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Lazy Lob
01-04-2007, 03:28 AM
Kenneth Robert Livingstone, “Red Ken” to his mates, is playing international politics again. For non Brits he is the mayor of London who leans “slightly” to the left and tends to come up with some rather whacky ideas at times.
On the 20th of this month he is hosting a conference in London going by grand title of: “A World Civilisation or a Clash of Civilisations”.
Gorgeous George is going to be there and I think it may be interesting to say the least. Here are a couple of snippets.

http://www.london.gov.uk/mayor/equalities/clash-conf.jsp


Conference: A World Civilisation or a Clash of Civilisations
20 January 2007, 10am-5pm
The controversial ‘clash of civilisations’ theory is the subject of a special one-day conference organised by the GLA on Saturday 20 January.
The view has been put forward that the world is going into an era of conflict and war driven by a clash of civilisations. The Mayor’s policies are based on the exact opposite idea: that the multicultural city is part of creating a new concept of world civilisation that corresponds to a globalised world.
This conference will debate these contrasting approaches and their implications. The conference will feature a debate between the Mayor and Daniel Pipes, Director of the Middle East Forum, an American think tank that advises US policymakers on the Middle East. He has argued that ‘there is not so much a clash of civilisations as there is one of civilisations vs. barbarism.’
Other sessions will see scholars and policy-makers discuss the impact of international events on London's communities and examine issues such as religious tolerance, human rights, diversity and the approach to multiculturalism. More information about conference speakers and sessions.
Admission to the conference is free, but you must register in advance - complete the online registration form, or call 020 7983 4838 or email conference@london.gov.uk.
The conference will take place at the Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre, Broad Sanctuary, London SW1. Nearest Tube: Westminster.
Find out how to get there by public transport using Transport for London's Journey Planner (opens in new window).

And IMHO for a better balanced view:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,1072-2530241,00.html


The Times January 04, 2007

The Mayor of London and some oddly vacuous ideas
Oliver Kamm

The former mayor of Jerusalem Teddy Kollek, who died this week, was the quintessential municipal leader. He cleared slums, built houses and made the city greener. So far as I know, he never gave unsolicited advice to the British Government on the constitutional status of Northern Ireland. But if he had done something so presumptuous and futile, he would have been anticipating his present-day London counterpart, Ken Livingstone.

Mr Livingstone is the host of a conference this month entitled “A World Civilisation or a Clash of Civilisations”. His website states: “The view has been put forward that the world is going into an era of conflict and war driven by a clash of civilisations. The Mayor’s policies are based on the exact opposite idea: that the multicultural city is part of creating a new concept of world civilisation that corresponds to a globalised world.”

If this vacuity means anything it must be that a single category of citizenship transcends divisions, and that a cosmopolitan city symbolises that unity. Yet Mr Livingstone’s behaviour undermines the notion. Three weeks after the 7/7 bombings he welcomed to London Yusuf al-Qaradawi, the Muslim cleric who praises suicide attacks in Israel. Mr Livingstone’s exculpation of these comments was that Palestinians have only their bodies with which to “fight back”. Astonishingly Mr Livingstone believes his conference is competent to debate “democratic solutions for the Middle East”.

Mr Livingstone asserts “a responsibility to support the rights of all of London’s diverse communities”. But Londoners are not communities. People belong to groups, but for civic purposes they are citizens who are equals under law. The notion that democratic politics celebrates group identities leads to the absurdity of a left-wing politician literally embracing a leader of theocratic, xenophobic reaction.

The conference’s title is a disparaging allusion to a book by the political scientist Samuel Huntington. Yet Huntington’s ostensibly conservative-realist argument is echoed in the assumptions of the multiculturalist Left. “Western universalism is dangerous to the world, declares Huntington, “because it could lead to a major intercivilisational war.” Only one of the conference’s listed speakers is liable to dissent. Others include an Islamist academic, a pacifist and a representative from George Galloway’s Respect party.

In fairness, I should add that I and another liberal writer scornful of Mr Livingstone’s identity politics received an invitations to speak, apparently as an afterthought, a few days ago. Perhaps the event’s exhortatory character had become too blatant. The conference and its principal figure remain, however, in expense, symbol and sentiment, a substantial net liability for London

mailmannz
01-04-2007, 08:46 AM
The guy is a socialist, communist, jihadi all rolled in to one!

Id rather he concentrated on cleaning up and making the city safer than trying to get closer to people like chavez.

Although it does make me laugh everytime Red Ken calls on the US Embassy to pay the congestion charge because they, like just about everyone else, knows something Red Ken doesnt want to know (that the charge is really a tax and not a charge for a service) :D

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