ME and Ophelia
Monday, May 31, 2004
POLITICAL BLOGS
More British MPs need to *get* blogging
Soon the news will be hotting up on the handover of Iraq. I'm collecting a new cross section of political blogs to get a balanced view of events, especially during the run up to America's presidential election in November. Tips on informative political blogs would be gratefully received.
I'm looking too for answers to elementary questions on American politics. For example: What happens if Kerry gets ill or run over by a bus, who'd take his place? Could Hilary Clinton suddenly join in the race against Bush for the White House? Seems the Americans have only two main political parties: the Democrats and Republicans. Is Kerry's party the equivalent of our Labour Party - and Bush the equivalent of our Conservative Party? Which party do liberals (and those who are anti Bush and against the war on terror) in America support - the Democrats or Republicans?
Here in England we have three main political parties plus several smaller ones. Labour Party (left). Conservative Party (right). Liberal Party (center). And smaller parties representing the views of minority groups such as the Greens, Independents, etc. Our current Prime Minister Tony Blair leads the Labour Party (referred as Socialists or Socialism - ex leader Neil Kinnock). Ex Prime Minister Baroness Margaret Thatcher was leader of the Conservative Party (also referred to as Tory or Tories) - current leader is Michael Howard. Lord Paddy Ashdown is former leader of the Liberals - current leader is Charles Kennedy.
Lately some members of the Labour Party (and a few bloggers I know of) are actively pushing for a change of leadership within their own party. Seems they're working at pulling down our democratically elected Prime Minister by openly discrediting him and backing Chancellor Gordon Brown (edited insert: Deputy Prime Minister is John Prescott) - or some other politician who hasn't much chance of being elected as Prime Minister.
If Tony Blair is pushed out by the Labour Party that he brought to power - after it was totally unelectable for 18 years - the Party will not get my vote. I'll just abstain from voting. I've no confidence in old fashioned Labour thinking as it can't seem to progress or move with the times. Gordon Brown doesn't seem to have Tony Blair's amazing energy, people skills and ability to calmly juggle and hold it all together with vision while under pressure. Bearing in mind too that we get two brilliant minds for the price of one: Cherie Blair is super intelligent, maybe even more so than her husband.
Seems that Labour has no other credible leader who'd be accepted as Prime Minister by the majority of voters in the UK. Same goes for the Conservatives and Liberals. From what I've read, only a minority of bloggers (but most of the media) appear to be fixated with the war in Iraq - and yet on the doorsteps of British voters, the war is hardly an issue. British voters, and the majority of personal blogs I visit, seem more concerned over what's happening closer to home and in their own back yards.
Of course, no one is indispensable. But I do hope Tony Blair serves at least another term as Prime Minister. If he wants to that is. I can't imagine why he (or anyone) would want to lead the Labour Party. Seems a pretty troublesome and thankless task. Especially since the criticism comes from those who are not competent to do the job.
It'd be good to see more British Members of Parliament (MPs) starting personal journals and really getting into blogging.
More British MPs need to *get* blogging
Soon the news will be hotting up on the handover of Iraq. I'm collecting a new cross section of political blogs to get a balanced view of events, especially during the run up to America's presidential election in November. Tips on informative political blogs would be gratefully received.
I'm looking too for answers to elementary questions on American politics. For example: What happens if Kerry gets ill or run over by a bus, who'd take his place? Could Hilary Clinton suddenly join in the race against Bush for the White House? Seems the Americans have only two main political parties: the Democrats and Republicans. Is Kerry's party the equivalent of our Labour Party - and Bush the equivalent of our Conservative Party? Which party do liberals (and those who are anti Bush and against the war on terror) in America support - the Democrats or Republicans?
Here in England we have three main political parties plus several smaller ones. Labour Party (left). Conservative Party (right). Liberal Party (center). And smaller parties representing the views of minority groups such as the Greens, Independents, etc. Our current Prime Minister Tony Blair leads the Labour Party (referred as Socialists or Socialism - ex leader Neil Kinnock). Ex Prime Minister Baroness Margaret Thatcher was leader of the Conservative Party (also referred to as Tory or Tories) - current leader is Michael Howard. Lord Paddy Ashdown is former leader of the Liberals - current leader is Charles Kennedy.
Lately some members of the Labour Party (and a few bloggers I know of) are actively pushing for a change of leadership within their own party. Seems they're working at pulling down our democratically elected Prime Minister by openly discrediting him and backing Chancellor Gordon Brown (edited insert: Deputy Prime Minister is John Prescott) - or some other politician who hasn't much chance of being elected as Prime Minister.
If Tony Blair is pushed out by the Labour Party that he brought to power - after it was totally unelectable for 18 years - the Party will not get my vote. I'll just abstain from voting. I've no confidence in old fashioned Labour thinking as it can't seem to progress or move with the times. Gordon Brown doesn't seem to have Tony Blair's amazing energy, people skills and ability to calmly juggle and hold it all together with vision while under pressure. Bearing in mind too that we get two brilliant minds for the price of one: Cherie Blair is super intelligent, maybe even more so than her husband.
Seems that Labour has no other credible leader who'd be accepted as Prime Minister by the majority of voters in the UK. Same goes for the Conservatives and Liberals. From what I've read, only a minority of bloggers (but most of the media) appear to be fixated with the war in Iraq - and yet on the doorsteps of British voters, the war is hardly an issue. British voters, and the majority of personal blogs I visit, seem more concerned over what's happening closer to home and in their own back yards.
Of course, no one is indispensable. But I do hope Tony Blair serves at least another term as Prime Minister. If he wants to that is. I can't imagine why he (or anyone) would want to lead the Labour Party. Seems a pretty troublesome and thankless task. Especially since the criticism comes from those who are not competent to do the job.
It'd be good to see more British Members of Parliament (MPs) starting personal journals and really getting into blogging.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/31/2004
0 comments
- - -
THE EXPANDING BLOGOSPHERE
Do political reporters *hear* political bloggers?
Excerpt from the American Journalism Review: "Political blogs--online journals featuring commentary, often highly opinionated--have rapidly become a presence in the campaign landscape. Now some established news organizations are hiring established bloggers or creating their own. How much impact does this instant punditry have on mainstream political reporting? When political bloggers bay in the blogosphere, do political reporters hear them? The answer, I quickly learned, depends on four factors: how you define "political blog"; which political bloggers you mean; which political reporters you mean; and--not to go all Bill Clinton on you--what the meaning of "hear" is." Read more...
- - -
THE EXPANDING BLOGOSPHERE
Political reporter says his blog beat Associated Press with a scooplet
In the above report on political blogs, Ryan Lizza, a reporter for The New Republic, says he's used his Campaign Journal blog to break news: On April 2, 2004 he happened to be on the phone with Jim Margolis, Kerry's admaker, when Margolis said he was leaving the Kerry campaign and read Lizza a prepared statement. "It was a very inside story, but kind of cool because you could break it and put it on the blog," says Lizza, who posted the news at 12:22 p.m. that day, beating the Associated Press with the scooplet by 11 minutes. At the New York Times, Wilgoren learned about Margolis' departure when a colleague e-mailed her Lizza's post. "My guess is that everybody who wrote about this heard about it" from there, Wilgoren says. "It seemed that everybody I called about Margolis had read Ryan's thing. So he broke news on the blog."
Lizza reads blogs "pretty religiously" and has a list of 10 or 15 blogs that he checks in with at least once a day. He thinks "one really smart blog that deserves to get more attention" is The Decembrist which "tends to be more thoughtful, more of an essay style." But he cautions that "you don't want to get too wrapped up in what some parts of the blogosphere are obsessing about, because it can sometimes be this self-contained world."
THE EXPANDING BLOGOSPHERE
Do political reporters *hear* political bloggers?
Excerpt from the American Journalism Review: "Political blogs--online journals featuring commentary, often highly opinionated--have rapidly become a presence in the campaign landscape. Now some established news organizations are hiring established bloggers or creating their own. How much impact does this instant punditry have on mainstream political reporting? When political bloggers bay in the blogosphere, do political reporters hear them? The answer, I quickly learned, depends on four factors: how you define "political blog"; which political bloggers you mean; which political reporters you mean; and--not to go all Bill Clinton on you--what the meaning of "hear" is." Read more...
- - -
THE EXPANDING BLOGOSPHERE
Political reporter says his blog beat Associated Press with a scooplet
In the above report on political blogs, Ryan Lizza, a reporter for The New Republic, says he's used his Campaign Journal blog to break news: On April 2, 2004 he happened to be on the phone with Jim Margolis, Kerry's admaker, when Margolis said he was leaving the Kerry campaign and read Lizza a prepared statement. "It was a very inside story, but kind of cool because you could break it and put it on the blog," says Lizza, who posted the news at 12:22 p.m. that day, beating the Associated Press with the scooplet by 11 minutes. At the New York Times, Wilgoren learned about Margolis' departure when a colleague e-mailed her Lizza's post. "My guess is that everybody who wrote about this heard about it" from there, Wilgoren says. "It seemed that everybody I called about Margolis had read Ryan's thing. So he broke news on the blog."
Lizza reads blogs "pretty religiously" and has a list of 10 or 15 blogs that he checks in with at least once a day. He thinks "one really smart blog that deserves to get more attention" is The Decembrist which "tends to be more thoughtful, more of an essay style." But he cautions that "you don't want to get too wrapped up in what some parts of the blogosphere are obsessing about, because it can sometimes be this self-contained world."
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/31/2004
0 comments
- - -
BLOGGERS 4 FREEDOM
First person accounts from Iraq
Bloggers 4 Freedom is dedicated to spreading first person only accounts by people in Iraq.
BLOGGERS 4 FREEDOM
First person accounts from Iraq
Bloggers 4 Freedom is dedicated to spreading first person only accounts by people in Iraq.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/31/2004
0 comments
Sunday, May 30, 2004
BOSTON CALLING LONDON
The UK Today on Sudan
On May 4 Clive at The UK Today wrote "Sudan - A British Angle" and on May 12 posted an update.
Today the Sudan blog, Passion of the Present out of Harvard in Boston, featured Clive's suggestions in their main headline post "Calling London".
Clive suggested we keep pushing our MPs to support the two Early Day Motions he mentioned: EDM 1051 on the Sudan (78 signatures - now 85) and EDM 293 on Darfur, Western Sudan (42 signatures - now 43). He writes:
"If your MP feels he can only support one of the motions (for whatever reason) then 1051 is the one to sign. Whilst there is no guarantee that the motion will be debated, the more signatures that can be garnered the better and we should be aiming for 300+. So if you haven't already done so, please use the Fax Or Email Your MP link to give your encouragement. And above all - don't forget that in the current global situation we are bombarded daily with shocking stories and it is easy to lose sight of the human tragedies."
- - -
Further reading: International Crisis Group (ICG) Sudan: Now or Never in Dafur Executive Summary and Recommendations.
The UK Today on Sudan
On May 4 Clive at The UK Today wrote "Sudan - A British Angle" and on May 12 posted an update.
Today the Sudan blog, Passion of the Present out of Harvard in Boston, featured Clive's suggestions in their main headline post "Calling London".
Clive suggested we keep pushing our MPs to support the two Early Day Motions he mentioned: EDM 1051 on the Sudan (78 signatures - now 85) and EDM 293 on Darfur, Western Sudan (42 signatures - now 43). He writes:
"If your MP feels he can only support one of the motions (for whatever reason) then 1051 is the one to sign. Whilst there is no guarantee that the motion will be debated, the more signatures that can be garnered the better and we should be aiming for 300+. So if you haven't already done so, please use the Fax Or Email Your MP link to give your encouragement. And above all - don't forget that in the current global situation we are bombarded daily with shocking stories and it is easy to lose sight of the human tragedies."
- - -
Further reading: International Crisis Group (ICG) Sudan: Now or Never in Dafur Executive Summary and Recommendations.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/30/2004
0 comments
- - -
KOFI ANNAN AT HARVARD JUNE 10
Peace rally for Sudan in planning stage
Great news from Jim Moore's Journal and the Sudan blog out of Harvard:
Kofi Annan, who is a supporter of action to stop the Sudan genocide, will be speaking at Harvard on Thursday June 10, 2004.
Encouraged by television journalist Liz Walker, Jim and several others who live in the Boston area are holding a Sudan peace rally on the day.
Read the latest in Jim's journal on how action within the blogosphere is finally gaining momentum.
Today Joi Ito also posts on the Sudan and suggests how you can help googlebomb to stop genocide.
- - -
Further reading: Democratic Reforms Must Go Hand in Hand with Economic Changes Annan Says September 24, 1998.
- - -
DARFUR IN WESTERN SUDAN
Not included in the peace agreement for Southern Sudan
CNN May 27: Kofi Annan has been flooded with requests from people across the world beseeching him to provide emergency assistance to end the killing in Darfur.
A spokeswoman for the Nobel prize winning U.N. secretary-general, said he will focus on stemming the fighting in western Sudan, where the lives of hundreds of thousands of people are threatened. He fully shares the concerns of the public at large, and is following the situation in Darfur very closely and with great concern.
A day after a peace agreement marked the end of fighting in southern Sudan, attention has turned to the still embattled western part of the country - Darfur. Annan will also press for a humanitarian ceasefire in Darfur to be extended, and is urging the Sudanese government to intervene to halt human-rights violations in that region, she said.
Meanwhile, David Lambo, director of the Africa bureau of the U.N.'s High Commission for Refugees, said Thursday that Wednesday's agreement will "bring closer the day when southern Sudan's 500,000 refugees and more than three million displaced persons can go home."
Also Thursday, the president of the Security Council, Pakistan Ambassador Munir Akram, said that, with the agreement affecting the southern region now signed, the council may take further action elsewhere. [via passion of the present.com and jim moore's journal]
- - -
DARFUR IN WESTERN SUDAN
A dramatic race against the clock - hundreds of thousands will perish
The U.N. estimates that 30,000 people have been killed in a campaign of ethnic cleansing in Darfur.
On Wednesday, U.N. Emergency Relief Coordinator Jan Egeland called the situation there "the biggest humanitarian drama of our time". "This is the most dramatic race against the clock that we have anywhere in the world at the moment," he said. "If we lose, hundreds of thousands of women and children, mostly, will perish."
Egeland said the U.N. and other relief agencies were "late" to recognize the scope of the humanitarian problem in Darfur. [source: passion of the present.com via jim moore's journal]
- - -
WORLD NEEDS TO SEE AND HEAR SURVIVORS' TALES
The people of Darfur care that somebody cares about them -
It's important for survivors to know that people are telling their stories
Jerry Fowler, staff director of the Committee on Conscience at the U.S. Holocaust Museum in Washington, at a May 26 museum-sponsored program on the current crisis said: "One of the things that survivors of the Holocaust carry with them to this day, six decades after the end, is a feeling of abandonment...the sense that no one cared what was happening to them....The Darfurians who fled into Chad care that somebody cares about them. It was very important for them to know that people were telling their stories." Read more Stories of Refugees From Sudan's Darfur Echo Horrors of Holocaust by Charles W Corey, May 28, 2004. [via passion of the present.com and jim moore's journal]
Note: Jim posts about the Feedster RSS mentions on "Sudan" (down slightly, to 13200 from 13222). Sorry, I can't figure how to change my template to accommodate Feedster, so I guess the mentions of Sudan - in this blog - are not counted in those numbers. If any readers here do manage to get Feedster, please mention "Sudan" in your RSS-issuing blog and you'll help raise the total. Thanks.
- - -
PHOTOS OF SURVIVORS IN THE SUDAN
13 year-old-boy's fingers all cut off by his master
Sorry, I am unable to post pictures here. If you cannot find the words to google bomb the word Sudan, please copy and post any of these photos from the Free Sudan Movement Photo Gallery that chronicle recent trips by Rev. Walter Fauntroy and Joe Madison into the Sudan. Their efforts have resulted in the freeing of over 6000 slaves. They met Sudanese slaves freed through Sudan's Underground Railroad.
Note the photo with the caption "Right hand of 13 year-old-boy Yak Kenyang Adieu, all fingers cut off by his master." Other photos show amputees whose arms were chopped off with an ax by slave owners when they tried to rescue their enslaved wives and children. A Sudanese woman being consoled with 400 freed slaves in background. An orphaned slave baby whose mother was killed in minefield. Arek Kiir with stab wounds in chest and throat. Mawien's right hand missing finger. Agom Bol Akuei who was forced to carry heavy loads of salt (looted by attackers from Pan-Nyok market). She collasped under the weight which broke her jaw bone.
- - -
US HOLDS KEY TO PEACE IN SUDAN
By John Eibner and Joe Madison, Boston Globe, May 29, 2004
Excerpt: SUDAN'S Islamist government and the secular Sudan People's Liberation Army have passed another milestone in a long and tortuous peace process. On Wednesday, Vice President Ali Osman Taha and SPLA Chairman Colonel John Garang signed the last of six protocols that collectively constitute a framework for a comprehensive peace agreement for Southern Sudan and the Nuba Mountains. They are now poised to conclude negotiations by establishing modalities for implementation and international monitoring.
On paper, the protocols appear to lay the foundation for an end to 21 years of apocalyptic civil war between successive Arab-Muslim-dominated governments and the predominantly black, non-Muslim rebels of Southern Sudan. The South is due to receive autonomous, Shariah-free government during a six-year interim period. Free elections are scheduled within three years. Southern Sudan is promised a referendum on independence at the end of that period.
