Monday, November 30, 2009

Andrew-tide, feast day of St Andrew the Apostle

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted
St Andrew the King
Three weeks and three days before Christmas begins.


So goes the old English saying. Today is St Andrew's Day (Andrew-tide or Andrewtide is the season in British parlance) in both the Western and Eastern Christian traditions. Saint Andrew, one of the twelve apostles of Jesus Christ and the brother of Simon (later the Apostle Peter), was a Galilean fisherman of Bethsaida, and originally a disciple of John the Baptist. In the Gospel of John (1:35-42), Andrew was the first called of Jesus' disciples.

According to tradition, Andrew was crucified at Patmos, in Achaia, on the Cross Saltire, or X-shaped cross, the form of which became known as St Andrew's Cross, which is still on the Scottish and British flags. The Saltire is also called the Boundary Cross (because it was used by the Romans as a barrier) and the crux decussata. Andrew's cross is the same as the cross of Wotan (Odin/Woden) which Norse invaders of Scotland carried ...

Pagan origins
According to Nigel Pennick (The Pagan Book of Days, 1992, 131), Andrew is a version of the divinity Andros, the Man, personification of virility, seen as an aspect of Dionysus. Scotland's matronal goddess is Skadi, the Scathing One. Depicted at left in the image above, is an image of man by Leonardo da Vinci.

St Andrew and the meaning of 'X' on a letter
People used to sign with an X if they couldn't sign their name. Then they would kiss the X and promise by St Andrew (whose cross the X resembles) to abide by their oath or contract. Over the years, 'X' on a letter came to mean a kiss ...

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Thursday, November 26, 2009

To yet another employed talking head on ABC Radio National

We do not want or need to be "incentivizated", or not.
We need some way to buy a loaf of bread, because we're hungry, you fucking comfortable twat.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Fusion centers will have access to classified military intelligence

"Speaking at San Francisco's Commonwealth Club September 15, Director of National Intelligence Admiral Dennis C. Blair, disclosed that the current annual budget for the 16 agency U.S. 'Intelligence Community' (IC) clocks-in at $75 billion and employs some 200,000 operatives world-wide, including private contractors."
Source

Blockbuster publishing

If you have any doubt that the book publishing industry is creepy, read this Wall Street Journal story: http://tinyurl.com/8n6zg9

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Friday, November 20, 2009

Olympic fascist

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted



1956 This photograph of Juan Antonio Samaranch, Spanish sports official (b. 1920), former president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) from 1980 to 2001, was taken on this day. It shows Samaranch leading a fascist march through Barcelona, bearing a wreath, flanked by burning torches. This was on the 20th anniversary of the death of Spanish anarchist, Buenaventura Durruti y Domingo.

Samaranch is probably remembered for four main things: his fascist career, his long reign as president of the IOC, his commercialization of the Olympics, and the corruption among officials and athletes that the commercialization engendered.

Samaranch was, for years, a member of the fascist Falange party in Spain and a national councillor under the dictatorship of Generalissimo Francisco Franco. The Times of London wrote: he "proved expert at the mixture of obeisance to the regime and political manoeuvring necessary to progress through the [fascist] ranks". By 1975, when Franco died, Samaranch was the leading fascist in Barcelona, and an IOC Vice-President ...

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Thursday, November 19, 2009

I dreamed I saw Joe Hill last night alive as you and me

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted
1915 USA: After a controversial trial believed by many to be a miscarriage of justice, IWW (Industrial Workers of the World) labor organizer, folk-poet and songwriter, Joe Hill (Joseph Hillstrom), was killed by state firing squad in Utah. Hill has become the subject of numerous songs, plays, and books, and some of his songs have been available continuously in the IWW's Little Red Song Book, now in at least its 36th edition.

Despite an international movement to save him that reached as far as Australia, Utah authorities and copper bosses had Joe Hill executed for murder, but many say it was for his organizing with the IWW.

Hill was convicted of killing a grocer and his son, even though the bullets were not from Hill's revolver and no one identified him as the murderer. His last words:

"Don't mourn, organize!"

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Wednesday, November 18, 2009

William Tell and the apple

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted
1307 On this day, according to tradition, William Tell (Wilhelm Tell) famously shot the apple off his son's head. One aspect of the tale is defiance of authority; another is the strong bond between a father and his child. I suppose that it why I and so many people like it, and why this simple story has survived the centuries.

