve their aims (Aboriginal sovereignty, a treaty with the Australian government, increased land rights etc) they will have to convince mainstream Australia of the necessity of these things. The behaviour we saw yesterday is very unlikely to help their aims, as I suspect most Australians were appalled. In fact, I suspect that it will do the precise opposite of what the protesters wanted to achieve – it may well add credence to Tony Abbott’s claim that the Tent Embassy has had its day, and should be disbanded, as the protesters came across in media reports as violent and disrespectful troublemakers. And that’s a pity.

G.O.P.? O.M.G.!

By DeusExMacintosh












‘Once we suffered from crimes; now we suffer from laws’

By skepticlawyer

… Tacitus, shortly after the Praetorian Edict, hitherto subject to an annual sunset clause, was enacted in perpetuum, thereby ending most substantive Roman legal innovation and, arguably, Roman societal and scientific innovation as well.

Hold that thought.

Law has limits I

Russell Blackford, toiling alone, has attempted to draw our attention away from the Melinda Tankard Reist v Jennifer Wilson defamation stoush. In this post, for example, he asks us to consider Jennifer Wilson’s substantive views, and (by necessary implication) Melinda Tankard Reist’s substantive views. Like Russell, I think the issues both raise are interesting in themselves. My reason for thinking so is simple: Melinda Tankard Reist seeks the imposition of new laws; Jennifer Wilson opposes the imposition of new laws. Part of the reason they disagree with each other so vehemently is a difference over law, and what should animate its enactment. Let me explain.

Law has two sorts of limits. The first concerns what one ought to do (with law). The second concerns what it is possible to do (with law). If it is true that Melinda Tankard Reist is a conservative Christian and seeks to impose new laws on that basis, then she is engaging in the first sort of (would be) lawmaking. This is known in the trade as a principled limit to law. Jennifer Wilson, by contrast, thinks that any proposed law should be subjected to empirical scrutiny, and that regardless of what one ought to do with law, what one is able to do with law is of greater importance. This is known in the trade as a means-end limit to law.

The core of the dispute between them turns on the means-end thinker suggesting that the principled thinker is using means-end research to achieve a principled aim. Hence the allegation of deception and duplicitousness when it comes to Melinda Tankard Reist’s religious beliefs. The (allegedly) principled thinker has responded by saying no, my principles are separable from the means-end arguments I make. My means-end arguments stand or fall on their own merits.

Now I find the tort of defamation endlessly fascinating, for the reasons Legal Eagle outlines in her splendid post The Streisand Effect. However, what I find even more interesting is a limits of law stoush, because, almost inevitably, limits of law stoushes reveal something fascinating about how we make and enforce our laws.

In law, if one is going to engage in principled reasoning, it is generally unwise to recruit means-end reasoning, and vice-versa. Thinkers who blur the two almost inevitably come unstuck. This is because the means-end thinker (typically an empiricist) is looking at outcomes, while the principled thinker is looking at what is right, which is of necessity logically prior, and focusses on intent. As should be obvious, they are approaching the problem from opposite ends of the snake. Perhaps I should add at this point that only one end of the snake actually bites.

A final bit of background: the best known argument that there is a principled limit to law is that given by John Stuart Mill, in his famous ‘harm principle‘. Many modern laws are enacted with the harm principle providing considerable ‘background radiation’. Unfortunately, the harm principle is so popular because it tends to produce good outcomes, and where it fails, the failures are controllable: the bad law can be excised with a sort of legislative surgical strike (although this doesn’t happen as often as it should, these days: as Tacitus complained, many bad and unworkable laws litter the books, sporadically enforced and expensive to maintain, until, eventually, they fall into desuetude). Other influential proposals for principled limits to the law do exist: for example, the suggestion that law must eschew certain kinds of otherwise valid moral reasons and that the law must be in some sense neutral.

Finding principled limits to the law, I maintain, is an elusive task. I could bore you all with why it is elusive, but since that was the subject of a 40,000 word Oxford M.Phil (Jurisprudence) thesis, I won’t go there. Instead, I want to consider some of the means-end arguments raised by both Melinda Tankard Reist and Jennifer Wilson. This is because the originating basis of this debate: to wit, the causal influence of media portrayals on public and private attitudes and behaviour — constitutes one of the thorniest problems in social science. It is a statistical and evidentiary nightmare. Building campaigns — especially for bans — when the evidence is not in is unwise: it’s just about the surest way to finish up with badly-drafted and ill-thought out legislation.

Right, that’s got all the bloody jurisprudence out of the way, on to the substance!

Jennifer Wilson (via Russell Blackford) raises the following issues:

I am also suspicious of her conflation of girls and women, when the two situations are entirely different and should be treated as such. Exploiting the sexuality of children (and children are sexual beings) is a whole other matter from the so-called epidemic of “sexualisation” and “pornification” of adults. I would like to see a journalist question Tankard Reist on her persistent conflation of the two. I believe it is deliberate.

We are sexual beings. Many of us, male and female, like to express our sexuality. It’s a big part of our identity. The ways in which we’ve chosen to do this have varied according to the style of the time. The ways some of us choose to do it in 2012 are, I would argue, no more or less scandalous than at other periods of human history. Yet a new sexual dysfunction called “sexualization” has entered the social discourse, driven initially in this country by Tankard Reist. She then gathered around her a motley crew of radical feminists and middle class moralists who tacitly ignore their considerable differences in the interests of the greater goal of fighting the twin evils they claim are destroying our society: sexualization and pornification.

[...]

Are Tankard Reist and her supporters in reality pathologizing all expressions of female sexuality? Genuine sexualization we may well get upset about, as a particular form of dehumanization, but are they using that word to obliterate the perfectly normal concept of female sexiness?

Does Tankard Reist believe that being sexy and feeling sexy is pathological behaviour outside of the marital bedchamber? And why does nobody ask her this question?

“Sexualization” and “pornification” are done to women, according to Reist. Women don’t choose to dress, work and play in ways that fit these pathological categories. They’ve been forced into them by men for male gratification. If you think you choose to wear high heels and a short skirt and learn pole dancing, you’re wrong. The patriarchy made you do it. If you think you like to show off your legs and breasts because it feels like sexy fun to do that, you didn’t make that choice, you know. You are actually so brainwashed that the whole concept of choice passed you by long ago. You are a victim.

