Tag Archives: europe

CNN.com Extols Europeans’ Nudism versus ‘Prudish’ Americans

Travel writer and public television personality Rick Steves lauded Europeans’s “more relaxed” attitude about nudity in public and on television while labeling Americans ” overly prudish ” by comparison in a Tuesday column on CNN.com: “I like a continent where the human body is considered a divine work of art worth admiring openly.” Steves’s ode to European nudity began six paragraphs into the column, ” European nudes and American prudes ,” after giving a detailed sketch of his 1978 experience at a Turkish bath: “Any traveler to Europe who’s visited a bath, perused a newsstand, hung out at a beach or park on a sunny day, or channel-surfed broadcast TV late at night has noticed that Europeans are more relaxed than Americans about nudity .” The writer, who, back in 2003, feared that the American flag was being “hijacked” as a “logo” for support of the war in Iraq, then spent several paragraphs describing how widespread this practice is on the European continent and how apparently great it is (including his “overly prudish” label about Americans): In the south of France, sunbathing grandmothers have no tan lines. In Norway, young children play naked in fountains. On summer days, accountants in Munich head to the park on their lunch break to grin and bare it, trading corporate suits for birthday suits. It’s quite a shock to Americans (they’re the ones riding their bikes into the river and trees). In Belgium, huge billboards advertise soap by showing a woman’s lathered-up breasts. A Copenhagen student tourist center welcomes visitors with a bowl of free condoms at their info desk. I’m not comfortable with all of this, though I do think Americans tend to be overly prudish . But if you can leave your inhibitions at home, you can better appreciate some of the amazing experiences Europe has to offer . In Finland, a trip to a public sauna — warmed by a wood-fired stove topped with rocks — not only feels good, but is a living slice of this culture…. Croatia has some of the best beaches — many of them without any dress code. The trend dates back to royalty: In 1936, England’s King Edward VIII visited the island of Rab on holiday. Wanting an all-over tan, he went through the proper channels to have one of Rab’s beaches designated for nudists . Inspired by his example, other travelers followed suit (er, dropped suit) … and a phenomenon was born. Steves leaves out that Edward VIII had to abdicate the British throne after his proposal to an American divorcee. Edward was also ahead of the curve in terms of another European phenomenon: a childless marriage. Later, Steves complained about conservatism of Americans’ attitudes toward nudity due to its effect on his occupations as an author and public television host: …An early edition of my art-for-travelers guidebook featured a naked David on the cover. My publisher was concerned that bookstores in more conservative areas wouldn’t stock it . A fig leaf would help sales. I proposed, just for fun, that we put a peelable fig leaf on the cover so readers could customize the level of nudity . I even paid half the cost and had the fun experience of writing “for fig leafs” on a check. Things get trickier when it comes to public television . Because of FCC regulations, we can’t easily show spas, saunas, or beaches in Europe where nudity is the norm. And because I show paintings and sculptures of naked bodies, my programs are flagged by the network and, in some regions, aired only after 10 p.m., when things are less restrictive . In recent years, programmers actually got a list of how many seconds that marble and canvas body parts appeared in each episode. They couldn’t inflict a Titian painting or a Bernini statue on a conservative viewership without taking heat and risking having to pay enormous fines of $275,000 . You may not want to bring the more casual European approach to sex and the human body back home with you. And I’m not saying we should all run around naked. But I like a continent where the human body is considered a divine work of art worth admiring openly . Well, Steves might be able to rest easy now, since the Second Circuit Court ruled against the FCC’s indecency regulations on Tuesday , finding them “unconstitutionally vague.” Earlier in the column, the author took a not-so-subtle shot at one European faction that he must have thought was too “overly prudish” – the Catholic Church: Not everyone in Europe is comfortable with nudity. At the Vatican Museum, fig leaves cover many statues. From 1550 to 1800, the Church decided that certain parts of the human anatomy were obscene. Perhaps Church leaders associated these full-frontal sculptures with the outbreak of Renaissance humanism that reduced their power in Europe . Whatever the cause, they reacted by covering classical crotches with plaster fig leaves, the same kind of leaves that Adam and Eve used when the concept of “privates” was invented.

