Thursday, July 31, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | Still confused about Iraq?

The most serious joke I've heard in a long time.


From Shara:

Why we attacked Iraq

Q: Daddy, why did we have to attack Iraq?
A: Because they had weapons of mass destruction honey.

Q: But the inspectors didn't find any weapons of mass destruction.
A: That's because the Iraqis were hiding them.

Q: And that's why we invaded Iraq?
A: Yep. Invasions always work better than inspections.

Q: But after we invaded them, we STILL didn't find any weapons of mass destruction, did we?
A: That's because the weapons are so well hidden. Don't worry, we'll find something, probably right
before the 2004 election.

Q: Why did Iraq want all those weapons of mass destruction?
A: To use them in a war, silly.

Q: I'm confused. If they had all those weapons that they planned to use in a war, then why didn't
they use any of those weapons when we went to war with them?
A: Well, obviously they didn't want anyone to know they had those weapons, so they chose to die by
the thousands rather than defend themselves.

Q: That doesn't make sense Daddy. Why would they choose to die if they had all those big weapons to
fight us back with?
A: It's a different culture. It's not supposed to make sense.

Q: I don't know about you, but I don't think they had any of those weapons our government said they did.
A: Well, you know, it doesn't matter whether or not they had those weapons. We had another good
reason to invade them anyway.

Q: And what was that?
A: Even if Iraq didn't have weapons of mass destruction, Saddam Hussein was a cruel dictator,
which is another good reason to invade another country.

Q: Why? What does a cruel dictator do that makes it OK to invade his country?
A: Well, for one thing, he tortured his own people.

Q: Kind of like what they do in China?
A: Don't go comparing China to Iraq. China is a good economic competitor, where millions of people
work for slave wages in sweatshops to make U.S. corporations richer.

Q: So if a country lets its people be exploited for American corporate gain, it's a good country,
even if that country tortures people?
A: Right.

Q: Why were people in Iraq being tortured?
A: For political crimes, mostly, like criticizing the government. People who criticized the government
in Iraq were sent to prison and tortured.

Q: Isn't that exactly what happens in China?
A: I told you, China is different.

Q: What's the difference between China and Iraq?
A: Well, for one thing, Iraq was ruled by the Ba'ath party, while China is Communist.

Q: Didn't you once tell me Communists were bad?
A: No, just Cuban Communists are bad.

Q: How are the Cuban Communists bad?
A: Well, for one thing, people who criticize the government in Cuba are sent to prison and
tortured.

Q: Like in Iraq?
A: Exactly.

Q: And like in China, too?
A: I told you, China's a good economic competitor. Cuba, on the other hand, is not.

Q: How come Cuba isn't a good economic competitor?

A: Well, you see, back in the early 1960s, our government passed some laws that made it illegal
for Americans to trade or do any business with Cuba until they stopped being Communists and
started being capitalists like us.

Q: But if we got rid of those laws, opened up trade with Cuba, and started doing business with
them, wouldn't that help the Cubans become capitalists?
A: Don't be a smart-ass.

Q: I didn't think I was being one.
A: Well, anyway, they also don't have freedom of religion in Cuba.

Q: Kind of like China and the Falun Gong movement?
A: I told you, stop saying bad things about China. Anyway, Saddam Hussein came to power through a
military coup, so he's not really a legitimate leader anyway.

Q: What's a military coup?
A: That's when a military general takes over the government of a country by force, instead of
holding free elections like we do in the United States.

Q: Didn't the ruler of Pakistan come to power by a military coup?
A: You mean General Pervez Musharraf? Uh, yeah, he did, but Pakistan is our friend.

Q: Why is Pakistan our friend if their leader is illegitimate?
A: I never said Pervez Musharraf was illegitimate.

Q: Didn't you just say a military general who comes to power by forcibly overthrowing the
legitimate government of a nation is an illegitimate leader?
A: Only Saddam Hussein. Pervez Musharraf is our friend, because he helped us invade Afghanistan.

Q: Why did we invade Afghanistan?
A: Because of what they did to us on September 11th.

Q: What did Afghanistan do to us on September 11th?
A: Well, on September 11th, nineteen men, fifteen of them Saudi Arabians, hijacked four airplanes
and flew three of them into buildings, killing over 3,000 Americans.

Q: So how did Afghanistan figure into all that?
A: Afghanistan was where those bad men trained, under the oppressive rule of the Taliban.

