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Last 50 mainblog entries:
Wednesday, 19th of March, 2008
Watch Dagmar Krause singing “Surabaya Johnny” (11:00 am)
Dagmar Krause’s version of the very best Brecht/Weill songs. I like the recorded version better (from her hard-to-find album Supply and Demand but also on the Brecht/Weill compilation Lost in the Stars) but this is still wonderful.
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Thursday, 13th of March, 2008Wednesday, 13th of February, 2008
Sorry (10:57 pm)
I remember that way back when the whole sorry mess began, when our oh-so-very-ex-Prime Minister John Howard refused to say “Sorry” for the unimaginable injustices and humiliation suffered by tens of thousands of Indigenous Australians as revealed once and for all in the Bringing them Home report, FourPlay played at the big inaugral Sorry Day event at the Sydney Opera House Forecourt. It was a matter of pride, and very moving, to take part in that, however briefly, but that’s nothing like the pride we can feel today after our new Prime Minister’s remarkable speech at the opening of Parliament. I was at work, and watched what I could on YouTube, but thanks to Peter Martin, I’ve now been able to read the whole speech. It’s quite long, and as Martin describes it, both gripping and well-judged. If you didn’t get to see it, or indeed if you did, I commend you to read the whole transcript. It’s a beauty. We can only hope that there will be real, honest and productive action taken, in co-operation with Indigenous communities around Australia, to turn things round — to bring some hope for future generations. Rudd mentions the really big problems, and it’s worth quoting:
Friday, 4th of January, 2008
Probably the greatest thing in the history of YouTube so far… (10:34 am)
Unfortunately YouTube are LAMERZ and pulled all of StSanders’ videos, but below you can see it via Wired. This post here has ALL the StSanders “________ shreds” videos! The Jake E. Lee/Ozzy Osborne one is the one I posted here: But the Santana one is hilarious too (as are most of them…) originally via the incomparable Graham Linehan
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In case you think Dawkins maybe isn’t absolutely right… (10:34 am)
Have a read of this: via the estimable Graham Linehan, who couples the link with a wonderful image you need to see… ETA: OK, it seems this is from 1970! The date stamp on the article is: “Monday, Dec. 07, 1970″. So why is it up on the TIME website with nothing else commenting on the date? Weird!
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Tuesday, 18th of December, 2007
10 years ago… (1:04 pm)
A few days ago I finally posted my ridiculously comprehensive 2007 list at the Utility Fog blog. Over at the Mess+Noise boards today there’s a thread on “Official…ish Top 10 of 1997“, of which I thought, “Hm, 1997, the year the Clouds broke up, and surely that dire period where indie music was pathetic and nothing much of interest was happening.”
So, a fucken awesome year for idm, which shouldn’t have been surprising - and also two absolutely seminal releases for Mego-style glitch. Also this year: Monday, 17th of December, 2007
The world we live in… (11:18 pm)
You can unsubscribe, but what action can be enough to counter our complicity in this? The link takes you to the horrifying account of a man kidnapped and tortured in a CIA black site. There are people who are, shall we say, more complicit in these atrocities, however, and they must not get away with it. (They will, I know). And in our little corner of the world, our brave new Rudd government is happily allowing the Federal police to place a control order on David Hicks when he’s shortly, finally, released. He’ll be reporting to police three times a week. I guess we can all feel a little bit safer that this misguided, broken, harmless man is still being vigilantly watched.
