Archive for April, 2005

Inner City Livin’

Interesting article in the SMH today about the differences between inner city and suburban living. Sydney and Melbourne definitely have the urban thing going - with a range of inner city and beachside suburbs full of life and each with its own distinct feel (think St. Kilda vs. Brunswick or Bondi vs. Newtown). In Brisbane and Adelaide, there are very few parts of town that have a genuine urban feel (I’ve not been to Perth and haven’t been to Hobart for a long time and Canberra is kinda sui generis). In ‘Vegas, there’s really only West End and New Farm (counting the Valley as sort of a northern extension of the CBD) and perhaps to a lesser extent parts of Paddo and Bulimba). When my flatmate moved out to live with her partner in Albion (3 train stops from the City), she found it a lot more suburban than she’d expected.

Round where I live in New Farm, there are constantly people walking down my (side) street - nicely lined with huge fig trees, people coming home from clubs in the early hours about 4 nights a week, a big lesbian and gay population, lots of homeless and Indigenous people (far more on the streets sadly since gentrification demolished so many boarding houses), a plethora of bars, coffee shops, restaurants, the excellent Merthyr Bowls Club on the river, great parks, two bookshops, and basically all sorts of good things and a nice heterogenous community feel combined with endless opportunities for people watching. Lots of Galleries, a cinema, and the fabulous Brisbane Powerhouse, not to mention the riverwalk and the Story Bridge (pictured at the top of this blog) within easy strolling distance. Good public transport and no need to get a cab back from the Valley bars and pubs. It’s also arguably a far more safe environment when it comes to crime than many outer suburbs.

In my adult life, I’ve lived a large part of the time in West End/Highgate Hill/Annerley and here down on the Farm for the last three and a bit years. Yet sometimes I do a bit of suburban dreaming. I don’t think I’d like living in the ‘burbs though.

The nice thing about Brisbane inner citydom compared to Melbourne or Sydney is that because we never did the Terrace House thing and most of the houses are on big blocks with back yards, it’s a lot more leafy than the classic inner city area. And we’ve got lots of asian gekkoes for company!

Naturally, being a “leafy suburb” we have a Labor Councillor, State MP (Peter Beattie) and Federal MP.

I’d be interested to hear from readers about what they think of inner urban vs. suburban living. Is there a particular time in your life when you start feeling suburban? What are the respective joys and demerits?

Incidentally, I’m looking for a flatmate. If you’re interested, or know anyone who is, get in touch at mbahnisch [at] gmail [dot] com. I’ve lived with women mostly so am fully house trained and rant a lot less about politics and religion than you might expect!

L8er Sk8er

Ok, this is interesting - I’ve finally worked out why I get periodic writers’ block - I am a text addict!

The regular use of text messages and emails can lower the IQ more than twice as much as smoking marijuana.

Saturday Salon

An open thread where you can, at your weekend leisure, discuss whatever you like.

Passion…

I had a drink with a good friend of mine this arvo and she commented that she thought compared to my posts at Troppo, my writing at LP here had lacked passion. Maybe she had a point. My response was that there wasn’t too much that I had got angry about really of late - I’m desensitised, as many are, to the horrendous daily news about the latest coups against accountability and good government by the Howard government. Our eternal PM (as eternal as the perpetual wars which have nothing to do with this country that he involves us in with seeming abandon) only ever said one meaningful thing - which was to agree with the great PJK that to change the government was to change the country. And he’s been very very good at that. I can remember having a beer (in a very dejected state) with my friend Justin in 1996 in the then Treasury Hotel (now yet another faux-Irish bar) and remarking that we would be different people under the reign of Howard. How little did I know back then how different. The tide will turn one day, I have faith in that, but for the last several years, the best those of us who oppose not only the Coalition in a partisan fashion, but hate what Howard has very very successfully done to the social imaginary of this country and how he has shifted the parameters under which we all have to live, have been able to do has been to trim our sails to the prevailing wind and hope to tack a bit to the Left.