Q: Aren't the Taliban those bad radical Islamics who chopped off people's heads and hands?
A: Yes, that's exactly who they were. Not only did they chop off people's heads and hands, but they
oppressed women, too.

Q: Didn't the Bush administration give the Taliban 43 million dollars back in May of 2001?
A: Yes, but that money was a reward because they did such a good job fighting drugs.

Q: Fighting drugs?
A: Yes, the Taliban were very helpful in stopping people from growing opium poppies.

Q: How did they do such a good job?
A: Simple. If people were caught growing opium poppies, the Taliban would have their hands and
heads cut off.

Q: So, when the Taliban cut off people's heads and hands for growing flowers, that was OK,
but not if they cut people's heads and hands off for other reasons?
A: Yes. It's OK with us if radical Islamic fundamentalists cut off people's hands for growing
flowers, but it's cruel if they cut off people's hands for stealing bread.

Q: Don't they also cut off people's hands and heads in Saudi Arabia?
A: That's different. Afghanistan was ruled by a tyrannical patriarchy that oppressed women and
forced them to wear burqas whenever they were in public, with death by stoning as the penalty for
women who did not comply.

Q: Don't Saudi women have to wear burqas in public, too?
A: No, Saudi women merely wear a traditional Islamic body covering.

Q: What's the difference?
A: The traditional Islamic covering worn by Saudi women is a modest yet fashionable garment that
covers all of a woman's body except for her eyes and fingers. The burqa, on the other hand, is an
evil tool of patriarchal oppression that covers all of a woman's body except for her eyes and
fingers.

Q: It sounds like the same thing with a different name.
A: Now, don't go comparing Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia. The Saudis are our friends.

Q: But I thought you said 15 of the 19 hijackers on September 11th were from Saudi Arabia.
A: Yes, but they trained in Afghanistan.

Q: Who trained them?
A: A very bad man named Osama bin Laden.

Q: Was he from Afghanistan?
A: Uh, no, he was from Saudi Arabia too. But he was a bad man, a very bad man.

Q: I seem to recall he was our friend once.
A: Only when we helped him and the mujahadeen repel the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan back in
the 1980s.

Q: Who are the Soviets? Was that the Evil Communist Empire Ronald Reagan talked about?
A: There are no more Soviets. The Soviet Union broke up in 1990 or thereabouts, and now they have
elections and capitalism like us. We call them Russians now.

Q: So the Soviets, I mean, the Russians, are now our friends?
A: Well, not really. You see, they were our friends for many years after they stopped being
Soviets, but then they decided not to support our invasion of Iraq, so we're mad at them now. We're
also mad at the French and the Germans because they didn't help us invade Iraq either.

Q: So the French and Germans are evil, too?
A: Not exactly evil, but just bad enough that we had to rename French fries and French toast to
Freedom Fries and Freedom Toast.

Q: Do we always rename foods whenever another country doesn't do what we want them to do?
A: No, we just do that to our friends. Our enemies, we invade.

Q: But wasn't Iraq one of our friends back in the 1980s?
A: Well, yeah. For a while.

Q: Was Saddam Hussein ruler of Iraq back then?
A: Yes, but at the time he was fighting against Iran, which made him our friend, temporarily.

Q: Why did that make him our friend?
A: Because at that time, Iran was our enemy.

Q: Isn't that when he gassed the Kurds?
A: Yeah, but since he was fighting against Iran at the time, we looked the other way, to show him we
were his friend.

Q: So anyone who fights against one of our enemies automatically becomes our friend?
A: Now you're getting the idea!

Q: And anyone who fights against one of our friends is automatically an enemy?
A: Sometimes that's true, too. However, if American corporations can profit by selling
weapons to both sides at the same time, all the better.

Q: Why?
A: Because war is good for the economy, which means war is good for America. Also, since God is
on America's side, anyone who opposes war is a godless, un-American Communist.
Do you understand now why we attacked Iraq?

Q: I think so. We attacked them because God wanted us to, right?
A: Yes.

Q: But how did we know God wanted us to attack Iraq?
A: Well, you see, God personally speaks to George W. Bush and tells him what to do.

Q: So basically, what you're saying is that we attacked Iraq because George W. Bush hears voices
in his head?
A: Yes! Now stop thinking so hard, close your eyes, make yourself comfortable, and go to sleep.
Good night.

Q: OK Daddy. Goodnight.

*Ø* Blogmanac | Wow, what an amazing coincidence!