The legend as told by Sabine Baring-Gould in Curious Myths of the Middle Ages (London, 1866) (Source): In the year 1307, Gessler, Vogt (local governor) of the Emperor Albert I of Hapsburg (c. 1255 - 1308), German king, and duke of Austria, eldest son of King Rudolph I of Habsburg, set a hat on a pole as symbol of imperial power, and ordered everyone who passed by to salute it. On this day, tradition has it, a mountaineer of the name of Wilhelm Tell boldly passed by the symbol of authority without saluting. By Gessler's command he was at once seized and brought before him. As Tell was known to be an expert archer, he was ordered by way of punishment to shoot an apple off the head of his own son ...

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Tuesday, November 17, 2009

One small step for a bloke

I was able to eat an over-ripe banana today. This mightn't sound like much, but for me (after dental surgery last Thursday) it was one giant leap for mankind. I'm looking fwd to a big T-bone and a bag of honey-roasted Queensland bush nuts (macadamias to my US friends). I'm grateful for the kind wishes so many Almaniacs have sent me. Thank you.

Shakespeare and Company

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted
1919 Sylvia Beach opened Shakespeare and Company, the first combination English-language book shop and lending library in Paris. Beach befriended many of the world's writers, particularly in the 1920s and '30s, when her shop was a gathering place for expatriate writers and French authors pursuing new found interest in US literature. She also published the first edition of James Joyce's Ulysses.

The shop's place in literary history is assured by its association (over two incarnations, with the second being owned by George Whitman) with such luminaries as Ernest Hemingway, F Scott Fitzgerald, George Bernard Shaw, Ezra Pound, Gertrude Stein, Alice B Toklas, Pablo Picasso, Baz le Tuff, TS Eliot, Paul Valèry, André Gide, James Joyce, Thornton Wilder, André Malraux, DH Lawrence, Aleister Crowley, Man Ray, Anäis Nin, Lawrence Durrell, James Baldwin, Allen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso, Lawrence Ferlinghetti and many others.

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Monday, November 16, 2009

Pirates Anne Bonny and Mary Read

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted
1720 Pirates Anne Bonny (Anne Bonney) and Mary Read were convicted of piracy.

Anne Bonny (1698 - 1782) was an Irish pirate and Mary Read (c. 1690 - 1721) an English one, and together they sailed throughout the Caribbean.

Bonny and Read became close companions on the Revenge, commanded by pirate John 'Calico Jack' Rackham, and one day when Bonny walked in on Read (who was, unlike Bonny, disguised as a man) undressing, she discovered her secret ...

Mary Read: Woman Pirate

Highwaymen, outlaws, bushrangers, pirates, gangsters, etc in the Book of Days

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Sunday, November 15, 2009

Shichi-Go San ceremony, Japan

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted
Shich-Go san literally means 'seven-five-three'; the ceremony is performed in families who have daughters of seven, sons of five, and sons and daughters of three years of age. The children are taken to shrines to drive out evil spirits and receive the blessings of the deities. It's one of the few occasions these days on which Japanese women wear the kimono ...

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Wednesday, November 11, 2009

The Haymarket Martyrs

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted


1887 Chicago, USA: The Haymarket Martyrs – August Spies, Albert Parsons, Adolph Fischer and George Engel – were hanged for "inciting" the Haymarket riot, at which they had not been present. The execution was protested in many countries worldwide, and in Australia large commemorative meetings were held for some years.

A fifth, 23-year-old Louis Lingg, had killed himself in his cell the previous evening. The evidence against them was their anarchist ideas and literature. They were found guilty in a trial which Governor John Peter Altgeld subsequently held to be grossly unfair. History has generally judged the convicted men to have been innocent ...

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Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Indian warrior queen

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted
1835 Lakshmibai (Rani, or Ranee, Lakshmi Bai; d. 1858), the warrior queen of Jhansi, a Maratha-ruled princely state of northern India. She is sometimes referred to as the Boudicca (Boadicea) of India.

Lakshmibai was born into a Brahmin family in Varanasi, India. She received an unusual education for a girl, learning to read and write, and even studying horsemanship and martial arts.

