Hitchens vs Hitchens
by Brendan O'Neill
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ColumnHelen Searls20 November 2001
An Englishwoman in Washington
The anthrax attacker remains a bigger concern to most Americans than the war being fought thousands of miles away.

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ColumnMick Hume16 November 2001
How did we get from Manhattan to Kabul?
What has the West's war in Afghanistan got to do with 11 September?

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ColumnJennie Bristow13 November 2001
Fear goes sky-high
Many seem relieved that the plane crash of 12 November looks like an accident, not a terrorist attack. Either way, it's a disaster for America's national psyche.

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ColumnMick Hume9 November 2001
A war that nobody wants to fight
The carpet bombing in Afghanistan confirms the dreadful power of the American military machine. But it also reveals a sense of powerlessness within the US (and British) political elites.

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22 November 2001
Silicone scare
Where's the evidence that breast implants are a health risk?
ColumnMick Hume30 October 2001
Oh, what a 'wobbly' war
The New Labour establishment is so nervous that it has begun to imagine a powerful anti-war movement that exists only in its head.

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ColumnMick Hume16 October 2001
Fear and defeatism infect the West
Why are the American and British governments worried about 'losing the propaganda war' to a lame terrorist with a camcorder in the desert?

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ColumnMick Hume8 October 2001
Now it is war - but for what?
First they told us we were at war with nobody in particular. Now they say we are not at war with somebody we are bombing.

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ColumnHelen Searls2 October 2001
Fear under the flag
America is united more by a sense of loss and fear for the future than it is by defiant patriotism. An Englishwoman reports from Washington DC.

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ColumnMick Hume28 September 2001
Why has Bush not pushed the button?
The US government lacks the authority or legitimacy to act decisively.

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ColumnMick Hume14 September 2001
It's war - but against whom?
The world is being reorganised in response to the events of 11 September.

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ColumnMick Hume12 September 2001
After the attack on America
As the dust clears over the scenes of carnage, it is worth asking what these events and the reaction to them can tell us about the world we live in now.

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ColumnMick Hume5 September 2001
Whoever wins, it won't be a Tory
The Conservative Party's leadership election has been marked by one concession after another to New Labour's agenda of the centre ground.

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ColumnRay Crowley13 July 2001
Spare us the rod
The UK government has endorsed a scheme to get young truants and vandals 'hooked on fishing'. Fishing?

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ColumnMick Hume22 June 2001
Put liberty first in New Labour's second term
Can we all please turn our telescopes away from far-off Planet Tory and the amusing antics of its alien occupants? Back among the human beings here on Earth, there are important matters afoot.

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ColumnHelen Searls19 June 2001
An Englishwoman in Washington
'Bush has tried to run the country as though the Clinton years did not exist: big mistake.'

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ColumnJennie Bristow14 June 2001
The work thing
There's more to life than making a living. So why is the government so obsessed with work?

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ColumnJennie Bristow7 June 2001
Spoiling for a fight?
Why I resisted the temptation to spoil my ballot paper on election day.

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ColumnMick Hume4 June 2001
A landslide that signifies nothing
'This is the age of landslide-lite, when you can have an avalanche in the virtual world of parliamentary politics that leaves life pretty much untouched in the real world below.'

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ColumnRay Crowley31 May 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter, 31 May
Tory meltdown: 'Contests just aren't very interesting if there is only one contender. And they can't be won either.'

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ColumnJennie Bristow31 May 2001
Blaspheming through the second term
My top 10 blasphemies for life under New Labour - all the things you cannot oppose in contemporary politics because all parties accept them as common sense.

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ColumnMick Hume25 May 2001
Blair wins - so why is New Labour so nervous?
'While New Labour is going to trounce the Tories, it has yet to establish the authority of the new political elite.'

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ColumnJennie Bristow25 May 2001
Baby bondage
Think about the phrases 'baby bond' and 'Child Trust Fund'. For a few hundred quid, the state can buy a bond with your baby - and show that you, the parent, cannot be trusted.