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CNN.com Extols Europeans’ Nudism versus ‘Prudish’ Americans

Nicki Minaj Reveals That She’s A ‘Hills’ Fan

‘I was SO mad wen Justin bobby cut his hair!’ the MC tweets before tonight’s series finale. By Mawuse Ziegbe Nicki Minaj Photo: Bryan Bedder/ Getty Images The drama the ladies of the “The Hills” have grappled with for six seasons has captivated millions of fans, including one hip-hop diva in particular: Nicki Minaj. Minaj recently revealed via Twitter that not only does she watch the show — which signs off on Tuesday (July 13) — but she has strong opinions about the goings-on of the cast. Apparently, the MC has been keeping up with the antics of Audrina’s (and Kristin’s) on-and-off boy toy, Justin “Bobby” Brescia. When a fan pressed Minaj on Twitter about whether she watches “The Hills,” the star tweeted , “Yes! I was SO mad wen Justin bobby cut his hair!” Her taste in TV isn’t the only thing the star has revealed on the social-networking website. Last week, the Young Money MC announced the release date of her hotly anticipated debut album on Twitter. “Yes. It’s time. November 23rd,” the star tweeted Thursday. When MTV News caught up with the “Your Love” rapper on the set of the video for her #1 track , Minaj called the material she was working on with producer Swizz Beatz “magical” and was generally amped about the album. “When people hear the album, they’re going to get to know Onika [her birth name is Onika Maraj]. And no one knows Onika,” Minaj said. “I really didn’t think I would be this excited about the songs that I’m coming up with. I’m really, really proud.” Swizzy was also excited about his work with Minaj. “We have a lot of small conversations that end up [turning] into big musical moments,” the producer told MTV News. “When you hear Nicki on my track, you’re gonna see that ‘Wow, she just went from here to there.’ I’m happy to be a part of that.” Are you surprised to hear that Nicki is a “Hills” fan? Let us know in the comments! Join MTVNews.com on Tuesday, July 13, at 8 p.m. ET for a live stream from the red carpet of Hollywood’s Roosevelt Hotel, where the stars will gather for “The Hills Live: A Hollywood Ending.” Then tune in for the series finale at 10 p.m. ET on MTV and “The Hills Live: A Hollywood Ending After Show” at 11. Related Videos Saying Goodbye To ‘The Hills’ The Hills | Most Memorable Moments Related Photos Red Carpet Radar: ‘The Hills’ Best Looks Related Artists Nicki Minaj

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Nicki Minaj Reveals That She’s A ‘Hills’ Fan