If you want to look sexy because you’d like to have sex, if you earn your living as a sex worker or perform in porn, in short, if you express your sexuality in any way at all outside of marriage, you are dysfunctional, immoral or both.

Somebody needs to ask Tankard Reist just what she considers an acceptable public expression of female sexuality. I suspect the reality is, she doesn’t have one. For religious fundamentalists, there is no such thing. A woman must be modest and pure, but definitely not sexy and enjoying it.

What kind of a lesson is this to teach our girls about their sexuality?

Having thus far failed to take control of the sexy and eradicate its expression through the invocation of morality, defining it as a pathological disorder is the next step in the reactionary battle for control of female sexuality.

I’m hoping that the distinction between principled limits (‘a woman must be modest and pure’) and means-end limits (‘defining it as a pathological disorder’) on the (legal) expression or depiction of female sexuality is clear. Wilson’s implication is that if the first (moral) claim fails on the merits, then a second, empirical claim (still buttressing the failed moral claim) is being smuggled into the argument.

Law has limits II

That is obvious. Legal officials at various times and in various places have objectives and they need to find the best way of achieving them. Some might seek to end casual street violence, so impose stiff legal penalties on anyone caught engaging in such conduct. Some might seek to end demonstrable harms caused by alcohol or drugs through prohibiting their sale and consumption. Others might seek to meet housing needs by imposing minimum standards for accommodation on those who rent out their properties. Though they seek the best means of reaching their goals, they might fail and the failure could be dramatic.

In all the examples mentioned above the aims sought may not materialize. The stiff legal penalties imposed by those seeking to curtail street violence may lead only to an increase in violence as perpetrators reason they may as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb. The prohibition of alcohol consumption may merely drive consumption underground, failing in its purpose and succeeding only in adding to the stock of societal harms as further criminality incident on the prohibition grows. Property owners, rather than forking out for legally mandated improvements to their rental property, may simply take their properties off the market, resulting in fewer affordable properties available for rental and fewer needs met. In each case the law has overreached itself. Having observed the results of their efforts, the legal officials may conclude that it would have been better to have used other means or maybe even to have done nothing, to have tolerated the former level of harm, since their means of putting it to an end did not solve the problem aimed at, but exacerbated it. In pursuing the best result as they see it, they have achieved only the third-best and now the problem might be the embarrassing one of getting back to second-best.

These are familiar stories in skeletal form and illustrate the commonplace that the methods the law might use can simply misfire. There are limits to what the law can achieve because some of its tools are blunt. Some tools do not work, others are counter-productive; some exacerbate the problem they were supposed to solve. Knowing what works and what does not and what will be counterproductive is important knowledge indeed.

There ought to be a law against it!

Because principled limits to law are elusive, then means-end limits must be found. And when they are found, they had better be bloody good means-end limits, because the price of failure is high: the section above references Prohibition, some spectacular examples of failed policing, and the effect of various rent-restriction acts in both Britain and the US. Of the three means-end failures, only one has been largely abandoned: Prohibition, although no doubt Ron Paul and other opponents of the War on Drugs would argue (probably rightly) otherwise. The others are still around, cluttering up the books, gumming up the legal system, costing us a motza.

When laws are enacted on the basis of empirical arguments (what is sometimes called ‘evidence-based policy’), great care should go into researching the issue in question. This latter is particularly the case when the proposed law conflicts with another important legal doctrine. As should be reasonably obvious, Melinda Tankard Reist’s claims about objectifying advertising, child sexualisation and pornography (I am being careful to take Jennifer Wilson’s counsel and keep the categories separate) conflict with freedom of expression, a cherished value in Anglophone (common law) democracies, and self-expression, a cherished value in civilian (Roman law) democracies. Traditionally, putting freedom of expression or the right to self-expression to one side in favour of another claim, however strong, is subjected to ‘anxious scrutiny‘ by the courts. And with good reason.

A selection of claims

Melinda Tankard Reist makes various claims and engages in various campaigns. Here is a selection (culled both from the oganisation Collective Shout and her personal website):

  • campaign against Typo, a office supplies company, for the sale of porn themed novelty mugs and stationary.
  • A campaign against Kmart (the Australian version of Asda) for selling ‘sexualised’ knickers to girls. The press release boasts:
    “In one of the fastest responses to consumer complaints that we’ve seen, Kmart has withdrawn a range of underwear with sexualised slogans and issued an apology assuring customers they will not repeat the same mistake.The hashtag campaign #kmartsexploitation began when these photographs were shared on twitter. The Girls Xpress branded underwear featured slogans such as ‘Call me’ ‘I Love Rich Boys’ and ‘I love boys in uniform.’”

There are many others; I recommend further exploration. I have tried to showcase a reasonable variety, if only to illustrate that she does conflate Wilson’s categories as part of her broader campaign ‘against the objectification of women and sexualisation of girls in media, advertising and popular culture’ (Collective Shout’s strapline). That said, it is difficult to see how the ban on A Serbian Film contributes to her wider goals. There is a difference between a piece of arthouse cinema and a popular line in branded girls’ underwear.

The reason maintaining the distinction between Wilson’s categories is important is because the evidence supporting/undermining means-end legal limits for each is different. The research Collective Shout has itself compiled discloses this clearly, although I did my own literature review (Goddess bless LexisNexis and Westlaw and all who sail in them) to confirm my initial impression. Reist’s strongest claims for actual harm concern, unsurprisingly, children, particularly when it comes to child beauty pageants. These, it seems (based on the available research) introduce children to competition too early for them to grasp its meaning, with deleterious effects. The participants are typically younger than the youngest ages permitted in competitive sport, even in a controlled environment like, say, Little Athletics. Other claims are far more tenuous, and may even be contra-indicated. The claim that porn has a deleterious effect on its users and society more generally, for example, is particularly weak.

Why is showing harm so important? Because when one is making means-ends arguments, one has to do four things:

1. Show that the activity is harmful.

2. Show that the enactment of laws against it would reduce the harm.

3. Show that the enactment of laws against the activity would not damage other, valued activities.

4. Accept that even if the first three requirements are satisfied, impossibility/difficulty of enforcement may still mean ‘do nothing’ or ‘legalise, regulate and tax’.

