It was yesterday!...so I'm hoping some of you were aware of it! I've just signed up for next year [official site] although I'm very conscious of waste anyway...except for all the flights I do I might even be considered "green" . Also, by complete coincidence, at the exact time (8pm to 9pm local time) I was sat in the dark for nearly 2 hours with all the lights and appliances at home turned off...good eh?...however I was out in the cinema!"Given our company's commitment to environmental awareness and energy efficiency, we strongly support the Earth Hour campaign, and have darkened our homepage today to help spread awareness of what we hope will be a highly successful global event."
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Off or out...
Off or out...
It was yesterday!...so I'm hoping some of you were aware of it! I've just signed up for next year [official site] although I'm very conscious of waste anyway...except for all the flights I do I might even be considered "green" . Also, by complete coincidence, at the exact time (8pm to 9pm local time) I was sat in the dark for nearly 2 hours with all the lights and appliances at home turned off...good eh?...however I was out in the cinema!"Given our company's commitment to environmental awareness and energy efficiency, we strongly support the Earth Hour campaign, and have darkened our homepage today to help spread awareness of what we hope will be a highly successful global event."
Friday, March 28, 2008
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Obedient, obeisant observance or obsequious obscurantism?...
Andrew Clark and Orsolya Lelkes in their paper entitled 'Deliver us from evil: religion as insurance' are basically telling us that believers are happier. Their paper - one of dozens presented at last weeks Royal Economic Society Annual Conference [RES Home] [RES Conference]
Judging by the fact that it seems to concentrate on European data sets - I've only read the abstract - and highlights Catholic and Protestant denominations I'm guessing they refer only to Christianity - hence today's relevance....focuses on the insurance role of religion in buffering the well‐being impact of stressful life events, and the ensuing economic and social implications... ...we show that the religious enjoy higher levels of life satisfaction, and that religion does insure against some adverse life events.
Anyway, happy or not they've got some good tunes! (and they say it's the Devil that always has them...he may have: THIS is why.) I wrote here - the 4th comment on this post on Baldinio's blog yesterday - and now I can't stop singing! Oh happy day...
Obedient, obeisant observance or obsequious obscurantism?...
Andrew Clark and Orsolya Lelkes in their paper entitled 'Deliver us from evil: religion as insurance' are basically telling us that believers are happier. Their paper - one of dozens presented at last weeks Royal Economic Society Annual Conference [RES Home] [RES Conference]
Judging by the fact that it seems to concentrate on European data sets - I've only read the abstract - and highlights Catholic and Protestant denominations I'm guessing they refer only to Christianity - hence today's relevance....focuses on the insurance role of religion in buffering the well‐being impact of stressful life events, and the ensuing economic and social implications... ...we show that the religious enjoy higher levels of life satisfaction, and that religion does insure against some adverse life events.
Anyway, happy or not they've got some good tunes! (and they say it's the Devil that always has them...he may have: THIS is why.) I wrote here - the 4th comment on this post on Baldinio's blog yesterday - and now I can't stop singing! Oh happy day...
Saturday, March 22, 2008
Only oceans...
The incredible facts and figures aren't encouraging. All of the World's rivers and lakes (and including that built up in the clouds...some of which is dropping in the violent hail storm that's above me right now!) carry less than 1% of the world's freshwater. Great graphic image on the Nature webpage - with picture credit to USGS - of the global water distribution HERE.How much water is there on the planet?... ...less than 3% of that is freshwater. Of that, nearly 70% is in ice caps, glaciers, and permanent snow, and 30% sits in ground water.
A few examples of more facts from the article: Enough water to go around?
Makes one wonder but will it make anyone more careful with their usage? No.70 liters: water needed to create a single apple
900 liters: water needed to produce a kilogram of maize
10,850 liters: water needed to produce a pair of jeans
15,500 liters: water needed to produce a kilogram of industrial beef
Only oceans...