The greatest beneficiary of peace should be the South. There, the war assumed genocidal proportions: Over two million black non-Muslims perished, over four million were displaced, and tens of thousands enslaved. For Southern Sudan, the protocols open a door to economic development and self-determination. They also provide the North with a historic opportunity to free itself from a destructive jihad declared against restive non-Muslim communities.
The Bush administration deserves credit for creating conditions for a serious peace process. Read more...
Note: John Eibner, a member of the human rights organization Christian Solidarity International, and Joe Madison, a Washington-based syndicated radio commentator, are co-founders of the Sudan Campaign coalition, which works to free slaves in Sudan (see photos in next post above) [source: passion of the present.com via jim moore's journal]
- - -
Further reading in my previous posts:
April 24, 2004: IMPORTANT POST ON GENOCIDE IN SUDAN - Time is critical and hours matter
April 26, 2004: WOMEN AROUND THE WORLD - Stand and unite against mans inhumanity
April 29, 2004: BLOGGERS HAVEN'T DONE A WHOLE LOT TO CHANGE THE WORLD - Now seems like a hell of a time to try and start. THANK YOU DEAR BLOGGERS - For doing something
May 02, 2004: WHY IS THE BBC CONTINUOUSLY STIRRING UP TROUBLE FOR EVERYONE IN IRAQ - And not headlining shocking photos of rape and genocide in the Sudan?
May 03, 2004: SUDAN IS NOT IGNORED BY THE BBC - It's lack of political and media outrage
May 05, 2004: SUDAN: ONE OF THE WORLDS WORST HUMANITARIAN CRISES - BBC reports that conditions are as bad as reports suggested. SUDAN - A BRITISH ANGLE From The UK Today
May 05, 2004: SUDAN KEEPS SEAT ON UN RIGHTS PANEL - U.S. rights groups protest nomimination
May 07, 2004: SUDAN 'STARVING DARFUR REFUGEES' - BBC reports on the "politics of starvation"
May 08, 2004: BIG POWERS WARY OVER SUDAN CRISIS - Pro-government militiamen are accused of holding a town hostage
May 10, 2004: WHERE WERE WE TEN YEARS AGO? - Asks a blogging reporter in Africa
May 11, 2004: BBC RADIO ONLINE - Listen to World Service via the Internet
May 21, 2004: IMPORTANT MESSAGE TO BLOGGERS FROM DR JAMES MOORE: WHY YOUR ACTION ON SUDAN MATTERS TODAY. THANK YOU TO THE BBC FOR REPORTING ON THE SUDAN - Peacekeepers to be called to Darfur as soon as possible
June 02, 2004: RALLY FOR PEACE IN THE SUDAN - At Harvard on Wednesday June 9, 6 PM
June 01, 2004: BRITAIN REJECTS MILITARY INTERVENTION AND SANCTIONS AGAINST KHARTOUM - Time to stop dragging our feet. Time to act
June 01, 2004: BRITISH-US RIFT ON HOW TO DEAL WITH SUDAN 'CLEANSING' - Britain rejects intervention despite warnings of 350,000 deaths in the next few months
June 01, 2004: ON MAY 30, 2004 - Oxfam launched a new appeal for Western Sudan
May 30, 2004: US HOLDS KEY TO PEACE IN SUDAN - By John Eibner and Joe Madison, Boston Globe, May 29, 2004
May 30, 2004: PHOTOS OF SURVIVORS IN THE SUDAN - 13 year-old-boy's fingers all cut off by his master
May 30, 2004: WORLD NEEDS TO SEE AND HEAR SURVIVORS' TALES: The people of Darfur care that somebody cares about them - It's important for survivors to know that people are telling their stories
May 30, 2004: DARFUR IN WESTERN SUDAN - A dramatic race against the clock - hundreds of thousands will perish
May 30, 2004: DARFUR IN WESTERN SUDAN - Not included in the peace agreement for Southern Sudan
May 30, 2004: KOFI ANNAN AT HARVARD JUNE 10 - Peace rally for Sudan in planning stage
May 30, 2004: BOSTON CALLING LONDON - The UK Today on Sudan.
KOFI ANNAN AT HARVARD JUNE 10
Peace rally for Sudan in planning stage
Great news from Jim Moore's Journal and the Sudan blog out of Harvard:
Kofi Annan, who is a supporter of action to stop the Sudan genocide, will be speaking at Harvard on Thursday June 10, 2004.
Encouraged by television journalist Liz Walker, Jim and several others who live in the Boston area are holding a Sudan peace rally on the day.
Read the latest in Jim's journal on how action within the blogosphere is finally gaining momentum.
Today Joi Ito also posts on the Sudan and suggests how you can help googlebomb to stop genocide.
- - -
Further reading: Democratic Reforms Must Go Hand in Hand with Economic Changes Annan Says September 24, 1998.
- - -
DARFUR IN WESTERN SUDAN
Not included in the peace agreement for Southern Sudan
CNN May 27: Kofi Annan has been flooded with requests from people across the world beseeching him to provide emergency assistance to end the killing in Darfur.
A spokeswoman for the Nobel prize winning U.N. secretary-general, said he will focus on stemming the fighting in western Sudan, where the lives of hundreds of thousands of people are threatened. He fully shares the concerns of the public at large, and is following the situation in Darfur very closely and with great concern.
A day after a peace agreement marked the end of fighting in southern Sudan, attention has turned to the still embattled western part of the country - Darfur. Annan will also press for a humanitarian ceasefire in Darfur to be extended, and is urging the Sudanese government to intervene to halt human-rights violations in that region, she said.
Meanwhile, David Lambo, director of the Africa bureau of the U.N.'s High Commission for Refugees, said Thursday that Wednesday's agreement will "bring closer the day when southern Sudan's 500,000 refugees and more than three million displaced persons can go home."
Also Thursday, the president of the Security Council, Pakistan Ambassador Munir Akram, said that, with the agreement affecting the southern region now signed, the council may take further action elsewhere. [via passion of the present.com and jim moore's journal]
- - -
DARFUR IN WESTERN SUDAN
A dramatic race against the clock - hundreds of thousands will perish
The U.N. estimates that 30,000 people have been killed in a campaign of ethnic cleansing in Darfur.
On Wednesday, U.N. Emergency Relief Coordinator Jan Egeland called the situation there "the biggest humanitarian drama of our time". "This is the most dramatic race against the clock that we have anywhere in the world at the moment," he said. "If we lose, hundreds of thousands of women and children, mostly, will perish."
Egeland said the U.N. and other relief agencies were "late" to recognize the scope of the humanitarian problem in Darfur. [source: passion of the present.com via jim moore's journal]
- - -
WORLD NEEDS TO SEE AND HEAR SURVIVORS' TALES
The people of Darfur care that somebody cares about them -
It's important for survivors to know that people are telling their stories
Jerry Fowler, staff director of the Committee on Conscience at the U.S. Holocaust Museum in Washington, at a May 26 museum-sponsored program on the current crisis said: "One of the things that survivors of the Holocaust carry with them to this day, six decades after the end, is a feeling of abandonment...the sense that no one cared what was happening to them....The Darfurians who fled into Chad care that somebody cares about them. It was very important for them to know that people were telling their stories." Read more Stories of Refugees From Sudan's Darfur Echo Horrors of Holocaust by Charles W Corey, May 28, 2004. [via passion of the present.com and jim moore's journal]
Note: Jim posts about the Feedster RSS mentions on "Sudan" (down slightly, to 13200 from 13222). Sorry, I can't figure how to change my template to accommodate Feedster, so I guess the mentions of Sudan - in this blog - are not counted in those numbers. If any readers here do manage to get Feedster, please mention "Sudan" in your RSS-issuing blog and you'll help raise the total. Thanks.
- - -
PHOTOS OF SURVIVORS IN THE SUDAN
13 year-old-boy's fingers all cut off by his master
Sorry, I am unable to post pictures here. If you cannot find the words to google bomb the word Sudan, please copy and post any of these photos from the Free Sudan Movement Photo Gallery that chronicle recent trips by Rev. Walter Fauntroy and Joe Madison into the Sudan. Their efforts have resulted in the freeing of over 6000 slaves. They met Sudanese slaves freed through Sudan's Underground Railroad.
Note the photo with the caption "Right hand of 13 year-old-boy Yak Kenyang Adieu, all fingers cut off by his master." Other photos show amputees whose arms were chopped off with an ax by slave owners when they tried to rescue their enslaved wives and children. A Sudanese woman being consoled with 400 freed slaves in background. An orphaned slave baby whose mother was killed in minefield. Arek Kiir with stab wounds in chest and throat. Mawien's right hand missing finger. Agom Bol Akuei who was forced to carry heavy loads of salt (looted by attackers from Pan-Nyok market). She collasped under the weight which broke her jaw bone.
- - -
US HOLDS KEY TO PEACE IN SUDAN
By John Eibner and Joe Madison, Boston Globe, May 29, 2004
Excerpt: SUDAN'S Islamist government and the secular Sudan People's Liberation Army have passed another milestone in a long and tortuous peace process. On Wednesday, Vice President Ali Osman Taha and SPLA Chairman Colonel John Garang signed the last of six protocols that collectively constitute a framework for a comprehensive peace agreement for Southern Sudan and the Nuba Mountains. They are now poised to conclude negotiations by establishing modalities for implementation and international monitoring.
On paper, the protocols appear to lay the foundation for an end to 21 years of apocalyptic civil war between successive Arab-Muslim-dominated governments and the predominantly black, non-Muslim rebels of Southern Sudan. The South is due to receive autonomous, Shariah-free government during a six-year interim period. Free elections are scheduled within three years. Southern Sudan is promised a referendum on independence at the end of that period.
The greatest beneficiary of peace should be the South. There, the war assumed genocidal proportions: Over two million black non-Muslims perished, over four million were displaced, and tens of thousands enslaved. For Southern Sudan, the protocols open a door to economic development and self-determination. They also provide the North with a historic opportunity to free itself from a destructive jihad declared against restive non-Muslim communities.
The Bush administration deserves credit for creating conditions for a serious peace process. Read more...
Note: John Eibner, a member of the human rights organization Christian Solidarity International, and Joe Madison, a Washington-based syndicated radio commentator, are co-founders of the Sudan Campaign coalition, which works to free slaves in Sudan (see photos in next post above) [source: passion of the present.com via jim moore's journal]
- - -
Further reading in my previous posts:
April 24, 2004: IMPORTANT POST ON GENOCIDE IN SUDAN - Time is critical and hours matter
April 26, 2004: WOMEN AROUND THE WORLD - Stand and unite against mans inhumanity
April 29, 2004: BLOGGERS HAVEN'T DONE A WHOLE LOT TO CHANGE THE WORLD - Now seems like a hell of a time to try and start. THANK YOU DEAR BLOGGERS - For doing something
May 02, 2004: WHY IS THE BBC CONTINUOUSLY STIRRING UP TROUBLE FOR EVERYONE IN IRAQ - And not headlining shocking photos of rape and genocide in the Sudan?
May 03, 2004: SUDAN IS NOT IGNORED BY THE BBC - It's lack of political and media outrage
May 05, 2004: SUDAN: ONE OF THE WORLDS WORST HUMANITARIAN CRISES - BBC reports that conditions are as bad as reports suggested. SUDAN - A BRITISH ANGLE From The UK Today
May 05, 2004: SUDAN KEEPS SEAT ON UN RIGHTS PANEL - U.S. rights groups protest nomimination
May 07, 2004: SUDAN 'STARVING DARFUR REFUGEES' - BBC reports on the "politics of starvation"
May 08, 2004: BIG POWERS WARY OVER SUDAN CRISIS - Pro-government militiamen are accused of holding a town hostage
May 10, 2004: WHERE WERE WE TEN YEARS AGO? - Asks a blogging reporter in Africa
May 11, 2004: BBC RADIO ONLINE - Listen to World Service via the Internet
May 21, 2004: IMPORTANT MESSAGE TO BLOGGERS FROM DR JAMES MOORE: WHY YOUR ACTION ON SUDAN MATTERS TODAY. THANK YOU TO THE BBC FOR REPORTING ON THE SUDAN - Peacekeepers to be called to Darfur as soon as possible
June 02, 2004: RALLY FOR PEACE IN THE SUDAN - At Harvard on Wednesday June 9, 6 PM
June 01, 2004: BRITAIN REJECTS MILITARY INTERVENTION AND SANCTIONS AGAINST KHARTOUM - Time to stop dragging our feet. Time to act
June 01, 2004: BRITISH-US RIFT ON HOW TO DEAL WITH SUDAN 'CLEANSING' - Britain rejects intervention despite warnings of 350,000 deaths in the next few months
June 01, 2004: ON MAY 30, 2004 - Oxfam launched a new appeal for Western Sudan
May 30, 2004: US HOLDS KEY TO PEACE IN SUDAN - By John Eibner and Joe Madison, Boston Globe, May 29, 2004
May 30, 2004: PHOTOS OF SURVIVORS IN THE SUDAN - 13 year-old-boy's fingers all cut off by his master
May 30, 2004: WORLD NEEDS TO SEE AND HEAR SURVIVORS' TALES: The people of Darfur care that somebody cares about them - It's important for survivors to know that people are telling their stories
May 30, 2004: DARFUR IN WESTERN SUDAN - A dramatic race against the clock - hundreds of thousands will perish
May 30, 2004: DARFUR IN WESTERN SUDAN - Not included in the peace agreement for Southern Sudan
May 30, 2004: KOFI ANNAN AT HARVARD JUNE 10 - Peace rally for Sudan in planning stage
May 30, 2004: BOSTON CALLING LONDON - The UK Today on Sudan.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/30/2004
0 comments
Saturday, May 29, 2004
BLOGGERS GET TOGETHER WITH JOI ITO IN LONDON
NoCon '04 at Imperial College, London June 6th
Joi Ito is planning to arrive in London on Sunday June 6th and has set up a wiki page to plan a bloggers get together for that evening. Also on the same date is NotCon '04 11am-7pm at Imperial College Union, London.
Stephanie Booth will be coming in from Switzerland. She's currently studying french, philosophy and history of religions at Lausanne University - specializing in Indian religions. (Thanks for posting Delicious! - a great bookmarks manager).
Pixelfury Pete who lives in the English coastal town of Brighton will be in London for the get together with Joi Ito. And so too will freelance writer Suw (congrats on the 'Free Culture AudioBook Project' essay) who lives less than an hour away from here. I am feeling sad that I can't go. I've been too ill to even chat on IRC. It's at times like this that I wonder what is the point of blogging and getting to know people in one dimension. What is the point...
Oh well, such is life, no good moaning about it. At least inbetween the tears today I have Scaryduck to thank for the laugh and timely reminder of London life. And thanks to Suw I found out today that Chihuahuas aren't dogs at all - they're rodents. Ha! I always felt there was something different about them. Once, when I was eight years old, I cuddled one and it bit me right on my nose. It was like getting attacked by a rat. At the time I couldn't understand why everyone (and its owner) found it so funny - it really hurt.
NoCon '04 at Imperial College, London June 6th
Joi Ito is planning to arrive in London on Sunday June 6th and has set up a wiki page to plan a bloggers get together for that evening. Also on the same date is NotCon '04 11am-7pm at Imperial College Union, London.
Stephanie Booth will be coming in from Switzerland. She's currently studying french, philosophy and history of religions at Lausanne University - specializing in Indian religions. (Thanks for posting Delicious! - a great bookmarks manager).
Pixelfury Pete who lives in the English coastal town of Brighton will be in London for the get together with Joi Ito. And so too will freelance writer Suw (congrats on the 'Free Culture AudioBook Project' essay) who lives less than an hour away from here. I am feeling sad that I can't go. I've been too ill to even chat on IRC. It's at times like this that I wonder what is the point of blogging and getting to know people in one dimension. What is the point...
Oh well, such is life, no good moaning about it. At least inbetween the tears today I have Scaryduck to thank for the laugh and timely reminder of London life. And thanks to Suw I found out today that Chihuahuas aren't dogs at all - they're rodents. Ha! I always felt there was something different about them. Once, when I was eight years old, I cuddled one and it bit me right on my nose. It was like getting attacked by a rat. At the time I couldn't understand why everyone (and its owner) found it so funny - it really hurt.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/29/2004
0 comments
- - -
TOP THREE BLOGGING COMMUNITIES:
Knitting bloggers and warbloggers - No. 3 is techbloggers
Anil Dash posted this comment at Joi Ito's post re Weblogs and Authority: "...A lot of the weighting of these sites comes from the fact that they've been around a *long* time, particularly on the blogroll side. I can see about half of them are 5 years old, which is a lot more time to accrue blogroll links. I do think popularity is a misreading of the importance of blogs, since all that matters are the people whose blogs you care about, and many more bloggers read *none* of the sites on these lists than read any of them. I'd say knitting bloggers are probably one of the largest communities, along with warbloggers, and then techbloggers. However, blogging technology is something almost all bloggers have in common, and that's why tech bloggers end up being popular..."
- - -
Note: Anita points to a knitalong - a group of folks, all knitting the same or similar object and usually wriiting about it; and Much Ado About...Knitting? introduces Threaded Thoughts.
- - -
FAILURE TO COMMUNICATE
Techies developing attitude problems
In his post, "Failure to communicate", Richard Soderberg writes: "A growing segment of the technologically-enabled population is developing what I would best describe as a "derision" towards those who are not technically competent, for whatever reason. This sentiment is immediately apparent in the technical support industry, but I've seen it from peers who've never been formally introduced to tech support as well. Read more...