Therefore, you would think that we would welcome a strong “Lefty blogger” from Fairfax land into the ’sphere.

And we did.

But I want to say this now - I am grievously disappointed in Antony Loewenstein.

We’ve all been talking about the election of Pope Benedict XVI over the last few days in the blogosphere.

What has got me really steamed up - as an admittedly liberal Catholic, who nevertheless feels, and I’ve argued this here, and will have more to say on it in due course, that Pope Benedict XVI will be a great improvement on JP2, and will cause scandal to the ultra-orthodox - but leaving that aside for a second, is the amount of sheer ignorance, prejudice, and to call a spade a spade, old fashioned anti-Catholic sectarianism, that has been evident in blog comment threads in this last week.

Let me put this in some context.

The other worrying thing is the ludicrous, hyperbolic and irrational implications drawn by bloggers such as Antony and Darp that because the young Joseph Ratzinger - along with every other young German man - was forced to join Hitler Youth - that first, he is disqualified from the Papacy, and secondly, the implied but not substantiated allegation that the Catholic Church is the fount of all evil in the world.

Antony, for instance, wrote:

Prediction number three: being a former Nazi will do wonders for the church’s image.

All in all, a grand day for the secularists.

And the Catholic Church is accused of triumphalism? This sort of crap gives secularism (which I support in the public political sphere) a bad name.

Let me tell you something first about Germans in this country. Most German-Australians came out here in 1848 - there was no coincidence whatsoever with that year being a year of revolution in Europe - to seek political and religious freedom. Yet, in one of the two areas in which Germans settled (the other being the Barossa Valley in South Australia) - the Darling Downs in Queensland - every German town on the Darling Downs - bar one, Marburg - had to change its name in WW1. And despite the fact that German-Australians in the 30s totally resisted Nazi advances, people were interned during WW2. Australian citizens from families who’d been in this country 90 years. One of the great right-wing myths is that Australia was some sort of Anglo-Celtic homogenous country prior to Calwell’s post-war immigration programme. Not true. Simply false. Ask the descendants in Queensland of South Sea Islanders, the Chinese diaspora, the Jewish community, and the Germans. But this land of the free destroyed German-Australian culture willy nilly in the 40s. And as late as the 50s, a friend of mine’s mother who’d been subjected to domestic violence was thrown out of a boarding house in Tooowoomba in which she had taken refuge, because she was Catholic. She converted to Lutheranism.

Let’s not forget that there was no “Anglo-Celtic” ethnicity - rather Australia was torn between Irish Catholics and English, Scots and Welsh Protestants. It’s said that sectarianism in Australian culture and politics died in the 60s and 70s. Untrue. When I worked in the Queensland public service as a young clerk aged 16 in 1984, there were still entire departments that were “Mick” and others that were “Masonic”. Maybe that’s not true now, but these cultural prejudices run deep, and the prominence of the events surrounding the death of John Paul II and the election of Benedict XVI has seen some spectres return with a vengeance.

Much of the discussion of Benedict XVI in terms of his past as a young man in Hitler’s Germany on blogs has frankly displayed prejudice. The same sort of prejudice that had my ancestors afraid to speak German in the streets 60 years ago. And I’ve been horrified - not by the reasonable questioning of Benedict XVI’s policies and past - but by the slurs and insinuations that have been all too evident on some threads of late - by the rising of the ghost of sectarianism. It’s time to call a spade a spade, and invite those who haven’t examined their own cultural biases to reflect - and deal. Until you do, your self-identification as left wing is a fraud and a deception.

I agree with Currency - much of the discussion of the Papacy has been, frankly, pathetic. In the real sense of that word.

Passionate enough?

Elsewhere: Tim Dunlop agrees with my sentiments about slurs at Road to Surfdom and also has something to say on papal infallibility, Miss P makes a welcome return to posting, Guy thinks we should talk about non Pontiff related matters, Jason Soon does the shorter Ratzinger and Phil Gomes takes issue with the Church’s reaction to Spanish policy on homosexual marriage.

