Mark Steyn, Cole Porter and Free Speech
I’m cruising down New England country lanes that criss-cross towns that look like Norman Rockwell theme parks—on my way to find Mark Steyn—but I’m not allowed to tell you exactly where I am.
My destination is the equivalent of a military bunker—a hidden television studio where, later today, they’ll be installing the concert grand piano Steyn will be using when he launches his variety talk show. Even though I’m less than an hour from the Canadian border and ninety minutes from Montreal, and even though the last battle fought here was in 1777 (the Green Mountain Boys routed some Brits, Hessians and Iroquois under German command), tactical secrecy is the order of the day.
Mark Steyn is under a fatwa.
In a sane world I would be hoping to find Steyn in a good mood so I could ask him whether he really thinks Gypsy is the greatest musical ever staged, because many people believe that despite the stunning score by Jule Styne (“There’s No Business Like Show Business”, “Everything’s Coming Up Roses”, “All I Need Is the Girl”) and the delightful lyrics of Stephen Sondheim (before he became the mononymous bore Sondheim), the book by Arthur Laurents is, after all, a backstage story, which is the typical refuge of the journeyman Broadway playwright looking to establish excuses for downstage centre belting. I’m of the opinion that, since Laurents was also the director of the best Gypsy revival, the one in the early 1990s starring Tyne Daly as Mama Rose—who was, by the way, far superior to both Ethel Merman and Rosalind Russell—and since the Eleven O’Clock Number, “Rose’s Turn”, was spun entirely from the best scene in the book (“I thought you did it for me, mama”), it’s obvious that Laurents was constantly sacrificing his dialogue to the staging and choreography of the original director, Jerome Robbins.
But, alas, we don’t live in a sane world, so I can’t justify spending valuable interview time asking the author of America Alone: The End of the World as We Know It—the apocalyptic best-seller about how Muslims are taking over the world and destroying Western civilisation—whether the songs of Harry Warren would someday be recognised for their genius, despite the novelty lyrics of “Chattanooga Choo Choo”, “Shuffle Off to Buffalo” and “I’ve Got a Gal from Kalamazoo”. Steyn is indeed the author of Broadway Babies Say Goodnight—in my opinion one of the greatest works in the rarefied world of musical theatre journalism—but spending all our time on it would be, under the circumstances, equivalent to interviewing Ronald Reagan about the nuances of Knute Rockne, All American.
“But you do really think Gypsy is the greatest musical?” I manage to wedge in later. And, to my great satisfaction, he says, “Yes, I really do.”
But back to the Islamic apocalypse. Apparently Steyn was radicalised by the events of 9/11, because on that day he ceased being a nerdy theatre critic, crooner and exponent of the American songbook, and became instead the Cassandra of Western democracy, doling out an avalanche of columns, articles, books and radio programs telling us that we have given up our Anglo-Saxon Enlightenment souls while the vanguard of the Islamic menace has been advancing toward Kansas. That he’s managed to do so without sacrificing any of the acerbic humour he displayed while describing the libretto of Les Miz or the eccentricities of Andrew Lloyd Webber makes him, sui generis, our singing dancing Tiresias, or, perhaps more accurately, that guy who stands on the side of the road in every Friday the 13th movie, saying “Turn back! Turn back now! Before it’s tooooooo late!” but, in Steyn’s case, with a Catskills-comic rimshot to further confuse the heedless libertines on their way to perdition.
Mark, glad to meet you, you’ve written one of the happiest books I’ve ever read and one of the most depressing books I’ve ever read.
I did say something to this effect when Steyn at length showed up, ambling into a construction site full of exposed electrical wires and bare support beams where, in a few days, The Mark Steyn Show would go into tryouts on the CRTV network. (Be careful when you Google it: CRTV is also the acronym of the national television network of Cameroon.)
“But it’s all part of the same package!” says Steyn with enthusiasm. “The point of politics is to free up time for what really matters in life.”