Thank you, Al Qaeda, for taking note of our fears like that

Two days ago the US Department of Homeland Security released a warning that Australia is a target for Al Qaeda terrorism. The Australian government, receiving a kindly visit from Men in Black from the tourism and airline industries, did something completely out of character. With their biggest John Howard nervous grins, they mentioned politely to the USA that "The Australian People" were a tad dubious about that assessment.

At first, the big burly blokes in the American administration stood firm, and told the media they saw no reason to change their alert for Australia. Then, as if by some overnight miracle, or a phone call from some unknown benefactor, they rewrote the whole dossier for us. Big Aussie phew! Australia is no longer a target for Al Qaeda, which sure makes us feel safer. Me, I'm going to find me some big crowded airport right away!

What a great coincidence that the Al Qaeda leader changed his mind about attacking us on the very day that Australian industry delegations met government officials expressing their disquiet? And within hours of the Aussie delegation to Admiral poindexter.

We stopped being a target at precisely that time! Talk about synchronicity! I don't know who to thank more, Mr bin Forgotten, Prime Minister 'Honest' John Howard, President Bush or the nice Admiral, but whoever is responsible, a big God bless you from all us terrified but patriotic Aussies!! We salute you, gentlemen, and thank you for leading us because we know we can't lead ourselves. One day we might be just like you, but it hardly seems possible.

Read the story

*Ø* Blogmanac July 31 | Happy birthday, Juliet!

1578 Juliet Capulet, ill-fated lover of Romeo Montague in Shakespeare’s play, Romeo and Juliet, was born on this day

How do we know this was Juliet’s birthday?

"Come Lammas eve at night shall she be fourteen. That shall she, marry; I remember it well. 'Tis since the earthquake now eleven years, an' she was weaned. " Source

Shakespeare's characters spoke as if they were English people living in his own times; London had an earthquake in 1580. She would have been two when weaned. Tomorrow, August 1, is the ancient Celtic pagan festival of Lammas, and today is Lammas Eve. These clues can make us confident that we may wish Juliet a happy birthday today.

Much more on Lammas tomorrow

*Ø* Blogmanac | How Bush shuns the media

"Americans can see their president on television almost every day. From policy speeches to White House meetings to photo opportunities on the road with selected groups, the sight of George W Bush is anything but a rarity. But opportunities for the nation's press to question the leader are far less common. Mr Bush holds far fewer briefings than his predecessors.

"He will make comments before or after events - such as paying tribute to the late comedian Bob Hope - and he takes two questions after meeting visiting foreign leaders like Israel's Ariel Sharon.

"Yet the White House can let months go by without giving the press any extended opportunity to ask questions of the president."

Source


This is a captivating blog by a guy in Iran, where bloggers are being shut down and persecuted. You will find a permalink to it from now on on the Blogmanac.





*Ø* Blogmanac | Refugees start hunger strike in Belgium

When asylum seekers in Australia's concentration camp-like 'detention centres' sewed their lips shut, some Aussie politicians and radio jocks affected to interpret this as the actions not of terrified, desperate people but as the manipulations of sophisticatedly cynical enemies of the state.

Now, news from Belgium of more cynical ne'er-do-wells trying to bend a nice white government to their wicked will:


"As the Australian Government continues to urge Afghan asylum seekers in Australia to return home, in Belgium a similar policy has prompted a desperate response from the Afghans.

"The Belgian Interior Ministry announced this week that more than 1,000 Afghan asylum seekers would be repatriated within three to nine months.

"Now around 300 of the asylum seekers have occupied a Brussels Church, and many of them have gone on a hunger strike to protest the decision to send them home ...

"Hakimi Manisha is heavily pregnant, but has refused to take food, and now even water. She says she will be killed if she is returned to Afghanistan, and draws no distinction between the Taliban or those who replaced them.

HAKIMI MANISHA: They come in the night, they take their valuable things from the house, and that's very dangerous situation for, particularly for the women, there is not available woman rights for the woman, for the girls, and also for the children.

When I go to Afghanistan, I know I can't put my baby in the school, because if she go at morning to school, til night when she come back I must be afraid that what's happened with my baby ...

"How long can you go on not taking water, not eating, how long will your hunger strike continue for?

ASYLUM SEEKER: I must continue till the Government from Belgium change their decision, when I dead, or my baby dead, or anybody dead, and these people – the Government from Belgium – must be responsible."

Source
"I would prefer to die of hunger than be forced to go back there."

