ME and Ophelia
Saturday, May 28, 2005
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/28/2005
0 comments
Tuesday, May 24, 2005
GLASGOW UNIVERSITY, UK:
Scientists find key to curing debilitating ME?
Not sure what to make of this, but to me it sounds extra special interesting so I am copying it here for future reference.
A report at HindustanTimes.com entitled "Scientists find key to curing debilitating ME":
London, May 24, 2005
A remedy for the debilitating condition ME, which causes extreme fatigue in patients, could be available in as little as a year after groundbreaking research.
A Glasgow University team has discovered the malfunction in sufferers' genes, which appears to prompt their immune system to "work overtime", making them extremely tired, reports the Scottish daily Scotsman.
The lead scientist, John Gow, said a cocktail of drugs could be used to "turn off" the genes - that cause the condition also known as chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), once derided as "yuppie flu", allowing patients to live "a fairly normal" life.
The university has already patented the genes involved. It took a while to realise the gravity of the disease.
In 2002, Liam Donaldson, the chief medical officer for England and Wales, said "CFS/ME should be classed alongside other diseases such as multiple sclerosis and motor neurone disease".
Gow, a senior lecturer in clinical neuroscience at the university, mapped all 33,000 genes in CFS sufferers and compared them with the genes of healthy people. He said they found CFS sufferers had a particular kind of "unusual gene expression".
"This means the genes are switched on or off at an inappropriate time. We have identified a number of genes that are wrongly switched on," he said.
"It looks like the immune system is working overtime when it shouldn't be, making the patient tired."
Every cell in the body contains the same 33,000 genes, but only about 10 per cent are actually doing anything at any one time. There are genes related to the production of liver proteins in brain cells, for example, but these should be "switched off" because liver protein is not required in the brain.
Drugs can be used to control chemical pathways that act on the genes and Gow said he had identified ones that could be used to regulate the over-active genes in CFS.
These drugs are already on the market for other conditions and could be given to CFS sufferers within a year if tests prove positive. "This is not a major breakthrough yet, but it is a big step forward," he said.
A prototype diagnostic testing kit has already been developed, which would give doctors "a yes or no answer" about whether someone had the condition. Currently it takes about six months to make a diagnosis.
[Note M.E. = Myalgic Encephalomyelitis]
Scientists find key to curing debilitating ME?
Not sure what to make of this, but to me it sounds extra special interesting so I am copying it here for future reference.
A report at HindustanTimes.com entitled "Scientists find key to curing debilitating ME":
London, May 24, 2005
A remedy for the debilitating condition ME, which causes extreme fatigue in patients, could be available in as little as a year after groundbreaking research.
A Glasgow University team has discovered the malfunction in sufferers' genes, which appears to prompt their immune system to "work overtime", making them extremely tired, reports the Scottish daily Scotsman.
The lead scientist, John Gow, said a cocktail of drugs could be used to "turn off" the genes - that cause the condition also known as chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), once derided as "yuppie flu", allowing patients to live "a fairly normal" life.
The university has already patented the genes involved. It took a while to realise the gravity of the disease.
In 2002, Liam Donaldson, the chief medical officer for England and Wales, said "CFS/ME should be classed alongside other diseases such as multiple sclerosis and motor neurone disease".
Gow, a senior lecturer in clinical neuroscience at the university, mapped all 33,000 genes in CFS sufferers and compared them with the genes of healthy people. He said they found CFS sufferers had a particular kind of "unusual gene expression".
"This means the genes are switched on or off at an inappropriate time. We have identified a number of genes that are wrongly switched on," he said.
"It looks like the immune system is working overtime when it shouldn't be, making the patient tired."
Every cell in the body contains the same 33,000 genes, but only about 10 per cent are actually doing anything at any one time. There are genes related to the production of liver proteins in brain cells, for example, but these should be "switched off" because liver protein is not required in the brain.
Drugs can be used to control chemical pathways that act on the genes and Gow said he had identified ones that could be used to regulate the over-active genes in CFS.
These drugs are already on the market for other conditions and could be given to CFS sufferers within a year if tests prove positive. "This is not a major breakthrough yet, but it is a big step forward," he said.
A prototype diagnostic testing kit has already been developed, which would give doctors "a yes or no answer" about whether someone had the condition. Currently it takes about six months to make a diagnosis.
[Note M.E. = Myalgic Encephalomyelitis]
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/24/2005
0 comments
- - -
THIRD RUNWAY AT HEATHROW -
Why not?
Have your say and let your views be known at the newly launched Future Heathrow blog.
Future Heathrow's Campaign Director is Clive Soley, one of my favourite bloggers.
Photo: Clive Soley, the first blogging Lord who leads Future Heathrow Campaign, launched yesterday.
Here's wishing Clive the best of luck. One day, if all goes well, he and millions of other passengers will travel along Runway Three.
Tags: Lord+Clive+Soley Future+Heathrow Blogging
THIRD RUNWAY AT HEATHROW -
Why not?
Have your say and let your views be known at the newly launched Future Heathrow blog.
Future Heathrow's Campaign Director is Clive Soley, one of my favourite bloggers.
Photo: Clive Soley, the first blogging Lord who leads Future Heathrow Campaign, launched yesterday.
Here's wishing Clive the best of luck. One day, if all goes well, he and millions of other passengers will travel along Runway Three.
Tags: Lord+Clive+Soley Future+Heathrow Blogging
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/24/2005
0 comments
Saturday, May 21, 2005
CATBLOGGING AND SCREENCAPS
Creative Commons license
This is what Ophelia looks like sometimes when she is asleep, except she doesn't have stripey markings. And her nose is darker. And her ear hairs are darker ... and her whiskers are black, and her fur is more grey and orange and ... I love her.
Looking at this picture makes me smile so I am posting it here incase it is infectious.
Image courtesy strangeday May 8, 2005 [btw happy birthday May 21] is covered by a Creative Commons License.
- - -
Not sure what is screencaps but I marvelled at the work that has been put into it. Found it while surfing and am posting it here for future reference.
- - -
Good luck to Jeff Jarvis of Buzz Machine who just quit his job at Advance.net to do lots of new things all related to changing news and to citizens' media.
He's going to work on content development About.com, on a consulting basis, working with Martin Nisenholtz at The New York Times Company.
I've just checked out Chronic Fatigue Syndrome at About.com and found some useful links.
- - -
British Royal Navy
My brother's 17-year old daughter is enjoying her training in the British Royal Navy. She joined last November and has now passed all the exams. Last month she was made team leader. Next month she sails for the first time. On an aircraft carrier as an electronics warfare operator.
- - -
Push button plane landing hailed
Landing Harrier jump jets on ships in bad weather can now be done at the touch of a button, British technology firm Qinetiq has announced.
The first automatic ship landing by "short take-off vertical landing" (STOVL) aircraft was achieved during a test on HMS Invincible.
It is part of the Ministry of Defence's £2bn contribution to America's $40bn Joint Strike Fighter programme.
The system was based on "some very complicated maths which would remain a trade secret", the project's technical manager Jeremy Howitt said.
The technology could also be used on helicopters, frigates and destroyers.
The device works by linking a STOVL aircraft, via satellite and radio, to an aircraft carrier.
It enables the aircraft and the carrier to know the relative location of one another to within 10cm.
Qinetiq pilot Justin Paines, 41, who was on the Harrier jet equipped with the new system said it made things "completely automatic".
In the new procedure, pilots have to press the button to plot a route in, press it again to accept and then a third time to engage.
Photo: The 'push button landing' was onto the deck of HMS Invincible. "It's something Harrier pilots have always wanted - a big red button to push and take you straight to the coffee bar" says Pilot Justin Paines.
Full Story BBC UK May 21, 2005.
Tags: cat+blogging screencaps British+Royal+Navy Harrier HMS+Invincible
Creative Commons license
This is what Ophelia looks like sometimes when she is asleep, except she doesn't have stripey markings. And her nose is darker. And her ear hairs are darker ... and her whiskers are black, and her fur is more grey and orange and ... I love her.
Looking at this picture makes me smile so I am posting it here incase it is infectious.
Image courtesy strangeday May 8, 2005 [btw happy birthday May 21] is covered by a Creative Commons License.
