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Latest issue: 17 April 2009
Last updated: 12 February 2012

tpr

From the editor’s desk


Voices from the lower depths Free 

Until now, the anarchic and unruly realm of the blogger has been seen as a somewhat surreal world remote from real life. It has at last impinged on mainstream British politics in no uncertain fashion. The malicious blogging ambitions of a couple of Labour Party zealots, one inside 10 Downing Street where the other used to work, have embarrassed the already beleaguered Prime Minister and given his political enemies fresh ammunition to hurl at him. One of the zealots, Damian McBride, was employed as a special political adviser to the Prime Minister, a post created to keep civil servants from having to dirty their hands with party politics. He passed the time dishonourably inventing scurrilous rumours about the leaders of the Tory Party, with a view to his equally dishonourable co-conspirator, Derek Draper, posting them on a pro-Labour political blog to be called Red Rag.

News of this dastardly plot reached an established Tory blogger, known by the pseudonym Guido Fawkes, who sent the material to a newspaper - proving ironically that in the internet age the print media still has a purpose. Mr McBride had to resign in disgrace, and Mr Brown, in his usual cack-handed way, has half-apologised and half-disowned it. All hell was thus let loose on the political battlefield, with Downing Street being described as a "cesspit" and the blame laid firmly, not without reason, at the door of a culture of scurrility cultivated by Mr Brown himself. More than one ex-minister has complained that the distressing experience of being "briefed against" - off-the-record denigration in the press, planted unattributedly by those who have the Prime Minister's ear - has happened to them too. Given the instant hit-and-run anonymity that those who post items on blogs (as distinct from most of those who run them) can enjoy, blogging must have seemed the natural place to expand these nefarious activities. It fits well with the tabloid-driven tendency to reduce all politics to personalities rather than policies.

Blogs ...


New labour, new Catholic

Previous weeks


The well-being of women


Time for leadership and vision Free 

Celebrating Christ's death and Resurrection is a time of repentance, renewal and rebirth. This year Easter appropriately coincides with the beginning of a new chapter in the history of the Catholic Church in England and Wales, with the appointment of a new Archbishop of Westminster. It is a moment for taking stock, and refreshing old commitments. The Church here has fallen below its potential, and needs boosting ...


Politician, heal thyself


Questions of principle Free 

As President Barack Obama received the adulation of press and public in London, a very different treatment was being directed at him within the Catholic Church in the United States. He has been invited to America's senior Catholic university, Notre Dame in Indiana, both to receive an honorary doctorate of law and to give the graduation-day address. The invitation has caused a furore. It has been denounced not only ...


A very African message


Trust must head G20 agenda Free 

Prayers for the success of the G20 summit, which opens on Thursday in London's Docklands, would not be out of order this weekend. A good outcome is the best prospect in sight to ease the suffering of millions who have been impoverished and crushed by the global recession, and millions more who are at risk. They live not just in the developing world, although their plight is acute, but in every town and city in Europe ...


Human cost of targets


Courage and cowardice Free 

The image of the Catholic Church as an unchanging monolith seems to be crumbling before our eyes. The conventional wisdom - that it is bad for the laity to see their pastors as fallible human beings disagreeing among themselves - has given way under various pressures, including palpable mistakes made by the Vatican on various issues. This is not a view confined to the Vatican's critics, for Pope Benedict himself has ...

       

 In this week’s issue

Between a rock and a hard place
Agony of L’Aquila
Resurrection song
A delight in company
Worship begins at home
Called to the NHS
Grasping after God
Smoke machines, amp stacks and grace
Regrets, I've had a few

 Latest News

Dublin archbishop says Ireland not ready to welcome Pope Benedict
Surprise at delay over Becker's appointment as cardinal
Longley sees value of secularism
SSPX plays for time
Australian ordinariate named

Can the Church support abuse victims on its own terms?
Elena Curti

Is the Church too slow in recognising that academies are the future for Catholic schools?
Christopher Lamb

Goodwin the scapegoat
Elena Curti

The pain of being a coeliac Catholic
Sr M, guest contributor

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2011 lecture