In The News

David Rieff August 15, 2005
The London bombings perpetrated by native-born Muslims have forced Europeans to take a serious look at the status of the Continent’s Muslim minority. Suggestions that the Muslim alienation is due to anger in Muslim communities over the Iraq war and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, do not provide an adequate answer. Rieff argues that the reasons of alienation run much deeper than this. Europe’...
Salman Rushdie August 11, 2005
The British government's strategy of relying on traditional, but essentially orthodox, Muslims to help eradicate Islamist radicalism is ineffective, writes Salman Rushdie. Traditional Islam is a broad church that includes millions of tolerant, moderate believers – as well as those at odds with the cultures among which they live. What is truly needed to combat terrorism, says Rushdie, is a...
George Monbiot August 10, 2005
Following the bombings in London last month, a national consensus has emerged in Britain that a renewed sense of patriotism is necessary to combat terrorism. Codes of citizenship and a shared belief in Britain's values, proponents argue, will reduce the risk of domestic terrorism. While patriotism makes citizens less likely to attack one another, it may also make the state more inclined to...
Sanjay Suri August 10, 2005
When Muslim students are released from British public schools in the afternoon, they quickly head home and change into their religious garb in preparation for their second school – the madrassa. With close to a thousand madrassas across the country, an overwhelming number of Muslim children in Britain are receiving a strong Islamic education in their evening schools. The children are required...
Jeremy Rifkin August 5, 2005
Ever since the 1960's, economists and politicians have discussed the possibility that technological leaps may render factory workers obsolete. Now, as decision-makers blame outsourcing to countries like China for a decline in European (and American) jobs, labor expert Jeremy Rifkin writes that their accusations may be misplaced. The spread of automation to service-sector industries, and...
Mark Glaser July 28, 2005
In the past decade, advances in technology and communications have changed the way people live, connecting the world as never before. One currently-unfolding change is the way viewers experience the news: According to journalist Mark Glaser, modern tools - weblogs, cellphone cameras (both still and video) - are facilitating a new brand of citizen journalism. In the aftermath of the July 7 and...
Mikhail Gorbachev July 26, 2005
The referendums on the EU constitution in France and the Netherlands shocked the European elites, reflecting a deep chasm dividing the ideologues and the public. The rapid expansion of the EU has caused widespread anger among citizens of the “Old World,” whose are afraid of losing their jobs to the influx of cheap labor from eastern Europe. Speculating that two separate systems in eastern and...