- - -
Not sure what is screencaps but I marvelled at the work that has been put into it. Found it while surfing and am posting it here for future reference.
- - -
Good luck to Jeff Jarvis of Buzz Machine who just quit his job at Advance.net to do lots of new things all related to changing news and to citizens' media.
He's going to work on content development About.com, on a consulting basis, working with Martin Nisenholtz at The New York Times Company.
I've just checked out Chronic Fatigue Syndrome at About.com and found some useful links.
- - -
British Royal Navy
My brother's 17-year old daughter is enjoying her training in the British Royal Navy. She joined last November and has now passed all the exams. Last month she was made team leader. Next month she sails for the first time. On an aircraft carrier as an electronics warfare operator.
- - -
Push button plane landing hailed
Landing Harrier jump jets on ships in bad weather can now be done at the touch of a button, British technology firm Qinetiq has announced.
The first automatic ship landing by "short take-off vertical landing" (STOVL) aircraft was achieved during a test on HMS Invincible.
It is part of the Ministry of Defence's £2bn contribution to America's $40bn Joint Strike Fighter programme.
The system was based on "some very complicated maths which would remain a trade secret", the project's technical manager Jeremy Howitt said.
The technology could also be used on helicopters, frigates and destroyers.
The device works by linking a STOVL aircraft, via satellite and radio, to an aircraft carrier.
It enables the aircraft and the carrier to know the relative location of one another to within 10cm.
Qinetiq pilot Justin Paines, 41, who was on the Harrier jet equipped with the new system said it made things "completely automatic".
In the new procedure, pilots have to press the button to plot a route in, press it again to accept and then a third time to engage.
Photo: The 'push button landing' was onto the deck of HMS Invincible. "It's something Harrier pilots have always wanted - a big red button to push and take you straight to the coffee bar" says Pilot Justin Paines.
Full Story BBC UK May 21, 2005.
Tags: cat+blogging screencaps British+Royal+Navy Harrier HMS+Invincible
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/21/2005
0 comments
Friday, May 20, 2005
MEDIA FAST
For Mojtaba
Excerpt from a post at Committee to Protect Bloggers May 19, 2005:
The CPB is asking bloggers and other concerned people to observe next Thursday, May 26 as a Media Fast for Mojtaba.
Mojtaba Saminejad, a blogger from Iran, has declared a hunger strike. He is being held at Tehran’s Gohar Dashat prison, which has a reputation for mistreatment of detainees. He is being held in the general population, the overwhelming majority of which are common criminals.
Mojtaba was arrested for reporting the earlier arrest of three of his fellow Iranian bloggers. (Iran has arrested over 20 bloggers over the last year.) Iranian bloggers who have been released have reported being the victims of torture.
Read full story at Committee to Protect Bloggers: MEDIA FAST FOR MOJTABA.
[via Curt with thanks] Tags: Tehran Iran Mojtaba Blog Bloggers Committee+to+Protect+Bloggers
For Mojtaba
Excerpt from a post at Committee to Protect Bloggers May 19, 2005:
The CPB is asking bloggers and other concerned people to observe next Thursday, May 26 as a Media Fast for Mojtaba.
Mojtaba Saminejad, a blogger from Iran, has declared a hunger strike. He is being held at Tehran’s Gohar Dashat prison, which has a reputation for mistreatment of detainees. He is being held in the general population, the overwhelming majority of which are common criminals.
Mojtaba was arrested for reporting the earlier arrest of three of his fellow Iranian bloggers. (Iran has arrested over 20 bloggers over the last year.) Iranian bloggers who have been released have reported being the victims of torture.
Read full story at Committee to Protect Bloggers: MEDIA FAST FOR MOJTABA.
[via Curt with thanks] Tags: Tehran Iran Mojtaba Blog Bloggers Committee+to+Protect+Bloggers
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/20/2005
0 comments
Thursday, May 19, 2005
PATHOLOGY STORY OF MAN IN A PAN
By a blogging pathologist
Madhu always has neat snappy titles for her posts at ChaiTeaLatte. Her latest is 'MAN IN A PAN'. Heh.
Great Madhu. Thanks. I am still waiting for the day you do an autopsy on someone who has suffered Myalgic Encephalomyelitis, or Myalgic Encephalopathy (ME) aka Post Viral Fatigue Syndrome (PVFS) or Chronic Fatigue Immune Dysfunction Sydnrome (CFIDS). I would like to know the findings in the brain and spine.
Many ME sufferers have offered to donate their bodies after death for medical research but, as far as I am aware, the medical profession is not interested. How will there ever be an effective treatment or a cure if doctors do not know how ME works?
World Health Organisation classes it as a neurological disorder. My GP says he does not understand ME. After five and one half years, I probably know more about it now than he does. A cartoon in a recent ME magazine showed a sufferer sitting up in bed wearing a Sherlock Holmes hat and cloak, clutching a teddybear, hot water bottle, and a magnifying glass. (I quite understand if I am the only one here who finds the cartoon hilarious).
One of officialdom's excuses for lack of physical research into ME is that doctors do not need to know the cause of a disease to treat it - say, like cancer. My view on that is, cancer can be diagnosed and pinpointed in the body giving a good clue as to how/where best to target treatment. There is no diagnostic tool for ME. It is done through a process of elimination. They run tests to rule out everything it could be. So, after six months of debilitating illness they find nothing, label it as chronic fatigue (ME is separate from Chronic Fatigue - tiredness is the least of ones problems with ME) and tell you there is nothing they can do. To go away and come back if something else crops up that they can help with. They've been telling people this for well over 50 years, despite strong indicators an enterovirus is the likely culprit, probably Coxsackie B.
You ask when will you get better, their answer is "how long is a piece of string?" Other doctors tell you it will burn itself out in a year or two. But this is not true for thousands of people. Nobody warns you. They just leave you to manage your own care and find out things the hard way. Two years down the road, when you become housebound you get to wondering about why nobody has mentioned the word wheelchair. [Three years ago I called the social services for advice on where to get a wheelchair: "what for?" asked the woman, cutting to the chase -- "because I want to go out" I wailed -- "and WHO will help and push you?" the woman snapped. I've not called a health professional since.]
Intense fatigue is the least of your problems. It feels as if the body is attacking itself inside (they say it is the immune system attacking itself). I tell you, you just want to jump out of your skin and into hell. Not because of the pain but how it affects your life and ability to do even the most basic activity, including conversing and being in the company of people. Recently, I found that leukemia symptoms seem identical to ME. The fatigue is so intense at times you barely have the energy to breathe, nevermind talk.
Severely affected folk describe ME as a living death. Nothing can be done. Very little research. These days, when almost everything can be fixed, people don't believe you when you tell them there is no treatment. They say, "oh but there MUST be something that can be done. Times are changing all the time. Progress is made. Perhaps they've got the diagnosis wrong." Most people (including two doctors I've seen) say they don't understand ME. I don't understand AIDS either but it does not stop me from feeling compassion for those who are HIV positive.
Of the conditions I know of, I have never come across one such as ME that involves so much suffering with so little care, compassion and attention. The only condition that springs to mind is leprosy. Sufferers used to be shunted to colonies and left to fend for themselves. That's what suffering severe ME feels like. I know, because I have talked to others in the severe ME colony who agree. We simply get too ill and too difficult to manage and be around. Few people know how to help. We can't be helped.
One research study concluded the quality of life for a severely affected ME sufferer is comparable to the last two weeks of end stage AIDS. The misconceptions and disbelief, even from health professionals makes for a great lack of compassion.
I've read somewhere that compassion is the greatest healer.
Postscript:
This post is my contribution to ME Awareness Week May 9-15, 2005.
Note, ME has been formally classified by the World Health Organisation as a neurological disorder in the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) since 1969 (ICD-8: Vol I: code 323, page 158; Vol II (Code Index) page 173). On 7th April 1978 the Royal Society of Medicine held a symposium on ME at which ME was accepted as a distinct entity.
M.E. is a condition of many names. It is commonly known as:
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME)
Myalgic Encephalopathy (ME)
Post Viral Fatigue Syndrome (PVFS)
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS)
Chronic Fatigue Immune Dysfunction Syndrome (CFIDS)
Other names include:
Yuppie Flu – this term is (hopefully) no longer used.