The second requirement, it should be noted, is onerous. ‘About the same’ is not good enough. The reduction in harm needs to be material and quantifiable. If the law exacerbates the harm, or does nothing while costing a fortune, or achieves a little bit while damaging another, valued activity, then it has failed. See Law has Limits II, above.

When campaigners think there oughtta be a law, how do they go about it?

Very often, by not thinking very hard. This sounds cruel to Melinda Tankard Reist, but is not meant to be, for the thoughtlessness afflicts activists across the political spectrum. As someone with wonkish interests and experience, the process of campaigning seems to go like this:

1. An intuitive sense that a given activity is bad, for a variety of inchoate and unclear reasons. It is at this point — although much philosophy depends on intuitions — that the stupidity usually kicks in, becoming like a mistake made in the first two lines of a complex algebra equation: magnified, typically, at every step. When the hypothesis is poorly formed, then observations enlisted in its support can be seriously awry.

The intuition problem stems in part from a failure to appreciate that other people may not react to the activity in question in the same way, with the campaigner having great difficulty imagining him or herself into someone else’s head. When it comes to the objectification of adult women, for example (one of Wilson’s ‘categories’), we may be dealing with normal statistical differences both between men and women, and also statistical variation within the set, ‘women’. Many women dislike male attention, being ogled, say, or chatted up. They dislike porn and find it degrading of women. By contrast, many women like and want male attention. They have no problem with porn. There are also intermediate positions between the two.

The campaigner’s response, of course, is the one Wilson has already flagged: to argue that women who like porn or pole-dancing or whatever are victims of a form of false consciousness: that is, they are unable to see things, especially exploitation, oppression, and social relations, as they really are. It should be very obvious that this is an enormous claim, for embedded within it is one express argument: the pole-dancing and porn-loving woman’s mind is (a) unable to produce a sophisticated awareness of how it is developed and shaped by circumstances; and one implied argument (b) that the campaigner knows better than the pole-dancing, porn loving woman, and should decide for her. That’s where the law comes in, of course.

2. Realising that ‘I don’t like being objectified, so there ought to be a law against it’ won’t cut the mustard with policymakers, advertisers, politicians, business and legal drafters, the campaigner goes looking for a link between objectification and other harms.

This is the stage where the great bulk of the research cited by participants on all sides of this debate is at right now. The evidence points in fifty different directions. Much of it is very bad. Some of it has clearly been written by people who need desperately to read a statistics textbook. Tankard Reist’s book on grief after abortion, for example, is based on only 18 case studies. N=18, ladies and gentlemen or, the plural of ‘anecdote’ is not ‘data’. Others have no causality tests, or lack controls, or no regression analysis.

You are regressing…

Regression works by artificially holding constant every variable except the two the researcher wants to focus on, and then showing how those two co-vary.

Imagine you have 10,000 girls, 5,000 of whom have participated in child beauty pageants and 5,000 who haven’t. You want to see if there’s any meaningful difference between the two groups — in say, school test scores, or ability to delay gratification (the famous ‘marshmellow test‘), and whether any difference (there may not be one)  is attributable to participation in child beauty pageants for the first 5,000. Regression analysis converts each of those 10,000 children into a circuit board with an identical number of switches. Each switch represents a single category of the child’s data: her year one maths score, her year-three reading score, her mother’s education level, her father’s income, whether she comes from an intact family, the relevant affluence of her suburb, and so on. The statistician lines up all the children who share many characteristics–all the circuit boards that have their switches flipped in the same direction–and then pinpoints the single characteristic they don’t share. This is how the effect of that switch and, eventually, of every switch, becomes clear.

Be careful with that Leviathan, Citizens!

This, as you may appreciate, is a long, slow process. Many activists don’t have the patience. So they revert to item 1, and spend a great deal of time arguing that their choices are better than other people’s while getting entangled in complex debates over freedom of expression. If they catch the ear of lawmakers, of course, they may even get their much desired law.

And if the law is bad enough, we, the people, all suffer — likely from both crimes and laws.

Park & Pride

By DeusExMacintosh

Australia’s Opposition leader, Tony Abbott, has been criticised for making a “tasteless” joke about the Costa Concordia disaster.

Mr Abbott, who has been a fierce critic of the Gillard Government’s efforts to stem the flow of boat people, jokingly described the liner as “one boat that did get stopped”.
The Government pounced on the comments, saying they were “childish” and calling on Mr Abbott to apologise.

“You have 11 people that are dead and at least 20 people missing and he is using this tragedy to make a tasteless joke,” said an MP, Rob Mitchell.

“It shows he is unfit to be leader.”

Mr Abbott has previously drawn criticism for several other ill-considered remarks, including a comment during a visit to troops in Afghanistan when he said “s— happens” in an attempt to explain the death of a soldier.

- The Telegraph

UPDATE 4.25pm: ANDREW Wilkie has scrapped his agreement with Julia Gillard to back the Government after she walked away from a signed agreement on poker reform.

His announcement late this afternoon comes after the Gillard Government earlier in the afternoon said it would trial pre-commitment amounts on pokie machines from next year and backed away from its gambling legislation deal with Mr Wilkie.

The Government will not fall as a result of his decision because the Prime Minister secured a two-vote buffer in the hung Parliament when Liberal Peter Slipper defected late last year to claim the job as Speaker.

The Tasmanian independent, who helped Labor form government in 2010 after extracting a deal to deliver on poker reform laws by May 2012, had told the Prime Minister he expected to scrap his agreement.

He announced his decision in Hobart after marathon talks with the Prime Minister.

- Herald Sun

The Midwich Cats

By skepticlawyer

On the bonnet of the damned…

Homosexual panic defence

By Legal Eagle

A good post by Lorenzo on the “homosexual panic defence” and what it means for the status of women and gay men. Please go and read it.

I would add that homosexual panic defence has become an issue again after a recent case in Queensland where one of the defendants attempted unsuccessfully to claim the homosexual panic defence (i.e. that the unwanted advance by a man of the same gender was provocation which provides a partial defence to murder). It was found that there was no homosexual approach on the facts, and that the defence shouldn’t apply. However, there is an argument that provocation as a defence should be abolished altogether, regardless of the gender of the parties involved, and it has been abolished in my home state of Victoria.