‘The Hills’ Stars Plan Their Post-Show Careers

Some plan to stay on TV, while others have behind-the-scenes projects in the works. By Jocelyn Vena Kristin Cavallari and Audrina Patridge Photo: MTV On “The Hills,” fans were given glimpses into the work lives of the cast. Lauren Conrad and Whitney Port both worked at Teen Vogue and People’s Revolution, where they were joined (for a short time) by Stephanie Pratt. Lo Bosworth works at Smashbox. Audrina Patridge let us all in on what it’s like to work at Epic Records. Heidi Montag even tried her hand at event planning when she worked at Bolthouse Entertainment. But now that the show is ending on Tuesday (July 13), how will we get our fix of our favorite “Hills” stars? Well, we have the lowdown on the next big moves the cast plans to make. Lo Bosworth, who has hinted at wanting to get into TV hosting, has launched her own lifestyle website, TheLoDown.com, where she’ll be on hand to give out advice on everything from fashion to boys. She’s also the face of Nivea’s Goodbye Cellulite Challenge. Kristin Cavallari is looking to continue her career in television — but behind the lens. “Going back to ‘The Hills,’ I’ve enjoyed seeing the behind-the-scenes and how everything gets put together, the TV magic,” she said. “So I want to start producing. I’ve been pitching some shows and talking to some people about that. So, hopefully, right away, I can get one of those running, and then I want to keep acting. I would like that. I like being in charge and calling the shots.” Audrina Patridge might land her own reality show, and the Bongo model admitted that a break was foremost on her mind. “I plan on taking a vacation,” she said. “I really want to go to Europe and just travel and hang out with my friends and family down in Orange County. But other than that, I’m still going to castings and still going to auditions for acting, definitely going to continue pushing for that. I would love to do a [period] piece, like, medieval. I love ‘The Tudors’ and I love ‘Troy’ and those types of movies. So that’s my dream.” While Spencer Pratt said he wanted to go back to school , he’s also been tweeting nonstop about his new website, the aptly titled KingSpencer.com , where he covers, ironically, celebrity news. His estranged wife, Heidi Montag , has also recently launched her own website , where she’s shared several designs for a new fashion line she is working on. She has also tweeted about working on several scripts for films, trying to get a role in “Transformers 3” and working on music for a new album. What do you want to see the cast do next? Tell us in the comments! Join MTVNews.com on Tuesday, July 13, at 8 p.m. ET for a live stream from the red carpet of Hollywood’s Roosevelt Hotel, where the stars will gather for “The Hills Live: A Hollywood Ending.” Then tune in for the series finale at 10 p.m. ET on MTV and “The Hills Live: A Hollywood Ending After Show” at 11. Related Videos Saying Goodbye To ‘The Hills’ The Hills | Most Memorable Moments Related Photos Red Carpet Radar: ‘The Hills’ Best Looks The Boys Of ‘The Hills’

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‘The Hills’ Stars Plan Their Post-Show Careers

Roman Polanski Avoids Extradition to U.S.

Roman Polanski is a free man! Well, he has been for 30 years-plus now, despite facing a prison term in the United States for having sex with a 13-year-old girl. The Oscar-winning director will remain free, though, thanks to Switzerland’s Federal Department of Justice cited a recent flaw in the U.S. extradition request. The Swiss argue that Roman Polanski, who maintains a home in Switzerland, could reliably expect not to be arrested and deported to face sentencing in America. Basically, since the U.S. knew of his frequent presence there over the last few years but never acted on it, the government is refusing to send him packing . Roman Polanski remains free and in Europe . Polanski, who was recently apprehended and also accused of sexually abusing Charlotte Lewis , has already been released from house arrest, authorities said. The announcement was a dramatic development in a case that has lasted more than 30 years and appeared to be drawing to a conclusion earlier this year. In 1978, Polanski, a French citizen, fled the U.S. hours before he was to be sentenced for having unlawful sex with a minor. He has not set foot in the U.S. since.

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Roman Polanski Avoids Extradition to U.S.

Newsweek Shocker: ‘The Environment is No Longer a Surefire Political Winner’