Like Cole Porter?
“Like Cole Porter.”
Steyn is a large man—above six feet, burly, with a fuzzy red beard that makes him look as if he should be handing William Wallace a halberd at Falkirk, not tinkling piano keys while sipping a Tom Collins—but then that’s his whole point.
“What I’ve learned since 9/11 is that the small pleasures—music, theatre, film—have to be earned. In the Muslim world, there is no music. In Libya they destroyed all the musical instruments—music was considered an abomination. When the demography changes, there will be no concert halls. Artists who take a multicultural view should be aware of this. Count the number of covered women in London’s West End. In Birmingham, where I went to high school, you have a provincial symphony orchestra in a Muslim city—I’m not sure it will survive. All art, all popular culture, is endangered by Islam, because there’s no room for it. It’s considered libertinism. And I’m not even talking about Miley Cyrus twerking at the music awards. What turned Sayyid Qutb against the morality of the West is that he attended a church dance in Greeley, Colorado, which was a dry town in 1948, and he heard the song ‘Baby, It’s Cold Outside’. He thought it was evil. And now things are getting a lot worse. Ugly things are happening.”
This is what’s simultaneously frustrating and fascinating about talking to Mark Steyn—he understands the connection between Frank Loesser, the creator of Guys and Dolls, and Sayyid Qutb, the Muslim Brotherhood leader executed for plotting the assassination of Nasser. If the Islamic extremists weren’t out there meddling with the canon, we could have spent the next hour discussing the various versions of “Baby, It’s Cold Outside”, which Loesser wrote for the Esther Williams movie Neptune’s Daughter. What Steyn failed to mention is that, after six decades as a Christmas standard played over department-store public address systems, the song suddenly became ostracised two years ago because certain moral police officers in various social media fora decided it’s an anthem for date rape. (Apparently the National Organization for Women has more in common with the Muslim Brotherhood than either party would like to admit.) The idea is ludicrous, not only because the song is light-hearted and romantic, but also because it’s been consistently interpreted and reinterpreted to make either sex and both sexes desperate for nookie. Even the original movie uses the song twice—once when Ricardo Montalban is trying to seduce Esther Williams, but again when the man-crazy Betty Garrett is trying to seduce Red Skelton! Not to mention that Idina Menzel and Michael Bublé recorded a video version lip-synched by pre-pubescent actors dressed up as 1920s swells—should they be prosecuted for child abuse?—and, in the Lady Gaga version with Joseph Gordon-Levitt, she is aggressively trying to have sex with him.
But then sometimes Mark Steyn seems like the only conservative you can discuss these issues with, because most Republicans think popular culture is beside the point, if not downright dangerous. Steyn, on the other hand, has performed “Kung Fu Fighting” before thousands of people in civic auditoria more accustomed to Mary Kay Cosmetics conventions, so he gets it.
“Social conservatives are always editing pop culture,” says Steyn, “and it’s completely pathetic. Conservatives play to the caricature. Mention a French movie and the crowd turns on you. It’s a reductive view of the world. There are ideological enforcers casting aside works of art because they contain bad words or uncomfortable associations. It’s one of the biggest abdications of the American right. Who gives a crap about who gets elected to the Congressional district in Ohio?—that’s not going to change the culture. It’s movies that move the culture. And if you abdicate that space, you lose. Jeb Bush spent a billion dollars to get 2.8 per cent of the vote in Iowa. Mitt Romney and people like him who have a billion dollars—don’t spend it on politics, buy a TV network! Theatre, movies, music, that’s where the battles are fought. They’ve abdicated that space in the schools. As a result, my kid had to sit through Al Gore’s lousy movie three times. All effective storytelling is inherently conservative—because your choices have consequences. For the Left, nothing has consequences. But the trends are all in the Left’s direction, because the Right got out of the game—they chose to make themselves culturally irrelevant. If you’re not in the same room, having the conversation, there’s not gonna be a solution.”
