Showing posts with label Politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Politics. Show all posts

Thursday, 15 April 2010

What a day it has been

Much of western Europe has had to close airspace because of volcanic dust from Iceland. I do not belittle this event. It serves as a reminder that the Earth is much bigger than we are.

Tonight we get the first ever live debate between the main contenders for prime ministerial office in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. This will probably have one of the highest viewing figures ever recorded in the UK, for about 15-30 minutes. I am listening on the radio rather than viewing so I can do something else at the same time - blog and then probably fall asleep.

The British Chiropractic Association has dropped it's libel case against Simon Singh. That's good, a courtroom is not the place to decide scientific validity. Now the BCA should continue and provide a scientific reasoning for the treatments they practice. Otherwise it's still "bogus".

Then the best thing of all today. I just discovered The Merseyside Skeptics Society. And they have a podcast, and it's spot on! Even better is their spoof panel game InKredulous where they take "a satirical look at science and pseudoscience news".

Not a bad day after all :) Grow into these trousers... >>

Wednesday, 10 March 2010

Equality means being equal

A couple of days ago was International Women’s Day which was widely celebrated hereabouts.

I had never heard of this before, but it seems a cause I can fully support, so in the true gentlemanly tradition of making amends (next time, tell me beforehand) and in belated recognition of the day (hope it went well ladies) here is the courageous Wafa Sultan speaking on the dangers of Sharia law.

Wafa Sultan on Sharia


Wafa says she has a petition, but the clip is a couple of years old and I can't find it. I have signed similar things before though. Grow into these trousers... >>

Friday, 15 May 2009

Hitch

No, thankfully not that kind...

Christopher Hitchens - on being himself. I quite like Hitch!

Christopher Hitchens on The Hour (Part 1 of 2)

Part 2 is below the belt...

Christopher Hitchens on The Hour (Part 2 of 2)


Hitch has stopped smoking!? If he can do it, then I can too.
-------------------
Many thaks to [Matt] at Atheist News.
Grow into these trousers... >>

Wednesday, 22 April 2009

What ?



From the BBC budget report:
• Alcohol taxes to go up 2% from midnight - putting the price of the average pint up 1p
Thanks...

Don't worry, I'll be doing my bit for our National economy.


If only Brown and his Darling would do the same. Grow into these trousers... >>

Tuesday, 21 April 2009

Sharif don't like it


President Ahmadinejad, if you wish to be taken seriously on the world stage:

               1) learn basic history
               2) look up the word 'diplomacy'
       and 3) don't resort to hate speech

otherwise the rest if the world will just point and laugh.

the clash rock the casbah w/lyrics
Grow into these trousers... >>

Tuesday, 31 March 2009

Youtube have lost the plot

This is almost impossible to believe. YouTube have suspended the account of the James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF), one of our planet's foremost organisations dedicated to the promotion of scepticism, rationality and the debunking of pseudoscientific bullshit. No reasons have been given yet and it's idle to speculate. JREF President Phil Plait asks for patience while they work on a resolution with YouTube. He also thanks people for their support - so here is my bit. Pass on this video and, if you feel so inclined, complain at the address below.

Youtube have lost the plot - JREF account suspended


--------------------------------------
From dprjones:
To complain to youtube follow this link;
http://www.google.com/support/youtube...

Scroll to the very bottom and click on "new issue"

Select "suspended account" from the options and express your opinion.

The mediafire link is;
http://www.mediafire.com/?sharekey=4d...

Thank you
--------------------------------------

And I've just heard that the Rational Response Squad have been suspended too.


Don't know any details yet, but this has happened to them before. What is the world coming to? Grow into these trousers... >>

Thursday, 26 March 2009

Women, politics and religion

I took a taxi home a few nights* ago. I knew the driver (I know many of the local taxi drivers :) and during the short journey we usually enjoy a serious but light hearted conversation, if that makes sense. It's not unknown for us to continue, parked at the roadside, to round off a discussion.

My friend, though a cab driver, is well educated, intelligent and widely traveled. He is also a devout Moslem. I am not, but even though we are on either side of a wide divide, we both enjoy these exchanges. Well I do and I'm sure it's mutual. We talk about science or politics or music or the news or whatever. Or religion, quite often. Usually we share a laugh about our ability to 'agree to disagree'.

Good banter... Until the other night when I asked about the position of women under sharia law. Out of the blue came "women are no good at running countries".