Royal Free Disease
Icelandic Disease
Epidemic Neuromyesthenia
Tapanui Flu
Read more about it here at the M.E. Association UK.
If you or anyone you know (sufferer or carer) needs help or advice please contact the 25% ME Group national charity and support group for the severely affected ME sufferer. You can join as an Associate member, even if you are not severely affected with ME.
- - -
Let's all be hummingbirds
Here is a copy of one of my favourite recent posts at Sudan Watch blog:
Warm thanks to Ansel in America for this Japanese story, courtesy of Wangari Maathai:
When the forest where the hummingbird lived went up in flames, the other animals ran out to save themselves. But the hummingbird stayed, flying to and from a nearby river with drops of water in its beak to pour on the fire.
From a distance, the other animals laughed and mocked it. "What do you think you are doing?" they shouted. "This fire is overwhelming. You can't do anything."
Finally, the hummingbird turned to them and said, "I'm doing what I can."
[We can all be like the hummingbird, doing whatever we can says Wangari Maathai, the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize laureate, is Kenya's deputy minister for environment, a member of parliament for the Tetu constituency, and founder of the Green Belt Movement.]
P.S. See Ansel's Hedgemeiser ... ah... Ophelia would would love it.
Tags: Myalgic+Encephalomyelitis Myalgic+Encephalopathy ME+CFS+CFIDS Chronic+Fatigue+Immune+Dysfunction+Sydnrome Post+Viral+Fatigue+Sydnrome Leukemia Orthostatic+intolerance Coxacie+B Polio Enterovirus Pathology
By a blogging pathologist
Madhu always has neat snappy titles for her posts at ChaiTeaLatte. Her latest is 'MAN IN A PAN'. Heh.
Great Madhu. Thanks. I am still waiting for the day you do an autopsy on someone who has suffered Myalgic Encephalomyelitis, or Myalgic Encephalopathy (ME) aka Post Viral Fatigue Syndrome (PVFS) or Chronic Fatigue Immune Dysfunction Sydnrome (CFIDS). I would like to know the findings in the brain and spine.
Many ME sufferers have offered to donate their bodies after death for medical research but, as far as I am aware, the medical profession is not interested. How will there ever be an effective treatment or a cure if doctors do not know how ME works?
World Health Organisation classes it as a neurological disorder. My GP says he does not understand ME. After five and one half years, I probably know more about it now than he does. A cartoon in a recent ME magazine showed a sufferer sitting up in bed wearing a Sherlock Holmes hat and cloak, clutching a teddybear, hot water bottle, and a magnifying glass. (I quite understand if I am the only one here who finds the cartoon hilarious).
One of officialdom's excuses for lack of physical research into ME is that doctors do not need to know the cause of a disease to treat it - say, like cancer. My view on that is, cancer can be diagnosed and pinpointed in the body giving a good clue as to how/where best to target treatment. There is no diagnostic tool for ME. It is done through a process of elimination. They run tests to rule out everything it could be. So, after six months of debilitating illness they find nothing, label it as chronic fatigue (ME is separate from Chronic Fatigue - tiredness is the least of ones problems with ME) and tell you there is nothing they can do. To go away and come back if something else crops up that they can help with. They've been telling people this for well over 50 years, despite strong indicators an enterovirus is the likely culprit, probably Coxsackie B.
You ask when will you get better, their answer is "how long is a piece of string?" Other doctors tell you it will burn itself out in a year or two. But this is not true for thousands of people. Nobody warns you. They just leave you to manage your own care and find out things the hard way. Two years down the road, when you become housebound you get to wondering about why nobody has mentioned the word wheelchair. [Three years ago I called the social services for advice on where to get a wheelchair: "what for?" asked the woman, cutting to the chase -- "because I want to go out" I wailed -- "and WHO will help and push you?" the woman snapped. I've not called a health professional since.]
Intense fatigue is the least of your problems. It feels as if the body is attacking itself inside (they say it is the immune system attacking itself). I tell you, you just want to jump out of your skin and into hell. Not because of the pain but how it affects your life and ability to do even the most basic activity, including conversing and being in the company of people. Recently, I found that leukemia symptoms seem identical to ME. The fatigue is so intense at times you barely have the energy to breathe, nevermind talk.
Severely affected folk describe ME as a living death. Nothing can be done. Very little research. These days, when almost everything can be fixed, people don't believe you when you tell them there is no treatment. They say, "oh but there MUST be something that can be done. Times are changing all the time. Progress is made. Perhaps they've got the diagnosis wrong." Most people (including two doctors I've seen) say they don't understand ME. I don't understand AIDS either but it does not stop me from feeling compassion for those who are HIV positive.
Of the conditions I know of, I have never come across one such as ME that involves so much suffering with so little care, compassion and attention. The only condition that springs to mind is leprosy. Sufferers used to be shunted to colonies and left to fend for themselves. That's what suffering severe ME feels like. I know, because I have talked to others in the severe ME colony who agree. We simply get too ill and too difficult to manage and be around. Few people know how to help. We can't be helped.
One research study concluded the quality of life for a severely affected ME sufferer is comparable to the last two weeks of end stage AIDS. The misconceptions and disbelief, even from health professionals makes for a great lack of compassion.
I've read somewhere that compassion is the greatest healer.
Postscript:
This post is my contribution to ME Awareness Week May 9-15, 2005.
Note, ME has been formally classified by the World Health Organisation as a neurological disorder in the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) since 1969 (ICD-8: Vol I: code 323, page 158; Vol II (Code Index) page 173). On 7th April 1978 the Royal Society of Medicine held a symposium on ME at which ME was accepted as a distinct entity.
M.E. is a condition of many names. It is commonly known as:
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME)
Myalgic Encephalopathy (ME)
Post Viral Fatigue Syndrome (PVFS)
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS)
Chronic Fatigue Immune Dysfunction Syndrome (CFIDS)
Other names include:
Yuppie Flu – this term is (hopefully) no longer used.
Royal Free Disease
Icelandic Disease
Epidemic Neuromyesthenia
Tapanui Flu
Read more about it here at the M.E. Association UK.
If you or anyone you know (sufferer or carer) needs help or advice please contact the 25% ME Group national charity and support group for the severely affected ME sufferer. You can join as an Associate member, even if you are not severely affected with ME.
- - -
Let's all be hummingbirds
Here is a copy of one of my favourite recent posts at Sudan Watch blog:
Warm thanks to Ansel in America for this Japanese story, courtesy of Wangari Maathai:
When the forest where the hummingbird lived went up in flames, the other animals ran out to save themselves. But the hummingbird stayed, flying to and from a nearby river with drops of water in its beak to pour on the fire.
From a distance, the other animals laughed and mocked it. "What do you think you are doing?" they shouted. "This fire is overwhelming. You can't do anything."
Finally, the hummingbird turned to them and said, "I'm doing what I can."
[We can all be like the hummingbird, doing whatever we can says Wangari Maathai, the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize laureate, is Kenya's deputy minister for environment, a member of parliament for the Tetu constituency, and founder of the Green Belt Movement.]
P.S. See Ansel's Hedgemeiser ... ah... Ophelia would would love it.
Tags: Myalgic+Encephalomyelitis Myalgic+Encephalopathy ME+CFS+CFIDS Chronic+Fatigue+Immune+Dysfunction+Sydnrome Post+Viral+Fatigue+Sydnrome Leukemia Orthostatic+intolerance Coxacie+B Polio Enterovirus Pathology
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/19/2005
0 comments
Wednesday, May 18, 2005
GEORGE GALLOWAY'S
U.S. Senate testimony
The Scotsman on Galloway's testimony [via Instapundit May 17]:
"GEORGE Galloway yesterday failed in his attempt to convince a sceptical US Senate investigative committee that he had not profited from oil dealings with Iraq under the UN’s controversial oil-for-food programme.
Despite a typically barnstorming performance full of bluster and rhetorical flourishes, the former Glasgow Kelvin MP was pinned down by persistent questioning over his business relationship with Fawaz Zureikat, the chairman of the Mariam Appeal - set up to assist a four-year-old Iraqi girl suffering from leukaemia.