Update: saint writes ‘yet another Pope post’, among other things, criticising the stereotyping of Benedict’s ethnicity and making some good points about redemption and forgiveness.

Just in: Phil Gomes discusses the Australian blogosphere’s passion play.

Feel to Believe

Excellent - Tim Dunlop has joined the Beth Orton fan club.

Bahnisch on Blogging @ Online Opinion

Online Opinion, which has been running a series of articles on blogging and new media, has published my piece - Political Blogs versus Big Media? It’s the wrong question to ask. I’d be very interested in feedback. I’ve also posted the article here at LP so that it becomes part of the archive of this site.

My argument, in short, is that to counterpose blogging to big media and ask, as journos often do, “why don’t Ozbloggers break stories and influence the political process?” is to misunderstand the role blogs can actually play - I argue that there are aspects of the form itself (primarily interactivity) that make blogging significant:

As blogger Ken Parish put it, we become monitorial citizens, and, I’d add, better citizens. I hope, just as I’ve argued that blogging reflects broader social patterns, that this political interactivity is a sign of the times. It’s certainly a sign of hope, and as the song goes, maybe “from little things, big things grow”.

Juxtaposed with my piece at Online Opinion is a piece by Daniel Donahoo. Daniel is an Ozprospect Fellow. I don’t know his work, but he has a fairly negative perspective on blogs. He claims that blogs are not influential because influential people don’t blog. This surely is unfair to the Christopher Sheils, John Quiggins, Andrew Bartletts and indeed Tim Blairs of the sphere, to name only a few. The rest of us, he suggests, are just sad.

Hmmm.

I’d make a couple of points in reply. The first is that his conception of influence is a very top-down one. What he ignores is the point that I’m making about the empowerment of citizens that’s possible through blogging.

His second point is a version of the old canard about interactivity over the internet being a symptom of a decline in “real” as opposed to “virtual” community. The latter is seen as somehow inferior, and a sad sign of the times:

That we can no longer share our thoughts over a coffee or a beer, but must go home and type them on the computer is another demonstration of people losing their physical connection with each other.

Bloggers know each other by pseudonyms and URLs. They are connected by computer terminals and telephone lines. A blogger can log off and disappear at any time, never to be seen again. There isn’t much serious commitment to the bevy of relationships formed online.

The greatest influence that blogging is having, is on the nature of our human relationships.

Again, I thoroughly disagree. I certainly share thoughts with people over a coffee and a beer - and sometimes with fellow bloggers - Michael Carden and I had a couple of beers at UQ yesterday and a good chat about theology and politics. There’s a kind of implication in the piece that bloggers are sad nerds with decayed social skills. But the broader point is also wrong. There’s been a flurry of research from Sociologists and Psychologists over the last decade on internet relations between people - almost all of which suggests that its results are positive and have a flow through effect on offline sociality. And the suggestion that to blog about politics displays a lack of political commitment is wrong as well. Surely throwing ideas out and discussing them with an audience is a positive thing. How many other fora where this can be done (ie vibrant branch meetings of political parties or public meetings) exist? And the potential of the internet for political mobilisation was stunningly demonstrated in the US last year on both left and right.

So I don’t see any need to modify the points I made in response to Donahoo’s arguments.

Consummatum Est

It’s hard to go into a bookshop these days where they display the best selling ten without seeing multiple Dan Brown tomes, or without being lured into the temptation of buying pseudo-lavish collectors’ editions of his (in)famous tale The Da Vinci Code, arguably more of a marketing phenomenon than a novel. Brown claims (kind of) to have uncovered a secret conspiracy of the usual suspects (including the Templars, who, as I revealed to an expectant blogosphere last year, are now living in tunnels under Hertfordshire) to conceal their true manipulation of history. It’s all there - the Holy Grail, Merovingian Kings, strange goings on in a French church in the 19th century, and of course the hidden bloodline of Jesus’ (and Mary Magdalene’s) children. Not to mention Opus Dei.