Note to Richard: Thanks for advice on the mac update 10.3.4. I'm on narrowband dial up and it took almost a day. Glad it's over...and thankfully no Asteroids on their way for a while yet, and hopefully no Meteorites hurtling this way... angry comments are scary enough ;-)
TOP THREE BLOGGING COMMUNITIES:
Knitting bloggers and warbloggers - No. 3 is techbloggers
Anil Dash posted this comment at Joi Ito's post re Weblogs and Authority: "...A lot of the weighting of these sites comes from the fact that they've been around a *long* time, particularly on the blogroll side. I can see about half of them are 5 years old, which is a lot more time to accrue blogroll links. I do think popularity is a misreading of the importance of blogs, since all that matters are the people whose blogs you care about, and many more bloggers read *none* of the sites on these lists than read any of them. I'd say knitting bloggers are probably one of the largest communities, along with warbloggers, and then techbloggers. However, blogging technology is something almost all bloggers have in common, and that's why tech bloggers end up being popular..."
- - -
Note: Anita points to a knitalong - a group of folks, all knitting the same or similar object and usually wriiting about it; and Much Ado About...Knitting? introduces Threaded Thoughts.
- - -
FAILURE TO COMMUNICATE
Techies developing attitude problems
In his post, "Failure to communicate", Richard Soderberg writes: "A growing segment of the technologically-enabled population is developing what I would best describe as a "derision" towards those who are not technically competent, for whatever reason. This sentiment is immediately apparent in the technical support industry, but I've seen it from peers who've never been formally introduced to tech support as well. Read more...
Note to Richard: Thanks for advice on the mac update 10.3.4. I'm on narrowband dial up and it took almost a day. Glad it's over...and thankfully no Asteroids on their way for a while yet, and hopefully no Meteorites hurtling this way... angry comments are scary enough ;-)
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/29/2004
0 comments
- - -
NET ON WHEELS:
The Magicbike
One US company offers internet kits on scooters to developing world. In the 1980s a Washington resident created a connected bike based on office networks. Copenhagen taxi-bikes offer net access.
Yury Gitman is a wireless and emerging-media artist. For his latest project he's turned to cycle power to create the wireless bike. The wireless bike, or Magicbike as he prefers to call it, is not just a trendy alternative to the wi-fi cafe or office. It may look like a simple bicycle but it hides a wireless hub. It has wi-fi antennas which mounted on the bike's frame and feed into a laptop hidden in the saddle-bag. The connection is received either from the cellular network or from nearby hotspots.
In a wired city such as New York, he envisages it being used at art and cultural events, public demonstrations and for emergency access. In communities at the fringe of internet connectivity it could become a more permanent lifeline. It can fulfil an important function in bringing internet connectivity to areas ignored by the traditional telecommunications industry. "A grassroots bottom-up wireless infrastructure can be formed and pedalled to any place accessible by bicycle," said Mr Gitman.
He receives hundreds of e-mails to his Magicbike website from people interested in setting up similar ideas - and is considering setting up a community based website for wireless bikes as they spring up in other cities and countries. The closest he thinks the idea has come to being commercially available is a similar idea used on bike taxis in the Danish capital of Copenhagen.
NET ON WHEELS:
The Magicbike
One US company offers internet kits on scooters to developing world. In the 1980s a Washington resident created a connected bike based on office networks. Copenhagen taxi-bikes offer net access.
Yury Gitman is a wireless and emerging-media artist. For his latest project he's turned to cycle power to create the wireless bike. The wireless bike, or Magicbike as he prefers to call it, is not just a trendy alternative to the wi-fi cafe or office. It may look like a simple bicycle but it hides a wireless hub. It has wi-fi antennas which mounted on the bike's frame and feed into a laptop hidden in the saddle-bag. The connection is received either from the cellular network or from nearby hotspots.
In a wired city such as New York, he envisages it being used at art and cultural events, public demonstrations and for emergency access. In communities at the fringe of internet connectivity it could become a more permanent lifeline. It can fulfil an important function in bringing internet connectivity to areas ignored by the traditional telecommunications industry. "A grassroots bottom-up wireless infrastructure can be formed and pedalled to any place accessible by bicycle," said Mr Gitman.
He receives hundreds of e-mails to his Magicbike website from people interested in setting up similar ideas - and is considering setting up a community based website for wireless bikes as they spring up in other cities and countries. The closest he thinks the idea has come to being commercially available is a similar idea used on bike taxis in the Danish capital of Copenhagen.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/29/2004
0 comments
Friday, May 28, 2004
PERFORMANCE APPRAISALS FOR THE US MILITARY
Maybe It's Time To Seek Other Employment...
On Labor Day weekend 2000, Eric and Kat Meyer moved in to their lovely house and have set about making it a home ever since. These are reported to be actual lines out of OER (Officer Efficiency Report), which are performance appraisals for the military, writes Eric in his post Maybe It's Time To Seek Other Employment...
▪ Not the sharpest knife in the drawer.
▪ Got into the gene pool while the lifeguard wasn't watching.
▪ A room temperature IQ.
▪ Got a full 6-pack, but lacks the plastic thingy to hold it all together.
▪ A gross ignoramus -- 144 times worse than an ordinary ignoramus.
▪ A photographic memory but with the lens cover glued on.
▪ A prime candidate for natural deselection.
▪ Bright as Alaska in December.
▪ One-celled organisms out-score him in IQ tests.
▪ Donated his body to science before he was done using it.
▪ Fell out of the family tree.
▪ Gates are down, the lights are flashing, but the train isn't coming.
▪ Has two brains; one is lost and the other is out looking for it.
▪ He's so dense, light bends around him.
▪ If brains were taxed, he'd get a rebate.
▪ If he were any more stupid, he'd have to be watered twice a week.
▪ If you give him a penny for his thoughts, you'd get change.
▪ If you stand close enough to him, you can hear the ocean.
▪ It's hard to believe that he beat out 1,000,000 other sperm.
▪ One neuron short of a synapse.
▪ Some drink from the fountain of knowledge; he only gargled.
▪ Takes him 1 1/2 hours to watch 60 minutes.
▪ Was left on the Tilt-A-Whirl a bit too long as a baby.
▪ Wheel is turning, but the hamster is dead.
- - -
PING-O-MATIC
148,587 pings served
On Ping-o-Matic! ping page I've entered my URL, ticked all the boxes and bookmarked the page my menu bar. Now I can fast ping almost a dozen services a single click away. Ping at Ping-O-Matic after editing a post to update it, as most blog packages are set up to ping only when there's a new post. [Thanks Lisa]
Maybe It's Time To Seek Other Employment...
On Labor Day weekend 2000, Eric and Kat Meyer moved in to their lovely house and have set about making it a home ever since. These are reported to be actual lines out of OER (Officer Efficiency Report), which are performance appraisals for the military, writes Eric in his post Maybe It's Time To Seek Other Employment...
▪ Not the sharpest knife in the drawer.
▪ Got into the gene pool while the lifeguard wasn't watching.
▪ A room temperature IQ.
▪ Got a full 6-pack, but lacks the plastic thingy to hold it all together.
▪ A gross ignoramus -- 144 times worse than an ordinary ignoramus.
▪ A photographic memory but with the lens cover glued on.
▪ A prime candidate for natural deselection.
▪ Bright as Alaska in December.
▪ One-celled organisms out-score him in IQ tests.
▪ Donated his body to science before he was done using it.
▪ Fell out of the family tree.
▪ Gates are down, the lights are flashing, but the train isn't coming.
▪ Has two brains; one is lost and the other is out looking for it.
▪ He's so dense, light bends around him.
▪ If brains were taxed, he'd get a rebate.
▪ If he were any more stupid, he'd have to be watered twice a week.
▪ If you give him a penny for his thoughts, you'd get change.
▪ If you stand close enough to him, you can hear the ocean.
▪ It's hard to believe that he beat out 1,000,000 other sperm.
▪ One neuron short of a synapse.
▪ Some drink from the fountain of knowledge; he only gargled.
▪ Takes him 1 1/2 hours to watch 60 minutes.
▪ Was left on the Tilt-A-Whirl a bit too long as a baby.
▪ Wheel is turning, but the hamster is dead.
- - -
PING-O-MATIC
148,587 pings served
On Ping-o-Matic! ping page I've entered my URL, ticked all the boxes and bookmarked the page my menu bar. Now I can fast ping almost a dozen services a single click away. Ping at Ping-O-Matic after editing a post to update it, as most blog packages are set up to ping only when there's a new post. [Thanks Lisa]
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/28/2004
0 comments
Thursday, May 27, 2004
PICKLED BABY DRAGON MYSTERY SOLVED
It's British!
The pickled baby dragon mystery I posted on some months ago, is solved. The dragon was created by Crawley Creatures, the model makers behind TV's Walking with Dinosaurs, and the jar was made by a specialist glass blowing studio in the Isle of Wight. The whole thing was thought up by aspiring author Allistair Mitchell as a publicity stunt that proved hugely successful for him.
The baby dragon sure is fine looking. Trust the Brits to come up with such brilliance. I wonder how much it cost. Though, like Jim says, it might all just be an elaborate cover up of the truth... :-)
- - -
BACK TO THE SEA OF CORTEZ
John Steinbeck and the Hermit Crab
See this amazing Hermit Crab discovered a few months ago by James' wife during a visit with their three children to Monterey Bay Aquarium in America. James is a fan of John Steinbeck and found the visit a great way to experience the things that he'd read about in his books. Read more in his post Back to the Sea of Cortez.
A while back, I posted on the launch of the Eglu. This next post is for you James - and your family :-)
- - -
EGGS AND THE CITY
British designed Eglu
BBC reporter Christine Jeavans writes a blogger-style account
of keeping two South American Araucana hens (which lay pale blue eggs) in an Eglu, "an iMac-style bright plastic hen house complete with run, feeders and a sun/rain shade".
The eglu (£325 including two hens and feed) was dreamt up by four industrial design students as part of a final year project at the Royal College of Art. After graduating they decided to bring chicken-keeping to the urban masses.
"We had a hunch that a lot of people wanted to keep hens but didn't know how," says Johannes Paul, 25, one of the inventors. "They think they need a massive garden and that there will be lots of mess and noise but that's not the case."
Comb & wattles keep hen cool
Crop stores food
Grit in gizzard grinds food
Clipping one wing stops flight
Egg yolk takes a week to form
Shell is 0.3mm thick
Hen lays an egg every 25 hours
No cockerel required
A hen costs 3p per day to feed
Produces average 6 eggs a week
Six free range organic eggs cost £1.55
Saving per egg: 22.5p
Annual saving per hen: (£1.55x52)-(0.03x365)= £69.65
"The key thing is demystifying what it is to keep chickens. They are easy to look after and children in particular love them."
Online bookseller Amazon UK has seen a 400% increase in sales across hen-keeping titles since 2000, something the company attributes to Channel 4's Big Brother, acquainting a new generation with the simple pleasures of keeping a few chickens roaming around.
- - -
SCOTT WESTON
At Google in Dublin and Silicon Valley
A few months ago, in my list at Technorati, I found offendedlamentation.cluevacuum.com linked to my blog. Must be an error as the link leads to Scott Weston's new blog Inexcusable Inferences.
On March 8, 2004, Scott wrote: A new week, a new blog, a new job. I am a proud G o o g l e r. I'm working in the Dublin office (in Ireland for the geographically challenged and experts alike). Next week I fly to the G o o g l e p l e x in the heart of silicon valley and get to stay there for 3 months. I can honestly say I haven't been this excited since I was a young 'un left to my own devices for an entire day in seaworld.
It's British!
The pickled baby dragon mystery I posted on some months ago, is solved. The dragon was created by Crawley Creatures, the model makers behind TV's Walking with Dinosaurs, and the jar was made by a specialist glass blowing studio in the Isle of Wight. The whole thing was thought up by aspiring author Allistair Mitchell as a publicity stunt that proved hugely successful for him.
The baby dragon sure is fine looking. Trust the Brits to come up with such brilliance. I wonder how much it cost. Though, like Jim says, it might all just be an elaborate cover up of the truth... :-)
- - -
BACK TO THE SEA OF CORTEZ
John Steinbeck and the Hermit Crab
See this amazing Hermit Crab discovered a few months ago by James' wife during a visit with their three children to Monterey Bay Aquarium in America. James is a fan of John Steinbeck and found the visit a great way to experience the things that he'd read about in his books. Read more in his post Back to the Sea of Cortez.
A while back, I posted on the launch of the Eglu. This next post is for you James - and your family :-)
- - -
EGGS AND THE CITY
British designed Eglu
BBC reporter Christine Jeavans writes a blogger-style account
of keeping two South American Araucana hens (which lay pale blue eggs) in an Eglu, "an iMac-style bright plastic hen house complete with run, feeders and a sun/rain shade".
The eglu (£325 including two hens and feed) was dreamt up by four industrial design students as part of a final year project at the Royal College of Art. After graduating they decided to bring chicken-keeping to the urban masses.
"We had a hunch that a lot of people wanted to keep hens but didn't know how," says Johannes Paul, 25, one of the inventors. "They think they need a massive garden and that there will be lots of mess and noise but that's not the case."
Comb & wattles keep hen cool
Crop stores food
Grit in gizzard grinds food
Clipping one wing stops flight
Egg yolk takes a week to form
Shell is 0.3mm thick
Hen lays an egg every 25 hours
No cockerel required
A hen costs 3p per day to feed
Produces average 6 eggs a week
Six free range organic eggs cost £1.55
Saving per egg: 22.5p
Annual saving per hen: (£1.55x52)-(0.03x365)= £69.65
"The key thing is demystifying what it is to keep chickens. They are easy to look after and children in particular love them."
Online bookseller Amazon UK has seen a 400% increase in sales across hen-keeping titles since 2000, something the company attributes to Channel 4's Big Brother, acquainting a new generation with the simple pleasures of keeping a few chickens roaming around.
- - -
SCOTT WESTON
At Google in Dublin and Silicon Valley
A few months ago, in my list at Technorati, I found offendedlamentation.cluevacuum.com linked to my blog. Must be an error as the link leads to Scott Weston's new blog Inexcusable Inferences.
On March 8, 2004, Scott wrote: A new week, a new blog, a new job. I am a proud G o o g l e r. I'm working in the Dublin office (in Ireland for the geographically challenged and experts alike). Next week I fly to the G o o g l e p l e x in the heart of silicon valley and get to stay there for 3 months. I can honestly say I haven't been this excited since I was a young 'un left to my own devices for an entire day in seaworld.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/27/2004
0 comments
Wednesday, May 26, 2004
FIRE, FIRE, McCARTHY FAMILY HOUSE ON FIRE
Jay McCarthy blogged a dramatic life changing event - as it unfolded before his eyes
Someone asked the accountant of one of the richest men in the world, who'd just died, how much was still left. The accountant exclaimed: "EVERYTHING!" This true story highlights how much the world's wealthiest man took with him when he died, and serves to remind us we are just caretakers of material things - and that "stuff", in the great scheme of things, isn't at all important.
Today, Halley Suitt pointed to Jay McCarthy's post Fire, Fire, House on Fire. Jay lives in America and wrote it last Sunday, while he watched his family's home burn down. Great post. Straight from the heart. You can feel the heat and emotion. Best personal post I've read of Jay's. Sorry the house is such a disaster, it must be a devastating experience. Glad to see that at least everyone is safe and sound. All good wishes to Jay and his family - from Ingrid and Ophelia =^.^=
Jay McCarthy blogged a dramatic life changing event - as it unfolded before his eyes
Someone asked the accountant of one of the richest men in the world, who'd just died, how much was still left. The accountant exclaimed: "EVERYTHING!" This true story highlights how much the world's wealthiest man took with him when he died, and serves to remind us we are just caretakers of material things - and that "stuff", in the great scheme of things, isn't at all important.
Today, Halley Suitt pointed to Jay McCarthy's post Fire, Fire, House on Fire. Jay lives in America and wrote it last Sunday, while he watched his family's home burn down. Great post. Straight from the heart. You can feel the heat and emotion. Best personal post I've read of Jay's. Sorry the house is such a disaster, it must be a devastating experience. Glad to see that at least everyone is safe and sound. All good wishes to Jay and his family - from Ingrid and Ophelia =^.^=
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/26/2004
0 comments
- - -
MAN'S THEORY OF EVOLUTION
The monkeys would say something quite different
During my blogging break, I googled some of the issues raised in the reading material I ploughed through, and came across three links (see below). Here are some excerpts I've taken from Man relating to man’s version of the story of evolution and what the monkeys would say:
It is important to understand what the theory of evolution says about the origin of man since so many people believe this. This is what is often taught in the public schools and elsewhere.
Evolution teaches that man has gradually evolved from lower animals (such as ape-like creatures) in a slowly changing process that has taken millions of years. Thus, the evolutionists would say that man is nothing more than a highly intelligent animal. Man is not too much different from a gorilla, except man is smarter!
Let’s think this theory through carefully. If man has evolved from some ape-like creature, then where did that creature come from? Remember, to find the origin of something you need to go back to the very beginning (all the way back to the starting point).