Do you like the Blogmanac? Do us a favorama please?
Please click Blogarama. The click will raise our profile. Then click the Counter Culture category there and see the listing for Wilson's Blogmanac. Click where it says Site Reviews, enjoy the kind reviews people are writing about us, and scroll down to where it says Click here to add a site review. Then would you be kind enough to say a few words? It doesn't have to be much.

Thank you, it would be a great helporama.

Wednesday, July 30, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | Plan for Terrorism Futures Market Dumped
Only a day after it was disclosed, outraged senators of both parties called for the immediate end to the online trading bazaar that would have rewarded investors able to predict terror attacks and other global unrest. Pentagon officials raced to oblige, saying it would be shut down posthaste.

"It is a very significant mistake," said Senator John W. Warner, Republican of Virginia, the chairman of the Armed Services Committee.

Democrats quickly pointed the finger at John M. Poindexter, a retired rear admiral who was a key official involved in developing the plan.

"This Poindexter program is still a runaway horse that needs to be reined in," said Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon, one of the two Democrats who brought the plan to light on Monday.

Admiral Poindexter first gained notoriety in the Iran-contra scandal during the Reagan administration and more recently he oversaw a Pentagon program for extensive electronic surveillance of computer records in the search for terrorists.

Mr. Wyden and Senator Byron L. Dorgan of North Dakota disclosed the existence of the futures program on Monday, calling it grotesque.

Full text at NewYorkTimes

*Ø* Blogmanac | Now you really can subscribe!



Free subscriptions to the Blogmanac now working

If you look in the right-hand column here, you'll see that you can subscribe to what's posted in the Blogmanac. it is not the same material as in Wilson's Almanac -- but you can subscribe to that too.

Our Blogmanac subs weren't working before, but they are now. It's really a cool free ezine, so take out a free sub and see for yourself. You get all the posts here, daily.

*Ø* Blogmanac July 29 | St Abdon; The MicMac festival
Feast day of St Abdon
St Abdon is the patron of hygiene. In the Vosges Mountains of Europe, the ashes of ferns cut and burned on this feast keep away insects and unwanted guests.
Source

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


Feast day of St Julitta (White mullen, Verbuscum lychnitis, is today's plant, dedicated to this saint)

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


Micmac Tribe Festival of St Anne, Cape Benton, Canada
Indian adoption of St Ann and the god Gloosca as Mother Goddess and Father God.

*Ø* Blogmanac July 30, 1967 | Arthur Stace passes into Eternity


The greatest graffitist



Every morning for 37 years, Sydneysiders, as those who live in Sydney are called, awoke to a word that helped in unknown ways to give a focus on the deep meanings of life, death, and meaning itself.

Arthur Stace died on July 30, 1967, aged 83. He had been ‘born again’ at St Barnabas's Church of England, Broadway, Sydney, in August 1930, and his friends described him as a very colourful character. He had been a methylated spirits-drinking, hopeless alcoholic and derelict in the streets of Sydney, when he was converted to Christianity at about 46 years of age. He had returned from World War One shell-shocked and soon became a scout for brothels, a petty criminal, and a ‘cockatoo’ (lookout) for two-up schools (illegal gambling rooms where the Australian game of two-up is played).

Just after his conversion to Christianity, Stace heard the evangelist John Ridley at the Burton Street Baptist Church preach about a man who was converted in Scotland through ‘Eternity’ being written on a footpath. Ridley cried out ‘Oh for someone to write Eternity on the footpaths of Sydney!’ Arthur Stace said to himself, ‘Here is something I can do for God.’ He did so, writing the word half a million times over nearly four decades.

The pedestrians of Sydney saw this one word sermon every morning for 37 years, its origin a mystery for most of that time. When the yellow Eternity vanished from our city streets, something vanished with it.

This is an abridged verion of the article here

*Ø* Blogmanac | Grand Chief Woableza LaBatte badly injured


Thank you to my friend Tonya Maxwell for sending this:

Brothers & Sisters,

As most of you know by now, Sioux spiritual leader Grand Chief Woableza LaBatte of the World Council of Spiritual Elders and spiritual leader of the Manataka American Indian Council was severely beaten on the Choctaw Reservation early Monday morning, July 14.

His Injuries Head: Woableza head injuries are the most severe. During the assault, a piece his skull pierced the brain. A metal plate was sewn into place to stabilize the crack that is about seven inches long and shaped like a flat letter 'L' or 'N' . The wound itself is healing well and the swelling appears to be going down. Headaches are continual and medication is needed to alleviate pain ...

He is not on oxygen, however, an intravenous tube with a variety of anti-inflammatory and other medicines flow through a tube inserted by needle into the back of his left hand ...

