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Who is responsible for learning?

By Legal Eagle

One of the hard things about teaching is that there is only so much you can do. You can try to lead students to information, but in the end, it’s up to them how much of that information they choose to take in, and final responsibility for performance in exams, tests or essays rests with the student. This is why good teaching is also hard to judge. If a student does badly in a test, it is not necessarily because the teacher was bad. Some responsibility must rest with the student too.

The reason I am discussing this is because The Age reported today that an 18-year-old woman and her mother were suing Geelong Grammar because it failed to assist her in her quest to study Law at the University of Sydney:

Rose Ashton-Weir, 18, alleges Geelong Grammar gave her inadequate academic support, particularly in maths.

Seeking compensation in the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal, she said her final secondary school score was too low to study law at the University of Sydney.

Of her time at Geelong Grammar, she said: ”I didn’t ever feel I was getting the support I needed to really excel.”

Ms Ashton-Weir boarded at the school in 2008 and 2009 but finished her secondary studies at a TAFE college in Sydney. She is in the first year of a double degree in arts and sciences at the University of Sydney.

Her mother, Elizabeth Weir, is also suing the school for lost income and other expenses.

She said she gave up her chocolate fortune cookie business – which she had expected to make $450,000 over three years – because her daughter moved from Geelong to live with her in New South Wales.

She is also seeking compensation for $39,000 in rent paid when they moved to another house in Sydney.

Earlier this week, Ms Weir said the school had known her daughter was gifted and had scored highly in an intelligence test, but struggled in maths.

Yesterday, Ms Ashton-Weir told the tribunal a teacher at Geelong Grammar had criticised her for using words that were too long, which had left her confused and had made her doubt her ability to write essays. She became ”quite distressed” when her English marks began to fall.

Darren Ferrari, representing Geelong Grammar, said Ms Ashton-Weir could have studied law at several other universities. ”You could have done law at Deakin University by correspondence,” he said.

There’s a mix of different issues in these cases, as I’ve said before in a post on a similar case some years ago. I do feel some sympathy towards the parent. If she has shelled out a bucket-load of money for her daughter to get a good education, it’s understandable that she would want to demand certain standards of the school.  On the other hand, if the child does not do her work or does not turn up to classes, that is her own choice. She has to take some responsibility for her own academic success. And let us be clear, just because you pay for an educational service does not mean that you are entitled to good marks. As I commented in that earlier post, there are a few things which concern me about this kind of case:

  • It suggests that it is the school’s fault alone if the child has not done well. To recycle a well-known proverb, “You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make it drink”. The child also has to put in effort of his own.
  • Teachers are caught between wanting to give an accurate view of a child’s potential, and the potential for crushing a child’s ego. As a friend was explaining, school reports in this State increasingly tend towards brevity and giving scant information about a child’s progress.
  • Some parents have unrealistic expectations about the extent to which their child can improve academically. It may be that the best outcome which could have been reached is for a D student to become a C student.
  • If a class does badly, it does not mean that the teacher is bad. It may mean that the class is a particularly difficult one, or there are a high proportion of students with learning difficulties, or students who are socially disadvantaged. This is the problem I have with “grading teachers”. If you judge the quality of teachers on the achievements of students, it will depend in part on the aptitude of the students, and so it is not a fair judgment.
  • Should teachers have given [one] student attention over and above the attention which they gave other students who were not struggling? If so, doesn’t this mean that the more accomplished members of the class are being neglected and in a sense, being “punished” for being smart?

The first thing I thought with regard to this particular young woman is that she needs to be told The Horse Story. The moral of The Horse Story is this: sometimes it looks like it’s a disaster when you don’t get what you want, but in the end it can be the best possible thing for you, and you end up doing something that is better for you than what you wanted. Just keep on persisting (and ‘wait and see’ before you decide it’s all a disaster). I am an exemplar of this. While I did get into an Arts/Law degree at the university of my choice, I did not get Articles with a law firm first time around and ended up working with the Victorian Court of Appeal as a researcher instead. If that had not happened, I would not have met my husband, I would not have met a variety of excellent friends and I would not have worked for a Judge for a number of years. As it happens, I did get Articles in the end (and in fact shared an office with Darren, the barrister mentioned above — he’s still a friend of mine — he blogs here).

I know a number of people who didn’t get into Law first time around, but they studied other courses in an effort to attain marks which would enable them to transfer. And they managed to do so successfully. Why is this woman spending her time bringing a legal action, and not spending her time studying hard in her Arts/Science degree so that she can transfer into Law if that is her ultimate goal in life? (It’s almost exam time right now at my university, and surely at hers too. She should be concentrating on swotting rather than appearing in VCAT). If you want something, you should damn well work for it (yes, my Protestant work ethic is showing, even though I’m not religious). Show some resilience, girl. You aren’t going to get very far if you just complain the instant you don’t get what you want rather than working for it.

Which brings me to my second point: it seems to me that this young woman has a massive sense of entitlement. From the way in which the newspaper article tells it, it almost seems to me that she was asserting that she should have gotten into Law just because she’s clever and she’s got a high IQ. If so, I’ve got news for you, honey. A lot of people are clever, but that doesn’t give them an entitlement to do Law. You’ve got to work for it, and even then, you might not succeed. In this young woman’s defence, it can be hard to adjust to this hard truth if you’re very clever, you’ve never had to work hard before and you’ve never failed to achieve what you set out to achieve before. Maybe she’s also the kind of person who has always been told that she’s brilliant and that she’s entitled to special treatment? While I wasn’t in that category, I confess that at my Australian high school, I never had to study to do well, and it was only when I got to my English high school that I learned how to work, and developed organised study habits. It was a bit of a shock to the system to learn how to work, but it was good for me. I’ve described the process I went through in this post, and I concluded that post with comments I still endorse:

The truth of the matter is, that to achieve results, one has to work hard and do “boring” stuff. It seems to be unpopular these days to emphasise this. Everything has to be “interesting” and palatable for easily-bored students. But once you get out into the real world, there’s lots of boring stuff. Just because you’re a lawyer doesn’t mean that you can escape this: in fact, it may mean you resign yourself to a life of boring stuff (discovery, due diligence etc). And one is constantly judged in the real world – who gets pay rises, who doesn’t etc. The best way of preparing children for the real world is to let them know that life isn’t always interesting, and native intelligence or talent alone does not get you anywhere without practice and hard work.