Now, Brown’s tale isn’t exactly new, and he’s being sued by the writers of the 80s potboiler The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail.

Christopher Sheil wrote a very very good debunking post on Brown at Back Pages, and Gary Indiana contextualised the book within conspiracy culture in the Village Voice.

But why write about it now? Not because it’s still a blight on good bookstores everywhere. It’s well known that the Church recently appointed Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone to expose the book’s distortions of history. The said Cardinal, now Archbishop of Genoa, was of course a former deputy to one Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger.

And as Joanne Jacobs noted, lots of bloggers mentioned Dan Brown when posting about Pope Benedict XVI.

See how conspiracy theory works? You string a few related statements together and imply a causal connection which isn’t spelt out!

But, while we’re on the subject of the Pope, it’s highly likely that Cardinal Ratzinger is aware of the prophecies attributed to St. Malachy - which predict that there is but one Pope to follow the current one. The last Pope will be Peter the Roman, and in his reign Rome will be destroyed, and Christ will return to judge the living and the dead:

In persecutione extrema S.R.E. sedebit Petrus Romanus, qui pascet oves in multis tribulationibus: quibus transactis civitas septicollis diruetur, & Judex tremaedus judicabit populum suum. Finis.

Intriguingly, the tradition is that the penultimate Pope will be from the Benedictine Order. Another reason for Ratzinger’s choice of name?

In actual fact, St. Malachy’s prophecies are thought to have been concocted in the Sixteenth Century, possibly from within the Jesuit Order (usually found when there’s a conspiracy theory about). The website from which I quoted (and I could multiply the quotations - try this google search) states:

These short prophetical announcements, in number 112, indicate some noticeable trait of all future popes from Celestine II, who was elected in the year 1130, until the end of the world. They are enunciated under mystical titles. Those who have undertaken to interpret and explain these symbolical prophecies have succeeded in discovering some trait, allusion, point, or similitude in their application to the individual popes, either as to their country, their name, their coat of arms or insignia, their birth-place, their talent or learning, the title of their cardinalate, the dignities which they held etc. For example, the prophecy concerning Urban VIII is Lilium et Rosa (the lily and the rose); he was a native of Florence and on the arms of Florence figured a fleur-de-lis; he had three bees emblazoned on his escutcheon, and the bees gather honey from the lilies and roses. Again, the name accords often with some remarkable and rare circumstance in the pope’s career; thus Peregrinus apostolicus (pilgrim pope), which designates Pius VI, appears to be verified by his journey when pope into Germany, by his long career as pope, and by his expatriation from Rome at the end of his pontificate. Those who have lived and followed the course of events in an intelligent manner during the pontificates of Pius IX, Leo XIII, and Pius X cannot fail to be impressed with the titles given to each by the prophecies of St. Malachy and their wonderful appropriateness: Crux de Cruce (Cross from a Cross) Pius IX; Lumen in caelo (Light in the Sky) Leo XIII; Ignis ardens (Burning Fire) Pius X. There is something more than coincidence in the designations given to these three popes so many hundred years before their time.

Well, maybe not. The nature of cryptic prophecy is that the space for interpretation is so wide you can read almost anything into it.

Which brings me back to the interpretation of history and The Da Vinci Code. I’ve been dipping into a scholarly but well written history of the Grail legend by Richard Barber. As readers of Umberto Eco will know, there are grave difficulties in treating ancient and medieval texts as having a self-evident meaning. For instance, many theological texts sometimes called “forgeries” were just conventionally attributed to an author with authority (literally) - one example being the Pseudo-Irenaus. The intent wasn’t to deceive. Similarly, Barber notes that the early romances of the Grail usually claimed to have access to a secret book or codex that the author dared not circulate, or sometimes even summarise in full. Robert de Boron, the first writer to give the Grail legend a Christian twist, claimed to own a book containing the words Christ spoke to Joseph of Arimethea after his resurrection. The words he discloses are conventional medieval Eucharistic theology.