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ColumnRay Crowley24 May 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter, 24 May
I have noticed that there is money to be made in self-help manuals, so I am writing one to help wannabe politicians in their election campaigns.

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ColumnHelen Searls18 May 2001
An Englishwoman in Washington
'Only one aspect of the UK election has so far aroused the interest of the US media - the total collapse facing the British Conservative Party.'

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ColumnJennie Bristow18 May 2001
No dreams - and little reality
New Labour's manifesto leaves nothing to the imagination. And that's the problem with it.

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ColumnMick Hume17 May 2001
Shopping for cut-price votes
'The parties try to use taxes to entice us to vote for them, as if we were deciding whether to do the weekend shop at Tesco or Sainsbury's.'

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ColumnRay Crowley16 May 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter, 16 May
'Surely it's more apathetic and lazy to vote for a party you don't really support just because you feel you ought to, than it is to refuse to vote with very good reason?'

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ColumnJennie Bristow15 May 2001
Low 'Ambitions for Britain'
'New Labour's commitment to "equality of worth" is worse than worthless.'

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ColumnRay Crowley11 May 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'Election day is my twenty-first birthday. What sort of party will I end up having now?'

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ColumnMick Hume11 May 2001
Politics is important - voting isn't
'Nobody need feel any obligation to vote in an election that has become little more than a coronation ceremony for the new oligarchy.'

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ColumnJennie Bristow8 May 2001
License to drink - soberly
'The new licensing laws may exercise less control over WHEN we drink, but will only bring about more controls on HOW we drink.'

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ColumnMick Hume8 May 2001
Inspire us with some new tunes
As the UK election campaign gets off to a non-start, spiked editor Mick Hume proposes a few bullet points for Tony Blair and William Hague to put on little cards and give to all their candidates.

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ColumnRay Crowley3 May 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
On pigeons: 'I can't believe the feathered gremlins have provoked a protest, got their own alliance and had so much attention from the London mayor.'

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ColumnMick Hume1 May 2001
People's peers: why not abolish the lot?
'Presumably those demanding that more "ordinary people" be turned into people's peers would be happy for political debate to echo the banality of commuter train chat.'

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ColumnRay Crowley26 April 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'Maybe they will start a Dog-Job Club, for these latest victims of foot-and-mouth.'

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ColumnMick Hume20 April 2001
Cook plays the curry card
At last we know what the UK general election is really about: it's the Tandooris against the Tories.

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ColumnHelen Searls20 April 2001
An Englishwoman in Washington
The spy plane in China: why Bush turned an accident into an international incident.

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ColumnRay Crowley19 April 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'The latest torture for young people: a government-backed education manual for use in secondary schools called "Taking Drugs Seriously"'

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ColumnRay Crowley12 April 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'Tony Blair and William Hague just aren't interested in Bridget's thirtysomething, un-unemployed, childless, no-longer-in-education, fairly-comfortable, doesn't-live-in-the-countryside kinda life.'

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ColumnMick Hume12 April 2001
Don't mention the election
If any of the parties had a message to make us sit up and take notice, they would be shouting it from the rooftops now.

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ColumnRay Crowley5 April 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'As things stand, I have absolutely no idea when I am supposed to be not voting, what I am not voting for, or why I now have to not vote on a different date from the one I was previously not voting on.'

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ColumnMick Hume2 April 2001
The strange affair of the election that never was
'Public support for cancelling the election amid the foot-and-mouth crisis was always an expression of the anti-political mood of our times.'

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ColumnHelen Searls30 March 2001
An Englishwoman in Washington
'Campaign finance reform is popular because it provides a way for politicians to distance themselves from the nasty business of politics.'

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ColumnRay Crowley29 March 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'For anybody thinking of voting, the question of how you are going to get to the polling station should be number one on your list of woes.'

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ColumnRay Crowley22 March 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'If politics is about who can create the most entertaining TV, politicians are on to a sure loser. Myleene, Kym, Danny and the rest have already won hands down.'

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ColumnMick Hume22 March 2001
An outbreak of anti-election fever
'We are left with a raging national debate over when the general election should be, while the small matter of what that election is actually going to be about passes almost without comment.'