There’s an irony, too, that this young woman is suing for loss of a chance to obtain a law degree. I wonder if this case will leave her more or less starry eyed about the legal system? I am glad that I studied Law, as it happens. I genuinely enjoy it, and being a lawyer is very empowering…but if she does eventually get into law, and into the legal profession, I wonder if she will be disappointed?

Free Derry, Jail Gerry

By DeusExMacintosh

Republican Action Against Drugs

A Londonderry man has claimed that republican vigilantes told him to go to anger management classes or get shot.

The Republican Actions Against Drugs (RAAD) has been behind paramilitary-style shootings against those guilty of so-called “anti-social behaviour”.

But Hugh Brady, a community volunteer, said he was surprised by the claim. He had never heard about anyone being ordered to go on an anger management course by RAAD, he said.

Mr Brady is a volunteer adviser at the Rosemount Resource Centre which acts as an intermediary between RAAD and those threatened by the group.

He said: “I think this young man is being quite cynical,”

The man, who did not give his name, said he had been threatened by RAAD.

“They said they would shoot me because I got the blame for stealing a car,” the man said. “I had to do a course like an anger management couse.”

“It was down behind Rosemount Centre.”

The man said that RAAD ruled his area of Derry and people were afraid to speak out.

“They are gangsters and bullies,” he claimed.

Derry journalist Eamon McDermott said it was the first time he had heard of RAAD anger management classes.

“They were concerning themselves with drugs but in recent times they have been dealing with what they would class as anti-social activity.”

- BBC News

Power Dressing

By DeusExMacintosh

Hoodies in the news

SAN FRANCISCO _ Dressed in his trademark hoodie and jeans, Facebook Inc. co-founder Mark Zuckerberg kicked off a cross-country road show to pitch his company’s initial public stock offering.

Hundreds of institutional investors stood in long lines Monday to pile into a ballroom at New York’s Sheraton Hotel to hear the billion-dollar pitch from the 27-year-old chief executive before his company’s hotly anticipated IPO. The meeting was closed to the media.

Facebook is trying to build excitement for the IPO that in a few weeks could value the company at more than $96 billion. That would make it the largest offering to come out of Silicon Valley. The Menlo Park, Calif., company said last week that it would offer 337.4 million shares at $28 to $35 each.

Investors expect that price range to jump as the road show makes its way across the nation, including stops in Boston and Chicago. Facebook plans to raise as much as $11.8 billion in its IPO. It’s expected to price the offering May 17 and begin trading the next day. The shares will be listed on the Nasdaq Stock Market under the symbol FB.

- Washington Post

Tit for tat, or the Vicar of Bray

By skepticlawyer

We are going to have to get better at managing difference, people.

I learn via Catallaxy that one of the anti-gay signatories to the ‘Doctors for the Family’ senate submission has resigned from his position on Victoria’s Equal Opportunity and Human Rights Commission. I carry no brief for ‘Doctors for the Family’; fellow Skeptic Chrys Stevenson does a splendid job documenting their dishonest use of social science research. However, it seems that there is some quite serious complexity here, in that Dr Kuruvilla George’s views are being excluded as being ‘not part of the properly moral’. Jonathan Haidt would no doubt have something thoughtful to say on that point.

Now, for what it’s worth, it seems one can argue any one of the following (these positions are conflicting, and I am truly at a loss, the whole situation is such a mess):

1. Entrenched Bills of Rights (of even the softest, fluffiest sort) don’t work very well and should be scrapped, leaving aside arguments as to whether people actually have inherent rights. I don’t think they do, for the best Humean reasons, but I suspect I am in a minority. People tend not to realise how bad arguments for inherent rights are until they encounter them in the form of Catholic natural law doctrine. Because most people do not accept either the reasoning or conclusions reached by Catholic natural lawyers, only then do they apply their minds to the identical reasoning used to justify Bills of Rights and international human rights instruments. This is something worth bearing in mind.

2. That said, if one is going to have entrenched Bills of Rights administered by bodies funded by the taxpayer, they should be facially neutral: the State, which we all pay for, cannot be partial. That is something about which people on all sides of politics agree. Libertarians and classical liberals will often be kinder when a private body is partial in some way (we draw the line between public and private in different places), but every modern western political tradition, and certainly every modern Australian political party, accepts the case for the facial neutrality of government. That is why we have things like Civil Rights Acts, which always applied to government first. Only later were they extended to the private sector and the private sphere.

In this case, that means two things. First, Dr George is not allowed to treat gays partially while he is a public servant. Second, religious people’s complaints about discrimination have to be taken just as seriously as other people’s complaints about discrimination. Dr George is thus in the awkward position of both discriminating against and being discriminated against. It is the kind of scenario one imagines a 19th century equity draftsman inventing entirely for his own amusement.

