Michael Cook

Michael Cook likes bad puns, bushwalking and black coffee. He did a BA at Harvard University in the US where it was good for networking, but moved to Sydney where it wasn’t. He also did a PhD on an obscure corner of Australian literature. He has worked as a book editor and magazine editor and has published articles in magazines and newspapers in the US, the UK and Australia. Currently he is the editor of BioEdge, a newsletter about bioethics, and MercatorNet.


German criminologist speaks out

Michael Cook | 1 Apr 2010

Professional criminologists seem somewhat bemused by the furore over sex abuse in the Catholic Church. A German journal of political commentary, Cicero, interviewed Germany’s most prominent criminal psychologist, Hans-Ludwig Kroeber yesterday. He is the director of the Institute for Forensic Psychiatry of the Free University of Berlin and serves on an independent panel of experts advising the Catholic Church about child abuse. He is not a Catholic.



Feel good stuff for Easter

Michael Cook | 1 Apr 2010
Terrific YouTube video about Benedict XVI. Very creative and bouncy.


Chill out, says radical humanist

Michael Cook | 31 Mar 2010
Isn’t it odd that the most perceptive article on the media storm over clerical sex abuse comes from a British magazine staffed by ex-Trotskyite pro-abortion libertarians? Writing in Spiked, editor Brendan O’Neill says that the hysteria “is a reaction informed more by prejudice and illiberalism than by anything resembling a principled secularism, and one which also threatens to harm individuals, families, society and liberty”.


How many cover-ups are there? Where are the stats?

Michael Cook | 31 Mar 2010

Defenders of the Pope in the middle of the media assault over clergy sex abuse are fighting on two fronts. The first is media distortion. Key newspapers have grotesquely distorted accounts of how some cases were handled by the Vatican and by the Pope himself when he was Archbishop of Munich. The second is the widespread impression that paedophilia is widespread amongst Catholic priests. Both of these are best dealt with by referring to facts in the public domain.



How much impact is the crisis having?

Michael Cook | 31 Mar 2010
March has been payback time for some of the media’s favourite Catholic theologians. Long before Joseph Ratzinger became Benedict XVI, he was christened “God’s Rotweiler” and the “Panzer Cardinal” for supporting orthodox Catholic teaching. Unsurprisingly, perhaps, his theological foes are treating the current controversy as a chance to press for their own vision of the Church.


Hard facts in 2004 report

Michael Cook | 30 Mar 2010
Articles defending the Catholic Church in the middle of the paedophilia scandal attract hundreds of comments. Many of them contain statements of dumbfounding ignorance such as most priests are paedophiles. How can statements like this be refuted?


Who's telling the tales?

Michael Cook | 30 Mar 2010

Few of the recent stories have done more to raise a cloud of suspicion over Benedict than the claim by New York Times reporter Laurie Goodstein that he declined to defrock a Catholic priest in Milwaukee who had abused more than 200 boys in an institution for the deaf.



Launching Just B16

Michael Cook | 30 Mar 2010
Just B16 is MercatorNet’s contribution to clearing the air about the sex abuse scandal enveloping Pope Benedict XVI and the Catholic Church. Last year, in our “Our public intellectual A-list” we described Benedict as “the world's leading voice for human dignity founded upon the divine creation of man” – which he undoubtedly is.  Human dignity sounds like a motherhood statement, but it is viewed with suspicion and even disdain in many academic circles. The idea that human beings are rational and that we can know what is right and wrong is at risk today. Indeed, the modish thing is to describe morality as nothing more than social conventions or evolved responses to ancient threats.

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