The incredible facts and figures aren't encouraging. All of the World's rivers and lakes (and including that built up in the clouds...some of which is dropping in the violent hail storm that's above me right now!) carry less than 1% of the world's freshwater. Great graphic image on the Nature webpage - with picture credit to USGS - of the global water distribution HERE.How much water is there on the planet?... ...less than 3% of that is freshwater. Of that, nearly 70% is in ice caps, glaciers, and permanent snow, and 30% sits in ground water.
A few examples of more facts from the article: Enough water to go around?
Makes one wonder but will it make anyone more careful with their usage? No.70 liters: water needed to create a single apple
900 liters: water needed to produce a kilogram of maize
10,850 liters: water needed to produce a pair of jeans
15,500 liters: water needed to produce a kilogram of industrial beef
Friday, March 21, 2008
Ostara offering...
Ostara: In ancient Anglo-Saxon myth, Ostara is the personification of the rising sun. In that capacity she is associated with the spring and is considered to be a fertility goddess. She is the friend of all children and to amuse then she changed her pet bird into a rabbit. This rabbit brought forth brightly colored eggs, which the goddess gave to the children as gifts. From her name and rites the festival of Easter is derived. "Ostara." Encyclopedia Mythica from Encyclopedia Mythica Online.
Equinox and Easter are always close: Christians observe "Christ's resurrection from the dead after his death on Good Friday as being synonymous with rebirth and rejuvenation: the symbolic resurrection of Christ is echoed in the awakening of the plant and animal life around us. But if we look more closely at some of these Easter customs, we will see that the origins are surprisingly, well, pagan! Eggs, bunnies, candy, Easter baskets, new clothes, all these "traditions" have their origin in practices which may have little or nothing to do with the Christian holiday." [Witchvox]"The Ostara worship was so strong in the Germanic lands that the somewhat similar Christian feast of rebirth and renewal was given the Goddess's name. Bede recounts that the Christian Paschal feast was named after the heathen Goddess Eostre, and so this celebration is still named Easter among the Christians. There is no specific date on which the Ostara feast must be held."
Ostara offering...
Ostara: In ancient Anglo-Saxon myth, Ostara is the personification of the rising sun. In that capacity she is associated with the spring and is considered to be a fertility goddess. She is the friend of all children and to amuse then she changed her pet bird into a rabbit. This rabbit brought forth brightly colored eggs, which the goddess gave to the children as gifts. From her name and rites the festival of Easter is derived. "Ostara." Encyclopedia Mythica from Encyclopedia Mythica Online.
Equinox and Easter are always close: Christians observe "Christ's resurrection from the dead after his death on Good Friday as being synonymous with rebirth and rejuvenation: the symbolic resurrection of Christ is echoed in the awakening of the plant and animal life around us. But if we look more closely at some of these Easter customs, we will see that the origins are surprisingly, well, pagan! Eggs, bunnies, candy, Easter baskets, new clothes, all these "traditions" have their origin in practices which may have little or nothing to do with the Christian holiday." [Witchvox]"The Ostara worship was so strong in the Germanic lands that the somewhat similar Christian feast of rebirth and renewal was given the Goddess's name. Bede recounts that the Christian Paschal feast was named after the heathen Goddess Eostre, and so this celebration is still named Easter among the Christians. There is no specific date on which the Ostara feast must be held."
Excellent. I've just been laughing out loud (along with the metal aliens with the Dalek voices) Are these the ten greatest ads of all time? [Times Comment Central] Not in my opinon but there's some goodies: the Guinness and John Smith's are great plus I enjoyed the Necafe 'novella'...(I'm not getting out enough!!) however I think that the ads that stick in your mind are the musical ditties or mottos you remember, For Mash Get Smash is one of those; so is Beanz Meanz Heinz, a Mars a Day helps you work rest and play and Topic, a hazelnut in every bite - "yes , funny how you always remember right at the end". I'm sure more will spring to mind now I've started!
