Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Cross-dresser probably 1st European woman in Tasmania

http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun29.html 1754 Marie-Louise Victoire Girardin (d. December 18, 1794), French ship's steward and cross-dresser. On April 23, 1792 (qv), the expedition of French admiral, Joseph-Antoine Raymond de Bruni d'Entrecasteaux (1739 - '93) reached Recherche Bay in Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania) and ship's steward Girardin, disguised as a man, became probably the first European woman to visit the island.

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Shakespeare's Globe Theatre burns down

http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun29.html 1613 The Globe Theatre in London burnt down as a cannon was fired for a scene in Shakespeare's Henry VIII.

Very shortly after the blaze, Shakespeare retired back to Stratford. The play being performed at the time was also called All This is True, supposed to be a revival of King Henry the Eighth – this we know from the contemporary ballad, 'On the Pitiful Burning of the Globe Play-house' ...

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

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Monday, June 28, 2010

Ned Kelly's last stand


http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun28.html 1880 Dressed in home-made armour and with revolver blazing, Australian bushranger Ned Kelly burst out of the Glenrowan Inn, which was surrounded by about 30 State troopers.

The most wanted outlaws the country has ever known, the four-member Kelly Gang, had £8,000 on their heads, at a time when a labouring man's wages were about 15 shillings a week. Their crime, among many others, was the murder of three policemen at Stringybark Creek.




At first the dumbfounded police could not understand why their bullets did not stop him. Even in the dawn light, they could see the helmet he was wearing, but when they aimed at his torso, nothing happened. Then they realized that under his long overcoat must be more armour, so they began firing at his legs ...

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Sunday, June 27, 2010

One Blood: the story of William Cooper

http://bit.ly/b4JNqk "William Cooper is counted among the righteous who saved Jews during the Holocaust. In late 1938, this elder statesman of the Aboriginal rights movement delivered a letter of protest to the German consulate in Melbourne as synagogues burned across Germany in the aftermath of the infamous Night of Broken Glass, or Kristallnacht. "
Source: Awaye! (with audio documentary)

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The first cartoon

Click to enlarge

http://tinyurl.com/2c6hv8w from http://www.punch.co.uk/cartoonhistory.html

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Partial lunar eclipse tonight

On Saturday June 26, eastern and central Australia will have the best view of the partial lunar eclipse at 8.16 pm, with mid-eclipse around 9.38 pm. See http://tinyurl.com/32wnacq and http://tinyurl.com/yekjgwk

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Time to demolish The Great Australian Ugliness

An architect friend once said to me, "Australian architects have a lot to answer for".

Indeed, architects, town planners, shire councillors and builders have disgraced this stunningly beautiful continent. As one example, I give you the returned servicepeople's club building on the north shore of Broken Bay near Sydney. With (even at the shoreline) one of the most spectacular views in the state of New South Wales -- overlooking the glistening, large harbour, and Lion Island, and as far as Palm Beach, Barrenjoey Island and its 19th-Century lighthouse -- they built a four-storey concrete monstrosity with no windows on the water side.

Another example: Mona Vale Hospital, several storeys high, overlooks the beaches and rocky headlands of Mona Vale, near Sydney. But the windows are placed so that patients in bed can't see out. See Google Maps for all of these follies. Check out Dee Why, Nambucca, Urunga and Coffs Harbour as further examples of how sublime topography has been ruined by idiots with clipboards. Welcome to Australia, paradise and breeding ground for idiot architects and shire councillors. It is time to demolish and, with clearer minds, build over the Great Australian Ugliness.

Pictured: Your almanackist on Barrenjoey

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Thursday, June 24, 2010

Ambrose Bierce, the Devil's lexicographer

http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun24.html 1842 Ambrose Bierce (d. 1913 or 1914, speculative), American author noted for his cynical epigrams (The Devil's Dictionary). A fictional account of his last days is related in Old Gringo (1989) by Mexican novelist Carlos Fuentes (adapted to screen in 1989, directed by Luis Puenzo, starring Jane Fonda and Gregory Peck).

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

Bierce's twelve-volume Collected Works were published in 1912. In October 1913 the septuagenarian went to Mexico, then in the throes of revolution, to join the army of Pancho Villa. His wrote a last letter on December 26, 1913 and was expecting to travel to the Battle of Ojinaga. He disappeared; subsequent investigations to ascertain his fate were fruitless and his disappearance remains a mystery ...

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Britain's Royal Garter a witches' badge?


http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun24.html 1348 The exact day is not known, but some time between this day and August 6, King Edward III of England (1312 - '77) instituted the Order of the Garter, with St George as the patron.

During a festival at court, a lady happened to drop her garter. King Edward picked it up, and noticed that the others were giggling. He said, with displeasure, "Honi soit qui mal y pense" – "Shame to him who thinks ill of it". In the spirit of gallantry, perhaps to prevent any further impertinence, he put the garter around his own knee. Or, so it is said.

Traditionally, the lady was the Countess of Salisbury. The garter was an object of note in the year preceding June 24, 1348. Garters with the motto embroidered on were common, as were banners and couches with the motif, and a surcoat provided to the king in 1348 was covered with garters.

The Australian folklorist, Rabbi Dr Rudolph Brasch, says the story is hardly convincing. "Fourteenth-century ladies, even those attending royal functions, were not so finicky or modest that the mere loss of a garter would have caused them to blush or feel uncomfortable," he writes.