Of course, now that Steyn lives 300 miles from the Palace Theatre and 3200 miles from the Barbican, he’s more or less out of the game as well. Steyn has a bucolic spread near a village in New Hampshire, where, rumour has it, he’s installed a “Beware of Pig” sign in order to taunt those Islamic extremists who would have him assassinated. It’s a strange homestead choice for a baptised Catholic, born in Ontario, confirmed in the Anglican church, three generations removed from a Jewish heritage, who speaks with a Brummie accent and sometimes sits in for Rush Limbaugh—and it all happened because he noticed the slogan on the New Hampshire licence plates.
“I was taking a Montreal-to-New-York train in the early nineties,” he said, “and it broke down in this general area. A van took us to an inn, and I thought it was nice here. I liked the way it looked. At first we just had a weekend place for skiing—we liked the hills and lakes. But you see these licence plates every day—LIVE FREE OR DIE—and I thought, ‘Right. That’s where I want to live.’ You know what they put on the licence plates of Ontario? ‘Yours to Discover’—about as lame as a licence plate can get. I prefer ‘Live Free or Die’. A place with town government. A place where you can still participate at the lowest level of government. Herman van Rompuy, the ‘President’ of Europe, says that we live in the age of global governance. New Hampshire is the diametric opposite. Add to that the landscape around Lancaster, New Hampshire, which is perhaps the most beautiful spot I’ve ever seen on earth, and I’m just very sentimental about the place.”
Part of the delight in reading Mark Steyn, or listening to him talk, is that you don’t know exactly where he came from or where he’s going. He’s an urban Canadian living in rural America who talks like an upper-class Brit while occasionally going on sold-out speaking tours to places like Melbourne’s Institute of Public Affairs. He’s like a professional wrestler. There’s a certain hyperbole and ambiguity to his performances—part of it’s true and classically reasoned, and part of it is the equivalent of Wild Bill Longson executing a piledriver finish, which is turning your opponent upside down and driving his head into the mat, a move that’s both illegal and enormously fun. Steyn doesn’t really keep an arsenal of sophisticated weapons in his farmhouse, ready to blow away the Chechen assassins sent to dispatch him, or maybe he does. Wrestlers and satirists never really let you know which parts are the pulled punches and which are the ones where they really do bleed and get injured, but Steyn has suffered more than his share of written attacks, verbal attacks, staged protests and—in one notorious case—a prolonged prosecution by three “human rights tribunals” in his native country.
He’s also been excoriated for using the pronoun “we” when discussing American or British or Australian affairs, since he’s never altered his citizenship (“Most of the trouble in the world is caused by people with multiple passports”), but, in his defence, he was often blindsided by editors claiming his opinions as native as he toiled simultaneously for the Chicago Sun-Times, the American Spectator, the National Post of Toronto, and the British Spectator.
“It always depended on what point the editors were trying to make,” he explains, “and I was often unaware that the change had been made. ‘We’ could be used to distinguish ‘us’ from ‘you Brit losers’, but it could also be used to distinguish ‘us’ from ‘you crazy Yanks’. Canada is the country that, if I ever needed one, I would always call home, but I use ‘we’ to mean Western civilisation. Because the important thing is not the difference between Idaho and Denmark—the important thing is the West versus barbarism. Nigeria, for example, drifted from ‘we’ to ‘them’. Now half the country is under sharia. Beer trucks are destroyed in the name of Islam. I think ‘we’—meaning the English-speaking West—have common citizenship as originating in the British Empire. First of July, Fourth of July, I celebrate both. But America is important to me because it’s the indispensable nation of our times. To be born in America is a rare and precious gift.”
At this point, playing the clueless American, I made a game attempt to say But, Mark, aren’t you overstating the advance of Islam? Haven’t they been trying to scale the ramparts for ten centuries? Don’t they always get turned back at the last minute? Don’t we always wake up and defeat them at Poitiers or the Kahlenberg Mountain?