3. If you play the game of moral exclusion, don’t be surprised if the culture shifts and suddenly the same moral exclusion is applied to you, as Lorenzo points out in his excellent piece. It’s a weaker version of the argument in favour of secular government: historically, religious people of different persuasions spent a great deal of time trying to lay their hands on the levers of power and then using that power against their opponents, only to lose power and have the coercive powers of the state applied to them (often fatally). That is why the weathervane Vicar of Bray is so funny and still carries real satirical bite:

In good King Charles’s golden days,
When loyalty had no harm in’t,
A zealous High Churchman I was,
And so I gained preferment.
To teach my flock I never missed:
Kings were by God appointed;
And they are damned who dare resist
Or touch the Lord’s anointed.

And this is law I will maintain
Until my dying day, sir,
That whatsoever King shall reign,
I’ll be Vicar of Bray, sir.

When Royal James obtained the Throne,
And Popery grew in fashion,
The Penal Law I hooted down,
And read the Declaration;
The Church of Rome I found would fit
Full well my constitution;
And I had been a Jesuit
But for the Revolution.

And this is law I will maintain
Until my dying day, sir,
That whatsoever King shall reign,
I’ll be Vicar of Bray, sir.

When William, our deliverer, came
To heal the nation’s grievance,
Then I turned cat-in-pan again,
And swore to him allegiance
Old principles I did revoke,
Set conscience at a distance,
Passive obedience was a joke,
A jest was non-resistance.

And this is law I will maintain
Until my dying day, sir,
That whatsoever King shall reign,
I’ll be Vicar of Bray, sir.

When glorious Anne became our Queen,
The Church of England’s glory,
Another face of things was seen,
And I became a Tory.
Occasional Conformist Face!
I damned such moderation;
And thought the Church in danger was
By such prevarication.

And this is law I will maintain
Until my dying day, sir,
That whatsoever King shall reign,
I’ll be Vicar of Bray, sir.

When George in pudding-time came o’er
And moderate men looked big, sir,
My principles I changed once more,
And so became a Whig, sir;
And thus preferment I procured
From our Faith’s great Defender;
And almost every day abjured
The Pope and the Pretender.

And this is law I will maintain
Until my dying day, sir,
That whatsoever King shall reign,
I’ll be Vicar of Bray, sir.

The illustrious House of Hanover,
And Protestant Succession,
By these I lustily will swear
While they can keep possession
For in my faith and loyalty
I never once will falter,
But George my King shall ever be,
Except the times do alter.

And this is law I will maintain
Until my dying day, sir,
That whatsoever King shall reign,
I’ll be Vicar of Bray, sir.

We don’t do that any more, the killing part (I don’t think anyone seriously argues that PC kills), but the same attraction is still there — put one’s hands on the levers of power and then engage in moral exclusion. And people have to learn to give it up. Now I don’t know how to do that, but until we do learn to give it up, this kind of go round will become endless: people sacked for being gay, people sacked for being Christian, people sacked for being Muslim… and then running off to a Human Rights Commission that will only take some of their claims seriously (the moral exclusion problem again), depending on who has their hands on the levers of power at the time. Sheer tit-for-tat. Is this right? No. Is it fair? Arguable, depending on where you stand when it comes to the idea of righting past injustices (gays were the huge losers historically, but the Christians who dislike them now are not the same Christians who killed them in the past). I’m skeptical of the ‘let’s put it right’ argument (because it leads to tokenistic crap like Rudd’s Apology, for example), but there are genuine arguments in the opposite direction, too.

I must admit I’m waiting for a Muslim employer to sack a gay employee (or vice versa). Yes I will break out the popcorn while everyone plays the Oppression Olympics, but underneath the amusement will be a sad recognition that we are incapable of leaving dangerous things alone (in this case, the coercive powers of the State), much like a child poking cutlery into a power socket to see what it does.

[My apologies for the unformed nature of this post; I have an exam on Thursday, then two more next week, so I have not worked the ideas through. I only know that I find the whole business troubling on many levels].

If it’s not Baroque, don’t fix it

By Lorenzo

Today, went to St John’s co-cathedral in Valletta. Downloading and then uploading images from my iPad defeats me. But images are available here.  It is an unrestrained example of a Baroque Catholic cathedral. When I say “unrestrained”, I mean they did not know when to stop. I would say it was positively Hindu or Chinese in its inability to know when to stop, except that would give mere ornamental bling excess a bad name.  It does not so much assault the boundaries of good taste as unthinkingly obliterate them.

But the cathedral  has two Caravaggios on display--St Jerome Writng and The Execution of St John. In a side chapel. A juxtaposition that allows one to contemplate the conjunction of the sublime and the ridiculous.

Still, the cathedral itself is proof that old does not equal tasteful. Or, as I have been known to observe to fellow re-enactors, bad taste is period too.

The quintessential brains trust

By skepticlawyer

… Marie Curie: the only person ever to win two Nobel prizes in two sciences.

I am currently in examination hell, hence my diminished substantive contributions to the blog. I will be out of gaol on May 24 (last exam) and will then take a week or so off, but I’m afraid not much more than that, as there really is work to be done. I do have quite a few good posts brewing, however :)

Also, Lorenzo won’t be around as much as usual as he is currently airborne (on his way to Venice for a conference, the lucky so-and-so). I have asked him to write the odd travel diary and post pictures while he’s in Italy (he’s visiting places other than Venice), but I’m not sure how regular that will be or how soon.

In the meantime, here is a chit-chat thread for you to muck around in to your heart’s content. If you’ve got any interesting links, witticisms or other contributions (even suggestions!), do leave them here.

UPDATE: I also suspect Legal Eagle may be sans computer on account of the latest Windows update. So it goes.