And it was a Democrat senator, Carl Levin, rather than the Republican committee chairman, Norm Coleman, who gave him the hardest time as Mr Galloway sought to turn the tables on his inquisitors, leaving him no closer to clearing his name than when he took his seat in front of the sub-committee of the Senate’s homeland security and government affairs committee in Washington.
Time and again, Mr Levin questioned him, requesting wearily that he deliver a straight answer to a straight question. But Mr Galloway could, or would not.
No surprise, there. Thanks to reader Bill Rudersdorf for the link."
U.S. Senate testimony
The Scotsman on Galloway's testimony [via Instapundit May 17]:
"GEORGE Galloway yesterday failed in his attempt to convince a sceptical US Senate investigative committee that he had not profited from oil dealings with Iraq under the UN’s controversial oil-for-food programme.
Despite a typically barnstorming performance full of bluster and rhetorical flourishes, the former Glasgow Kelvin MP was pinned down by persistent questioning over his business relationship with Fawaz Zureikat, the chairman of the Mariam Appeal - set up to assist a four-year-old Iraqi girl suffering from leukaemia.
And it was a Democrat senator, Carl Levin, rather than the Republican committee chairman, Norm Coleman, who gave him the hardest time as Mr Galloway sought to turn the tables on his inquisitors, leaving him no closer to clearing his name than when he took his seat in front of the sub-committee of the Senate’s homeland security and government affairs committee in Washington.
Time and again, Mr Levin questioned him, requesting wearily that he deliver a straight answer to a straight question. But Mr Galloway could, or would not.
No surprise, there. Thanks to reader Bill Rudersdorf for the link."
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/18/2005
0 comments
Tuesday, May 17, 2005
THE FUTURE OF PUBLIC RADIO
IN THE AGE OF PODCASTING:
Anybody can create their own public radio online
Note Rebecca MacKinnon's post linking to a live webcast from Harvard's Berkman Center today, May 17, 2005.
Jake Shapiro of the Public Radio Exchange will talk about the future of public radio in the age of podcasting, which enables anybody to create their own public radio online.
This is history in the making. Keep it for your archives.
Tags: Podcasting Radio Audioblogging MacKinnon Shapiro Berkman Harvard
IN THE AGE OF PODCASTING:
Anybody can create their own public radio online
Note Rebecca MacKinnon's post linking to a live webcast from Harvard's Berkman Center today, May 17, 2005.
Jake Shapiro of the Public Radio Exchange will talk about the future of public radio in the age of podcasting, which enables anybody to create their own public radio online.
This is history in the making. Keep it for your archives.
Tags: Podcasting Radio Audioblogging MacKinnon Shapiro Berkman Harvard
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/17/2005
0 comments
Monday, May 16, 2005
OPEN SOURCE
It'll be a radio show. May 30, 2005
Here is a don't miss, must-do: listen to Open Source's pilot on podcasting and bloggers without borders. Hear phone interviews and discussions with Rebecca and Ethan of Global Voices, and several other bloggers, hosted by smooth (and thankfully not-so-fast) talking American Christopher Lydon at Harvad's Berkman.
Historic stuff. Keep it for your archives.
See Ethan's follow-up post "On hold with Chris Lydon".
Note also GlobalCoordinate.com Geo-Community. Click on the map to zoom in. You can add your own comments, stories, or photos at any location.
It'll be a radio show. May 30, 2005
Here is a don't miss, must-do: listen to Open Source's pilot on podcasting and bloggers without borders. Hear phone interviews and discussions with Rebecca and Ethan of Global Voices, and several other bloggers, hosted by smooth (and thankfully not-so-fast) talking American Christopher Lydon at Harvad's Berkman.
Historic stuff. Keep it for your archives.
See Ethan's follow-up post "On hold with Chris Lydon".
Note also GlobalCoordinate.com Geo-Community. Click on the map to zoom in. You can add your own comments, stories, or photos at any location.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/16/2005
0 comments
Sunday, May 15, 2005
CARNIVAL OF THE CATS
Cat and Llama blogging
Catblogging at Aptenobytes
via Dust my Broom - with thanks for the Llama blogging too :)
Cat and Llama blogging
Catblogging at Aptenobytes
via Dust my Broom - with thanks for the Llama blogging too :)
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/15/2005
0 comments
Tuesday, May 10, 2005
INSTAPUNDIT'S REVIEW OF BLOGNASHVILLE CONFERENCE
Is big media on the run?
In his post at MSNBC titled "Big media on the run?" Prof Glenn Reynolds of Instapundit.com writes:
Looks interesting. I'm keeping it aside to read later on. Just wanted to share it here right away. I think professional journalists have lots of reasons to fear blogland. Chewing over and pointing out rubbish in mainstream media, along with the spin, truths, half-truths, downright lies, political propaganda and character assassinations is what we bloggers, around the world, are placed to do well.
- - -
Today, Instapundit points out:
Tim Worstall's weekly Britblog Roundup where Scaryduck gets top billing.
Along with Adam Cohen's unimpressive ruminations on blog ethics in today's New York Times.
And Virginia Postrel who writes in Forbes, "There's something about blogs that makes a lot of respectable journalists hyperventilate."
Heh.
P.S. Foundations can expect more scrutiny in an age of weblogs, according to this article.
Is big media on the run?
In his post at MSNBC titled "Big media on the run?" Prof Glenn Reynolds of Instapundit.com writes:
"Do blogs and other alternative media have traditional media organizations running scared? Some people are saying so, but I think there's more going on than fear. Still it's clear that the blogosphere is having an impact.Read full story.
This past weekend I attended the BlogNashville conference at Belmont University, billed as the largest blogging conference to date. There were some representatives of Big Media organizations there, one of whom said straighforwardly "I'm here out of fear," but others of whom were looking for ways to incorporate blogs, and bloggers, into their operations."
Looks interesting. I'm keeping it aside to read later on. Just wanted to share it here right away. I think professional journalists have lots of reasons to fear blogland. Chewing over and pointing out rubbish in mainstream media, along with the spin, truths, half-truths, downright lies, political propaganda and character assassinations is what we bloggers, around the world, are placed to do well.
- - -
Today, Instapundit points out:
Tim Worstall's weekly Britblog Roundup where Scaryduck gets top billing.
Along with Adam Cohen's unimpressive ruminations on blog ethics in today's New York Times.
And Virginia Postrel who writes in Forbes, "There's something about blogs that makes a lot of respectable journalists hyperventilate."
Heh.
P.S. Foundations can expect more scrutiny in an age of weblogs, according to this article.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/10/2005
0 comments
- - -
MAKE POVERTY HISTORY
Tony Blair chairs G8 summit July 6, 2005
Email just received from Patrick Kielty (pictured below):
Hello,
Over the past few months more than a quarter of a million people have sent a message to Tony Blair and asked him to make poverty history.
It's an achievable aim that has risen up the political and news agendas like never before - thanks to the actions of people like you.
But we are rapidly approaching the critical moment of this campaign - and it really is time to turn up the heat.
After last week's election result we now know for sure that it will be Mr. Blair who sits at that all-important G8 summit table in Scotland on July 6th. Last month, he said he would work "night and day" on this issue until the summit. Now he has the chance to prove it, and the responsibility to deliver.
30,000 children will continue to die needlessly every day unless he succeeds.
So please, if you are in the UK click here [outside the UK click here] and urge Tony Blair to make this his number one post-election priority.
Even if you have emailed him before, now is the time to do so again.
The countdown has begun to the biggest day ever in the fight to end poverty and we need to make sure that our message is getting through loud and clear.
Thank you,
Patrick Kielty
MAKE POVERTY HISTORY
Tony Blair chairs G8 summit July 6, 2005
Email just received from Patrick Kielty (pictured below):
Hello,
Over the past few months more than a quarter of a million people have sent a message to Tony Blair and asked him to make poverty history.
It's an achievable aim that has risen up the political and news agendas like never before - thanks to the actions of people like you.
But we are rapidly approaching the critical moment of this campaign - and it really is time to turn up the heat.
After last week's election result we now know for sure that it will be Mr. Blair who sits at that all-important G8 summit table in Scotland on July 6th. Last month, he said he would work "night and day" on this issue until the summit. Now he has the chance to prove it, and the responsibility to deliver.
