Saturday, September 27, 2025

Drag v Blackface

 Blackface = white men using makeup and costume to dress up as a caricature of black men for public performance. 

Drag = men using makeup and costume to dress up as a caricature of women for public performance. 

Blackface is racist. So why isn't drag seen as sexist/misogynist?

Some perspectives on this question:

Josephine Bartosch in The Critic 

Kelly Kleiman in the Chicago-Kent Law Review (admit it, you read it all the time)

Meghan Murphy at Feminist Current

Frustratingly, most of the articles I found giving the opposite perspective are behind paywalls. This one is a brief summary.


Sunday, September 21, 2025

Health, Wealth and Happiness

 Health: I have prostate cancer. Back in February I had a urine infection, which didn't fully clear up after antibiotics. Cue a PSA (prostate specific antigen test) and an uncomfortable investigation. The PSA reading was over 20 (it should be 0-3.5), and in a follow up test it was still too high. Next stop an MRI scan at the start of May, which showed up some areas the hospital wasn't happy with, so onto a prostate biopsy (next time I'll have the general anaesthetic). The results show I have prostate cancer, but in the lowest of 5 risk groups: the cancer is slow growing (if at all) and localised. 

I'm now on 'active surveillance' - PSA tests every 3 months, MRI every 12, and then something more drastic if things take a turn for the worse. There's been some headlines recently about over-treatment of prostate cancer, that many men are given treatment with serious and long lasting side effects which they don't actually need at the time. 60% of men who have their prostate removed end up with lifelong incontinence and erectile dysfunction. At the tender age of 56, I've gone for 'watch and wait'. In the meantime, my latest PSA test came back at 0.7, which just goes to show that you can still have cancer and a low PSA (either that or there's some answered prayer going on, but I won't know that until an MRI next summer). Either way: men, don't mess around, if somethings wrong downstairs then go and see your GP. 

update: turns out the 0.7 was a laboratory error, the test is invalid and I have to do it again. Watch this space!

update 2: the retest was 2.6, so still not bad. 

The news was a shock, but overall I seem to be at peace about it. A month after the diagnosis I had a weeks retreat booked in, and during that I sketched out what would be my life priorities if I had 1, 3 or 10 years to live. It was a life-giving exercise, rather than a macabre one. My life expectancy may be unaffected (Dad is 87 and still going strong), but I have more clarity over what's important, and more motivation to lose weight, stay fit, love my wife and kids and pursue God. So in a weird way its a gift. 

Wealth: A couple of weeks after the diagnosis, I was preaching on the parable of the rich fool. The guy is a hoarder, who plans to build a bigger store for all his stuff. The news of his impending death puts his focus and his decisions into perspective: he's not a success, he's an idiot. The cancer diagnosis sharpens the question of what money is for, what my money is for, or is it even 'my' money or just what I've been trusted with by God? I could max out my remaining time and money working through a bucket list, and I would deserve the same verdict as the rich fool. Or I could use the gifts well. 

Happiness: the Bible verse which has come into focus most of all in the last 3 months is Psalm 37:4 'Delight yourself in the Lord'. There is a lot of joy in the Bible, and in God, and ideally in God's people too. Back in the day I was more interested in the 2nd half of that verse 'and He will give you the desires of your heart'. I've recently discovered that it no longer interests me. Delighting in God is enough, more than enough. Brother Lawrence used to make omelettes 'for the love of God' and then dance in his kitchen, Eric Liddell said 'God made me fast, and when I run I feel His pleasure'. There are a hundred small ways every day to delight in God. At the moment it's a significant triumph if I can register and enjoy 2 or 3 of them in 24 hours, but I've got the rest of this life to practice, however long that is. 


Saturday, September 13, 2025

Proud of my Flag

 The Union Jack is a 4-way blend of:

 - The St George Cross, commemorating a Christian saint from Lydda/Lod, at the time a Roman colony and now in modern day Israel, (his father was from Cappdocia in modern day Turkey). George was, probably, a Roman soldier who was martyred for his faith around the turn of the 3rd/4th century.


 - The St Andrew Cross, commemorating a young fisherman, one of the first two disciples of Jesus, instrumental in introducing his brother Peter to the Lord. The cross is a saltire, an X, as tradition has it that Andrew was crucified on a cross in this form. 

 - The St Patrick Cross, commemorating a Northerner from Britain who was captured into slavery by Irish pirates, escaped, and then returned to Ireland as a missionary and led many to Christ. 

 - The symbol of the cross, where God the Son gave his life as the ultimate act of love and sacrifice, where death was defeated, and from which everyone is invited to recognise, embrace and respond to God's love. It's what unites these 3 men from different ethnic backgrounds, eras, language groups and life experiences: a Jewish working man in an occupied land, a coloniser - a member of the occupying military, and a victim of people trafficking. 

It's a good flag to be proud of, its such a shame its become something else. 



Wednesday, September 10, 2025

What we don't talk about when we talk about migration

 "There's a lot of talk about this next song. Too much talk in fact." (Bono on 'Sunday Bloody Sunday'). You could say the same about immigration, which has gone from nobody wanting to talk about it, to everyone wanting to talk about it. 

But amidst all the talk, there are several facets of the debate that are getting way more airtime than others. For example: within the eye-watering levels of legal migration we currently have, why is it ok for the UK to poach trained medical staff in large numbers from countries which need them way more than we do? Why are we not training and deploying more of our own, when Medicine courses are vastly oversubscribed every year, and medic graduates often struggle to find work placements?

Here's another: Ian Paul has just published a thoughtful piece here in response to an intervention by the Archbishop of York, to which I posted the following comment:

Thankyou – there are so many angles to this question, and one which concerns me for my grandchildren is the effect of immigration on the religious mix of the UK. The combination of a high Muslim birth rate, and a high annual number of Muslim immigrants, will push the Muslim population of the UK over 10m by 2050. The last general election saw the first MPs elected on a Muslim ticket, and the government is exploring a legal definition of ‘Islamophobia’ – a term popularised in order to set Islam above challenge and criticism in Western countries.

When Islam ends up in a majority, or with significant political power within a country, it rarely ends well for Christians. 14 of the 20 worst countries for Christian persecution are Islamic states https://www.opendoors.org/en-US/persecution/countries/ . If we sleepwalk into increased Islamic influence on government, culture and society by welcoming unsustainable numbers of Muslim immigrants – legal and illegal – who we can’t integrate, and therefore form their own subcultures, then we are storing up trouble for the future of the gospel in this country.

And for 'gospel' you could substitute other things, such as 'womens rights', 'freedom of speech', 'democracy' and most of the things which we value within our culture and ethos as a nation. Islam is, in its roots, a religion of conquest. Yes it can reform, but where Islam becomes a significant, powerful or majority grouping, it doesn't seem to do power-sharing. Is this a conversation we're afraid of having? 

Tuesday, September 09, 2025

Cornwall relocated to 'The North'

 The Guido Fawkes blog, which prides itself on doing a better job than the mainstream media, posted this earlier today: 


Writing this from Somerset, I was fascinated to discover that anything 'outside London' is Northern. And yes, Labour does have MPs in Dorset, Somerset, Devon and Cornwall, all of which are at least 200 miles from the borders of The Blessed Yorkshire. 

Perhaps Guido should get out more?