There is a gendered aspect to the provocation defence generally. Almost all of those who successfully claim that they killed during a temporary loss of control are men. When women kill men in a domestic situation, it tends to be premeditated and in response to prolonged domestic violence, and it has become notorious that it is very difficult to extend provocation to this situation because there is not the requisite sudden loss of control. For whatever reason, women tend not to kill after losing their temper.

I’ve never heard of a woman killing a man (or a woman for that matter) for an unwanted advance. I must admit, I did slap a guy once when he grabbed my bottom in a very aggressive and unpleasant way in a night club, and he backed right off (ran like a rabbit would describe his response nicely) but that’s the extent of any violent urge I have experienced myself. But I think women are generally much more used to putting up with unwanted advances, and develop techniques for dealing with it. This became evident when my husband tried out Second Life for about half an hour after Telstra had some kind of free offer. For some reason, he chose a female avatar. During the half an hour he tried out the game, he was repeatedly propositioned by men, and he was totally freaked out by the predatory nature of the approaches. [It didn't help that he couldn't work out how to put clothes on his avatar and she was walking about naked - am I a bad wife for laughing until the tears came?]

It came to me then that this was a situation which men don’t often have to face, and they don’t have a social framework of response. In addition, women simply don’t seem to be threatened by homosexuality in the same way as men are, as the statistics in Lorenzo’s post indicate. Thus, when one couples the fact that many men simply have no idea how to respond if there is an unwanted advance with the fact that some men are very threatened by homosexuality, it means such men may lash out with extreme violence, particularly where there is alcohol and drugs involved and the defendant has poor impulse control.

It is unacceptable in our modern day and age that someone could get away with murder (literally) by saying that they were the victim of a same-sex approach. To kill a person for making an unwanted advance is simply not a proportionate or appropriate response, and there should be no excuse for it. I would encourage the Queensland government to consider doing away with the provocation defence altogether, as it is a defence which operates in a manner such to disadvantage both women and homosexual men who are the victims of violent crime. (There is an online petition here, started by the priest in whose churchgrounds the Queensland case above occurred, for those who want to sign it).

‘…And we’ll burn your bloody house down!’

By skepticlawyer

This Sceptered Isle slides further into the shitter, alas: I can do no better than reproduce much of this excellent post from a British blog (it provides important context and background). The difference here is that I know the young man in question, and am young enough (just) to remember what school bullying felt like. Not bullying like this, though.

Rhys Morgan hit the headlines a few weeks ago due to his work in publicising Stanislaw Burzynski‘s fradulent alternative medicine practices. I hold him in some high regard as, at his age, I wasn’t too heavily involved in skepticism (although a friend of mine was, and was partially the reason why I later became active in the atheist movement).

Also in the news was a dispute between University College London and their atheist society, after an image from the webcomic Jesus and Mo was used to promote one of their facebook event. Obviously, this caused Muslims on campus to complain about the offensiveness of the image. It’s nothing new; Leeds Atheist Society was forced to cancel a showing and debate of the controversial film Fitna back in 2009 for the same reason.

The skeptic and atheist community is no stranger to threats to their freedom of speech: Simon Singh got sued by the British Chiropractic Association after he called their claims that chiropractic could help ill children “bogus”. In 2005, the Christian Party protested BBC screenings of Jerry Springer: The Opera, people from Jyllands-​​Posten to South Park Studios have been censored and attacked for daring to show images of Muhammad. This extends to actual legislation: critics of Scientology and other religions have been arrested for using “insulting” language as defined in the Public Order Act 1986, which is why Peter Tatchell (one of my favourite people) and the British Humanist Association would like that provision stripped.

This is where the two are linked: UCL’s student union asked the society to take it down, and refused on the grounds that it was an infringement of freedom of speech: of course, there is an Islamic prohibition on images of Muhammad, but it doesn’t and shouldn’t apply to non-​​Muslims. It’s like banning people from saying “God dammit”: taking the Lord’s name in vain, is of course, a massive sin. They publicised this dispute and got support from Richard Dawkins and all three major secular societies in the UK (the British Humanist Association, the National Secular Society, and the National Federation of Atheist, Humanist, and Secular Student Societies).

They also got solidarity from Morgan, who used the image as his profile picture for a week or so. He describes the intolerant behaviour he experienced on his blog, to the point that he was denounced as no better than Hitler and people threatened to burn his house down and assault him.

I was unaware of Rhys’s actions until I woke up this morning and found he had tweeted that he had been called into a meeting with his head of year at his sixth form college, about the Jesus and Mo cartoon. He reports being harassed at school and being ostracized for posting the cartoon. He was later called in again to be told that they were considering expelling him if he didn’t take the cartoon down.

What’s that gag about history always happening twice, the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce? Except that this isn’t funny, and Britain can bloody well do better.

The Streisand Effect

By Legal Eagle

In the light of the recent hoo-hah discussed by SL here involving Melinda Tankard-Reist suing blogger Jennifer Wilson for defamation I thought I might revisit the notion of the Streisand effect, because as Russell Blackford has commented, we may be seeing an instance of it unfolding before our eyes.

The term Streisand effect was coined after Barbra Streisand unsuccessfully attempted to sue photographers for US$50M in an attempt to have an aerial photograph of her mansion removed from a publicly available collection of 12,000 California coastline photographs, citing privacy concerns. As a result, public interest in the picture increased substantially and it became popular on the Internet, with more than 420,000 people visiting the site over the next month.  In other words, the Streisand effect covers those situations where the threat of legal action has brought publicity to the information sought to be suppressed.

Long-time readers of the blog will know that I have a strange fascination with defamation cases which result in the precise opposite outcome to that which the plaintiff sought to achieve. If the plaintiff had just left the defamatory statement alone, then fewer people would have known about it. In a lot of cases, I suspect that alleged defamers are so intimidated by an aggressive lawyerly letter that they withdraw whatever they have said, and the matter rests there. A particular problem with defamation cases is the risk of “SLAPP suits” (strategic lawsuits against public participation): i.e. cases which are brought to threaten and intimidate, and to prevent public discussion of an issue, rather than to vindicate any right of the plaintiff. However, I’m not going to enter into detailed discussion of SLAPP suits here: it’s the cases where the decision to bring or threaten defamation proceedings backfires spectacularly that interest me.