Excellent. I've just been laughing out loud (along with the metal aliens with the Dalek voices) Are these the ten greatest ads of all time? [Times Comment Central] Not in my opinon but there's some goodies: the Guinness and John Smith's are great plus I enjoyed the Necafe 'novella'...(I'm not getting out enough!!) however I think that the ads that stick in your mind are the musical ditties or mottos you remember, For Mash Get Smash is one of those; so is Beanz Meanz Heinz, a Mars a Day helps you work rest and play and Topic, a hazelnut in every bite - "yes , funny how you always remember right at the end". I'm sure more will spring to mind now I've started!
Sunday, March 16, 2008
Out of office (2)...
Currently there are no ideas, just changes to the colour of the icing on the cake. Clegg is a Cameron clone and Cameron is a Blair clone and on current 'performance' it would seem that any interchanging between the two major parties would only mean New Labour becomes Blue Labour - better but not good enough. I can understand the hanging on the sidelines whilst Brown gets a good kick-in - my God he deserves it - but the Conservatives need to do a lot more to be convincing, especially if they wish to attract the crucial 'swing to the right'...not the most appropriate phrase for today's UK politics but you know what I mean! More from AM:"Victory went to the winner in the battle of ideas... [in the 1945, 1979 and 1997 General Elections] ...a body of new ideas replaced the prevailing orthodoxy. Today politics is struggling to come to terms with even greater changes: more assertive citizens, more diverse societies and more globalised economies. Together they call for new ideas, particularly a new relationship between the state and the citizen. As yet that call goes unheeded."
How I agree with Arlene from Liverpool as she comments "Fine words, Alan Milburn. You even sound as if you mean them. However, I do wonder if your piece is a placatory measure - a Trojan Horse. Time will tell, I guess. I hope that all readers will remain objective and suitably wary in the coming months and years." Objective indeed and very wary, especially of those that appear to have been poacher turned gamekeeper and now poacher once more."The modern state should not just enable. It should empower so that more people can realise their own individual aspirations to progress. The right wrongly rejects the state. The trick is to transform it so that the state controls less and empowers more. It is time to complete the post-war journey - from Attleeism through Thatcherism to Blairism – from the state being in charge to the state empowering the citizen to be in charge – from 'they control' to 'we control".
Out of office (2)...
Currently there are no ideas, just changes to the colour of the icing on the cake. Clegg is a Cameron clone and Cameron is a Blair clone and on current 'performance' it would seem that any interchanging between the two major parties would only mean New Labour becomes Blue Labour - better but not good enough. I can understand the hanging on the sidelines whilst Brown gets a good kick-in - my God he deserves it - but the Conservatives need to do a lot more to be convincing, especially if they wish to attract the crucial 'swing to the right'...not the most appropriate phrase for today's UK politics but you know what I mean! More from AM:"Victory went to the winner in the battle of ideas... [in the 1945, 1979 and 1997 General Elections] ...a body of new ideas replaced the prevailing orthodoxy. Today politics is struggling to come to terms with even greater changes: more assertive citizens, more diverse societies and more globalised economies. Together they call for new ideas, particularly a new relationship between the state and the citizen. As yet that call goes unheeded."
How I agree with Arlene from Liverpool as she comments "Fine words, Alan Milburn. You even sound as if you mean them. However, I do wonder if your piece is a placatory measure - a Trojan Horse. Time will tell, I guess. I hope that all readers will remain objective and suitably wary in the coming months and years." Objective indeed and very wary, especially of those that appear to have been poacher turned gamekeeper and now poacher once more."The modern state should not just enable. It should empower so that more people can realise their own individual aspirations to progress. The right wrongly rejects the state. The trick is to transform it so that the state controls less and empowers more. It is time to complete the post-war journey - from Attleeism through Thatcherism to Blairism – from the state being in charge to the state empowering the citizen to be in charge – from 'they control' to 'we control".
Monday, March 10, 2008
Oro: only one...
"Oh my goodness"...and the ease of the style and his landing makes it look like he could go much further! Watch it from the video link HERE on the BBC."Idowu made the fifth longest indoor jump of all time and set a new British indoor record to win with 17.75m"
Oro: only one...