I’m in thorough agreement with Barber:

And finally, why, in the twenty-first century, are we unable to face uncertainty about the past? Many of us are not content with possibilities as the answer to historical problems, but are driven to see questions like these as secrets locked from us by some vast conspiracy, for which a key must be found.

In fact, we do violence to the past by imagining that our futures were so easily manipulable. And often, as notoriously the case with the anti-Semitic forgeries of the recent past, conspiracy theory slips easily into caricature and hatred. More often than not, what happens in history is unintended, and history as such is ultimately unknowable - all we have is texts and artefacts from which we reconstruct a past. This is in no way to disparage scientific enquiry into history or to promote relativism - often it’s the results of serious history that we are afraid to confront. So we retreat into fantasies unredeemed by logic. It’s a worry.

So why then Cardinal Ratzinger’s choice of the name Benedict - so striking when considering the prophecy?

(Rhetorical questions also mark out conspiracy theory).

Just between you and me, I suspect it’s in part his little joke.

Ethereal?

While I’ve been writing a long post, I’ve been taping Picnic at Hanging Rock which is on the ABC at the moment. Last time I saw it, I was having trouble pinning down exactly why it’s such a haunting film. Help me out on this one?

Benedict XVI

The key assumption made in debates in the Australian blogosphere about the elevation of Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger to the Papacy under the name of Benedict XVI is that his record at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith indicates his will be a conservative if not reactionary Pontificate.

This is true in one sense - no Cardinal elected by this Conclave was likely to break ranks with John Paul II on issues such as women priests, the distinctiveness of the Catholic Church, homosexuality, the “culture of life” and so on. Much as I’d welcome some movement on these matters, that’s just realism.

However, on reflection, I’m not so sure that the dire predictions of many liberal Catholics and indeed self described secularists are necessarily going to be fulfilled. Interpreting the tea leaves of Vatican politics is as complex an exercise as Kremlinology was, and predictions have always been rife, including those of Nostradamus. Obviously the speculation about Benedict’s future based on Ratzinger’s past are based more in rationality than arcane and esoteric prophecy. But I’d like to sound a note of caution.

Ratzinger was a liberal theologian in his youth and as a peritus (expert) at the Second Vatican Council, and a close colleague of Hans Kung. It’s eminently possible that he will bring aspects of this past to his Papacy as well. The hyper-orthodox who act more like a political faction than a religious grouping, and who blithely take upon themselves the power to accuse liberal Catholics of heresy are often (though not always) difficult to distinguish from schismatic “traditional” Catholics who reject Vatican II entirely. Ratzinger was careful to defend the teaching of the Second Vatican Council as an integral part of Catholic tradition against the schismatic movement of Archbishop Lefevre. Benedict XVI would be well aware of the tendency of hyper-orthodox Catholics to set themselves up as their own judges in matters of faith and morals, and aware also of the need for unity in the Church. Indeed, such extremism differs from traditional ultramontanism (or the tendency to elevate the Papacy over the local Church) in that it is also a sign of the postmodern phenomenon of picking for oneself elements of religion to observe. It’s remarkable how often these conservative Catholics ignore papal teaching when it suits them, for instance on matters of justice and peace.

One conclusion that can be drawn from the short Conclave is that Cardinal Ratzinger must have had the support of many moderate Cardinals. His personal qualities seem attractive. And, as a number of commentators, including the bete-noire of the ultra-orthodox, Australian priest Dr Paul Collins have observed, his choice of the name Benedict is significant:

In choosing the name Benedict, the Pope is seeking to inherit the mantle of Benedict XV, pope from 1914 to 1922, who was regarded as a moderate following the anti-modernist Pius X.

The name Benedict appears intended to soften the Pope’s image as a hardliner.

In his first encyclical, issued only months after his installation, Benedict XV called a halt to the war between traditionalists and progressives in the church.