At age eight, Lakshmibai married the Raja of Jhansi. When her husband died in 1853, the English seized Jhansi and denied Lakshmibai the throne. During the Great Rebellion – which the British insisted on calling "the Sepoy Mutiny" (1857) – 22-year-old Lakshmibai joined the rebels and trained an army of women to defend her fortress ...

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Monday, November 09, 2009

Paul is dead

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted
1966 Paul McCartney died. At least, that was what the worldwide 'Paul is dead' rumour of 1969 alleged.

The 'Paul is dead' rumour started with a series of events in the 1960s that led many fans of The Beatles to believe that McCartney was actually dead and had been replaced with a look-alike ...

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2012: The Mayan Y2K Bug


Let's start with first principles: despite a movie called 2012 opening worldwide on November 13, 2009, and despite hundreds of websites claiming that December 21, 2012 will usher in either the end of the material world, or of the materialist world, there is nothing yet apparent in the Mayan calendar that is prophetic about that date.

The 2012 fad, which predicts either a global apocalypse or a global awakening on the December solstice of that year, is based on evidence as flimsy as that of many notorious failed prophecies of the past. And there are hundreds, even thousands of those.

The forecasts of either doom or transformation are based on what is claimed to be the end-date of the current baktun (144,000-day) cycle of the Mesoamerican or Mayan Long Count calendar, which lasts for 5,126 years and terminates on the fateful date. We must note here that scholars disagree widely on the calendar calculations – German scientist Andreas Fuls puts the end-date at about 2200.

The current (13th) baktun will be completed on the date known to the Mayan civilization of Central America (its classic period lasting about six centuries from c. 300 CE) as 13.0.0.0.0 – December 21, 2012 in our Gregorian calendar. The Long Count calendar identifies a date by counting the number of days from a starting date that is generally calculated to be August 11, 3114 BCE in our reckoning.

The calibration of the Long Count calendar can be a bit off-putting to our eyes, but it's not really too complicated. Science writer Dr Karl Kruszelnicki succinctly puts it thus: "The calendar read a little like the odometer in your car's speedo … when it got to 19 days (0.0.0.0.19) [it] would reset to zero, and the next slot across to the left would increase by one ... So 0.0.0.0.1 was one day, and 0.0.0.1.0 was 20 days. Then 0.0.1.0.0 was about one year, 0.1.0.0.0 was about 20 years and with 1.0.0.0.0, you've clocked up about 400 years."

There is no evidence that 0.0.0.0.1 – the August 11, 3114 BCE date – marks any historical event, nor that 13.0.0.0.0 is the very end of all time, nor even the end of the calendar, because the calendar can start again, just like ours. So 13.0.0.0.0 will be followed by 0.0.0.0.1, and so far nobody seems to argue, with conclusiveness, anything to the contrary. To complicate matters further, in some Mayan places, such as Palenque and Tortuguero (both in southern Mexico), the calendar went at least as far as the twentieth baktun, not the 13th, and that's thousands of years in the future even for us. If the Mayans could differ, we can beg to as well.

In 1957, the early Mayan scholar and archaeoastronomer, Maud Worcester Makemson, wrote that "[t]he completion of a Great Period of 13 baktuns would have been of the utmost significance to the Maya". Its significance is that it is the end of an arbitrary calendar cycle, much like the year 2000 when the modern world celebrated the millennium. Party time, without a doubt, but nothing more.

In the Chilam Balam, books written centuries after the Mayan period, Makemson found the expression, "the god will come to visit his little ones", but other Maya scholars such as Linda Schele and David Freidel argue that the Maya "did not conceive this to be the end of creation, as many have suggested". Anthropologist Munro S Edmonson, who translated the Chilam Balam, even considered the Long Count calendar to be entirely absent from the books.

Today's popular notion of 2012 was taken up and made popular by authors such as José Argüelles, Carl Johan Calleman, Ian Xel Lungold, John Major Jenkins and Terence McKenna, and the discerning eye detects some 'noble savage' worship. New Age thought is often notoriously fixated on a belief that some (not all) ancient civilizations were incredibly more advanced than ours, with their citizens possessing paranormal powers. The fact that there is no evidence to support this view is neither here nor there to those who require no evidence for their beliefs, except what can be ‘shoehorned’ in to fit preconceived and deeply desired notions. Meanwhile, those who believe that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, await some facts. For many of a rational perspective, even any evidence at all would greatly aid further study.