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

The choice of the garter may also owe something to the princess's girdle in the article on St George in The Golden Legend (Aurea Legenda, 1275), compiled by Jacobus de Voragine, which she used to lead the monster once St George had speared it with his lance.

British anthropologist and folklorist, Margaret Murray (1863 - 1963), advanced a different theory. In the 14th Century the garter symbolized witches. To lose it was to give away her allegiance to Satan and was an acute danger ...

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Old Midsummer Day, Britain

http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun24.html This day is very important in most parts of Europe because it is both Midsummer Day – strictly speaking, not the same as the Summer Solstice – and the feast of one of the most important saints, John the Baptist.

In old England today was a time for moving house. It is known as a quarter day. "On this day some may quit, some may remain; all must pay – that can!"

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

The bonfires were lit at midnight on Midsummer Eve. There were, anciently, sacrifices, and the people danced around the fire and leaped over it. Firebrands were taken out and the ashes were scattered to the wind in a custom that was thought to dispel evil ...

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In the constitution of Australia there are no leaders

Please allow me say it yet again: no office of Prime Minister exists in the Australian Constitution, nor any word from the verb 'to lead'. There are 62 occurrences of words derived from the verb 'to represent'. Those who call themselves "our leaders" are arrogating the term to themselves, and self-aggrandizing.

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Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Alan Turing

http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun23.html 1912 Alan Turing (d. 1954), British mathematician and cryptographer who pioneered the Turing Machine, which advanced computer development. He is considered one of the founders of modern computer science. During World War II he was the director of the Naval Enigma Hut at Bletchley Park for some time and remained throughout the war the chief cryptanalyst for the Naval Enigma effort.


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

Prosecution of Turing for his homosexuality crippled his career. In 1952, his male lover helped an accomplice to break into Turing's house and commit larceny. Turing went to the police to report the crime. As a result of the police investigation, Turing was said to have had a sexual relationship with a 19-year-old man, and Turing was charged with 'gross indecency and sexual perversion' ...

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Midsummer Eve (St John's Eve): bonfires and a magickal herb

Saint John's Eve is the night before the Feast Day of St John the Baptist, and in Europe, from pre-Christian times, Summer Solstice festivities and spiritual practices have been a part of this day. Also called Midsummer Eve, June 23 is a time rich in folklore.

On this night in olde Britain, people would go into the woods and bring back branches to their homes, celebrating the eve of the birth of John the Baptist (the only Christian saint whose birth date is a feast, as well as the day of his death – August 29). Fairies speak in human tongues on this night; the flower of happiness blooms ...

In olde Britain, tonight was bonfire night and fires were made composed of contributions of fuel called boons. Men and boys jumped through the fires in accordance with an ancient custom. People would walk about the towns for much of the night, usually garlanded with flowers or with ribbons and jewels - some citizens would not go themselves but send a substitute ...

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

It was customary in Britain and Europe on St John's Eve, to gather certain herbs, such as St John's wort, vervain, trefoil and rue, all of which were believed to have magical properties. St John's wort (Hypericum perforatum) does, in fact, have scientifically proven anti-depressant qualities. Drinks were brewed from it to cure madness, sciatica, epilepsy and paralysis. The salve made from the herb cured wounds from spears and swords - or, so it is said ...

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Strange case of the bookfish

http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun23.html 1626 Vox Piscis and the strange case of the ichthiobibliophage.

At the markets in the university town of Cambridge, England, the air was full of the sounds of expressions of amazement and wonder when a fishmonger discovered something remarkable while cleaning a cod fish caught off the coast of King's Lynn.

A certain scholar and theologian by the name of Dr Joseph Mede, a fellow of Christ's College Cambridge, was taking a stroll through the markets as it was perhaps his custom to do on a Tuesday. Hearing the hubbub, he hurried over to see what the fuss was all about. His scholastic knowledge was particularly welcome amongst the many illiterate market stallholders and shoppers, for Mede could read and identify the tiny sextodecimo book that had just been cut from the belly of the cod fish ...

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

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US general Stanley McChrystal's career on line over criticisms of White House

http://bit.ly/bUe6eJ US general Stanley McChrystal's career on line over criticisms of White House: "US general Stanley McChrystal's career on line over criticisms of White House"

"BARACK Obama says his top military commander in Afghanistan "showed poor judgment" in a magazine interview highly critical of the White House.

"But the US President said he would wait until he speaks to General Stanley McChrystal in person before making a decision whether to fire the man he put in charge of US and NATO operations in Afghanistan ..."

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Aussie top brass again calls for withdrawal from Afghanistan

Major General Alan Stretton, AO, CBE, Australian Army chief of staff during the Vietnam War, former Australian of the Year, former Deputy Director of the Joint Intelligence Organization and member of the National Intelligence Committee, has again called for Australia to withdraw from Afghanistan, calling Australia's longest war "unwinnable".

In August 2004 he also publicly criticized the Australian Government's policy of involvement with the 2003 Invasion of Iraq, in an open letter in which he stated: "The alleged connection between Saddam Hussein and al-Qa'ida is ludicrous."