Here is how the evolutionists tell the story of man [Note: this information was taken from two sources: (1) "The Awesome Worlds Within a Cell", National Geographic, September, 1976, pp. 392-393; (2) Evolution by Ruth Moore published by TIME Incorporated (TIME-LIFE series), 1964, pp.109-116]:
In the beginning, about four billion years ago, the air was unfit to breathe. The young earth is without life. The sun beats down; storms lash the coasts; volcanoes pour hissing lava into the ocean’s waters. These natural jolts fuse simple molecules into more complex ones. Amino acids are formed, then interact with each other, and primitive protein is fashioned, perhaps as a worm-like molecule. Somehow the right molecules get together and the first living cell appears. This first living cell is the great ancestor of all plants and animals on earth, including man. From this first cell, all other forms of life evolved. This tiny first living cell is the father of us all!
How did man come from this first cell? (Remember, there are more cells in the human body than there are people in the world) Here's the story: As time went on, this first cell developed into amoeba?-like organisms and other primitive creatures that could survive in the ocean. After millions of years, these creatures evolved into fish. Some of these fish developed lungs so that they could survive outside of the water. Gradually they began to make their way onto land as the first amphibians. These amphibians then evolved into reptiles and the earth soon became populated with great dinosaurs. Some of these reptiles started to develop legs that could move around better, and these creatures became what we today would call mammals. Other reptiles developed wings and flew away to become birds.
Where did man come from? One of these early mammals was known as a tree shrew. He was not much larger than a squirrel and in many ways looked like a squirrel. This creature lived in trees and gradually evolved into primitive monkeys and other ape-like creatures. From these ape-like creatures there evolved two major groups: 1) the great apes that we can see in zoos today, such as the gorilla, orangutan, gibbon and chimpanzee; 2) a creature who came down from the trees and who started walking upright (all monkeys and apes walk on all fours)--THIS IS MAN!
Our father (that first living cell) would have been very proud of us if he could have seen how far we have come these past millions of years!
- - -
The above is man’s version of the story
If we were to ask the monkeys, they would say something quite different:
Three monkeys dining once in a cocoanut tree
Were discussing some things that they heard true to be.
"What do you think?" "Now listen, you two;
Here, monkeys, is something that cannot be true,
That humans descend from our noble race!
Why, it’s shocking -- a terrible disgrace.
Whoever heard of a monkey deserting his wife,
Leaving a baby to starve and ruin its life?
And have you ever known of a mother monk
To leave her darling with strangers to bunk?
Their babies are handed from one to another,
And some scarcely know the love of a mother.
And I’ve never known a monkey so selfish to be,
As to build a fence around a cocoanut tree,
So other monkeys can‘t get a wee taste,
But would let all the cocoanuts there go to waste.
Why, if I'd put a fence around this cocoanut tree,
Starvation would force you to steal from me.
And here is another thing a monkey won’t do:
Seek a cocktail parlor and get on a stew.
Carouse and go on a whoopee disgracing his life,
Then reel madly home and beat up his wife.
They call this all pleasure and make a big fuss--
THEY’VE DESCENDED FROM SOMETHING,
BUT CERTAINLY NOT FROM US!!!"
- - -
MAN'S ORIGIN
Where Did I Come From?
Man’s Origin--Where Did I Come From?
Man’s Purpose--Why Am I Here?
Man’s Destiny--Where Am I Going?
[Source courtesy Man]
MAN'S THEORY OF EVOLUTION
The monkeys would say something quite different
During my blogging break, I googled some of the issues raised in the reading material I ploughed through, and came across three links (see below). Here are some excerpts I've taken from Man relating to man’s version of the story of evolution and what the monkeys would say:
It is important to understand what the theory of evolution says about the origin of man since so many people believe this. This is what is often taught in the public schools and elsewhere.
Evolution teaches that man has gradually evolved from lower animals (such as ape-like creatures) in a slowly changing process that has taken millions of years. Thus, the evolutionists would say that man is nothing more than a highly intelligent animal. Man is not too much different from a gorilla, except man is smarter!
Let’s think this theory through carefully. If man has evolved from some ape-like creature, then where did that creature come from? Remember, to find the origin of something you need to go back to the very beginning (all the way back to the starting point).
Here is how the evolutionists tell the story of man [Note: this information was taken from two sources: (1) "The Awesome Worlds Within a Cell", National Geographic, September, 1976, pp. 392-393; (2) Evolution by Ruth Moore published by TIME Incorporated (TIME-LIFE series), 1964, pp.109-116]:
In the beginning, about four billion years ago, the air was unfit to breathe. The young earth is without life. The sun beats down; storms lash the coasts; volcanoes pour hissing lava into the ocean’s waters. These natural jolts fuse simple molecules into more complex ones. Amino acids are formed, then interact with each other, and primitive protein is fashioned, perhaps as a worm-like molecule. Somehow the right molecules get together and the first living cell appears. This first living cell is the great ancestor of all plants and animals on earth, including man. From this first cell, all other forms of life evolved. This tiny first living cell is the father of us all!
How did man come from this first cell? (Remember, there are more cells in the human body than there are people in the world) Here's the story: As time went on, this first cell developed into amoeba?-like organisms and other primitive creatures that could survive in the ocean. After millions of years, these creatures evolved into fish. Some of these fish developed lungs so that they could survive outside of the water. Gradually they began to make their way onto land as the first amphibians. These amphibians then evolved into reptiles and the earth soon became populated with great dinosaurs. Some of these reptiles started to develop legs that could move around better, and these creatures became what we today would call mammals. Other reptiles developed wings and flew away to become birds.
Where did man come from? One of these early mammals was known as a tree shrew. He was not much larger than a squirrel and in many ways looked like a squirrel. This creature lived in trees and gradually evolved into primitive monkeys and other ape-like creatures. From these ape-like creatures there evolved two major groups: 1) the great apes that we can see in zoos today, such as the gorilla, orangutan, gibbon and chimpanzee; 2) a creature who came down from the trees and who started walking upright (all monkeys and apes walk on all fours)--THIS IS MAN!
Our father (that first living cell) would have been very proud of us if he could have seen how far we have come these past millions of years!
- - -
The above is man’s version of the story
If we were to ask the monkeys, they would say something quite different:
Three monkeys dining once in a cocoanut tree
Were discussing some things that they heard true to be.
"What do you think?" "Now listen, you two;
Here, monkeys, is something that cannot be true,
That humans descend from our noble race!
Why, it’s shocking -- a terrible disgrace.
Whoever heard of a monkey deserting his wife,
Leaving a baby to starve and ruin its life?
And have you ever known of a mother monk
To leave her darling with strangers to bunk?
Their babies are handed from one to another,
And some scarcely know the love of a mother.
And I’ve never known a monkey so selfish to be,
As to build a fence around a cocoanut tree,
So other monkeys can‘t get a wee taste,
But would let all the cocoanuts there go to waste.
Why, if I'd put a fence around this cocoanut tree,
Starvation would force you to steal from me.
And here is another thing a monkey won’t do:
Seek a cocktail parlor and get on a stew.
Carouse and go on a whoopee disgracing his life,
Then reel madly home and beat up his wife.
They call this all pleasure and make a big fuss--
THEY’VE DESCENDED FROM SOMETHING,
BUT CERTAINLY NOT FROM US!!!"
- - -
MAN'S ORIGIN
Where Did I Come From?
Man’s Origin--Where Did I Come From?
Man’s Purpose--Why Am I Here?
Man’s Destiny--Where Am I Going?
[Source courtesy Man]
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/26/2004
0 comments
- - -
WHEN YOU WANT IT - WHERE YOU WANT IT
Never miss out on a home delivery again?
Someone wrote to MetaFilter on the problem of internet/mail order deliveries arriving at home when you're out. Seems this is a growing problem, that maybe deters people from shopping online, especially for expensive goods. Who'd be there to receive the order when you're away or at work?
One reader suggested giving out your work address for delivery. Good idea (if your work approves) but not very convenient if the package is large and you travel home on foot, by bike, train, bus or underground.
Another suggested - for those in the UK - giving out your Royal Mail Post Office address for delivery, where you could pick-up outside business hours. Good idea if the Post Office is close to your home, you have a car or the package manageable.
Same applies to Collectpoint (with 1600 locations across the UK, your nearest collectpoint is never far away - so if what you’ve bought is not quite what you wanted, you can return it in the same way). If a package was large or heavy and you had no car, you'd need to arrange pick-up or drop-off with a friend by car or taxi - or get some sort of trolley.
My mother and her elderly neighbours only shop by phone and inevitably have to deal with returns. They are loyal to one particular mail order company because the 'returns' service is so efficient. One phone call to the company and a courier arrives next day at the door, label is made up ready and goods are returned in their original packaging, without a quibble.
Another solution, discussed at Meta Filter, would be to purchase a specially designed gigantic letter box that's lockable. Or to build an outdoor storage box with a fastening that can be padlocked; leave the padlock undone so the delivery person can put the package into the storage box and snap close the padlock. Good idea, if one was expecting not more than one delivery per day (and if the padlock didn't get stolen before the goods arrived).
Here's another solution that would be good for perishable items: arrange for the order to be sent to a home delivery service such as Beck & Call who, for a small fee, would deliver to your home between 7 am and 11 pm. It makes more sense to pay a small fee to a holding bay that delivers outside of business hours.
Some years ago, I managed a mail order business. It was a nightmare. Goods were perishable (large outdoor plants and shrubs) and delivery problems and returns took up most of the customer support resources. Customers weren't at home when they said they would be, ie: in hospital, on holiday, urgent business away, ill (deceased!) ...the list of reasons is huge. On certain items - and especially when stocks run out - there's a 28-day order fulfillment cycle - and it's not always possible to give every customer an exact time/date for delivery.
IMO there's huge growth potential for home delivery services. People are now getting more confident using plastic payment cards online. It may be just a matter of time before it becomes the norm to get the best deal on purchases made over the Internet, which would create a demand for efficient and reliable delivery services prepared to serve customers outside of business hours.
Most of my purchases are over the phone, by mail or online. The most expensive and recent item is a laptop, purchased via Apple Store Online. One powerbook did get lost by the carrier but was replaced within two weeks. I was at home during the day to receive the delivery. The carrier did not phone in advance to check that I was in. If I had been at work, I'd use a service like Beck & Call - after checking fine print on policy re goods damaged or lost in transit.
It makes sense to pay a small fee to a holding bay that delivers outside of business hours. Instead of burning up car fuel, getting stressed over parking and loading. Kinder to the environment too: one van delivers to several homes, rather than several cars to and fro, clogging up roads and parking spaces to pick up goods. If home delivery services became truly efficient, people could shop at supermarkets more easily or by phone and have their goods delivered.
The problem of traffic congestion here in this small seaside town is mainly caused by shoppers. The main street gets noisy, smelly and stressful. Reminds me of the olden days when horse and carriages packed the streets and created chaos. It's still barmy and chaotic today: one person in a car, parks - and takes up the space that a holidaymaker could use - goes grocery shopping, comes back an hour or two later, loads and leaves... while another car waits in line to do the same thing.
Recently, I've read that one should not push a young child in a low pram along a pavement on a busy street because the child could develop breathing problems from the fumes from car exhaust pipes. There are bans on smoking in certain areas, even in the outdoors. But no bans on stinky vehicles polluting our lungs and giving us cancer. I've lived in London where black soot (not dust) would settle on the inside of window ledges - and on my face makeup - even cuffs of white shirts were blackened at the end of one working day. Read more in the war outside your door.
- - -
Note: Benedict Ely and Charles Doyle founded Beck & Call Delivery in August 2000. This London based service, delivers packages and parcels to residential customers at a time convenient to them. The challenge for the business was to honour the promises echoed in their mission statement to be at the, "beck and call of customers".
WHEN YOU WANT IT - WHERE YOU WANT IT
Never miss out on a home delivery again?
Someone wrote to MetaFilter on the problem of internet/mail order deliveries arriving at home when you're out. Seems this is a growing problem, that maybe deters people from shopping online, especially for expensive goods. Who'd be there to receive the order when you're away or at work?
One reader suggested giving out your work address for delivery. Good idea (if your work approves) but not very convenient if the package is large and you travel home on foot, by bike, train, bus or underground.
Another suggested - for those in the UK - giving out your Royal Mail Post Office address for delivery, where you could pick-up outside business hours. Good idea if the Post Office is close to your home, you have a car or the package manageable.
Same applies to Collectpoint (with 1600 locations across the UK, your nearest collectpoint is never far away - so if what you’ve bought is not quite what you wanted, you can return it in the same way). If a package was large or heavy and you had no car, you'd need to arrange pick-up or drop-off with a friend by car or taxi - or get some sort of trolley.
My mother and her elderly neighbours only shop by phone and inevitably have to deal with returns. They are loyal to one particular mail order company because the 'returns' service is so efficient. One phone call to the company and a courier arrives next day at the door, label is made up ready and goods are returned in their original packaging, without a quibble.
Another solution, discussed at Meta Filter, would be to purchase a specially designed gigantic letter box that's lockable. Or to build an outdoor storage box with a fastening that can be padlocked; leave the padlock undone so the delivery person can put the package into the storage box and snap close the padlock. Good idea, if one was expecting not more than one delivery per day (and if the padlock didn't get stolen before the goods arrived).
Here's another solution that would be good for perishable items: arrange for the order to be sent to a home delivery service such as Beck & Call who, for a small fee, would deliver to your home between 7 am and 11 pm. It makes more sense to pay a small fee to a holding bay that delivers outside of business hours.
Some years ago, I managed a mail order business. It was a nightmare. Goods were perishable (large outdoor plants and shrubs) and delivery problems and returns took up most of the customer support resources. Customers weren't at home when they said they would be, ie: in hospital, on holiday, urgent business away, ill (deceased!) ...the list of reasons is huge. On certain items - and especially when stocks run out - there's a 28-day order fulfillment cycle - and it's not always possible to give every customer an exact time/date for delivery.
IMO there's huge growth potential for home delivery services. People are now getting more confident using plastic payment cards online. It may be just a matter of time before it becomes the norm to get the best deal on purchases made over the Internet, which would create a demand for efficient and reliable delivery services prepared to serve customers outside of business hours.
Most of my purchases are over the phone, by mail or online. The most expensive and recent item is a laptop, purchased via Apple Store Online. One powerbook did get lost by the carrier but was replaced within two weeks. I was at home during the day to receive the delivery. The carrier did not phone in advance to check that I was in. If I had been at work, I'd use a service like Beck & Call - after checking fine print on policy re goods damaged or lost in transit.
It makes sense to pay a small fee to a holding bay that delivers outside of business hours. Instead of burning up car fuel, getting stressed over parking and loading. Kinder to the environment too: one van delivers to several homes, rather than several cars to and fro, clogging up roads and parking spaces to pick up goods. If home delivery services became truly efficient, people could shop at supermarkets more easily or by phone and have their goods delivered.
The problem of traffic congestion here in this small seaside town is mainly caused by shoppers. The main street gets noisy, smelly and stressful. Reminds me of the olden days when horse and carriages packed the streets and created chaos. It's still barmy and chaotic today: one person in a car, parks - and takes up the space that a holidaymaker could use - goes grocery shopping, comes back an hour or two later, loads and leaves... while another car waits in line to do the same thing.
Recently, I've read that one should not push a young child in a low pram along a pavement on a busy street because the child could develop breathing problems from the fumes from car exhaust pipes. There are bans on smoking in certain areas, even in the outdoors. But no bans on stinky vehicles polluting our lungs and giving us cancer. I've lived in London where black soot (not dust) would settle on the inside of window ledges - and on my face makeup - even cuffs of white shirts were blackened at the end of one working day. Read more in the war outside your door.
- - -
Note: Benedict Ely and Charles Doyle founded Beck & Call Delivery in August 2000. This London based service, delivers packages and parcels to residential customers at a time convenient to them. The challenge for the business was to honour the promises echoed in their mission statement to be at the, "beck and call of customers".
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/26/2004
0 comments
Sunday, May 23, 2004
THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD
Powers of Ten and Just Six Numbers
Posts in this weblog are usually just cryptic notes to myself, on issues I think about, that are dressed up incase they prove useful to readers passing by. Often I wonder what it is that's so great about democracy. Twenty years ago I used to think and talk of the multi-nationals running the world, and about what could happen next: maybe something completely different, like a New World Order. My interest in communications technology began twenty-five years ago - I felt sure then, and still do now, that it would change the world.
Twenty years later, and even more so after 9/11, I became interested in trying to understand the Muslims, what they believe in and why. I've been online daily since June of last year, and often find my eye drawn towards news of ongoing battles involving Christians, Muslims, Jews and Arabs.
Recently I had three long phone discussions with a friend re Iraq, Bosnia and the Sudan, and why people should care. Basically, I raised four questions: (1) are the Muslims trying to take over the world? (2) is the genocide of black Africans by Arabs in the Sudan anything to do with oil being found in Africa? (3) did World War III begin on 9/11? (4) and why we should care about our fellow man whether he is next door or in Africa.
My friend is a staunch atheist and takes every opportunity to rubbish religion, so naturally God cropped up. My friend is very clever and silly me - trying to conserve energy whilst explaining why there is a God - cut to the chase by blurting out "God is Love" and "Love is within all of us." Because my friend scoffed at this, I asked him to explain why we should care, and what then is love. He said they were complicated questions and my explanations were too simplistic. Next day, he swiftly responded by sending me this stack of reading material:
1) "The New Penguin History of The World" by J.M. Roberts. I've been asked to please start with pages 1 to 38, covering The Foundations, Homo Sapiens, and The Possibility of Civilization. And then to read pages 991 to 1148, covering The Latest Age.
