Sodom and Begorrah

Sodom and Begorrah

Lovely review by Michael Billington of Frank McGuinness’s new play about Michael MacLiammoir and Hilton Edwards, the gay couple who dominated Irish theatrical life in my boyhood.

“McGuinness is not simply writing a paean to the past. He is also exploring the symbiotic link between gayness and theatre. At one point, Conrad [the MacLiammoir character] recalls that the pioneering youthful dream of himself and Gabriel [Edwards] was that “we shall conceive a child in Sodom”.

That is exactly what MacLiammoir and Edwards did. The oldest Dublin theatre joke is that, with the Gate devoted to a gay fin-de-sičcle aesthetic and the Abbey to rural Irish naturalism, the city’s two playhouses offered a choice between “Sodom and Begorrah”. But theatre itself, McGuinness implies, becomes for gay men and women a surrogate form of procreation: the only tragedy lies in the medium’s inherent impermanence. ”

No easy fix for protecting kids from porn sites

No easy fix for protecting kids from porn sites
“NYT” article, May 3 2002.

One of the most thorough reports ever produced on protecting children from Internet pornography has concluded that neither tougher laws nor new technology alone can solve the problem.

“Though some might wish otherwise, no single approach — technical, legal, economic or educational — will be sufficient,” wrote the authors of the report, “Youth, Pornography and the Internet,” issued yesterday by the National Research Council. “Rather, an effective framework for protecting our children from inappropriate materials and experiences on the Internet will require a balanced composite of all of these elements.”

Lots of good stuff and common sense here. For example…

The report compared the problem of protecting children from online risks to dealing with a more mundane hazard of daily life. “Swimming pools can be dangerous for children,” the authors wrote. “To protect them, one can install locks, put up fences and deploy pool alarms. All of these measures are helpful, but by far the most important thing that one can do for one’s children is to teach them to swim.”