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Thursday, 29th of November, 2007
Greens senate chances and pragmatism (12:01 am)
There’s some really interesting discussion going on over at GreensBlog about the Greens’ chances in the senate, which are stronger than you might think. At Larvatus Prodeo late last year, Paul Norton explained that the media regularly underestimates the Greens’ electoral success because they tend to do considerably better out of pre-poll and absentee votes than the Coalition. You can follow the links to see some theories as to why this is - but this post of Tim’s gives us some figures:
This is fascinating, and the good news is that as those pre-polls and absentee votes come in, the Greens are doing very well in ACT — potentially enough for Kerrie Tucker to overtake the Liberal candidate! In Victoria, Richard di Natale has a good chance too, especially considering there were three very Greens-friendly events on that weekend: Queenscliff Music Festival, Earthcore and the Great Victorian Bike Ride. If they can pick up at least one of these seats, they would represent one fewer Liberal senator, meaning that Labor wouldn’t have to negotiate with Family First (they’d still need all the Greens and Nick Xenophon, or a National or Liberal to vote with them); if they pick up both of these, the Greens would hold the balance of power on their own, meaning that they would be the only group (other than the Liberals) who would have the power on their own to negotiate with Labor over policy details. As it stands, Labor would either need the Libs to vote with them, or would need all the Greens plus Xenophon plus Family First in order to get anything through the senate… In the comments to Tim’s senate post (which also accounces the awesome fact that the Greens are projected to end up with something like 1,080,000 first preference votes in the Senate — yes, well over a million!), there’s a discussion initiated by Rob Mailler (who apparently has a bit of a bee in his bonnet about this) suggesting that the Greens should moderate some of their “lower priority messages” in order to gain a small proportion more of the vote (and presumably thus get an extra senator through). The discussion has revolved around whether the pragmatic choice of toning down other policies in order to best serve the climate change agenda is desirable. I’m interested in this question of “principle vs pragmatism”. I think there’s an issue that all “framers” face, which is one of identifying what one’s ultimate aim is. Framing is all very well if you’re attempting to convince a group of people of one or two simple points. You find a way of coming at it from a point of common ground, using terminology that simply and effectively makes your point of view attractive. It’s like that with all rhetoric; it’s not meant for conveying nuanced, complicated matters, nor for convincing people of a multitude of policy matters all at once. In any case, this might be a bit of a furphy when it comes to “New Atheism vs framing of science”; there should be — and is — room for many different voices, and the occasional clashes that occur when one voice says “taking science seriously must mean abandoning belief in God” and another says “Look here, your belief in God doesn’t preclude taking evolution seriously!” are acceptable. Most people have minds of their own, and can choose to say “Well I don’t like that Dawkins chap, but the nice Mr Wilson is saying some interesting things. Maybe I should give evolution another look!” (This would be sad, since Dawkins is one of the most misrepresented thinkers in the world, but that’s another blog post…) A political party, however, needs to present a coherent and united front. Indeed, some Greens candidates & party members’ failure to stay on-point has been mentioned as a drawback for them, and it’s true that the Greens should make sure their representatives don’t muddy the waters. In the case of this discussion, what’s being suggested is that they take a pragmatic approach whereby they become more populist in some of their policies in order to give themselves more of an opportunity to effect real change with regards to what might be considered their “core” policy of combating climate change. How the Greens can combat the frankly ridiculous idea that they’re “extreme Left”, that they’re just a bunch of drug-loving, tree-hugging hippies, or a socialist front, I’m not sure. But the best way is simply to get more and more air-time to publicise their views on a whole range of matters, which will come with balance of power (hopefully!) and the gradual increase in votes. Finding ways whenever they’re given air-time to convey simple facts like the inaccuracy of early media reports on the Greens’ success, finding ways to frame harm-minimisation that can strongly combat the “War on Drugs”/”Tough on Drugs” imagery that’s been so effectively framed by the right; these are important. I’ve been mostly very impressed with Bob Brown when I’ve seen him or heard him in the media of late, but I think there’s still plenty of room for improvement… Here’s to the future! Sunday, 25th of November, 2007
“Elated in Adelaide” (1:51 pm)
is what I changed my Facebook status to on my Treo last night at the venue where I was playing a gig, once it had become clear that it was a Ruddslide, and what’s more Howard had lost his seat to Maxine (they’re not calling it yet, but I can’t see how Howard can hang on to it - which is simply wonderful!) I’m disappointed that the Greens haven’t had the out-and-out success we hoped for, but I think they still have a chance at getting a 6th senator in and holding balance of power. As it stands, the ABC are giving them 5 senators, with Nick Xenophon in SA and Steven Fielding for Family First also required for any Labor legislation to pass (in addition to the Greens). Another Greens senator would mean Family First are out of the picture. It’s very sad to see the end of the Democrats. It’s particularly sad to see Andrew Bartlett go, so let’s hope he continues to contribute to the blogosphere (here’s his post analysing the senate results as they stand).