He also sought to end what he called the “useless slaughter” of World War I that played out during his papacy.

“Benedict’s pontificate was characterised by the attempt to bring peace both to a war-ravaged Europe and to a church recently torn by the Modernist crisis,” according to the Encyclopedia of Catholicism.

The other factor to take into consideration, as Jesuit Fr Bill Uren also notes, is that in any organisation it’s hard to discern the genuine views of those in subordinate positions, no matter how powerful. Uren also argues that Ratzinger was a moderating influence on John Paul II.

I’m not making any predictions, but on reflection, I wouldn’t be so quick to rush to judgement about the papacy of Benedict XVI as some on both left and right have been.

Elsewhere: Chris McGillion argues the case for seeing Benedict XVI as a compromise candidate. Peter Wilson suggests in The Australian that it’s Benedict’s turn to be “good cop”.

Update: Tim Dunlop looks at some of the political issues that arise for secular liberals. The Guardian has a round up of international blog reaction, reinforcing the point that those chanting “down with heresy” may be reacting prematurely.

Further update: Hans Kung argues we should not rush to judgement and John Allen in the National Catholic Reporter reinforces the point about the choice of the name Benedict:

The very name is maybe one indication. While the primary reference may be to St. Benedict, the founder of European monasticism, no doubt there are echoes also of Benedict XV, who reigned from 1914 to 1922 and put an end to the conservative anti-modernist campaigns of the pontificate of St. Pius X. Benedict said that rather than worrying about the least signals of doctrinal error, it was enough for someone to use Catholic as their first name, and Christian as their family name.

Perhaps, therefore, Pope Benedict XVI was sending a subtle signal that he too would like to be a conciliator rather than an authoritarian, repressive figure.

The English text of the Pope’s first homily is online at the New York Times. The NYT notes a striking change of tone.

Additional update: Mark has another liberal Catholic take posted.

Extremely interesting: Courtesy of saint in comments, this article by an Italian journalist said to be well informed lays out some speculations on Benedict’s papacy, including the suggestion (with some supporting evidence) that the Church may revisit its prohibition on condoms.

Rules for a Flame War II

Why do metablogging posts always attract interesting comments threads? Perhaps because they’re the essence of pure blog, form without content. Last week, Jacques Chester posted some rules for a good flame war. Now, courtesy of Nabs, who’s probably been involved in all good Ozblog flamewars, LP is happy to be able to draw your attention to the definitive post on the rhetorical moves involved in blog wars.

Crime and Punishment

Foreign Minister Alexander Downer has no sympathy for the Australians arrested in Bali for drug smuggling. The video evidence seems to suggest their guilt, and the Indonesian Courts proceed on the basis of the inquisitorial rather than adversarial style of justice common to countries whose legal system is based on Roman law rather than common law. The implication is that there’s no presumption of innocence. By contrast, the government has been moving mountains to ensure that Schapelle Corby doesn’t face the death penalty. I make no comment about Ms Corby’s innocence or guilt, but I do wonder if the media machine that’s focussing attention on her case makes some difference to the government’s response.

Elsewhere: Posts at Catallaxy and wsacaucus.org. Rowen dissects Downer’s logic.

Update: Given the turn comments have taken, it’s worth drawing attention to Andrew Bartlett’s post on the death penalty.

The City of Churches

South Australian Labor Premier Mike Rann has appointed businessman Robert de Champion de Crespigny and Monsignor David Cappo to his cabinet executive committee, despite neither being MPs. A National MP and an Independent already sit in Cabinet.

I’m inclined to agree with this observation:

[Liberal MP] Mr Lucas questioned the public accountability of the committee members.

“In our system, elected cabinet ministers are subject to the checks and balances of parliament,” he said.

“However, Mr Rann’s two new appointees would not be answerable to the parliament and to the people of South Australia.”

Loud, Nude and Proud

If you were wondering where to find a nude rock festival to go to over the Anzac Day weekend, it’s an an hour’s train ride north of Brisbane.