2) "Just Six Numbers - The Deep Forces that Shape the Universe" by British Astronomer Royal Professor Sir Martin Rees, an international leader in cosmology and Royal Society Research Professor at Cambridge University.
3) "Powers of Ten" - explains the relative size of things in the universe and illustrates relationships of size among objects. (btw I have a hard copy up in my attic given to me 20 years ago by physicist - with a bit of a story that I'll recall in a future post.)
4) National Geographic Millennium Supplement, October 1999, featuring "Secrets of the Gene".
5) Five articles in May 8, 2004 issue of The Economist:
i) on economics: "Feeding the hungry" is the fourth of a series of articles on the Copenhagen Consensus project which is basically to do with a series of proposals for advancing global welfare [See www.economist.com/copenhagenconsensus]
ii) on entomology: "Invasion of the Brood" about the 17-year cicadas that are about to emerge in force in the eastern part of the U.S.
iii) on crime prediction: "Time bandits" prospective "hot-spot" maps that show where criminals are going to be active.
iv) on human evolution: "It figures" in terms of fertility, geometry seems to matter.
v) on decontamination: "Phages are your friends" features killing bacteria the natural way; it's the first time that phages have been proposed as a way of decontaminating land - although there are few sites that need to be liberated from anthrax spores, it is not exactly a coincidence that the research is happening at a time when the American government is worried about the idea of terrorists launching an anthrax attack.
In order to get this reading started, I'm taking a blogging break for a few days. My previous two posts tie in with this. Bye for now. With love from Ingrid and Ophelia - who's having fun outdoors getting all dusty and covered in pollen. We're enjoying great weather: blue sea and sky, no wind - motor boats zooming by and the yacht club out in numbers. Carpenter will be back tomorrow to complete work on new front balcony, painter will follow to decorate exterior, two weeks of groceries arrive on Tuesday, a friend will be visiting and this new Mac works great. My cup runneth over...
Powers of Ten and Just Six Numbers
Posts in this weblog are usually just cryptic notes to myself, on issues I think about, that are dressed up incase they prove useful to readers passing by. Often I wonder what it is that's so great about democracy. Twenty years ago I used to think and talk of the multi-nationals running the world, and about what could happen next: maybe something completely different, like a New World Order. My interest in communications technology began twenty-five years ago - I felt sure then, and still do now, that it would change the world.
Twenty years later, and even more so after 9/11, I became interested in trying to understand the Muslims, what they believe in and why. I've been online daily since June of last year, and often find my eye drawn towards news of ongoing battles involving Christians, Muslims, Jews and Arabs.
Recently I had three long phone discussions with a friend re Iraq, Bosnia and the Sudan, and why people should care. Basically, I raised four questions: (1) are the Muslims trying to take over the world? (2) is the genocide of black Africans by Arabs in the Sudan anything to do with oil being found in Africa? (3) did World War III begin on 9/11? (4) and why we should care about our fellow man whether he is next door or in Africa.
My friend is a staunch atheist and takes every opportunity to rubbish religion, so naturally God cropped up. My friend is very clever and silly me - trying to conserve energy whilst explaining why there is a God - cut to the chase by blurting out "God is Love" and "Love is within all of us." Because my friend scoffed at this, I asked him to explain why we should care, and what then is love. He said they were complicated questions and my explanations were too simplistic. Next day, he swiftly responded by sending me this stack of reading material:
1) "The New Penguin History of The World" by J.M. Roberts. I've been asked to please start with pages 1 to 38, covering The Foundations, Homo Sapiens, and The Possibility of Civilization. And then to read pages 991 to 1148, covering The Latest Age.
2) "Just Six Numbers - The Deep Forces that Shape the Universe" by British Astronomer Royal Professor Sir Martin Rees, an international leader in cosmology and Royal Society Research Professor at Cambridge University.
3) "Powers of Ten" - explains the relative size of things in the universe and illustrates relationships of size among objects. (btw I have a hard copy up in my attic given to me 20 years ago by physicist - with a bit of a story that I'll recall in a future post.)
4) National Geographic Millennium Supplement, October 1999, featuring "Secrets of the Gene".
5) Five articles in May 8, 2004 issue of The Economist:
i) on economics: "Feeding the hungry" is the fourth of a series of articles on the Copenhagen Consensus project which is basically to do with a series of proposals for advancing global welfare [See www.economist.com/copenhagenconsensus]
ii) on entomology: "Invasion of the Brood" about the 17-year cicadas that are about to emerge in force in the eastern part of the U.S.
iii) on crime prediction: "Time bandits" prospective "hot-spot" maps that show where criminals are going to be active.
iv) on human evolution: "It figures" in terms of fertility, geometry seems to matter.
v) on decontamination: "Phages are your friends" features killing bacteria the natural way; it's the first time that phages have been proposed as a way of decontaminating land - although there are few sites that need to be liberated from anthrax spores, it is not exactly a coincidence that the research is happening at a time when the American government is worried about the idea of terrorists launching an anthrax attack.
In order to get this reading started, I'm taking a blogging break for a few days. My previous two posts tie in with this. Bye for now. With love from Ingrid and Ophelia - who's having fun outdoors getting all dusty and covered in pollen. We're enjoying great weather: blue sea and sky, no wind - motor boats zooming by and the yacht club out in numbers. Carpenter will be back tomorrow to complete work on new front balcony, painter will follow to decorate exterior, two weeks of groceries arrive on Tuesday, a friend will be visiting and this new Mac works great. My cup runneth over...
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/23/2004
0 comments
- - -
ISLAM AND DEMOCRACY:
THE IMPOSSIBLE UNION
In today's Sunday Times, Iranian Muslim Amir Taheri says his faith cannot embrace western liberalism because our notions of equality are antithetical to the basis of Islam. Taheri writes (see copy in full below) why Islam and democracy are essentially incompatible and that Muslims should not be duped into believing that they can have their cake and eat it. Taheri says Muslims can build successful societies provided they treat Islam as a matter of personal, private belief and not as a political ideology that seeks to monopolise the public space share by the whole of humanity and dictate every aspect of individual and community life. Here's a copy of the article, in full:
In recent weeks there has been much soul-searching, in the Islamic world and among the wider Muslim diaspora about whether Islam is compatible with democracy. This sparked a debate hosted by Intelligence, a forum I took part in last week. As an Iranian now living in a liberal democracy, I would like to explain why Islam and democracy are essentially incompatible.
To understand a civilisation it is important to comprehend the language that shapes it. There was no word in any of the Muslim languages for democracy until the 1890s. Even then the Greek word entered Muslim vocabulary with little change: democrasi in Persian, dimokraytiyah in Arabic, demokratio in Turkish.
Democracy is based on one fundamental principle: equality.
The Greek word isos is used in more than 200 compound nouns, including isoteos (equality), isologia (equal or free speech) and isonomia (equal treatment).
Again we find no equivalent in any of the Muslim languages. The words we have such as barabari in Persian and sawiyah in Arabic mean juxtaposition or separation.
Nor do we have a word for politics. The word siassah, now used as a synonym for politics, initially meant whipping stray camels into line. (Sa’es al-kheil is a person who brings back lost camels to the caravan.) The closest translation may be: regimentation.
Nor is there mention of such words as government and the state in the Koran. Early Muslims translated numerous ancient Greek texts, but never those related to political matters.
The idea of equality is unacceptable to Islam. For the non-believer cannot be the equal of the believer. Even among the believers only those who subscribe to the three Abrahamic religions: Judaism, Christianity and Islam, known as the “people of the book” (Ahl el-Kitab), are regarded as fully human. Here, too, there is a hierarchy, with Muslims at the top.
Non-Muslims can, and have often been, treated with decency, but never as equals. There is a hierarchy even for animals and plants. Seven animals and seven plants will assuredly go to heaven while seven others of each will end up in hell.
Democracy means the rule of the demos, the common people, or what is now known as popular or national sovereignty. In Islam, however, power belongs only to God: al-hukm l’illah. The man who exercises that power on Earth is known as Khalifat al-Allah, the regent of God. Even then the Khalifah, or Caliph, cannot act as legislator. The law has already been spelt out and fixed forever by God.
The only task that remains is its discovery, interpretation and application. That, of course, allows for a substantial space in which different styles of rule could develop.
But the bottom line is that no Islamic government can be democratic in the sense of allowing the common people equal shares in legislation. Islam divides human activities into five categories from the permitted to the sinful, leaving little room for human interpretation, let alone ethical innovations.
To say that Islam is incompatible with democracy should not be seen as a disparagement of Islam. On the contrary, many Muslims would see it as a compliment because they believe that their idea of rule by God is superior to that of rule by men, which is democracy.
The great Persian poet Rumi pleads thus:
Oh, God, do not leave our affairs to us
For, if You do, woe is us.
Islamic tradition holds that God has always intervened in the affairs of men, notably by dispatching 124,000 prophets or emissaries to inform the mortals of his wishes and warnings.
Many Islamist thinkers regard democracy with horror.
The late Ayatollah Khomeini called democracy “a form of prostitution”, because he who gets the most votes wins the power that belongs only to God.
Sayyid Qutb, the Egyptian who has emerged as the ideological mentor of Salafists (fundamentalists who want to return to the idyllic Islamic state of their forebears) spent a year in the United States in the 1950s. He found “a nation that has forgotten God and been forsaken by Him; an arrogant nation that wants to rule itself”.
Last year Yussuf al-Ayyeri, one of the leading theoreticians of today’s Islamist movement, published a book in which he warned that the real danger to Islam did not come from American tanks and helicopter gunships in Iraq but from the idea of democracy and the government of the people.
Maudoodi, another of the Islamist theoreticians now fashionable, dreamt of a political system in which humans would act as automatons in accordance with rules set by God.
He said that God has arranged man’s biological functions in such a way that their operation is beyond human control. For our non-biological functions, notably our politics, God has also set rules that we have to discover and apply once and for all so that our societies can be on autopilot, so to speak.
The late Saudi theologian, Sheikh Muhammad bin Ibrahim al-Jubair, a man I respected though seldom agreed with, believed that the root cause of contemporary ills was the spread of democracy.
“Only one ambition is worthy of Islam,” he liked to say, “to save the world from the curse of democracy: to teach men that they cannot rule themselves on the basis of man-made laws. Mankind has strayed from the path of God, we must return to that path or face certain annihilation.”
Those who claim that Islam is compatible with democracy should know that they are not flattering Muslims.
In the past 14 centuries Muslims have, on occasions, succeeded in creating successful societies without democracy. And there is no guarantee that democracy never produces disastrous results (after all, Hitler was democratically elected).
The fact that almost all Muslim states today can be rated as failures or, at least, underachievers, is not because they are Islamic but because they are ruled by corrupt and despotic elites that, even when they proclaim an Islamist ideology, are, in fact, secular dictators.
Socrates ridiculed the myth of democracy by pointing out that men always call on experts to deal with specific tasks, but when it comes to the more important matters concerning the community, they allow every Tom, Dick and Harry an equal say.
In response his contemporary, Protagoras, one of the original defenders of democracy, argued: “People in the cities, especially in Athens, listen only to experts in matters of expertise, but when they meet for consultation on the political art, ie of the general question of government, everybody participates.”
Traditional Islamic political thought is closer to Socrates than to Protagoras. The common folk, al-awwam, are regarded as “animals”. The interpretation of the divine law is reserved only for the experts.
Political power, like many other domains including philosophy, is reserved for the “khawas” who, in some Sufi traditions, are even exempt from the rituals of the faith.
The “common folk”, however, must do as they are told either by the text and tradition or by fatwas (edicts) issued by the experts. Khomeini used the word “mustazafeen” (the feeble ones) to describe the general population.
Islam is about certainty (iqan) while democracy is about doubt. Islam cannot allow people to do as they please, even in the privacy of their bedrooms, because God is always present, all-hearing and all-seeing.
There is consultation in Islam: wa shawerhum fil amr (and consult them in matters). But, here, consultation is about specifics only, never about the overall design of society.
In democracy there is a constitution that can be amended or changed. The Koran, however, is the immutable word of God, beyond amendment or change.
This debate is not an easy one to have, because Islam has become an issue of political controversy in the West.
On the one hand we have Islamophobia, a particular affliction of those who blame Islam for all the ills of our world. Some Muslims regard any criticism of Islam as Islamophobia.
On the other hand we have Islamoflattery, which claims that everything good under the sun came from Islam. (According to a recent BBC documentary on Islam, even cinema was invented in the 9th century by a Muslim lens maker in Baghdad, named Abu-Hufus!)
This is often practised by a new generation of the Turques de profession, westerners who are prepared to apply the rules of critical analysis to everything under the sun except Islam.
They think they are doing Islam a favour. They are not.
Depriving Islam of critical scrutiny is bad for Islam and Muslims, and ultimately dangerous for the whole world. There are 57 nations in the Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC). Not one is yet a democracy.
We should not allow the everything-is-equal-to-everything-else fashion of postmodernist multiculturalism and political correctness to prevent us from acknowledging differences and even incompatibilities in the name of a soggy consensus. If we are all the same, how can we have a dialogue of civilisations?
Muslims should not be duped into believing that they can have their cake and eat it. Muslims can build successful societies provided they treat Islam as a matter of personal, private belief and not as a political ideology that seeks to monopolise the public space shared by the whole of humanity and dictate every aspect of individual and community life. Islam is incompatible with democracy.
ISLAM AND DEMOCRACY:
THE IMPOSSIBLE UNION
In today's Sunday Times, Iranian Muslim Amir Taheri says his faith cannot embrace western liberalism because our notions of equality are antithetical to the basis of Islam. Taheri writes (see copy in full below) why Islam and democracy are essentially incompatible and that Muslims should not be duped into believing that they can have their cake and eat it. Taheri says Muslims can build successful societies provided they treat Islam as a matter of personal, private belief and not as a political ideology that seeks to monopolise the public space share by the whole of humanity and dictate every aspect of individual and community life. Here's a copy of the article, in full:
In recent weeks there has been much soul-searching, in the Islamic world and among the wider Muslim diaspora about whether Islam is compatible with democracy. This sparked a debate hosted by Intelligence, a forum I took part in last week. As an Iranian now living in a liberal democracy, I would like to explain why Islam and democracy are essentially incompatible.
To understand a civilisation it is important to comprehend the language that shapes it. There was no word in any of the Muslim languages for democracy until the 1890s. Even then the Greek word entered Muslim vocabulary with little change: democrasi in Persian, dimokraytiyah in Arabic, demokratio in Turkish.
Democracy is based on one fundamental principle: equality.
The Greek word isos is used in more than 200 compound nouns, including isoteos (equality), isologia (equal or free speech) and isonomia (equal treatment).
Again we find no equivalent in any of the Muslim languages. The words we have such as barabari in Persian and sawiyah in Arabic mean juxtaposition or separation.
Nor do we have a word for politics. The word siassah, now used as a synonym for politics, initially meant whipping stray camels into line. (Sa’es al-kheil is a person who brings back lost camels to the caravan.) The closest translation may be: regimentation.
Nor is there mention of such words as government and the state in the Koran. Early Muslims translated numerous ancient Greek texts, but never those related to political matters.
The idea of equality is unacceptable to Islam. For the non-believer cannot be the equal of the believer. Even among the believers only those who subscribe to the three Abrahamic religions: Judaism, Christianity and Islam, known as the “people of the book” (Ahl el-Kitab), are regarded as fully human. Here, too, there is a hierarchy, with Muslims at the top.
Non-Muslims can, and have often been, treated with decency, but never as equals. There is a hierarchy even for animals and plants. Seven animals and seven plants will assuredly go to heaven while seven others of each will end up in hell.
Democracy means the rule of the demos, the common people, or what is now known as popular or national sovereignty. In Islam, however, power belongs only to God: al-hukm l’illah. The man who exercises that power on Earth is known as Khalifat al-Allah, the regent of God. Even then the Khalifah, or Caliph, cannot act as legislator. The law has already been spelt out and fixed forever by God.
The only task that remains is its discovery, interpretation and application. That, of course, allows for a substantial space in which different styles of rule could develop.
But the bottom line is that no Islamic government can be democratic in the sense of allowing the common people equal shares in legislation. Islam divides human activities into five categories from the permitted to the sinful, leaving little room for human interpretation, let alone ethical innovations.
To say that Islam is incompatible with democracy should not be seen as a disparagement of Islam. On the contrary, many Muslims would see it as a compliment because they believe that their idea of rule by God is superior to that of rule by men, which is democracy.
The great Persian poet Rumi pleads thus:
Oh, God, do not leave our affairs to us
For, if You do, woe is us.
Islamic tradition holds that God has always intervened in the affairs of men, notably by dispatching 124,000 prophets or emissaries to inform the mortals of his wishes and warnings.
Many Islamist thinkers regard democracy with horror.
The late Ayatollah Khomeini called democracy “a form of prostitution”, because he who gets the most votes wins the power that belongs only to God.
Sayyid Qutb, the Egyptian who has emerged as the ideological mentor of Salafists (fundamentalists who want to return to the idyllic Islamic state of their forebears) spent a year in the United States in the 1950s. He found “a nation that has forgotten God and been forsaken by Him; an arrogant nation that wants to rule itself”.
Last year Yussuf al-Ayyeri, one of the leading theoreticians of today’s Islamist movement, published a book in which he warned that the real danger to Islam did not come from American tanks and helicopter gunships in Iraq but from the idea of democracy and the government of the people.