Here are some instances of the Streisand effect in action with regard to defamation suits and the like that I have discussed on the blog over the years:

  • “Officer Bubbles”: a Toronto police officer sued YouTube in an effort to get it to reveal the identity of anonymous online users who had abused him. The police officer was filmed during protests in Toronto telling a young female protestor that she would be arrested for assault if she continued blowing bubbles in his face. This led to him being nicknamed “Officer Bubbles”, and clips of the confrontation drew unpleasant and defamatory comments about him. In addition, an anonymous person created a series of derisory cartoons featuring Officer Bubbles as the chief character.
  • Liskula Cohen: The New York model Liskula Cohen sued Blogger to obtain the identity of the author of a blog called “Skanks in NYC” which was devoted to criticising Cohen and certainly contained some very unpleasant comments about her.
  • T & J Towing: A university student wrote a critical review of T & J Towing, inviting others to share their unhappy stories of the company’s conduct, which led to the formation of a Facebook group Kalamazoo Residents against T&J Towing. T & J Towing issued a ‘cease and desist’ order and sought removal of the Facebook group, and also claimed $750k in damages. The extraordinary claim in damages led to the story going viral, first in the US and then globally.
  • Glenn Beck: US shock jock Glenn Beck sued a person who set up a website satirising Beck’s shock jock techniques. The website pretended there was a rumour that Beck raped and murdered a young girl in 1990, saying, inter alia, “We don’t claim to know the truth — only that [the rumour] should be discussed. So we’re going to do our part to try and help get to the bottom of this. Why won’t Glenn Beck deny these allegations? We’re not accusing Glenn Beck of [the rumour] – in fact, we think he didn’t! But we can’t help but wonder, since he has failed to deny these horrible allegations. Why won’t he deny [the rumour]?” Beck sued to discover the identity of the website author and to demand that the website be taken down.
  • Keysar Trad: the founder of the Islamic Friendship Association of Australia Inc and former spokesperson for Sheik Al-Hilaly sued radio 2GB for defamation for saying, inter alia, that he was violent and had offensive views. The trial judge found that the imputations with regard to violent and offensive views were correct. This was overturned on appeal, but 2GB only had to pay half of Trad’s costs on account of  a legal technicality.
  • Bruce Grobbelaar: The former Liverpool goalkeeper sued The Sun for libel. On appeal to the House of Lords, he was awarded “contemptuous damages” of only the lowest coin in the realm. Lord Bingham said: “The tort of defamation protects those whose reputations have been unlawfully injured. It affords little or no protection to those who have, or deserve to have, no reputation deserving of legal protection. Until 9 November 1994 when the newspaper published its first articles about him, the appellant’s public reputation was unblemished. But he had in fact acted in a way in which no decent or honest footballer would act and in a way which could, if not exposed and stamped on, undermine the integrity of a game which earns the loyalty and support of millions. Even if the newspaper had published no more than what, on my interpretation of the jury’s verdict, it was entitled to have published, the appellant would have been shown to have acted in a way which any right-thinking person would unequivocally condemn. It would be an affront to justice if a court of law were to award substantial damages to a man shown to have acted in such flagrant breach of his legal and moral obligations.”

With all of these people, because of the global nature of the media these days and the pervasiveness of the internet, the net effect of bringing a defamation action was to bring much wider prominence to the defamatory allegations, meaning that a lot more people knew about them than would otherwise be the case. Indeed, in some instances, the case went global. I doubt I’d ever have heard of many of these people, or (in the case of Trad and Beck) thought about their views and motivations in any detail, but for the legal actions they took.

It can be hard with some cases. With a case like the Liskula Cohen case, where there were genuinely unpleasant and creepy comments, I can understand why she sued: she was trying to vindicate her reputation and sense of injury. She was trying to find out who was behind the defamatory comments (and succeeded). She was trying to punish the person who was behind the comments (and succeeded). Finally, she was trying to protect her reputation, but by suing, she gave a far greater prominence to the defamatory comments than would otherwise be the case. It’s a hard choice with this kind of a case. I can also understand why “Officer Bubbles” was upset, given that violent threats had been made against him. With some of the other plaintiffs, I really think they’d have been better off just leaving it. The net effect of both the Trad case and the Beck case, for example, was to have people dissect the views of those individuals and to be extremely critical of them. They actually drew more criticism and scrutiny. The net effect of the Grobbelaar case was for the House of Lords to effectively decide that he had no good reputation. Definitely better off leaving it.

In the event, I think that the Melinda Tankard-Reist case might fall into the category of case where the bringing of a legal action just brings more criticism and scrutiny of that person’s views. Certainly there has been a number of blog posts and tweets which are very critical. Ms Tankard-Reist may also find that her name is forever linked with the allegedly defamatory statements in other people’s minds, even if she does get a court order taking them down.  To explain what I mean by ‘linking’, whenever I think about poor Liskula Cohen, the words “NYC Skank” also come into my head (courtesy of the defamatory blog). Although I know the blog was defamatory, the notions of “NYC Skank” and “Liskula Cohen” are inextricably linked in my head. I wonder if the same may happen to me with Ms Tankard-Reist. Will the notions of Christian fundamentalism and duplicity pop into my head whenever I think of her, even if she does establish defamation and cause Ms Wilson to take down all her posts?

In addition, Ms Tankard-Reist’s legal action has led to a much larger audience being aware of the claims: for example, in The Age today, there was an article headed “Anti-porn activist threatens to sue blogger over religion claims” in which the general nature of Ms Wilson’s claims and the general nature of Ms Tankard-Reist’s objections were outlined.

Ultimately, a difficulty with tort is that you are always trying to repair an injury in an imperfect manner, and defamation is no exception to this rule. You can’t actually get something “unsaid”.  And you have to be really careful when you do threaten people with defamation. Seeking to prevent things from being said is a lottery for plaintiffs. A defendant may comply meekly and the defamatory statement may disappear without a trace; but then again, a defendant may not comply. If she does not comply, it may result in unexpected outcomes for a plaintiff, including national or global publicity of a claim. Sometimes, as in the Trad case or the Beck case, it may result in increased scrutiny of the plaintiff’s view. In extreme cases, it may lead to a judicial decision that the plaintiff does not have a good reputation (trial judge in Trad) or that the plaintiff has in fact been duplicitous as alleged (Grobbelaar).