His Spirit Chief Woableza is amazing. His countenance and spirit are strong. He smiles often and is continuing his prayers for others in need. We did detect some sadness and a small bit anger deep within, but he is working to resolve these issues with prayer and meditation.

Woableza does not complain - about anything. When the pain becomes unbearable, he does not complain or cry. He has not uttered a single negative word. He has not allowed any anger coming from friends and family to enter his consciousness. He remains humble to his purpose and rejoices at the many blessings he is given. Truly amazing ...

What Can You Do?
1. Pray for the continued healing of our most beloved and respected elder, Grand Chief Woableza.

2. Pray for his family that they may remain strong.

3. Pray for the perpetrators and their families that they may understand the gravity of this horrendous crime against a holy man and take responsibility for their actions ...


Manataka American Indian Council

*Ø* Blogmanac July 27 - Sept 7 | India's great Kumbh Mela fest


"Since time immemorial, The Kumbh Mela, the greatest of the Indian fairs, has enamoured people from all walks of life. Irrespective of all worldly barriers of caste, creed, region, the Kumbh Mela has wielded a mesmeric influence over the mind and the imagination of the ordinary Indian. The mela brings alive the most spectacular India, now almost relegated to the pages of history"




Read more about the great Kumbh Mela festival of India

Schedule

*Ø* Blogmanac | Oil groups snub US on Iraq deals
By Carola Hoyos in London

Some of the world's biggest oil companies have warned the US administration that they will not make large investments in Iraq while the security situation remains so dangerous.

The reluctance of the industry to invest long-term is a setback to US efforts to revive the oil industry and rebuild the economy. Industry experts estimate it would cost $30bn-$40bn to tap the full potential of Iraq's vast oil deposits.

It is understood high-ranking US officials recently met some heads of international oil companies to sound them out about when companies would be willing to start investing. Industry executives expressed concerns over the lack of security and political legitimacy. They say the US-backed authority, so far, had too little representation.

Such concerns were amplified last Thursday by Sir Philip Watts, chairman of Royal Dutch/Shell, who told his company's results meeting: "The safety our people is paramount. There has to be proper security, legitimate authority and a legitimate process . . . by which we will be able to negotiate agreements that would be longstanding for decades. We wouldn't go into that situation unless these conditions were satisfied because we are a long-term business doing long-term projects and we need the framework in which we can make this sort of investment decision."

US inability to bring security and a legitimate transitional authority to Iraq has forced oil companies to shy away from setting up all but a low-level presence. Even services companies such as ExxonMobil and ChevronTexaco of the US and BP and Royal/Dutch Shell have been disappointed at the pace of progress.

They are needed immediately to repair oil infrastructure and boost exports, but fear tenders due to be awarded next month by the US Army will be considerably less than the maximum expected $1bn.

Walid Khadduri, editor of the influential Middle East Economic Survey, said: "The danger today is that, if the political situation deteriorates - and this is a real threat - the oil industry will not only be unable to expand but could also fail to return to its previous capacity."

Sir Philip said: "When the legitimate authority is there on behalf of the people of Iraq, we will know and recognise it."

Source: Financial Times


*Ø* Blogmanac July 29 | Maîtresse Silvérine
Maîtresse Silvérine, Voudon
“Voudun: Festival honoring Maîtresse Silvérine, who only very slightly tastes of food offered to her; and Maîtresse Lorvana, who smells flowers for her nourishment.”
Source: Earth, Moon and Sky

Tuesday, July 29, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac July 29, 1578 | King Sebastian of Portugal went missing in battle


When will King Sebastian return?
On this day in 1578, Portugal’s Don Sebastian, aged 22, was fighting (read invading) the Moors (African Muslims) in Morocco, at Ksar el Kebir. His army was so defeated that scarcely 50 of his men made it out alive. The Moors said that they had his body and buried it at Belem, but Sebastian's countrymen believed he had escaped and would return to lead them.

Despite the passage of many years, the conviction grew into a cult, passing on from one Portuguese generation to another, surviving into modern times.

The London Times of December 1825 reported that old Portuguese visionaries would go out on windy nights, wrapped in cloaks, watching the movements of the heavens. Sometimes they would see a shooting star and cry “Here he comes!” Sebastianism, a kind of messianic cult, persisted into the 19th century, with the belief that Brazil would become the chief nation of earth.

Sales of horses and some other things were sometimes made, payable at the coming of King Sebastian.