Humanising law

By Lorenzo

One of the standard complaints against giving queers (by ‘queer’ I mean any person who does not conform to being definitively male-or-female and heterosexual: i.e. same-sex oriented, same-sex attracted, intersex, transgender people) equal protection of the law is that it is an offense against the Christian, or Judaeo-Christian (if Christians want to include Jews rather than practising more traditional exclusion thereof), traditions of the Western civilisation. To put it another way, it involves de-Christianisation of law.

Controlling women
This is true. But so did giving women equal protection of the law and giving Jews equal protection of the law. Giving women the right to exit a marriage, and to control their fertility, was equally an “offense” against the Christian traditions of Western civilisation. Indeed, if one examines the Christianisation of Roman law, and of proto-common law, one sees the same pattern. As Christianisation advances, women lose the right to control their fertility, they lose the right to exit a marriage. Being so completely untrusted as decision makers in such key areas of their life, the natural corollary was that they lost control over property as well; hence the development of coverture marriage and married woman as chattel of her husband. A free women in C8th England had far more legal standing, property rights and social opportunities than a free woman in C18th England and the reason for the difference was a thousand years of Christianisation of law.

As institutions and technology developed, and the ambit of religion as a source of meaning and explanation (and so authority) shrank, the legal status of women rose in a steady unravelling of the aforementioned Christianisation of law. They regained property rights, they regained the right to exit a marriage, they regained control over their fertility. (Such rights and control having been features of Celtic, Germanic and late Republic/early Empire Roman law.) Women became legally and socially recognised as full decision-makers, with dramatic expansion of their social opportunities.

That Islam, particularly in the Middle East, has not experienced the same shifts—institutional and technological changes being either outside impositions or grudging adjustments to outside pressure—and the ambit of religion as a source of meaning and explanation has (after a temporary period of retreat) resurged, explains the precarious status of women in such countries.

Oppressing Jews
The case of the Jews is, if anything, even clearer. Christianisation of Roman Law involved a steady process of stripping Jews of legal protections and imposing ever more legal constraints. (Pagans were even more severely treated.)

The Germanic conquests of the lands of the former Western Roman Empire was generally a benefit to the Jews, since persecution of belief was not a feature of Germanic law. Indeed, the Carolingian dynasty valued Jews as revenue-producing, law-abiding believers in God. The relentless hostility of the Catholic Church, however, led to the steady stripping of legal protections from Jews and the imposing of harsher and harsher legal constraints. (To their credit, both Karl-lo-magne and his son Louis the Pious resisted the Church’s demands that Jews be stripped of rights, but the collapse of Carolingian power removed that block.)

It was only with a process of de-Christianisation of law that Jews were able to enjoy full legal protections. By the middle of the C19th, places where a monopoly Catholic or Orthodox Christian Church had the most power (the Papal states, Tsarist Russia, Romania) were where oppression of Jews were most intense. During the C19th and early C20th, the Catholic Church put considerable resources into promoting Jew-hatred.

It has been a standard Catholic refrain over the last few centuries that liberal modernity is evil because it gives people rights. Liberal modernity is evil because it gives Jews equal standing in law; liberal modernity is evil because it gives women control over their fertility and the right to exit a marriage; liberal modernity is evil because it gives queers equal rights. The Catholic Church has been a strong proponent of the “insult of equality”— that it is an insult to decent, God-fearing Christians that Jews have the same rights as them, that women have control over their lives, that queers have equal rights. All this is even more intensely true in Islam.

Which leads to two questions: why is monotheism so hostile to equal protection of the law? Why has liberal modernity successively embraced equal protection of the law?

The answer to the first question is simple and has two parts. First, that it is based on a God-centred view (or, more accurately, particular theories-of-God-centred view). Second, that the easiest path to clerical or priestly power and authority is to offer and withhold God. Picking on some vulnerable group and selling effortless virtue (if you are Christian, male or heterosexual there is no effort involved in not being Jewish, female or queer) against them is a particularly easy way to do that. (So, the miracle is not that priests and clerics are enemies of queers, it is that some have chosen not to be.)

The answer to the second involves explaining why an increasingly human-centred view has become dominant. Why, in particular, there has been a humanisation of law; an adoption of an increasingly human-centred approach to law.

If you start with God, you don’t start with people
If authority comes from God, so the dynamics of belief in One God is at the heart of one’s conception of social order (including law), then how people actually are is not at the centre of conceptions of social order. On the contrary, how people should be to conform to the dynamics of belief in One God becomes the key question.

This puts in place the two key elements of moral (and so legal) exclusion: a theory that allows one to define who is, or is not, a “proper” person and a claim to authority that creates the massive sense of entitlement needed to both do so and act upon it. For one thing belief in the One God is very good at (and prone to) doing, is to create a massive sense of entitlement—something that the jihadis have been plaguing the world with for some time, to take a particularly murderous example.

Defining Jews and queers as not “proper” persons is straightforward enough. Jews were the Chosen People, the original followers of the One God who produced the prophetic tradition that both Christianity and Islam later appropriated. In failing to follow the Messiah they produced (Christ) or the Prophet who “completed” their tradition (Muhammad) they “betrayed” their God-given role; an act of betrayal, indeed treachery against God’s wishes, they continue every day they fail to embrace Christ (or the Prophet). Jews are betrayers of their “proper” role and so have demoted themselves outside the realm of moral decency. In the case of Islam, the notion that Jews have demoted themselves to being animals is in the Qur’an and the hadiths.

The irony is that this is a notion both Christians and Muslims got from Jewish scriptures. Deuteronomy 13 is, in fact, a much more vicious form of the above. It brings together defining people as not morally “proper” persons and a massive sense of entitlement—the right to completely strip people of any moral or legal protection because they have different beliefs to you; all done in the name of God, the ultimate authority.