Maudoodi, another of the Islamist theoreticians now fashionable, dreamt of a political system in which humans would act as automatons in accordance with rules set by God.
He said that God has arranged man’s biological functions in such a way that their operation is beyond human control. For our non-biological functions, notably our politics, God has also set rules that we have to discover and apply once and for all so that our societies can be on autopilot, so to speak.
The late Saudi theologian, Sheikh Muhammad bin Ibrahim al-Jubair, a man I respected though seldom agreed with, believed that the root cause of contemporary ills was the spread of democracy.
“Only one ambition is worthy of Islam,” he liked to say, “to save the world from the curse of democracy: to teach men that they cannot rule themselves on the basis of man-made laws. Mankind has strayed from the path of God, we must return to that path or face certain annihilation.”
Those who claim that Islam is compatible with democracy should know that they are not flattering Muslims.
In the past 14 centuries Muslims have, on occasions, succeeded in creating successful societies without democracy. And there is no guarantee that democracy never produces disastrous results (after all, Hitler was democratically elected).
The fact that almost all Muslim states today can be rated as failures or, at least, underachievers, is not because they are Islamic but because they are ruled by corrupt and despotic elites that, even when they proclaim an Islamist ideology, are, in fact, secular dictators.
Socrates ridiculed the myth of democracy by pointing out that men always call on experts to deal with specific tasks, but when it comes to the more important matters concerning the community, they allow every Tom, Dick and Harry an equal say.
In response his contemporary, Protagoras, one of the original defenders of democracy, argued: “People in the cities, especially in Athens, listen only to experts in matters of expertise, but when they meet for consultation on the political art, ie of the general question of government, everybody participates.”
Traditional Islamic political thought is closer to Socrates than to Protagoras. The common folk, al-awwam, are regarded as “animals”. The interpretation of the divine law is reserved only for the experts.
Political power, like many other domains including philosophy, is reserved for the “khawas” who, in some Sufi traditions, are even exempt from the rituals of the faith.
The “common folk”, however, must do as they are told either by the text and tradition or by fatwas (edicts) issued by the experts. Khomeini used the word “mustazafeen” (the feeble ones) to describe the general population.
Islam is about certainty (iqan) while democracy is about doubt. Islam cannot allow people to do as they please, even in the privacy of their bedrooms, because God is always present, all-hearing and all-seeing.
There is consultation in Islam: wa shawerhum fil amr (and consult them in matters). But, here, consultation is about specifics only, never about the overall design of society.
In democracy there is a constitution that can be amended or changed. The Koran, however, is the immutable word of God, beyond amendment or change.
This debate is not an easy one to have, because Islam has become an issue of political controversy in the West.
On the one hand we have Islamophobia, a particular affliction of those who blame Islam for all the ills of our world. Some Muslims regard any criticism of Islam as Islamophobia.
On the other hand we have Islamoflattery, which claims that everything good under the sun came from Islam. (According to a recent BBC documentary on Islam, even cinema was invented in the 9th century by a Muslim lens maker in Baghdad, named Abu-Hufus!)
This is often practised by a new generation of the Turques de profession, westerners who are prepared to apply the rules of critical analysis to everything under the sun except Islam.
They think they are doing Islam a favour. They are not.
Depriving Islam of critical scrutiny is bad for Islam and Muslims, and ultimately dangerous for the whole world. There are 57 nations in the Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC). Not one is yet a democracy.
We should not allow the everything-is-equal-to-everything-else fashion of postmodernist multiculturalism and political correctness to prevent us from acknowledging differences and even incompatibilities in the name of a soggy consensus. If we are all the same, how can we have a dialogue of civilisations?
Muslims should not be duped into believing that they can have their cake and eat it. Muslims can build successful societies provided they treat Islam as a matter of personal, private belief and not as a political ideology that seeks to monopolise the public space shared by the whole of humanity and dictate every aspect of individual and community life. Islam is incompatible with democracy.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/23/2004
0 comments
- - -
HE PREDICTED THE CLASH OF CIVILISATIONS
Harvard professor Samuel P Huntington foresaw the current crisis
An excellent article in today's Sunday Times by Sarah Baxter - copied here in full because, sorry to say, direct linking is not possible:
Harvard professor Samuel P Huntington foresaw the current crisis. Now, he tells Sarah Baxter, to beat terrorism America must first defend its own culture.
Few academics have more of an eagle eye than Professor Samuel P Huntington of Harvard University and author of the prescient The Clash of Civilisations. While the rest of us were celebrating the end of the cold war and jawing about peace in the Middle East in the 1990s, he was coolly surveying the crack-up of Yugoslavia and a host of other minor but bloody wars and warning of a collision to come between an insurgent Islam and a gently declining West.
An ivory tower is a natural location for surveying the grand sweep of history and its consequences. To my surprise I find the professor in a modern suite of offices on a high street away from Harvard’s ivy-clad halls. He is surrounded by books piled high on the floor, desk and shelves including many translations of his most famous tome, which launched 1,000 academic conferences before a bunch of suicide pilots turned theory into practice on September 11, 2001 and sealed his reputation as the world’s foremost scholar of the modern age.
Huntington has a limp handshake and soft voice, but he has too much intellectual self-confidence for shyness. He is lanky with a gentle, disarming smile that belies the toughness of his thinking. If his frame is weedy, his brain is supercharged. At 77 he has little tolerance for political correctness and some surprising views on the war on terror and the fighting in Iraq.
“It’s difficult not to be frank about this,” he says. “If we look around the world, polls in Muslim countries — and not just in Arab countries — reveal that Osama Bin Laden is among the most popular figures.” There can be few better examples of a clash of values than the hero worship of a mass murderer in large swathes of the globe.
When Huntington’s essay was published in 1993 (it became a book three years later), he was criticised for his pessimism. Those who believed that he was on to something have been shocked by the pace of unravelling events.
“We have now come to recognise something I didn’t,” he says. “The extent to which there was a growing network of militant Islamic groups with cells in dozens and dozens of countries that was waging a war on western civilisation. We’d had a few attacks by Al-Qaeda but tended to think of them in individual terms. We didn’t appreciate it was part of a broader pattern that materialised on September 11.”
One might expect Huntington to have a “bring it on” approach to the epic clash. If conflict is inevitable, why not go for it, I suggest.
On the contrary, the war on terror is “most unfortunate”, he insists. Battling Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan was certainly justified because “that was the base they attacked us from”. But the “with us or against us” framing of the war on terror by President George W Bush has had catastrophic implications.
“What is happening now is that all the local wars between Muslims and non-Muslims are being incorporated into a broad clash of civilisations,” the professor warns, as he surveys ethnic and regional conflicts in Chechnya, Africa, the Philippines and elsewhere. “It has given nations a great excuse to say ‘we’re fighting terrorists and we’re enlisting in your war’.
“I opposed going into Iraq. My argument was that if we invade Iraq we’ll become involved in two wars. One against Saddam Hussein and his army, which we will win quickly, and a second with the Iraqi people that we can never win, because people don’t want to be dominated by a foreign power.”
Before the anti-war left brings out the garlands, a word of caution. In Huntington’s view the only way to fight a war of civilisations is to shore up one’s own cultural values. That means tossing aside liberal nostrums such as “multiculturalism” and robustly asserting the traditions that have led the West to be a beacon of freedom and prosperity.
This has caused him no end of trouble in his new book, Who Are We? (Free Press, £18.99), about the challenge to American national identity. He has been criticised for asserting that Hispanic migration threatens the predominantly white Anglo-Protestant foundations of American society, based on individualism and respect for the law.
Even right-wing commentators have described his fears as bigoted nonsense, although a handful have praised his courage. Huntington shrugs off the criticism as an example of “how difficult it is to have a serious and informed exchange on the fundamental question about the United States’s future as a nation and a culture”. In truth he is not bothered, feeling that history has a way of vindicating him in the long term.
When it comes to Europe, Huntington is just as alarmist. He has been reading about the Spanish government’s identification of 300 suspects in the Madrid bombing from 11 different sleeper cells. He is in no doubt that there are as many terrorists in Britain hidden in Muslim communities.
“Certainly the idea of a fifth column is an issue. There clearly is a sympathetic environment which varies from country to country,” he says.
In western Europe we are uncomfortable with asserting the fundamental values of our society, he suggests, picking “ridiculous” quarrels in which “there is nothing material at stake”, such as the one over headscarves for Muslim schoolgirls in France.
There is a much broader threat. When Huntington looks at the Christian West’s declining fertility rates and the expanding Muslim population he can feel the Earth’s cultural plates shift.
He is all for religious tolerance and is lax about his own religious habits — he never attends church, for instance. But to him Christendom is not an outdated term. “Some people are embarrassed to describe it that way, but I’m not,” he says. “The historical definition of Europe is countries that are western and Christian.”
It is “perfectly justifiable”, he says, to want the European Union to be a community of countries with a common culture — a Christian club in other words — just as it is preposterous for multiculturalists to condemn the vigorous assertion of America’s traditional values as “un-American”.
The best way to fight the battle of civilisations is by defending one’s own culture. Bush’s big mistake has been to believe that a nation’s values can be exported by soldiers. Attempting to impose western ideals such as democracy on a foreign culture is an epic blunder, Huntington fears: “There has been very little appreciation of how different Iraq is from the United States. This is a society where the family, the tribe and the clan dominate everything. If you ’re in a position to give a member of your family a job, you are morally obliged to do so.”
The more Bush insists on staying the course, the more conflicts are likely to spread across the globe: “Unfortunately it’s helping to create a feeling on both sides that this really is a raging clash of civilisations. In my book I was saying, ‘We’ve got to avoid this’.”
Huntington will be voting for John Kerry, the Democrat presidential candidate, this autumn: “I think he certainly would be a tremendous improvement on the present incumbent and he will have a more multilateral, realistic view of foreign policy.”
There is, however, no quick fix for the global passions and enmities that the war has unleashed. The answer lies with us, not with politicians. How much do we believe in our own culture? Are we willing to defend it with our hearts and minds? This is where Huntington believes western intellectual elites have let us down. “I am a patriot and a scholar,” he declares resoundingly. Note that for him patriotism comes first and begins at home.
HE PREDICTED THE CLASH OF CIVILISATIONS
Harvard professor Samuel P Huntington foresaw the current crisis
An excellent article in today's Sunday Times by Sarah Baxter - copied here in full because, sorry to say, direct linking is not possible:
Harvard professor Samuel P Huntington foresaw the current crisis. Now, he tells Sarah Baxter, to beat terrorism America must first defend its own culture.
Few academics have more of an eagle eye than Professor Samuel P Huntington of Harvard University and author of the prescient The Clash of Civilisations. While the rest of us were celebrating the end of the cold war and jawing about peace in the Middle East in the 1990s, he was coolly surveying the crack-up of Yugoslavia and a host of other minor but bloody wars and warning of a collision to come between an insurgent Islam and a gently declining West.
An ivory tower is a natural location for surveying the grand sweep of history and its consequences. To my surprise I find the professor in a modern suite of offices on a high street away from Harvard’s ivy-clad halls. He is surrounded by books piled high on the floor, desk and shelves including many translations of his most famous tome, which launched 1,000 academic conferences before a bunch of suicide pilots turned theory into practice on September 11, 2001 and sealed his reputation as the world’s foremost scholar of the modern age.
Huntington has a limp handshake and soft voice, but he has too much intellectual self-confidence for shyness. He is lanky with a gentle, disarming smile that belies the toughness of his thinking. If his frame is weedy, his brain is supercharged. At 77 he has little tolerance for political correctness and some surprising views on the war on terror and the fighting in Iraq.
“It’s difficult not to be frank about this,” he says. “If we look around the world, polls in Muslim countries — and not just in Arab countries — reveal that Osama Bin Laden is among the most popular figures.” There can be few better examples of a clash of values than the hero worship of a mass murderer in large swathes of the globe.
When Huntington’s essay was published in 1993 (it became a book three years later), he was criticised for his pessimism. Those who believed that he was on to something have been shocked by the pace of unravelling events.
“We have now come to recognise something I didn’t,” he says. “The extent to which there was a growing network of militant Islamic groups with cells in dozens and dozens of countries that was waging a war on western civilisation. We’d had a few attacks by Al-Qaeda but tended to think of them in individual terms. We didn’t appreciate it was part of a broader pattern that materialised on September 11.”
One might expect Huntington to have a “bring it on” approach to the epic clash. If conflict is inevitable, why not go for it, I suggest.
On the contrary, the war on terror is “most unfortunate”, he insists. Battling Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan was certainly justified because “that was the base they attacked us from”. But the “with us or against us” framing of the war on terror by President George W Bush has had catastrophic implications.
“What is happening now is that all the local wars between Muslims and non-Muslims are being incorporated into a broad clash of civilisations,” the professor warns, as he surveys ethnic and regional conflicts in Chechnya, Africa, the Philippines and elsewhere. “It has given nations a great excuse to say ‘we’re fighting terrorists and we’re enlisting in your war’.
“I opposed going into Iraq. My argument was that if we invade Iraq we’ll become involved in two wars. One against Saddam Hussein and his army, which we will win quickly, and a second with the Iraqi people that we can never win, because people don’t want to be dominated by a foreign power.”
Before the anti-war left brings out the garlands, a word of caution. In Huntington’s view the only way to fight a war of civilisations is to shore up one’s own cultural values. That means tossing aside liberal nostrums such as “multiculturalism” and robustly asserting the traditions that have led the West to be a beacon of freedom and prosperity.
This has caused him no end of trouble in his new book, Who Are We? (Free Press, £18.99), about the challenge to American national identity. He has been criticised for asserting that Hispanic migration threatens the predominantly white Anglo-Protestant foundations of American society, based on individualism and respect for the law.
Even right-wing commentators have described his fears as bigoted nonsense, although a handful have praised his courage. Huntington shrugs off the criticism as an example of “how difficult it is to have a serious and informed exchange on the fundamental question about the United States’s future as a nation and a culture”. In truth he is not bothered, feeling that history has a way of vindicating him in the long term.
When it comes to Europe, Huntington is just as alarmist. He has been reading about the Spanish government’s identification of 300 suspects in the Madrid bombing from 11 different sleeper cells. He is in no doubt that there are as many terrorists in Britain hidden in Muslim communities.
“Certainly the idea of a fifth column is an issue. There clearly is a sympathetic environment which varies from country to country,” he says.
In western Europe we are uncomfortable with asserting the fundamental values of our society, he suggests, picking “ridiculous” quarrels in which “there is nothing material at stake”, such as the one over headscarves for Muslim schoolgirls in France.
There is a much broader threat. When Huntington looks at the Christian West’s declining fertility rates and the expanding Muslim population he can feel the Earth’s cultural plates shift.
He is all for religious tolerance and is lax about his own religious habits — he never attends church, for instance. But to him Christendom is not an outdated term. “Some people are embarrassed to describe it that way, but I’m not,” he says. “The historical definition of Europe is countries that are western and Christian.”
It is “perfectly justifiable”, he says, to want the European Union to be a community of countries with a common culture — a Christian club in other words — just as it is preposterous for multiculturalists to condemn the vigorous assertion of America’s traditional values as “un-American”.
The best way to fight the battle of civilisations is by defending one’s own culture. Bush’s big mistake has been to believe that a nation’s values can be exported by soldiers. Attempting to impose western ideals such as democracy on a foreign culture is an epic blunder, Huntington fears: “There has been very little appreciation of how different Iraq is from the United States. This is a society where the family, the tribe and the clan dominate everything. If you ’re in a position to give a member of your family a job, you are morally obliged to do so.”
The more Bush insists on staying the course, the more conflicts are likely to spread across the globe: “Unfortunately it’s helping to create a feeling on both sides that this really is a raging clash of civilisations. In my book I was saying, ‘We’ve got to avoid this’.”
Huntington will be voting for John Kerry, the Democrat presidential candidate, this autumn: “I think he certainly would be a tremendous improvement on the present incumbent and he will have a more multilateral, realistic view of foreign policy.”
There is, however, no quick fix for the global passions and enmities that the war has unleashed. The answer lies with us, not with politicians. How much do we believe in our own culture? Are we willing to defend it with our hearts and minds? This is where Huntington believes western intellectual elites have let us down. “I am a patriot and a scholar,” he declares resoundingly. Note that for him patriotism comes first and begins at home.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/23/2004
0 comments
Friday, May 21, 2004
IMPORTANT MESSAGE TO BLOGGERS FROM DR JAMES MOORE:
WHY YOUR ACTION ON SUDAN MATTERS TODAY
Look. Please read this. I'm not blogging it for my own good. Banging on about the Sudan gives me a headache and is depressing because hardly anyone's interested.
How much does it cost us to link to the Sudan blog, Doctors Without Borders and Human Rights Watch? Nothing. Except ten minutes of our time to blog a few lines about this and a few links.
Jim Moore is working hard at getting this story in the mainstream media. Lives are at stake. Time is running out. Please read why. Thank you.
PS Jim has just updated on a new form of Ebola reported today. He asks if you know any journalists, please try to interest her or him in the story today. Here's pinging - via Technorati - five professional journalists whose blogs I follow on a regular basis: Danny O'Brien, Melanie Phillips, Stephen Pollard, Gavin Sheridan, Bill Thompson.