PS wonder how long this‘ll be up? Second time I’ve seen it listed! Wednesday, 24th of October, 2007
OiNK oinks no more (8:50 am)
I’ve been musing since yesterday over the demise of private BitTorrent site OiNK, and especially of the rather forbidding message now hosted there (”A criminal investigation continues into the identities and activities of the site’s users”). In particular, I was thinking how this criminal investigation, if it finds anyone much, is going to turn up a huge selection of massive music fans with huge CD & vinyl collections, and what’s more a huge selection of professional musicians and DJs. Because many, many musos, and probably all DJs, are obsessive music fans. I was going to write something up about it, about how despite its rather insanely huge selections, once I was able to check out its wares (well, its warez), I didn’t find much that I wanted, because I’m such a completist anyway; and about how most of the music I’ve “stolen” from filesharing over the years now exists on my CD/vinyl shelves anyway — eventually I’ll find a way of buying a physical copy of anything I like, and what, in the end, is the difference between a second-hand copy of an out-of-print item and a downloaded mp3 of the same, from the record company’s point of view? (Answer: nothing. The fuckerz really hate second-hand record stores too!) And the strange morality of OiNK was something that struck me very much - enforced sharing ratios, enforced sound quality, stringent rules about formatting and information supplied; could I square that in my head with the illegality of the whole exercise? I’m not sure. Even the fact that it was forbidden to share leaked pre-masters and studio sessions, which in a weird way was actually reassuring. In any case, the wonderful Jace Clayton aka DJ /rupture has written the perfect post on the matter, so go read DEFENDING THE PIG: OiNK croaks. Thanks Jace! Tuesday, 23rd of October, 2007
Greg Egan - Steve Fever (12:31 am)
Finally, Greg Egan has started writing fiction again, and not only do we have a new novel, Incandescence, coming out in 2008, we have a bunch of new short stories too. I strongly recommend reading “Steve Fever”. It’s fun, quite short, and nicely demonstrates Egan’s touch - a personal story about strange technologies used to interrogate some pretty deep ideas about the world. It reminded me of Kathleen Ann Goonan’s remarkable nanotech quartet, especially Queen City Jazz, in which a nanotech virus infects people’s minds with an urge to travel down the Mississippi river. Goonan uses her solidly-thought-out scientific and technological ideas to tell a story about the history of America, its literature, blues and jazz music, and a kind of search for transcendence. Egan has often aimed at some of these themes himself (including transcendence within a scientific-materialist world), and Goonan was no doubt influenced by Egan’s astounding earlier works, so it’s nice to hear the echoes coming back again.
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Wednesday, 26th of September, 2007Sunday, 19th of August, 2007
Rudd or Milne: you choose (7:57 pm)
Regarding Kevin Rudd’s visit to a strip club, as revealed in a story by Glenn Milne, this is how Glenn Milne acts when drunk:
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Friday, 20th of July, 2007
Brain seizures from spinning silhouettes & silly sentences (12:15 am)
This is the most evil thing I have ever seen. It gave me a similar sensation, if more unpleasant, to the one gained from examining these sentences in detail: Are they ungrammatical? Well, yes, but that’s not exactly why they’re so fascinating. It’s very nearly impossible to apprehend them as simply ungrammatical - they feel strongly as if they’re genuine sentences. Wednesday, 13th of June, 2007
AC Grayling OTM (11:07 pm)
In the Guardian’s “Comment Is Free” section, which I off-handedly slagged off (kinda) in the previous post, AC Grayling has some on-the-money comments about the incredible fuss that some half-dozen or so books on atheism have stirred up in the last year or so — essentially pointing out that there are hundreds (at least) of religious books published every year, and isn’t it funny how terribly insecure those poor religious folks must be that they get so het up about a few books advocating for the Case Against. In a way I’m more intrigued by the agnostic and even atheistic folks who think the strident atheists ought to be quiet and not rock the boat. On a similar tack, here’s Jeffrey Shallit on the cliché of the militant atheist — a convenient and inappropriate bit of framing, that one. Fundamentalist Christians and Moslems (and indeed Jews) could easily be described as militant. Most atheists, even the most strident, are as un-militant as they come. Tuesday, 12th of June, 2007
blogs.smh.com.au is teh awesome (11:01 am)
It seems Fairfax don’t have any qualms about hosting content on their site that hasn’t been through seven levels of subediting… I guess either you go all-out with blog comments (a la the Grauniad’s Comment Is Free) or you don’t bother. Hence, on a “Mashup” (stupid co-opting of a term there!) post about privacy and Google Maps, we get this informed opinion:
Well, RoDog, maybe if you weren’t a moron (oh, sorry, a “,Moron”) you’d notice that teh intarweb doesn’t reside exclusively in the USA. Yay! Friday, 1st of June, 2007
Nussbaum on the Israel boycott (7:16 pm)
US philosopher Martha Nussbaum has an excellent clear-thinking article in Dissent on the idiotic academic boycott of Israel.