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Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Aussie mental health services being destroyed by Rudd government

Click for more global actions one person can take
"I lost my beautiful youngest daughter to suicide 3 years ago... She was not referred on to an appropriate service after suffering post-natal depression... She had 3 children whom she adored, and she had so much to live for. She said to me not long before she died, 'Mum, I wish I had cancer, then people would be more understanding and caring'. We need improved and increased specialised services NOW." --Mary, a GetUp member who shared her story.

No parent should have to experience this. Please sign this petition today before it's delivered to Parliament House on Thursday: http://www.getup.org.au/campaign/MentalHealth

--- A message to you from Prof John Mendoza ---

Dear Pip,

On Friday I resigned my position as the head advisor to the Rudd Government on mental health. And it's because of stories like Mary's and my frustration over the Government's failure to do more to prevent them.

So, today I'm taking the unusual step of writing to you through GetUp to ask you to sign this petition, because I've come to the regrettable conclusion that my advice was not getting through - only public pressure will spur politicians into action.

Every day 330 Australians with serious mental illnesses are turned away from Emergency Departments, and 1,200 Australians are refused admission to a public or private psychiatric unit.

Every day more than 7 people die as a result of suicide, and more than a third of those have been discharged too early or without care from hospitals. For each of those 7 Australians, there are 7 families who mourn them, 7 groups of friends who ask themselves, 'why?'

And every day our political leaders fail to take action, this crisis worsens. This petition will be presented at Parliament House on Thursday - please add your name now through the GetUp website below:

http://www.getup.org.au/campaign/MentalHealth

On Thursday, I and over 60 mental health organisations from across Australia intend to present a letter to Kevin Rudd with a plan of action for mental health. But so far, the Prime Minister has declined to receive it, and so too has the Health Minister, Nicola Roxon.

If 60,000 Australians get behind those 60 organisations by signing this petition, perhaps the Government will stand up and take notice. Please join us by adding your name through the GetUp website below:

http://www.getup.org.au/campaign/MentalHealth

There are programs on the ground right now, proven to be effective - but we need real leadership and new investment to roll them out nationally. The Headspace youth mental health centres and psychosis intervention services pioneered by Professor McGorry are excellent and can reach hundreds of thousands of young Australians, if we make an additional investment of $250 million a year. The lack of spending right now means that tens of thousands of young Australians have no access to care.

We also need to expand programs for child mental health, so that the parents of every child with a learning or developmental disorder can access effective services. We must also provide more support for the 63,000 homeless Australians suffering from mental illness, and invest in e-health services that can reach hundreds of thousands of sufferers cost effectively.

Lastly, we owe it to our children, and their peers, to implement a national suicide prevention service. Suicide is the number 1 cause of death for men 16-44 and women 16-34 years. But across Australia, life-saving suicide prevention services are starved for funds. $100 million would expand these crucial services and concentrate on suicide hot spots like 'The Gap' in Sydney, where just last week the Federal and NSW Governments passed up on the opportunity to fund an effective suicide prevention project.

http://www.getup.org.au/campaign/MentalHealth

For too long, successive Governments have failed to take mental health seriously. It's now the leading cause of disability for all Australians and the leading killer of those under 44. On Friday, the Prime Minister restated his commitment "to do more on mental health" and that the next cab off the rank was mental health." They've been saying that for six months, but if they're serious, these sensible investments can start saving lives and alleviate suffering today.

The concerted efforts of mental health campaigners, including GetUp members, have been effective in securing small pledges from the Government this year - but we need an investment of at least $500 million to start turning this health crisis around. It's within our grasp. A poll commissioned by GetUp this weekend found that 83% of Australians would be in favour of investing $500 million in mental health immediately.

The policies are there, the public support is there and million of Australians are waiting for help - now we need the public political pressure to make it happen. Please join the call by adding your name at: http://www.getup.org.au/campaign/MentalHealth

Thanks, Prof. John Mendoza

*Mary is a GetUp member who shared her family's story with other GetUp members when we launched the mental health campaign. Her name has been changed in respect for her privacy.

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World's oldest map of the heavens

Click to enlarge

Seen from the Mittelberg, a 252m hill in the Ziegelroda Forest, Nebra, 180km south-west of Berlin, the sun sets every June 22 behind the Brocken, the highest mountain in northern Germany. The Brocken is in a direct line of sight on a clear day, 85km (about 53mi) to the north-west.

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


The Brocken is fabled in northern European mythology as the place where witches gather for a coven every Walpurgisnacht, April 30.

Treasure hunters on the Mittelberg in 1999 found a 32cm bronze-and-gold disc, crafted around 3,600 years ago. The map on its face shows the Brocken as well as 32 stars including the Pleiades. The Nebra disc, with the oldest concrete representation of the stars in the world, was placed in a pit in the middle of a ringwall during the early Bronze Age. The ringwall was built in such a way that the sun seemed to disappear every equinox behind the Brocken. Scientists believe the map and site formed an observatory, used to set the calendar for planting and harvesting crops ...

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Quarry Men and birth of The Beatles

1957 The Quarry Men, a Liverpool, UK, pop group led by John Lennon, played one of their first gigs (pictured) – at a street party on the back of a coal truck.

Just a few weeks later, on July 6 [qv] that year, Paul McCartney saw the band for the first time, playing at a local church fête, and joined the group soon after ...

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

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Dance of the Lily, Nola, Italy

http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun22.html Feast day of St Paulinus, Bishop of Nola, confessor

(Canterbury bells, Campanula medium, is today's plant, dedicated to this saint.)