- - -
THANK YOU TO THE BBC FOR REPORTING ON THE SUDAN:
Peacekeepers to be called to Darfur as soon as possible
Breakthrough news from the Sudan blog: Passion of the Present: "It is nice to see a small bit of enabling action taken in Sudan, as is reported today by the BBC: Sudan has said it will scrap the need for aid workers to have special permits to enter the troubled Darfur region in the west of the country. It said embassies would issue standard visas to aid workers within 48 hours. Announcing the change, Foreign Minister Mostafa Othman Ismail called on African countries to send peacekeepers to Darfur as soon as possible.
Further reading: The BBC has posted photos, accompanied by personal stories told by people in Darfur. Passion of the Present has featured a post of mine on Women and the Sudan and horrific mass rapes being used as a weapon of war.
Note Joi Ito's Web: Caring about the rest of the world.
WHY YOUR ACTION ON SUDAN MATTERS TODAY
Look. Please read this. I'm not blogging it for my own good. Banging on about the Sudan gives me a headache and is depressing because hardly anyone's interested.
How much does it cost us to link to the Sudan blog, Doctors Without Borders and Human Rights Watch? Nothing. Except ten minutes of our time to blog a few lines about this and a few links.
Jim Moore is working hard at getting this story in the mainstream media. Lives are at stake. Time is running out. Please read why. Thank you.
PS Jim has just updated on a new form of Ebola reported today. He asks if you know any journalists, please try to interest her or him in the story today. Here's pinging - via Technorati - five professional journalists whose blogs I follow on a regular basis: Danny O'Brien, Melanie Phillips, Stephen Pollard, Gavin Sheridan, Bill Thompson.
- - -
THANK YOU TO THE BBC FOR REPORTING ON THE SUDAN:
Peacekeepers to be called to Darfur as soon as possible
Breakthrough news from the Sudan blog: Passion of the Present: "It is nice to see a small bit of enabling action taken in Sudan, as is reported today by the BBC: Sudan has said it will scrap the need for aid workers to have special permits to enter the troubled Darfur region in the west of the country. It said embassies would issue standard visas to aid workers within 48 hours. Announcing the change, Foreign Minister Mostafa Othman Ismail called on African countries to send peacekeepers to Darfur as soon as possible.
Further reading: The BBC has posted photos, accompanied by personal stories told by people in Darfur. Passion of the Present has featured a post of mine on Women and the Sudan and horrific mass rapes being used as a weapon of war.
Note Joi Ito's Web: Caring about the rest of the world.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/21/2004
0 comments
- - -
MAC OS X SECURITY FLAW IS A HOAX:
Confirmed by Apple Technical Support in India
After I completed the five steps (see my previous post), my mac was working fine. Until I couldn't open any web pages. Either my ISP Virgin.net was at a standstill - or something was wrong. More likely I'd done something wrong with that chessboard :-) Because I have a 3-year warranty, I phoned Apple Technical Support to check on what I'd done.
A very helpful technician called Boris, had not heard of the OS X flaw, so I gave him my blog URL and asked him to get it up on his screen. He'd not heard of weblogs. He read my latest posts. And then offered to formally log this enquiry, make some investigations and phone me back on my mobile in ten minutes. I am typing this while I await his call.
He has just phoned. After speaking in-depth with a Product Specialist he says Apple emphatically state: there is not a security flaw in the mac operating system. He said Apple engineers around the world, work on macs every day, month after month and year after year and there is no way there is a security flaw for mac operating system. He said a few months back they gave out a security warning about a trojan horse on Microsoft software - but it had nothing to do with the operating system. I asked him if he was 100% sure. He said yes. I asked if it was a hoax. He said, well yes. I suggested that Apple post this confirmation on their website before this rumour and hoax gathers momentum on the Internet. He agreed to put the suggestion forward.
Because my machine was acting up, Boris talked me through the steps of reinstalling my software using the software install and restore CD. It took half an hour. Everything is now as good as new again. I'm glad it was only a hoax. Apple are still as awesome as they say :-)
I am pinging a copy of this good news - via Technorati - to: Chris Young, Wired News, Jay Allen, Liz Lawley and Jim O'Connell.
MAC OS X SECURITY FLAW IS A HOAX:
Confirmed by Apple Technical Support in India
After I completed the five steps (see my previous post), my mac was working fine. Until I couldn't open any web pages. Either my ISP Virgin.net was at a standstill - or something was wrong. More likely I'd done something wrong with that chessboard :-) Because I have a 3-year warranty, I phoned Apple Technical Support to check on what I'd done.
A very helpful technician called Boris, had not heard of the OS X flaw, so I gave him my blog URL and asked him to get it up on his screen. He'd not heard of weblogs. He read my latest posts. And then offered to formally log this enquiry, make some investigations and phone me back on my mobile in ten minutes. I am typing this while I await his call.
He has just phoned. After speaking in-depth with a Product Specialist he says Apple emphatically state: there is not a security flaw in the mac operating system. He said Apple engineers around the world, work on macs every day, month after month and year after year and there is no way there is a security flaw for mac operating system. He said a few months back they gave out a security warning about a trojan horse on Microsoft software - but it had nothing to do with the operating system. I asked him if he was 100% sure. He said yes. I asked if it was a hoax. He said, well yes. I suggested that Apple post this confirmation on their website before this rumour and hoax gathers momentum on the Internet. He agreed to put the suggestion forward.
Because my machine was acting up, Boris talked me through the steps of reinstalling my software using the software install and restore CD. It took half an hour. Everything is now as good as new again. I'm glad it was only a hoax. Apple are still as awesome as they say :-)
I am pinging a copy of this good news - via Technorati - to: Chris Young, Wired News, Jay Allen, Liz Lawley and Jim O'Connell.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/21/2004
0 comments
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/21/2004
0 comments
- - -
WE LOVE BLOGGER - THANKS TO BLOGGER
For giving us free unlimited photo hosting
On 5/19/2004 at Blogger's homepage, Biz writes: "Did someone order unlimited photo hosting and an easy way to send pictures to a blog? Hello, Photoblogging should get you started. Oh, and that's on the house."
Unlimited photo hosting? On the house? Looks like I can soon start learning how to post pictures here. Thanks Blogger.
WE LOVE BLOGGER - THANKS TO BLOGGER
For giving us free unlimited photo hosting
On 5/19/2004 at Blogger's homepage, Biz writes: "Did someone order unlimited photo hosting and an easy way to send pictures to a blog? Hello, Photoblogging should get you started. Oh, and that's on the house."
Unlimited photo hosting? On the house? Looks like I can soon start learning how to post pictures here. Thanks Blogger.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/21/2004
1 comments
- - -
MAC OS X HIGHLY CRITICAL SECURITY FLAW:
What to do
Following on from my previous post, American blogger and techie extraordinaire Jim O'Connell, at Wirefarm in Tokyo, says "if you use a Mac, please read this. There is a serious vulnerability in OS X right now that will let a web page or email do bad stuff to your files. It could delete any file that you, as a user, have permission to delete."
- - -
Note, Of course, I can't understand a word of it and have never heard of Telnet. I'll try following the instructions again, after posting this. I may need to take a short blogging break to sort this out and, while I'm at it, get Symantec's anti virus protection (is that the best for a Mac, does any reader know?) installed on my new PowerBook G4. I hope other Mac users take the time out to do same.
- - -
Update: Thanks to Liz Lawley for posting these easy step instructions (I'll try them as soon as I've posted this):
"If, like me, you just want to know how to fix this fast (since Apple has apparently known about this since February and hasn’t fixed it, it wouldn’t be wise to wait for their patch), here’s the approach to use:
1. Download the freeware tool More Internet.
2. From the disk image, run “install prefpane,” which will put the MoreInternet preference panel into your System Preferences panel.
3. Open the MoreInternet panel, and select the help: protocol.
4. Change the application it launches from the Help Viewer (which has the script-running vulnerability) to something benign. (I used TextEdit.) I used Chess, which, unlike TextEdit, gives me a clear visual cue that a page tried to invoke the help: protocol.
5. Make sure it worked by going to the scary but harmless example.
In my comments, Jay Allen points out that you should repeat steps 3 and 4 for the disk: protocol, as well."
- - -
Update 11.05 am: I've carried out steps 1-4. If I'm not supposed to end up with the PICTURE of a chessboard when I click into step 5, please don't laugh at me - because that's what I've got. I couldn't work out step 4 and just clicked around, trying to find a way to insert the word Chess - like Liz did. I saw Chess (an application I think) somewhere and clicked onto it. All of a sudden "Chess" replaced the word "Help" in the list that step 4 brings up. Does any reader know if I've done it correctly? Can I now stop worrying about this security flaw? Do I still need to install Norton anti virus? Or is there something better to protect Macs? Any advice would be gratefully received. I cannot bear anymore computer related problems.
MAC OS X HIGHLY CRITICAL SECURITY FLAW:
What to do
Following on from my previous post, American blogger and techie extraordinaire Jim O'Connell, at Wirefarm in Tokyo, says "if you use a Mac, please read this. There is a serious vulnerability in OS X right now that will let a web page or email do bad stuff to your files. It could delete any file that you, as a user, have permission to delete."
- - -
Note, Of course, I can't understand a word of it and have never heard of Telnet. I'll try following the instructions again, after posting this. I may need to take a short blogging break to sort this out and, while I'm at it, get Symantec's anti virus protection (is that the best for a Mac, does any reader know?) installed on my new PowerBook G4. I hope other Mac users take the time out to do same.
- - -
Update: Thanks to Liz Lawley for posting these easy step instructions (I'll try them as soon as I've posted this):
"If, like me, you just want to know how to fix this fast (since Apple has apparently known about this since February and hasn’t fixed it, it wouldn’t be wise to wait for their patch), here’s the approach to use:
1. Download the freeware tool More Internet.
2. From the disk image, run “install prefpane,” which will put the MoreInternet preference panel into your System Preferences panel.
3. Open the MoreInternet panel, and select the help: protocol.
4. Change the application it launches from the Help Viewer (which has the script-running vulnerability) to something benign. (I used TextEdit.) I used Chess, which, unlike TextEdit, gives me a clear visual cue that a page tried to invoke the help: protocol.
5. Make sure it worked by going to the scary but harmless example.
In my comments, Jay Allen points out that you should repeat steps 3 and 4 for the disk: protocol, as well."
- - -
Update 11.05 am: I've carried out steps 1-4. If I'm not supposed to end up with the PICTURE of a chessboard when I click into step 5, please don't laugh at me - because that's what I've got. I couldn't work out step 4 and just clicked around, trying to find a way to insert the word Chess - like Liz did. I saw Chess (an application I think) somewhere and clicked onto it. All of a sudden "Chess" replaced the word "Help" in the list that step 4 brings up. Does any reader know if I've done it correctly? Can I now stop worrying about this security flaw? Do I still need to install Norton anti virus? Or is there something better to protect Macs? Any advice would be gratefully received. I cannot bear anymore computer related problems.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/21/2004
0 comments
Thursday, May 20, 2004
MAC OS
Security Warning
Wired News: Mac Hole Has Users, Hackers Abuzz. Apple are addressing the issue. Seems no victims have stepped forward yet.
[via Chris Young]
Security Warning
Wired News: Mac Hole Has Users, Hackers Abuzz. Apple are addressing the issue. Seems no victims have stepped forward yet.
[via Chris Young]
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/20/2004
0 comments
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/20/2004
0 comments
- - -
BBC FOLLOWS ONE DAY OF WAR:
In 16 locations around the world
Every minute, two people are killed in conflicts around the world. Often very little is known about the people who are fighting and dying:
The BBC programme One Day of War follows individual fighters in 16 of these wars, over the same 24 hour period. Use this map to find out about each of these conflicts. Why are people fighting? How long have the wars been going on? And how many have died? Then read accounts of the conflicts from each of the 16 locations."
[via Doctor's Orders]
BBC FOLLOWS ONE DAY OF WAR:
In 16 locations around the world
Every minute, two people are killed in conflicts around the world. Often very little is known about the people who are fighting and dying:
The BBC programme One Day of War follows individual fighters in 16 of these wars, over the same 24 hour period. Use this map to find out about each of these conflicts. Why are people fighting? How long have the wars been going on? And how many have died? Then read accounts of the conflicts from each of the 16 locations."
[via Doctor's Orders]
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/20/2004
0 comments
- - -
UZBEKISTAN:
Is in danger of becoming another Iraq
Clive Soley MP recently commented in his blog, "Uzbekistan is in danger of becoming another Iraq but it is not true that we are not putting pressure on for change. I agree however that there is a strong case for much tougher action. I have raised it but not formally in the House – so you read it here first!"
UZBEKISTAN:
Is in danger of becoming another Iraq
Clive Soley MP recently commented in his blog, "Uzbekistan is in danger of becoming another Iraq but it is not true that we are not putting pressure on for change. I agree however that there is a strong case for much tougher action. I have raised it but not formally in the House – so you read it here first!"
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/20/2004
0 comments
- - -
IRAQ NEVER DECLARED BINARY ARTILLERY SHELLS FULL OF NERVE AGENT - Like the Sarin round used to attack our troops this week
Tantor says: "Uh oh. Looks like those nasty nonexistent WMDs are rearing their invisible heads. Blaster's Blog reveals that:
"Iraq never declared any binary 155mm artillery shells. In fact, they never claimed any filled with sarin at all in the UNSCOM Final report (Find on "Munitions declared by Iraq as remaining"). Not declared as existing at the end of the Gulf War, not having been destroyed in the Gulf War, not having been destroyed unilaterally. The only binary munitions claimed by the Iraqis were aerial bombs and missile warheads. Not in an artillery shell."
Expect more surprises in the future. Those WMDs are out there somewhere, waiting to be found. Finding this one sarin shell is like Mel Fisher finding the first Spanish doubloons spilled on the seabed from the sunken Atocha."
IRAQ NEVER DECLARED BINARY ARTILLERY SHELLS FULL OF NERVE AGENT - Like the Sarin round used to attack our troops this week
Tantor says: "Uh oh. Looks like those nasty nonexistent WMDs are rearing their invisible heads. Blaster's Blog reveals that:
"Iraq never declared any binary 155mm artillery shells. In fact, they never claimed any filled with sarin at all in the UNSCOM Final report (Find on "Munitions declared by Iraq as remaining"). Not declared as existing at the end of the Gulf War, not having been destroyed in the Gulf War, not having been destroyed unilaterally. The only binary munitions claimed by the Iraqis were aerial bombs and missile warheads. Not in an artillery shell."
Expect more surprises in the future. Those WMDs are out there somewhere, waiting to be found. Finding this one sarin shell is like Mel Fisher finding the first Spanish doubloons spilled on the seabed from the sunken Atocha."
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/20/2004
0 comments
- - -
ADOPT-A-PLANT
"You call, you dig, you haul, that's all"
Friends of mine have large gardens with lots of big trees. One was especially proud of his fruit and olive trees. I've helped to plant several but have never owned a tree. It must seem a special responsibility, like caring for a pet's wellbeing. Cuddling a tree definitely feels good. Especially when it's warm - it feels alive and emits vibes. Not like hugging dead wood.
Anita blogs about three Giant Sequoias in Lake City, near Seattle, currently awaiting adoption through a free service called Adopt-A-Plant. At ten feet tall, they're still young. Even so, imagine the logistics involved in adopting any tree. Plant Amnesty make it sound so simple: "You call, you dig, you haul, that's all" - and, they say: PLEASE FILL HOLES AND LEAVE THE SITE TIDY.
Seems to me you'd have to read up on the needs of your chosen tree, make the phone calls, get the details and directions and go check it out. Then, return home and select the right spot in your garden. Maybe move other plants to make way. Enlist the help of a friend and organise a truck. Organise another visit to the tree's site. Find necessary tools, sheeting and materials. Get the truck, friend, tools and materials to the site. Dig up a ten foot tall Giant Sequoia without harming its roots and branches. Fill-in the empty hole, clean up the mess and load the tree. Gently drive home, unload and carry the tree to its new spot. Dig and prepare another deep hole. Plant the tree (straight) and fill in the hole. Feed and water the tree and friend. Clean up the mess. Return the truck. Phew. Adopt-A-Plant is a neat idea. But I get tired just thinking about it :-)
- - -
SAY NO TO SHRUB-SHEARING
And remember, stop topping trees!
Plant Amnesty says "people never seem to grasp that all plants, including forsythias have a height and width that is genetically programmed into them, and pruning really can't keep them under a certain size (for any reasonable time). When people prune to make things smaller, they are dismayed to find that the plant speeds up its growth rate to regain its original height."
Part of PlantAmnesty's mission is to provide accurate information about pruning and landscape maintenance. Their advice states: say no to shrub-shearing - and remember, topping is for your banana split, not your tree! See Plant Amnesty's Pruning Tips and 5 Reasons to Stop Topping Trees.
ADOPT-A-PLANT
"You call, you dig, you haul, that's all"
Friends of mine have large gardens with lots of big trees. One was especially proud of his fruit and olive trees. I've helped to plant several but have never owned a tree. It must seem a special responsibility, like caring for a pet's wellbeing. Cuddling a tree definitely feels good. Especially when it's warm - it feels alive and emits vibes. Not like hugging dead wood.
Anita blogs about three Giant Sequoias in Lake City, near Seattle, currently awaiting adoption through a free service called Adopt-A-Plant. At ten feet tall, they're still young. Even so, imagine the logistics involved in adopting any tree. Plant Amnesty make it sound so simple: "You call, you dig, you haul, that's all" - and, they say: PLEASE FILL HOLES AND LEAVE THE SITE TIDY.