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Tuesday, 29th of May, 2007
The Office of the Messiah (11:28 am)
It turns out that the, er, “Office of the Messiah” is in Tasmania. Who knew?
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Sunday, 27th of May, 2007
The unComfortable Truth (12:30 pm)
Ray Comfort is a Creationist famous for some mindbending arguments against evolutionary biology involving bananas and coke cans, which appeared on YouTube not too long ago and were roundly lampooned the world over. This is just to point you to PZ Myers’ spot-on response.
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Monday, 16th of April, 2007
I’m Stranded (4:38 pm)
Yep, we’re stuck in San Francisco. We were packing this morning and I rang Victor, Jordan’s uncle in New York at one of whose apartments we’re staying there… and he mentioned that we might be delayed when we got there, because there’s huge storms there right now (apparently abating though). Anyway, lots of reading will be caught up on. I do owe a whole week’s worth of travelblogging, which I hope to get to shortly! For now, suffice to say that San Francisco is an awesome place. Among the places visited are the best comics shop in America, probably the best science fiction specialist bookshop, and a couple of awesome record stores… But there’s so many awesome little bookshops too, there’s the SFMOMA and a bunch of other great art galleries/museums, lots of cool/funky areas and so on. So yeah.
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Thursday, 12th of April, 2007
so it goes (5:20 pm)
Oh hell. Kurt Vonnegut is dead. His body of work has been hugely important to me for many years. I haven’t read much of his recent stuff, but he means a lot to me. Sad now. Yes, I have a big travel-blog post queued up but I’m doing other stuff, m’kay? It’ll get posted tomorrow, San Francisco time, for sure! Suffice to say, SF is awesome!
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Monday, 9th of April, 2007
Heading overseas! (12:39 am)
Yep, from tomorrow (er, that would be today’s date), Angela and I are heading overseas on a fabulous jaunt, taking in San Francisco, New York, Montreal and Chicago. I hope to keep up the travel blogging while we’re away, as will Ange, so you can get twice the bang for your buck this time through! Saturday, 7th of April, 2007
Yup (11:29 pm)
“OTM”, you ask? Sorry, you may need to read more ilX to understand that, or somewhere like that. OTM = “on the money” or “on the mark”, okeys?
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Sunday, 11th of March, 2007Saturday, 10th of March, 2007
The Oz Politics Blog’s Australian politics test (11:54 pm)
Find out what political party your views are closest to, and where you sit on the political spectrum. My results are here This is interesting though: the cumulative results and analysis page. As of writing this post, the distribution of people’s self-perceived preferred political parties was: Tuesday, 6th of March, 2007
Independent Australian Jewish Voices (9:40 am)
So the Independent Australian Jewish Voices website was launched a few days ago. I signed up, as did the rest of my family, as we’ve been quite disturbed by the one-sidedness of “Jewish” representation in the media for some time. Cue the IAJW launch. The reactions chronicled in this SMH article couldn’t be a better advertisement for why “independent” voices are needed from the Jewish community — and not just those of Antony Lowenstein, who is a signatory but by no means the only voice on offer. Let’s hear the statement from good old Colin Rubenstein of the Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council, always good for an over-the-top quote:
Hear that? “Jewish-born individuals”, what the frak? Somehow I thought that since the Holocaust, all Jewish-born individuals were Jews, all ethnic Jews were Jews. I guess I was being naïve huh? Clearly anyone who wants open discussion of Israel and the Middle East is no longer fit to call themself a Jew.
