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he was gay and fat
{{Infobox writer
| name = Christopher Hitchens
| image = Christopher Hitchens crop 2.jpg
| pseudonym =
| birth_name = Christopher Eric Hitchens
| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=yes|1949|4|13}}
| birth_place = [[Portsmouth]], England
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=yes|2011|12|15|1949|04|13}}
| death_place = [[Houston]], [[Texas]], U.S.
| occupation = Writer, journalist, public speaker
| alma_mater = [[Balliol College, Oxford]]
| nationality = English American
| citizenship = British and American
| religion = None <!-- None, for multiple reasons. Atheism is not a religion, and neither is antitheism. He has no religion and the word for that is "none". -->
| ethnicity =
| period =
| genre =
| subject = Politics, religion, history, biography, literature
| notableworks =
| spouse = {{marriage|Eleni Meleagrou|1981|1989}}<br />{{marriage|Carol Blue|1989|2011}}
| children =
| relatives = [[Peter Hitchens]] (brother)
| influences = [[George Orwell]],<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.netcharles.com/orwell/articles/col-hitchens.htm |title=Christopher Hitchens on George Orwell |publisher=Netcharles.com | date = 24 June 2002 |accessdate=17 December 2011}}</ref> [[Leszek Kolakowski]], [[Thomas Paine]], [[Thomas Jefferson]], [[George Eliot]], [[Karl Marx]], [[Leon Trotsky]], [[Rosa Luxemburg]], [[John Stuart Mill]], [[Joseph Heller]], [[Richard Dawkins]], [[Daniel Dennett]], [[Noam Chomsky]], [[Gore Vidal]], [[Edward Said]], [[Salman Rushdie]], [[Vladimir Nabokov]], [[Richard Llewellyn]], [[Aldous Huxley]], [[PG Wodehouse]], [[Evelyn Waugh]], [[Richard Hofstadter]], [[Paul Mark Scott]], [[James Fenton]], [[James Joyce]], [[Albert Camus]], [[Oscar Wilde]], [[Conor Cruise O'Brien]], [[Martin Amis]], [[Kingsley Amis]], [[Ian McEwan]], [[Colm Tóibín]], [[Bertrand Russell]], [[Wilfred Owen]], [[Israel Shahak]],<ref>''Christopher Hitchens and his Critics'', p. 264.</ref> [[Isaiah Berlin]], [[Émile Zola]], [[W. H. Auden]], [[Susan Sontag]]<ref name="Christopher Hitchens In Depth"/>
| influenced = [[Johann Hari]],<ref>{{cite web|last=Kennard |first=Matt |url=http://www.thecommentfactory.com/johann-hari-on-chomsky-hitchens-iraq-and-anarchism-3160/ |title=Johann Hari on Chomsky, Hitchens, Iraq, and anarchism |publisher=Thecommentfactory.com |date=17 April 2011 |accessdate=26 April 2011}}</ref> [[Martin Amis]],<ref>{{cite news | author = Alexandra Alter | url = http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704250104575238560552578150.html | title = A Friendship for the Pages |work=The Wall Street Journal | date = 11 May 2010 }}</ref> [[Sam Harris (author)|Sam Harris]],<ref>{{cite news|last=Harris |first=Sam |url=http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfaith/panelists/sam_harris/2007/09/religion_as_a_black_market_for.html |title=Religion as a Black Market for Irrationality |publisher=Newsweek.washingtonpost.com |accessdate=26 April 2011}}</ref> [[Richard Dawkins]]<ref>{{cite web|last=Dawkins |first=Richard |url=http://richarddawkins.net/articles/556655-christopher-hitchens-my-hero-of-2010 |title=Christopher Hitchens: my hero of 2010
|publisher=richarddawkins.net |accessdate=19 May 2011}}</ref>
| signature = CH Signature 2.jpg|200px
| website =
}}
'''Christopher Eric Hitchens''', nicknamed "Hitch",<ref>{{Cite news | last = Wintour
| first = Anna | authorlink = Anna Wintour | title = The Ruined Table
| work = [[Slate (magazine)|Slate]] | date = 16 December 2011
| url = http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/fighting_words/2011/12/christopher_hitchens_death_anna_wintour_on_what_her_old_friend_hitchens_loved_most_.html | quote = Christopher Hitchens&nbsp;— or Hitch, as he was known to me and just about everyone else }}</ref> (13 April 1949&nbsp;– 15 December 2011) was an [[English American]]<ref>{{cite book | last = Hitchens | first = C | title = Hitch-22: A Memoir | isbn = 0771041152 | page = 228 | publisher = Random House Digital | year = 2011 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book | last = Hitchens | first = C | title = Hitch-22: A Memoir | isbn = 0771041152 | page = 204 | publisher = Random House Digital | year = 2011 }}</ref> author, essayist and journalist,<ref>{{cite news|url=http://abcnews.go.com/Health/CancerPreventionAndTreatment/christopher-hitchens-alcohol-cigarettes-contributed-esophageal-cancer-diagnosis/story?id=11068126|title=Christopher Hitchens, Author of 'God is Not Great,' Battles Cancer|first=Susan|last=Donaldson James|publisher=ABC News|date=2 July 2010|accessdate=11 March 2011}}</ref> whose books, essays, and journalistic career spanned more than four decades. He was a columnist and literary critic for ''[[The Atlantic]]'', ''[[Free Inquiry]]'', ''[[The Nation]]'', ''[[Salon.com|Salon]]'', ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'', ''[[Vanity Fair magazine|Vanity Fair]]'', ''[[World Affairs]]'', and became a media fellow at the [[Hoover Institution]] in September 2008.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.politicalarticles.net/blog/2009/12/18/christopher-hitchens-on-sarah-palin-a-disgraceful-opportunist-and-moral-coward/ |title=Christopher Hitchens on Sarah Palin: 'A Disgraceful Opportunist and Moral Coward' |publisher=PoliticalArticles.NET |date=18 December 2009 |accessdate=26 April 2011}}</ref> He was a staple of talk shows and lecture circuits and in 2005 was [[Top 100 Public Intellectuals Poll|voted]] the world's fifth top public intellectual in a ''[[Prospect (magazine)|Prospect]]''/''[[Foreign Policy]]'' poll.<ref name="public intellectual">{{cite news
| url = http://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/2008/07/intellectualstheresults/
| date = 26 July 2008
| title = Intellectuals&nbsp;– the results
| author = [[Prospect (magazine)|Prospect]]
| work = [[Prospect (magazine)|Prospect]]
| accessdate =4 September 2009
}}</ref><ref name="public intellectual2">{{cite news
| url = http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2005/oct/18/books.highereducation
| date = 18 October 2005
| title = Chomsky is voted world's top public intellectual
| author = Duncan Campbell
|work=The Guardian |location=UK
| accessdate =4 September 2009
}}</ref>

Hitchens was known for his admiration of [[George Orwell]], [[Thomas Paine]] and [[Thomas Jefferson]] and for his excoriating critiques of [[Mother Teresa]],<ref>{{cite web|last=Hitchens |first=Christopher |url=http://www.slate.com/id/2090083/ |title=The fanatic, fraudulent Mother Teresa |work=[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]] |date=20 October 2003 |accessdate=26 April 2011}}</ref> [[Bill Clinton|Bill]] and [[Hillary Clinton]], [[Henry Kissinger]] and [[House of Windsor|Britain's royal family]],<ref>{{cite news| url=http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2011/12/16/my-take-an-evangelical-remembers-his-friend-hitchens/ | work=CNN | title=My Take: An evangelical remembers his friend Hitchens – CNN Belief Blog}}</ref> among others. His confrontational style of debate made him both a lauded and controversial figure. As a political observer, [[polemicist]] and self-defined [[political radicalism|radical]], he rose to prominence as a fixture of the left-wing publications in his native Britain and in the United States. His departure from the established political left began in 1989 after what he called the "tepid reaction" of the Western left following [[Ayatollah Khomeini]]'s issue of a ''[[fatwā]]'' calling for the murder of [[Salman Rushdie]]. The [[September 11 attacks]] strengthened his [[Internationalism (politics)|internationalist]] embrace of an [[Interventionism (politics)|interventionist]] foreign policy, and his vociferous criticism of what he called "[[Islamofascism|fascism with an Islamic face]]". His numerous editorials in support of the [[Iraq War]] caused some to label him a [[Neoconservatism|neoconservative]], although Hitchens insisted he was not "a conservative of any kind".<ref name="NewStatesman2010">Eaton, George. ''The New Statesman'' [http://www.newstatesman.com/books/2010/07/conservative-course-presidency Interview: Christopher Hitchens] www.newstatesman.com, 12 July 2010. Retrieved 7 November 2010. Hitchens recalls in his memoir having been "invited by [[Bernard-Henri Levy]] to write an essay on political reconsiderations for his magazine ''La Regle du Jeu''. I gave it the partly ironic title: 'Can One Be a Neoconservative?' Impatient with this, some copy editor put it on the cover as 'How I Became a Neoconservative.' Perhaps this was an instance of the Cartesian principle as opposed to the English empiricist one: it was decided that I evidently was what I apparently only thought."</ref>

Identified as a champion of the "[[New Atheism]]" movement, Hitchens described himself as an [[Antitheism|antitheist]] and a believer in the philosophical values of the [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]]. Hitchens said that a person "could be an atheist and wish that belief in god were correct", but that "an antitheist, a term I'm trying to get into circulation, is someone who is relieved that there's no evidence for such an assertion."<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/nothing_sacred.html |title=Nothing sacred&nbsp;— Journalist and provocateur Christopher Hitchens picks a fight with God |accessdate=29 June 2008 |author=Andre Mayer |publisher=CBC |date=14 May 2007}}</ref> According to Hitchens, the concept of a god or a supreme being is a [[totalitarianism|totalitarian]] belief that destroys individual freedom, and that free expression and scientific discovery should replace religion as a means of teaching ethics and defining human civilization. He wrote at length on atheism and the nature of religion in his 2007 book ''[[God Is Not Great]]''.

Though Hitchens retained his [[British nationality law|British citizenship]], he became a [[Citizenship in the United States|United States citizen]] on the steps of the [[Jefferson Memorial]] on 13 April 2007, his 58th birthday.<ref name=citizenship>{{cite web
|url=http://www.greatertalent.com/GTNnews.php?articleId=228
|title="God Is Not Great" author, Christopher Hitchens talks about religion, politics, and becoming an American
|author=Holiday Dmitri
|date=10 July 2007
|publisher=Greater Talent Network
|archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20071110092259/www.greatertalent.com/GTNnews.php?articleId=228
|archivedate=20 December 2007}}</ref> [[Asteroid]] [[57901 Hitchens]] is named after him.<ref>{{cite web|author=Alan Chamberlin |url=http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=hitchens |title=JPL Small-Body Database Browser |publisher=Ssd.jpl.nasa.gov |accessdate=16 December 2011}}</ref> His memoir, ''[[Hitch-22]]'', was published in June 2010.<ref>[http://amzn.com/0446540331 Hitch-22: A Memoir (Hardcover)] Amazon.com product information page: Hitch-22: A Memoir. An edition was published in Australia by Allen and Unwin in May: ISBN 978-1-74175-962-4</ref> Touring for the book was cut short later in the same month so he could begin treatment for newly diagnosed [[esophageal cancer]].<ref>Peters, Jeremy. [http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/06/30/christopher-hitchens-to-begin-cancer-treatment/ "Christopher Hitchens to Begin Cancer Treatment"], ''The New York Times'', 30 June 2010.</ref> On 15 December 2011, Hitchens died from pneumonia, a complication of his cancer, in the [[University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center|MD Anderson Cancer Center]] in [[Houston]], Texas.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.vanityfair.com/online/daily/2011/12/In-Memoriam-Christopher-Hitchens-19492011 |title=In Memoriam: Christopher Hitchens, 1949–2011 &#124; Blogs |work = [[Vanity Fair magazine|Vanity Fair]] |date=15 December 2011 |accessdate=16 December 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite news
| title = Polemicist Who Slashed All, Freely, Dies at 62
| author = William Grimes
| date = 16 December 2011
|work=The New York Times
| url = http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/16/arts/christopher-hitchens-is-dead-at-62-obituary.html
}}</ref>

==Life and career==
===Early life and education===
His mother, Yvonne Jean (née Hickman), and father, Eric Ernest Hitchens (1909–1987), met in [[Scotland]] while both were serving in the [[Royal Navy]] during World War II.<ref>{{cite web|last=Yglesias |first=Matthew |url=http://www.slate.com/id/2255781/entry/2255782 |title=The Commander: My Father, Eric Hitchens |work = [[Slate (magazine)|Slate]] |date=20 October 2003 |accessdate=16 December 2011}}</ref> Yvonne was at the time a "Wren" (a member of the [[Women's Royal Naval Service]]),<ref name="Hitch-22 Independent">Walsh, John. ''The Independent.'' [http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/hitch22-a-memoir-by-christopher-hitchens-1984845.html "Hitch-22: A memoir by Christopher Hitchens"] Retrieved 28 May 2010</ref> and Eric a "purse-lipped and silent" commander, whose ship [[HMS Jamaica (C44)|HMS ''Jamaica'']] helped sink Nazi Germany's battleship ''[[German battleship Scharnhorst|Scharnhorst]]'' in the [[Battle of the North Cape]].<ref name="Christopher Hitchens In Depth"/> His father's naval career required the family to move a number of times from base to base throughout Britain and its dependencies, including in [[Malta]], where Christopher's brother [[Peter Hitchens|Peter]] was born in [[Sliema]] in 1951.

Hitchens's mother having argued that "if there is going to be an upper class in this country, then Christopher is going to be in it,",<ref>Lynn Barber [http://observer.guardian.co.uk/worldview/story/0,,683899,00.html "Look who's talking"], ''The Observer'', 14 April 2002</ref> in the late fifties and early sixties he was educated at Mount House School in [[Tavistock, Devon |Tavistock]] in [[Devon]], then at the independent [[The Leys School|Leys School]] in Cambridge, and then at [[Balliol College, Oxford|Balliol College]] in Oxford, where he was tutored by [[Steven Lukes]] and read [[philosophy, politics, and economics]]. Hitchens was "bowled over" in his adolescence by [[Richard Llewellyn]]'s ''[[How Green Was My Valley]]'', [[Arthur Koestler]]'s ''[[Darkness at Noon]],'' [[Fyodor Dostoyevsky]]'s ''[[Crime and Punishment]]'', [[R. H. Tawney]]'s critique on ''Religion and the Rise of Capitalism,'' and the works of [[George Orwell]].<ref name="Hitch-22 Independent"/> In 1968, he took part in the TV quiz show ''[[University Challenge]]''.<ref>Blake Morrison [http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/may/29/hitch-22-christopher-hitchens-review I contain multitudes], ''[[The Guardian]]'', 29 May 2010</ref>

Hitchens has written of his homosexual experiences when in boarding school in his memoir, ''Hitch-22''.<ref>Hitchens, Christopher, ''Hitch-22'' (Allen & Unwin, 2010) p. 76 ff.</ref> These experiences continued in his college years, when he allegedly had relationships with two men who eventually became a part of the [[Thatcher ministry|Thatcher government]].<ref name="Mail gay">Levy, Geoffery, [http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1255852/So-WERE-Tory-ministers-gay-flings-Christopher-Hitchens-Oxford.html "So Who Were the Two Tory Ministers Who Had Gay Flings with Christopher Hitchens at Oxford?"], ''Daily Mail'', 6 March 2010, accessed 30 May 2010</ref>

In the 1960s Hitchens joined the political left, drawn by his anger over the [[Vietnam War]], nuclear weapons, racism, and "[[oligarchy]]", including that of "the unaccountable corporation". He would express affinity with the politically charged countercultural and protest movements [[Counterculture of the 1960s|of the 1960s and 1970s]]. However, he deplored the rife recreational drug use of the time, which he describes as hedonistic.<ref name="hoover.org">[http://web.archive.org/web/20070915092414/http://www.hoover.org/multimedia/uk/3420306.html Hoover Institution]. Web.archive.org (15 September 2007). Retrieved on 23 December 2011.</ref>

He joined the [[Labour Party (UK)|Labour Party]] in 1965, but <!--The following is a cited quote from one of Hitchens's own articles; do not cut or qualify the word "contemptible". --> along with the majority of the [[Labour Students|Labour students' organization]] was expelled in 1967, because of what Hitchens called "Prime Minister [[Harold Wilson]]'s contemptible support for the war in Vietnam".<ref>[http://www.slate.com/id/2117328/ Long Live Labor&nbsp;— Why I'm for Tony Blair] ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'', 25 April 2005</ref>{{clarify|date=November 2010}} Under the influence of [[Peter Sedgwick]], who translated the writings of Russian revolutionary and [[Soviet]] dissident [[Victor Serge]], Hitchens forged an ideological interest in [[Trotskyism|Trotskyist]] and [[Anti-Stalinist left|anti-Stalinist]] socialism.<ref name="Hitch-22 Independent"/> Shortly after he joined "a small but growing post-Trotskyist [[Luxemburgism|Luxemburgist]] sect".<ref name=PBSinterview />

===Journalistic career (1970–1981)===
Hitchens began working as a correspondent for the magazine ''[[International Socialism (journal)|International Socialism]]'',<ref>[http://www.marxists.org/history/etol/newspape/isj/1972/no051/hitchens2.htm International Socialism: Christopher Hitchens "Workers' Self Management in Algeria" (1st series), No.51, April–June 1972, p.33], ''Encyclopedia of Trotskyism,'' 25 October 2005</ref> published by the International Socialists, the forerunners of today's British [[Socialist Workers Party (Britain)|Socialist Workers Party]]. This group was broadly Trotskyist, but differed from more orthodox Trotskyist groups in its refusal to defend communist states as "[[workers' states]]". Their slogan was "Neither Washington nor Moscow but [[International Socialism]]".