I don’t presume to know what the ultimate outcome for Ms Tankard-Reist’s case will be – I certainly do not have enough information to make a call on that, and nor would it be appropriate for me to do so. However, as far as I can see, she is already suffering from two or possibly three negative aspects of the Streisand effect: national publicity of the claims against her, increased scrutiny rather than a cessation of scrutiny of her views, and a potential linking of her name with the defamatory allegations in the minds of the public.

A Girl Named Sue (with apologies to Johnny Cash)

By skepticlawyer

There’s nothing quite like getting up first thing in the morning to discover service documents sitting in your hallway (or, if you’re in Australia or the US, poking out of your mailbox). This is what has happened to Australian political and skeptical blogger Jennifer Wilson (her blog is ‘No Place for Sheep’) yesterday. I have had a couple of these in my time, although interestingly, none since becoming a lawyer. This is presumably on the basis that lawyers know their own kind, and know what they can get away with.

Anti-porn campaigner and self-described ‘pro-life feminist’ Melinda Tankard Reist is behind the claim, and although the basis of the suit has not been revealed, Russell Blackford suspects defamation. I agree with him, although invasion of privacy may be an outside possibility. I say ‘an outside possibility’, for the simple reason that Australia has no tort of invasion of privacy, and for obvious reasons is not a signatory to the European Convention on Human Rights [ECHR], where Article 8 provides a qualified protection for privacy and family life. Russell comments:

The Christian anti-porn campaigner Melinda Tankard Reist has apparently threatened a defamation action or something of the kind against the blog No Place for Sheep (NPS).

NPS is the blog of Jennifer Wilson, an Australian academic, psychotherapist, and writer. It suggests that Ms Tankard Reist’s threat relates to true claims that she is a Baptist who attends the church in Belconnen – what this really amounts to, I think, is that the blog suggests she is motivated in her anti-porn campaign by her adherence to a conservative Christian belief system.

There may be more to it than that. I don’t claim to have researched all the claims made by the blog about Ms Tankard Reist. Perhaps some genuinely defamatory imputation can be found there somewhere … or not.

In any event, she is a public figure and a forthright campaigner for her cause, one who makes plenty of robust statements of her own (I’m wording this carefully, as I’m not especially interested in being slapped with a letter of demand or a defamation suit myself).

Once more from the top, people

1. Defamation

Legal Eagle and I wrote a guide to Australian defamation law (available here) in April, 2009. The law has not changed since then. However, it is important to remember that Australia has enacted Uniform Defamation Laws (for example, the Defamation Act 2005 (Vic) in LE’s home State of Victoria), so what is true of one state or territory will be true of all the others. The salient points to remember in this instance are as follows:

A publication will be defamatory if it tends to injure reputation by:

  • disparaging a person;
  • causing others to shun or avoid a person; or
  • subjecting a person to hatred, ridicule and contempt.

If an individual is defamed, then he or she has a right to damages for the injury to reputation, as the purpose of the tort is to vindicate and protect reputation. Courts do not only look at the literal meaning of a defamatory publication, but also consider what the ordinary reader or viewer could have understood the publication to mean. This may be different from what was intended by the plaintiff or what was understood by the defendant.

The three main defences are:

  • fair comment
  • justification/truth
  • qualified privilege

‘Fair comment’ is available when the publication is a comment (rather than a statement of fact). The comment must be:

  • based on facts (which must be stated or sufficiently identified);
  • relate to a matter of public interest; and
  • an honest expression of the commentator’s view.

This is backed up by the statutory defence of ‘honest opinion’ (see eg, s 31Defamation Act 2005 (Vic)), which is in similar terms.

In Australia, there is also a defence of ‘justification’, which applies if the defendant can prove the allegations are ‘substantially true’ (see eg, s 20 of the Defamation Act 2005 (Vic)). This can be compared to UK defamation law, where the defamatory statement is presumed to be false, unless the defendant can prove its truth. ‘Qualified privilege’ applies when there is a legal, social or moral interest or a duty to communicate something to a person and that person has a corresponding interest or duty to receive the information. This is what protects job referees, for example.

2. Right to privacy/invasion of privacy

As Australia has no tort of invasion of privacy, all I can do is point to a piece of mine on English and European law on breach of the Article 8 ECHR right to privacy. The salient thing to remember when it comes to the European law is that we are dealing with breach of a human right, not a tort, so tortious reasoning is not very helpful. Instead, the two contending ECHR rights (typically Article 8 and Article 10, the right to freedom of expression) are balanced against each other. This means that no distinction is drawn between public figures and private individuals (a contrast with the US position). Instead, a distinction is drawn between different types of expression, with political speech protected more powerfully under Article 10 than, say, celebrity gossip. We do seem to be following the French in seeing sexual behaviour as ‘inherently private’.

The European law of privacy is thought-provoking (my piece summarizes not only the relevant law but also its historical origins) — in part because it is so foreign to people coming out of an Anglophone legal tradition. However, as it is not a part of Australian law, and if Australian law were to change it would most likely be in the form of a new tort, the High Court’s discussion of the issues in Lenah Game Meats v ABC [2001] HCA 63 is of greater moment.

The important thing to remember about Lenah Game Meats is that the Australian High Court is open to the development of a tort of invasion of privacy in circumstances where a person intrudes upon the personal affairs of another, where the matter made public is highly offensive to a reasonable person and there is insufficient public interest in having the information disclosed. This bears considerable similarity to the US law on point, and is distinguishable from the European law discussed earlier. As should be reasonably obvious, Australian law is still waiting for a suitable test case.

A little legal speculation or, why would someone prefer not to reveal their religious affiliation in debates about porn and abortion?

