I throw out the above topic as a possible object of research for some keen young DPhil student on the threshold of a brilliant career in Academe.
Here is some evidence for her to consider.
A couple of evenings ago, I was watching the Beeb on my computer: a late-night slot in which media experts tell you what the interesting stories in the following morning's papers are, and ... on a good evening ... sometimes hint at what the 'Fleet Street' gossip behind and about them is.
Very unusually, one of the newspapers they had in front of them that evening was Polish! Yes, the news had just come through that the Polish Constitutional Court had ruled against the pre-birth destruction of the handicapped.
Of the three broadcasters (occasionally the three may include a man, but most commonly they are all women), the 'Anchor' was an elderly lady 'of Polish heritage'; another was Women's Editor on a right-wing paper generally known as The Torygraph; she was called Claire Cohen.
Cohen reacted to the Polish Breaking News with the phrase "really shocking". The Anchor seemed not unsympathetic to this laconic pronouncement. There was no suggestion that this was a merely personal view to which Cohen was entitled; the phrase was left hanging in the air as an obviously objective observation. Nobody offered any balance.
Poland is a country in which, within still living memory, there were the very grossest Extermination Camps engaged in the sadistic slaughter of millions of human beings, many of them with names like, er, Cohen. And the country itself suffered from a murderous Nazi tyranny determined to reduce the numbers of 'sub-human' Slavs and to destroy its cultural identity.
Yet Cohen, and her Polish chum, sophisticated ladies, had graduated far beyond any simple-minded revulsion at the slaughter of the innocent. Instead, they seemed horrified that the current holocaust of 'sub-human' babies might in anyway be interrupted.
Ridete, quidquid est Daemoniorum!!
I read sometime ago that pre-War Poland was the leading centre of the European abortion movement. Eugenic laws appeared all over the continent. Then the War and the atrocities of the Nazis made the literate classes shy of supporting such policies for a while. Now they have forgotten the lessons of the past (they have long forgotten God) and so we have, once again, a culture that is quite deaf to the irony of their presuppositions. It seems that whatever channel one watches or paper one reads the same set of unquestioned biases are held by 'open minded' persons. They invariably centre on the maximisation of individual human freedom and therefore on sexual and related matters and the admissibility of the deliberate destruction of vulnerable and innocent life (young or old). That they are treading in the footsteps of monsters does not seem to occur to them.
ReplyDeleteIf the evil one does have something that passes for a sense of humour it is a very dark and twisted one. Then again perhaps he is more twisted with rage at the sheer stupidity of humanity than with mirth.
I'm not sure the powers of evil know mirth, but they do delight in mockery; more like sniggering than laughter.
ReplyDelete