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

In the town of Nola, near Naples, Italy, people commemorate their famous son, Paulinus, today. He had a miraculous dream while in Africa, where Vandals had taken him as a slave. The king, impressed by this dream, sent Paulinus home, where he and his companions were met by the people of Nola bearing lilies. Ever since, today has been called the Day of the Dance of the Lily (Giglio) ...

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Reversed message

Not exactly a palindrome, but quite an incredible reversed message http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=42E2fAWM6rA

Racist media intrusion - just change the channel

http://bit.ly/ck2ay3



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Obama internet 'kill switch' proposed

http://bit.ly/bKmPCe Obama would be granted powers to seize control of and even shut down the internet under a new bill that describes the global internet as a US "national asset".

Thanx, Baz le Tuff

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Monday, June 21, 2010

How Nelson Mandela betrayed us, says ex-wife Winnie

http://bit.ly/bN5VmE Fascinating how this journalist so easily overlooks Winnie Mandela's convictions (with suspended sentences) for horrific murders, and fraud.

Happy Solstice

http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun21.html The wheel of the year has rolled a little further through the seasons and now we find ourselves at one of the four main stations of the year, Summer Solstice (Northern Hemisphere) and Winter Solstice (Southern Hemisphere).

The four main stations ('grand sabbats' in the Neopagan tradition) are the two equinoxes and two solstices. Halfway between each of these are the other significant days, sometimes known as the 'lesser sabbats' ...

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

We have solstice greeting cards today in the Book of Days http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun21.html

Make a sundial for your ceiling
Check out the article, How to make a sundial for your ceiling. Summer or Winter Solstices are great days to begin your 'spotdial'. All it takes is a small birdcage mirror worth a buck or two. When you have a working spotdial on your ceiling, why not send me a pic or two and we can share it with the Almaniacs ...

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Saturday, June 19, 2010

Niman Kachinas, Hopi Indian 'going home' ceremony (c. Jun 19 - 29)

From http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun19.html Kachinas (katsinam; singular katsina) are spiritual messengers who listen to prayers of the holy men and elders and convey them to the gods. They have human forms and distinctive personalities. Kachinas are benevolent in the main, if treated respectfully. They taught the sacred dances to a group of youths who became the first priests.

A sixteen-day event, it begins around the time of the Summer Solstice. The Niman is one of the most solemn and dramatic of all Kachina rituals.

It is time to say goodbye to the Kachinas who return home to the San Francisco mountains for another Winter. The Niman is similar to Christmas: children receive gifts from the Kachinas before they leave.

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

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Slippery suffragette Amelia Pankhurst

1885 Adela Pankhurst (d. 1961), feminist and pacifist, Communist, then fervent anti-Communist, daughter of Britain's most prominent suffragist, Emmeline Pankhurst, with whom she became estranged, mainly because of Adela's political positions on many issues, which were further to the left than those of her mother. She was sister of Sylvia Pankhurst and Christabel Pankhurst, who, with mother Emmeline, edged Adela out of their movement.

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

Pankhurst moved to Melbourne, Australia in 1914 partly for reasons of her health, and joined the Victorian Socialist Party (VSP), editing its children's magazine. There she worked with Vida Goldstein and the Women's Political Association, campaigning on the 'No' side of the WWI military conscription controversy, particularly with the Women's Peace Army. By war's end she was living in Sydney. In 1917 Adela married the Irish seaman's unionist Tom Walsh of the Federated Seamen’s Union of Australasia, a widower with three daughters; they had a further five children. In 1920 she and Walsh became founding members of the Communist Party of Australia, from which she was later expelled. Sometime between the wars, her politics shifted from left to right, and in 1941, she formed the Australia First Movement, a conservative, nationalist, quasi-fascist organization ...

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Midsummer Watch Parade, Chester, UK

Chester, which is world famous for its Mystery Plays (associated with Whitsuntide), also celebrates the coming Summer Solstice with a parade that can be traced back five centuries to 1498. It was then that when Richard Goodman was mayor of the town that the city guilds organized the procession, to be held in the years that the Mystery Plays were not performed.

Of special note in this parade, all the way back to 1498, is the presence of 'giants' – enormous structures made of cardboard and buckram and carried by two men – which were a fairly standard feature of Tudor-period pageantry in England and Europe. However, Chester outshone them all as it paraded a whole family of giants. The crowd also enjoyed, then as now, processing creatures such as a unicorn, elephant, camel and dragon. Until the Puritan 16th Century, when the practice was banned, the dragon was beaten by six naked boys.

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

The Midsummer Watch also features parading guildsmen, jesters, and children in costume – angels, goblins and green men ...

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Some facts and figures about Gaza

Source: http://tinyurl.com/28w5kop The Gaza Strip has a population of 1.5 million with the sixth highest population density in the world.
(WHO World Health Organisation 16/02/2009)

During the last Israeli military strike between 27 December (08) and 18 January (09):- 1,380 Palestinians were killed, of whom 431 were children and 112 women. At least 5,380 people were injured, including 1,872 children and 800 women. 13 Israelis died during the same period
(WHO World Health Organisation 16/02/2009)

Over three-quarters of the current estimated population of some 1.5 million are registered refugees.
(UNRWA United Nations Relief Works Agency)

56% of the population is under 18 years of age
(OCHA United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs)

The rate of stunting in children younger than 5 years has risen. Stunting during childhood is an indicator of chronic malnutrition, and is associated with increased disease burden and death.
(The Lancet, Medical Journal 07/03/2009)

80% of the water supply in the territory is estimated to be unsafe for drinking.
(OCHA United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs)

Living conditions and access to sources of livelihood in Gaza are currently at their worst since 1967, with poverty affecting 90% of the population.
(UNCTAD United Nations Conference on Trade and Development 09/09/2009)

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Is God a spiceist?