30,000 children will continue to die needlessly every day unless he succeeds.
So please, if you are in the UK click here [outside the UK click here] and urge Tony Blair to make this his number one post-election priority.
Even if you have emailed him before, now is the time to do so again.
The countdown has begun to the biggest day ever in the fight to end poverty and we need to make sure that our message is getting through loud and clear.
Thank you,
Patrick Kielty
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/10/2005
0 comments
Monday, May 09, 2005
MINT JULEP
Recipe and 1937 version
Image and post via Corrente with thanks:
In honor of the venerable Kentucky Derby, I offer you Mint Julep Blogging Friday, and a little something to go with--a story on making the perfect julep, and a recipe for it as well. First, the recipe:
2 cups granulated sugar
2 cups water (branch water is ideal)
Fresh Mint
Crushed Ice
Kentucky bourbon (2 ounces per serving)
Make a simple mint syrup by boiling sugar and water together for 5 minutes; cool. (This recipe makes enough syrup for 44 juleps.) Place in a covered container with 6 or 8 bruised mint sprigs. Refrigerate overnight.
Make a julep by filling a julep cup or glass with crushed ice well-packed into the cup, then adding 1 tablespoon of mint syrup and 2 ounces of bourbon. Stir rapidly with a spoon to frost outside of cup or glass. Garnish with a fresh mint sprig and a straw cut short enough so that you almost bury your nose in the mint as you sip.
And now, the story, from a 1937 letter at the Buckner Family website:
"Go to a spring where cool, crystal-clear water bubbles from under a bank of dew-washed ferns. In a consecrated vessel, dip up a little water at the source. Follow the stream through its banks of green moss and wildflowers until it broadens and trickles through beds of mint growing in aromatic profusion and waving softly in the summer breezes. Gather the sweetest and tenderest shoots and gently carry them home. Go to the sideboard and select a decanter of Kentucky Bourbon, distilled by a master hand, mellowed with age yet still vigorous and inspiring. An ancestral sugar bowl, a row of silver goblets, some spoons and some ice and you are ready to start.
In a canvas bag, pound twice as much ice as you think you will need. Make it fine as snow, keep it dry and do not allow it to degenerate into slush.
In each goblet, put a slightly heaping teaspoonful of granulated sugar, barely cover this with spring water and slightly bruise one mint leaf into this, leaving the spoon in the goblet. Then pour elixir from the decanter until the goblets are about one-fourth full. Fill the goblets with snowy ice, sprinkling in a small amount of sugar as you fill. Wipe the outsides of the goblets dry and embellish copiously with mint.
Then comes the important and delicate operation of frosting. By proper manipulation of the spoon, the ingredients are circulated and blended until Nature, wishing to take a further hand and add another of its beautiful phenomena, encrusts the whole in a glittering coat of white frost. Thus harmoniously blended by the deft touches of a skilled hand, you have a beverage eminently appropriate for honorable men and beautiful women.
When all is ready, assemble your guests on the porch or in the garden, where the aroma of the juleps will rise Heavenward and make the birds sing. Propose a worthy toast, raise the goblet to your lips, bury your nose in the mint, inhale a deep breath of its fragrance and sip the nectar of the gods.
Recipe and 1937 version
Image and post via Corrente with thanks:
In honor of the venerable Kentucky Derby, I offer you Mint Julep Blogging Friday, and a little something to go with--a story on making the perfect julep, and a recipe for it as well. First, the recipe:
2 cups granulated sugar
2 cups water (branch water is ideal)
Fresh Mint
Crushed Ice
Kentucky bourbon (2 ounces per serving)
Make a simple mint syrup by boiling sugar and water together for 5 minutes; cool. (This recipe makes enough syrup for 44 juleps.) Place in a covered container with 6 or 8 bruised mint sprigs. Refrigerate overnight.
Make a julep by filling a julep cup or glass with crushed ice well-packed into the cup, then adding 1 tablespoon of mint syrup and 2 ounces of bourbon. Stir rapidly with a spoon to frost outside of cup or glass. Garnish with a fresh mint sprig and a straw cut short enough so that you almost bury your nose in the mint as you sip.
And now, the story, from a 1937 letter at the Buckner Family website:
"Go to a spring where cool, crystal-clear water bubbles from under a bank of dew-washed ferns. In a consecrated vessel, dip up a little water at the source. Follow the stream through its banks of green moss and wildflowers until it broadens and trickles through beds of mint growing in aromatic profusion and waving softly in the summer breezes. Gather the sweetest and tenderest shoots and gently carry them home. Go to the sideboard and select a decanter of Kentucky Bourbon, distilled by a master hand, mellowed with age yet still vigorous and inspiring. An ancestral sugar bowl, a row of silver goblets, some spoons and some ice and you are ready to start.
In a canvas bag, pound twice as much ice as you think you will need. Make it fine as snow, keep it dry and do not allow it to degenerate into slush.
In each goblet, put a slightly heaping teaspoonful of granulated sugar, barely cover this with spring water and slightly bruise one mint leaf into this, leaving the spoon in the goblet. Then pour elixir from the decanter until the goblets are about one-fourth full. Fill the goblets with snowy ice, sprinkling in a small amount of sugar as you fill. Wipe the outsides of the goblets dry and embellish copiously with mint.
Then comes the important and delicate operation of frosting. By proper manipulation of the spoon, the ingredients are circulated and blended until Nature, wishing to take a further hand and add another of its beautiful phenomena, encrusts the whole in a glittering coat of white frost. Thus harmoniously blended by the deft touches of a skilled hand, you have a beverage eminently appropriate for honorable men and beautiful women.
When all is ready, assemble your guests on the porch or in the garden, where the aroma of the juleps will rise Heavenward and make the birds sing. Propose a worthy toast, raise the goblet to your lips, bury your nose in the mint, inhale a deep breath of its fragrance and sip the nectar of the gods.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/09/2005
0 comments
Saturday, May 07, 2005
BLAIR MAKES IT THREE IN A ROW
Abolish compulsory BBC licence fee
Stephen Pollard in his blog quotes fellow journalist Melanie Phillips as writing: "As for the LibDems, what can one say except that they and Brian Sedgemore deserve each other, and the fact that people voted for them in such great numbers merely demonstrates the extent to which this country may already have reached the point of no return in the infantilism stakes."
I've chosen the above quote not for what was said about the LibDems but to give context to a line that jumped out at me: "this country may already have reached the point of no return in the infantilism stakes."
Today, I am feeling low, probably overtired (followed election results and news Thurs eve til 3am and 7am Fri onwards) wondering about if I want to follow politics anymore; what kind of person it takes to want to be a politician or prime minister; and what it is that motivates political activists.
After well over 30 years of making an effort to keep an eye on the world of politics, I think the last two years of my being on the Internet and seeing even more of how people act, think and behave, I am grateful we are not forced to vote because it would mean the majority of people in this country who are ill informed would probably end up electing the Monster Raving Loony Party and more people like Stalinist lefty George Galloway*
[*In 1994, Galloway faced some of his strongest criticism on his return from a Middle-Eastern visit during which he had met Saddam Hussein and reported the support given to him by the people of the Gaza Strip. He had been filmed greeting Saddam Hussein with the words,"Sir, I salute your courage, your strength, your indefatigability".
George Galloway does not believe that Fidel Castro is a dictator]
Photo courtesy The Economist - Tony Blair [showing correct sleeve length]
For future reference, here is a copy of a comment I wrote the night after the election results:
My eyeballs are burning from watching election results until 3am – waking up at 7am and watching more til 1.30pm – inbetween all of that checking my newsfeed and tracking a bit of other news. Bit too bleary eyed right now to comment so please forgive if this sounds a bit disjointed.
Maybe I am feeling low because I am overtired but quite frankly I think I have had my fill over the past two years of media propaganda (especially the BBC) and people who are rude, aggressive and intimidating on TV, in the papers and on the net. I tracked on the net the last US elections from the start and must have read thousands of reports and vitriolic comments (mainly made it seems by anti Bush folks). On the whole, I found posts and comments authored by Bush supporters more considerate of people.