As for me, I have been interested in the '2012 Mayan prophecy' for enough years to have read hundreds of thousands of words on it, all the while keeping an open mind. But a mind that is too open is leakier than suits me. I have searched long enough for evidence that seems not to exist. We are confronted with the weakest of gullible pop culture at its unseemly worst.

Perhaps there is also self loathing in the wide acceptance of unsubstantiated assertions. There is a tendency for many believers in the Mayan 2012 'prophecy' to see the ancient people of Central America as having a superior consciousness to our own, but this is as unproven as the 2012 prognostication. For example, Jenkins claims that "the early Maya formulated a profound galactic cosmology … naturally enough, with their uncorrupted intelligence intact". In fact, the best we can say is that the Mayans were like us and as clever as we are, but different. History and geography repeatedly show that people are people.

Artist and art historian José Argüelles was formerly best known for his role in the 'Harmonic Convergence', a New Age astrological term applied to a planetary alignment that occurred on August 16 to 17, 1987. That event was supposed to be a harbinger of global peace. Some still believe that it was, despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary. Astronomers said nothing especially unusual happened with that rather arbitrary event in space (arbitrary because it was a convergence only as viewed from our planet), and likewise they say nothing especially unusual is likely to happen in 2012.

The late Ian Xel Lungold was a colleague of toxicologist and Mayan calendar commentator, Carl Calleman, and a tireless advocate of an apocalypse date based on the Mayan calendar, but his date was October 28, 2011. His lectures, circulated on CDs and the Internet, convince many people of his claims. Admitting he did not have much of an education, he was still influential in what is now called 'Mayanism'. His lectures, however, might be taken with a grain of salt, containing, as they do, numerous easily refuted errors of fact. For example, Lungold claims that the Roman Catholic Inquisition murdered four million women for being witches, when in fact the victims, from the Inquisition, plus secular courts, numbered in the thousands over 500 years. He also suggests that there is a remarkable coincidence that one Mayan calendar (the Tun) has 360 days, and that celestial bodies, being spherical, have 360 degrees. The fact that 360 degrees in a circle represent an arbitrary number seems to have escaped him.

Despite the hype, no scholars have found in Mayan writings any prophecies – whether for good or ill – concerning 13.0.0.0.0. There have been, however, numerous alleged prophecies from extraterrestrial beings. Even today's Maya, who make up about half of Guatemala's population, are not noted for joining in the 2012 craze, despite the fact that some of them still use the ancient calendars.

"There is no concept of apocalypse in the Mayan culture," Jesus Gomez, head of the Guatemalan confederation of Mayan priests and spiritual guides, told Britain's The Sunday Telegraph.

The film 2012, directed by Roland Emmerich, is likely to be a box office favourite. Emmerich favours a mix of history, religion and sci-fi. He directed The Noah's Ark Principle (1984), set in 1997, when world peace seems to have come, and most weapons of mass destruction abolished. He also directed Independence Day (the 22nd highest-ever worldwide grossing movie), Godzilla and The Day After Tomorrow, so his disaster movie movie credentials are solid, if not reception of his work by film critics and experts. Palaeoclimatologist William Hyde of Duke University said that The Day After Tomorrow is "to climate science as Frankenstein is to heart transplant surgery". Critics and scholars panned Emmerich's movie 10,000 BC for its sloppy historicity. American film critic and screenwriter Roger Ebert said of another Emmerich film, "the movie Ed Wood, about the worst director of all time, was made to prepare us for Stargate".

The tagline for 2012 is "Mankind's earliest civilization warned us this day would come". Many are wondering if Mayans have been promoted to a new status to rival the Sumerians. Theirs is clearly not the earliest civilization, nor anything like it.