God has a thing about salt (Sodium chloride, NaCl). I think he might actually be a spiceist, because he seems much more fascinated with salt than any other condiment, even pepper or Tabasco. For example, he turned Lot's wife into a pillar of salt (Genesis 19:26). He made a number of commandments about the use of salt (see http://www.biblegateway.com/keyword/?search=salt salted&version1=31&searchtype=any). I love that "salting the earth" thing -- putting salt over the land of your enemies. That has to be one of God's most idiosyncratic tactics, and he has many. People should make more of God's salt fetish. It should be mentioned in prayers at school, and in the armed forces. When they open Australia's Parliament with a prayer, as they still do, the Speaker should pray, 'O Lord, we beseech thee, O thou who salteth the lands of those He liketh not ..."

More about salt: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Black fish blues

When I lived at Repton, I used to fish at nearby Mylestom, about 4 or 5 nights a week, at the spot in the photo attached. One dark night I forgot to take my torch, and I caught a nice, fat black fish, which I assumed to be a blackfish. I took it home to have for the next day's breakfast. Unfortunately, in the light of my kitchen, I could see that it was a black fish but it wasn't a blackfish ... it was a baby black cod, a species that lives for decades and grows to more than a metre in length. See http://www.dailyexaminer.com.au/story/2010/06/09/Keeping-tabs-on-black-cod-vulnerable-species-list/. The fine for taking one of this endangered or vulnerable species is, I believe several thousand dollars.

I felt really terrible. But it was delicious.

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Birth date of Henry Lawson


Give me a pound a column, and a drop to clear my throat,
An' I will write the reddest song as ever poet wrote.


http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun17.html 1867 Henry Lawson (d. September 2, 1922), Australian's best-known writer of short stories and verse, noted for his realistic portrayals of bush life and the revolutionary politics of his earlier writing.

Henry Lawson was born dirt-poor in a bark hut on the goldfields at Grenfell, New South Wales. Likewise, he died in abject poverty, under a tree in his garden, and Prime Minister William Morris Hughes ordered one of the grandest State funerals ever seen in Australia, and the first for a writer, which was attended by many thousands in St Andrew's Cathedral and out on the streets of Sydney (picture of funeral).

Years later, his face was on Australia's $10 note, only to be removed and replaced with that of his conservative friend and The Bulletin magazine poetic sparring partner, Banjo Paterson. On the reverse of today's $10 note is one-time Communist Mary Gilmore, who Lawson once asked to marry him, but was refused. She changed her mind soon after she had sailed to Paraguay to live on the William Lane-led radical communal experiment, New Australia, but by then it was too late as Lawson had married the daughter of two of Australia's most famous fiery radicals, William and Bertha McNamara.

Henry Lawson's mother was the pioneer feminist and 'Mother of Women's Suffrage', Louisa Lawson (1848 - 1920), publisher/editor of the progressive women's journal, Dawn (a “paper in which women may express their own opinions on political and social questions”), which Henry Lawson printed in its earliest editions. His brother-in-law was another fiery labor man, Jack Lang, who became Premier of New South Wales in 1925.

When female Australian British subjects (with the glaring exception of Asians, Aborigines and Africans) won the vote with the Uniform Franchise Act (June 16, 1902), Louisa Lawson was hailed by her political sisters as "The Mother of Womanhood Suffrage", in the first country in the world to grant women the right to vote and stand for election. Unlike many suffragists and feminists of her day, she did not come from a privileged background but from the shanties of rural Australia. Dawn was a monthly journal that lasted for 17 years, employed a staff of ten and mostly published the writings of Henry Lawson’s remarkable mother.

Henry Lawson lived much of his life in poverty and alcoholic despair, but even during his lifetime he was acknowledged as a poetic genius, much-loved by the Australian people who until recently had a strong poetic culture. In his lifetime, he was probably Australia's most famous person. With Andrew Barton ‘Banjo’ Paterson (1864 - 1941), he is Australia's national poet and the two names are often said together. His poetry, however, like his short stories (he was prolific in both genres), has much more of a radical bent than that of Banjo. The two men were friendly rivals and a famous poetic duel ('Up the Country'), was fought publicly between them in The Bulletin. Paterson's poem romanticised the Aussie outback; Henry Lawson, ever the cynic-realist, answered decrying its harshness, poverty and social injustice ...

Read on at the Henry and Louisa Lawson page at the Scriptorium.

My photos of the 50th Annual Lawson festival, Grenfell, 2007

The Louisa Lawson and Henry Lawson Online Chronology is, as far as we know, the largest Lawson website.





Read for free

My novel is 'Faces in the Street'. My novel's two central characters are Henry Lawson and his suffragette mother, Louisa Lawson ("Mother of Women's Suffrage"). It also fictionally covers many of the famous and remarkable people the Lawsons really did associate with. It's being well received -- you can read the reviews here. It will make a good gift for people who like to read historical fiction.