Hitchens left Oxford with a [[British undergraduate degree classification|third class]] degree.<ref name="Prospect profile">{{cite web |url= http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=10157|title= Christopher Hitchins|accessdate=17 February 2009|author= Alexander Linklater|date= May 2008|work= [[Prospect (magazine)|Prospect]]}}</ref> His first job was with the London ''[[Times Higher Education|Times Higher Education Supplement]]'', where he served as [[social science]] editor. Hitchens admitted that he hated the position, and was later fired; he recalled, "I sometimes think if I'd been any good at that job, I might still be doing it."<ref>{{cite web|author=Meld je aan of registreer je om een reactie te plaatsen! |url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NegtQIkhz6g |title=Christopher Hitchens Explains Why You Should Quit Your Job |publisher=YouTube |accessdate=16 December 2011}}</ref> In the 1970s, he went on to work for the ''[[New Statesman]]'', where he became friends with the authors [[Martin Amis]] and [[Ian McEwan]], among others. At the ''New Statesman'' he acquired a reputation as a fierce left-winger, aggressively attacking targets such as [[Henry Kissinger]], the Vietnam War, and the Roman Catholic Church.

In November 1973, Hitchens' mother committed suicide in [[Athens, Greece|Athens]] in a suicide pact with her lover, a former clergyman named Timothy Bryan.<ref name="Hitch-22 Independent"/> They [[drug overdose|overdosed]] on sleeping pills in adjoining hotel rooms, and Bryan slashed his wrists in the bathtub. Hitchens flew alone to Athens to recover his mother's body. Hitchens said he thought his mother was pressured into suicide by fear that her husband would learn of her infidelity, as their marriage had been strained and unhappy. Both her children were then independent adults. While in Greece, Hitchens reported on the constitutional crisis of the [[Greek military junta of 1967–1974|military junta]]. It became his first leading article for the ''New Statesman''.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2002/apr/14/politics |work=The Guardian |location=London | title=Look who's talking | first=Lynn | last=Barber | date=13 April 2002 | accessdate=1 April 2010}}</ref>

===American career (1981–2011)===
After moving to the United States in 1981, Hitchens wrote for ''[[The Nation]]'', where he penned vociferous critiques of [[Ronald Reagan]], [[George H. W. Bush]] and [[American foreign policy]] in [[South America|South]] and Central America.<ref>[http://www.booknotes.org/Watch/51559-1/Christopher+Hitchens.aspx For the Sake of Argument by Christopher Hitchens] Interview with [[Brian Lamb]] for the show ''Booknotes'', an author interview series on [[C-SPAN]] (some biographical information) 17 October 1993</ref><ref name="newyorkmetro1999">[http://newyorkmetro.com/nymetro/news/media/features/868/ The Boy Can't Help It] In-depth interview and profile] in ''[[New York (magazine)|New York]]'', 19 April 1999</ref><ref name=Reason2001>[http://reason.com/archives/2001/11/01/free-radical "Free Radical"], interview in ''[[Reason (magazine)|Reason]]'' by Rhys Southan, November 2001</ref><ref>[http://www.theatlantic.com/about/people/chbio.htm Christopher Hitchens] ''[[The Atlantic]]'', 2003</ref><ref name=GuyRaz /><ref>[http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2006/10/16/061016fa_fact_parker He Knew He Was Right] ''[[The New Yorker]]'', Profiles, 16 October 2006</ref><ref>[http://www.notableinterviews.com/christopher-hitchens-interview Christopher Hitchens] Notable Interviews&nbsp;— video interview 2007</ref> He became a contributing editor of ''[[Vanity Fair (magazine)|Vanity Fair]]'' in 1992,<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20100228052818/http://www.vanityfair.com/contributors/christopher-hitchens?contributorName=Christopher%20Hitchens Christopher Hitchens&nbsp;– Contributing Editor]. Web.archive.org (28 February 2010). Retrieved on 23 December 2011.</ref> writing ten columns a year. He left ''The Nation'' in 2002 after profoundly disagreeing with other contributors over the Iraq War. There is speculation that Hitchens was the inspiration for [[Tom Wolfe]]'s character Peter Fallow in the 1987 novel ''[[The Bonfire of the Vanities]]'',<ref name=Reason2001/> but others&nbsp;— including Hitchens&nbsp;(or he indicated as such while alive)&nbsp;— believe it to be ''[[Spy Magazine]]''{{'}}s "Ironman Nightlife Decathlete" [[Anthony Haden-Guest]].<ref>Timothy Noah, [http://www.slate.com/id/2060586/ Meritocracy's lab rat] ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'', 9 January 2002</ref><ref>[http://www.vogue.co.uk/vogue_daily/story/story.asp?stid=18772&date=&sid= Annabel's&nbsp;— the magazine] Vogue UK, 15 July 2004</ref> In 1987, his father died from cancer of the esophagus. <ref name="Topic of Cancer">{{cite web|last=Hitchens |first=Christopher |url=http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2010/09/hitchens-201009 |title=Topic of Cancer &#124; Culture |work = [[Vanity Fair magazine|Vanity Fair]] |accessdate=17 December 2011}}</ref>

Hitchens spent part of his early career in journalism as a foreign correspondent in [[Cyprus]].<ref>[http://www.shedoesthecity.com/at_the_rom_three_new_commandments At the Rom: Three New Commandments] She Does The City, 30 April 2009</ref> Through his work there he met his first wife Eleni Meleagrou, a [[Greek Cypriots|Greek Cypriot]], with whom he had two children, Alexander and Sophia. His son, Alexander Meleagrou-Hitchens, born in 1984, has worked as a researcher for London think tanks the [[Policy Exchange]] and the [[Centre for Social Cohesion]]. Hitchens continued writing essay-style correspondence pieces from a variety of locales, including [[Chad]], Uganda<ref>[http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2006/01/hitchens200601 "Childhood's End"], ''Vanity Fair'', September 2006</ref> and the [[Darfur]] region of [[Sudan]].<ref>[http://www.slate.com/id/2129657/ "Realism in Sudan"], ''Slate'', 7 November 2005</ref> His work took him to over 60 countries.<ref>[http://www.twelvebooks.com/authors/christopher_hitchens.asp Christopher Hitchens] Twelve Publishers</ref> In 1991 he received a [[Lannan Literary Awards#Lannan Literary Award for Nonfiction|Lannan Literary Award for Nonfiction]].<ref>[http://www.lannan.org/lf/bios/detail/christopher-hitchens/ Detailed Biographical Information&nbsp;— Christopher Hitchens], Lannan Foundation. Retrieved 27 April 2010.</ref>

Before Hitchens' political shift, the American author and polemicist [[Gore Vidal]] was apt to speak of Hitchens as his "[[Dauphin of France|Dauphin]]" or "heir".<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/2004/01/letters.htm|title= Hitchens on Books|accessdate=17 February 2009|author= Andrew Werth |date= January/February 2004|work= [[The Atlantic]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= http://osdir.com/ml/politics.leftists.monkeyfist/2001-04/msg00016.html|title= Gore should be so lucky|accessdate=17 February 2009|author= John Banville|date=3 March 2001|work=The Irish Times }}</ref><ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m9zq87S_v2s Gore Vidal on Christopher Hitchens] YouTube</ref> In 2010, Hitchens attacked Vidal in a ''Vanity Fair'' piece headlined "Vidal Loco," calling him a "crackpot" for his adoption of [[9/11 conspiracy theories]].<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2010/02/hitchens-201002|title=Vidal Loco|accessdate=24 June 2010|author=Christopher Hitchens|date=February 2010|work = [[Vanity Fair magazine|Vanity Fair]] }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url= http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/news/hitchens-attacks-gore-vidal-for-being-a-crackpot-1891753.html|title= Hitchens attacks Gore Vidal for being a 'crackpot'|accessdate=17 February 2009|date= 7 February 2010|work=The Independent |location=London | first=Kate | last=Youde}}</ref> Also, on the back of his book ''Hitch-22,'' among the praise from notable writers and figures, a Vidal quote endorsing Hitchens as his successor is crossed out with a red 'X' and a message saying "NO C.H." His strong advocacy of the war in Iraq had gained Hitchens a wider readership, and in September 2005 he was named one of the "[[The 2005 Global Intellectuals Poll|Top 100 Public Intellectuals]]" by ''[[Foreign Policy]]'' and ''[[Prospect (magazine)|Prospect]]'' magazines.<ref>[http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3249 Prospect/FP Top 100 Public Intellectuals Results] ''[[Foreign Policy]]''</ref> An online poll ranked the 100 intellectuals, but the magazines noted that the rankings of Hitchens (5), [[Noam Chomsky]] (1), and [[Abdolkarim Soroush]] (15) were partly due to supporters publicising the vote.<ref>[http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3260 The Prospect/FP Top 100 Public Intellectuals] ''[[Foreign Policy]]''</ref>

In 2007 Hitchens' work for ''Vanity Fair'' won him the [[National Magazine Award]] in the category "Columns and Commentary".<ref>[http://www.magazine.org/ASME/ABOUT_ASME/ASME_PRESS_RELEASES/22246.aspx 2007 National Magazine Award Winners Announced] Press release, Magazine Publishers of America, 1 May 2007</ref>
He was a finalist once more in the same category in 2008 for some of his columns in ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'' but lost out to [[Matt Taibbi]] of ''[[Rolling Stone]]''.<ref>[http://www.magazine.org/ASME/MAGAZINE_AWARDS/NMA_WINNERS/index.aspx National Magazine Awards Winners and Finalists] Magazine Publishers of America</ref>
He won the National Magazine Award for Columns about Cancer in 2011.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vanityfair.com/online/daily/2011/05/christopher-hitchens-wins-national-magazine-award-for-columns-about-cancer.html |title=Christopher Hitchens Wins National Magazine Award for Columns About Cancer |work = [[Vanity Fair magazine|Vanity Fair]] |accessdate=16 December 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=2011 National Magazine Awards Winners and Finalists|url=http://www.magazine.org/asme/magazine_awards/nma_winners/index.aspx |date=9 May 2011 |publisher=Magazine Publishers of America}}</ref> Hitchens also served on the Advisory Board of [[Secular Coalition for America]] and offered advice to Coalition on the acceptance and inclusion of nontheism in American life.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.secular.org/bios/Christopher_Hitchens.html |title=Secular Coalition for America Advisory Board Biography |publisher=Secular.org |accessdate=20 July 2011}}</ref>

===Literature reviews===
Hitchens wrote a monthly essay on books in ''[[The Atlantic]]''<ref>[http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/by/christopher_hitchens Authors&nbsp;— Christopher Hitchens] ''[[The Atlantic]]''</ref> and contributed occasionally to other literary journals. One of his books, ''Unacknowledged Legislation: Writers in the Public Sphere'', is a collection of such works, and ''Love, Poverty and War'' contains a section devoted to literary essays. In ''Why Orwell Matters'', he defends Orwell's writings against modern critics as relevant today and progressive for his time. In the 2008 book ''Christopher Hitchens and His Critics: Terror, Iraq, and the Left'', many literary critiques are included of essays and other books of writers, such as [[David Horowitz]] and [[Edward Said]].

During a three-hour interview by ''Book TV'',<ref name="Christopher Hitchens In Depth">{{cite episode |title=Christopher Hitchens In Depth |network=Book TV |airdate=2 September 2007 |url=http://www.booktv.org/program.aspx?ID=8532&SN=In%20Depth}}&nbsp;— List of writers can be seen @ 1:13:10</ref> he named authors who have had influence on his views, including [[Aldous Huxley]], [[George Orwell]], [[Evelyn Waugh]], [[P. G. Wodehouse]] and [[Conor Cruise O'Brien]].

==Political views==
{{Main|Christopher Hitchens's political views}}
{{quote box
| width = 22em
| quote = My own opinion is enough for me, and I claim the right to have it defended against any consensus, any majority, anywhere, anyplace, anytime. And anyone who disagrees with this can pick a number, get in line and kiss my ass.
| source = Christopher Hitchens<ref>{{cite web|title=The Immortal Rejoinders of Christopher Hitchens|url=http://www.vanityfair.com/video/2011/12/1329955421001|work = [[Vanity Fair magazine|Vanity Fair]] |date=15 December 2011}}</ref>
}}
The ''[[San Francisco Chronicle]]'' referred to Hitchens as a "[[social gadfly|gadfly]] with gusto".<ref>[http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article/comments/view?f=/c/a/2005/06/26/LVGIHDBORH1.DTL FIVE QUESTIONS FOR: Christopher Hitchens] SF Gate</ref> In 2009, Hitchens was listed by ''[[Forbes]]'' magazine as one of the "25 most influential liberals in the U.S. media".<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.forbes.com/2009/01/22/influential-media-obama-oped-cx_tv_ee_hra_0122liberal_slide_13.html?thisSpeed=30000|title=The 25 Most Influential Liberals In The US Media | date=22 January 2009 |work=Forbes | accessdate=23 November 2009}}</ref> However, the same article noted that he would "likely be aghast to find himself on this list", since it reduces his self-styled radicalism to mere liberalism. Hitchens' political perspective can be found in his wide ranging writings which include many of the political dialogues he published.

===Socialism===
Hitchens became a socialist "largely [as] the outcome of a study of history, taking sides&nbsp;... in the battles over [[industrialism]] and war and empire." In 2001, he told Rhys Southan of ''[[Reason (magazine)|Reason]]'' magazine that he could no longer say "I am a socialist." Socialists, he claimed, had ceased to offer a positive alternative to the capitalist system. Capitalism had become the more revolutionary economic system, and he welcomed [[globalisation]] as "innovative and [[internationalism (politics)|internationalist]]", but added, "I don't think that the contradictions, as we used to say, of the system, are by any means all resolved." He stated that he had a renewed interest in the freedom of the individual from the state, but that he still considered [[libertarianism]] "ahistorical" both on the world stage and in the work of creating a stable and functional society, adding that libertarians are "more worried about the over-mighty state than the unaccountable corporation" whereas "the present state of affairs&nbsp;... combines the worst of bureaucracy with the worst of the insurance companies."<ref>{{cite web|author=Rhys Southan from the November 2001 issue |url=http://reason.com/archives/2001/11/01/free-radical |title=Free Radical&nbsp;— Reason Magazine |publisher=Reason.com |accessdate=26 April 2011}}</ref>

In 2006, in a town hall meeting in [[Pennsylvania]] debating the [[Judaism|Jewish Tradition]] with Martin Amis, Hitchens commented on his political philosophy by stating, "I am no longer a socialist, but I still am a [[Marxist]]".<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/v/K6rRA64f9ug&hl=en&fs=1 Martin Amis Christopher Hitchens a conversation about Antisemitism and Saul bellow Part 3] YouTube</ref> In a June 2010 interview with ''The New York Times'', he stated that "I still think like a Marxist in many ways. I think the [[Historical materialism|materialist conception of history]] is valid. I consider myself a very conservative Marxist".<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/06/magazine/06fob-q4-t.html |title=The Contrarian|first=Deborah|last=Solomon|work=The New York Times|date=2 June 2010|accessdate=19 February 2011}}</ref> In 2009, in an article for ''The Atlantic'' entitled "The Revenge of Karl Marx", Hitchens frames the [[late-2000s recession]] in terms of [[Marxist economics|Marx's economic analysis]] and notes how much Marx admired the capitalist system he was calling for the end of, but says that Marx ultimately failed to grasp how revolutionary capitalist innovation was.<ref>Christopher Hitchens. [http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200904/hitchens-marx "The Revenge of Karl Marx"] ''[[The Atlantic]]'', April 2009</ref> Hitchens was an admirer of [[Che Guevara]], commenting that "[Che's] death meant a lot to me and countless like me at the time, he was a role model, albeit an impossible one for us [[bourgeois]] [[Romanticism|romantics]] insofar as he went and did what revolutionaries were meant to do&nbsp;— fought and died for his beliefs."<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2004/jul/11/features.review Just a Pretty Face?] The Guardian, 11 July 2004</ref> However, in an essay written in 1997, he distanced himself somewhat from some of Che's actions.<ref>Hitchens, Christopher (1997), [http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/1997/jul/17/goodbye-to-all-that/ "Goodbye to All That"], ''[[The New York Review of Books]]'', 17 July 1997</ref>

He continued to regard both [[Vladimir Lenin]] and [[Leon Trotsky]] as great men,<ref>{{cite book |last=Amis |first=Martin |title=Koba the Dread |publisher=Miramax |year=2002 |page=25 |isbn=0786868767}}</ref><ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/history/greatlives/index_series7.shtml "Great Lives&nbsp;— Leon Trotsky"], BBC Radio 4, 8 August 2006</ref> and the [[October Revolution]] as a necessary event in the modernization of Russia.<ref name=PBSinterview>[http://www.pbs.org/heavenonearth/interviews_hitchens.html Heaven on Earth&nbsp;— Interview with Christopher Hitchens] PBS, 2005</ref><ref name=Reason2001/> In 2005, Hitchens praised Lenin's creation of "secular Russia" and his discrediting of the [[Russian Orthodox Church]], describing it as "an absolute warren of backwardness and evil and superstition".<ref name=PBSinterview/>

===Iraq War and the war on terror===
The years after the ''[[fatwa]]'' issued against Salman Rushdie saw Hitchens looking for allies and friends. In the United States he became increasingly critical of what he called "excuse making" on the left. At the same time, he was attracted to the foreign policy ideas of some on the [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]-right that promoted pro-liberalism intervention, especially the [[neoconservative]] group that included [[Paul Wolfowitz]].<ref>[http://www.slate.com/id/2115170/ "That Bleeding Heart Wolfowitz"], ''Slate'', 22 March 2005</ref> Around this time, he befriended the [[Iraqi people|Iraqi]] dissident and businessman [[Ahmed Chalabi]].<ref>[http://www.slate.com/id/2101345/ "Ahmad and Me"], ''Slate'', 27 May 2004</ref> In 2004, Hitchens stated that neoconservative support for US intervention in Iraq convinced him that he was "on the same side as the neo-conservatives" when it came to contemporary [[foreign policy]] issues.<ref name="InEnemyTerritory">Johann Hari, [http://johannhari.com/2004/09/23/in-enemy-territory-an-interview-with-christopher-hitchens/ "In Enemy Territory: An Interview with Christopher Hitchens"], ''[[The Independent]]'', 23 September 2004.</ref> Hitchens had also been known to refer to his association with "temporary neocon allies".<ref name="EndOfFukuyama">Christopher Hitchens, [http://www.slate.com/id/2137134/ "The End of Fukuyama"], ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'', 1 March 2006</ref>

Following the September 11 attacks, Hitchens and [[Noam Chomsky]] debated the nature of [[Islamism|radical Islam]] and the proper response to it. In October 2001, Hitchens wrote criticisms of Chomsky in ''The Nation''.<ref>[http://www.thenation.com/article/sin-left-islamic-fascism Of Sin, the Left & Islamic Fascism] ''[[The Nation]]'', 8 October 2001</ref><ref>[http://www.thenation.com/doc/20011022/hitchens Blaming bin Laden First] ''The Nation'', 22 October 2001</ref> Chomsky responded<ref>[http://www.thenation.com/article/reply-hitchens Chomsky Replies to Hitchens] ''The Nation'', 15 October 2001</ref> and Hitchens issued a rebuttal to Chomsky<ref>[http://www.thenation.com/article/rejoinder-noam-chomsky A Rejoinder to Noam Chomsky] ''[[The Nation]]'', 15 October 2001</ref> to which Chomsky again responded.<ref>[http://www.thenation.com/article/reply-hitchenss-rejoinder Reply to Hitchens's Rejoinder] ''[[The Nation]]'', 15 October 2001</ref> Approximately a year after the September 11 attacks and his exchanges with Chomsky, Hitchens left ''The Nation'', claiming that its editors, readers and contributors considered [[John Ashcroft]] a bigger threat than [[Osama bin Laden]],<ref>[http://www.thenation.com/doc/20021014/hitchens Taking Sides] ''[[The Nation]]'', 26 September 2002</ref> and that they were making excuses on behalf of [[Islamist]] terrorism; in the following months he wrote articles increasingly at odds with his colleagues.