Such folly as the 2012 fad may be fun, but it's not much more, and it is far from new. Classic failed prophecies that gained a great many devotees are legion. On May 15, 1527, when the Last Judgement failed to come, Anabaptist leader Hans Huth postponed it to 1529. Other examples: Joanna Soutcott's prediction that she would give birth to the Messiah on October 19, 1814; William Miller's prophecy of the return of Jesus Christ on October 22, 1844; George Riffert's prophecy in his book The Great Pyramid: Its Divine Message (1925) that the world would end on September 6, 1936; Moses David Berg, head of the Children of God cult, prophesied that the USA would be destroyed by Comet Kohoutek by January 1974 and that Jesus Christ would return in 1993. South Australian house painter John Nash predicted that an earthquake and tidal waves would destroy the city of Adelaide on January 19, 1975. On November 24, 1993, the world failed to end on the day promised by Maria Devi Christos, the self-styled Final Incarnation of God on Earth.

American Christian author Hal Lindsey has sold 35 million copies of his 1970 book, The Late, Great Planet Earth, predicting imminent apocalypse, and untold numbers of people radically altered their lives to suit the coming catastrophe. Lindsey predicted in his book, 1980s: Countdown to Armageddon, that the end times would take place in the '80s. He continued writing and lecturing on the same themes despite the disconfirmations.

Why do people continue in their beliefs despite such disconfirmations? In the classic work, When Prophecies Fail (1956), social psychologist Leon Festinger theorized that holding two contradictory beliefs leads to 'cognitive dissonance', a state of mind disconcerting to the human psyche. Festinger infiltrated a UFO doomsday cult whose members were convinced the end of the world was nigh; when the date came and went uneventfully, the cult's official position was that its prayer-power had prevented the apocalypse. "A believer may then selectively reinterpret data, reinforcing one of the beliefs regardless of the strength of the contradictory case," says Christina Valhouli in the 1999 article, 'Cutting down the dissonance: the psychology of gullibility'.

Victims of failed prophecies might even become more devout in their failed beliefs, possibly because the more people they can convert to their cause, the less foolish they will appear. The further out on a limb they have gone (such as selling their goods and donating them to the cause, and going public with their beliefs), the greater the incentive to say that the limb was sound. We might expect this in 2013, but I make no predictions. To do so is to invite almost inevitable egg on face.

What we can best prophesy about December 21, 2012 is that 1,440 suckers will be born on that day, given the generally accepted theory among scholars and lay people alike that there is one born every minute.

Does it matter? Well, actually, yes it does. NASA scientist, David Morrison, who says there are at least 200 different books for sale about 2012, says he gets about 12 questions a day on the topic. Says Morrison: "Two teenagers said they didn't want to see the end of the world so they were thinking of ending their lives". Many letters, Morrison says, presume that the US Government is covering up the impending doom. Letters begin, "I know you can't tell me the truth, but … ".

Failed prophecies can have tragic consequences: on February 18, 1857, the Xhosa tribe in South Africa discovered that it had destroyed much of its food resources in vain. Fourteen-year-old female shaman, Nongqawuse, had reported to her tribe a vision she had had. Nongqawuse interpreted "omens" that to retain the ancestors' favour, the tribe must slaughter all its livestock and destroy all its crops before February 18, 1857, on which date the ancestor spirits would bring the Xhosa people many blessings. Unfortunately for the tribe, it followed the soothsayer's advice and tens of thousands of Xhosas died in the ensuing famine.

Marshall Applewhite, a leader of the Heaven's Gate cult, died in the cult's suicide on or about March 26, 1997. Heaven's Gate believed that Comet Hale-Bopp was associated with apocalyptic prophecies, and their suicide was timed just prior to when it passed perihelion on April 1, 1997. Their website is still on the Net, a terrible relic of misguided belief.

Yes, it matters.

(Copyright Pip Wilson, Wilson's Almanac, 2009.)

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Sunday, November 08, 2009

Opening of Mundus Cereris, ancient Rome

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted
Mundus Cereris was the womb or labyrinthine passage to the underworld, the domain of Ceres (pictured), the great Mother of vegetation. The structure was vaulted in the shape of an inverted sky, divided into two parts, and had a cover. We do not know for certain where the Mundus Cereris was, or is, but in 1914 Giacomo Boni discovered on the Palatine Hill in Rome a subterranean structure which he identified with the Mundus.

The cover was removed on August 24, October 5 and November 8, and these days were religiosi, when the way was supposed to be open to the lower world. First-fruits of the season would be offered to the Manes (ancestral spirits) and placed in the pit.

