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Sarah Benton
For Sarah Benton's latest contributions to The Japan Times, see below:
COMMENTARY
Jun 4, 2005
EU elites missing the signals
LONDON -- The "no" vote that seems to have blown apart the whole European project is a crisis of the elites and institutions of Europe, not of the people. In fact, if the jubilant faces of many French people on Monday was a true signal, it might be taken as a triumph for the citizens against those elites, rather than against the European Union: Enough, stop taking us for granted, if it's to be our Europe, stop locking yourselves away in secret summits buttressed by large expense accounts and fancy dinners and old world protocols. Consult us, engage with us, make it our Europe.
COMMENTARY
May 5, 2005
Britain's apolitical election
LONDON -- So powerful has been Prime Minister Tony Blair's dominance of British politics that Thursday's General Election has resolved into one question: Are you for or against his leadership?
COMMENTARY
Apr 9, 2005
School kitchens need a nanny
LONDON -- Turkey twizzlers once divided the nation; now they appear to have united it in a surge of national purpose for reform. This is thanks to a new political hero, chef Jamie Oliver, who, from one of the most despised backgrounds in Britain -- white working-class boy from Essex -- has shown imagination and drive in improving the diet of other working-class people.
COMMENTARY
Mar 6, 2005
Trashing liberties we die for
LONDON -- At the end of last year, 69 men, it is thought, were being held in British prisons as terrorist suspects. Only 11 of these had been convicted of any offense. Twelve were being held in Belmarsh prison without trial (since then, one has been moved to Broadmoor, a high security mental hospital). This is the most serious abrogation of the basic civil liberty -- that liberty can only be removed by the state after due process of law -- since the height of the "troubles" in Northern Ireland over 20 years ago.
COMMENTARY
Feb 3, 2005
Fear of rips in the EU fabric
LONDON -- The fear here is that the whole of Europe has succumbed to the virus of racism and that new political parties based on some variant of racism will swell in popular support, win elections, run institutions of state -- including the European Union -- and destroy the civilization that has been precariously constructed since 1945.
COMMENTARY
Jan 3, 2005
Modern England leaves Granny behind
LONDON -- "What are we coming to" cried one of the grannies at my Christmas dinner, meaning we, the English. Her small anguish was prompted by the thought of the bank holidays and festive refusal of work that wraps everyone in a haze of food and alcohol, gifts and family, and lets the outer world fend for itself for the week.
COMMENTARY
Nov 28, 2004
Labour's path to nowhere
LONDON -- Tuesday was one of those quaint ceremonial occasions that cling like barnacles to the slow-moving body of the British ship of state: The queen announced the next year's legislative program.
COMMENTARY
Oct 6, 2004
International hubris may throttle Labour
LONDON -- There has been more money at the Labour Party conference the past few years than the delegates' parents might ever have dreamed of, let alone the impoverished founders of the workers' party. There has been, and is, more money because the power is with the parliamentary leaders of this party.
COMMENTARY
Sep 3, 2004
Labour seeks a constituency
LONDON -- A ruler can obtain power only with the help of his own people. He uses them to fight against those who revolt against his party. They fill his administrative offices and he appoints them to prestigious and lucrative positions. They help him to achieve his ascendancy. This is true so long as the first stage of a dynasty lasts.
COMMENTARY
Aug 2, 2004
Global warming remains the deadliest foe
LONDON -- Perhaps philosophers have a name for it -- this modern phenomenon of continuing to enjoy life in a way that we know is leading to destruction because we feel that there is nothing we can do about it anyway.
COMMENTARY
Jun 30, 2004
Iraq handover spells relief
LONDON -- Day One of modern Iraq. Never before have the people of Iraq had their political destiny in their own hands. There have been no celebrations. The sound of gunfire is of killing, not festivity.
COMMENTARY
Jun 13, 2004
Personality could crown Gordon Brown
LONDON -- Britain is governed by an unhappy couple -- a pair of men whose relationship excites more attention than any other aspect of British politics.
COMMENTARY
May 4, 2004
Blair's hard sell of a new EU
LONDON -- "It's ghastly," Chris Patten, the last governor of Hong Kong, said with a shudder. He was speaking of the referendum -- that Prime Minister Tony Blair has declared, after no consultation with his Cabinet, will now be held -- on the draft EU constitution. Why is a referendum ghastly? Because, Patten said, it's "tabloid politics."
COMMENTARY
Mar 3, 2004
Secret operations rock Blair's boat
LONDON -- From the moment Tony Blair let it be known that he had decided to send troops to Iraq, his days of smooth government were over. The decision unleashed all the dark forces of suspicion and a sense of illegality that are usually contained by democratic institutions. As the prime minister battles through each crisis, like a small boat in rough seas, he may breathe a sigh of relief only to find himself tossed about by the next wave.
COMMENTARY
Feb 3, 2004
British society's fatal divide
LONDON -- Last week the inquiry by Senior Appeals Judge Lord Hutton into the July 18 death of weapons expert Dr. David Kelly cleared all state politicians and civil servants -- bar one -- of any blame for Kelly's death and indicted the media, in particular the BBC, for Kelly's wretched end. The one state official whom Hutton criticized as bearing some responsibility for the death was Kelly himself -- for transgressing the civil service rules that were supposed to govern and constrain his conduct.
COMMENTARY
Jan 1, 2004
Fantasy of the final solution
LONDON -- WMD: a new acronym for a new century and what a terrible augury of the century. If weapons of mass destruction are ever used for their intended purpose -- to annihilate mankind -- this century will be mankind's last. Perhaps the flippancy of the new century's young adults should after all be welcomed, since the most powerful nations of the world appear to be organizing this new millennium on the basis of WMD.
COMMENTARY
Dec 6, 2003
Keep doors open to refugees
LONDON -- If you're reading this on a plane or in a hotel, you're part of the problem. But even if you're sitting snugly, smugly at home, you may not be the solution.
COMMENTARY
Nov 3, 2003
Britain's institutions fall on hard times
LONDON -- The world I grew up in was dominated by the Tory Party, which had governed for as long as any child could remember, by its icon the royal family, which smiled serenely from every magazine, and by the Church of England, which hosted every major national occasion and ritually adjured us to respect and honor both government and monarchy all the days of our life.
COMMENTARY
Oct 8, 2003
Blair style reassures nonunion masses
LONDON -- British Prime Minister Tony Blair strides onto the platform, shirt and skin softly gleaming, his gait erect, his manner proud, determined, with a measure of sorrow and a tinge of repentance; his appearance is heart-winningly boyish with his large blue eyes and easy smile, but now there is an appropriate map of lines and wrinkles on his face; his hair is receding and he needs to use glasses. These are the proper marks of responsibility and of loss of sleep to care and worry. Blair boasts of the "scars on his back," inflicted by those who oppose his heroic battle to reform sluggish and self-interested public services.
COMMENTARY
Aug 24, 2003
Looking for a few bad men
LONDON -- Will Prime Minister Tony Blair's government fall as a result of the inquiry being led by Lord Hutton into the apparent suicide of weapons expert Dr. David Kelly? Unlikely.

Longform

Historically, kabuki was considered the entertainment of the merchant and peasant classes, a far cry from how it is regarded today.
For Japan's oldest kabuki theater, the show must go on