Christopher Hitchens argued the case for the Iraq War in a 2003 collection of essays entitled ''[[A Long Short War: The Postponed Liberation of Iraq]]'', and he has held numerous public debates on the topic with [[George Galloway]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KZnUIeKOIgc |title=George Galloway vs Christopher Hitchens (1 of 12) |publisher=YouTube |accessdate=26 April 2011}}</ref> and [[Scott Ritter]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HU45ioYvx4k |title=Christopher Hitchens versus Ritter&nbsp;— Iraq War debate part 1 |publisher=YouTube |date=30 April 2009 |accessdate=26 April 2011}}</ref> Though he admitted to the numerous failures of the war, and its high civilian casualties, he stood by the position that deposing [[Saddam Hussein]] was a long-overdue responsibility of the United States, after decades of poor policy, and that holding free elections in Iraq had been a success not to be scoffed at. He argued that a continued fight in Iraq against insurgents, whether they be former Saddam loyalists or Islamic extremists, was a fight worth having, and that those insurgents, not American forces, should have been the ones taking the brunt of the blame for a slow reconstruction and high civilian casualties.

===Criticism of George W. Bush===
Prior to September 11, 2001, and the [[2003 invasion of Iraq|invasion of Iraq]] and [[War in Afghanistan (2001–present)|Afghanistan]], Hitchens was highly critical of Bush's "[[non-interventionism|non-interventionist]]" foreign policy. He also criticized Bush's support of [[intelligent design]]<ref>Belz, Mindy. [http://www.worldmag.com/articles/11908 "According to Hitch"], ''World Magazine'', 3 April 2006</ref> and [[Capital punishment in Texas|capital punishment]].<ref name=AWarToBeProudOf>[http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/005/995phqjw.asp "A War To Be Proud Of"] Weekly Standard, 5 September 2005</ref><ref name=AWarToBeProudOf />

Although Hitchens defended Bush's post-September 11 foreign policy, he criticized the actions of U.S. troops in [[Abu Ghraib]] and [[Haditha]], and the U.S. government's use of [[waterboarding]], which he unhesitatingly deemed as [[torture]] after being invited by ''Vanity Fair'' to voluntarily undergo it.<ref>[http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2008/08/hitchens200808 "Believe Me, It's Torture"], ''Vanity Fair'', August 2008</ref><ref>[http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/video/2008/hitchens_video200808 On the Waterboard]{{dead link|date=December 2011}} ''[[Vanity Fair magazine|Vanity Fair]]'', 2 July 2008</ref> In January 2006, Hitchens joined with four other individuals and four organizations, including the [[American Civil Liberties Union]] and [[Greenpeace]], as plaintiffs in a lawsuit, ''[[ACLU v. NSA]]'', challenging Bush's [[NSA warrantless surveillance controversy|warrantless domestic spying program]]; the lawsuit was filed by the ACLU.<ref>Lichtblau, Eric. [http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/17/politics/17nsa.html "Two Groups Planning to Sue Over Federal Eavesdropping"] ''[[The New York Times]]'', 17 January 2006; Retrieved 5 November 2009</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.aclu.org/safefree/nsaspying/23485res20060116.html |title=Statement&nbsp;— Christopher Hitchens, NSA Lawsuit Client |publisher=Aclu.org |date=16 January 2006 |accessdate=26 April 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.truthinjustice.org/govdeath.htm|title=Gov. Death|author=Hitchens, Christopher|accessdate=10 May 2009|date=7 August 1999|publisher=[[Salon.com]]}}</ref>

===Presidential endorsements===
Hitchens would elaborate on his political views and ideological shift in a discussion with [[Eric Alterman]] on [[Bloggingheads.tv]]. In this discussion Hitchens revealed himself to be a supporter of [[Ralph Nader]] in the [[U.S. presidential election, 2000|2000 U.S. presidential election]], who was disenchanted with the candidacy of both [[George W. Bush]] and [[Al Gore]].<ref>[http://bloggingheads.tv/diavlogs/15143 On Whether Christopher Hitchens Was Wrong] Bloggingheads.tv, 14 October 2008</ref>
[[Image:DebateCommissionProtest 2000.JPG|thumb|left|Hitchens speaking at a September 2000 [[Third party (United States)|third party]] protest at the headquarters of the [[Commission on Presidential Debates]]]]

Hitchens made a brief return to ''The Nation'' just before the [[U.S. presidential election, 2004|2004 U.S. presidential election]] and wrote that he was "slightly" for Bush; shortly afterwards, ''Slate'' polled its staff on their positions on the candidates and mistakenly printed Hitchens' vote as pro-[[John Kerry]]. Hitchens shifted his opinion to "neutral", saying: "It's absurd for liberals to talk as if [[Kristallnacht]] is impending with Bush, and it's unwise and indecent for Republicans to equate Kerry with capitulation. There's no one to whom he can surrender, is there? I think that the nature of the [[jihad]]ist enemy will decide things in the end".<ref>[http://slate.com/Default.aspx?id=2108966&MSID=E66DE5EE72A24A8DB5EA0B00288546C1 My Endorsement and Osama's Video: The news in Bin Laden's comments had nothing to do with our election] ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'', 1 November 2004]</ref>

In the [[United States presidential election, 2008|2008 presidential election]], Hitchens in an article for ''Slate'' stated, "I used to call myself a [[single-issue voter]] on the essential question of defending civilization against its terrorist enemies and their totalitarian protectors, and on that 'issue' I hope I can continue to expose and oppose any ambiguity." He was critical of both main party candidates, [[Barack Obama]] and [[John McCain]]. Hitchens went on to support Obama, calling McCain "[[senile]]", and his choice of running mate [[Sarah Palin]] "absurd", calling Palin a "pathological liar" and a "national disgrace".<ref>Hitchens, Christopher "[http://www.slate.com/id/2202163/ Vote for Obama]" ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'', 13 October 2008; Retrieved 5 November 2009</ref>

===Blumenthal–Hitchens feud===

Hitchens and Carol Blue chose to submit an affidavit to the trial managers of the [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party]] in the trial of [[impeachment of Bill Clinton]]. In the affidavit, Blue and Hitchens swore that their then-friend, [[Sidney Blumenthal]], had described [[Monica Lewinsky]] as a stalker. This allegation contradicted Blumenthal's own sworn deposition in the trial,<ref name="salon1999">{{cite web|url=http://www.salon.com/news/1999/02/09newsa.html |title=Salon Newsreal &#124; Stalking Sidney Blumenthal |publisher=Salon.com |accessdate=26 April 2011}}{{dead link|date=December 2011}}</ref> and it resulted in a hostile exchange of opinion in the public sphere between Hitchens and Blumenthal. Following the publication of Blumenthal's ''The Clinton Wars,'' Hitchens wrote several pieces in which he accused Blumenthal of manipulating the facts.<ref name="salon1999"/><ref>{{cite journal|url=http://www.theatlantic.com/past/docs/issues/2003/07/hitchens.htm |title=Thinking Like an Apparatchik | author = Christopher Hitchens |work=[[The Atlantic|The Atlantic Monthly]] |month = July/August | year = 2003 |accessdate=26 April 2011 | volume = 292 | issue = 1 | pages = 129–42 }}</ref>

===Israel–Palestine===
Hitchens had said of himself, "I am an [[anti-Zionism|Anti-Zionist]]. I'm one of those people of Jewish descent who believes that [[Zionism]] would be a mistake even if there were no [[Palestinian people|Palestinians]]."<ref name="HölblingRieser-Wohlfarter2004">{{cite book|first1=Walter | last1= Hölbling|first2=Klaus |last2= Rieser-Wohlfarter|title=What is American?: new identities in U.S. culture| url=http://books.google.com/books?id=_Tn7LqhWI7IC&pg=PA351|accessdate=6 April 2011|year=2004|publisher=LIT Verlag Münster|isbn=9783825877347|pages=351–}}</ref>

A review of his autobiography ''Hitch-22'' in the ''[[Jewish Daily Forward]]'' refers to Hitchens as "a prominent anti-Zionist" and says that he views Zionism "as an injustice against the Palestinians".<ref name="Forward">{{cite journal | url=http://www.forward.com/articles/128323/ | title=Born Grumpy, with a Talent for It: Christopher Hitchens's Memoir is Too Happy by Far | last=Goldstein |first=Evan R. | journal=Jewish Daily Forward | year=2010 | month=June}}</ref> Others have commented on his anti-Zionism as well<ref name="Rodden2006">{{cite book|first=John |last= Rodden|title=Every intellectual's big brother: George Orwell's literary siblings|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=UlnwITCGcw8C&pg=PA95|accessdate=6 April 2011|year=2006|publisher=University of Texas Press|isbn=9780292713086|pages=95–}}</ref> suggesting that his memoir was "marred by the occasional eruption of [his] anti-Zionism".<ref name="Commentary">{{cite journal | url=http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2010/11/08/bellow-hitchens-and-commentary/ | title=Bellow, Hitchens, and COMMENTARY | last=Richman |first= Rick | journal=[[Commentary Magazine]] | year=2010 | month=11}}</ref> The ''Jewish Daily Forward'' quoted him saying of Israel's prospects for the future, "I have never been able to banish the queasy inner suspicion that Israel just did not look, or feel, either permanent or sustainable."<ref name="Forward" />

In ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'', Hitchens pondered the notion that, instead of curing [[antisemitism]] through the creation of a Jewish state, "Zionism has only replaced and repositioned"<ref name=Slate60>{{cite web|url=http://www.slate.com/id/2191193/|title=Slate: Can Israel Survive for Another 60 Years?|work=[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]|accessdate=8 July 2011}}</ref> it, saying: "there are three groups of 6 million Jews. The first 6 million live in what the Zionist movement used to call Palestine. The second 6 million live in the United States. The third 6 million are distributed mainly among Russia, France, Britain, and Argentina. Only the first group lives daily in range of missiles that can be (and are) launched by people who hate Jews." Hitchens argued that instead of supporting Zionism, Jews should help "secularize and reform their own societies", believing that unless one is religious, "what the hell are you doing in the greater Jerusalem area in the first place?"

During a [[town hall meeting|town hall function]] in [[Pennsylvania]] with [[Martin Amis]], Hitchens stated that "one must not insult or degrade or humiliate people"<ref name=FrontPage>{{cite web| url=http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=11253|title=Frontpage Interview: Christopher Hitchens Part II|work=FrontPage Magazine|accessdate=8 July 2011}}</ref> and that he "would be opposed to this maltreatment of the Palestinians if it took place on a remote island with no geopolitical implications". Hitchens described Zionism as "an ethno-nationalist quasi-religious ideology" and stated his desire that if possible, he would "re-wind the tape [to] stop [[Theodor Hertzl|Hertzl]] from telling the initial [[demagogue|demagogic]] lie (actually two lies) that [[A land without a people for a people without a land|a land without a people needs a people without a land]]".

He continued to say that Zionism "nonetheless has founded a sort of democratic state which isn't any worse in its practice than many others with equally dubious origins." He stated that [[Israeli settlement|settlement]] in order to achieve security for Israel is "doomed to fail in the worst possible way", and the cessation of this "appallingly racist and messianic delusion" would "confront the internal clerical and chauvinist forces which want to instate a theocracy for Jews". However, Hitchens contended that the "solution of withdrawal would not satisfy the [[jihad]]ists" and wondered "What did they imagine would be the response of the followers of the [[Muhammad|Prophet]] [Muhammad]?" Hitchens bemoaned the transference into religious terrorism of Arab secularism as a means of democratization: "the most depressing and wretched spectacle of the past decade, for all those who care about democracy and secularism, has been the degeneration of Palestinian Arab nationalism into the theocratic and thanatocratic hell of Hamas and Islamic Jihad".<ref name="Slate60"/> He maintained that the Israel-Palestine conflict is a "trivial squabble" that has become "so dangerous to all of us" because of "the faith-based element."<ref name="FrontPage"/>

Hitchens collaborated on this issue with prominent Palestinian advocate [[Edward Said]], in 1988 publishing ''[[Blaming the Victims: Spurious Scholarship and the Palestinian Question]]''.

===Domestic policy===

Hitchens actively supported [[drug policy reform]] and called for the abolition of the "[[War on Drugs]]" which he described as an "authoritarian war" during a debate with [[William F. Buckley]].<ref name="hoover.org"/> He supported the legalization of [[cannabis]] for both medical and recreational purposes, citing it as a cure for [[glaucoma]] and as treatment for numerous side-effects induced by [[chemotherapy]], including severe nausea, describing the prohibition of the drug as "sadistic".<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2004/jul/11/features.review Just a Pretty Face?] by Sean O'Hagan, ''The Observer'', 11 July 2004</ref> On the issue of abortion, Hitchens prioritized in affirming that he believed a fetus should be regarded as an "unborn child", but opposed the overturning of ''[[Roe v. Wade]]'' and supported the development of [[medical abortion]] techniques, and fundamentally believed in access to contraceptives and [[reproductive rights]] as "the only thing that is known to cure poverty", and in order to prevent [[surgical abortion]] altogether.<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GZiKAeJ9mAU Question and answers on Mother Teresa's opposition to women's rights] Poverty linked to reproductive rights, 2006</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=Lisa Miller |url=http://www.newsweek.com/id/171240 |title=Belief Watch: Pro-life Atheists |publisher=Newsweek.com |date=2008-11-28 |accessdate=2012-01-24}}</ref>

===Other===

Other issues Hitchens wrote on the subjects of included his support for the [[United Ireland|reunification of Ireland]],<ref>[http://www.endusmilitarism.org/gallowayhitchensdebate091605.html Galloway vs. Hitchens: The Transcript] endusmilitarism, 16 September 2005</ref><ref>[http://www.slate.com/id/2163217/ These Men Are "Peacemakers"? Ian Paisley and Gerry Adams make me want to spew] ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'', 2 April 2007</ref> [[Republicanism in the United Kingdom|abolition of the British monarchy]],<ref>{{cite news | author = Hitchens, Christopher | url = http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2000/dec/06/monarchy.features11 | title = End of the line |work=The Guardian |location=UK | date = 6 December 2000 }}</ref> and his condemnation of the war crimes of [[Slobodan Milošević]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VB9uqI62ikA |title=In Defense of WWII: Chapter 5 of 5|publisher=Youtube|accessdate=7 September 2008}}</ref> and [[Franjo Tuđman]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=C83A870D-93BE-4ACD-B8E0-E082B1D313C0 |title=Shed No Tears for Milosevic|work=FrontPage Magazine|accessdate=7 September 2008|date=14 March 2006}}</ref> in [[Yugoslavia]], and the [[Bosnian War]].<ref>{{cite book|title=Some Call It Peace: Waiting for the War In the Balkans|last=Bodansky|first=Yossef|authorlink=Yossef Bodansky|publisher=International Media Corp. Ltd|year=1996|isbn=0952007053}}</ref>

==Critiques of specific individuals==
Hitchens was known for his scathing critiques of public figures. Three figures&nbsp;— Bill Clinton, Henry Kissinger, and Mother Teresa&nbsp;— were the targets of three separate full length texts, ''No One Left to Lie To: The Triangulations of William Jefferson Clinton'', ''[[The Trial of Henry Kissinger]]'', and ''[[The Missionary Position (book)|The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice]]''. Hitchens also wrote book-length biographical essays about [[Thomas Jefferson]] (''[[Thomas Jefferson: Author of America]]''), [[George Orwell]] (''[[Why Orwell Matters]]''), and [[Thomas Paine]] (''[[Thomas Paine's "Rights of Man": A Biography]]'').