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

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McChrystal Faces "Iraq 2006 Moment" in coming months

http://tinyurl.com/23vdgc7 Washington - Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal confronts the spectre of a collapse of U.S. political support for the war in Afghanistan in coming months comparable to the one that occurred in the Iraq War in late 2006.

On Thursday, McChrystal's message that his strategy will weaken the Taliban in its heartland took its worst beating thus far, when he admitted that the planned offensive in Kandahar City and surrounding districts is being delayed until September at the earliest, because it does not have the support of the Kandahar population and leadership.

Equally damaging to the credibility of McChrystal's strategy was the Washington Post report published Thursday documenting in depth the failure of February's offensive in Marja.

The basic theme underlined in both stories - that the Afghan population in the Taliban heartland is not cooperating with U.S. and NATO forces - is likely to be repeated over and over again in media coverage in the coming months.

The Kandahar operation, which McChrystal's staff has touted as the pivotal campaign of the war, had previously been announced as beginning in June. But it is now clear that McChrystal has understood for weeks that the most basic premise of the operation turned out to be false.

"When you go to protect people, the people have to want you to protect them," said McChrystal, who was in Brussels for a NATO conference.

He didn't have to spell out the obvious implication: the people of Kandahar don't want the protection of foreign troops.

The Washington Post story on McChrystal's announcement reported "U.S. officials" had complained that "the support from Kandaharis that the United States was counting on [Afghan President Hamid] Karzai to deliver has not materialised."

That explanation hardly makes McChrystal's war plan more credible, because Karzai has made no secret of his preference for a negotiated settlement rather than continued efforts to weaken the Taliban by occupying key Taliban strongholds.

The report in the Post, written by National Editor Rajiv Chandrasekaran, provided the first detailed evidence of the systematic non-cooperation of the population of the district-sized area called Marja with U.S. troops ...

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Kevin Costner - Ocean Therapy Solutions

http://www.ots.org/news10062010.php Ocean Therapy Solutions: "British Petroleum signed a letter of intent with Ocean Therapy Solutions to deploy thirty-two centrifuge machines to assist in the cleanup of oil in the Gulf of Mexico. BP agreed to use the technology after testing machines during the past week.

"In testimony yesterday before the House of Representatives' Science and Technology committee, Ocean Therapy Solutions partner Kevin Costner told the panel about the challenges he faced bringing the technology into industrial use, including his own personal investment of over $20 million developing the technology. He urged committee members to legislate that oil rigs be required to have mitigation equipment onsite. 'We've legislated life preservers. We legislated fire extinguishers,' Costner said. 'We legislated lifeboats and first aid kits. It seems logical that as long as the oil industry profits from the sea, they have the legal obligation to protect it, except when they find themselves fighting for life and limb.'"

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Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Act of God destroys Jesus statue

http://bit.ly/bSTdwl A giant statue of Jesus Christ has been destroyed by lightning in the US state of Ohio.

The 19-metre-high sculpture on a highway outside Cincinnati caught fire and burnt to the ground after being struck during a thunderstorm.

Insurance companies described the incident as an act of God.

Down in Monterey


The people came and listened
Some of them came and played
Others gave flowers away
Yes they did
Down in Monterey
Down in Monterey

Young gods smiled upon the crowd
Their music being born of love
Children danced night and day
Religion was being born
Down in Monterey


http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun16.html 1967 The Monterey International Pop Festival began in the Monterey County Fairgrounds in Monterey, California, USA. The rock festival was planned by producer Lou Adler, John Phillips of The Mamas & the Papas, producer Alan Pariser, and Beatles publicist Derek Taylor; the festival board included members of The Beatles and The Beach Boys.

In three days 50,000 fans witnessed the first major appearances of Jimi Hendrix ( who was booked on the insistence of board member Paul McCartney), The Who and Janis Joplin. Also appearing were The Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, Buffalo Springfield, Otis Redding, The Animals, Mamas and Papas, Brian Jones of the Rolling Stones, Country Joe and the Fish, Canned Heat, Steve Miller Band, Simon and Garfunkel, The Byrds, The Butterfield Blues Band, Al Kooper, Scott McKenzie and Ravi Shankar ...



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

Wilson's Almanac Book of Days hip list :: CounterCulture Wiki

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Bloomsday

http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun16.html June 16 is Bloomsday, commemorating James Joyce's novel, Ulysses. All of the narrative of the novel takes place on June 16, 1904, and today is celebrated annually around the world, usually with readings from that marvellous book, first published in 1922. Many call it the greatest novel ever written.

At the last Bloomsday we celebrated in Bellingen I read the following selection:

In Inisfail the fair there lies a land, the land of holy Michan. There rises a watchtower beheld of men afar. There sleep the mighty dead as in life they slept, warriors and princes of high renown. A pleasant land it is in sooth of murmuring waters, fishful streams where sport the gurnard, the plaice, the roach, the halibut, the gibbed haddock, the grilse, the dab, the brill, the flounder, the pollock, the mixed coarse fish generally and other denizens of the aqueous kingdom too numerous to be enumerated. In the mild breezes of the west and of the east the lofty trees wave in different directions their firstclass foliage, the wafty sycamore, the Lebanonian cedar, the exalted planetree, the eugenic eucalyptus and other ornaments of the arboreal world with which that region is thoroughly well supplied. Lovely maidens sit in close proximity to the roots of the lovely trees singing the most lovely songs while they play with all kinds of lovely objects as for example golden ingots, silvery fishes, crans of herrings, drafts of eels, codlings, creels of fingerlings, purple seagems and playful insects. And heroes voyage from afar to woo them, from Eblana to Slievemargy, the peerless princes of unfettered Munster and of Connacht the just and of smooth sleek Leinster and of Cruahan's land and of Armagh the splendid and of the noble district of Boyle, princes, the sons of kings.