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ColumnMick Hume15 March 2001
Things fall apart
'We seem to have lost sight of any distinction between rational measures to cope with an animal disease, and the irrational attempt to put the countryside (if not the entire country) into quarantine.'

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ColumnRay Crowley15 March 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'Why not move members of the UK government and shadow cabinet into the brightly painted Big Brother house, and allow us to vote one of them out each week?'

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ColumnHelen Searls8 March 2001
An Englishwoman in Washington
'Despite the attention of the world's media, attempted murder in American schools is still extremely rare.'

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ColumnRay Crowley8 March 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'I live in the main "younger voters" area of Birmingham - Studentsville - and I have yet to visit a student house whose residents take all their empties down to the bottle bank.'

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ColumnRay Crowley2 March 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'With Labour way ahead in the polls and most election issues too weak for even a pensioner to get their dentures into, perhaps Blair and his posse have realised that somebody has to spice things up a bit.'

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ColumnHelen Searls23 February 2001
An Englishwoman in Washington
'US President Bush's foreign policies remain incoherent - but by bombing Iraq, at least last week's PR events could end with a bang.'

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ColumnMick Hume22 February 2001
You don't have to be mad to vote here...
'If putting polling stations in supermarkets was a brazen stunt, putting them in prisons looks even more surreal.'

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ColumnRay Crowley22 February 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'Threats of "do it - or that Widdecombe woman will get you" might shoo the little Blairs to their rooms, but it won't get the rest of us to the polling station.'

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ColumnJennie Bristow19 February 2001
A matter of routine?
'The latest military display of "mine's bigger than yours" in Iraq, it seems, is not even a matter for public discussion. So how are we supposed to react to it?'

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ColumnMick Hume15 February 2001
Grey days for democracy
'Behind their displays of concern, the UK authorities hold pensioners in contempt, as bodies to be bought on the cheap come election time.'

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ColumnRay Crowley15 February 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'Taking an interest in parliamentary goings-on usually means reading about "the ridiculous debate of transport versus badgers", as my flatmate puts it.'

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ColumnDr Michael Fitzpatrick13 February 2001
Second opinion
'Post-BSE, civil servants are now trained in the principles of New Labour's modernised governance: never miss an opportunity to promote a health scare; always encourage risk awareness; and remember that farmers are all Tory voters.'

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ColumnMick Hume8 February 2001
For fewer laws, not more
When New Labour promises to be 'bold and radical', it means busy and restless.

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ColumnRay Crowley7 February 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'Can you picture tribes of young women marching to the polling station in skinni-fit t-shirts with the new New Labour hearts and cross logo on them?'

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ColumnMick Hume1 February 2001
A-pathetic excuse
'The major parties are planning short election campaigns that will not start until Blair announces polling day, for fear of "boring" the electorate.'

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ColumnRay Crowley30 January 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'When I went to India I saw a lot of people who didn't even have homes, never mind shock-resistant housing.'

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ColumnMick Hume26 January 2001
Exploiting the Holocaust
'However worthy the intentions might be, the net effect of the current obsession with the Holocaust can only be to diminish the meaning of the slaughter of six million Jews.'

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ColumnRay Crowley24 January 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'The idea of us all getting emotional together is vomit-inducing.'

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ColumnHelen Searls24 January 2001
An Englishwoman in Washington
'George W Bush may have won the election: but Clinton and his supporters won the culture war hands down.'

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ColumnRay Crowley17 January 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'Maybe science has to have the monster factor before it enters the limelight.'

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ColumnJennie Bristow15 January 2001
Sergeant-Major Brown's 'Grey Army'
'In their enthusiasm to strengthen this "great British tradition", politicians risk turning volunteering into something that is not, well, voluntary.'

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ColumnMick Hume11 January 2001
The stupid economy
'In the recent balance sheet of profit and loss, the biggest loss has been any sense of proportion about the state of the economy.'

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ColumnRay Crowley10 January 2001
Diary of a first-time non-voter
'Access to the morning after pill is old news to most 14-year olds.'

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ColumnJennie Bristow