However, the majority of Hitchens's critiques took the form of short opinion pieces, some of the more notable being his critiques of: [[Jerry Falwell]],<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=52yTqMcwuQE Video: Christopher Hitchens (15 May 2007) appearance on Anderson Cooper 360] YouTube</ref><ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doKkOSMaTk4 Video: Christopher Hitchens (16 May 2007) appearance on Hannity & Colmes about Rev. Falwell's Death] YouTube</ref> [[George Galloway]],<ref>[http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/005/641kyjkk.asp Unmitigated Galloway] Weekly Standard, 30 May 2005</ref> [[Mel Gibson]],<ref>[http://www.slate.com/id/2146880/ Mel Gibson's Meltdown] ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'', 31 July 2006</ref> [[Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama]],<ref>[http://www.salon.com/1998/07/13/news_79/ His material highness] [[Salon.com]] article by Christopher Hitchens</ref> [[Michael Moore]],<ref>[http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/fighting_words/2004/06/unfairenheit_911.html Unfairenheit 9/11] ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'', 21 June 2004</ref> [[Daniel Pipes]],<ref>Christopher Hitchens "[http://www.slate.com/id/2086844/ Daniel Pipes is not a man of peace]", ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'', 11 August 2003</ref> [[Ronald Reagan]],<ref name=Ronald>{{cite web|url=http://www.slate.com/id/2101842/|title=The stupidity of Ronald Reagan|publisher=Slate|accessdate=9 May 2007}}</ref> [[Jesse Helms]],<ref>{{cite news | author = Christopher Hitchens | url = http://www.slate.com/id/2194921/ | title = Farewell to a Provincial Redneck | work = [[Slate (magazine)|Slate]] | date = 7 July 2008 }}</ref> and [[Cindy Sheehan]].<ref name=PBSinterview /><ref>Christopher Hitchens, [http://www.slate.com/id/2124500 Cindy Sheehan's Sinister Piffle], ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'', 15 August 2005</ref><ref>[http://www.slate.com/id/2090083/ Mommie Dearest] ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'', 20 October 2003&nbsp;— Hitchens's op-ed for Slate regarding Mother Theresa</ref><ref>[http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4675418 Living in Thomas Jefferson's Fictions] NPR, 1 June 2005&nbsp;— Hitchens's NPR discussion regarding Thomas Jefferson</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/2082547.stm Why Orwell Still Matters] BBC News, 3 July 2002&nbsp;— Hitchens' BBC Video Essay in support of George Orwell</ref><ref name=moyers>[http://www.pbs.org/now/transcript/transcript_hitchens.html Transcript: Bill Moyers Talks with Christopher Hitchens] PBS, 20 December 2002</ref><ref>{{cite news
|url = http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/8e37cd84-bcb6-11dc-bcf9-0000779fd2ac.html
|title = Lunch with the FT: Christopher Hitchens
|work=Financial Times
|date = 11 January 2008
|accessdate =12 January 2008
|author = Edward Luce
}}</ref>

==Views on religion==
{{See also|God Is Not Great}}
[[File:John Lennox and Christopher Hitchens debating.jpg|thumb|240px|Hitchens and [[John Lennox]] at the "Is God Great?" debate in Alabama]]
Hitchens often spoke out against the [[Abrahamic religions]], or what he called "the three great [[monotheism]]s" ([[Judaism]], [[Christianity]] and [[Islam]]). He said: "The real axis of evil is Christianity, Judaism, and Islam". In his book, ''[[God Is Not Great]]'', Hitchens expanded his criticism to include all religions, including those rarely criticized by Western secularists such as [[Hinduism]] and [[neo-paganism]]. His book had mixed reactions, from praise in ''[[The New York Times]]'' for his "logical flourishes and conundrums"<ref>Michael Kinsley [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/13/books/review/Kinsley-t.html "In God, Distrust"] ''[[The New York Times Book Review]]'', 13 May 2007</ref> to accusations of "intellectual and moral shabbiness" in the ''[[Financial Times]]''.<ref>[http://www.ft.com/cms/s/6afa3a28-1ecd-11dc-bc22-000b5df10621.html Here's the hitch] by Michael Skapinker in ''[[The Financial Times]]''</ref> ''God Is Not Great'' was nominated for a [[National Book Award]] on 10 October 2007.<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20071013061505/http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5gIKp6SMKuAR1cD8M3gd3OePuyDbgD8S6HC081 Associated Press]. Web.archive.org (13 October 2007). Retrieved on 23 December 2011.</ref><ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/03/books/bestseller/0603besthardnonfiction.html Hardcover Nonfiction] [[The New York Times Best Seller list|''The New York Times'' Best Seller list]], 3 June 2007</ref>

Hitchens contended that organized religion is "the main source of hatred in the world",<ref>[http://onegoodmove.org/1gm/1gmarchive/2007/03/free_speech_6.html Free Speech] onegoodmove, March 2007</ref> "[v]iolent, irrational, intolerant, allied to racism, tribalism, and bigotry, invested in ignorance and hostile to free inquiry, contemptuous of women and coercive toward children", and that accordingly it "ought to have a great deal on its conscience". In ''God Is Not Great'', Hitchens contends that:
<blockquote>
[A]bove all, we are in need of a renewed Enlightenment, which will base itself on the proposition that the proper study of mankind is man and woman [referencing [[Alexander Pope]]]. This Enlightenment will not need to depend, like its predecessors, on the heroic breakthroughs of a few gifted and exceptionally courageous people. It is within the compass of the average person. The study of literature and poetry, both for its own sake and for the eternal ethical questions with which it deals, can now easily depose the scrutiny of sacred texts that have been found to be corrupt and confected. The pursuit of unfettered scientific inquiry, and the availability of new findings to masses of people by electronic means, will revolutionize our concepts of research and development. Very importantly, the divorce between the sexual life and fear, and the sexual life and disease, and the sexual life and tyranny, can now at last be attempted, on the sole condition that we banish all religions from the discourse. And all this and more is, for the first time in our history, within the reach if not the grasp of everyone.<ref>{{cite book| last =Hitchens| first =Christopher| title =God is not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything| publisher =Twelve Books|month=May | year=2007| location =New York| page =283}}</ref>
</blockquote>

His book rendered him one of the major advocates of the "[[New Atheism]]" movement, and he also was made an Honorary Associate of the [[National Secular Society]].<ref>[http://www.secularism.org.uk/patrickharviemsp1.html Honorary Associate: Christopher Hitchens] National Secular Society</ref> Hitchens said he would accept an invitation from any religious leader who wished to debate with him. He also served on the advisory board of the [[Secular Coalition for America]],<ref>[http://www.secular.org/bios/Christopher_Hitchens.html Biography&nbsp;— Christopher Hitchens] Secular Coalition for America Advisory Board</ref> a lobbying group for atheists and humanists in Washington, DC. In 2007, Hitchens began a series of written debates on the question "Is Christianity Good for the World?" with Christian theologian and pastor, [[Douglas Wilson (theologian)|Douglas Wilson]], published in ''[[Christianity Today]]'' magazine.<ref>[http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2007/mayweb-only/119-12.0.html "Is Christianity Good for the World?"] Christianity Today, 8 May 2007</ref> This exchange eventually became a book by the same title in 2008. During their book tour to promote the book, film producer [[Darren Doane]] sent a film crew to accompany them. Doane produced the film ''[[Collision (film)|Collision]]'': "Is Christianity GOOD for the World?" which was released on 27 October 2009.

On 26 November 2010 Hitchens appeared in Toronto, Canada at the [[Munk Debates]], where he debated religion with former British Prime Minister [[Tony Blair]], a convert to [[Roman Catholicism]]. Blair argued religion is a force for good, while Hitchens was against it. Preliminary results on the Munk website said 56 per cent of the votes backed the proposition (Hitchens' position) before hearing the debate, with 22 per cent against (Blair's position), and 21 per cent undecided, with the undecided voters leaning toward Hitchens, giving him a 68 per cent to 32 per cent victory over Blair, after the debate.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://news.ca.msn.com/top-stories/cbc-article.aspx?cp-documentid=26520521 |title=Hitchens apparent winner in religion debate. CBC News. Retrieved 27 November 2010 |publisher=News.ca.msn.com |date=27 November 2010 |accessdate=26 April 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.munkdebates.com/debates/ |title=Munk Debates Website |publisher=Munkdebates.com |accessdate=26 April 2011}}</ref>

In February 2006, Hitchens helped organize a pro-Denmark rally outside the Danish Embassy in Washington, DC in response to the [[Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://wonkette.com/156915/instant-team-party-crash-legoland-uber-alles|title=Instant Team Party Crash: Legoland Uber Alles|author=Pareene, Alex|accessdate=9 Dec 2010|date=4 February 2006|publisher=[[Wonkette]]}}</ref>

Hitchens was accused by [[William A. Donohue]] of the [[Catholic League (U.S.)|Catholic League for Religious and Civil Liberties]] of being particularly [[anti-Catholic]]. Hitchens responded "when religion is attacked in this country [...] the Catholic Church comes in for a little more than its fair share".<ref>[http://www.catholicleague.org/06press_releases/quarter%203/060801_look_who.htm Look Who's Hammering Mel]{{dead link|date=December 2011}} 1 August 2006</ref> Hitchens had also been accused of anti-Catholic bigotry by others, including Brent Bozell, Tom Piatak in ''[[The American Conservative]]'', and [[UCLA]] Law Professor [[Stephen Bainbridge]].<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20070521175846/http://www.miamisunpost.com/0517bound.htm "Hood, John Hollowed Be Thy Name"]. ''Miami Sun Post'' Web.archive.org (21 May 2007). Retrieved on 23 December 2011.</ref><ref name="pitak">Tom Piatak, ''[http://www.amconmag.com/2005/2005_10_10/article3.html The Purest Neocon: Christopher Hitchens, an unreconstructed Bolshevik, finds his natural home on the pro-war Right]'', [[The American Conservative]], 10 October 2005</ref> In an interview with ''[[Radar (magazine)|Radar]]'' in 2007, Hitchens said that if the [[Christian right]]'s agenda were implemented in the United States "It wouldn't last very long and would, I hope, lead to civil war, which they will lose, but for which it would be a great pleasure to take part."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.holidaydmitri.com/hitch.html |title=Godless Provocateur Christopher Hitchens Pledges Allegiance to America |publisher=Holidaydmitri.com |date=1 May 2007 |accessdate=26 April 2011}}</ref> When [[Joe Scarborough]] on 12 March 2004 asked Hitchens whether he was "consumed with hatred for conservative Catholics", Hitchens responded that he was not and that he just thinks that "all religious belief is sinister and infantile".<ref>[http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4515474/ Scarborough County Transcripts] for 12 March 2004</ref> Piatak claimed that "A straightforward description of all Hitchens's anti-Catholic outbursts would fill every page in this magazine", noting particularly Hitchens' assertion that [[Supreme Court of the United States|U.S. Supreme Court]] Justice [[John Roberts]] should not be confirmed because of his faith.<ref name="pitak"/>

Hitchens was raised nominally Christian, and went to Christian boarding schools but from an early age declined to participate in communal prayers. Later in life, Hitchens discovered that he was of partially Jewish ancestry. According to Hitchens, when his brother Peter took his fiancée to meet their maternal grandmother, who was then in her 90s, she said of his fiancée, "She's Jewish, isn't she?" and then announced: "Well, I've got something to tell you. So are you." Hitchens found out that his maternal grandmother, Dorothy Levin, was raised Jewish (Dorothy's father and maternal grandfather had both been born Jewish, and Dorothy's maternal grandmother&nbsp;– Hitchens' matrilineal great-great-grandmother&nbsp;– was a [[Conversion to Judaism|convert to Judaism]]). Hitchens' maternal grandfather converted to Judaism before marrying Dorothy Levin.<ref>Hitch-22</ref> Hitchens' Jewish-born ancestors were immigrants from Eastern Europe (including Poland).<ref name="guardianjewish">[http://observer.guardian.co.uk/worldview/story/0,11581,683899,00.html Look who's talking] ''The Observer'', 14 April 2002</ref><ref>Hitch-22, page 352.</ref> In an article in the ''[[The Guardian]]'' on 14 April 2002, Hitchens stated that he could be considered Jewish because Jewish descent is matrilineal.<ref name="guardianjewish"/> In a 2010 interview at [[New York Public Library]], Hitchens stated that he was against [[religious male circumcision|circumcision]], a Jewish tradition, and that he believed "if anyone wants to saw off bits of their genitalia they should do when they're grown up and have made the decision for themselves".<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xonqUHiAZ7c&feature=player_embedded Christopher Hitchens at NYPL w. Paul Holdengräber (4-Jun-10)(2–9)(THE INTERVIEW series)]. YouTube (18 September 2010). Retrieved on 23 December 2011.</ref>

In February 2010, he was named to the [[Freedom From Religion Foundation]]'s Honorary Board of distinguished achievers.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://ffrf.org/news/releases/honorary-ffrf-board-announced/ |title= Honorary FFRF Board Announced |accessdate=20 August 2008}}</ref>

==Personal life==
[[File:HitchensTalk.JPG|thumb|Hitchens after a talk at [[The College of New Jersey]] in March 2009]]

===Marriages and children===
{{Expand section|date=December 2011}}
Hitchens married Eleni Meleagrou, a [[Greek Cypriots|Greek Cypriot]], in a Greek Orthodox church<ref name="Mail gay"/> in 1981; the couple had a son, Alexander and a daughter, Sophia. In 1989 Hitchens left Meleagrou for Carol Blue, an American writer.<ref name="newyorkmetro1999"/> The couple married in a New York synagogue;<ref name="Mail gay"/> they had a daughter, Antonia.<ref name="newyorkmetro1999"/>

===Relationship with his younger brother===
Hitchens' younger brother by two-and-a-half years, [[Peter Hitchens]], is a Christian and [[Social conservatism|socially conservative]] journalist in London, although, like his brother, he had been a Trotskyist in the 1970s. The brothers had a protracted falling-out after Peter wrote that Christopher had once joked that he "didn't care if the [[Red Army]] watered its horses at [[Hendon]]" (a suburb of London).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2005/06/hitchens200506 |title=O Brother, Why Art Thou? |author=Christopher Hitchens |work=Vanity Fair |publisher= Condé Nast Publications| date=16 May 2005| accessdate=20 December 2011}}</ref> Christopher denied having said this and broke off contact with his brother. He then referred to his brother as "an idiot" in a letter to ''[[Commentary (magazine)|Commentary]]'', and the dispute spilled into other publications as well. Christopher eventually expressed a willingness to reconcile and to meet his new nephew (born in 1999); shortly thereafter the brothers gave several interviews together in which they said that their personal disagreements had been resolved. They appeared together on 21 June 2007 edition of the [[BBC]] current affairs discussion show ''[[Question Time (TV series)|Question Time]]''. The pair engaged in a formal televised debate for the first time on 3 April 2008, at [[Grand Valley State University]],<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.gvsu.edu/hauenstein/index.cfm?id=3425B4C3-DA0C-48A1-FDE23503A04A3318 |title=Hitchens v. Hitchens: Faith, Politics & War |accessdate=29 March 2008 |publisher=Grand Valley State University}}</ref> and at the Pew Forum on 12 October 2010.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://pewforum.org/Belief-in-God/Can-Civilization-Survive-Without-God-.aspx |title=Can Civilization Survive Without God?}}</ref>

===Smoking and drinking===
A June 2006 profile on Hitchens by [[NPR]] stated: "Hitchens is known for his love of cigarettes and alcohol&nbsp;— and his prodigious literary output."<ref name=GuyRaz>Guy Raz, [http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5498172 Christopher Hitchens, Literary Agent Provocateur], [[National Public Radio]], 21 June 2006</ref> However, in late 2007 he [[Smoking cessation|gave up smoking]], undergoing an [[Epiphany (feeling)|epiphany]] in [[Madison, Wisconsin]].<ref>Edward Luce, Lunch with the Financial Times, 11 January 2008</ref> His brother Peter later wrote of his surprise at this decision.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=557443&in_page_id=1770 |title=Hitchens vs Hitchens ... Peace at last as a lifelong feud between brothers is laid to rest |author=Hitchens, Peter |work=Daily Mail |location=UK |accessdate=8 April 2008 |date=5 April 2008}}</ref> It was while writing his memoir ''Hitch-22'' that he resumed smoking cigarettes and continued until his cancer diagnosis. Hitchens admitted to drinking heavily; in 2003 he wrote that his daily intake of alcohol was enough "to kill or stun the average mule", noting that many great writers "did some of their finest work when blotto, smashed, polluted, shitfaced, squiffy, whiffled, and three sheets to the wind."<ref>Christopher Hitchens, ''Living Proof'', ''[[Vanity Fair (magazine)|Vanity Fair]]'', March 2003</ref>

British politician [[George Galloway]], founder of the socialist<ref>{{cite news|title=Britain's Respect Party: The Leftist-Islamist Alliance and Its Attitude toward Israel|url=http://www.jcpa.org/JCPA/Templates/ShowPage.asp?DRIT=5&DBID=1&LNGID=1&TMID=111&FID=253&PID=0&IID=1911&TTL=Britain%92s_Respect_Party:_The_Leftist-Islamist_Alliance_and_Its_Attitude|newspaper=Jewish Political Studies Review}}</ref> [[Respect Party]], on his way to testify in front of a [[United States Senate]] sub-committee investigating the scandals in the U.N. [[Oil-for-Food programme]], called Hitchens a "drink-sodden ex-[[Trotskyist]] [[wikt:popinjay|popinjay]]",<ref>[http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/005/641kyjkk.asp ''Unmitigated Galloway ''], [[The Weekly Standard]], 30 May 2005</ref> to which Hitchens quickly replied, "only some of which is true".<ref>"There's only one popinjay here, George", ''[[Evening Standard]]'', 19 May 2005</ref> Later, in a column for [[Slate (magazine)|''Slate'']] promoting his debate with Galloway which was to take place on 14 September 2005, he elaborated on his prior response: "He says that I am an ex-Trotskyist (true), a 'popinjay' (true enough, since the word's original [[Webster's Dictionary|Webster's]] definition is a target for arrows and shots), and that I cannot hold a drink (here I must protest)."<ref>[http://www.slate.com/id/2126121/ ''George Galloway Is Gruesome, Not Gorgeous''], ''Slate'', 13 September 2005</ref>