“In the Balkans you have the toughest hombres on the planet,” Steyn snapped back, “and they couldn’t hold the line. People who are optimistic because the Belgians or the Swedes will hold the line are holding a fairly deluded view.”
And, of course, he’s right, because, once again, the menace is no longer an Ottoman army but an erosion of the belief that there’s anything worth defending.
“What we lack in the West is cultural confidence,” says Steyn. “We think our inheritance is horrible. American students think America invented slavery. In Britain people think they’re responsible for imperialism, colonialism, racism. We’ve lost our cultural ideals. There’s a big hole where our sense of self should be, and so instead we concentrate on climate change and transgender bathrooms. If your parents immigrated to the United States, you’re taught in school that your new country is racist and that what we call bedrock Western principles are, in fact, evil and misguided. So what do you do? You no longer look to your new nation for moral guidance—you look for meatier stuff. And radical Islam is much meatier.”
But, Mark, aren’t we all well served by a questioning academic world that tries to shoot down basic assumptions, as opposed to what we used to have—a fawning Victorian ivory tower full of privileged dons who upheld God, country, and the bromides of Samuel Johnson? (I said this well before the riot in which an angry mob at nearby Middlebury College forced political scientist Charles Murray to flee for his life, in the process sending the scholar who was hosting him to the hospital with a back injury.)
“The modern world,” answers Steyn, “was built by people from a very narrow tradition. Athens, Rome, Jerusalem, London, Magna Carta. Not a perfect tradition, but less flawed than anybody else. Yes, Cromwell’s admonition to paint ‘warts and all’ is a good thing, but that’s not what we do. We paint only the warts. And, of course, there are no takers for free speech—they think that’s hateful. We’re becoming a civilisation that is not willing to defend itself, and that is a civilisation that cannot survive.”
But, I start again, Monotheism! Children of Abraham! Common heritage at Ur of the Chaldees! Surely there’s common ground spiritually if not culturally.
“You’re right,” he says, “it shouldn’t be different for Islam, but we make it different. Muslims fought for king and empire in both world wars. Muslims were the backbone of the Indian army. Ataturk’s Turkey was an example of Muslims functioning perfectly well in a modern democratic society—but Ataturk’s Turkey is going away. We don’t have that trust any more. It was a Wahhabi who assassinated the chief justice in British India, and that is more or less the only brand of Islam exported today—extremist Saudi-style Wahhabism. All these giant mosques you see going up in cities all over the world are not paid for locally, they’re paid for by Saudi Arabia. They’re trying to make it one-size-fits-all Islam, and a type of Islam that regards the West as its enemy, instead of the mom-and-pop Islam of the past.”
So you’re saying the problem is not Islam, the problem is Wahhabism?
“No! Wahhabism is the symptom. The problem is us. We don’t defend ourselves. If you are a woman living alone in a Muslim community in Europe, you do not venture out after 6 p.m. If there are sexual assaults by Muslims, and the allegations are made public by the victims, the accuser is inevitably accused of racism. Nobody disputes that it happened, but they’re held to a different standard because the victims are Swedes or Danes and the accused is from a Muslim country. It’s believed that it’s unreasonable to expect decent behaviour from an Afghan or an Iraqi—which is racist. You’re denying the humanity of these people. And so you surrender incrementally. You live in a citadel. You make ridiculous changes to your own culture. In Britain the banks don’t give piggy banks to children any more, because the ‘piggy’ might be offensive. There’s a fetishisation of the burka, which should be regarded as what it is—a prison for women. Why should we abandon our own heritage to barbarism? I’m a nineteenth-century imperialist a hundred years past my sell-by date.”