1. Melinda Tankard Reist – some background

According to her publisher, respected feminist imprint Spinifex Press, Melinda Tankard Reist is:

[A] Canberra author, speaker, commentator, blogger and advocate for women and girls. Melinda’s books include Giving Sorrow Words: Women’s Stories of Grief after Abortion (Duffy & Snellgrove, 2000), Defiant Birth: Women Who Resist Medical Eugenics (2006) and Getting Real: Challenging the Sexualisation of Girls (2009). Getting Real is already in its fourth printing. She has been a contributor to China for Women: Travel and CultureCat Tales, A Girl’s Best Friend, and HorseDreams.

Melinda has just initiated a new grassroots campaigning movement called Collective Shout. It aims to expose corporations, advertisers and marketers who objectify women and sexualise girls to sell products and services. In demand as a speaker, Melinda is named in Who’s Who of Australian Women and the World Who’s Who of Women.

She is regularly attacked and slandered but loves the women in the ‘To’ address bar in emails who have helped keep her sane in difficult times.

Her personal website provides a little more detail:

Melinda’s commentary has been published and broadcast in Australia and overseas.  She has been a panellist on ABC’s Q&A, and is a regular on Channel 7′s Morning Show, along with frequent appearances on a range of television and radio programs. Melinda contributes regularly to online opinion sites including ABC The Drum Unleashed. She’s also editor of Faking It: The Female Image in Young Women’s  Magazines (WFA 2007).

Further detail again is available on well-known Australian humanist Leslie Cannold’s site. Cannold’s information is taken from material Reist wrote for her publisher, in various collections of essays and stories. The most salient:

By 1994 she was describing herself as ‘a freelance writer with a special interest in women’s health issues, bioethics and population programs’ (‘Contributors’, Michael Cook [ed.] [1994] The New Imperialism: World Population and the Cairo Conference [Little Hills Press], p.8). She was also presenting radio broadcasts for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation e.g. ‘Bullets or Babies’ (China for Women op. cit., p.350).

At about this time, Tankard Reist made three important moves as far as her future career was concerned. Reference has already been made to Spinifex Press which published China for Women and which later issued one of Tankard Reist’s own books, Defiant Birth: Women Who Resist Medical Eugenics (2006). Spinifex Books is run by Susan Hawthorne and Renate Klein, the latter being one of the best-known and longest-established ‘pro-life feminists’ in Australia.

[...]

Senator Brian Harradine, an ultra-conservative Tasmanian senator, hired Tankard Reist as his bioethics adviser in about 1993-94. Harradine retired in 2005 at which time Tankard Reist had been in his employ for 12 years. She may well have directly influenced a number of Harradine’s more important political deals, including the imposition of a longstanding ban on importation of the RU 486 ‘abortion pill’.

Also around 1994, Tankard Reist became involved with the Southern Cross Bioethics Institute (SCBI), a Catholic-dominated organisation that produces a range of statistics and research papers, virtually all of them favourable to official Catholic positions. One of these is Tankard Reist’s own ‘RU 486 Trials – Controversy in Australia’ (September 1994) which quotes Senator Harradine, Renate Klein and the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference as authorities in this area. Selena Ewing, one of Tankard Reist’s co-directors at Women’s Forum Australia, is a Research Officer at SCBI.

In a careful (and recent) profile, writer Rachel Hills left out Reist’s religious affiliations, but did make some other telling observations (the whole piece is worth a read):

Tankard Reist links media reports of increased child-on-child sexual assault to “children acting out what they’re learning from pornography”, but the 2010 Australian Crime Commission study the stories were based on stresses that “sexualised behaviour in children is only rarely a result” of sexualised media. The American Psychological Association’s 2007 investigation into the sexualisation of girls is more concerned with narrow beauty standards than it is with sexual media content.

“There is often a suggestion in the anti-porn movement that men’s attitudes towards women’s sexuality were better in the ‘good old days’,” argues Alan McKee, a professor in film and television at QUT and co-author of The Porn Report. “But we know statistically that young men today have far better attitudes towards women than their fathers or their grandfathers did.”

Hills’ failure to draw attention to Reist’s religious affiliations drew criticism from Jennifer Wilson (she who has been sued), who observed:

I’m surprised that you didn’t mention Tankard Reist’s religious affiliations. She’s a fundamentalist Christian. As feminists we learn to always ask anyone who is publicly morally prescriptive where they are coming from. Yet you don’t ask that question.

Tankard Reist’s critique of sexuality is based on the moral values of fundamentalist Christianity. She is of the religious right and a member of a church that preaches the second coming of Christ, the end time, and evangelism.

If we can tell Tony Abbott to get his rosaries off our ovaries because of his Catholic beliefs, why aren’t we telling Tankard Reist the same thing? And why are journalists such as yourself concealing her religious affiliations?

Hills’ response was that she thought the religious origin of Reist’s views was obvious:

You’re right, I didn’t ask MTR about her religious beliefs, and perhaps that was misplaced of me. I suppose the reason I didn’t was because it seemed so obvious to me that it wasn’t worth asking – have you ever met anyone who identified as pro-life who wasn’t religiously motivated? But fair point: it was an omission, and I should have mentioned it at least in passing.

For the record, I did ask Melinda what she thought healthy female sexuality looked like, if she thought women had a role to play in regulating men’s sexuality, and to articulate how she defined “sexualisation” and why it was of concern to her. Some of those answers didn’t make the final story (I wrote it from 45-pages of transcripts and background material – there was a lot of info that didn’t make the cut), but I don’t think you could say that the story repeated her POV uncritically.

2. So why the coyness about religious affiliation? And is privacy an issue?

People — including, believe it or not, public figures — do not like to have ‘where they hang out’ made available for public consumption. If this is the basis of Reist’s claim, then I have some sympathy — having had something similar done to me — even though it will not sound in Australian law. Once media people know where you shop, or exercise, or whatever, then they are in a position to make your life pretty bloody miserable. In the process, they can also make other people’s lives pretty bloody miserable if the place in question is quasi-public (a gym or a church, say). Ever seen footage of someone trying to bolt while being pursued by a bunch of people with cameras? Ever noticed that sometimes they chase the wrong person, or any person? This is likely what Reist is trying to avoid, and has some salience in English law, for example, in Campbell v MGN Ltd [2004] UKHL 22. In that case, the House of Lords held that the press couldn’t, without more, reveal that model Naomi Campbell was attending Narcotics Anonymous (the story included, among other things, paparazzi pictures of her taken outside the clinic).