I’ve seen the same thing happening over here by the anti Blairs about Blair. Aggressive rudeness is drowning out the voices and politeness of others. The way many people talk about (and to) politicians and others discussing politics and issues is outrageous. If a person went up to strangers on the street and talked to them in the same way, they’d get a punch on the nose, or worse. What’s going on and where is it all going? Surely it will end up disengaging the majority. Even the Conservatives' leader Michael Howard calling Tony Blair a liar did not go unnoticed by many voters who were turned off by it.
Surely I must be one of many who found it deeply disturbing to hear George Galloway sound like Hitler shouting warnings (sounded threatening to me) to Tony Blair from a podium after he was elected. Mr Galloway was filmed on TV saying he was REAL Labour and, I believe, it is what he was telling people to sway them to vote for him. But from what I’ve seen and heard so far, there has been no outrage expressed. He’s been given a lot of TV and net coverage, but no criticism that I've seen. I've read somewhere today that Nazis are back in state government in Germany.
I wonder what these kind of people are all about and what are their motives, aims and objectives. From what I have gathered about core members of the Labour party over the past ten years, I have come to the conclusion that if, by the time the next election, Gordon Brown and not Jack Straw is Labour leader, I shall not be voting Labour again. I am disappointed that core members of old Labour have not moved with the times. The fact that many of them set out, and encouraged others, to weaken the Government undermines the party I voted for.
My support for Labour seems pointless and a wasted vote. I voted for Tony Blair but Labour only received 4,000 or so votes in my area. There seems no point spending time and effort to support Labour when my vote for new Labour is not welcomed by old Labour. I think I've said it here somewhere before, old Labour seem more in their element being in perpetual opposition. It seems to me the core of old Labour's membership is not enough to get elected as a government. Without Tony Blair, I do not believe Labour will win another term if the Tories bring in someone really good like Chris Patten.
The way Tony Blair has been treated by members of his own party and the media, and the foul manners and rudeness that abounds like a new sort of cruel sport such as badger baiting, cock and pitbull fighting, has put me off politics (especially U.S. ones) and voting for any of the three main parties here in Britain for good. Like I said, I am overtired right now but the way I feel at the moment, I am thinking of investing my time in green issues and voting Green at the next election.
Photo BBC: A woman polishes the brass on the door of 10 Downing Street as voters go to the polls May 5, 2005.
Photograph: Russell Boyce/Reuters
Further reading:
May 6, 2005 - Economist report: Despite continuing accusations that he lied to the British public over the Iraq war, and some gathering economic clouds, Tony Blair has won a third term of office, albeit with a much-reduced majority. But how will he handle the big challenges ahead? And how soon will he pass them on to his expected successor, Gordon Brown?
- - -
UK's politically biased public broadcasting service
After everything that happened with the BBC last year, I'd hoped under new management it would stop its biased reporting. The BBC has been given many opportunities and a great deal of time to change. If an opportunity comes up to vote for the abolishment of the license fee, I have now firmly decided I'd vote for the BBC licence fee to be abolished. No matter what, the BBC continues to act as a political organisation instead of a neutral public broadcasting service. Like old Labour, it's policies and attitudes are just too entrenched to change and move with the times.
All that's changed at the BBC is their manipulaton and propaganda is more "subtle". I am copying here a a report at BBC News online yesterday, the morning after Labour's historic consecutive third term victory and the day of Tony Blair's birthday. The main headline was titled: "Blair: I've listened and learned - Tony Blair says he will "focus relentlessly" on people's priorities after securing a historic third term in office."
On looking for news and comments on the reactions of millions of people who voted for Labour, I found - a few lines below the top headline - a BBC slideshow titled "Still the boss - Your views on Blair's historic election win". I clicked into it and found nine photos, each of an individual person and an accompanying caption. Here is what the they said (the report has been taken down):
'Reasonable job'
Alan Williams, 39, a premises manager from Burnley, said: "I am pleased Labour are back in.
"I think Tony Blair has done a reasonable job. People have slated him about the war in Iraq but I think the Conservatives would have done the same.
"He is a bit more down to earth than the other party leaders and the economy is reasonably buoyant."
'Doubts about Blair'
Education worker Anne Scott, 58, from Tunbridge Wells, said: "The result was much what I expected.
"I couldn't see the Conservatives actually being able to win. I thought they might make progress, which they have.
"I have my doubts about Tony Blair - I don't like his style. He believes he has to be right."
'I don't care'
Andi Parsons, 33, a taxi driver from Tunbridge Wells, said: "I haven't really been following the election.
"I couldn't be bothered to vote because I don't care. I think the country is run badly whoever is in power.
"Tony Blair has made a lot of mistakes."
'Foregone conclusion'
Elizabeth McCallum, 80, retired, from Glasgow, said: "I voted Lib Dem and am pleased they did so well in Scotland.
"I feel they were trying to do more for Scottish people than Labour or the Conservatives.
"Blair knew the country was against him because of the war but Labour winning was a foregone conclusion."
'Brown in charge'
Ken Primrose, 58, a taxi driver from Glasgow, said: "I wasn't that happy with Blair but couldn't have voted for any other party, especially not the Tories.
"The biggest threat to Labour is Tony Blair - more people would have voted for them if Brown was in charge."
'I hate Labour'
Dorothy McDermott, 59, a retired coffee shop owner from Glasgow, said: "I voted Conservative as I hate Labour and Tony Blair.
"I more or less always vote for the Conservatives but they should have done better in Scotland. I don't mind the Lib Dems moving into second place in Scotland as long as someone is standing up to Labour."
'Care for elderly'
John Elston, 63, a retired NHS technical manager from Dinas Powys, said: "The main reason I voted Lib Dem was because I think care of the elderly should be free.
"I have a 93-year-old mother who had to sell her terraced house just to pay for nursing home fees.
"Labour spends billions on war but then can't pay for the care of elderly people."
'None of the above'
Sian Williams, 25, a barber from Cardiff, did not vote.
She said: "I know the suffragettes gave up so much for people like me and I feel quite disappointed in myself that I did not have any confidence in any of the parties.
"It should be like America where you can go in and vote for 'none of the above' but still have used your option to vote."
'Sick of Blair'
Ken Jenkins, 80, a retired bakery engineer, voted Plaid Cymru in the Vale of Glamorgan.
He said: "I'm not sick of Labour, I'm sick of Tony Blair.
"I'm an Arnhem veteran as well and Tony Blair should have had his son in Iraq in the army.
"Blair is a chancer - I voted Labour all my life but not any more."
Posted by: Ingrid at May 7, 2005 09:38 AM
- - -
Quotation
Yesterday, I found this comment in a thread at the Guardian's Election 2005 blog:
The new "fascism" comes from the left. Watch out for left wing fanatics who "know" what's the best for you. They are the ones who want to impose their view on everyone, they are the ones who do not tolerate different opinions. All, of course in the name of "tolerance" and "diversity".
What a joke. A dangerous joke.
Posted by Rick on May 6, 2005
- - -
New blogs
Blogger News Network
UN Dispatch
- - -
Tags: Blair Galloway BBC UN UN
Abolish compulsory BBC licence fee
Stephen Pollard in his blog quotes fellow journalist Melanie Phillips as writing: "As for the LibDems, what can one say except that they and Brian Sedgemore deserve each other, and the fact that people voted for them in such great numbers merely demonstrates the extent to which this country may already have reached the point of no return in the infantilism stakes."
I've chosen the above quote not for what was said about the LibDems but to give context to a line that jumped out at me: "this country may already have reached the point of no return in the infantilism stakes."
Today, I am feeling low, probably overtired (followed election results and news Thurs eve til 3am and 7am Fri onwards) wondering about if I want to follow politics anymore; what kind of person it takes to want to be a politician or prime minister; and what it is that motivates political activists.
After well over 30 years of making an effort to keep an eye on the world of politics, I think the last two years of my being on the Internet and seeing even more of how people act, think and behave, I am grateful we are not forced to vote because it would mean the majority of people in this country who are ill informed would probably end up electing the Monster Raving Loony Party and more people like Stalinist lefty George Galloway*
[*In 1994, Galloway faced some of his strongest criticism on his return from a Middle-Eastern visit during which he had met Saddam Hussein and reported the support given to him by the people of the Gaza Strip. He had been filmed greeting Saddam Hussein with the words,"Sir, I salute your courage, your strength, your indefatigability".