After pushing manmade global warming for years, the folks at Newsweek appear to be cooling on the idea. Prominently placed at the front page of the magazine’s website Monday was a large, overhead picture of what appeared to be a golf fairway or park with the following headline in green: A Green Retreat: Why the Environment is No Longer a Surefire Political Winner Even more surprising was the contents (h/t Climate Depot ): Following two of the harshest winters on record in the Northern Hemisphere-not to mention an epic economic crisis-voters no longer consider global warming a priority. Just 42 percent of Germans now worry about climate change, down from 62 percent in 2006. In Australia, only 53 percent still consider it a pressing issue, down from 75 percent in 2007. Americans rank climate change dead last of 21 problems that concern them most, according to a January Pew poll. Last month Canada’s Prime Minister Stephen Harper, blasting climate change as a “sideshow” to global economic issues, canceled the meeting of environment ministers that has preceded the G8 or G20 summit every year but one since 1994. Merkel has slashed green-development aid in the latest round of budget cuts, while in Washington, Barack Obama seems to have cooled on his plan to cap emissions. In perhaps the most striking momentum reversal for environmental politicians, last month Rudd became the first leader to be destroyed by his green policies. Flip-flopping over planned emissions cuts as the opposition exploited Australian voters’ flagging support for climate measures, he was finally ousted by party rebels.  After discussing some of the politics involved at local levels around the globe, author Stefan Theil started pointing out the really inconvenient truths Nobel Laureate Al Gore has hidden from his followers:  Increasingly, the whole concept of radical, top-down global targets is coming under scrutiny as citizens and governments face tougher choices over costs and benefits. Green policies can be popular when they mean subsidizing renewable fuels or going after unpopular power companies, but can quickly hit a wall when they force lifestyle change, such as less driving and fewer swimming pools-fears Rudd’s opponents have exploited. Policies that push trendy green fuels also cost much more than other options, such as replacing dirty coal with cleaner gas or emissions-free nuclear power. Some schemes, such as America’s corn ethanol and Europe’s biodiesel made from rapeseed, have virtually zero net emissions savings, but any petroleum they displace is quickly bought up by China. Even in the ideal case that the United Nations’ goal of 80 percent emissions reduction by 2050 is technologically and politically feasible, economists disagree widely on whether the cost of the current set of policies, such as carbon caps and green-fuel subsidies, is justified by the avoided damage from warmer temperatures.  But here’s what should really grab the attention of those that either believe this myth or are still on the fence: In many ways, green projects have become just another flavor of grubby interest politics. Biofuels have become a new label for old-style agricultural subsidies that funnel some $20 billion annually to landowners with little effect on emissions (only Brazilian sugar-cane ethanol produces any significant savings; America’s corn ethanol and Europe’s biodiesel do not). Germany’s solar subsidies, a signature project in the country’s battle against climate change, are perhaps the most wasteful green scheme on earth, producing a mere 0.25 percent of the country’s energy at a cost to consumers of as much as $125 billion. A leading member of Merkel’s Christian Democrats in the German Parliament says there is growing unease both in his party and in the Bundestag “about the scary monster we’ve created that is sucking up ever larger amounts of money for a negligible effect.” With green politics losing its moral high ground, there is a growing realization that climate change is just one policy priority among many that compete for limited resources and attention. That means, first, that climate politics will likely fall off its pedestal of being the Western world’s overarching priority. Second, the new sobriety could give more space to a third stream of climate politics between those who see warming as an unmitigated catastrophe that must be stopped at any cost, and those who reject global warming as a hoax. A new climate realism would more carefully weigh the costs and benefits of emissions controls, and look at other options beyond the current set of targets. The new debate will be more pragmatic and include a broader mix of policies. That might include a shift of subsidies into research and development, as many climate economists have argued. It would also include greater efforts to adapt society to a warmer climate, rather than focusing only on stopping the warming process in its tracks. Those that have been following this debate from a grander perspective than what is typically presented by global warming-obsessed media know that climate realists have been saying this for years. Sociologists and economists from around the world have argued that moneys currently being devoted to try to “stop this problem” could be far better spent in ways that would more greatly impact citizens on every continent.  But as Theil pointed out: That idea has so far figured little in the debate, largely because mainstream environmentalists fear it will distract from their push for CO2 cutbacks. Yet adaptation may offer equally valid and much less expensive choices than cutting back on emissions. Imagine that: man could adapt to a changing environment more cheaply than trying — likely with little to no success! — to prevent the change: In other words, some of the money spent on current policies that often have only limited efficacy might be better spent on other measures, including protection against the worst effects of warming. What’s more, current economic worries are a reminder that every dollar spent on solar cells or biodiesel is a dollar less for education and other budget priorities. Truly shocking stuff, especially from a magazine that as Tom Nelson points out published a cover story almost exactly three years ago entitled “Global Warming Deniers: A Well-funded Machine.” So why the change of heart? Was it evidence that the weather really isn’t cooperating with the desires and computer model-driven predictions of the alarmists? Did last year’s ClimateGate scandal, despite the relative lack of press it got here in the states, open up some eyes as to the modus operandi and the deviousness of those spreading the myth? Did revelations concerning misreporting and truly bad science employed by Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change contributors weaken the resolve of believers? Or was it all the controversy surrounding the Green Messiah Al Gore’s new home purchase in Montecito quickly followed by a separation from his wife and allegations of a four-year-old sex scandal? Or is it merely a consequence of a struggling economy and a federal government trying to figure out ways to finance all its current commitments without the additional burden of environmental spending? Whatever the reason or combination thereof, Americans should hope that this isn’t just a brief moment of sanity, and that Newsweek isn’t going to quickly reverse course once someone wakes up Monday morning and realizes what’s been so prominently placed at the front page of its website. 