Habemus Papam

Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger has been elected Pope, taking the name Benedict XVI.

Remember you saw the puff of white smoke first here at LP.

The reaction of Brisbane Archbishop John Bathersby is interesting:

Arcbishop John Bathersby said despite the speed of the decision, the choice was predictable.

“I met him about three or four times over the years and hearing the description of him as an enormously frightening person, I was amazed by his quietness - and even shyness - and his courtesy,” Archbishop Bathersby said.

“I found him a very easy person to talk to.”

Elsewhere: Some interesting commentary in The Guardian.

There’s some vigorous discussion going on at John Quiggin’s, Tim Dunlop’s and at Barista. On the other side of the fence, there’s a roundup of reaction at Tim Blair’s. Appropriately Nic White was the first in the Ozblogosphere to see the smoke.

Ken Parish’s sentiments at Troppo are close to my own.

Update: The New York Times provides some good coverage of the Pope’s background and possible intentions. There’s a comprehensive profile of the Pope’s views at The National Catholic Reporter where John Allen writes:

Some say his 18 years as prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the church’s guardian of orthodoxy, have been the intellectual salvation of Roman Catholicism in a time of confusion and compromise.

Others believe Ratzinger will be remembered as the architect of John Paul’s internal Kulturkampf, intimidating and punishing thinkers in order to restore a model of church — clerical, dogmatic and rule-bound — many hoped had been swept away by the Second Vatican Council, the 1962-65 assembly of bishops that sought to renew Catholicism and open it to the world. Ratzinger’s campaign bears comparison to the anti-modernist drive in the early part of the century or Pius XII’s crackdown in the 1950s, critics say, but is even more disheartening because it followed a moment of such optimism and new life.

At the most basic level, many Catholics cannot escape the sense that Ratzinger’s exercise of ecclesial power is not what Jesus had in mind.

Beneath the competing analyses and divergent views, this much is certain: Ratzinger has drawn lines in the sand and wielded the tools of his office on many who cross those lines. Whether necessary prophylaxis or a naked power play, his efforts to curb dissent have left the church more bruised, more divided, than at any point since the close of Vatican II.

This just in: Liam has his say at Cut Price Commentariat and Flutey has made a welcome return to blogging - his first post on nuns, if I’m correct. saint has some initial thoughts posted, with a promise of more to come. Jo Jacobs throws a bit of cynicism into the mix.

Conservative Oz Catholic bloggers react: Currency Lad has posted on Benedict XVI while DREADNOUGHT reads liberal Catholics out of the Church and wonders if we’re diabolical. His post is all about love, of course.

Cardinal Ratzinger in his own words: Online are text of his homily prior to the conclave where he attacked the “dictatorship of relativism” and his homily at the funeral mass of John Paul II. An extensive compilation of Ratzinger’s writing and interviews is at the Ratzinger Fan Club site.

Which Side Are You On?

A number of commenters on the series of linked posts about the 2005 British Political Opinion Survey were surprised to find themselves Green or Lib Dem voters, or that their opinions on other questions had them wrongly tagged as “pro-war”. In a two-party system where it’s assumed that public opinion lines up neatly on two poles of an ideological divide, what do you do when your views don’t fit either?

This is a live issue in the British election, particularly for Left voters who might “naturally” incline to Labour, but want to send a message about its rightward drift, Blair’s premiership and the Iraq War. Tariq Ali had some simple advice for voters but the utter confusion that results from reading George Monbiot’s column in The Guardian is probably a sign of some of the contradictions of using your vote to “send a message” in a system which wants you to choose between Government and Opposition. These contradictions are compounded in a first-past-the-post system as in the UK.

And does the message you send reach its destination?

For instance, did the defection of traditional Labor voters to the Greens and the Democrats in the 2001 Tampa/terror election have an effect, either immediate or long term?

Or is there a kernel of truth in the canard that a third party vote is wasted?