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Sunday, 4th of March, 2007
Back to atheism… (12:40 pm)
…and back to linklogging again. Just a link to a very thoughtful article by Vancouver philosopher Stan Persky on Dawkins’ The God Delusion, which makes some good points in its favour against its critics on the more-or-less atheistic side of the fence. Persky admits that the book could have been better, but that it probably does a good enough job for now, in the context that it’s not meant to be an all-encompassing piece of philosophy or theology — it’s meant to be a middle-brow polemic aimed at giving believers a way out. It’s consciousness-raising, as Dawkins puts it.
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Thursday, 1st of March, 2007
Here is no why (1:48 pm)
Barry Jones on why “It’s not too late to save the political process”.
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Saturday, 24th of February, 2007
Conservapedia (5:35 pm)
It’s really hard to know whether Conservapedia is somebody’s hilarious hoax or whether it’s deadly serious. By now, as lefties the world over go and have fun with it, it’s probably full of lots of deliberately stoopid stuff, but there’s no doubt that if it was started in all seriousness then there’s plenty of po-faced idiocy there as well. Meanwhile, fellow Frogworthian Stuart comments at his blog, Le Rayon Vert.
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Tuesday, 6th of February, 2007Sunday, 7th of January, 2007
Wow (7:25 pm)
A nice and sarcastic poem from Greg Laden (via PZ):
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Sunday, 24th of December, 2006
The House Beyond Your Sky (12:26 pm)
For some time, Benjamin Rosenbaum has been one of the brightest new sparks in the sf world, creating stories with equal parts mythical resonance, rigorous scientific speculation and empathy with the human condition. He can bring a strange mix of the Talmudic and scientific methods to the philosophical backgrounds of his stories, and his blog is often home for intense philosophical arguments involving such others as Ted Chiang and David Moles. In this post, I’m urging you to go and check out Ben R’s most recent story, online at Strange Horizons: The House Beyond Your Sky. It’s an immensely-far-future tale which is vintage Rosenbaum (as described above), and the less I say about it the better. However, Ben does have an illuminating blog post about the story, which includes a prologue which was removed from the final version, but which it wouldn’t hurt to read before you dive into the story.
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Sunday, 17th of December, 2006
Jay Lake @ COSMOS Magazine (7:32 pm)
Easily one of my favourite authors at the moment is Jay Lake, whose LiveJournal is a constant source of fascinating ruminations on (and discussions of) science fiction, writing, politics, morality, philosophy, child-rearing and more. He’s been appearing in some Australian sf markets recently, and it’s lovely to see that Damien Broderick has got a new story of Jay’s up on the COSMOS Magazine site (COSMOS is a great newish Aussie science magazine that’s been featuring a new sf story every issue since the beginning. They now seem to be buying enough that they’re publishing a few exclusively on the web, like here). This one’s a science fiction story, and a space opera at that, and it’s a beauty. And it’s short, so you can easily hop over there now. Go read The Dead Man’s Child.
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Wednesday, 13th of December, 2006
English usage 101 (11:21 pm)
You probably haven’t seen all of these.
Admittedly this one’s even better though:
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Another muso philosopher (12:40 pm)
Mylo, whose music I can’t say I particularly appreciate, turns out to have a philosophical past, and he seems to pretty much have his head screwed on right too.