Conversely, the Jews found being ruled by Zoroastrian Iranians a positive experience since the Zoroastrians had no angst about the Jews having their own prophetic tradition and no problems with Jewish veneration of One God.

The monotheist anathematisation of queers (which also occurs in Zoroastrianism) flows from natural dynamics of belief in One God. Unlike animism and paganism, in monotheism sexuality is not part of the divine. On the contrary, sexuality distracts and diverts us from the contemplation of the divine it has no role in—hence the very strong nudity taboos of monotheism. The only part of sexuality that connects us to the divine, to the Creator, is procreation; the creation of new life. Hence procreation is at the centre of monotheist conception of sexuality, leading to the anathematisation of those who engage in non-procreative sex. (This is complicated in Islam by its strongly male-entitled sense of ritual purity.)

The subordination of women is connected to the above. For a woman to frustrate procreation is to act against God. Moreover, God being conceived as thoroughly masculine, and only men being permitted to wield authority on His behalf, the association of women with sex makes give them an inherently problematic status. Especially as they have no role in religious debates or decisions. Indeed, justifying their exclusion from such itself involves deprecating their status as decision-makers.

All of which makes enforcement of strict gender roles vital. So, cross-dressing and being transgender are offenses against God’s purposes. While intersex people are just a frustrating anomaly who need to be driven to chose a particular gender role, because that is part of being “properly” human.

In other words, the God-centred view involves quite systematic assaults on people as they actually are.

Practising moral exclusion
It is important to understand just how devastating it is to be defined as not a “proper” person. If you are out of the realm of the “proper” your views, experience and perspective have no positive value, they do not count, they have no standing. The anathematisation of homosexuality, for example, has caused a great deal of completely unnecessary human misery. But this human misery has no standing, it does not count; it is morally invisible. The only issue is the “defiance” of moral righteousness. The excluded are trapped in a cage from which no escape is permitted except by agreeing with their captors. For the cage is never the issue, merely the “defiance”.

To be defined as an inherently inferior decision-maker is both worse and better. Better in that you are still part of the moral community, still covered by moral protections. It is worse in that one so easily becomes a co-conspirator in the web of condescension that constrains your life. Even to the extent of accepting it as the natural order and resenting people who raise uncomfortable issues by seeking to overturn it.

Either way, the practice of such moral exclusion teaches us to disregard the experience, perspectives and aspirations of others. Which is the other problem with such moral exclusion; it is contagious.

We can see this in the Mosaic two-step. The Jews decide that queers and apostates should be killed, as traitors to God. The Christians agree, and then say Jews should be repressed, as betrayers of God in the person of His Son. The Muslims agree, and then say Christians should be repressed, as betrayers of God, in the person of His Prophet—the Muslim notion of dhimmi just being an regularisation and extension of Christian treatment of Jews in the Christianised Roman Empire. The Mosaic two-step is a game that the Jews started, but have spent centuries losing.

For the trouble with the game of moral exclusion, is that anyone can play. We can see this happening in front of us as conservative Christians find themselves on the losing side of political correctness. But they are so morally blind that they cannot see that the moral and legal exclusions they are now running up against are just milder versions of the same moral and legal exclusions they so enthusiastically advocate, and seek to practice, against queers. But that is the other side of moral exclusion; if some group are created as a separate moral “species” so their views, experience and perspective have no positive value, they do not count, they have no standing then their experience has no warning value. They are so separated that one becomes completely blind to the reality that this is a game that can be played against you and yours. But if one engages in the practice of moral exclusion—and so teach folk to disregard the experience, perspectives and aspirations of others—then it does become a game anyone can play, for you have made sure the socio-psychological tools are already in use.

Purifying society
The most striking manifestation of putting the tools for exclusion into play is that the natural law reading of Genesis 19—that Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed for practising boy-boy sex—justified the notion that slaughter can purify human society. More specifically, given the reality of human sexual diversity, that the extermination of a minority can purify human society. That this notion, which has become such a horrible feature of modern history, has impeccably Judaeo-Christian roots is something people are blind to, since queers are constructed as not “proper” people, as separate moral species, and so what happens to them has no implications for “real” people.

But, of course it does. The notion that killing some group purifies society is just the most intense version of moral exclusion. If one teaches the theology of Genesis 19 as being God’s wrath on people being “unnatural” then, giving the reality of human sexual diversity, one is re-iterating, again and again, the notion that society is purified by slaughter.

This reading of Genesis 19 is not one that fits with the rest of the Old Testament or Gospel references to Sodom and Gomorrah. Idolatry, oppression of the weak, vicious treatment of outsiders; these are the things which the cities of the plain are condemned for. Which fits in with both the wider concerns of the Torah and the Gospels and the actual story of Genesis 19; a threatened gang rape (against the messengers of God) and attempted gang rape (against Lot’s daughters). It takes a certain sort of mind to gloss over the issue of rape and focus on the form of sex; particularly the form of sex in the gang rape that is merely threatened, not the one actually attempted. A particularly intense manifestation of how a theory-of-God-centred view becomes a people-disregarding one.

But who was the most important figure in making the story of Sodom and Gomorrah being about the form of sex? Philo of Alexandria, who applied natural law reasoning to the story. The thing about natural law reasoning being you can be as restrictive as you need to be about the evidence, since contrary evidence is merely declared perverse, and so does not count. A technique of metaphysical exclusion that makes practising moral exclusion so much easier.

Saul of Tarsus, aka St Paul, is fairly clearly invoking elements of Philo’s writings in his use of para physin (against nature), particularly in Romans. (St Paul is the go-to guy for Christians who wish to practice moral exclusion, since the rest of the New Testament is unhelpful.) St John Chrysostom, the patron saint of preachers, took up Philo’s arguments, including his metaphors, agreeing emphatically that queers should be killed. Of course, he then applied this “betraying God’s purposes” reasoning against, of course, the Jews. The techniques of moral exclusion really are contagious.