George Galloway does not believe that Fidel Castro is a dictator]
Photo courtesy The Economist - Tony Blair [showing correct sleeve length]
For future reference, here is a copy of a comment I wrote the night after the election results:
My eyeballs are burning from watching election results until 3am – waking up at 7am and watching more til 1.30pm – inbetween all of that checking my newsfeed and tracking a bit of other news. Bit too bleary eyed right now to comment so please forgive if this sounds a bit disjointed.
Maybe I am feeling low because I am overtired but quite frankly I think I have had my fill over the past two years of media propaganda (especially the BBC) and people who are rude, aggressive and intimidating on TV, in the papers and on the net. I tracked on the net the last US elections from the start and must have read thousands of reports and vitriolic comments (mainly made it seems by anti Bush folks). On the whole, I found posts and comments authored by Bush supporters more considerate of people.
I’ve seen the same thing happening over here by the anti Blairs about Blair. Aggressive rudeness is drowning out the voices and politeness of others. The way many people talk about (and to) politicians and others discussing politics and issues is outrageous. If a person went up to strangers on the street and talked to them in the same way, they’d get a punch on the nose, or worse. What’s going on and where is it all going? Surely it will end up disengaging the majority. Even the Conservatives' leader Michael Howard calling Tony Blair a liar did not go unnoticed by many voters who were turned off by it.
Surely I must be one of many who found it deeply disturbing to hear George Galloway sound like Hitler shouting warnings (sounded threatening to me) to Tony Blair from a podium after he was elected. Mr Galloway was filmed on TV saying he was REAL Labour and, I believe, it is what he was telling people to sway them to vote for him. But from what I’ve seen and heard so far, there has been no outrage expressed. He’s been given a lot of TV and net coverage, but no criticism that I've seen. I've read somewhere today that Nazis are back in state government in Germany.
I wonder what these kind of people are all about and what are their motives, aims and objectives. From what I have gathered about core members of the Labour party over the past ten years, I have come to the conclusion that if, by the time the next election, Gordon Brown and not Jack Straw is Labour leader, I shall not be voting Labour again. I am disappointed that core members of old Labour have not moved with the times. The fact that many of them set out, and encouraged others, to weaken the Government undermines the party I voted for.
My support for Labour seems pointless and a wasted vote. I voted for Tony Blair but Labour only received 4,000 or so votes in my area. There seems no point spending time and effort to support Labour when my vote for new Labour is not welcomed by old Labour. I think I've said it here somewhere before, old Labour seem more in their element being in perpetual opposition. It seems to me the core of old Labour's membership is not enough to get elected as a government. Without Tony Blair, I do not believe Labour will win another term if the Tories bring in someone really good like Chris Patten.
The way Tony Blair has been treated by members of his own party and the media, and the foul manners and rudeness that abounds like a new sort of cruel sport such as badger baiting, cock and pitbull fighting, has put me off politics (especially U.S. ones) and voting for any of the three main parties here in Britain for good. Like I said, I am overtired right now but the way I feel at the moment, I am thinking of investing my time in green issues and voting Green at the next election.
Photo BBC: A woman polishes the brass on the door of 10 Downing Street as voters go to the polls May 5, 2005.
Photograph: Russell Boyce/Reuters
Further reading:
May 6, 2005 - Economist report: Despite continuing accusations that he lied to the British public over the Iraq war, and some gathering economic clouds, Tony Blair has won a third term of office, albeit with a much-reduced majority. But how will he handle the big challenges ahead? And how soon will he pass them on to his expected successor, Gordon Brown?
- - -
UK's politically biased public broadcasting service
After everything that happened with the BBC last year, I'd hoped under new management it would stop its biased reporting. The BBC has been given many opportunities and a great deal of time to change. If an opportunity comes up to vote for the abolishment of the license fee, I have now firmly decided I'd vote for the BBC licence fee to be abolished. No matter what, the BBC continues to act as a political organisation instead of a neutral public broadcasting service. Like old Labour, it's policies and attitudes are just too entrenched to change and move with the times.
All that's changed at the BBC is their manipulaton and propaganda is more "subtle". I am copying here a a report at BBC News online yesterday, the morning after Labour's historic consecutive third term victory and the day of Tony Blair's birthday. The main headline was titled: "Blair: I've listened and learned - Tony Blair says he will "focus relentlessly" on people's priorities after securing a historic third term in office."
On looking for news and comments on the reactions of millions of people who voted for Labour, I found - a few lines below the top headline - a BBC slideshow titled "Still the boss - Your views on Blair's historic election win". I clicked into it and found nine photos, each of an individual person and an accompanying caption. Here is what the they said (the report has been taken down):
'Reasonable job'
Alan Williams, 39, a premises manager from Burnley, said: "I am pleased Labour are back in.
"I think Tony Blair has done a reasonable job. People have slated him about the war in Iraq but I think the Conservatives would have done the same.
"He is a bit more down to earth than the other party leaders and the economy is reasonably buoyant."
'Doubts about Blair'
Education worker Anne Scott, 58, from Tunbridge Wells, said: "The result was much what I expected.
"I couldn't see the Conservatives actually being able to win. I thought they might make progress, which they have.
"I have my doubts about Tony Blair - I don't like his style. He believes he has to be right."
'I don't care'
Andi Parsons, 33, a taxi driver from Tunbridge Wells, said: "I haven't really been following the election.
"I couldn't be bothered to vote because I don't care. I think the country is run badly whoever is in power.
"Tony Blair has made a lot of mistakes."
'Foregone conclusion'
Elizabeth McCallum, 80, retired, from Glasgow, said: "I voted Lib Dem and am pleased they did so well in Scotland.
"I feel they were trying to do more for Scottish people than Labour or the Conservatives.
"Blair knew the country was against him because of the war but Labour winning was a foregone conclusion."
'Brown in charge'
Ken Primrose, 58, a taxi driver from Glasgow, said: "I wasn't that happy with Blair but couldn't have voted for any other party, especially not the Tories.
"The biggest threat to Labour is Tony Blair - more people would have voted for them if Brown was in charge."
'I hate Labour'
Dorothy McDermott, 59, a retired coffee shop owner from Glasgow, said: "I voted Conservative as I hate Labour and Tony Blair.
"I more or less always vote for the Conservatives but they should have done better in Scotland. I don't mind the Lib Dems moving into second place in Scotland as long as someone is standing up to Labour."
'Care for elderly'
John Elston, 63, a retired NHS technical manager from Dinas Powys, said: "The main reason I voted Lib Dem was because I think care of the elderly should be free.
"I have a 93-year-old mother who had to sell her terraced house just to pay for nursing home fees.
"Labour spends billions on war but then can't pay for the care of elderly people."
'None of the above'
Sian Williams, 25, a barber from Cardiff, did not vote.
She said: "I know the suffragettes gave up so much for people like me and I feel quite disappointed in myself that I did not have any confidence in any of the parties.
"It should be like America where you can go in and vote for 'none of the above' but still have used your option to vote."
'Sick of Blair'
Ken Jenkins, 80, a retired bakery engineer, voted Plaid Cymru in the Vale of Glamorgan.
He said: "I'm not sick of Labour, I'm sick of Tony Blair.
"I'm an Arnhem veteran as well and Tony Blair should have had his son in Iraq in the army.
"Blair is a chancer - I voted Labour all my life but not any more."
Posted by: Ingrid at May 7, 2005 09:38 AM
- - -
Quotation
Yesterday, I found this comment in a thread at the Guardian's Election 2005 blog:
The new "fascism" comes from the left. Watch out for left wing fanatics who "know" what's the best for you. They are the ones who want to impose their view on everyone, they are the ones who do not tolerate different opinions. All, of course in the name of "tolerance" and "diversity".
What a joke. A dangerous joke.
Posted by Rick on May 6, 2005
- - -
New blogs
Blogger News Network
UN Dispatch
- - -
Tags: Blair Galloway BBC UN UN
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/07/2005
0 comments
Thursday, May 05, 2005
MAKE YOUR VOICE COUNT TODAY
In honour of those who fought to secure our freedom and vote
Wherever you stand on the political spectrum please make your voice count and vote today. There are millions of people in countries whose voices will never be heard because they live under dictatorships and are refused a vote. Countless numbers of men and women lost their lives to secure our freedom and a vote. In honour of all those who fought hard for women to be allowed a vote, this message is especially to any women reading this before 6pm today, who have not voted, there is still time.