Seems to me you'd have to read up on the needs of your chosen tree, make the phone calls, get the details and directions and go check it out. Then, return home and select the right spot in your garden. Maybe move other plants to make way. Enlist the help of a friend and organise a truck. Organise another visit to the tree's site. Find necessary tools, sheeting and materials. Get the truck, friend, tools and materials to the site. Dig up a ten foot tall Giant Sequoia without harming its roots and branches. Fill-in the empty hole, clean up the mess and load the tree. Gently drive home, unload and carry the tree to its new spot. Dig and prepare another deep hole. Plant the tree (straight) and fill in the hole. Feed and water the tree and friend. Clean up the mess. Return the truck. Phew. Adopt-A-Plant is a neat idea. But I get tired just thinking about it :-)
- - -
SAY NO TO SHRUB-SHEARING
And remember, stop topping trees!
Plant Amnesty says "people never seem to grasp that all plants, including forsythias have a height and width that is genetically programmed into them, and pruning really can't keep them under a certain size (for any reasonable time). When people prune to make things smaller, they are dismayed to find that the plant speeds up its growth rate to regain its original height."
Part of PlantAmnesty's mission is to provide accurate information about pruning and landscape maintenance. Their advice states: say no to shrub-shearing - and remember, topping is for your banana split, not your tree! See Plant Amnesty's Pruning Tips and 5 Reasons to Stop Topping Trees.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/20/2004
0 comments
Wednesday, May 19, 2004
HOW THE BLOG WORD GETS AROUND
The Memespread Project
The blogosphere has a strange ability to push a seemingly obscure idea into the forefront of people's minds in a heartbeat. How this happens is a bit of a mystery. Sam Arbesman wanted to know how it works, so he created a meme and set it loose. Read the rest at Wired News - and the Memespread Project analysis.
Courtesy via Chris Gulker via Gavin's Blog
- - -
WEBLOGS
A history and perspective
Veteran blogger Rebecca Blood's essay on weblogs: a history and perspective.
- - -
STUCK FOR BLOGS TO READ?
Ask Meta Filter - And ye shall receive
Metafilter, a Community Weblog. Note their page on "what's a weblog? - a comprehensive history of weblogs."
- - -
TONY RANDALL DIED
And Pauly won five dollars
When you get to know how hard Pauly in NYC works at getting lucky, you can't help laughing at this.
Here's something for you Pauly: "Breaking Vegas" and the The Divine Mr. M. ;-)
The Memespread Project
The blogosphere has a strange ability to push a seemingly obscure idea into the forefront of people's minds in a heartbeat. How this happens is a bit of a mystery. Sam Arbesman wanted to know how it works, so he created a meme and set it loose. Read the rest at Wired News - and the Memespread Project analysis.
Courtesy via Chris Gulker via Gavin's Blog
- - -
WEBLOGS
A history and perspective
Veteran blogger Rebecca Blood's essay on weblogs: a history and perspective.
- - -
STUCK FOR BLOGS TO READ?
Ask Meta Filter - And ye shall receive
Metafilter, a Community Weblog. Note their page on "what's a weblog? - a comprehensive history of weblogs."
- - -
TONY RANDALL DIED
And Pauly won five dollars
When you get to know how hard Pauly in NYC works at getting lucky, you can't help laughing at this.
Here's something for you Pauly: "Breaking Vegas" and the The Divine Mr. M. ;-)
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/19/2004
0 comments
- - -
BLOGGING PROTECTS AGAINST ALZHEIMER'S :-)
Use it or lose it
Courtesy of the Lancet Neurology June 2004 issue: Does doing the crossword every day protect against dementia? Or are those of us who don't participate in such cerebral activities already in the early stages of cognitive decline? Laura Fratiglioni and co-authors systematically analyse the published longitudinal studies exploring the effects of social network, physical activity, and non-physical leisure on cognition and dementia. They conclude that an active and socially integrated lifestyle in late life seems to protect against dementia and Alzheimer's disease.
- - -
ORAL SIMVASTATIN AND MS
Could it help ME?
Courtesy of the Lancet Neurology June 2004 issue: Statins and MS Drug treatments for multiple sclerosis (MS) are expensive and only partially effective. Recent knowledge that statins promote an anti-inflammatory response from the immune system suggest a potential in the treatment of MS. Timothy Vollmer and colleagues report that a daily dose of oral simvastatin over a 6-month period could inhibit the inflammatory components of MS that lead to neurological disability.
BLOGGING PROTECTS AGAINST ALZHEIMER'S :-)
Use it or lose it
Courtesy of the Lancet Neurology June 2004 issue: Does doing the crossword every day protect against dementia? Or are those of us who don't participate in such cerebral activities already in the early stages of cognitive decline? Laura Fratiglioni and co-authors systematically analyse the published longitudinal studies exploring the effects of social network, physical activity, and non-physical leisure on cognition and dementia. They conclude that an active and socially integrated lifestyle in late life seems to protect against dementia and Alzheimer's disease.
- - -
ORAL SIMVASTATIN AND MS
Could it help ME?
Courtesy of the Lancet Neurology June 2004 issue: Statins and MS Drug treatments for multiple sclerosis (MS) are expensive and only partially effective. Recent knowledge that statins promote an anti-inflammatory response from the immune system suggest a potential in the treatment of MS. Timothy Vollmer and colleagues report that a daily dose of oral simvastatin over a 6-month period could inhibit the inflammatory components of MS that lead to neurological disability.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/19/2004
0 comments
Tuesday, May 18, 2004
FROM THE COUNTRYSIDE WEST OF BOSTON:
Jim Moore with Canon Elph in his back yard
Imagine yourself blogging while sitting on cool grass beneath Jim Moore's trees, on a perfect day like this.
Surely writing in such peaceful surroundings, while taking in the sights, scents and sounds of the breeze and wildlife buzzing around, would affect the depth and tone of one's composition. And make the mindless destruction of life and this planet seem even crazier. Nature is so beautiful.
Imagine leaning back against one of Jim's trees, and looking up at the sky and sunlight through the leaves, and thinking about all the young soldiers battling to defend us, and bringing freedom and democracy to the people of Iraq. Heavily kitted out in the heat and dust. Guarding, fighting and social working on foot and in hot noisy tanks. Absorbing the daily pressures and tensions. Gas masks, chemical suits and bayonets at the ready. Being spat on and shot at, booby trapped, stoned, ambushed, beaten, tortured, bombed, maimed, mutilated or killed - and, all the while, thinking of the folks back home and the politicians and media saying that what they are doing in Iraq is wrong.
God bless and thank you to the soldiers of the world who are battling for us all, and sacrificing their lives, so that we may all enjoy freedom and democracy and continue living in peace while defending this beautiful Earth of ours.
Jim Moore with Canon Elph in his back yard
Imagine yourself blogging while sitting on cool grass beneath Jim Moore's trees, on a perfect day like this.
Surely writing in such peaceful surroundings, while taking in the sights, scents and sounds of the breeze and wildlife buzzing around, would affect the depth and tone of one's composition. And make the mindless destruction of life and this planet seem even crazier. Nature is so beautiful.
Imagine leaning back against one of Jim's trees, and looking up at the sky and sunlight through the leaves, and thinking about all the young soldiers battling to defend us, and bringing freedom and democracy to the people of Iraq. Heavily kitted out in the heat and dust. Guarding, fighting and social working on foot and in hot noisy tanks. Absorbing the daily pressures and tensions. Gas masks, chemical suits and bayonets at the ready. Being spat on and shot at, booby trapped, stoned, ambushed, beaten, tortured, bombed, maimed, mutilated or killed - and, all the while, thinking of the folks back home and the politicians and media saying that what they are doing in Iraq is wrong.
God bless and thank you to the soldiers of the world who are battling for us all, and sacrificing their lives, so that we may all enjoy freedom and democracy and continue living in peace while defending this beautiful Earth of ours.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/18/2004
0 comments
Monday, May 17, 2004
ALL MOBILE USERS PAY ATTENTION
ACE message is most definitely a hoax
There's an email circulating saying: "If you receive a phone call and your mobile phone displays (ACE) on the screen don't answer the call. End the call immediately. If you answer the call, your phone will be infected by a virus. This virus will erase all IMEI and IMSI information from both your phone and your SIM card, which will make your phone unable to connect with the telephone network. You will have to buy a new phone. This information has been confirmed by both Motorola and Nokia. There are over 3 million mobile phones being infected by this virus in USA now. You can also check this news in the CNN website. Please forward this piece of information to all your friends."
To check if this was a hoax, I emailed British technologist Pete Barr-Watson in Brighton, England. Here's Pete's response: "...As for the ACE message, it is most definitely a hoax. The ACE name would have to be in your directory to show up, and there are so many different operating systems and variations that there are no mobile viruses that are likely to produce this result. (actually, I just googled it too, and got this response --> http://us.mcafee.com/virusInfo/default.asp?id=description&virus_k=99320)."
- - -
CATCHING UP ON MEMORIES
Pete's Flash fame and dot.com years
Pete's nearly finished writing the story of his dot.com years. On his forthcoming book (the dotcom years and more) he says: "Writing about the last few years has been quite cathartic for me. I went through my 30-something years embroiled in the whole dotcom phenomenon one way or another. I saw things, heard things and did things that seem fantastical to me now and the constituent parts make for a more dynamic story than any fictional novel could deliver! Money, drugs, intrigue, subterfuge, sex and rock and roll - it's all there... I'll get it finished by summer hopefully and then publish it here under a CC license. Not sure about naming names yet though; we'll see..."
BTW Pete's wowy bod is in the link above - here's his handsome cheery face :-)
ACE message is most definitely a hoax
There's an email circulating saying: "If you receive a phone call and your mobile phone displays (ACE) on the screen don't answer the call. End the call immediately. If you answer the call, your phone will be infected by a virus. This virus will erase all IMEI and IMSI information from both your phone and your SIM card, which will make your phone unable to connect with the telephone network. You will have to buy a new phone. This information has been confirmed by both Motorola and Nokia. There are over 3 million mobile phones being infected by this virus in USA now. You can also check this news in the CNN website. Please forward this piece of information to all your friends."
To check if this was a hoax, I emailed British technologist Pete Barr-Watson in Brighton, England. Here's Pete's response: "...As for the ACE message, it is most definitely a hoax. The ACE name would have to be in your directory to show up, and there are so many different operating systems and variations that there are no mobile viruses that are likely to produce this result. (actually, I just googled it too, and got this response --> http://us.mcafee.com/virusInfo/default.asp?id=description&virus_k=99320)."
- - -
CATCHING UP ON MEMORIES
Pete's Flash fame and dot.com years
Pete's nearly finished writing the story of his dot.com years. On his forthcoming book (the dotcom years and more) he says: "Writing about the last few years has been quite cathartic for me. I went through my 30-something years embroiled in the whole dotcom phenomenon one way or another. I saw things, heard things and did things that seem fantastical to me now and the constituent parts make for a more dynamic story than any fictional novel could deliver! Money, drugs, intrigue, subterfuge, sex and rock and roll - it's all there... I'll get it finished by summer hopefully and then publish it here under a CC license. Not sure about naming names yet though; we'll see..."
BTW Pete's wowy bod is in the link above - here's his handsome cheery face :-)
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/17/2004
0 comments
HOMEPAGE
July 2003
August 2003
September 2003
October 2003
November 2003
December 2003
January 2004
February 2004
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
January 2005
February 2005
March 2005
April 2005
May 2005
June 2005
July 2005
August 2005
September 2005
October 2005
November 2005
December 2005
January 2006
February 2006
March 2006
April 2006
May 2006
June 2006
July 2006
September 2006
October 2006
November 2006
January 2007
February 2007
September 2008
October 2008
November 2008
January 2009
February 2009
April 2009
May 2009
June 2009
July 2009
August 2009
October 2009
November 2009
January 2010
June 2010
August 2010
Thank you to Blogger for this weblog - you can start yours for free now at:
Please contact me anytime
Email: Ingrid Jones
- - -
HOW BLOGGERS MIGHT MAKE A LIVING
Ghost blogging for celebrities
British blogger Suw Charman at Chocolate and Vodka enjoys writing and wants to make a living out of blogging. Here's Tom Mangan's great idea on how bloggers might make a living: start blogging about your favourite celeb, they might just hire you. In other words: ghost blogging. Tom suggests that famous people might eventually start blogging to use it as a publicity tool. As they may not have the time, or inclination, they could hire fans to ghost blog for them.
People ghost write books for well known people, I don't see why bloggers can't ghost write blogs.
Gavin Sheridan says "what you do is: create this wonderful celeb blog, attract all this attention and traffic, and when the celeb's "people" contact you, you say, "well, you know, I'd love to be able to do this full-time, but ...."
- - -
GAVIN'S PHOTO AND BIO
He's a 23-year-old cutie :-)
Check out Gavin Sheridan's photo and his blog's bio:
Gavin Sheridan is a freelance journalist based between London and Cork. He has been published in such luminary titles as the Irish Examiner and the New Statesman. Before doing freelance hackery he worked as a technical writer, bartender, and tradesman. He attended the Milltown Institute, completing one year of a three year philosophy degree. He is (obviously) the initiator of this weblog, established in June 2002. In his spare time he enjoys reading history, politics and philosophy. He enjoys music, mainly Irish and Classical. He also enjoys pints of Murphy's.
Gavin's co-bloggers are: Isabelle Esling who hails from France - English is her third language after German and French. She is an Eminem fanatic, and mainly posts on hip hop and R&B music. She also posts on French issues. She is a single mother with two children.
And, Anthony Sheridan, Gavin's uncle - currently retired, spending his time reading and writing. Before retirement he was Chief Petty Officer in the Irish Navy, in the communications division. Upon retirement he studied at University College Cork, achieving a degree in Philosophy and Greek/Roman civilisation."
- - -
BLOGGER NEWS
Hooray for Bloggywood
Congratulations are in order for one of Blogger's users. Film deal for 'Baghdad blogger': "The Baghdad Blog, a book based on an online diary written by an Iraqi man about life during the conflict there, is to be made into a film." First a book, then a movie and it all started at Blogger. Nice! – Biz [5/12/2004 12:16:00 PM]
- - -
MOVABLE TYPE 3.0
Mena answers some questions
Note to Wendy who's testing beta MT 3.0: there's a discussion at Joi Ito's re Mena answers questions on MT 3.0. Thought you and other MT users might be interested. Good luck with your exams. Thinking of you.
HOW BLOGGERS MIGHT MAKE A LIVING
Ghost blogging for celebrities
British blogger Suw Charman at Chocolate and Vodka enjoys writing and wants to make a living out of blogging. Here's Tom Mangan's great idea on how bloggers might make a living: start blogging about your favourite celeb, they might just hire you. In other words: ghost blogging. Tom suggests that famous people might eventually start blogging to use it as a publicity tool. As they may not have the time, or inclination, they could hire fans to ghost blog for them.
People ghost write books for well known people, I don't see why bloggers can't ghost write blogs.
Gavin Sheridan says "what you do is: create this wonderful celeb blog, attract all this attention and traffic, and when the celeb's "people" contact you, you say, "well, you know, I'd love to be able to do this full-time, but ...."
- - -
GAVIN'S PHOTO AND BIO
He's a 23-year-old cutie :-)
Check out Gavin Sheridan's photo and his blog's bio:
Gavin Sheridan is a freelance journalist based between London and Cork. He has been published in such luminary titles as the Irish Examiner and the New Statesman. Before doing freelance hackery he worked as a technical writer, bartender, and tradesman. He attended the Milltown Institute, completing one year of a three year philosophy degree. He is (obviously) the initiator of this weblog, established in June 2002. In his spare time he enjoys reading history, politics and philosophy. He enjoys music, mainly Irish and Classical. He also enjoys pints of Murphy's.
Gavin's co-bloggers are: Isabelle Esling who hails from France - English is her third language after German and French. She is an Eminem fanatic, and mainly posts on hip hop and R&B music. She also posts on French issues. She is a single mother with two children.
And, Anthony Sheridan, Gavin's uncle - currently retired, spending his time reading and writing. Before retirement he was Chief Petty Officer in the Irish Navy, in the communications division. Upon retirement he studied at University College Cork, achieving a degree in Philosophy and Greek/Roman civilisation."
- - -
BLOGGER NEWS
Hooray for Bloggywood
Congratulations are in order for one of Blogger's users. Film deal for 'Baghdad blogger': "The Baghdad Blog, a book based on an online diary written by an Iraqi man about life during the conflict there, is to be made into a film." First a book, then a movie and it all started at Blogger. Nice! – Biz [5/12/2004 12:16:00 PM]
- - -
MOVABLE TYPE 3.0
Mena answers some questions
Note to Wendy who's testing beta MT 3.0: there's a discussion at Joi Ito's re Mena answers questions on MT 3.0. Thought you and other MT users might be interested. Good luck with your exams. Thinking of you.
ME and Ophelia
is the personal blog of Ingrid J. Jones
I live by the sea in England, United Kingdom
Here on my laptop I communicate to my friends
About things in general and my life with M.E. and cat Ophelia
Home user technology and business services
Food and household management
How it all impacts on my *lifestyle management programme*
And my battle for more energy.
My Blogger Profile
My other blogs:
Archive:
HOMEPAGE
July 2003
August 2003
September 2003
October 2003
November 2003
December 2003
January 2004
February 2004
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
January 2005
February 2005
March 2005
April 2005
May 2005
June 2005
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October 2005
November 2005
December 2005
January 2006
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October 2008
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