What can be asserted without proof can be dismissed without proof.

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The British political class may stop asking the one question that has obsessed it for decades. By Christopher Hitchens "It was about...
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Thanks to Atheist Altar for uploading. March 2009 at Samford University in Birmingham, AL. This debate is for sale on DVD and is every now...
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Time has come to publish the last post on this site. I've been posting links and articles for three years, and it's been great. I a...
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One week after the fatwa on Salman Rushdie was issued in 1989, Hitchens appeared on C-SPAN to discuss The Satanic Verses and freedom of spee...
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Kindle Exclusive "..Hitchens reflects upon the life and death of Osama bin Laden in this sobering Kindle Single." If you don...
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The writings of the martyred socialist Rosa Luxemburg give a plaintive view of history’s paths not taken. By Christopher Hitchens ...
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CH interviewed in his home in Washington D.C by Jeremy Paxman. Broadcasted on Nov 29, 2010. Play Full Interview.
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Vanity Fair July 2011 By Christopher Hitchens "Hating the United States—which funds Islamabad’s army and nuclear program to the h...
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Mox News April 16, 2010. CNN/AC360. Christopher Hitchens debates Tony Perkins on the US Federal District Court ruling that the "Nation...
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In the battle for ideas, scientists could learn from Christopher Hitchens. By Michael Shermer " Although he has no formal training in...