BBC website says polls close up and down the country at 10pm.
- - -
Viewer's guide to election night - from the BBC:
It's almost over, bar the voting. After 30 days of intensive electioneering it is time for the public to deliver their verdict.
All will become clear during the early hours of 6 May, and the BBC will be on hand to offer comprehensive coverage on television, radio and online.
Throughout the night the BBC news website will offer a comprehensive and up-to-the-minute breaking news, results and analysis service. A seat-by-seat guide will be updated regularly as results pour in from up and down the country.
- - -
You can also follow the election at Guardian Unlimited Election 2005 and meet more political bloggers at Bloggers4Labour.
In honour of those who fought to secure our freedom and vote
Wherever you stand on the political spectrum please make your voice count and vote today. There are millions of people in countries whose voices will never be heard because they live under dictatorships and are refused a vote. Countless numbers of men and women lost their lives to secure our freedom and a vote. In honour of all those who fought hard for women to be allowed a vote, this message is especially to any women reading this before 6pm today, who have not voted, there is still time.
BBC website says polls close up and down the country at 10pm.
- - -
Viewer's guide to election night - from the BBC:
It's almost over, bar the voting. After 30 days of intensive electioneering it is time for the public to deliver their verdict.
All will become clear during the early hours of 6 May, and the BBC will be on hand to offer comprehensive coverage on television, radio and online.
Throughout the night the BBC news website will offer a comprehensive and up-to-the-minute breaking news, results and analysis service. A seat-by-seat guide will be updated regularly as results pour in from up and down the country.
- - -
You can also follow the election at Guardian Unlimited Election 2005 and meet more political bloggers at Bloggers4Labour.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/05/2005
0 comments
Wednesday, May 04, 2005
TONY BLAIR'S COMMISSION FOR AFRICA
The world's first blogging Lord: Clive Soley
Apologies for not keeping up with posting, emailing and commenting. [HD London: sorry not replied since Easter; C Surrey: still not back to where I was]. Must rest to concentrate on UK political blogs and news. Here is a copy of a post I have published today at my other blog Sudan Watch:
Apologies for intermission at Sudan Watch over next few days. Today is the final 24 hours of the run up to the General Election here in Britain. Much bitterness is felt by many voters in the UK about British Prime Minister Tony Blair supporting the US with military intervention to remove the dictatorship in Iraq and enable Iraqis to vote and elect their leaders.
No doubt many Americans don't give two hoots about who is in power outside of America. Today, I feel like writing a vent about all those who mindlessly argue and spread political propaganda in mainstream media, on the Internet and in blogland and make concerted attempts to drown out political discussion, but I shan't because it would be complete waste of time and energy.
Suffice to say, Tony Blair has done more for Africa than any other British prime minister. Through his leadership, the UK is second to the US in its huge contribution to help the people of Sudan. The next G8 meeting is to be chaired by a British prime minister which Tony Blair has spent several years working towards with the aim of getting the G8 to agree on cancelling the debts of the world's poorest nations.
For this reason, and many others, I hope he wins another term in office, which I believe he will. Former prime minister Margaret Thatcher won another term for the Conservatives after taking Britain to war not in a fight against terrorism but over a piece of rock, in the middle of nowhere, that never seemed to belong to us in the first place. There's an old saying that goes something along the lines that "there is nought so queer as folk". If things go pear shaped tomorrow because of the UK's support to the US over Iraq, it is questionable if any more help will be coming from the UK for the people of Sudan and Darfur, not to mention the whole of Africa and the world's poorest nations.
On this note I shall say a warm hello and congratulations to my most favourite British blogger Clive Soley who, having recently retired as an MP after 26 years of great service to this country, has just been made a Lord. Surely Lord Clive of British Blogland must qualify for an entry into the Guinness Book of World Records as the world's first blogging Lord.
[Note to any new readers: please understand, this is not a political blog. The only reason this post appears here today is to encourage any British readers, no matter where they are on the political spectrum, please vote tomorrow. Comments are welcomed if they are non-political and relate to a genuine and kindly interest in peace and prosperity for Africa and in particular DRC, Uganda and the Sudan. Thank you.]
Further reading:
Tony Blair's Commission for Africa, La Commission pour l'Afrique.
Clive Soley's Why MP's Should Get Blogging plus Fabian paper on Iraq.
Tags: Blair Soley Darfur Sudan Africa
The world's first blogging Lord: Clive Soley
Apologies for not keeping up with posting, emailing and commenting. [HD London: sorry not replied since Easter; C Surrey: still not back to where I was]. Must rest to concentrate on UK political blogs and news. Here is a copy of a post I have published today at my other blog Sudan Watch:
Apologies for intermission at Sudan Watch over next few days. Today is the final 24 hours of the run up to the General Election here in Britain. Much bitterness is felt by many voters in the UK about British Prime Minister Tony Blair supporting the US with military intervention to remove the dictatorship in Iraq and enable Iraqis to vote and elect their leaders.
No doubt many Americans don't give two hoots about who is in power outside of America. Today, I feel like writing a vent about all those who mindlessly argue and spread political propaganda in mainstream media, on the Internet and in blogland and make concerted attempts to drown out political discussion, but I shan't because it would be complete waste of time and energy.
Suffice to say, Tony Blair has done more for Africa than any other British prime minister. Through his leadership, the UK is second to the US in its huge contribution to help the people of Sudan. The next G8 meeting is to be chaired by a British prime minister which Tony Blair has spent several years working towards with the aim of getting the G8 to agree on cancelling the debts of the world's poorest nations.
For this reason, and many others, I hope he wins another term in office, which I believe he will. Former prime minister Margaret Thatcher won another term for the Conservatives after taking Britain to war not in a fight against terrorism but over a piece of rock, in the middle of nowhere, that never seemed to belong to us in the first place. There's an old saying that goes something along the lines that "there is nought so queer as folk". If things go pear shaped tomorrow because of the UK's support to the US over Iraq, it is questionable if any more help will be coming from the UK for the people of Sudan and Darfur, not to mention the whole of Africa and the world's poorest nations.
On this note I shall say a warm hello and congratulations to my most favourite British blogger Clive Soley who, having recently retired as an MP after 26 years of great service to this country, has just been made a Lord. Surely Lord Clive of British Blogland must qualify for an entry into the Guinness Book of World Records as the world's first blogging Lord.
[Note to any new readers: please understand, this is not a political blog. The only reason this post appears here today is to encourage any British readers, no matter where they are on the political spectrum, please vote tomorrow. Comments are welcomed if they are non-political and relate to a genuine and kindly interest in peace and prosperity for Africa and in particular DRC, Uganda and the Sudan. Thank you.]
Further reading:
Tony Blair's Commission for Africa, La Commission pour l'Afrique.
Clive Soley's Why MP's Should Get Blogging plus Fabian paper on Iraq.
Tags: Blair Soley Darfur Sudan Africa
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 5/04/2005
0 comments
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Tuesday, May 03, 2005
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
To Dave Winer
Birthday greetings to Dave Winer at Scripting News in America.
Thousands of us bloggers remember Dave for the great fun of the historic BloggerCon he started in 2003. Jim's posted a photo that reminds me of the time I watched the first live webcast of Dave's talk at BloggerCon. Jim was there. Maybe the photo of Dave was taken at the conference.
Ah yes, those were the days ... Happy Birthday Dave!
With all good wishes from England, UK.
Gift tags: Winer ScriptingNews RSS BloggerCon
To Dave Winer
Birthday greetings to Dave Winer at Scripting News in America.
Thousands of us bloggers remember Dave for the great fun of the historic BloggerCon he started in 2003. Jim's posted a photo that reminds me of the time I watched the first live webcast of Dave's talk at BloggerCon. Jim was there. Maybe the photo of Dave was taken at the conference.
Ah yes, those were the days ... Happy Birthday Dave!
With all good wishes from England, UK.
Gift tags: Winer ScriptingNews RSS BloggerCon
ME and Ophelia
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