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Newsweek Shocker: ‘The Environment is No Longer a Surefire Political Winner’

Oil/Water samples from Gulf…VERY TOXIC

This comes from the YouTube video: Oil and water samples were taken from both the Shores of Grand Isle and from 20 miles out. The preliminary analysis was done at an academic analytical chemistry laboratory. Looking for the likely pollutants from the deep water Horizon Oil spill. It was focused on the detection of benzene and propylene glycol. Benzene and other highly toxic contaminants were very low however the concentration of propylene glycol was between 360 and 440 parts per million. Just 25 parts per million is know to kill most fish and propylene glycol is just one of many ingredients found in Corexit. In short, the Gulf is being poisoned by BP's usage of the dispersants even after the EPA asked them to stop back in May. We are willing to provide ANY respected/known laboratory these samples or provide them with more. This is very serious to all people and marine life in and around the Gulf. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gq65E7rmO_k This comes from a blog: A group of daring citizen journalists collected water samples from Grand Isle, Louisiana, a few days ago and sent them to an Academic Chemistry lab for analysis. The findings were startling: The concentrations of Propylene Glycol were off the charts: 360 and 440 parts per million, concentrations indicating a much higher level of Corexit (of which Propylene Glycol is only one part). Toxicity tests have shown that a concentration of Corexit at 25 parts per million kills most fish and only 2.6 parts per million has the same effect in the presence of dispersed oil. The level of the water samples collected at Grand Isle is roughly 150 times the toxic level for fish. Overall, this water analysis suggests high Corexit concentrations in surface water near New Orleans and suggests a public health Hazard that should be taken extremely seriously along the entire Gulf Coast. Simply put: This water is poisonous! http://activerain.com/blogsview/1731102/this-water-is-poisonous- added by: samantha420

Science and the Spill

Hello Currenters! The Science Group is dedicating this month to the BP spill; all featured stories will be about the oil and other contaminants that continue to spew into the Gulf, what scientists predict, what they are learning and what efforts are being considered and implemented to stop it. These particular stories are less about political opinions and more about facts and the ecological ramifications of the spill. If you have stories like this, please post them into the Science Group ( http://current.com/science/ ) and EthicalVegan's new group, BP Catastrophe ( http://current.com/groups/bp-catastrophe/ ) Here are a few examples of the stories we have right now: Just the Facts: Livescience takes a look at the most common questions related to the spill, ( http://bit.ly/9C7gk2 ), NYTimes tracks the spill with interactive maps ( http://bit.ly/cShkGz ) and EthicalVegan has an ongoing collection of photos from the area ( http://bit.ly/a2ds28 ) Pollution vs Pollution: Oil isn't the only thing in that water! Scientific American discusses dispertants ( http://bit.ly/9sbGkR ) JanforGore has a video about Corexit ( http://bit.ly/drn5OT ) and the Gulf Coast's Dead Zone is set to grow this year, with the spill being only ONE of the pollutants involved! ( http://bit.ly/clZyWn ) The Ecosystem: Microbes just love methane, and scientists have been awarded grants to study the impact all the oil and methane will have on the microbial population, which effects oxygen levels ( http://bit.ly/bOA1jE ) Birds are getting a helping hand from the US Gov ( http://bit.ly/cJohJH ) and studies are being conducted specifically on the impact on the Whale population ( http://bit.ly/dhJuHU ). So come on by and check out some science, join the group and post some stories! I will try to update the group daily with a wide array of scientific information and studies. Thanks, hope this is helpful and interesting! added by: DeliaTheArtist