But Philo’s notion that killing a minority purifies society (one he most emphatically meant to be applied to fellow Alexandrians, for example) was one that constantly came back to haunt Philo’s own people. The Catholic Church never advocated murder of Jews. They merely accused them of Deicide and taught the natural law theology of Genesis 19, that slaughter of a minority can purify society. Strangely enough, again and again, folk found it a short step from that to killing Jews.

All of which makes Jews the stupidest queer-haters, since not only are they so often the next on the list; they are typically on the same lists. It would be a nice symmetry if that also made queers the stupidest Jew-haters, but that is not quite true. There has been a long history of Jew-hating among educated queers, since they were well aware that it was the adoption of a Jewish religious taboo that so blighted their lives. (Still, queer Israel-haters are being pretty stupid; Israel is by far the most queer-friendly polity in the Middle East.)

About liberal modernity
Against this long and sad history, it is conspicuous that liberal modernity has been a process whereby the previously excluded find their views, perspectives and aspirations do come to count and that those previously deprecated as decision makers find the web of condescension being pierced and broken. How so?

The short answer is: science, Enlightenment and technology.

With the great European surge across and around the globe, Europeans became far more aware of both the diversity of cultures and creatures but also of the metaphysical consistency of the globe. (No Purgatory in the Southern Hemisphere.) Interacting with this was much greater capacity to measure and observe phenomena, both macro and micro.

The shock to medieval modes of thought was profound. Montaigne’s scepticism was the intellectual highpoint of C16th philosophy—otherwise a “dead zone” as the enormity of the challenge overwhelmed the resources of medieval philosophy. In the C17th, Sir Francis Bacon’s empiricism and Descartes’s rationalism kicked off the new philosophical obsession with epistemology. (The inadequacy of Scholastic Aristotelianism in the face of the shock of the new was nicely expressed by the Paduan philosophy professor who explained why Galileo had to be wrong about Jupiter having moons.)

Meanwhile, the Reformation both shattered the religious uniformity of what had been Latin Christendom and established very different concepts of authority.

This led to the C18th Enlightenment and the development of thoroughly secular modes of ethical thought and analysis. Once Christian conceptions had serious competition, any shift in the levers of social influence was likely to be a boon to previously excluded groups.

The surging capitalist economy and its concomitant technological advances, again and again, provided those levers. The Jews were first; if you treated them seriously as bankers, it was increasingly hard to justify not treating them as full citizens: especially as they were God-fearing family men.

Next were women. If they were participating in economic and intellectual life then how could they not possess property rights? And, if they had property rights, how could they not be voters? And, if they were voters, why could they not decide about their own marriages? And, if they could do all that, how could they not control their own fertility? As intellectual and social competition to Christianity increased, the ability of Christian precepts to block the logic of commerce and wider social participation steadily weakened and were eventually overwhelmed.

These were not the only civil rights movements, but they were the ones that directly confronted and defeated Christian precepts of moral and legal exclusion.

The queers have been the last group to move toward gaining equal protection of the laws. But they are inherently isolated—Jews grow up in Jewish families while women have female relatives (starting with a mother) but queers grow up in overwhelmingly straight families and social milieus. So they have been the most reliant on the development of cheaper and broader transport and communication. Cheaper transport encouraged mobility and urbanisation which allowed the creation of sufficiently dense social networks; a process taken further by cheaper communication.

Still, once they could organise and become visible, the logic of social participation and common humanity has increasingly overwhelmed Christian exclusion.

All this is much less true in Islam, not least because Islam is largely a science-free zone in which modernity is overwhelmingly a foreign intrusion. Islam retains a ruthlessness in dealing with challenges that Christianity has lost. It also asserts legal authority far beyond anything Christianity ever claimed and, unlike the case of Judaism, has not been constrained (and even humanised) by the pressures of permanent minority status. (The Ismailis are exception; but they have also been constrained by the pressures of permanent minority status.)

Humanising law
And every time you change (in practice expand) the concept of what is a full and legitimate manifestation of the human, you change the law. Either through statute or through what comes to seem reasonable and equitable. (Hence the evolution from Bowers v. Hardwick in 1986 to Lawrence v. Texas in 2003.) And the process of expanding equal protection of the law has been a process of making the law increasingly human-centred, increasingly based on how people actually are, and decreasingly centred on theories of God, thereby making law less a vehicle for prosecuting a particular set of wars against how people actually are—wars which blight lives and deform societies. The humanising of law is a thoroughly good thing.

Beanz Meanz Deathz

By DeusExMacintosh

Dinosaurs farted themselves to death

Giant dinosaurs could have warmed the planet with their flatulence, say researchers.

British scientists have calculated the methane output of sauropods, including the species known as Brontosaurus. By scaling up the digestive wind of cows, they estimate that the population of dinosaurs – as a whole – produced 520 million tonnes of gas annually.

They suggest the gas could have been a key factor in the warm climate 150 million years ago.

David Wilkinson from Liverpool John Moore’s University, and colleagues from the University of London and the University of Glasgow published their results in the journal Current Biology.

Sauropods, such as Apatosaurus louise (formerly known as Brontosaurus), were super-sized land animals that grazed on vegetation during the Mesozoic Era.

For Dr Wilkinson, it was not the giants that were of interest but the microscopic organisms living inside them.

“The ecology of microbes and their role in the working of our planet are one of my key interests in science,” he told BBC Nature.

“Although it’s the dinosaur element that captures the popular imagination with this work, actually it is the microbes living in the dinosaurs guts that are making the methane.”