I hit back with Magrat Thatcher and Benazir Bhutto which seemed to cause a sharp intake of breath, and damn! I was home, and we couldn't carry on because of parked cars and traffic. Next time...

To make my own position clear:
I believe in equality between all people. Black, white, brown, olive, yellow, red, green, blue or orange. Male, female, non-gendered, cross-gendered, medically re-gendered, transsexual, transvestite, bisexual, homosexual, lesbian, hermaphrodite or those who have suffered desexualization by disease, accident or Bobbitt. Rich or poor, strong or weak. Educated, streetwise or neither, healthy or ill, young or old, religious or atheistic, sober or drunk we should all be equal under the law of the land.
J.A. Holroyd 26.03.09
Now I have had time to think, and look-up female presidents and prime ministers etc, I should have started with Pharaoh Hatshepsut of Egypt.

Below the belt, as a memory jogger for myself, I reproduce this list from About.com of women political leaders from 1960 to 2000ish.


  1. Sirimavo Bandaranaike, Sri Lanka
    Prime Minister, 1960-1965, 1970-1977, 1994-2000.
  2. Indira Gandhi, India
    Prime Minister, 1966-77, 1980-1984.
  3. Golda Meir, Israel
    Prime Minister, 1969-1974.
  4. Isabel Peron, Argentina
    President, 1974-1976
  5. Elisabeth Domitien, Central African Republic
    Prime Minister, 1975-1976
  6. Margaret Thatcher, Great Britain
    Prime Minister, 1979-1990.
  7. Maria da Lourdes Pintasilgo, Portugal
    Prime Minister, 1979-1980.
  8. Lidia Gueiler Tejada, Bolivia
    Prime Minister, 1979-1980.
  9. Dame Eugenia Charles, Dominica
    Prime Minister, 1980-1995.
  10. Vigdís Finnbogadóttír, Iceland
    President, 1980-96.
  11. Gro Harlem Brundtland, Norway
    Prime Minister, 1981, 1986-1989, 1990-1996.
  12. Soong Ching-Ling, Peoples' Republic of China
    Honorary President, 1981.
  13. Milka Planinc, Yugoslavia
    Federal Prime Minister, 1982-1986.
  14. Agatha Barbara, Malta
    President, 1982-1987.
  15. Maria Liberia-Peters, Netherlands Antilles
    Prime Minister, 1984-1986, 1988-1993.
  16. Corazon Aquino, Philippines
    President, 1986-92.
  17. Benazir Bhutto, Pakistan
    Prime Minister, 1988-1990, 1993-1996.
  18. Kazimiera Danuta Prunskiena, Lithuania
    Prime Minister, 1990-91.
  19. Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, Nicaragua
    Prime Minister, 1990-1996.
  20. Mary Robinson, Ireland
    President, 1990-1997.
  21. Ertha Pascal Trouillot, Haiti
    Interim President, 1990-1991.
  22. Sabine Bergmann-Pohl, German Democratic Republic
    President, 1990.
  23. Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar (Burma)
    Her party won 80% of the seats in a democratic election in 1990, but the military government refused to recognize the results. She was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991.
  24. Khaleda Zia, Bangladesh
    Prime Minister, 1991-1996.
  25. Edith Cresson, France
    Prime Minister, 1991-1992.
  26. Hanna Suchocka, Poland
    Prime Minister, 1992-1993.
  27. Kim Campbell, Canada
    Prime Minister, 1993.
  28. Sylvie Kinigi, Burundi
    Prime Minister, 1993-1994.
  29. Agathe Uwilingiyimana, Rwanda
    Prime Minister, 1993-1994.
  30. Susanne Camelia-Romer, Netherlands Antilles
    Prime Minister, 1993, 1998-
  31. Tansu Çiller, Turkey
    Prime Minister, 1993-1995.
  32. Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunge, Sri Lanka
    Prime Minister, 1994, President, 1994-
  33. Reneta Indzhova, Bulgaria
    Interim Prime Minister, 1994-1995.
  34. Claudette Werleigh, Haiti
    Prime Minister, 1995-1996.
  35. Sheikh Hasina Wajed, Bangladesh
    Prime Minister, 1996-.
  36. Mary McAleese, Ireland
    President, 1997-.
  37. Pamela Gordon, Bermuda
    Premier, 1997-1998.
  38. Janet Jagan, Guyana
    Prime Minister, 1997, President, 1997-1999.
  39. Jenny Shipley, New Zealand
    Prime Minister, 1997-1999.
  40. Ruth Dreifuss, Switzerland
    President, 1999-2000.
  41. Jennifer Smith, Bermuda
    Prime Minister, 1998-.
  42. Nyam-Osoriyn Tuyaa, Mongolia
    Acting Prime Minister, July 1999.
  43. Helen Clark, New Zealand
    Prime Minister, 1999-.
  44. Mireya Elisa Moscoso de Arias, Panama
    President, 1999-.
  45. Vaira Vike-Freiberga, Latvia
    President, 1999-.
  46. Tarja Kaarina Halonen, Finland
    President, 2000-.