Computer simulations show oil reaching up the Atlantic coastline and toward Europe

“The possible spread of the oil spill from the Deepwater Horizon rig over the course of one year was studied in a series of computer simulations by a team of researchers from the School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST) at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. The simulations suggest that the coastlines near the Carolinas, Georgia, and Northern Florida could see the effects of the oil spill as early as October 2010, while the main branch of the subtropical gyre is likely to transport the oil film towards Europe, although strongly diluted. Eight million buoyant particles were released continuously from April 20 to September 17, 2010, at the location of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig. The release occurred in ocean flow data from simulations conducted with the high-resolution Ocean General Circulation Model for the Earth Simulator (OFES). “The paths of the particles were calculated in 8 typical OFES years over 360 days from the beginning of the spill,” says Fabian Schloesser, a PhD student from the Department of Oceanography in SOEST, who worked on these simulations with Axel Timmermann and Oliver Elison Timm from the International Pacific Research Center, also in SOEST. “From these 8 typical years, 5 were selected to create an animation for which the calculated extent of the spill best matches current observational estimates.” http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/07/100706103408.htm added by: DeliaTheArtist

Rolling Stone Writer That Took Down McChrystal Gets Book Deal

The Rolling Stone magazine writer that took down General Stanley McChrystal a few weeks ago has been rewarded with a significant book deal. One source says Michael Hastings will get seven figures for his “unprecedented behind-the-scenes account of America’s longest war.” According to Forbes, publishing house Little, Brown will release the following statement later on Tuesday: A forthcoming UNTITLED book by renowned journalist Michael Hastings, author of the Rolling Stone article “The Runaway General” which revealed shocking truths about General McChrystal and the war in Afghanistan, that promises an unprecedented behind-the-scenes account of America’s longest war, to Geoff Shandler, Editor in Chief, Little, Brown and Company, by Scott Moyers at the Wylie Agency. The book will offer an unfiltered look at the war, and the soldiers, diplomats and politicians who are waging it. Based on exclusive reporting in Afghanistan, Europe, the Middle East and Washington, D.C., this landmark work of journalism will elucidate as never before our deeply troubling war in vivid, unforgettable detail. Little, Brown Publisher Michael Pietsch says, “In his brilliant article Michael Hastings has already given us the clearest of insights into the disaster of America’s war in Afghanistan. He is a writer of extraordinary talent and his book will take us deeper and further into the war and its major architects, at a time when we need that clarity desperately.” Mediaite is reporting , “Rumor has it the book went for seven figures, which is a rather serious chunk of change in this publishing environment.” Indeed. This seems pricey for at least two reasons. First, Hastings may have given what he had to Rolling Stone making it possible his book is just an elaboration of what he’s already published. Maybe more importantly, how’s he going to get any new information given his questionable journalistic standards involving telling folks things are off the record when they are apparently not? Regardless, it will be interesting to see whether he offers any new revelations that bring down anyone else. Stay tuned. 

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Rolling Stone Writer That Took Down McChrystal Gets Book Deal

British Feminist Journalist: Abortion ‘Lesser Evil’ Than ‘Misogyny’