Methane is known as a “greenhouse gas” that absorbs infrared radiation from the sun, trapping it in the Earth’s atmosphere and leading to increased temperatures.

Previous studies have suggested that the Earth was up to 10C (18F) warmer in the Mesozoic Era.

With the knowledge that livestock emissions currently contribute a significant part to global methane levels, the researchers used existing data to estimate how sauropods could have affected the climate.

- BBC News

Look, I’m sorry. But it was this, or that other Jurassic classic…

Don’t mention the A-word

By Lorenzo

The Eurozone, the US, Japan and the UK are all suffering prolonged economic stagnation. [You can see how serious it is in the US here.] It is sensible to suggest that they are doing something (or perhaps many things) wrong and need to change policy.

What is not sensible is ignoring a developed world economy that has conspicuously not suffered any of the economic stagnation problems that have hit the major developed economies. Indeed, has not had a recession (in the sense of two quarters of economic contraction) since 1991. That sailed through the Great Recession and Global Financial Crisis (aka GFC) with barely a ripple. Whose current problems are not of economic stagnation but of maintaining economic balance when one part of the economy is doing much better than another.

That country is Australia. Yes, it is true that the surge in commodity demand (centred on China) has been a boon to the Australian economy (well, to the commodity exporting States; the resultant surge in the value of the $A has been a problem for the tourism-and-goods exporting States—the commodity boom has been a distinctly mixed blessing). But Australia had also managed to avoid recession even when its terms of trade (the ratio of the price of what it sells to the price of what it buys) were in long-term decline and when commodity prices dropped dramatically at the onset of the Great Recession. Indeed, the fall in Australia’s exports as a % of GDP was worse than the US’s.

Yet the Australian success gets mostly ignored. A classic example is Raghuram Rajan’s recent piece in Foreign Affairs. (Non-gated version here [pdf].) Much of what he has to say about the desirability for supply-side reforms is sensible. Indeed, much of what he advocates Australia has already done; which makes the failure to mention what should be the poster-polity for what he is advocating all the more of a glaring failure.

The problem with mentioning Australia is that it does not conform to the stories that Rajan and others want to tell about what went wrong. Rajan essentially ignores monetary policy, both in the commonly offered solutions to economic stagnation (fiscal stimulus and even-lower interest rates: interest rates are a very limited way of looking at monetary policy) and in diagnosing why the economic stagnation descended. So Rajan writes:

today’s economic troubles are not simply the result of inadequate demand but the result, equally, of a distorted supply side.

Australia has done a lot of supply-side reforms, so perhaps it can be ignored.  Except Rajan goes on to say:

For decades before the financial crisis in 2008, advanced economies were losing their ability to grow by making useful things. But they needed to somehow replace the jobs that had been lost to technology and foreign competition and to pay for the pensions and health care of their aging populations. So in an effort to pump up growth, governments spent more than they could afford and promoted easy credit to get households to do the same. The growth that these countries engineered, with its dependence on borrowing, proved unsustainable.

Does anyone really think Australia just magically averted such structural problems, that its economy is somehow profoundly different from other developed countries? Given its per capita GDP growth has been respectable but not outstanding. In particular, while its public finances were much sounder, with public debt reduced to very low levels, enthusiastic embrace of private debt meant that the total level of indebtedness was and is comparable to other developed countries.

The story that Rajan wants to tell is that:

the common thread was that debt-fueled growth was unsustainable.

Except, apparently, in Australia.  Australia ran a mildly higher inflation rate than the US during the “Great Moderation”, so its monetary policy was more “lax” than “easy money-easy credit” US.

Rajan is claiming that low interest rates are an “easy credit” policy: but credit is a supply-and-demand process. Yes, low interest rates make credit cheap to buy but it also reduces the return on providing it. Something is missing in this story; that a lot of capital was looking for safe havens. Many developing economies might be vigorously growing, but they have also been significantly failing to satisfy the demand for safer assets. Said demand therefore flowed into developed countries: including Australia, which continues to run the substantial current account deficits it has for 50 years (i.e. be a net importer of capital). So, the “too much debt/easy credit” story of sin Rajan (and others) want to tell just does not work if you include Australia.

It is true that Australian financial institutions were not much affected by the GFC and that Australian housing prices have not crashed (yet). The former is, in part, because of superior prudential regulation. This includes the Australian banking trade-off where the “four pillars” (NAB, Westpac, ANZ, CBA) have some level of protection in return for strong prudential oversight. Conversely, the American banking sector is far more fragmented, due to regulatory blocks on inter-state branching. Comparison with the performance of both the Canadian and the Australian banking sectors suggests that this regulated fragmentation has not been a social positive. (The much-discussed separation of investment and deposit banking is much less important.) But the GFC does not explain the Great Recession. On the contrary, a failure of monetary policy both aggravated the GFC and created the Great Recession; as was also true for the Great Depression [pdf].

So, despite “lax” monetary policy, fairly standard levels of indebtedness and a considerable export shock, Australian demand (and so income) did not collapse. Which meant debt remained manageable. Why?

The simple answer is: because our central bank is not mad (unlike other central banks). The RBA looks like a standard inflation-targeting central bank. Except it does not have a fixed inflation target, it has an explicit average-over-the-business-cycle target. Which means that, if output falls, the money supply does not have to follow output down. On the contrary, counteracting monetary stimulus “smooths out the bumps”. The effect is not merely to anchor price expectations, but to anchor income expectations as well. We did not end up in the situation where people are nervous about their income expectations but confident in their price expectations (i.e. the future-swap-value-of-money), which then encourages people to hold onto their money, which leads to less transactions and so less income (income being someone else’s spending; i.e. price x transactions), which increases concerns about income, leading to a downward spiral in transactions. Low interest rates are not a sign of “easy” money; they are generally a sign of “tight” money; of money being expected to retain—or even increase—its average swap values. (Inflation expectations in the US are currently very low while cash flow uncertainty can have, unsurprisingly, a significantly negative impact on corporate investment and employment.)