And there rises a shining palace whose crystal glittering roof is seen by mariners who traverse the extensive sea in barks built expressly for that purpose, and thither come all herds and fatlings and firstfruits of that land for O'Connell Fitzsimon takes toll of them, a chieftain descended from chieftains. Thither the extremely large wains bring foison of the fields, flaskets of cauliflowers, floats of spinach, pineapple chunks, Rangoon beans, strikes of tomatoes, drums of figs, drills of Swedes, spherical potatoes and tallies of iridescent kale, York and Savoy, and trays of onions, pearls of the earth, and punnets of mushrooms and custard marrows and fat vetches and bere and rape and red green yellow brown russet sweet big bitter ripe pomellated apples and chips of strawberries and sieves of gooseberries, pulpy and pelurious, and strawberries fit for princes and raspberries from their canes.

I dare him, says he, and I doubledare him. Come out here, Geraghty, you notorious bloody hill and dale robber!

And by that way wend the herds innumerable of bellwethers and flushed ewes and shearling rams and lambs and stubble geese and medium steers and roaring mares and polled calves and longwoods and storesheep and Cuffe's prime springers and culls and sowpigs and baconhogs and the various different varieties of highly distinguished swine and Angus heifers and polly bullocks of immaculate pedigree together with prime premiated milchcows and beeves: and there is ever heard a trampling, cackling, roaring, lowing, bleating, bellowing, rumbling, grunting,
champing, chewing, of sheep and pigs and heavyhooved kine from pasturelands of Lusk and Rush and Carrickmines and from the streamy vales of Thomond, from the M'Gillicuddy's reeks the inaccessible and lordly Shannon the unfathomable, and from the gentle declivities of the place of the race of Kiar, their udders distended with superabundance of milk and butts of butter and rennets of cheese and farmer's firkins and targets of lamb and crannocks of corn and oblong eggs in great hundreds, various in size, the agate with this dun.

So we turned into Barney Kiernan's and there, sure enough, was the citizen up in the corner having a great confab with himself and that bloody mangy mongrel, Garryowen, and he waiting for what the sky would drop in the way of drink.

--There he is, says I, in his gloryhole, with his cruiskeen lawn and his load of papers, working for the cause.

The bloody mongrel let a grouse out of him would give you the creeps. Be a corporal work of mercy if someone would take the life of that bloody dog. I'm told for a fact he ate a good part of the breeches off a constabulary man in Santry that came round one time with a blue paper about a licence.

--Stand and deliver, says he.

--That's all right, citizen, says Joe. Friends here.

--Pass, friends, says he.

Then he rubs his hand in his eye and says he:

--What's your opinion of the times?

Doing the rapparee and Rory of the hill. But, begob, Joe was equal to the occasion.

--I think the markets are on a rise, says he, sliding his hand down his fork.

So begob the citizen claps his paw on his knee and he says:

--Foreign wars is the cause of it.

And says Joe, sticking his thumb in his pocket:

--It's the Russians wish to tyrannise.

--Arrah, give over your bloody codding, Joe, says I. I've a thirst on me I wouldn't sell for half a crown.

--Give it a name, citizen, says Joe.

--Wine of the country, says he.

--What's yours? says Joe.

--Ditto MacAnaspey, says I.

--Three pints, Terry, says Joe. And how's the old heart, citizen? says he.

--Never better, a chara, says he. What Garry? Are we going to win? Eh?

And with that he took the bloody old towser by the scruff of the neck and, by Jesus, he near throttled him.

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Robin Goodfellow - a midsummer night's imp

Watch out, watch out, there are imps about! Charles Kightly in his The Perpetual Almanack of Folklore (Thames and Hudson, 1987) tells us that the red-stalked Herb Robert (Geranium robertianum) blooms around English houses in June, associated with Summer Solstice (June 21) and Midsummer (June 24). (In North America, however, it is a noxious weed.) Herb Robert is also known as Death-come-quickly, Robin's eye, Robin Hood, Robin-i’-th’-hedge, Stinking Bob, Stinker Bobs and Wren flower.

Weed or not, beware how you treat it, for it is Robin Goodfellow’s flower and he might direct a snake to bite you, especially if you destroy it.

Robin Goodfellow is an English imp, a trickster from the woods. As a forest dweller, he symbolises the pagan (wood-dwelling) pre-Christian peoples who the Church worked hard at converting from their wicked ways. Robin is a cognate of the famous European Green Man (a name coined by Lady Raglan in 1939 for a medieval image usually found in churches), and of Robin Hood. The English sometimes called him Puck, frequently representing him as a goat, while the Irish knew similar fantastic beings as Pooka. In Killorglin, County Kerry, Ireland annually on August 10 - 12, a goat is still the mascot of the ancient Puck Fair ...