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Wednesday, 22nd of November, 2006
I wish Ben Peek hated me half as much as I hate him (3:25 pm)
PS isn’t that cover awesome? I hate Andrew Macrae too. But not as much as Ben Peek. Friday, 17th of November, 2006
It’s not easy being an idiot (2:29 pm)
I’ve seen this incredibly stupid article linked from a couple of blogs recently — it’s called “It’s not easy being an atheist”, and it’s by Pastor Steven W Cornell, a man who clearly prefers not to think too hard about worldviews other than his own. The trouble with someone like Cornell writing about what it must be like to be an atheist is that he’s categorically unable to break out of his own blinkered world-view, and therefore everything about life gets defined in a Christian’s straightjacketed way - morality cannot exist without god/faith, existence is a miracle, life without god must lack “ultimate” purpose… But hey, c’mon, there’s more craziness than that in the guy’s article, if you’re up for it:
Never mind all of the inconsistencies between the different gospels’ accounts; it’s presented in an “authentic manner”, folks, so that’s all there is to it! Getting back to blinkered worldviews, the most interesting thing about these kinds of people is how they couch everything in terms of “denying” god, being “biased against” god. Sorry mate, the thing is, you have to have a pretty good reason to get god into the discussion in the first place. As I’ve mentioned before (I think), many of us atheists (yes, I have the grammar right there) do not consider our position a rejection of theism/deism/religion as such at all. Ours is the natural way to understand the world — there just isn’t any good reason or need to introduce some kind of supernatural, transcendent element. (PS Please don’t be offended by this post’s title if you’re religious yourself; I’m not necessarily talking about you, but jumpin’ jehosophat, this guy really is an idiot!) Friday, 20th of October, 2006
Dear Australian government… (1:23 pm)
What a bunch of assholes you are… (I know, I could’ve pointed to dozens of other serious things, but right now the imminent demise of our only half-half-decent newspaper proprietors is a crying shame.) Wednesday, 11th of October, 2006
xkcd (2:41 pm)
xkcd is, hands down, the best webcomic in existence. Tuesday, 26th of September, 2006
A long sentence (4:24 pm)
My brother’s partner is doing a PhD in criminal law, about the length of sentences as it happens. Saturday, 23rd of September, 2006
Etgar Keret interview (11:26 pm)
I’m sure I’ve talked about the amazing Israeli author Etgar Keret before here (oh yes - in relation to his exchange of letters with Palestinian author Samir El-Youssef). I just wanted to link to a fantastic interview with him in The Believer, which gives a really interesting insight into life in Israel, especially for people of our generation.
and:
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Monday, 28th of August, 2006
Interesting thing (1:30 am)
Give this a go. Friday, 18th of August, 2006
Detour (3:45 pm)
Fascinating. Bruno Latour, scion of “science studies”, is worried enough by the Right’s co-opting of much of the discource of “critique”, “Theory” or whatever you want to call it, that he’s asking whether maybe its time is over:
Fascinating. Sunday, 13th of August, 2006
Cabin baggage bans affect musicians (12:37 pm)
Recently, my band has decided forthrightly to stop flying with one of the cheap carriers here (you can guess who). Why? Apart from the obviously lower level of comfort on their flights (but they are generally cheaper, so it never stopped us in the past), we recently encountered a remarkable level of hostility from them regarding the realities of our job. We were told that they have a rule about not allowing instruments in the cabin — something we’ve never been informed of before — and in addition they stopped us from taking our boxes of CDs on board with us.
Yep, the fuckers inevitably stick the cello belly-down on the conveyor-belt (in fact, in Australia is’t even sometimes on the main conveyor belt with the other luggage). How stupid can you be? Well, it doesn’t always come out on the conveyor-belt, but when it does, it’s hardly ever the right way up. And things do shift around inside the case, so if I’m putting it on a long flight I try and pad it with clothing as much as possible. These issues are just some of the reasons that I suspect that the UK’s full ban on cabin baggage can’t last long, especially if the rest of the world doesn’t follow suit. Who cares about no liquids? Noone really; but not being able to take one’s expensive laptops and musical instruments, often with limited insurance, on board would be disastrous for many of the most frequent air travellers. Friday, 11th of August, 2006Friday, 4th of August, 2006
Those poor Christians getting offended (10:51 am)
Here’s something rather troubling. The Gay Police Association in the UK were so concerned about the increase in “very serious homophobic incidents on the grounds and justification of religious belief” that they took out an advertisement in the Independent’s Diversity supplement in June. Certainly the ad contained some strong imagery, “depicting a Bible beside a pool of blood under the heading ‘In the name of the father’”.
Not like those Christians, who start Metropolitan Police investigations and call for the chairman of the Gay Police Association to resign as soon as their oh-so-frail belief system is challenged. *sigh* Look forward to the Spanish Inquisition, coming soon to a free, democratic, open society near you. Via Ophelia Benson.
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Tuesday, 1st of August, 2006
More on Israel, the Left, and Truth(!) (1:11 pm)
Here’s a stunning blog post from Lisa Goldman on the affect the conflict has had on the (relationship between the) editors of Time Out Beirut and Time Out Tel Aviv. |