Because the cover to the Mundus, the Lapis Manalis (Stone of the Manes), is considered an Ostium Orci (Gate of Hades), the Manes (ancestral spirits) are freed to roam for the day, so marriage was not permitted today, and nor were battles nor business considered advisable.

One of the numerous spheres over which the goddess Ceres had influence was liminality, that is, boundaries and transitions between different stages of social life, a function that she shared with Janus. We note that this commemoration almost precisely coincides with the Celtic Samhain (October 31), at which time the veil between the living world and that of the dead is said to be its thinnest, and its Christian corollaries, All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day, November 1 and 2 respectively ...

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Saturday, November 07, 2009

Bellingen a disaster area

Click for more on my bioregion
Due to the fifth flood in nine months, the State government has declared Bellingen and adjoining shires a natural disaster area. As much as 520mm (20 inches) of rain fell in 24 hours and as much as 310mm (12 inches) in six hours. Rain continues, but not very heavily.

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Guilty until proved innocent

Legions of news sources, including the usually fairly progressive Daily Telegraph (UK) and ABC (Australia) have preemptively declared Army psychiatrist Major Nidal Malik Hasan guilty of the Fort Hood shootings. Trial, shmial. The hallowed concept of 'innocent until proved guilty' seems to have escaped so-called journalists and editors worldwide. Fortunately, the writers of the Wikipedia article do not play so fast and free with civil rights.

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Skeuomorphs of Nature

Discover the Permaculture solutions
Sydney's Hyde Park and New York's Central Park are skeuomorphs of Nature. A skeuomorph is a derivative object which retains ornamental design cues to structure that was necessary in the original. Arguably, permaculture is also a skeuomorph. I'm still working on this question, as, I have no doubt, are many others. Feedback welcome.

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An unofficial way to 'dislike' things on Facebook

http://tinyurl.com/ye354m3

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The first Melbourne Cup

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted
1861 Melbourne, Australia: Archer, ridden by J Cutts, won the first Melbourne Cup, one of the world's richest horse racing prizes. The event has been held on the first Tuesday in November since 1861 by the Victoria Racing Club, on the Flemington Racecourse in Melbourne. It is generally regarded as the most prestigious 'two-mile' handicap in the world (the race was originally held over two miles, about 3,218 metres, but following Australia's adoption of the metric system in 1972 the current distance of 3,200 metres was adopted).

Virtually the whole of Australia stops to watch or listen to the race in homes, offices and even in cars pulled over to the sides of roads, and in the State of Victoria, of which Melbourne is the capital, Cup Day is a public holiday. It was first declared a holiday for Victorian public servants and bank employees in 1865, and in the following year it was declared a public holiday for all workers ...

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Friday, November 06, 2009

Video: My garden in flood, Nov 6 '09

Click for more on my bioregion
It's not much fun watching lots of care and hard work washed away in heavy rain. This is the 5th flood my town (Bellingen) has endured in 9 months.

I'm a member of the Rainbow Region Flickr group for North-eastern New South Wales.

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Video: Bellinger River about to flood, Nov 6 '09

Click for more on my bioregion
View of the river rising fast at Lavenders Bridge, in the heart of town, in the 5th flood in 9 months.

I'm a member of the Rainbow Region Flickr group for North-eastern New South Wales.

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Birthday of Tiamat, mother of gods, Babylon

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted
A sea dragon, Tiamat is a primeval goddess in Babylonian and Sumerian mythology, and a central figure in the Enûma Elish creation epic.

Her slaying by the god Marduk, the son of Enki, was commemorated at the Akitu festival in which life was seen as the taming of primeval Chaos, a task that never ends. Slicing Tiamat in half, Marduk made heaven and earth from the two halves ...

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Thursday, November 05, 2009

Turning the Devil's Stone

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted
On November 5 (Guy Fawkes Day), the villagers of Shebbear in Devon, England, gather in the front of Berry House to 'turn the Devil's Stone' (or 'Devil's Boulder'), a great conglomerate rock that is turned every year to ensure good fortune for the village. The stone itself (which has an unnamed sibling about 750 metres to the north) is about two metres (about six feet) long and weighing about one ton.

It is not from a local rock formation and is, in fact, an 'erratic' – that is, a stone from elsewhere, such as those deposited in one of the Ice Ages. Perhaps its unusual character explains the mystery and traditions surrounding it ...

