2005-08-13

A journey from rootlessness to radical Islam

After the London bombings, many have been written about the young, homegrown, extremist Muslims in Britain and Europe. Some reports have also quoted younsters from similar backgrounds. But the excellent article by Aatish Taseer in Prospect - A British jihadist - primarily a lengthy interview of Hassan Butt in 2004, gives us rare insights into what "they" are searching for and why they have so much hatred. It's no use just saying that they are angry, they are dangerous, and they can go easily within Europe and into the US. You may catch a few terrorists after they struck, catch a few more before they make their moves, but diffusing their anger and hatred is the only long term solution.

Note: Butt used to be a spokesman for the extremist group al-Muhajiroun, and active in recruiting people to fight against the coalition forces in Afghanistan.

According to Taseer, radical Islam draws recruits in Britain mainly from second-generation British Pakistanis. "Somehow they have been worst hit by the populations shifts of the last 50 years and the alienation that came with them. A few have rallied under a banner which brings an intense sense of grievance. And when they are done chasing absurd dreams of caliphates, there is always martyrdom."

On "covenant of security": "al-Muhajiroun ... have this idea ... of a "covenant of security." This means Muslims in Britain are forbidden from any military action in Britain. Now, I am not in favour of military action in Britain, but if somebody did do it who was British, I would not have any trouble with that either. Islamically, it would be my duty to support and praise their action."

On Britain being a liberal country and anti-Islamic feeling in Britain: "Britain is a very liberal country in comparison to America ... Now with Afghanistan gone, the Muslims don't really have a place where they can come back to and regroup, have time to think and relax, without the authorities breathing down your neck. ... The British establishment has always hated Islam. Look at the crusades. ... And I do believe in my heart of hearts that the majority of British people — the majority being outside of London — would do that [kill a Muslim if they could get away with it] if they had the opportunity. Historically speaking, there has always been an enmity. I experienced it as I was growing up, going into majority white schools and having a problem trying to be a Muslim."

On Muslims living alongisde non-Muslims: "We did it in the past, why can't we do it now?" "Would it have to be a Muslim polity?" "Yes." "Or could it be like England?" "No, it couldn't be like England. The so-called liberal countries in the world, France for example, boast about liberty and their so-called revolution, but they are banning headscarves. Where have the rights of the Muslims gone there? Where are the rights of Muslims in Britain to be able to support their brothers who are being attacked in Kashmir? So many of the organisations proscribed by the British government are Kashmiri freedom fighters, or terrorists as you would call them."

2005-08-12

紅學作品連載及其他

莫非紅學熱之說是真的?新浪和搜狐的謮書頻道目前有不少紅學作品連載(不包括早前已在我的網中紅樓網頁已收入的張愛玲《紅樓夢魘》和聶鑫森《紅樓夢性愛解碼》):

周汝昌《紅樓無限情》(新浪)
周汝昌《紅樓十二層》(新浪)
周汝昌《定是紅樓夢裡人》(搜狐)
王蒙《王蒙活說紅樓夢》(新浪)
劉心武《紅樓望月》(搜狐)
薩孟武《紅樓夢與中國舊家庭》(搜狐)
劉夢溪《紅樓夢與百年中國》(搜狐)
鄧邃夫《草根紅學》(新浪)

劉心武揭密秦可卿(CCTV教育頻道)
紅樓一夢(新浪論壇)
紅樓夢吧(百度貼吧)

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2005-08-11

MediaMan

I have been having fun using MediaMan, a media cataloging freeware developed by a Shanghai-based Chinese guy. It can catalogue your collection of books, CDs, DVDs ... by drawing data from all Amazon sites. So, not only will you get detailed information about a book (say), but also the book cover (works most of the time).

It also claims to be able get information by using your webcam as a barcode scanner. This feature is really nice if you have a large collection, although I have not had any success with it so far. May be my webcam is just not high quality enough.

It's a lot of fun using it, especially when you view your collection as a virtual shelf. I won't try to catalogue my entire collection though, since it would take a hell lot of time, it does not cover Chinese items (which means roughly half of my collection can't be catalogued), and, for books, it usually only draws information on the latest edition (so the information and the cover may be different from what you actually have).

The screenshot on the left shows the "virtul shelf" view, with 12 books in the collection. As you can see, book cover photo for 2 of them is unavailable. Some book covers are different from what I actually have, since mine are not the most up-to-date edition.

Revisiting "success stories" in electronic commerce (1 of 57)

Just came across an entertaining piece on CNET.com: Top 10 Dot-com Flops.

This reminded me of a report my research team at HKTDC produced back in November 1999: "Success Stories in Electronic Commerce", detailing 57 e-commerce sites. The report meant a lot to me, because the research was interesting (can't say that for some of our other outputs), the layout was fun (primarily done by the researchers themselves), and the report was colourful (not the usual 99%-text report).

I often wonder what have happened to these sites. Are there still around? I suspect so, because the majority of those we chose were click-and-mortar sites, so the Internet arm should still be around. But have their functions changed?

OK, this will be my next big project: revisiting them one by one, reporting on their growth (or demise).

The first one: Cybergold. It was listed under Advertising/Marketing in the report. We wrote: "Cybergold, an Internet marketing firm, brings in an innovative approach to advertising in cyberspace. The company pays consumers to read ads, participate in marketing surveys and register at Websites".

The first thing to report is that Cybergold is no longer here. It was acquired by MyPoints.com, which offers similar services, in August 2000. Cybergold ceased operation at the end of August 2000, just a few days after the closing down of Beenz.

MyPoints itself was bought in June 2001 by UAL, the parent company of United Airline which went bankrupt shortly after 9/11.

According to Forbes, MyPoints is "a sort of frequent-flyer program for spenders ... It sends out e-mails to 5 million members on behalf of clients like Gap and Office Depot. Click on an ad and you get reward points worth 4 cents or so. About 13% of the 2 billion e-mails that MyPoints sends out annually get clicks". So it seems it is doing more or less the same things as it did in the last millenium. But of course the glamour has long gone. It's now just an online direct marketing company.

Also read: Hoover's fact sheet on MyPoints.com (By the way, Hoover's was another e-commerce site covered by our report).

A rather opinionated piece on evolution and religion

Jacob Weisberg (Slate, 10/8/05) argues that we should stop pretending that evolution and religion are compatible:"But the acceptance of evolution diminishes religious belief in aggregate for a simple reason: It provides a better answer to the question of how we got here than religion does. Not a different answer, a better answer: more plausible, more logical, and supported by an enormous body of evidence. Post-Darwinian evolutionary theory, which can explain the emergence of the first bacteria, doesn't even leave much room for a deist God whose minimal role might have been to flick the first switch."