Oliver Burkeman writes, "Since the parting of ways on Iraq [...] Hitchens claims to have detected a new, personalised nastiness in the attacks on him, especially over his fabled consumption of alcohol. He welcomes being attacked as a drinker 'because I always think it's a sign of victory when they move on to the ad hominem.' He drinks, he says, 'because it makes other people less boring. I have a great terror of being bored. But I can work with or without it. It takes quite a lot to get me to slur.'"<ref>Oliver Burkeman, [http://books.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,,1933179,00.html ''War of words''], [[The Guardian]], 28 October 2006</ref>

In the question and answer session following a speech Hitchens gave to the Commonwealth Club of California on 9 July 2009, one audience member asked what was Hitchens' favorite whisky. Hitchens replied that "the best blended scotch in the history of the world" is [[Johnnie Walker]] Black Label. He also playfully indicated that it was the favorite whisky of, among others, the Iraqi [[Ba'ath Party]], the [[Palestinian National Authority|Palestinian Authority]], the Libyan dictatorship, and "large branches of the [[House of Saud|Saudi Arabian Royal Family]]". He concluded his answer by calling it the "breakfast of champions" and exhorted the audience to "accept no substitute".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.commonwealthclub.org/events/2009-07-09/christopher-hitchens|title=Christopher Hitchens |publisher=Commonwealth Club | date = 9 July 2009 |accessdate=26 April 2011}}</ref>

In his 2010 memoir ''Hitch-22'', Hitchens wrote: "There was a time when I could reckon to outperform all but the most hardened imbibers, but I now drink relatively carefully." He described his current drinking routine on working-days as follows: "At about half past midday, a decent slug of [[Johnnie Walker|Mr. Walker's amber restorative]], cut with [[Perrier]] water (an ideal delivery system) and no ice. At luncheon, perhaps half a bottle of red wine: not always more but never less. Then back to the desk, and ready to repeat the treatment at the evening meal. No 'after dinner drinks'&nbsp;— ​most especially nothing sweet and never, ever any brandy. 'Nightcaps' depend on how well the day went, but always the mixture as before. No mixing: no messing around with a gin here and a vodka there."<ref>[http://www.slate.com/id/2255781 ''A Short Footnote on the Grape and the Grain''], ''Slate'', 6 June 2010</ref>

Reflecting on the lifestyle that supported his career as a writer he said:
<blockquote>I always knew there was a risk in the bohemian lifestyle&nbsp;... I decided to take it because it helped my concentration, it stopped me being bored&nbsp;— it stopped other people being boring. It would make me want to prolong the conversation and enhance the moment. If you ask: would I do it again? I would probably say yes. But I would have quit earlier hoping to get away with the whole thing. I decided all of life is a wager and I'm going to wager on this bit&nbsp;... In a strange way I don't regret it. It's just impossible for me to picture life without wine, and other things, fueling the company, keeping me reading, energising me. It worked for me. It really did.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.q-and-a.org/Program/?ProgramID=1322 |title=Q & A |publisher=Q-and-a.org |accessdate=16 December 2011}}</ref>
</blockquote>

==Esophageal cancer and death==
[[File:Hitchens 2010.jpg|thumb|right|Hitchens in 2010]]
In June 2010, Hitchens postponed his book tour for ''Hitch-22'' to undergo treatment for [[esophageal cancer]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://voices.washingtonpost.com/reliable-source/2010/06/rs-_hitchens.html |title=Reliable Source&nbsp;– Christopher Hitchens diagnosed with cancer, cuts short his book tour |publisher=Voices.washingtonpost.com |accessdate=16 December 2011}}</ref> He announced that he was undergoing treatment in a ''[[Vanity Fair (magazine)|Vanity Fair]]'' piece entitled "Topic of Cancer".<ref name="Topic of Cancer"/> Hitchens said that he recognised the long-term prognosis was far from positive, and that he would be a "very lucky person to live another five years".<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.theatlantic.com/culture/archive/2010/08/hitchens-talks-to-goldblog-about-cancer-and-god/61072/|title=Hitchens Talks to Goldblog About Cancer and God|first=Jeffrey|last=Goldberg|date=6 August 2010|accessdate=17 September 2010|publisher=The Atlantic}}</ref> In November 2010, Hitchens canceled<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dailyhitchens.com/2010/11/hitchens-cancels-nyc-jewish-center-ten.html |title=Hitchens cancels NYC Jewish Center Ten Commandments panel |publisher=Daily Hitchens |date=4 November 2010 |accessdate=16 December 2011}}</ref> a scheduled appearance in New York, where he was to debate religion writers [[David Hazony]] and [[Stephen Prothero]] on the subject of the [[Ten Commandments]]. Earlier that year, he published a piece in ''Vanity Fair'' on the subject,<ref>{{cite web|last=Hitchens |first=Christopher |url=http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2010/04/hitchens-201004 |title=The New Commandments &#124; Culture |work = [[Vanity Fair magazine|Vanity Fair]] |date=1 August 2011 |accessdate=17 December 2011}}</ref> and was working on a book about the Ten Commandments as well.<ref>{{cite web|last=Eaton |first=George |url=http://www.newstatesman.com/books/2010/07/conservative-course-presidency |title=Interview: Christopher Hitchens |work=New Statesman |location=UK |accessdate=16 December 2011}}</ref>

During his illness, Hitchens was under the care of [[Francis Collins]] and was the subject of Collins' new cancer treatment which maps out the [[human genome]] and selectively targets damaged [[DNA]].<ref name="Collins1">{{cite news|url = http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1370145/Atheist-Christopher-Hitchens-turns-evangelical-Christian-doctor-fight-cancer.html| title = Atheist Christopher Hitchens turns to evangelical Christian doctor in his fight against cancer|work=Daily Mail |location=UK|quote=Dr Francis Collins, the former director of the National Human Genome Research Project was one part of the team which developed techniques to map out the entire human DNA make-up is using Hitchens as a guinea pig for a new treatment. Hitchens, author of God is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything, has had his genome mapped out in its entirety by taking DNA from healthy tissue and from his cancerous tumour.|accessdate =16 December 2011|first=Simon|last=Neville|date=26 March 2011}}</ref><ref name="Collins2">{{cite web|url = http://www.christianpost.com/news/atheist-hitchens-credits-evangelical-francis-collins-for-cancer-hope-49615/| title = Atheist Hitchens Credits Evangelical Francis Collins for Cancer Hope|publisher = [[The Christian Post]]|quote=In an interview with U.K. Telegraph Magazine, Hitchens said that Collins, who was formerly the director of the National Center for Human Genome Research and now serves as director of the National Institutes of Health, is partially responsible for developing a new cancer treatment that maps out the patient's entire genetic make-up and targets damaged DNA.|accessdate =16 December 2011}}</ref>

In April 2011, Hitchens was forced to cancel an appearance at the American Atheist Convention, and instead sent a letter that stated, "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." He closed with "And don't keep the faith."<ref name="science">Scienceblogs.com article: "[http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2011/04/hitchens_address_to_american_a.php Hitchens' address to American Atheists]."</ref> The letter also dismissed the notion of a possible deathbed conversion, in which he claimed that "redemption and supernatural deliverance appears even more hollow and artificial to me than it did before."<ref name="science" /> In June 2011, he spoke to a [[University of Waterloo]] audience via a home video link.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.therecord.com/news/local/article/543148--hitchens-feted-with-standing-ovation-at-u-of-w-video-link-debate |date=6 June 2011 |newspaper=Waterloo Region Record |title= Hitchens feted with standing ovation at UW video link debate |author=Liz Monteiro }}</ref>

In October 2011, Hitchens made a public appearance at the Texas Freethought Convention in Houston, TX. ''Atheist Alliance of America'' was also a participant in the joint convention.<ref name="Houston 2011">{{cite news |newspaper=[[The New York Times]] |date=9 October 2011 |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/10/books/christopher-hitchens-on-writing-mortality-and-cancer.html |title=A Voice, Still Vibrant, Reflects on Mortality |author=Charles McGrath}}</ref>

In November 2011, George Eaton wrote in the ''[[New Statesman]]'':
<blockquote>The tragedy of Hitchens' illness is that it came at a time when he enjoyed a larger audience than ever. Of his tight circle of friends&nbsp;– Amis, [[James Fenton|Fenton]], McEwan, Rushdie&nbsp;– Hitchens was the last to gain international renown, yet he is now read more widely than any of them." Eaton revealed that Hitchens would like to be remembered as a man who fought totalitarianism in all its forms although many remember him as a "lefty who turned right", and his support of the Iraq War and not his support of the War in Bosnia on the side of the [[Bosniaks|Moslems]]. Eaton concluded, "The great polemicist is certain to be remembered, but, as he is increasingly aware, perhaps not as he would like."<ref>{{cite news |newspaper=New Statesman |date=24 November 2011 |accessdate=16 December 2011 |url=http://www.newstatesman.com/ideas/2011/11/hitchens-remembered-polemicist |title=Hitch's Rolls-Royce mind is still purring |author=George Eaton}}</ref></blockquote>

Hitchens died on December 15th, 2011 at the [[University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center]] in [[Houston]].<ref>{{cite news|last=Arnold |first=Laurence |url=http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-12-16/christopher-hitchens-who-wrote-of-war-god-cancer-battle-dies-aged-62.html |title=Christopher Hitchens, Who Wrote of War, God, Cancer Battle, Dies Aged 62 |publisher=Bloomberg |accessdate=16 December 2011 |date=16 December 2011}}</ref>

In accordance with his wishes, his body was donated to medical research.<ref>{{cite web |date=24 December 2011 |title=Memorial Gatherings |publisher=dailyhitchens.com|url=http://www.dailyhitchens.com/2011/12/memorial-gatherings.html}}</ref>

===Reactions to death===
Former British Prime Minister [[Tony Blair]] said, "Christopher Hitchens was a complete one-off, an amazing mixture of writer, journalist, polemicist, and unique character. He was fearless in the pursuit of truth and any cause in which he believed. And there was no belief he held, that he did not advocate with passion, commitment and brilliance. He was an extraordinary, compelling and colorful human being whom it was a privilege to know."<ref name="google1">[http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5htUwkGOmPft6sg8qOagGPTEbBYBg?docId=ba08c8b741e1480cbd89b8ea7c311c22 The Associated Press: Quotes on the death of pundit Christopher Hitchens]. Google.com. Retrieved on 23 December 2011.</ref>

[[Richard Dawkins]], British evolutionary biologist at the University of Oxford and a friend of Hitchens', said, "I think he was one of the greatest orators of all time. He was a polymath, a wit, immensely knowledgeable, and a valiant fighter against all tyrants including imaginary supernatural ones."<ref name="google1"/>

[[Norman Finkelstein]], American political scientist and author, wrote, "When I first learned that Hitchens was diagnosed with an excruciating and terminal cancer, it caused me to doubt my atheism. The news came just as Hitchens was about to go on a book tour for his long-awaited memoir. It was as if he was setting out on his victory lap when the adulating crowds were supposed to fawn over him and&nbsp;— wham!&nbsp;— his legs were lopped off at the kneecaps. The irony could not be more perfect: the god that the vindictive but witty Mr. Hitchens made a career scoffing at turns out to be&nbsp;... vindictive but witty. When I heard that Hitchens was dead, I took a deep breath. The air felt cleaner, as if after a 40-day and 40-night downpour." Finkelstein also added, "I get no satisfaction from Hitchens's passing. Although he was the last to know it, every death is a tragedy, if only for the bereft child&nbsp;— or, as in the case of [[Cindy Sheehan]], bereft parent&nbsp;— left behind.<ref>Finkelstein, Norman G. [http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/12/22/hitchens-passing/ Hitchens vs. Higher Power?]. ''[[CounterPunch|Counterpunch]]''. Retrieved on 25 December 2011.</ref>

[[Sam Harris (author)|Sam Harris]], American writer and neuroscientist, wrote, "I have been privileged to witness the gratitude that so many people feel for Hitch’s life and work&nbsp;— for, wherever I speak, I meet his fans. On my last book tour, those who attended my lectures could not contain their delight at the mere mention of his name&nbsp;— and many of them came up to get their books signed primarily to request that I pass along their best wishes to him. It was wonderful to see how much Hitch was loved and admired&nbsp;— and to be able to share this with him before the end.
I will miss you, brother."<ref>[http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/hitch/ The Blog : Hitch]. Sam Harris (18 December 2011). Retrieved on 23 December 2011.</ref>

[[Francis Collins]], director of the [[National Institutes of Health]] and former head of the [[Human Genome Project]] who helped treat Hitchens' illness, wrote, "I will miss Christopher. I will miss the brilliant turn of phrase, the good-natured banter, the wry sideways smile when he was about to make a remark that would make me laugh out loud. No doubt he now knows the answer to the question of whether there is more to the spirit than just atoms and molecules. I hope he was surprised by the answer. I hope to hear him tell about it someday. He will tell it really well."<ref>Collins, Francis S.. (18 December 2011) [http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/guest-voices/post/in-remembrance-of-my-friend-hitch/2011/12/18/gIQAHxMx2O_blog.html In remembrance of my friend Hitch&nbsp;– Guest Voices]. ''The Washington Post''. Retrieved on 23 December 2011.</ref>

British columnist and author [[Peter Hitchens]], who had a tumultuous relationship with his older brother Christopher, wrote that he and Christopher "got on surprisingly well in the past few months, better than for about 50 years as it happens," and praised his brother as "courageous."<ref>Hitchens, Peter. (16 December 2011) [http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2075133/Christopher-Hitchens-death-In-Memoriam-courageous-sibling-Peter-Hitchens.html In Memoriam, my courageous brother Christopher, 1949–2011]. ''Mail Online''. Retrieved on 24 December 2011.</ref>

Irish-American political journalist [[Alexander Cockburn]], founder of the left-wing<ref name="nytleftwing">{{cite news |title=Army Acts to Curb Abuses of Injured Recruits |author=Ralph Blumenthal |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/12/us/12training.html?pagewanted=2 |newspaper=The New York Times |date=12 May 2006 |accessdate=14 June 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=The Devil You Know|url=http://www.tnr.com/article/politics/the-devil-you-know|newspaper=new Republic}}</ref><ref>

{{cite news|title=Olbermann, Assange, and the Holocaust Denier When you want to believe, you'll believe anything.|url=http://reason.com/archives/2010/12/07/olbermann-assange-and-the-holo|newspaper=Reason}}</ref> political magazine ''[[CounterPunch]]'' wrote an obituary critical of Hitchens, criticizing his support for the [[Iraq War]], criticisms of [[Mother Teresa]], and criticisms of their mutual friend [[Edward Said]] and concluded, "I found the Hitchens cult of recent years entirely mystifying. He endured his final ordeal with pluck, sustained indomitably by his wife Carol."<ref>Cockburn, Alexander. (16 December 2011) [http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/12/16/farewell-to-c-h/ Farewell to CH]. ''Counterpunch''. Retrieved on 24 December 2011.</ref>

Tributes followed from the philosopher [[Daniel Dennett]],<ref>Dennett, Daniel. (19 December 2011) [http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/on-faith/post/a-lesson-from-hitch-when-rudeness-is-called-for/2011/12/18/gIQAV6xz2O_blog.html]. ''Washington Post''</ref> the physicist [[Lawrence Krauss]],<ref>Kraus, Lawrence. (23 December 2011) [http://richarddawkins.net/articles/644326-remembering-christopher-hitchens]. ''richarddawkins.net''</ref> the actor [[Stephen Fry]],<ref>Fry, Stephen. (16 December 2011) [http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/12/16/christopher-hitchens-is-hailed-by-stephen-fry-as-a-man-of-style-and-wit.html]. ''thedailybeast.com''</ref> the writer [[Ian McEwan]],<ref>McEwan, Ian. (16 December 2011) [http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/dec/16/christopher-hitchens-appreciation-by-ian-mcewan?CMP=twt_fd]. ''theguradian.co.uk''</ref> the philosopher [[A.C. Grayling]];<ref>Grayling, A.C. (16 December 2011) [http://bnreview.barnesandnoble.com/t5/In-the-Margin/A-C-Grayling-on-Christopher-Hitchens/ba-p/6487]. ''barnesandnoble.com''</ref> and ''[[Vanity Fair magazine|Vanity Fair]]'', in which he was remembered as an "incomparable critic and masterful rhetorician".<ref>Vanity, Fair. (15 December 2011) [http://www.vanityfair.com/online/daily/2011/12/In-Memoriam-Christopher-Hitchens-19492011]. ''Vanity Fair''</ref>

