Thursday, January 17, 2008

"Xerox"

"I am curious to hear his take on Hillary Clinton–he has written far less about Hillary than about Bill. Does he feel that she also embodied the vices of the 1960s?
"'Not at all,' he replies enthusiastically. 'With her it’s too many of the virtues. She’s a perfect example of how the 1960s have mutated into–I hate the term political correctness but I suppose it’s unavoidable. In other words they have changed from people who said they wanted complete freedom of speech on campus, into people who now want to police the campus. She represents that mutation to mere perfection.'
"Hitchens is in the familiar, articulate form I recognise from his television appearances, and is being quite unreasonable. I have no intention of stopping him. So he goes on: 'And then going from sexual freedom to saying that any unwanted advance is a case for the dean or the rape crisis centre–all of this re-infantilising–"put that fag out, don’t drink, or wait for a drink until you’re 21"–all this is an absolute negation of it but with the same complete sense of rectitude. I find it utterly nauseating.'"

Edward Luce of the Financial Times has lunch with Christopher Hitchens.

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