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Wednesday, November 04, 2009

US Government was not founded on Christianity

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted
1796 On this day, during the presidency of George Washington, the government of the USA signed its first treaty with another nation. That treaty, made with Tripoli, Libya, included the statement, "The Government of the United States is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion".

"As the Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion; as it has in itself no character of enmity against the laws, religion, or tranquillity, of Musselmen; and as the said States never have entered into any war or act of hostility against any Mehomitan nation, it is declared by the parties that no pretext arising from religious opinions shall ever produce an interruption of the harmony existing between the two countries."

So reads Article 11 of the Treaty with Tripoli (Libya), signed on this day. It was the first treaty that the Americans signed with another nation.

The Tripoli Treaty is frequently cited to indicate that the USA was not founded on Christianity.

Was the USA founded on Christianity? in the Scriptorium

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Tuesday, November 03, 2009

End the myths on asylum seekers

Click for more global actions one person can take
From GetUp: "The most damaging myth in this debate is that held by our leaders - that Australians are intolerant towards asylum seekers. Be a part of changing the conversation about asylum seekers in your community.

"Hostile myths are the greatest barrier to a more compassionate asylum seeker policy in Australia. Empower yourself to counter the disinformation by reading our myth-busting fact sheet [PDF].

"Pledge to do your part to bust the harmful myths about asylum seekers, by spreading the truth to your friends and neighbours."
Go to http://tinyurl.com/yfvdxgo to sign the pledge

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The Irish Nostradamus

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted
Feast day of St Malachy O'More (Maolmhaodhog ua Morgair; Maelmhaedhoc Ó Morgair; Maol Maedoc; Malachy O'Morgair; 1094 - November 2, 1148), Archbishop of Armagh, Ireland

In 1139, St Malachi went to visit Pope Innocent II in Rome and later visited St Bernard in Clairvaux in France, where he penned his Prophecies of the Popes. He describes many popes in 'mottoes' of just a few words. Some people say that, from Malachy's prophecies, the second pope next after Pope John Paul II will be Peter II (Petrus Romanus), the pope at the end of the world. Some also say that the penultimate pope is Pope Benedict XVI.

In Celtic tradition, today is a day for starting new enterprises and the day the cattle are taken down from the mountains and high hills for winter. Today also marks the initiation of the soul during the Winter months which starts during Samhain (October 31) and finishes on February 1/2, Festival of St Brighid. St Malachy's feast is celebrated on November 3, in order not to clash with All Souls Day ...

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Monday, November 02, 2009

All Souls Day

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted
Celebrated much more in former days, on All Souls Day (the day following All Saints or All Hallows' Day), people pray for the souls of the dead, particularly those believed to be in Purgatory.

It is celebrated in the Roman Catholic Church which has set it aside for a service for the repose of the deceased. Roman Catholic doctrine holds that after death, human spirits might spend time in a punishing place called Purgatory ...

Before 998, All Souls’ was marked with celebrations from the festival of Woden (Odin) as god of the dead, "parading the Hodening wild horse and other guising including mummers’ plays enacting the mysteries of life, death and rebirth". (Pennick, Nigel, The Pagan Book of Days, Destiny Books, Rochester, Vermont, USA, 1992) Hodening is a custom which used to be found in Wales, and locally in Kent, Lancashire, and other English counties, at various dates during the Christmas and New Year seasons, and seems to be a survival of the hobby-horse tradition once common during the Christmas season in the British Isles ...

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Sunday, November 01, 2009

November

Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted

November is the eleventh month of the year in the Gregorian calendar, with 30 days. It comes from the Latin novem, for 'nine' (it was originally the ninth month of the year, before January and February were inserted).

It was the ninth month in the ancient Roman calendar, when the year began in March. The old Dutch name was Slaghtmaand (slaughter-month, the time when the beasts were killed and salted down for winter use; the name might also have referred to human sacrifice); the old Saxon Wind-monath (wind-month, when the fishermen took their boats ashore, and put aside fishing till the next spring); it was also called Blot-monath – the same as Slaghtmaand. In the French Republican Calendar it was called Brumaire (fog-month, c. October 22 to November 20).

Frankish name: Herbistmanoth, or harvest (of animals) month. Ásatrú: Fogmoon. American backwoods: Beaver Moon ...

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