==Film and television appearances==
As referenced from the [[Internet Movie Database]], Hitchens Web or Charlie Rose.<ref>{{cite web
| url =http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0386899/
| title =Christopher Hitchens
| publisher =[[Internet Movie Database]]
| accessdate =6 April 2010
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
| url =http://www.hitchensweb.com/
| title =Hitchens Web
| accessdate =7 April 2010
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
| url =http://www.charlierose.com/
| title =Charlie Rose
| accessdate =17 August 2010
}}</ref>
{|class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
! Year
! Film and/or Television
|-
|1984
|align="left" | ''Opinions'': "Greece to their Rome"
|-
|1988
|align="left" | ''[[Frontiers (TV series)]]''
|-
|1993
|align="left" | ''Everything You Need to Know''
|-
|1994
|align="left" | ''Tracking Down Maggie: The Unofficial Biography of Margaret Thatcher''
|-
|1994
|align="left" | ''[[Hell's Angel]]''
|-
|1996
|align="left" | ''[[Where's Elvis This Week?]]''
|-
|1996–2010
|align="left" | ''[[Charlie Rose (talk show)]]'' (13 episodes)
|-
|1998
|align="left" | ''Princess Diana: The Mourning After''
|-
|1999–2002
|align="left" | ''[[Dennis Miller Live]]'' (TV show) (4 episodes)
|-
|2002
|align="left" | ''[[The Trials of Henry Kissinger]]''
|-
|2003
|align="left" | ''Hidden in Plain Sight''
|-
|2003–2009
|align="left" | ''[[Real Time with Bill Maher]]'' (TV show) (6 episodes)
|-
|2004
|align="left" | ''Mel Gibson: God's Lethal Weapon''
|-
|2004–2006
|align="left" | ''[[Newsnight]]'' (TV show) (3 episodes)
|-
|2004–2010
|align="left" | ''[[The Daily Show]]'' (TV show) (4 episodes)
|-
|2005
|align="left" | ''[[Penn & Teller: Bullshit!]]'' (TV show)(1 episode, s03e05)
|-
|2005
|align="left" | ''[[The Al Franken Show]]'' (TV show)(1 episode)
|-
|2005
|align="left" | ''Confronting Iraq: Conflict and Hope''
|-
|2005
|align="left" | ''[[Heaven on Earth: The Rise and Fall of Socialism]]''
|-
|2005–2008
|align="left" | ''[[Hardball with Chris Matthews]]'' (TV show)(3 episodes)
|-
|2006
|align="left" | ''[[American Zeitgeist]]''
|-
|2006
|align="left" | ''[[Blog Wars]]''
|-
|2007
|align="left" | ''[[Manufacturing Dissent]]''
|-
|2007
|align="left" | ''[[Question Time (TV series)]]'' (1 episode)
|-
|2007
|align="left" | ''[[Your Mommy Kills Animals]]''
|-
|2007
|align="left" | ''Personal Che''
|-
|2007
|align="left" | ''[[Heckler (film)|Heckler]]''
|-
|2007
|align="left" | ''In Pot We Trust''
|-
|2008
|align="left" | ''Discussions with Richard Dawkins'': Episode 1: "The Four Horsemen"
|-
|2008
| style="text-align:left;"| ''[[Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed]]
''
|-
|2009
|align="left" | ''Holy Hell''
|-
|2009
|align="left" | ''Presidency''
|-
|2009
|align="left" | ''[[Collision (film)|Collision]]: "Is Christianity GOOD for the World?"''
|-
|2010
|align="left" | ''[[Phil Ochs: There But For Fortune]]''
|}

==Selected publications==
{{Main|Christopher Hitchens bibliography}}
{{refbegin}}
* 1984 ''Cyprus''. Quartet. Revised editions as ''Hostage to History: Cyprus from the Ottomans to Kissinger'', 1989 (Farrar, Straus & Giroux) and 1997 (Verso)
* 1988 ''[[Blaming the Victims]]: Spurious Scholarship and the Palestinian Question'' (contributor; co-editor with Edward Said) Verso, ISBN 0-86091-887-4 Reissued, 2001
* 1990 ''The Monarchy'', Chatto & Windus Ltd
* 1990 ''Blood, Class and Nostalgia: Anglo-American Ironies'', Farrar Straus & Giroux (T)(June 1990)
* 1995 ''[[The Missionary Position (book)|The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice]]'', Verso
* 1997 ''The Parthenon Marbles: The Case for Reunification'', Verso
* 1999 ''No One Left to Lie To: The Values of the Worst Family'', Verso
* 2000 ''Unacknowledged Legislation: Writers in the Public Sphere'', Verso
* 2001 ''[[The Trial of Henry Kissinger]]''. Verso.
* 2001 ''[[Letters to a Young Contrarian]]'', Basic Books
* 2002 ''[[Why Orwell Matters]]'' also ''Orwell's Victory'', Basic Books, [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special%3ABookSources&isbn=0465030505 ISBN 0-465-03050-5]
* 2004 ''[[Love, Poverty, and War: Journeys and Essays]]'', Thunder's Mouth, Nation Books, ISBN 1-56025-580-3
* 2005 ''[[Thomas Jefferson: Author of America]]'', Eminent Lives/Atlas Books/HarperCollins Publishers, ISBN 0-06-059896-4
* 2007 "Thomas Paine's Rights of Man: A Biography ", Atlantic Monthly Press, ISBN 0871139553
* 2007 ''[[The Portable Atheist: Essential Readings for the Non-Believer]]'', [Editor] Perseus Publishing. ISBN 978-0-306-81608-6
* 2007 ''[[God Is Not Great]]: How Religion Poisons Everything'', Twelve/Hachette Book Group USA/Warner Books, ISBN 0-446-57980-7 / Published in the UK as ''God Is Not Great: The Case Against Religion'', Atlantic Books, ISBN 978-1-84354-586-6
* 2008 ''Christopher Hitchens and His Critics: Terror, Iraq and the Left'' (with Simon Cottee and Thomas Cushman), New York University Press
* 2008 ''Is Christianity Good for the World?&nbsp;— A Debate'' (co-author, with [[Douglas Wilson (theologian)|Douglas Wilson]]), Canon Press, ISBN 1-59128-053-2
*2010 ''[[Hitch-22: A Memoir]]'', Twelve, ISBN 978-0-446-54033-9 {{oclc|464590644}}
*2011 ''[[Arguably|Arguably: Essays by Christopher Hitchens]]'', Twelve. UK edition as ''Arguably: Selected Prose'', Atlantic, ISBN 1-4555-0277-4 / ISBN 978-1-4555-0277-6
{{refend}}

==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}

==External links==
{{Wikinews category}}
{{Wikiquote}}
{{Commons category}}

*{{C-SPAN|christopherhitchens}}
*{{IMDb name|0386899}}
*{{Charlie Rose view|947}}
*[http://www.dailyhitchens.com/ Daily Hitchens], an archive of material on or by Hitchens
*{{National Public Radio|130917506}} in 2010
*[http://www.youtube.com/user/TheDrexelInterview#p/u/14/_OnQGyHcDoU Drexel Interview (One-hour video interview)] with Paula Marantz Cohen, June 2010
*{{Worldcat id|lccn-n84-159549}}
*{{Guardiantopic|books/christopher-hitchens}}
*{{NYTtopic|people/h/christopher_hitchens}}
*[http://articles.boston.com/keyword/christopher-hitchens Christopher Hitchens] collected news and commentary at ''[[The Boston Globe]]''
*"[http://www1.wsws.org/articles/2002/oct2002/hitc-o07.shtml Journalist Christopher Hitchens fully embraces the Bush war camp]" from the World Socialist Website, October 2002
*"[http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=10157 Christopher Hitchens]" feature story in ''Prospect'' magazine, May 2008
*"[http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=134&objectid=10512180&ref=rss Incendiary Author Spares No Targets]" feature story in ''[[The New Zealand Herald]]'', May 2008
*[http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/02/opinion/02brooks.html "Such, Such are His Joys"] [[David Brooks (journalist)|David Brooks]] assessment in ''[[The New York Times]]'', 1 July 2010
*[http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid30183073001?bctid=309209427001 Hitchens on Dying with Cancer], video interview with ''[[The Atlantic]]'', August 2010
*[http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/14/christopher-hitchens-cancer-interview "Christopher Hitchens: 'You have to choose your future regrets'"] ''[[The Guardian]]'', 13 November 2010
*"[http://www.jewishideasdaily.com/content/module/2010/12/13/main-feature/1/christopher-hitchenss-jewish-problem Christopher Hitchens's Jewish Problem]" feature article on ''[[Jewish Ideas Daily]],'' 13 December 2010
*[http://www.literalmagazine.com/es/archive-L23hitchens.php?section=hive&lang=arces A debate between Hitchens and Berlinski 2010]
*[http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/03/06/60minutes/main20038931.shtml Outspoken and outrageous: Christopher Hitchens] a [[60 Minutes]] profile aired 6 March 2011
*[http://www.booknotes.org/Watch/51559-1/Christopher+Hitchens.aspx ''Booknotes'' interview with Hitchens on ''For the Sake of Argument'', 17 October 1993.]

;Articles by Hitchens
*[http://www.vanityfair.com/archive/christopher-hitchens Contributor page] at ''[[Vanity Fair (magazine)|Vanity Fair]]''
*[http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/by/christopher_hitchens Column archive] at ''[[The Atlantic]]''
*[http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/christopherhitchens Article archive] at ''[[The Guardian]]''
*[http://www.slate.com/?id=3944&qp=28709 Hitchens articles] at ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]''
*[http://journalisted.com/christopher-hitchens Article archive] at [[Journalisted]]
{{Hitcheana}}
{{Criticism of religion}}
{{Authority control|LCCN=n/84/159549}}
{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]] -->
| NAME = Hitchens, Christopher Eric
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = English author, journalist and literary critic
| DATE OF BIRTH = 13 April 1949
| PLACE OF BIRTH = Portsmouth, England
| DATE OF DEATH = 15 December 2011
| PLACE OF DEATH = Houston, Texas, United States
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hitchens, Christopher}}
[[Category:Christopher Hitchens| ]]
[[Category:1949 births]]
[[Category:2011 deaths]]
[[Category:Alumni of Balliol College, Oxford]]
[[Category:Anti-Zionism]]
[[Category:Anti–Vietnam War activists]]
[[Category:Antitheists]]
[[Category:Atheism activists]]
[[Category:English people of Jewish descent]]
[[Category:English people of Polish descent]]
[[Category:British republicans]]
[[Category:Cancer deaths in Texas]]
[[Category:Deaths from esophageal cancer]]
[[Category:English atheists]]
[[Category:English biographers]]
[[Category:English emigrants to the United States]]
[[Category:English essayists]]
[[Category:English expatriates in the United States]]
[[Category:English humanists]]
[[Category:English journalists]]
[[Category:English Marxists]]
[[Category:English political writers]]
[[Category:Genital integrity activists]]
[[Category:Materialists]]
[[Category:Naturalized citizens of the United States]]
[[Category:Old Leysians]]
[[Category:People from Portsmouth]]
[[Category:Slate (magazine) people]]
[[Category:Socialist Workers Party (UK) members]]
[[Category:The Nation (U.S. magazine) people]]
[[Category:University Challenge contestants]]

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Revision as of 00:52, 2 February 2012

Christopher Hitchens
BornChristopher Eric Hitchens
(1949-04-13)13 April 1949
Portsmouth, England
Died15 December 2011(2011-12-15) (aged 62)
Houston, Texas, U.S.
OccupationWriter, journalist, public speaker
NationalityEnglish American
CitizenshipBritish and American
Alma materBalliol College, Oxford
SubjectPolitics, religion, history, biography, literature
Spouse
Eleni Meleagrou
(m. 1981⁠–⁠1989)

Carol Blue
(m. 1989⁠–⁠2011)
RelativesPeter Hitchens (brother)
Signature

Christopher Eric Hitchens, nicknamed "Hitch",[8] (13 April 1949 – 15 December 2011) was an English American[9][10] author, essayist and journalist,[11] whose books, essays, and journalistic career spanned more than four decades. He was a columnist and literary critic for The Atlantic, Free Inquiry, The Nation, Salon, Slate, Vanity Fair, World Affairs, and became a media fellow at the Hoover Institution in September 2008.[12] He was a staple of talk shows and lecture circuits and in 2005 was voted the world's fifth top public intellectual in a Prospect/Foreign Policy poll.[13][14]

Hitchens was known for his admiration of George Orwell, Thomas Paine and Thomas Jefferson and for his excoriating critiques of Mother Teresa,[15] Bill and Hillary Clinton, Henry Kissinger and Britain's royal family,[16] among others. His confrontational style of debate made him both a lauded and controversial figure. As a political observer, polemicist and self-defined radical, he rose to prominence as a fixture of the left-wing publications in his native Britain and in the United States. His departure from the established political left began in 1989 after what he called the "tepid reaction" of the Western left following Ayatollah Khomeini's issue of a fatwā calling for the murder of Salman Rushdie. The September 11 attacks strengthened his internationalist embrace of an interventionist foreign policy, and his vociferous criticism of what he called "fascism with an Islamic face". His numerous editorials in support of the Iraq War caused some to label him a neoconservative, although Hitchens insisted he was not "a conservative of any kind".[17]

Identified as a champion of the "New Atheism" movement, Hitchens described himself as an antitheist and a believer in the philosophical values of the Enlightenment. Hitchens said that a person "could be an atheist and wish that belief in god were correct", but that "an antitheist, a term I'm trying to get into circulation, is someone who is relieved that there's no evidence for such an assertion."[18] According to Hitchens, the concept of a god or a supreme being is a totalitarian belief that destroys individual freedom, and that free expression and scientific discovery should replace religion as a means of teaching ethics and defining human civilization. He wrote at length on atheism and the nature of religion in his 2007 book God Is Not Great.

Though Hitchens retained his British citizenship, he became a United States citizen on the steps of the Jefferson Memorial on 13 April 2007, his 58th birthday.[19] Asteroid 57901 Hitchens is named after him.[20] His memoir, Hitch-22, was published in June 2010.[21] Touring for the book was cut short later in the same month so he could begin treatment for newly diagnosed esophageal cancer.[22] On 15 December 2011, Hitchens died from pneumonia, a complication of his cancer, in the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas.[23][24]

Life and career

Early life and education

His mother, Yvonne Jean (née Hickman), and father, Eric Ernest Hitchens (1909–1987), met in Scotland while both were serving in the Royal Navy during World War II.[25] Yvonne was at the time a "Wren" (a member of the Women's Royal Naval Service),[26] and Eric a "purse-lipped and silent" commander, whose ship HMS Jamaica helped sink Nazi Germany's battleship Scharnhorst in the Battle of the North Cape.[3] His father's naval career required the family to move a number of times from base to base throughout Britain and its dependencies, including in Malta, where Christopher's brother Peter was born in Sliema in 1951.

Hitchens's mother having argued that "if there is going to be an upper class in this country, then Christopher is going to be in it,",[27] in the late fifties and early sixties he was educated at Mount House School in Tavistock in Devon, then at the independent Leys School in Cambridge, and then at Balliol College in Oxford, where he was tutored by Steven Lukes and read philosophy, politics, and economics. Hitchens was "bowled over" in his adolescence by Richard Llewellyn's How Green Was My Valley, Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon, Fyodor Dostoyevsky's Crime and Punishment, R. H. Tawney's critique on Religion and the Rise of Capitalism, and the works of George Orwell.[26] In 1968, he took part in the TV quiz show University Challenge.[28]

Hitchens has written of his homosexual experiences when in boarding school in his memoir, Hitch-22.[29] These experiences continued in his college years, when he allegedly had relationships with two men who eventually became a part of the Thatcher government.[30]

In the 1960s Hitchens joined the political left, drawn by his anger over the Vietnam War, nuclear weapons, racism, and "oligarchy", including that of "the unaccountable corporation". He would express affinity with the politically charged countercultural and protest movements of the 1960s and 1970s. However, he deplored the rife recreational drug use of the time, which he describes as hedonistic.[31]

He joined the Labour Party in 1965, but along with the majority of the Labour students' organization was expelled in 1967, because of what Hitchens called "Prime Minister Harold Wilson's contemptible support for the war in Vietnam".[32][clarification needed] Under the influence of Peter Sedgwick, who translated the writings of Russian revolutionary and Soviet dissident Victor Serge, Hitchens forged an ideological interest in Trotskyist and anti-Stalinist socialism.[26] Shortly after he joined "a small but growing post-Trotskyist Luxemburgist sect".[33]

Journalistic career (1970–1981)

Hitchens began working as a correspondent for the magazine International Socialism,[34] published by the International Socialists, the forerunners of today's British Socialist Workers Party. This group was broadly Trotskyist, but differed from more orthodox Trotskyist groups in its refusal to defend communist states as "workers' states". Their slogan was "Neither Washington nor Moscow but International Socialism".

Hitchens left Oxford with a third class degree.[35] His first job was with the London Times Higher Education Supplement, where he served as social science editor. Hitchens admitted that he hated the position, and was later fired; he recalled, "I sometimes think if I'd been any good at that job, I might still be doing it."[36] In the 1970s, he went on to work for the New Statesman, where he became friends with the authors Martin Amis and Ian McEwan, among others. At the New Statesman he acquired a reputation as a fierce left-winger, aggressively attacking targets such as Henry Kissinger, the Vietnam War, and the Roman Catholic Church.

