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Sarah Benton
For Sarah Benton's latest contributions to The Japan Times, see below:
COMMENTARY
Aug 11, 2001
G8's glaring contradiction
LONDON — The belligerent actions of the Italian state at Genoa last month were a declaration of war against young anticapitalist protesters. That, anyway, is how they were understood.
COMMENTARY
Jul 5, 2001
It's all too lonely at the top
LONDON -- As predicted, the Labour Party won the June general election, giving Tony Blair a second term as prime minister. This is bad news for the media monster which, as we all know, has a voracious appetite but nonetheless a fastidious and restricted diet: sleaze, scandal, violence, betrayal. A large part of the energy of Labour goes into brushing away the sticky fingers of these media stories from its sober skirts. So if it won't provide the stories, who will?
COMMENTARY
Jun 5, 2001
Labor's win, democracy's loss
LONDON -- It is possible that in some dark cavern by the River Thames, or wherever it is that Labor's inner circle does its thinking, party planners are already plotting who is going to do what in government for the next five years. Labor is confident of winning the election on June 7: Its lead in the opinion polls has never dropped below 10 percent, it is currently around 13 percent, and every time a Conservative opens his mouth, the potential Tory vote falls even further.
COMMENTARY
May 5, 2001
Racism loses its grip in Britain
LONDON -- "Britain risks becoming a mongrel land"; "Britain will become a foreign land to most of the British": two thoughts from the Tory Party uttered in the past few weeks, one from a back-bench MP of little repute (John Townend), the other from the Tory Party leader, William Hague, whose reputation, never high, is now clonking along the bottom of the public stream.
COMMENTARY
Apr 8, 2001
Panic commands a high price
LONDON — The foot-and-mouth outbreak in Britain is not devastating British farm production. It is devastating farming's relationship with the rest of Britain. Less than 2 percent of Britain's livestock have been slaughtered either because they have the disease or because, though healthy, they might transmit it. Central England is largely free of the disease, which is concentrated in the border counties of Cumbria in the northwest, Devon in the southwest and Dumfries and Galloway in Scotland.
COMMENTARY
Mar 7, 2001
Agribusiness at a crossroads
LONDON -- Every industrialized country in the world has this idealized image: the farmer, full of robust common sense, tending his pig or his flock on his small land-holding, sturdily helped by his hardworking wife and children. He is close to the earth and nature. It is true that, in Japan or America's Midwest or France or Ireland these days, this happy family is more likely to be found in paintings than on the land, but the farmer survives the hurricane of globalization in our imaginations.
COMMENTARY
Feb 4, 2001
Globalization's saddest victim
LONDON -- I wish to draw to your attention a group of workers who are in a sorry plight. The use of their skills is in decline; where once they commanded our attention, they are now held in low esteem; the buildings in which they once worked are half deserted; their future does not look good. It is, in a way, one of the products of globalization.
COMMENTARY
Jan 4, 2001
Britain frets its economic ills
LONDON -- There was nothing unusual about this Christmas. Well, snow fell, which hasn't happened for years and it was hard traveling; but Britain's transport woes -- not enough trains or buses, too many cars -- began months ago. Passengers at one airport did riot after waiting four days for a plane, any plane, to take off (the company had run out of de-freezer for its fleet), but that sort of protest is now quite the thing to do.
COMMENTARY
Dec 3, 2000
Britons going nowhere fast
LONDON -- Is Britain in crisis? Many people think so, after a month in which large swathes of England have been inundated by filthy flood water. Television news showed comic snippets of boats in the streets rescuing old ladies and dogs, snaps of sturdy men and women counting their blessings as the flood water carried away their furniture.
COMMENTARY
Nov 3, 2000
Secrecy and greed behind BSE tragedy
LONDON --I am stunned at the awfulness of being British at the moment. A report written by Lord Phillips into the BSE tragedy has just been published. Though it does not roar with horror or screech with condemnation, its quiet steady tone fills me with anger and horror at Britain's farming, veterinary and government processes. The complete evasion of responsibility, the complete inability to think outside one's own tiny patch, has dumped the British beef industry and the 85 known victims of BSE-related disease into a world of trouble.
COMMENTARY
Aug 30, 2000
The 21st-century neurosis
LONDON -- I think I've discovered a new neurosis of the 21st century. It involves frustration, guilt, shame and outbursts of destructive violence. The neurosis lurks wherever there are personal computers. (Business computers, and the work and commercial systems they create, produce similar feelings, but these are more obviously political and erupt in violent demonstrations against, say, McDonald's or the World Trade Organization.)
COMMENTARY / World
Dec 4, 1999
In Britain now, 'tis the season to be silly
Not with a bang but a whimper, last month Britain's hereditary lords slid out of their ermine robes and off the scarlet-padded benches and retired to their country seats. A line of continuity from feudalism has finally been broken.
COMMENTARY / World
Nov 7, 1999
Another Anglo-French beef
LONDON -- So here we are, 60 days short of the new millennium and 66 years short of the date one thousand years ago (1066) when the French conquered Britain -- and we are in the middle of La Guerre du Rosbif, or the Beef War, or Le Front de la vache folle (the mad cow front) as the French daily paper Le Monde had it. Predictably, Britain's tabloid and rightwing press (they are not entirely the same thing) poured out a fusillade of insults at the French government for its decision to maintain the ban on importing British beef even though the rest of the European Union decided the ban should be dropped. British measures to prevent the spread of "mad cow disease" were sufficiently rigorous.
COMMENTARY
Oct 2, 1999
Blair touts 'the vision thing'
LONDON -- Watching British Prime Minister Tony Blair is like watching a religious phenomenon. He has stepped off his platform on the backs of members of the Labor Party and has ascended into the clouds, where he hopes to be borne along by the rushing winds of the future. As he lifts off, he kicks away the old ladder of class and party loyalties. He has gambled his party's future on being able to realize his vision of 21st-century Britain. What no one knows is whether he cares if -- or indeed whether it matters if -- the party does not survive the ascension of its leader.
COMMENTARY / World
Sep 5, 1999
The politics of love and hate
LONDON -- Here we are on the second anniversary of the death of Princess Diana, and neither her life nor her death seems as momentous as it did this time last year. Does this mean she really was just a media phenomenon, ephemeral, superficial, appearing and disappearing in our lives without consequence?

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