Thomas Jefferson

Thomas Paine

Baruch Spinoza

George Orwell

Bertrand Russell

Leon Trotsky

Rosa Luxemburg

Socrates
Chomsky's Follies
May 9, 2011By Christopher Hitchens
"Anybody visiting the Middle East in the last decade has had the experience: meeting the hoarse and aggressive person who first denies that Osama Bin Laden was responsible for the destruction of the World Trade Center and then proceeds to describe the attack as a justified vengeance for decades of American imperialism."
Read more (Slate)
Posted by Tom at 21:55 12 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens, Noam Chomsky, Osama bin Laden, Slate
Unspoken Truths
By Christopher Hitchens
"Like so many of life’s varieties of experience, the novelty of a diagnosis of malignant cancer has a tendency to wear off. The thing begins to pall, even to become banal. One can become quite used to the specter of the eternal Footman, like some lethal old bore lurking in the hallway at the end of the evening, hoping for the chance to have a word. And I don’t so much object to his holding my coat in that marked manner, as if mutely reminding me that it’s time to be on my way. No, it’s the snickering that gets me down."
Read more (vanityfair.com)
Posted by Tom at 12:45 13 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens, Unspoken Truths, Vanity Fair
Christopher Hitchens opens his diary
May 6, 2011The Spectator, 7 May 2011 issue
"I abhor the idea of taking a mobile-phone call at the dinner table but my friend Douglas Brinkley, eminent historian and editor (of Ronald Reagan and Hunter Thompson alike) has three small children and when his wife calls he rightly answers. So on Sunday night in Houston, Texas, at the home of the bountiful Michael and Nina Zilkha, we got an early notice that the President would soon be on the air."
Read More (spectator.co.uk)
Posted by Tom at 15:04 2 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens, diary, Osama bin Laden, the spectator
Death of a Madman
May 2, 2011What Obama does next will help define the legacy of Osama Bin Laden.
By Christopher Hitchens
"There are several pleasant little towns like Abbottabad in Pakistan, strung out along the roads that lead toward the mountains from Rawalpindi (the garrison town of Pakistani's military brass and, until 2003, a safe-house for Khalid Sheik Muhammed). Muzaffarabad, Abbottabad … cool in summer and winter, with majestic views and discreet amenities."
Read More (Slate)
Posted by Tom at 17:56 14 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens, Death of a Madman, Osama bin Laden, Slate
A debate between Hitchens and Barry Brummett
April 29, 2011"Please join us for a debate between God is Not Great author Christopher Hitchens and Barry Brummett (University of Texas at Austin) on the resolution 'Religion, as a literary value, is a force for good.'
Saturday, June 4, 2011, 7 to 8:30 p.m. (reception with light refreshments to follow) Hagey Hall, Humanities Theatre, University of Waterloo.
More Info..
Go After Qaddafi
April 25, 2011Stop worrying about an "exit strategy." What America needs in Libya is an entrance strategy.
By Christopher Hitchens
"The embarrassing failure of NATO's strategy with the Libyan "rebels" is easier to understand when it is contrasted with its closest parallel case, which is probably that of Kosovo."
Read More (Slate)
Posted by Tom at 19:58 3 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens, Libya, Qaddafi, Slate
Amis on Hitchens
April 24, 2011Martin Amis hails the peerless intelligence and rhetorical ingenuity of his exceptional friend, Christopher Hitchens.
"..Christopher is one of the most terrifying rhetoricians that the world has yet seen. Lenin used to boast that his objective, in debate, was not rebuttal and then refutation: it was the "destruction" of his interlocutor. This isn't Christopher's policy – but it is his practice."
Full Article: http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/apr/24/amis-hitchens-world
Posted by Tom at 06:46 9 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens, Martin Amis, The Observer
Hitchens' address to American Atheists
April 23, 2011via PZ Myers / Pharyngula
"Christopher Hitchens was scheduled to appear at the American Atheist convention, but had to cancel because of his illness. He sent this letter instead.
Dear fellow-unbelievers,
Nothing would have kept me from joining you except the loss of my voice (at least my speaking voice) which in turn is due to a long argument I am currently having with the specter of death. Nobody ever wins this argument, though there are some solid points to be made while the discussion goes on."
Read More http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2011/04/hitchens_address_to_american_a.php
Beware the In-Laws
April 18, 2011Does Kate Middleton really want to marry into a family like this?
By Christopher Hitchens
"A hereditary monarch, observed Thomas Paine, is as absurd a proposition as a hereditary doctor or mathematician. But try pointing this out when everybody is seemingly moist with excitement about the cake plans and gown schemes of the constitutional absurdity's designated mother-to-be."
Read More (Slate)
Posted by Tom at 18:50 2 comments
Labels: 2011, Beware the In-laws, Christopher Hitchens, Slate
Hitch In Confidence
April 16, 2011Hitchens interviewed by Laurie Taylor. Aired April 14, 2011, Sky Arts 1.
In Confidence: Peter and Christopher Hitchens, Sky Arts 1, review.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/8451761/In-Confidence-Peter-and-Christopher-Hitchens-Sky-Arts-1-review.html
Posted by Tom at 09:36 6 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens, interview, Peter Hitchens, Sky Arts 1
Christopher Hitchens: most provocative quotes
April 14, 2011The Telegraph
In Confidence: Peter and Christopher Hitchens airs on Sky Arts 1/SAHD on Thursday at 10.00pm and 11.00pm.
"The writer, polemicist and devout atheist Christopher Hitchens is known for his confrontational style of debate. Here we list some of his more controversial outbursts."
Plus related articles.. (US 'nasty and boring, 'I told my brother he was adopted'..)
Read More (telegraph.co.uk)
Posted by Tom at 16:51 2 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens, interview, the telegraph
Happy Birthday Christopher Hitchens !
April 13, 2011Posted by Tom at 05:48 42 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens, Happy Birthday
An Ode to Christopher Hitchens
April 12, 2011"A fangirl's tribute to the great Hitch."
Posted by Tom at 19:01 19 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens
Philip Larkin, the Impossible Man
By Christopher Hitchens
"IN MAY 1941, Philip Larkin was the treasurer of the Oxford University English Club and in that capacity had to take the visiting speaker George Orwell out to dinner after he had addressed the membership on the subject of “Literature and Totalitarianism.” Larkin’s main recollection: “We took Dylan Thomas to the Randolph and George Orwell to the not-so-good hotel. I suppose it was my first essay in practical criticism."
Read More (The Atlantic)
Posted by Tom at 18:20 3 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens, George Orwell, Philip Larkin, The Atlantic