"Oh my goodness"...and the ease of the style and his landing makes it look like he could go much further! Watch it from the video link HERE on the BBC."Idowu made the fifth longest indoor jump of all time and set a new British indoor record to win with 17.75m"
Saturday, March 08, 2008
Oakwell's outstanding Odejayi...
Of course I mention all this because I'm trying to forget other 'worse news': "England pay price for lack of ambition" [Times]. I'll be perfectly honest: the only things I have to say are well done Scotland and well done JW for at least gaining something today. Other than that you were all fucking crap."A second-half header from Kayode Odejayi was enough to dump Chelsea out of the FA Cup and take Championship Barnsley into the semi-finals."
That's the good bit; if I were the coach all XV would be dropped for the Ireland game."Jonny Wilkinson today stands alone as the leading scorer in Test rugby after kicking a penalty in England's RBS 6 Nations match in Scotland."
Oakwell's outstanding Odejayi...
Of course I mention all this because I'm trying to forget other 'worse news': "England pay price for lack of ambition" [Times]. I'll be perfectly honest: the only things I have to say are well done Scotland and well done JW for at least gaining something today. Other than that you were all fucking crap."A second-half header from Kayode Odejayi was enough to dump Chelsea out of the FA Cup and take Championship Barnsley into the semi-finals."
That's the good bit; if I were the coach all XV would be dropped for the Ireland game."Jonny Wilkinson today stands alone as the leading scorer in Test rugby after kicking a penalty in England's RBS 6 Nations match in Scotland."
"In a victory for Italian adulterers, the country's Supreme Court has ruled that it is acceptable for wives to lie in order to cover up an affair."
Sorry for such frivolity; there is of course a very serious message and something that get's my blood boiling more than anything else. Last year's UN message, "Ending Impunity for Violence against Women and Girls" [2008 link HERE has the message " Investing in Women and Girls"]
**Violence against women is the most common but least punished crime in the world.
**It is estimated that between 113 million and 200 million women are demographically "missing." They have been the victims of infanticide (boys are preferred to girls) or have not received the same amount of food and medical attention as their brothers and fathers.
**The number of women forced or sold into prostitution is estimated worldwide at anywhere between 700,000 and 4,000,000 per year. Profits from sex slavery are estimated at seven to twelve billion US dollars per year.
**Globally, women between the age of fifteen and forty-four are more likely to be maimed or die as a result of male violence than through cancer, malaria, traffic accidents or war combined.
**At least one out of every three women has been beaten, coerced into sex or otherwise abused in her lifetime. Usually, the abuser is a member of her own family or someone known to her. Domestic violence is the largest form of abuse of women worldwide, irrespective of region, culture, ethnicity, education, class and religion.
**It is estimated that more than two million girls are genitally mutilated per year, a rate of one girl every fifteen seconds.
**Systematic rape is used as a weapon of terror in many of the world's conflicts. It is estimated that between 250,000 and 500,000 women in Rwanda were raped during the 1994 genocide.
Figures taken from: Secretary-General's in-depth study on violence against women (2006) (A/61/122/Add.1) [click on globe image]
"In a victory for Italian adulterers, the country's Supreme Court has ruled that it is acceptable for wives to lie in order to cover up an affair."
Sorry for such frivolity; there is of course a very serious message and something that get's my blood boiling more than anything else. Last year's UN message, "Ending Impunity for Violence against Women and Girls" [2008 link HERE has the message " Investing in Women and Girls"]
**Violence against women is the most common but least punished crime in the world.
**It is estimated that between 113 million and 200 million women are demographically "missing." They have been the victims of infanticide (boys are preferred to girls) or have not received the same amount of food and medical attention as their brothers and fathers.
**The number of women forced or sold into prostitution is estimated worldwide at anywhere between 700,000 and 4,000,000 per year. Profits from sex slavery are estimated at seven to twelve billion US dollars per year.
**Globally, women between the age of fifteen and forty-four are more likely to be maimed or die as a result of male violence than through cancer, malaria, traffic accidents or war combined.