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

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Dingoes are smarter than pet dogs

http://bit.ly/c8P9dP "The dingo is considered a 'pure' prehistoric dog, which was brought to Australia tens of thousands of years ago by the Aborigines. While they have in the past been associated with humans, they have adapted to surviving 'wild' in the Australian outback. The dingo lies somewhere between the wolf, its ancient ancestor, and the domestic or pet dog, and has cognitive differences between the two. There has been little research done on dingoes, even though studies would aid in the understanding of the evolution of dogs, and it was unknown whether the dingo was more 'wolf-like' or 'dog-like' ..."

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

The real threat aboard the Freedom Flotilla, by Noam Chomsky

http://bit.ly/djStKR June 08, 2010 In These Times http://inthesetimes.com/article/6064/the_real_threat_aboard_the_freedom_flotilla/ - Israel's violent attack on the Freedom Flotilla carrying humanitarian aid to Gaza shocked the world.

"Hijacking boats in international waters and killing passengers is, of course, a serious crime.

"But the crime is nothing new. For decades, Israel has been hijacking boats between Cyprus and Lebanon and killing or kidnapping passengers, sometimes holding them hostage in Israeli prisons.

"Israel assumes that it can commit such crimes with impunity because the United States tolerates them and Europe generally follows the U.S.’s lead.

"As the editors of The Guardian rightly observed on June 1, 'If an armed group of Somali pirates had yesterday boarded six vessels on the high seas, killing at least 10 passengers and injuring many more, a NATO task force would today be heading for the Somali coast.' In this case, the NATO treaty obligates its members to come to the aid of a fellow NATO country—Turkey—attacked on the high seas.

"Israel's pretext for the attack was that the Freedom Flotilla was bringing materials that Hamas could use for bunkers to fire rockets into Israel.

"The pretext isn't credible. Israel can easily end the threat of rockets by peaceful means.

"The background is important. Hamas was designated a major terrorist threat when it won a free election in January 2006. The U.S. and Israel sharply escalated their punishment of Palestinians, now for the crime of voting the wrong way.

"The siege of Gaza, including a naval blockade, was a result. The siege intensified sharply in June 2007 after a civil war left Hamas in control of the territory.

"What is commonly described as a Hamas military coup was in fact incited by the U.S. and Israel, in a crude attempt to overturn the elections that had brought Hamas to power.

"That has been public knowledge at least since April 2008, when David Rose reported in Vanity Fair that George W. Bush, National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice and her deputy, Elliott Abrams, 'backed an armed force under Fatah strongman Muhammad Dahlan, touching off a bloody civil war in Gaza and leaving Hamas stronger than ever.'

"Hamas terror included launching rockets into nearby Israeli towns -- criminal, without a doubt, though only a minute fraction of routine U.S.-Israeli crimes in Gaza.

"In June 2008, Israel and Hamas reached a cease-fire agreement. The Israeli government formally acknowledges that until Israel broke the agreement on Nov. 4 of that year, invading Gaza and killing half a dozen Hamas activists, Hamas did not fire a single rocket.

"Hamas offered to renew the cease-fire. The Israeli cabinet considered the offer and rejected it, preferring to launch its murderous invasion of Gaza on Dec.27.

"Like other states, Israel has the right of self-defense. But did Israel have the right to use force in Gaza in the name of self-defense? International law, including the U.N. Charter, is unambiguous: A nation has such a right only if it has exhausted peaceful means. In this case such means were not even tried, although—or perhaps because—there was every reason to suppose that they would succeed.

"Thus the invasion was sheer criminal aggression, and the same is true of Israel’s resorting to force against the flotilla ...

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The most and least pesticide-contaminated foods

http://bit.ly/adIgQz The Most and Least Pesticide-Contaminated Foods "The United States Department of Agriculture has an ongoing Pesticide Data Program that tests for pesticide residues on a variety of basic foods, especially those likely to be eaten by infants and children. The Environmental Working Group translates the USDA data into a list of the best and worst foods as far as pesticide residue levels are concerned.

"Pesticides are neuro-toxins, designed to destroy the nervous system of insects. In my opinion they are far more of a human health problem than our government acknowledges, primarily because if the government confessed to the seriousness of the problem then people would wonder why they have allowed the American public to be poisoned for more than half a century ..."

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Magna Carta

http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun15.html 1215 King John of England met the barons of England at Runnymede, on the banks of the Thames, and put his seal with them the Magna Carta (Latin for 'Great Charter'), one of the basic documents of democracy in the English-speaking world.
Today according to Australian Eastern Standard Time when this item was posted

Magna Carta influenced many common law and other documents, such as the United States Constitution and Bill of Rights, and is considered one of the most important legal documents in the history of democracy ...

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At Bud Bagsak, US army massacred thousands



http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/jun15.html 1913 US troops under General John 'Black Jack' Pershing ended (temporarily, for it continues to this day) the Moro people's struggle for self-determination in the Philippines.

This was done by exterminating 2,000, including 196 women and 340 children, (one source has 6,000 to 10,000 men, women and children*) in an assault on the same crater in which an entire community had been similarly liquidated on March 8, 1906, an act of bastardry roundly condemned by anti-imperialist Mark Twain.

The Moro defenders of Bud Bagsak pitched spears and barongs at the overwhelming firepower of the US military. Pershing "stood so close to the trench, directing operations, that his life was endangered by flying barongs and spears which were being continually hurled from the Moro stronghold."

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

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