Wednesday, 5 May 2010

Violence is always funny, as long as it's against women!


Hello all,

Today I have, like a great deal of other people, been moved to great anger by an article published in ZOO Magazine (that links to the homepage of the magazine itself, so probably best not to click on it if you're in work. Or anywhere, really, but it gives you a flavour of the magazine in question). As I have been tweeting about it for a while, anyone following me may find some of this a bit familiar, but the remarks are intolerable.

The offending article is Danny Dyer's Agony Uncle page, which offered some unusual advice to a man who had recently split up with his girlfriend. In fact, Dyer suggested that he could "cut [his] ex's face, and then no one will want her"! Naturally, this remark produced an enormous uproar amongst people who found this "joke" distasteful, and ZOO were forced to issue an unreserved apology.

The apology, as I'm sure you will have seen by now, is a joke. The description of its publication as a "regrettable publication error" makes it sound as if these remarks were slipped in by something completely unbeknown to them. Perhaps the presses that published the magazines are planning to overturn their cruel overlords? It should have been spotted by the editors, and they should have removed it. Perhaps the error was publishing it in the first place.

This is presumably not the first "publication error" either, if this column is anything to go by. Granted, the fact that the image is more fantastic does not make it as unpleasant as his most recent suggestion, but this does not detract from the fact that he seems to take great joy in coming up with these suggestions. I don't believe for one moment that he would act, or expect anyone to act, on his "humorous advice", but there remains a leery, lad-ish tone more reminiscent of the 1970s than the 2010s.

Unsurprisingly, there have been people claiming that anyone complaining about this joke is missing the point, and that the statement is meant ironically. But irony will only work if it is transparent. Jimmy Carr's humour is offensive, but his delivery is so staged, coupled with the fact that his off-stage persona is so well known, that the intentions are self-evident. The title of this very blog is ironic, and yet I felt that the tone of this was so apparent that it too would be obvious. Dyer's column is the opposite, so that you could never truly claim that his vile comments weren't in keeping with the rest of the piece.

Dyer himself seems not to grasp the concept of irony. During an episode of "You Have Been Watching" last year, Charlie Brooker and panelists, including Frankie Boyle, discussed an episode of Dyer's Bravo show in which he was punched in the face. After mockingly mentioning that some of them would have liked a go, Dyer published an article in his column announcing he was quitting TV after the ridiculing he received. Clearly, when the humour is turned on him, he finds it far less funny.

Finally, there is a serious side to this. Domestic abuse affects, as we all know, hundreds of thousands of women a year. To make light of this situation is to do it an incredible injustice, and yet instances of this happening seem to be swept under the carpet. Today is the birthday of singer Chris Brown, convicted of assault against his then-girlfriend Rihanna. Whilst criticism of the ZOO article was trending on twitter, people wishing him a Happy Birthday was trending far higher. There is still, it seems, a long way to go before the issue of domestic violence is even close to being resolved.

Monday, 3 May 2010

The Real Bigotgate

Hello all,

The big news of yesterday is that Conservative MP Philippa Stroud used to run prayer sessions to cure people of their homosexuality, claiming that "demons" were possessing them. Naturally this is news that offended a great many people, and before long #PhilippaStroud was trending in the UK.

Actually, the truth of this story is even worse. The church has, shall we say, highly questionable views on the role of women in marriage, all of which the electorate deserve to know about. Any church that preaches:
“A church where Biblical family life is highly valued, where husband and wife embrace male servant leadership and joyful female submission, where godly parenting is taught and practised and where the special value of singleness and its unique opportunities are affirmed
should be questioned, and its influence on an MP challenged. As Bartley points out, an MP subservient to her husband in all things may not even be voting under her own viewpoint, but under her husbands. This somewhat trumps "Vote Clegg, Get Brown/Cameron", I would argue.

Of course, they also have a right to know about the positive sides, such as their work for charity, but I would imagine Ms Stroud has already covered that in her own leafleting.

The truth remains that Ms Stroud's views on homosexuality and feminism do not match the views of most people living in Great Britain today; A nation whose proudest claim should be its tolerance of all cultures that do not infringe on the happiness of others.

And yet... Shamefully, the worst part of this big news is that it is NOT BIG NEWS! A search for Philippa Stroud on the BBC News Website produces little beyond a Woman's Hour clip from last October. I recognise the institution's stance with regards to impartiality (and, let's face it, none of us were expecting to read this story in the Mail or Sun), but it was happy to publish the controversy surrounding the smear stories of Nick Clegg, and I fail to see why this story should receive special treatment.

Perhaps we can draw one positive from this story. Due to the comparative lack of coverage in the mainstream media, people have been tweeting, Facebooking and blogging about this story just to get it out there, and, by all accounts, it seems to be working. Social media is bypassing barons like Murdoch, and this can only be a good thing.

Wednesday, 28 April 2010

Reactions and Overreactions

Hello all,

The big news today is that Gordon Brown has been caught on tape describing a woman he met on the campaign trail as "bigoted". This comment was made after she asked about Eastern European immigration, describing them as "flocking".

Now, these remarks are enough to make a lot of people uncomfortable, me included. To call them bigoted would be something of an overstatement, but would be understandable, say, at home with friends.

This is why the story is so problematic. Brown was recorded, without his knowledge, and then the tape of his private conversation was made public for all to laugh at him. Private comments should not and must not be what we judge our politicians by, any more than extra-marital affairs or any other affairs of their private life.

The greatest hypocrisy of all, however, is that this tape is defended by the people who would cite Orwell to describe the current "Nanny State" (a term which, by the way, I despise). The people who would remove every CCTV camera and every form. Regardless of your views on these issues, the double standard of guarding your privacy so rigorously whilst ignoring that of others is intolerable.

One final point: When Chris Grayling's remarks on homosexual couples and B&Bs were leaked, I was as keen to criticise them as anyone. However, this is an issue that directly affects the voters. Grayling was making an ideological point on his view of Tory policy. Brown, on the other hand, was offering a (strongly worded) opinion on one individual. This was not in the public interest, and so I see no reason why it should affect anyone's opinion of him.

Monday, 26 April 2010

The First Post

Hello all,

It seems customary for the first comment always to be about the fact that you are publishing your first comment, and who am I to argue with tradition?

Actually, I argue with and about tradition quite a lot, being an atheist and a skeptic. I'm planning on using this blog to post on topical matters that are just too long to be discussed on twitter (twitter.com/chrismeredith, by the way), starting from as soon as I remember.

The Future awaits...