Antonia Senior of The Times of London revealed her extremist position in favor of abortion in a June 30 column . Senior bluntly admitted that the intentional killing of the unborn was a cause she would be willing to die for, and while acknowledging it was “taking a life,” she labeled it was a ” lesser evil ,” for, in her view, “you cannot separate women’s rights from their right to fertility control.” The British journalist, is the personal finance editor for The Times, began her column with outlining the extent to which abortion is a core issue for her. Senior noted that in the Tower of London, there’s an “interactive display that ask visitors to vote on whether they would die for a cause.” After eliminating dolphins and even her own country of England as potential choices, she continued that she “could think of one cause I would stake my life on: a woman’s right to be educated, to have a life beyond the home and to be allowed by law and custom to order her own life as she chooses. And that includes complete control over her own fertility.” Senior then revealed her own internal turmoil over the issue of abortion: Yet something strange is happening to this belief that has, for so long, shaped my core; my moral certainty about abortion is wavering, my absolutist position is under siege . It’s not a baby, it’s a foetus, you God-squaddies [British derogatory slang for someone who is militant, roughly equivalent to “grunt”], the teenage me would have crowed at the pro-lifers. It’s a woman’s body, her choice, end of, I would have proclaimed in whatever patois we were speaking back then. The report last week by the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, which found that the human foetus cannot feel pain before 24 weeks, would have been waved triumphantly at anyone who crossed my path, along with an invitation to be taught the meaning of pain. This is not, you see, a rational debate, but one of passion and vitriol and tribalism. Then came a baby, and everything changed . I think of it as the Anna Karenina conundrum. If you read the book as a teenager, you back her choices with all the passion of youth. Love over convention, go Anna! Then you have children and realise that Anna abandons her son to shack up with a pretty soldier, and then her daughter when she jumps under a train. She becomes a selfish witch. Having a baby paints the world an entirely different hue. Black and white no longer quite cut it. The abortion issue hinges on the notion of life. The pro-life position is clear: a baby is a life, with rights, from the instant of conception. The pro-choice position insists that we are talking only about a potential life, with no rights. An embryo is not a person. Later, after delving into the semantics of the debate over abortion, the journalist made a remarkable admission, given her pro-abortion position: What seems increasingly clear to me is that, in the absence of an objective definition, a foetus is a life by any subjective measure . My daughter was formed at conception , and all the barely understood alchemy that turned the happy accident of that particular sperm meeting that particular egg into my darling, personality-packed toddler took place at that moment…. Any other conclusion is a convenient lie that we on the pro-choice side of the debate tell ourselves to make us feel better about the action of taking a life . Even with this admission, Senior cannot bring herself to part from her support for legalized abortion because of her die-hard feminism, and concluded her column by spouting some of her side’s talking points and included her “lesser evil” line about the murder of defenseless unborn babies: So we are left with a problem. A growing movement in America, spearheaded by Sarah Palin, is pro-life feminism, This attempts to decouple feminism from abortion rights, arguing that you can believe in a woman’s right to be empowered without believing in her right to abort. Its proponents report a groundswell of support among young women looking to reinvent their mothers’ ideology. But you cannot separate women’s rights from their right to fertility control . The single biggest factor in women’s liberation was our newly found ability to impose our will on our biology . Abortion would have been legal for millennia had it been men whose prospects and careers were put on sudden hold by an unexpected pregnancy. The mystery pondered on many a girls’ night out is how on earth men, bless them, managed to hang on to political and cultural hegemony for so long. The only answer is that they are not in hock to their biology as much as we are. Look at a map of the world and the right to abortion on request correlates pretty exactly with the expectation of a life unburdened by misogyny . As ever, when an issue we thought was black and white becomes more nuanced , the answer lies in choosing the lesser evil . The nearly 200,000 aborted babies in the UK each year are the lesser evil , no matter how you define life, or death, for that matter. If you are willing to die for a cause, you must be prepared to kill for it, too . Ms. Senior, the issue isn’t becoming “more nuanced.” By your own admission, our lives began at conception, and any claim to the contrary is a “convenient lie…to make us feel better about the action of taking a life.” It’s a crying shame that you can’t pull yourself out of your blind obedience to radical feminist dogma to make the right conclusion on the issue of abortion. [H/t: Ignatius Insight Scoop blog]

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British Feminist Journalist: Abortion ‘Lesser Evil’ Than ‘Misogyny’