In November 1973, Hitchens' mother committed suicide in Athens in a suicide pact with her lover, a former clergyman named Timothy Bryan.[26] They overdosed on sleeping pills in adjoining hotel rooms, and Bryan slashed his wrists in the bathtub. Hitchens flew alone to Athens to recover his mother's body. Hitchens said he thought his mother was pressured into suicide by fear that her husband would learn of her infidelity, as their marriage had been strained and unhappy. Both her children were then independent adults. While in Greece, Hitchens reported on the constitutional crisis of the military junta. It became his first leading article for the New Statesman.[37]

American career (1981–2011)

After moving to the United States in 1981, Hitchens wrote for The Nation, where he penned vociferous critiques of Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush and American foreign policy in South and Central America.[38][39][40][41][42][43][44] He became a contributing editor of Vanity Fair in 1992,[45] writing ten columns a year. He left The Nation in 2002 after profoundly disagreeing with other contributors over the Iraq War. There is speculation that Hitchens was the inspiration for Tom Wolfe's character Peter Fallow in the 1987 novel The Bonfire of the Vanities,[40] but others — including Hitchens (or he indicated as such while alive) — believe it to be Spy Magazine's "Ironman Nightlife Decathlete" Anthony Haden-Guest.[46][47] In 1987, his father died from cancer of the esophagus. [48]

Hitchens spent part of his early career in journalism as a foreign correspondent in Cyprus.[49] Through his work there he met his first wife Eleni Meleagrou, a Greek Cypriot, with whom he had two children, Alexander and Sophia. His son, Alexander Meleagrou-Hitchens, born in 1984, has worked as a researcher for London think tanks the Policy Exchange and the Centre for Social Cohesion. Hitchens continued writing essay-style correspondence pieces from a variety of locales, including Chad, Uganda[50] and the Darfur region of Sudan.[51] His work took him to over 60 countries.[52] In 1991 he received a Lannan Literary Award for Nonfiction.[53]

Before Hitchens' political shift, the American author and polemicist Gore Vidal was apt to speak of Hitchens as his "Dauphin" or "heir".[54][55][56] In 2010, Hitchens attacked Vidal in a Vanity Fair piece headlined "Vidal Loco," calling him a "crackpot" for his adoption of 9/11 conspiracy theories.[57][58] Also, on the back of his book Hitch-22, among the praise from notable writers and figures, a Vidal quote endorsing Hitchens as his successor is crossed out with a red 'X' and a message saying "NO C.H." His strong advocacy of the war in Iraq had gained Hitchens a wider readership, and in September 2005 he was named one of the "Top 100 Public Intellectuals" by Foreign Policy and Prospect magazines.[59] An online poll ranked the 100 intellectuals, but the magazines noted that the rankings of Hitchens (5), Noam Chomsky (1), and Abdolkarim Soroush (15) were partly due to supporters publicising the vote.[60]

In 2007 Hitchens' work for Vanity Fair won him the National Magazine Award in the category "Columns and Commentary".[61] He was a finalist once more in the same category in 2008 for some of his columns in Slate but lost out to Matt Taibbi of Rolling Stone.[62] He won the National Magazine Award for Columns about Cancer in 2011.[63][64] Hitchens also served on the Advisory Board of Secular Coalition for America and offered advice to Coalition on the acceptance and inclusion of nontheism in American life.[65]

Literature reviews

Hitchens wrote a monthly essay on books in The Atlantic[66] and contributed occasionally to other literary journals. One of his books, Unacknowledged Legislation: Writers in the Public Sphere, is a collection of such works, and Love, Poverty and War contains a section devoted to literary essays. In Why Orwell Matters, he defends Orwell's writings against modern critics as relevant today and progressive for his time. In the 2008 book Christopher Hitchens and His Critics: Terror, Iraq, and the Left, many literary critiques are included of essays and other books of writers, such as David Horowitz and Edward Said.

During a three-hour interview by Book TV,[3] he named authors who have had influence on his views, including Aldous Huxley, George Orwell, Evelyn Waugh, P. G. Wodehouse and Conor Cruise O'Brien.

Political views

My own opinion is enough for me, and I claim the right to have it defended against any consensus, any majority, anywhere, anyplace, anytime. And anyone who disagrees with this can pick a number, get in line and kiss my ass.

Christopher Hitchens[67]

The San Francisco Chronicle referred to Hitchens as a "gadfly with gusto".[68] In 2009, Hitchens was listed by Forbes magazine as one of the "25 most influential liberals in the U.S. media".[69] However, the same article noted that he would "likely be aghast to find himself on this list", since it reduces his self-styled radicalism to mere liberalism. Hitchens' political perspective can be found in his wide ranging writings which include many of the political dialogues he published.

Socialism

Hitchens became a socialist "largely [as] the outcome of a study of history, taking sides ... in the battles over industrialism and war and empire." In 2001, he told Rhys Southan of Reason magazine that he could no longer say "I am a socialist." Socialists, he claimed, had ceased to offer a positive alternative to the capitalist system. Capitalism had become the more revolutionary economic system, and he welcomed globalisation as "innovative and internationalist", but added, "I don't think that the contradictions, as we used to say, of the system, are by any means all resolved." He stated that he had a renewed interest in the freedom of the individual from the state, but that he still considered libertarianism "ahistorical" both on the world stage and in the work of creating a stable and functional society, adding that libertarians are "more worried about the over-mighty state than the unaccountable corporation" whereas "the present state of affairs ... combines the worst of bureaucracy with the worst of the insurance companies."[70]

In 2006, in a town hall meeting in Pennsylvania debating the Jewish Tradition with Martin Amis, Hitchens commented on his political philosophy by stating, "I am no longer a socialist, but I still am a Marxist".[71] In a June 2010 interview with The New York Times, he stated that "I still think like a Marxist in many ways. I think the materialist conception of history is valid. I consider myself a very conservative Marxist".[72] In 2009, in an article for The Atlantic entitled "The Revenge of Karl Marx", Hitchens frames the late-2000s recession in terms of Marx's economic analysis and notes how much Marx admired the capitalist system he was calling for the end of, but says that Marx ultimately failed to grasp how revolutionary capitalist innovation was.[73] Hitchens was an admirer of Che Guevara, commenting that "[Che's] death meant a lot to me and countless like me at the time, he was a role model, albeit an impossible one for us bourgeois romantics insofar as he went and did what revolutionaries were meant to do — fought and died for his beliefs."[74] However, in an essay written in 1997, he distanced himself somewhat from some of Che's actions.[75]

He continued to regard both Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky as great men,[76][77] and the October Revolution as a necessary event in the modernization of Russia.[33][40] In 2005, Hitchens praised Lenin's creation of "secular Russia" and his discrediting of the Russian Orthodox Church, describing it as "an absolute warren of backwardness and evil and superstition".[33]

Iraq War and the war on terror

The years after the fatwa issued against Salman Rushdie saw Hitchens looking for allies and friends. In the United States he became increasingly critical of what he called "excuse making" on the left. At the same time, he was attracted to the foreign policy ideas of some on the Republican-right that promoted pro-liberalism intervention, especially the neoconservative group that included Paul Wolfowitz.[78] Around this time, he befriended the Iraqi dissident and businessman Ahmed Chalabi.[79] In 2004, Hitchens stated that neoconservative support for US intervention in Iraq convinced him that he was "on the same side as the neo-conservatives" when it came to contemporary foreign policy issues.[80] Hitchens had also been known to refer to his association with "temporary neocon allies".[81]

Following the September 11 attacks, Hitchens and Noam Chomsky debated the nature of radical Islam and the proper response to it. In October 2001, Hitchens wrote criticisms of Chomsky in The Nation.[82][83] Chomsky responded[84] and Hitchens issued a rebuttal to Chomsky[85] to which Chomsky again responded.[86] Approximately a year after the September 11 attacks and his exchanges with Chomsky, Hitchens left The Nation, claiming that its editors, readers and contributors considered John Ashcroft a bigger threat than Osama bin Laden,[87] and that they were making excuses on behalf of Islamist terrorism; in the following months he wrote articles increasingly at odds with his colleagues.

Christopher Hitchens argued the case for the Iraq War in a 2003 collection of essays entitled A Long Short War: The Postponed Liberation of Iraq, and he has held numerous public debates on the topic with George Galloway[88] and Scott Ritter.[89] Though he admitted to the numerous failures of the war, and its high civilian casualties, he stood by the position that deposing Saddam Hussein was a long-overdue responsibility of the United States, after decades of poor policy, and that holding free elections in Iraq had been a success not to be scoffed at. He argued that a continued fight in Iraq against insurgents, whether they be former Saddam loyalists or Islamic extremists, was a fight worth having, and that those insurgents, not American forces, should have been the ones taking the brunt of the blame for a slow reconstruction and high civilian casualties.

Criticism of George W. Bush

Prior to September 11, 2001, and the invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan, Hitchens was highly critical of Bush's "non-interventionist" foreign policy. He also criticized Bush's support of intelligent design[90] and capital punishment.[91][91]

Although Hitchens defended Bush's post-September 11 foreign policy, he criticized the actions of U.S. troops in Abu Ghraib and Haditha, and the U.S. government's use of waterboarding, which he unhesitatingly deemed as torture after being invited by Vanity Fair to voluntarily undergo it.[92][93] In January 2006, Hitchens joined with four other individuals and four organizations, including the American Civil Liberties Union and Greenpeace, as plaintiffs in a lawsuit, ACLU v. NSA, challenging Bush's warrantless domestic spying program; the lawsuit was filed by the ACLU.[94][95][96]

Presidential endorsements

Hitchens would elaborate on his political views and ideological shift in a discussion with Eric Alterman on Bloggingheads.tv. In this discussion Hitchens revealed himself to be a supporter of Ralph Nader in the 2000 U.S. presidential election, who was disenchanted with the candidacy of both George W. Bush and Al Gore.[97]

Hitchens speaking at a September 2000 third party protest at the headquarters of the Commission on Presidential Debates

Hitchens made a brief return to The Nation just before the 2004 U.S. presidential election and wrote that he was "slightly" for Bush; shortly afterwards, Slate polled its staff on their positions on the candidates and mistakenly printed Hitchens' vote as pro-John Kerry. Hitchens shifted his opinion to "neutral", saying: "It's absurd for liberals to talk as if Kristallnacht is impending with Bush, and it's unwise and indecent for Republicans to equate Kerry with capitulation. There's no one to whom he can surrender, is there? I think that the nature of the jihadist enemy will decide things in the end".[98]

In the 2008 presidential election, Hitchens in an article for Slate stated, "I used to call myself a single-issue voter on the essential question of defending civilization against its terrorist enemies and their totalitarian protectors, and on that 'issue' I hope I can continue to expose and oppose any ambiguity." He was critical of both main party candidates, Barack Obama and John McCain. Hitchens went on to support Obama, calling McCain "senile", and his choice of running mate Sarah Palin "absurd", calling Palin a "pathological liar" and a "national disgrace".[99]

Blumenthal–Hitchens feud

Hitchens and Carol Blue chose to submit an affidavit to the trial managers of the Republican Party in the trial of impeachment of Bill Clinton. In the affidavit, Blue and Hitchens swore that their then-friend, Sidney Blumenthal, had described Monica Lewinsky as a stalker. This allegation contradicted Blumenthal's own sworn deposition in the trial,[100] and it resulted in a hostile exchange of opinion in the public sphere between Hitchens and Blumenthal. Following the publication of Blumenthal's The Clinton Wars, Hitchens wrote several pieces in which he accused Blumenthal of manipulating the facts.[100][101]

Israel–Palestine

Hitchens had said of himself, "I am an Anti-Zionist. I'm one of those people of Jewish descent who believes that Zionism would be a mistake even if there were no Palestinians."[102]

A review of his autobiography Hitch-22 in the Jewish Daily Forward refers to Hitchens as "a prominent anti-Zionist" and says that he views Zionism "as an injustice against the Palestinians".[103] Others have commented on his anti-Zionism as well[104] suggesting that his memoir was "marred by the occasional eruption of [his] anti-Zionism".[105] The Jewish Daily Forward quoted him saying of Israel's prospects for the future, "I have never been able to banish the queasy inner suspicion that Israel just did not look, or feel, either permanent or sustainable."[103]

In Slate, Hitchens pondered the notion that, instead of curing antisemitism through the creation of a Jewish state, "Zionism has only replaced and repositioned"[106] it, saying: "there are three groups of 6 million Jews. The first 6 million live in what the Zionist movement used to call Palestine. The second 6 million live in the United States. The third 6 million are distributed mainly among Russia, France, Britain, and Argentina. Only the first group lives daily in range of missiles that can be (and are) launched by people who hate Jews." Hitchens argued that instead of supporting Zionism, Jews should help "secularize and reform their own societies", believing that unless one is religious, "what the hell are you doing in the greater Jerusalem area in the first place?"

During a town hall function in Pennsylvania with Martin Amis, Hitchens stated that "one must not insult or degrade or humiliate people"[107] and that he "would be opposed to this maltreatment of the Palestinians if it took place on a remote island with no geopolitical implications". Hitchens described Zionism as "an ethno-nationalist quasi-religious ideology" and stated his desire that if possible, he would "re-wind the tape [to] stop Hertzl from telling the initial demagogic lie (actually two lies) that a land without a people needs a people without a land".

He continued to say that Zionism "nonetheless has founded a sort of democratic state which isn't any worse in its practice than many others with equally dubious origins." He stated that settlement in order to achieve security for Israel is "doomed to fail in the worst possible way", and the cessation of this "appallingly racist and messianic delusion" would "confront the internal clerical and chauvinist forces which want to instate a theocracy for Jews". However, Hitchens contended that the "solution of withdrawal would not satisfy the jihadists" and wondered "What did they imagine would be the response of the followers of the Prophet [Muhammad]?" Hitchens bemoaned the transference into religious terrorism of Arab secularism as a means of democratization: "the most depressing and wretched spectacle of the past decade, for all those who care about democracy and secularism, has been the degeneration of Palestinian Arab nationalism into the theocratic and thanatocratic hell of Hamas and Islamic Jihad".[106] He maintained that the Israel-Palestine conflict is a "trivial squabble" that has become "so dangerous to all of us" because of "the faith-based element."[107]

Hitchens collaborated on this issue with prominent Palestinian advocate Edward Said, in 1988 publishing Blaming the Victims: Spurious Scholarship and the Palestinian Question.

Domestic policy

Hitchens actively supported drug policy reform and called for the abolition of the "War on Drugs" which he described as an "authoritarian war" during a debate with William F. Buckley.[31] He supported the legalization of cannabis for both medical and recreational purposes, citing it as a cure for glaucoma and as treatment for numerous side-effects induced by chemotherapy, including severe nausea, describing the prohibition of the drug as "sadistic".[108] On the issue of abortion, Hitchens prioritized in affirming that he believed a fetus should be regarded as an "unborn child", but opposed the overturning of Roe v. Wade and supported the development of medical abortion techniques, and fundamentally believed in access to contraceptives and reproductive rights as "the only thing that is known to cure poverty", and in order to prevent surgical abortion altogether.[109][110]

Other

Other issues Hitchens wrote on the subjects of included his support for the reunification of Ireland,[111][112] abolition of the British monarchy,[113] and his condemnation of the war crimes of Slobodan Milošević[114] and Franjo Tuđman[115] in Yugoslavia, and the Bosnian War.[116]

Critiques of specific individuals

Hitchens was known for his scathing critiques of public figures. Three figures — Bill Clinton, Henry Kissinger, and Mother Teresa — were the targets of three separate full length texts, No One Left to Lie To: The Triangulations of William Jefferson Clinton, The Trial of Henry Kissinger, and The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice. Hitchens also wrote book-length biographical essays about Thomas Jefferson (Thomas Jefferson: Author of America), George Orwell (Why Orwell Matters), and Thomas Paine (Thomas Paine's "Rights of Man": A Biography).

However, the majority of Hitchens's critiques took the form of short opinion pieces, some of the more notable being his critiques of: Jerry Falwell,[117][118] George Galloway,[119] Mel Gibson,[120] Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama,[121] Michael Moore,[122] Daniel Pipes,[123] Ronald Reagan,[124] Jesse Helms,[125] and Cindy Sheehan.[33][126][127][128][129][130][131]

Views on religion

Hitchens and John Lennox at the "Is God Great?" debate in Alabama

Hitchens often spoke out against the Abrahamic religions, or what he called "the three great monotheisms" (Judaism, Christianity and Islam). He said: "The real axis of evil is Christianity, Judaism, and Islam". In his book, God Is Not Great, Hitchens expanded his criticism to include all religions, including those rarely criticized by Western secularists such as Hinduism and neo-paganism. His book had mixed reactions, from praise in The New York Times for his "logical flourishes and conundrums"[132] to accusations of "intellectual and moral shabbiness" in the Financial Times.[133] God Is Not Great was nominated for a National Book Award on 10 October 2007.[134][135]

Hitchens contended that organized religion is "the main source of hatred in the world",[136] "[v]iolent, irrational, intolerant, allied to racism, tribalism, and bigotry, invested in ignorance and hostile to free inquiry, contemptuous of women and coercive toward children", and that accordingly it "ought to have a great deal on its conscience". In God Is Not Great, Hitchens contends that:

[A]bove all, we are in need of a renewed Enlightenment, which will base itself on the proposition that the proper study of mankind is man and woman [referencing Alexander Pope]. This Enlightenment will not need to depend, like its predecessors, on the heroic breakthroughs of a few gifted and exceptionally courageous people. It is within the compass of the average person. The study of literature and poetry, both for its own sake and for the eternal ethical questions with which it deals, can now easily depose the scrutiny of sacred texts that have been found to be corrupt and confected. The pursuit of unfettered scientific inquiry, and the availability of new findings to masses of people by electronic means, will revolutionize our concepts of research and development. Very importantly, the divorce between the sexual life and fear, and the sexual life and disease, and the sexual life and tyranny, can now at last be attempted, on the sole condition that we banish all religions from the discourse. And all this and more is, for the first time in our history, within the reach if not the grasp of everyone.[137]

His book rendered him one of the major advocates of the "New Atheism" movement, and he also was made an Honorary Associate of the National Secular Society.[138] Hitchens said he would accept an invitation from any religious leader who wished to debate with him. He also served on the advisory board of the Secular Coalition for America,[139] a lobbying group for atheists and humanists in Washington, DC. In 2007, Hitchens began a series of written debates on the question "Is Christianity Good for the World?" with Christian theologian and pastor, Douglas Wilson, published in Christianity Today magazine.[140] This exchange eventually became a book by the same title in 2008. During their book tour to promote the book, film producer Darren Doane sent a film crew to accompany them. Doane produced the film Collision: "Is Christianity GOOD for the World?" which was released on 27 October 2009.