**At least one out of every three women has been beaten, coerced into sex or otherwise abused in her lifetime. Usually, the abuser is a member of her own family or someone known to her. Domestic violence is the largest form of abuse of women worldwide, irrespective of region, culture, ethnicity, education, class and religion.
**It is estimated that more than two million girls are genitally mutilated per year, a rate of one girl every fifteen seconds.
**Systematic rape is used as a weapon of terror in many of the world's conflicts. It is estimated that between 250,000 and 500,000 women in Rwanda were raped during the 1994 genocide.
Figures taken from: Secretary-General's in-depth study on violence against women (2006) (A/61/122/Add.1) [click on globe image]
Tuesday, March 04, 2008
Ominous overreation...
Chavez's major overreaction - IMHO - to the Colombian incursion, as good an admission as any of FARC acitivity in Venezuela, could also be the pin that bursts the bubble of his glory-basking role in the release of hostages having been in direct negotiation with FARC...[worryingly my doppelgänger is in that AP photo on the BBC link; that should make my next visit interesting!]...sorry to be a cynic but I believe his efforts have been for one reason only: to paint a picture of the narco-terrorists as the good guys, being victimised by a stooge of the Empire: he and Venezuela do not recognise FARC as a terrorist group...they're only good ol' Marxist revolutionaries. Chavez has been key in their ploy."Just yesterday (Monday) our national police submitted an initial report regarding the content of two computers found with Raul Reyes, second in command of FARC, who was killed last Saturday"...They contained ..."information from one commander to another indicating that FARC was apparently negotiating for radioactive material"
...said Maria Victoria Llorente from Ideas Para La Paz (Ideas for Peace). The other part of the rebel strategy is President Chavez. My opinion is that that has now been revealed for what it really is - a cover and a sham. Rumours/stories, now becoming confirmed, that documents on the lap-tops implicate Ecuador and Venezuela in funding FARC have no doubt have hardened Chavez to prevent at all costs a similar 'coup' against FARC camps in Venezuela - already under Venezuelan Army 'protection' and involved in the flow (Owsblog) of cocaine to Europe. HERE similar from Associated Press."The guerrillas are trying to use the international community to force the president [Uribe] to give them what they want."
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STOP PRESS...as I write there are new developments: "Colombian President Alvaro Uribe says he will ask the International Criminal Court to bring charges against President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela" [BBC Online]
Ominous overreation...
Chavez's major overreaction - IMHO - to the Colombian incursion, as good an admission as any of FARC acitivity in Venezuela, could also be the pin that bursts the bubble of his glory-basking role in the release of hostages having been in direct negotiation with FARC...[worryingly my doppelgänger is in that AP photo on the BBC link; that should make my next visit interesting!]...sorry to be a cynic but I believe his efforts have been for one reason only: to paint a picture of the narco-terrorists as the good guys, being victimised by a stooge of the Empire: he and Venezuela do not recognise FARC as a terrorist group...they're only good ol' Marxist revolutionaries. Chavez has been key in their ploy."Just yesterday (Monday) our national police submitted an initial report regarding the content of two computers found with Raul Reyes, second in command of FARC, who was killed last Saturday"...They contained ..."information from one commander to another indicating that FARC was apparently negotiating for radioactive material"
...said Maria Victoria Llorente from Ideas Para La Paz (Ideas for Peace). The other part of the rebel strategy is President Chavez. My opinion is that that has now been revealed for what it really is - a cover and a sham. Rumours/stories, now becoming confirmed, that documents on the lap-tops implicate Ecuador and Venezuela in funding FARC have no doubt have hardened Chavez to prevent at all costs a similar 'coup' against FARC camps in Venezuela - already under Venezuelan Army 'protection' and involved in the flow (Owsblog) of cocaine to Europe. HERE similar from Associated Press."The guerrillas are trying to use the international community to force the president [Uribe] to give them what they want."
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STOP PRESS...as I write there are new developments: "Colombian President Alvaro Uribe says he will ask the International Criminal Court to bring charges against President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela" [BBC Online]