It’s statements like these that have landed Steyn on various hit lists, including, most famously, those of the Canadian Human Rights Commission, the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal and the Ontario Human Rights Commission, which are strange quasi-judicial bodies that were stirred to action a decade ago by the Canadian Islamic Congress. Between 2005 and 2007 the weekly news magazine Maclean’s published eighteen articles by Steyn, including an excerpt from America Alone, that were all deemed “Islamophobic” by the human rights tsars. Without going into excruciating detail about the various legal jockeying that took place—who knew one country could have this many commissions and tribunals that could all attack simultaneously?—Steyn and Maclean’s were charged with inciting hatred against Muslims, setting in motion an endless process of discovery and hearings.
“We were trying to lose,” said Steyn. “We wanted them to find us guilty so that we could appeal to a real court, hopefully the Supreme Court, and prove that these hate-speech laws are more absurd than any laws outside North Korea. Before I came along, these human rights tribunals had a 100 per cent conviction rate! The fact that we fought back meant that I became an albatross around their neck. The Thought Police were exposed to massive unrelenting publicity for the first time, and they didn’t expect that. They didn’t expect us to push back. But free speech is on the retreat, and this was not a time for a faint-hearted defence.”
The Canadian Human Rights Commission eventually bowed out of their part in the imbroglio, saying the articles were “polemical, colourful and emphatic” but failed to satisfy the definition of writings “of an extreme nature” as defined by the Supreme Court. But the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal was not so sure, holding a five-day hearing during which the Canadian Islamic Congress presented evidence that twenty articles in Maclean’s presented Islam as a violent religion and Muslims as violent people, with the Islamist lawyer using words like racist, hateful, contemptuous, Islamophobic and irresponsible. Mahmoud Ayoub, a Harvard historian of religion, testified that Steyn didn’t understand the meaning of the word jihad and that, of the 1.5 billion Muslims in the world, less than a million interpreted jihad to justify violence against non-believers. (I don’t know of any other religion in the world that has merely a million devotees willing to kill, but that’s what the man said.)
After almost two years of fighting, the tribunal dismissed the complaint, saying the articles did not violate British Columbia’s human rights law, but then adding that they were full of historical and religious inaccuracies, that they relied on stereotypes, that they were attempts to “rally public opinion by exaggeration and causing the public to fear Muslims”—as though to say, “These are horrible articles that we’re allowing to stand because of the technicalities of the law.”
Steyn was furious. “I will never think of the deranged dominion quite the same way again,” he told the National Post. “It has made me understand just how easily and incrementally free societies, often for the most fluffy reasons, slip into a kind of soft, beguiling totalitarianism. I don’t understand why they lack the cojones to find us guilty.”
But that was not the end of Steyn’s time on the pillory. The third extra-judicial tribunal, the Ontario Human Rights Commission, decided it had no jurisdiction and therefore couldn’t hear the case—but made a statement condemning Steyn anyway! The excerpt from America Alone, the commission said, “portrays Muslims as all sharing the same negative characteristics, including being a threat to ‘the West’,” and so was racist and prejudicial. The chief commissioner then gave interviews to the press indicating she considered the book harmful and irresponsible.
First of all, America Alone does no such thing. It’s a book about radical Islam and its ascendance in the world, and it’s full of verifiable data and quotations directly from the mullahs and imams who set the priorities for their flocks. The fact that Steyn doesn’t stop every hundred words to say, “Of course, I’m not talking about every Muslim”—as though he’s speaking to six-year-olds—is his only crime. Most of the book deals with the demography of Islamic birth-rates, immigration patterns, and the West’s tolerance of murderous rhetoric when it comes from the Middle East. Far from being cowed by the PC dogpile, Steyn followed up with a 400-page sequel, After America: Get Ready for Armageddon, detailing the ways in which the United States is showing the same cultural weakness as Europe.
“It probably cost Maclean’s $2 million to fight them,” says Steyn today. “And that’s the point—you have to win, because the process itself is the punishment. They do it so that everybody else gets the message.”