On 26 November 2010 Hitchens appeared in Toronto, Canada at the Munk Debates, where he debated religion with former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, a convert to Roman Catholicism. Blair argued religion is a force for good, while Hitchens was against it. Preliminary results on the Munk website said 56 per cent of the votes backed the proposition (Hitchens' position) before hearing the debate, with 22 per cent against (Blair's position), and 21 per cent undecided, with the undecided voters leaning toward Hitchens, giving him a 68 per cent to 32 per cent victory over Blair, after the debate.[141][142]

In February 2006, Hitchens helped organize a pro-Denmark rally outside the Danish Embassy in Washington, DC in response to the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy.[143]

Hitchens was accused by William A. Donohue of the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Liberties of being particularly anti-Catholic. Hitchens responded "when religion is attacked in this country [...] the Catholic Church comes in for a little more than its fair share".[144] Hitchens had also been accused of anti-Catholic bigotry by others, including Brent Bozell, Tom Piatak in The American Conservative, and UCLA Law Professor Stephen Bainbridge.[145][146] In an interview with Radar in 2007, Hitchens said that if the Christian right's agenda were implemented in the United States "It wouldn't last very long and would, I hope, lead to civil war, which they will lose, but for which it would be a great pleasure to take part."[147] When Joe Scarborough on 12 March 2004 asked Hitchens whether he was "consumed with hatred for conservative Catholics", Hitchens responded that he was not and that he just thinks that "all religious belief is sinister and infantile".[148] Piatak claimed that "A straightforward description of all Hitchens's anti-Catholic outbursts would fill every page in this magazine", noting particularly Hitchens' assertion that U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Roberts should not be confirmed because of his faith.[146]

Hitchens was raised nominally Christian, and went to Christian boarding schools but from an early age declined to participate in communal prayers. Later in life, Hitchens discovered that he was of partially Jewish ancestry. According to Hitchens, when his brother Peter took his fiancée to meet their maternal grandmother, who was then in her 90s, she said of his fiancée, "She's Jewish, isn't she?" and then announced: "Well, I've got something to tell you. So are you." Hitchens found out that his maternal grandmother, Dorothy Levin, was raised Jewish (Dorothy's father and maternal grandfather had both been born Jewish, and Dorothy's maternal grandmother – Hitchens' matrilineal great-great-grandmother – was a convert to Judaism). Hitchens' maternal grandfather converted to Judaism before marrying Dorothy Levin.[149] Hitchens' Jewish-born ancestors were immigrants from Eastern Europe (including Poland).[150][151] In an article in the The Guardian on 14 April 2002, Hitchens stated that he could be considered Jewish because Jewish descent is matrilineal.[150] In a 2010 interview at New York Public Library, Hitchens stated that he was against circumcision, a Jewish tradition, and that he believed "if anyone wants to saw off bits of their genitalia they should do when they're grown up and have made the decision for themselves".[152]

In February 2010, he was named to the Freedom From Religion Foundation's Honorary Board of distinguished achievers.[153]

Personal life

Hitchens after a talk at The College of New Jersey in March 2009

Marriages and children

Hitchens married Eleni Meleagrou, a Greek Cypriot, in a Greek Orthodox church[30] in 1981; the couple had a son, Alexander and a daughter, Sophia. In 1989 Hitchens left Meleagrou for Carol Blue, an American writer.[39] The couple married in a New York synagogue;[30] they had a daughter, Antonia.[39]

Relationship with his younger brother

Hitchens' younger brother by two-and-a-half years, Peter Hitchens, is a Christian and socially conservative journalist in London, although, like his brother, he had been a Trotskyist in the 1970s. The brothers had a protracted falling-out after Peter wrote that Christopher had once joked that he "didn't care if the Red Army watered its horses at Hendon" (a suburb of London).[154] Christopher denied having said this and broke off contact with his brother. He then referred to his brother as "an idiot" in a letter to Commentary, and the dispute spilled into other publications as well. Christopher eventually expressed a willingness to reconcile and to meet his new nephew (born in 1999); shortly thereafter the brothers gave several interviews together in which they said that their personal disagreements had been resolved. They appeared together on 21 June 2007 edition of the BBC current affairs discussion show Question Time. The pair engaged in a formal televised debate for the first time on 3 April 2008, at Grand Valley State University,[155] and at the Pew Forum on 12 October 2010.[156]

Smoking and drinking

A June 2006 profile on Hitchens by NPR stated: "Hitchens is known for his love of cigarettes and alcohol — and his prodigious literary output."[42] However, in late 2007 he gave up smoking, undergoing an epiphany in Madison, Wisconsin.[157] His brother Peter later wrote of his surprise at this decision.[158] It was while writing his memoir Hitch-22 that he resumed smoking cigarettes and continued until his cancer diagnosis. Hitchens admitted to drinking heavily; in 2003 he wrote that his daily intake of alcohol was enough "to kill or stun the average mule", noting that many great writers "did some of their finest work when blotto, smashed, polluted, shitfaced, squiffy, whiffled, and three sheets to the wind."[159]

British politician George Galloway, founder of the socialist[160] Respect Party, on his way to testify in front of a United States Senate sub-committee investigating the scandals in the U.N. Oil-for-Food programme, called Hitchens a "drink-sodden ex-Trotskyist popinjay",[161] to which Hitchens quickly replied, "only some of which is true".[162] Later, in a column for Slate promoting his debate with Galloway which was to take place on 14 September 2005, he elaborated on his prior response: "He says that I am an ex-Trotskyist (true), a 'popinjay' (true enough, since the word's original Webster's definition is a target for arrows and shots), and that I cannot hold a drink (here I must protest)."[163]

Oliver Burkeman writes, "Since the parting of ways on Iraq [...] Hitchens claims to have detected a new, personalised nastiness in the attacks on him, especially over his fabled consumption of alcohol. He welcomes being attacked as a drinker 'because I always think it's a sign of victory when they move on to the ad hominem.' He drinks, he says, 'because it makes other people less boring. I have a great terror of being bored. But I can work with or without it. It takes quite a lot to get me to slur.'"[164]

In the question and answer session following a speech Hitchens gave to the Commonwealth Club of California on 9 July 2009, one audience member asked what was Hitchens' favorite whisky. Hitchens replied that "the best blended scotch in the history of the world" is Johnnie Walker Black Label. He also playfully indicated that it was the favorite whisky of, among others, the Iraqi Ba'ath Party, the Palestinian Authority, the Libyan dictatorship, and "large branches of the Saudi Arabian Royal Family". He concluded his answer by calling it the "breakfast of champions" and exhorted the audience to "accept no substitute".[165]

In his 2010 memoir Hitch-22, Hitchens wrote: "There was a time when I could reckon to outperform all but the most hardened imbibers, but I now drink relatively carefully." He described his current drinking routine on working-days as follows: "At about half past midday, a decent slug of Mr. Walker's amber restorative, cut with Perrier water (an ideal delivery system) and no ice. At luncheon, perhaps half a bottle of red wine: not always more but never less. Then back to the desk, and ready to repeat the treatment at the evening meal. No 'after dinner drinks' — ​most especially nothing sweet and never, ever any brandy. 'Nightcaps' depend on how well the day went, but always the mixture as before. No mixing: no messing around with a gin here and a vodka there."[166]

Reflecting on the lifestyle that supported his career as a writer he said:

I always knew there was a risk in the bohemian lifestyle ... I decided to take it because it helped my concentration, it stopped me being bored — it stopped other people being boring. It would make me want to prolong the conversation and enhance the moment. If you ask: would I do it again? I would probably say yes. But I would have quit earlier hoping to get away with the whole thing. I decided all of life is a wager and I'm going to wager on this bit ... In a strange way I don't regret it. It's just impossible for me to picture life without wine, and other things, fueling the company, keeping me reading, energising me. It worked for me. It really did.[167]

Esophageal cancer and death

Hitchens in 2010

In June 2010, Hitchens postponed his book tour for Hitch-22 to undergo treatment for esophageal cancer.[168] He announced that he was undergoing treatment in a Vanity Fair piece entitled "Topic of Cancer".[48] Hitchens said that he recognised the long-term prognosis was far from positive, and that he would be a "very lucky person to live another five years".[169] In November 2010, Hitchens canceled[170] a scheduled appearance in New York, where he was to debate religion writers David Hazony and Stephen Prothero on the subject of the Ten Commandments. Earlier that year, he published a piece in Vanity Fair on the subject,[171] and was working on a book about the Ten Commandments as well.[172]

During his illness, Hitchens was under the care of Francis Collins and was the subject of Collins' new cancer treatment which maps out the human genome and selectively targets damaged DNA.[173][174]

In April 2011, Hitchens was forced to cancel an appearance at the American Atheist Convention, and instead sent a letter that stated, "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." He closed with "And don't keep the faith."[175] The letter also dismissed the notion of a possible deathbed conversion, in which he claimed that "redemption and supernatural deliverance appears even more hollow and artificial to me than it did before."[175] In June 2011, he spoke to a University of Waterloo audience via a home video link.[176]

In October 2011, Hitchens made a public appearance at the Texas Freethought Convention in Houston, TX. Atheist Alliance of America was also a participant in the joint convention.[177]

In November 2011, George Eaton wrote in the New Statesman:

The tragedy of Hitchens' illness is that it came at a time when he enjoyed a larger audience than ever. Of his tight circle of friends – Amis, Fenton, McEwan, Rushdie – Hitchens was the last to gain international renown, yet he is now read more widely than any of them." Eaton revealed that Hitchens would like to be remembered as a man who fought totalitarianism in all its forms although many remember him as a "lefty who turned right", and his support of the Iraq War and not his support of the War in Bosnia on the side of the Moslems. Eaton concluded, "The great polemicist is certain to be remembered, but, as he is increasingly aware, perhaps not as he would like."[178]

Hitchens died on December 15th, 2011 at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.[179]

In accordance with his wishes, his body was donated to medical research.[180]

Reactions to death

Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair said, "Christopher Hitchens was a complete one-off, an amazing mixture of writer, journalist, polemicist, and unique character. He was fearless in the pursuit of truth and any cause in which he believed. And there was no belief he held, that he did not advocate with passion, commitment and brilliance. He was an extraordinary, compelling and colorful human being whom it was a privilege to know."[181]

Richard Dawkins, British evolutionary biologist at the University of Oxford and a friend of Hitchens', said, "I think he was one of the greatest orators of all time. He was a polymath, a wit, immensely knowledgeable, and a valiant fighter against all tyrants including imaginary supernatural ones."[181]

Norman Finkelstein, American political scientist and author, wrote, "When I first learned that Hitchens was diagnosed with an excruciating and terminal cancer, it caused me to doubt my atheism. The news came just as Hitchens was about to go on a book tour for his long-awaited memoir. It was as if he was setting out on his victory lap when the adulating crowds were supposed to fawn over him and — wham! — his legs were lopped off at the kneecaps. The irony could not be more perfect: the god that the vindictive but witty Mr. Hitchens made a career scoffing at turns out to be ... vindictive but witty. When I heard that Hitchens was dead, I took a deep breath. The air felt cleaner, as if after a 40-day and 40-night downpour." Finkelstein also added, "I get no satisfaction from Hitchens's passing. Although he was the last to know it, every death is a tragedy, if only for the bereft child — or, as in the case of Cindy Sheehan, bereft parent — left behind.[182]

Sam Harris, American writer and neuroscientist, wrote, "I have been privileged to witness the gratitude that so many people feel for Hitch’s life and work — for, wherever I speak, I meet his fans. On my last book tour, those who attended my lectures could not contain their delight at the mere mention of his name — and many of them came up to get their books signed primarily to request that I pass along their best wishes to him. It was wonderful to see how much Hitch was loved and admired — and to be able to share this with him before the end. I will miss you, brother."[183]

Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health and former head of the Human Genome Project who helped treat Hitchens' illness, wrote, "I will miss Christopher. I will miss the brilliant turn of phrase, the good-natured banter, the wry sideways smile when he was about to make a remark that would make me laugh out loud. No doubt he now knows the answer to the question of whether there is more to the spirit than just atoms and molecules. I hope he was surprised by the answer. I hope to hear him tell about it someday. He will tell it really well."[184]

British columnist and author Peter Hitchens, who had a tumultuous relationship with his older brother Christopher, wrote that he and Christopher "got on surprisingly well in the past few months, better than for about 50 years as it happens," and praised his brother as "courageous."[185]

Irish-American political journalist Alexander Cockburn, founder of the left-wing[186][187][188] political magazine CounterPunch wrote an obituary critical of Hitchens, criticizing his support for the Iraq War, criticisms of Mother Teresa, and criticisms of their mutual friend Edward Said and concluded, "I found the Hitchens cult of recent years entirely mystifying. He endured his final ordeal with pluck, sustained indomitably by his wife Carol."[189]

Tributes followed from the philosopher Daniel Dennett,[190] the physicist Lawrence Krauss,[191] the actor Stephen Fry,[192] the writer Ian McEwan,[193] the philosopher A.C. Grayling;[194] and Vanity Fair, in which he was remembered as an "incomparable critic and masterful rhetorician".[195]

Film and television appearances

As referenced from the Internet Movie Database, Hitchens Web or Charlie Rose.[196][197][198]

Year Film and/or Television
1984 Opinions: "Greece to their Rome"
1988 Frontiers (TV series)
1993 Everything You Need to Know
1994 Tracking Down Maggie: The Unofficial Biography of Margaret Thatcher
1994 Hell's Angel
1996 Where's Elvis This Week?
1996–2010 Charlie Rose (talk show) (13 episodes)
1998 Princess Diana: The Mourning After
1999–2002 Dennis Miller Live (TV show) (4 episodes)
2002 The Trials of Henry Kissinger
2003 Hidden in Plain Sight
2003–2009 Real Time with Bill Maher (TV show) (6 episodes)
2004 Mel Gibson: God's Lethal Weapon
2004–2006 Newsnight (TV show) (3 episodes)
2004–2010 The Daily Show (TV show) (4 episodes)
2005 Penn & Teller: Bullshit! (TV show)(1 episode, s03e05)
2005 The Al Franken Show (TV show)(1 episode)
2005 Confronting Iraq: Conflict and Hope
2005 Heaven on Earth: The Rise and Fall of Socialism
2005–2008 Hardball with Chris Matthews (TV show)(3 episodes)
2006 American Zeitgeist
2006 Blog Wars
2007 Manufacturing Dissent
2007 Question Time (TV series) (1 episode)
2007 Your Mommy Kills Animals
2007 Personal Che
2007 Heckler
2007 In Pot We Trust
2008 Discussions with Richard Dawkins: Episode 1: "The Four Horsemen"
2008 Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed

2009 Holy Hell
2009 Presidency
2009 Collision: "Is Christianity GOOD for the World?"
2010 Phil Ochs: There But For Fortune

Selected publications

  • 1984 Cyprus. Quartet. Revised editions as Hostage to History: Cyprus from the Ottomans to Kissinger, 1989 (Farrar, Straus & Giroux) and 1997 (Verso)
  • 1988 Blaming the Victims: Spurious Scholarship and the Palestinian Question (contributor; co-editor with Edward Said) Verso, ISBN 0-86091-887-4 Reissued, 2001
  • 1990 The Monarchy, Chatto & Windus Ltd
  • 1990 Blood, Class and Nostalgia: Anglo-American Ironies, Farrar Straus & Giroux (T)(June 1990)
  • 1995 The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice, Verso
  • 1997 The Parthenon Marbles: The Case for Reunification, Verso
  • 1999 No One Left to Lie To: The Values of the Worst Family, Verso
  • 2000 Unacknowledged Legislation: Writers in the Public Sphere, Verso
  • 2001 The Trial of Henry Kissinger. Verso.
  • 2001 Letters to a Young Contrarian, Basic Books
  • 2002 Why Orwell Matters also Orwell's Victory, Basic Books, ISBN 0-465-03050-5
  • 2004 Love, Poverty, and War: Journeys and Essays, Thunder's Mouth, Nation Books, ISBN 1-56025-580-3
  • 2005 Thomas Jefferson: Author of America, Eminent Lives/Atlas Books/HarperCollins Publishers, ISBN 0-06-059896-4
  • 2007 "Thomas Paine's Rights of Man: A Biography ", Atlantic Monthly Press, ISBN 0871139553
  • 2007 The Portable Atheist: Essential Readings for the Non-Believer, [Editor] Perseus Publishing. ISBN 978-0-306-81608-6
  • 2007 God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything, Twelve/Hachette Book Group USA/Warner Books, ISBN 0-446-57980-7 / Published in the UK as God Is Not Great: The Case Against Religion, Atlantic Books, ISBN 978-1-84354-586-6
  • 2008 Christopher Hitchens and His Critics: Terror, Iraq and the Left (with Simon Cottee and Thomas Cushman), New York University Press
  • 2008 Is Christianity Good for the World? — A Debate (co-author, with Douglas Wilson), Canon Press, ISBN 1-59128-053-2
  • 2010 Hitch-22: A Memoir, Twelve, ISBN 978-0-446-54033-9 OCLC 464590644
  • 2011 Arguably: Essays by Christopher Hitchens, Twelve. UK edition as Arguably: Selected Prose, Atlantic, ISBN 1-4555-0277-4 / ISBN 978-1-4555-0277-6

References

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  174. ^ "Atheist Hitchens Credits Evangelical Francis Collins for Cancer Hope". The Christian Post. Retrieved 16 December 2011. In an interview with U.K. Telegraph Magazine, Hitchens said that Collins, who was formerly the director of the National Center for Human Genome Research and now serves as director of the National Institutes of Health, is partially responsible for developing a new cancer treatment that maps out the patient's entire genetic make-up and targets damaged DNA.
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External links

Articles by Hitchens

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