I've included Tarja Kaarina Halonen because, by most reckonings, the year 2000 is actually part of the 20th century. (The year "0" didn't exist, so a century starts with the year "1" - or so the logic goes.) As the 21st century arrived, yet another was added: Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo - President of the Philippines, sworn in on January 20, 2001. Mame Madior Boye became Prime Minister in Senegal in March of 2001. Megawati Sukarnoputri, daughter of founding head of state Sukarno, was selected as Indonesia's fifth president in 2001 after losing in 1999. We can only hope that many others will be on a list of Women Presidents and Prime Ministers for the 21st century. I've limited this list, however, to the history of women heads of state for the 20th century, and will not add anyone who took office after 2001.

---------------------------
* It wasn't 1001 nights.
Grow into these trousers... >>

Sunday, 1 February 2009

I should not laugh

But the blog address chosen by UK Conservative Councillor Richard Willis (Reading Borough Council representing Peppard ward since 2007) should have been better thought out. Richard Willis UK?

http://richardwillisuk.wordpress.com/

Shades of the Scunthorpe problem? Grow into these trousers... >>

Tuesday, 27 January 2009

Support Geert Wilders

As I commented the other day (see: Pat Condell - Shame on The Netherlands), Dutch MP and filmmaker Geert Wilders is to be prosecuted for "inciting hatred and discrimination" towards Muslims and their beliefs.
Now you can show your support for Wilders by visiting The International Free Press Society. There's a page about the campaign to defend Wilders, and please sign this Letter of Protest to the Dutch Government.

There are currently 24174 signatures +1, me.
-------------------
HT to Pink Triangle. Grow into these trousers... >>

Monday, 26 January 2009

Pat Condell - Shame on The Netherlands

Pat Condell's new video on YouTube lambasts the Dutch government for it's decision to allow the prosecution Geert Wilders, an elected Freedom Party MP and maker of the anti-Islamic film Fitna.

Fitna is not a pleasant film to watch but if you haven't seen it, here are the links to Part 1 and Part 2. Marvel at the scriptural quotations and the words of the religious 'scholars'. As Pat observes below, if similar threats were made against Moslems as the Koran makes against others, there would be immediate prosecutions under hate speech law. None of the hate speech in Fitna comes from Wilders.

Here's Pat:
Shame on The Netherlands

I too have read the Koran and am well aware of the intolerance and injustice therein. I will never 'submit'. Grow into these trousers... >>

Friday, 23 January 2009

UK economy slides into recession

So say today's news headlines.

Slides? Slides! It's more like this:


We've been swindled by incompetent politicians and greedy businessmen for years, and now we have to pay for it. Come on, empty your pockets and dive below the belt to throw your money at Gordon Brown. Well someone threw their shoes at Bush so you may as well.

Bail Out Brown
----------------------
Update: Oops, almost forgot to thank The Libertarian Alliance for the game link.

Grow into these trousers... >>

President Obama to close Guantanamo

Another small step towards a future world where 'hope' and 'better' are not just words in a statement, but a reality for everyone.

THE JEEVAS-"ONCE UPON A TIME IN AMERICA"
Grow into these trousers... >>

Wednesday, 21 January 2009

Why do some people never think things through?

This video is popping up around the blogosphere. A group of anti-abortionists are challenged on camera with a question they clearly have never considered.
If abortion was illegal, what should be done with the women who have illegal abortions?
Round and round they go:

Asking Anti-Abortion Demonstrators an Important Question
Grow into these trousers... >>

Tuesday, 30 December 2008

Internet censorship. Beware the bogeyman

Remember over a decade ago when some UK towns were discriminated against by America Online's email profanity filter? The Scunthorpe Problem, as it came to be known, also affected Penistone and Lightwater (I have never heard what they made of Cockermouth).