The disturbing thing to me about the Canadian brouhaha is that, for the most part, Steyn’s fellow journalists remained silent throughout his ordeal, which came immediately after the worldwide riots in January and February 2006 over the Muhammad cartoons published by the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten. It was a time when the Western mainstream media had acted like cowards, refusing to reprint the cartoons out of sheer terror that their offices would be blown up, so knowing that a lone-wolf Canadian conservative columnist was about to get put on an Islamic assassination list would have been highly embarrassing for, say, the New York Times, which had approximately one million times the security resources of Mark Steyn but declined to publish the cartoons out of fear.
“They used to pay lip service to the Voltaire argument,” [“I disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it”] says Steyn, “but now they say that every other right trumps freedom of speech. The rights of identity groups take precedence. Since there is no document in the British Commonwealth to support free-speech absolutism, as you have in the United States, what’s happened in our time is that there is a view of competing rights. Section 13 in Canada. Section 18 in Australia. Human rights commissions everywhere. And it’s all done in the name of ‘striking a balance’. The minute you talk about striking a balance, you are on the wrong side of the line, because that cure is worse than the disease. We have to take chances with repellent and repulsive speech in order to retain free speech.
“And actually it’s no better in the United States. On the one hand you have the absence of a monarchy and free-speech absolutism, but on the other hand you prostrate yourselves before judges. I’m in the fifth year of a lawsuit that started with a 140-word blog post—there’s not much of a First Amendment when that happens. And then, on your college campuses, you have the debate about ‘acceptable’ and ‘safe’ speech. You have a tiny little Canada on each campus, with the same sort of shrunken, shrivelled public discussion. ‘Safe speech’ is a road to hell. Their goal is the abolition of hate—the abolition of a human emotion. They want everyone to have this glassy-eyed look, celebrating diversity. And they don’t recognise their own totalitarianism.”
Mark Steyn is a brave man. He doesn’t talk about his death threats or his security measures, but his public life speaks for itself. For the fifth anniversary of the Muhammad cartoon controversy, he stood on a stage in Copenhagen with the Danes who were not yet in hiding along with Lars Vilks, the Swedish cartoonist who had survived physical attacks, arson, at least three assassination plots, and an Al Qaeda hit list. Steyn returned for the tenth anniversary observance, a few months after the Charlie Hebdo massacre, but by then no cartoonists were left—they were all in hiding, including Vilks, after yet another attempt on his life.
“I’m always willing to stand with the guys in Denmark,” says Steyn. “But the reason all these left-wing Europeans end up on a stage with an eccentric right-wing Canadian like me is that no real A-list stars will agree to be there. At the tenth anniversary both the American State Department and the British Foreign Office even issued official warnings to their citizens to stay away from the Danish Parliament, where we were holding the ceremony. What kind of signal does that send? Why don’t the artists show up for these things? Why aren’t the movie stars there? When Theo Van Gogh was assassinated, no one at the Oscars had a word to say about it. They didn’t even put him in the obituary montage. And yet they congratulate themselves on their moral courage. George Clooney wears a Je suis Charlie Hebdo pin. Helen Mirren wears a brooch. But they were not with Charlie. Those guys died alone. This is gesture politics. No one would stand with them. I honour the genuine courage of Ayaan Hirsi Ali. Ayaan’s point is absolutely right—in the end you have to share the risk. Charlie Hebdo supported the Danish cartoonists, but the rest of the world didn’t. If every newspaper had published those cartoons, there would have been no point in killing anyone because there would have been too many people to kill. Instead, nobody stands with them, and so the small publication that does ends up massacred. The writer of the comic strip Doonesbury in America [Garry Trudeau] attacked the decision of PEN to honour Charlie Hebdo. Well, they were lying on the floor, bleeding and dying. I don’t think they noticed.”