The RBA is also an example of the Australian ability to “do” bureaucracy. It has a clear policy focus, set out in a public letter of agreement between the Governor and the Treasurer, and a strong organisational identity that extends to deliberately investing in developing the skills and experience of its staff.

Rajan wants to tell a structural story for an economic downturn. Certainly, one understands the temptation of a crisis: “oh look, a crisis!, now I can get my favourite reforms through”. But that does not make it sound economics. On the contrary, there simply is no necessary trade-off between dealing with short-run level-of-economic-activity problems and fixing long-term structural problems. (And something that is clear enough to a high school student, however scarily smart, should probably be clear to a full professor.)

If income collapses, debt becomes much harder to manage. If your income does not collapse, you are much less likely to have a debt-management problem. Yes, lots of developed countries are having debt-management problems. But that is not because they were strikingly more indebted than Australia (even if their public debt levels are higher). It is because spending, and so income, did collapse.

Rajan’s penchant for false dichotomies does not just manifest in short-term/long-term trade-off claims, it also extends to excluding policy possibilities:

The way out of the crisis cannot be still more borrowing and spending, especially if the spending does not build lasting assets that will help future generations pay off the debts that they will be saddled with.

Someone’s future liabilities are also someone else’s future income (which is why debt defaults worry folk so; yes, it eliminates someone’s liabilities but it also eliminates someone else’s assets: this also increases your risk premium for any future borrowing). But, leaving that aside, there can be spending without borrowing: that is the joy of monetary stimulus. Yes, the fiscal multiplier is a measure of central bank incompetence. Yes, the monetary authority “moves last”. But, if it is competent, it chooses to move in ways that do not create catastrophic collapses in spending and so income. If people have more confidence in their future income prospects, they will spend. And, if they spend, income goes up and debt becomes much more manageable.

Yes, it would be a good idea if developed countries reformed their public sectors, if they abolished regulations that protect incumbents and retard economic activity, if they got their debt levels under control. All things Australia has done (but, in some areas—notably its land use permit rajs—not enough). But neither the Great Recession nor the Global Financial Crisis would have been anywhere near as severe if the US, the UK and the Eurozone had had central banks as competent and accountable as the RBA. If they now became as competent and accountable as the RBA, economic recovery would occur much quicker and unemployment would fall much faster. The alleviation of utterly unnecessary human misery would be worth it all on its own. And structural reform could be sold as providing benefits, not simply sharing pain. Pain that, moreover, will not get folk spending again: for that, you have to change their expectations in positive ways. Which central banks can do more thoroughly, and far more cheaply, than anyone else. All it takes is to be as competent, and as accountable, as the RBA.

It is very, very necessary that folk start using the A-word, and considering the example it provides, a lot more.

Doing what ought to be done

By Legal Eagle

One of the questions in the law of private law remedies is: how do we repair the wrong that has been done? What is the best way of doing this which nevertheless respects the autonomy of the parties and balances their rights?

One way in which courts can remedy some wrongs is by ordering the person to do what they ought to have done in the first place. For this purpose, we have the remedies of specific performance (which generally applies to contract) and injunctions (which apply more broadly). The court tells the defendant that they should do what they said they’d do, or restrains the defendant from acting in a way which is wronging the plaintiff. Usually, in common law at least, damages are the default remedy and plaintiffs are only entitled to specific relief if damages are inadequate.

A topic which interests me greatly is the idea of rectification damages and rectification orders. Say you have a house which you contracted to have painted Sunshine Yellow. The painter has painted the house in the subtly different colour known as Custard Yellow, and to you it looks far less attractive. However the diminution in value to the house is minimal. Should the painter be required to merely pay the for the reduction in value to the house, or should the painter be required to pay for the house to be repainted? Or should the painter perhaps be forced to repaint the house?

Fancy my excitement when I saw a case which raised rectification issues! In The Age on Thursday, the following story appeared:

The exterior wall of the Newry Street factory in Richmond before it was torn down.

The exterior wall of the Newry Street factory in Richmond before it was torn down.

A DEVELOPER who knocked down a 90-year-old Richmond factory in contravention of a planning permit has been ordered to rebuild the original walls brick by brick.

Soon after the planning permit for a small four-storey block of flats in 7 Newry Street was issued in March last year, developers razed the original brick building.

On the site now, tucked away in the heart of the once-working-class suburb, there is no trace of the historic red-brick factory that was supposed to be incorporated in the new 24-unit development.

The aftermath of the demolition.

The aftermath of the demolition.

Five weeks ago Victoria’s planning tribunal made an unusual order forcing both the developer, a company owned by the directors of the Crema Group, and builder Kubic Pty Ltd to reconstruct three of the factory’s original walls.

The developers claimed they demolished the factory walls because of structural cracks and insufficient footings. But Yarra Council took them to the tribunal seeking their restoration.

Tribunal member Russell Byard ordered the walls be reinstated ”as near as practicable to the condition prior to such demolition [excluding the reinstatement of any structural defects] … using the same bricks that formed part of the original walls.”

The builders are required to have their work finished before August.

The council also sought in the Melbourne Magistrates Court a fine and conviction for breaching the planning permit.

How fascinating is that? The Tribunal is requiring the builder to rebuild the entire historic factory wall before they can continue to build the flats. In this case, it seems actual rectification is the way to go.