However, I do think it is important that Reist’s religious affiliations are noted (even if the exact location of the church she attends is not revealed). This is because, I submit, her religious coyness is borne of the weakness of religious arguments against both pornography and abortion. This part of my argument is largely for people like Rachel Hills, who naively revealed in her comment on Jennifer Wilson’s site that she’d never ‘met anyone who identified as pro-life who wasn’t religiously motivated’. It would appear that Hills has never heard of Christopher Hitchens, at least in some of his moods.

3. Why are religious arguments against porn and abortion so bad?

You’ve all heard them, admit it. Chastity and morally upright behaviour will make us all better people; we can do without sex; celibacy is a gift from God; true love is love of God, sexual attraction is a diversion. Then there are the arguments against abortion, which are even worse: abortion creates a ‘culture of death’; raise every child regardless of whether you can afford it or not, weigh an infant’s life equally with that of the mother, worry about the unborn but do nothing (or very little) to assist those children (and their mothers) when they are born, or, in the alternative, do worry about this and find oneself subsidizing an utterly unworkable welfare state that routinely produces disasters like this.

It’s important to understand that this lack of quality is not because Christians and Muslims are stupid. They made (and make) interesting and sophisticated arguments in other areas. But they don’t ‘get’ sex at all (a point detailed with great knowledge and wit by University of Virginia professor of psychology, Jonathan Haidt). Haidt comments:

I think, however, that at least two less benevolent motivations [for religious hostility to human sexuality] are at work. First, there may be a kind of hypocritical self-interest in which the older generation says, “Do as we say, not as we did.” Buddha and St. Augustine, for example, drank their fill of passionate love as young men and came out only much later as opponents of sexual attachments. Moral codes are designed to keep order within society; they urge us to rein in our desires and play our assigned roles. Romantic love is notorious for making young people give less than a damn about the rules and conventions of their society, about caste lines, or about feuds between Capulets and Montagues. So the sages’ constant attempts to redefine love as something spiritual and prosocial sound to me like the moralism of parents who, having enjoyed a variety of love affairs when they were young, now try to explain to their daughter why she should save herself for marriage.

There are a number of reasons for these very bad arguments, but I will outline the most obvious:

  • The anti-sex/sexual expression arguments outlined by early Christian theologians like St Augustine have been disproven by scientific evidence (see Haidt, above, for exhaustive detail).
  • The most able Christian theologian, St Thomas Aquinas, followed pagan thinking (particularly Aristotle) on abortion, not disapproving of it until ‘quickening’. If any Christian was going to come up with a decent anti-abortion argument, it would have been Aquinas, but he didn’t bother. He was a bit busy trying to convince his fellow Christians that the universe obeyed rational scientific laws.
  • Protestantism is theologically very weak, having largely shorn itself of Catholic excellence in this area (Aquinas, Augustine, Finnis, Feser, etc), forcing it to rely on the Bible, which is, shall we say, not a morally sophisticated document. The best argument against sola scriptura is the fact that large chunks of that scriptura are just, well, awful. Steven Pinker points out that you’d get a more sophisticated moral code from reading Homer… but that’s not saying much.
  • Arguments for moral laws are often extrapolated from facts in the natural world, but just because something is a certain way doesn’t mean we ought to do a particular thing, do anything or do nothing as a consequence. This is known as the ‘is-ought’ problem in philosophy.
  • (Attempted) chastity and (attempted) morally upright behaviour across large regions does not make for better people, or contribute to moral improvement. In fact, the opposite occurs.
  • As part of (1) above, women are expected to greater or lesser degrees to police male sexuality and, by analogy, many other male habits. There are many interesting roles to fulfill in the world; ‘God’s Police’ is not one of them.

When your arguments are bad, but you still endorse the position those bad arguments buttress, you have to look elsewhere for good arguments. Religious anti-abortionists have come increasingly to rely on scientific arguments (a point Hitchens makes with some skill in his piece above) and on the non-aggression principle, which is borrowed from libertarian philosophy. Both are intelligent propositions, and ought to be taken seriously. They do not have a religious origin at all, although religious people now use them.

When it comes to pornography, religious anti-porn campaigners have turned to feminism and its various offshoots in the social sciences to make their case, once again because of the weakness of (1) above. It is important to note that not all feminists are anti-porn, only a sub-group are. Relevantly, however, those anti-porn feminists have produced considerable research and argument on the issue, and have shown themselves able to influence public policy in various countries. Their arguments, like Hitchens’ argument from science and the non-aggression case against abortion may be wrong, but are worthy of respect. It is important to bear this in mind.

Of course, the available research on porn, the status of women and sexualisation points in fifty different directions, which pleases no-one. There is evidence that freely available pornography reduces rates of violent sexual assault, for instance, along with evidence that teenagers are watching porn and getting what my mother used to call ‘ideahs’. Reist is particularly hot (along with Clive Hamilton) on ‘corporate paedophilia’, attacking the sexualisation of children in advertising, an attitude often coupled with a more general hostility to commerce. There is a kinship between her ‘Collective Shout’ and the feminist inspired ‘Pink Stinks!‘ campaign over here, for example. The difference, of course, is that the latter is a consumer pressure group only; Collective Shout actively seeks (and sometimes obtains) complete bans.

The upshot?

I have no wish to advise feminists (or others) on whom they choose as allies, but I will make a few observations. First, I think it is very dangerous for any school of feminism to find itself siding with women who do want to be ‘God’s Police’. Feminism went down that road once before; it was called ‘Prohibition’. It didn’t end well. Second, I am very wary when the available scientific research is so equivocal; we may well be confusing the noise for the signal. Third, there is something to be said for ‘the merit of candour’ in debate. Admitting that one’s arguments are ordinary and that one is actively looking for better arguments is no bad thing. Doctors no longer accept the doctrine of the Four Humours, the civil law no longer endorses obtaining a confession via judicial torture — this despite the fact that the most able minds of the past thought both were legitimate examples of ‘best practice’. People just found better arguments.

Accepting that one has a religious affiliation and that it motivates one’s beliefs (even though it does not provide substantive arguments to buttress those beliefs) is surely better than commencing litigation against someone who has merely pointed out the awkward association.