More recently, in 2008, Dr. Herman I. Libshitz, a retired radiologist in the US, had difficulty in registering his family name as an email address with Verizon. In his own words:
"Verizon could use my name in the phonebook. They could use my name to bill me. Lord knows they cash my checks with my name on it," Libshitz says. "But somehow, as an e-mail address, it wasn't good. That offended me. I told them it was fine when Uncle Sam wanted me to be in the military"
Eventually, with a newspaper reporter's help:
"They condescended to let me use my own name as an e-mail address. Wasn't that gracious?" Libshitz remarks.
Next into the fray next comes Andy Burnham, the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport who continues to try to impose such misguided censorship. The Telegraph reports:
He [Burnham] is planning to negotiate with Barack Obama’s incoming American administration to draw up new international rules for English language websites.
...
Giving film-style ratings to individual websites is one of the options being considered, he confirms. When asked directly whether age ratings could be introduced, Mr Burnham replies: “Yes, that would be an option. This is an area that is really now coming into full focus.”
Who will do the rating? Who will judge that my humble light-hearted blog is forever condemned because I use the word Scunthorpe or call someone a rassclat? The Telegraph continues:
However, Mr Burnham said: “If you look back at the people who created the internet they talked very deliberately about creating a space that Governments couldn’t reach. I think we are having to revisit that stuff seriously now.
Oh Mr. Burnham, remember on the 12th November last when you addressed the Internet Advertising Bureau?
We’re a long way from the John Perry Barlow Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace in 1996, where he declares

‘the global space we are building to be naturally independent of the tyrannies you seek to impose on us. You have no moral right to rule us nor do you possess any methods of enforcement we have true reason to fear. Your legal concepts of property, expression, identity, movement, and context do not apply to us.’

Perhaps you should read all of what John Perry Barlow set down rather than cherry picking.

Its only a short read: A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace, but I can cherry pick too.
You are terrified of your own children, since they are natives in a world where you will always be immigrants. Because you fear them, you entrust your bureaucracies with the parental responsibilities you are too cowardly to confront yourselves. In our world, all the sentiments and expressions of humanity, from the debasing to the angelic, are parts of a seamless whole, the global conversation of bits. We cannot separate the air that chokes from the air upon which wings beat.

In China, Germany, France, Russia, Singapore, Italy and the United States, you are trying to ward off the virus of liberty by erecting guard posts at the frontiers of Cyberspace. These may keep out the contagion for a small time, but they will not work in a world that will soon be blanketed in bit-bearing media.

Your increasingly obsolete information industries would perpetuate themselves by proposing laws, in America and elsewhere, that claim to own speech itself throughout the world. These laws would declare ideas to be another industrial product, no more noble than pig iron. In our world, whatever the human mind may create can be reproduced and distributed infinitely at no cost. The global conveyance of thought no longer requires your factories to accomplish.
In conclusion, I'm not sure whether to call Andy Burnham a Scunthorpe a Penistone or a Lightwater, but like too many politicians these days he sure is a Cockermouth. Grow into these trousers... >>

Tuesday, 16 December 2008

What is it with the shoe throwing?

I know that in many Arab cultures throwing a shoe at someone is a gesture of great disrespect, indeed just showing someone the sole of your shoe is derogatory enough. I just don't get it; but I must say 'hats off' to this man...



Even better, you can now have a go yourself.
Kast en sko på Bush

(or should that be Kast sko mot Bush? Norwegian is a language where my skills sadly lack).
-------------------------
Via The Invisible Pink Unicorn and LGF (now there is an unlikely pairing!). Grow into these trousers... >>

Tuesday, 25 November 2008

I couldn't put it better


Exactly.

Via Primordial Blog - via Friendly Atheist. Grow into these trousers... >>

Saturday, 22 November 2008

An incident close to home

My bus journey to work yesterday took me right past here. I saw the police tape and thought... nothing unusual, this is Windybank estate, a locally notorious region. Then the news items pop up.

It turns out that, following an internet leak of membership details of the right wing BNP, a so called political party in the UK, someone decides it is acceptable to fire bomb a car.

But the BNP guy wasn't in, so they trashed his neighbor’s car instead.

Wankers. Grow into these trousers... >>

Saturday, 15 November 2008

Universal Soldier

Here's another blast from the past
Donovan: Universal Soldier
Grow into these trousers... >>

Sunday, 9 November 2008

Bali bombers executed

Via BBC News.

Now the death toll is 205.

No one 'deserves' to die. Deliberate killing is ALWAYS wrong. Grow into these trousers... >>

Monday, 3 November 2008

Not that I have any say

But here's my take on the US election.

Grow into these trousers... >>