The Danish cartoon controversy was actually the first moment the American press had been challenged by Islam and could do something in response—and their reaction was a spectacular failure of will and principle. In several countries around the world, it was actually against the law to publish the Danish cartoons, but many editors stepped up, published them anyway, and suffered the civil and criminal consequences. In the United States—where there was no such law—no major publication would print them.
“Look, I’m not a brave person,” says Steyn, “and I’m not an insane person. I don’t put myself at risk needlessly. When I was in British West Africa, I joined up with some Canadians who were pretending to be Syrians. There were Gambians and Somalis there, so we were pretending to be Syrian. I’m not a fool. But one reason the press and the celebrities don’t stand with the cartoonists and the staff at Charlie Hebdo is that they’re perceived to be freaky weirdo people. Surely we know from history: first they come for the cartoonists, ultimately they move on to everybody else. The provocations, you may have noticed, get lamer and lamer. We are losing our world.”
Perhaps because of my own background in film and popular culture, I’m bothered most by this idea of Islamic terrorists attacking the nerds and geeks of the world—the cartoonists, the satirists, the fanzines—simply because they’re defenceless. Fatwas against cartoonists and humour magazine editors don’t get the respect that would be accorded to, say, an organised killing campaign against distinguished foreign correspondents, and there’s an underlying current—outwardly expressed by Garry Trudeau but believed by many others—that the dead and wounded partly deserve their fate, because they stirred up trouble where none existed. This is a stance that would have been unthinkable forty years ago, at the outset of my own American journalism career, when the philosophy was “Publish first and ask questions later.” In 1975 you would not have been able to find a single managing editor at a single American newspaper who would not have published the cartoons. In my view the blood of the Charlie Hebdo martyrs is on the hands of the Western mainstream media.
Surprisingly Steyn himself—who accumulated all that demographic data about the onslaught of the Islamic majority, and who has witnessed people flee his presence so as not to be photographed with him—does have faith that we can hold the line (Belgians and Swedes excepted).
“I’m optimistic in the end,” he said. “I like the Hollywood view of the odds. It’s not a numbers game in the end.”
I didn’t ask him to elaborate, because I suspected he had no data for that view, or that his data was taken from Nellie Forbush:
I have heard people rant and rave and bellow
That we’re done and we might as well be dead,
But I’m only a cockeyed optimist
And I can’t get it into my head.
I hear the human race
Is fallin’ on its face
And hasn’t very far to go,
But ev’ry whippoorwill
Is sellin’ me a bill
And tellin’ me it just ain’t so.
I could say life is just a bowl of Jello
And appear more intelligent and smart,
But I’m stuck like a dope
With a thing called hope,
And I can’t get it out of my heart!
Music by Rodgers, lyrics by Hammerstein, and my nominee for the anthem to be used when the Islamic hordes come over the last hill, confiscating tap shoes and castanets.
On second thought, if we could somehow make our last stand in Greeley, I would like to be singing “Baby, It’s Cold Outside”, and since it’s a duet, I think I’ll gather together all the alternate verses and sing it with a gay man, just to piss ’em off. I haven’t asked Mark Steyn about this stratagem, but something tells me he would approve.
John Bloom is an American journalist who writes mostly under the pseudonym Joe Bob Briggs. He has a website at www.joebobbriggs.com. Extracts from The Mark Steyn Show appear on Mark Steyn’s website, www.steynonline.com.
Many will disagree, but World War III is too great a risk to run by involving ourselves in a distant border conflict
Sep 25 2024
5 mins
To claim Aborigines have the world's oldest continuous culture is to misunderstand the meaning of culture, which continuously changes over time and location. For a culture not to change over time would be a reproach and certainly not a cause for celebration, for it would indicate that there had been no capacity to adapt. Clearly this has not been the case
Aug 20 2024
23 mins
A friend and longtime supporter of Quadrant, Clive James sent us a poem in 2010, which we published in our December issue. Like the Taronga Park Aquarium he recalls in its 'mocked-up sandstone cave' it's not to be forgotten
Aug 16 2024
2 mins