In Brazil, there is a legend that Don Sebastian appears in the form of a black bull on the beaches of mysterious Lencois Island, off the coast of Maranhao.

By the way, Don Sebastian is supposed to be a name of terror to Moorish children.

Nor shall Sebastian’s formidable name
Be longer used to still the crying babe.

Dryden, Don Sebastian (1690)

Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email



* Ø * Ø * Ø *


*Ø* Blogmanac July 29 | Spain's Fiesta of the Near Death Experience


“Every year the small parish town of As Neves, lying south of the ferocious Río Miño (Minho) that marks the border between Portugal and Spain, sees thousands converge on the town's streets for the Fiesta de Santa Marta de Ribarteme, or the Fiesta of the Near-Death Experience.

“The throngs of devotees of Santa Marta, the town's patron saint, known as the ‘saint of death’, besiege the church and surrounding area for a day to pay their respects. All these people hold one thing in common - they have all nearly died.

”One of the main festival highlights sees all manner of people being carried in their coffins by friends and relatives, in a procession that follows the effigy of Santa Marta around the church. It is not uncommon even to see the odd loner having to carry his own. Santa Marta carries a salver in her right hand which sees a constant flurry of donations. The proceeds go towards the maintenance of her shrine. The festival provides a great opportunity to have a good old natter about your near-death-experience, but do get there early. Many who don't (the majority) end up hearing the service on a tannoy from outside the church.”
Source

*Ø* Blogmanac July 29 | Feast day of St Martha, dragon charmer
Many cultures have dragonslaying heroes and heroines, and Martha is a European one with a good lineage, as she first appears in the Bible.

Martha was sister to St Lazarus and St Mary Magdalen and is matron saint of good housewives. According to one legend, she left Palestine after Jesus's death, around 48, and went to Provence with her sister Mary (possibly Mary Magdalene) and her brother Lazarus. Martha first settled in Avignon (now in France), then went to Tarascon, France. In art she is depicted in homely costume, often with a bunch of keys on a girdle, and holding a ladle of water. She is accompanied by a bound dragon, as she destroyed Tarasque, the dragon that ravaged the region around Marseilles, which she did by praising the monster for its goodness. She is Matron of Tarascon which was named after the dragon, as was the herb tarragon. After the townsfolk killed Tarasque, Martha wept for the dragon but forgave the people for they had suffered so long. Or, so it is said.

The Golden Legend: The Life of Saint Martha
Saint Martha and the Dragon

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


“In the thirteenth century, Friar Roger Bacon complained that ‘it is certain’ that Ethiopian sages were coming to Europe – to ‘those Christian lands where there are good flying dragons’ – luring dragons from their caves, saddling them, and then riding them back to Ethiopa where they would be butchered and eaten. A century later, European merchants, having belatedly grasped the commercial possibilities of the dragon trade, had established their own agents locally to acquire dragons for export to Ethiopia. It can be assumed that they advertised European dragons as a superior breed, and charged accordingly. And thus the systematic slaughter of dragons began, and decimated their numbers in both Europe and Africa.”

This quote comes from an essay at the boingdragon website which designed the free dragon hits counter, which I have added (with gratitude) to the right-hand column of this page because I think it's great.

*Ø* Blogmanac July 29 | Time of Thorn/Feast day of St Olaf, king of Norway
Around this time, ancient Northern Tradition honours the god whom the Anglo-Saxons called Thunor and the Norse, Thor. The time of Thorn, as it is known, is a period of proper order and higher powers. This day also honours the sainted Norwegian king, Olaf, murdered around Lammas Day (an ancient festival on August 1, a time when other European kings of old were allegedly murdered, but in fact relates to harvest magic). Traditionally it was portrayed on calendars with the sign of the axe.

*Ø* Blogmanac | Pentagon's Futures Market Plan Condemned



"WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pentagon is setting up a stock-market style system in which investors would bet on terror attacks, assassinations and other events in the Middle East. Defense officials hope to gain intelligence and useful predictions while investors who guessed right would win profits ...

"The market would work this way. Investors would buy and sell futures contracts - essentially a series of predictions about what they believe might happen in the Mideast. Holders of a futures contract that came true would collect the proceeds of investors who put money into the market but predicted wrong."

Don't believe me? Read the story at The Guardian

*Ø* Blogmanac Hussein Captured, Asks What "All The Fuss is About"




"TIKRIT, IRAQ- After months of tireless searching, the number one past-due villain in America's war in Iraq emerged from a nondescript Tikriti home around dawn this morning and introduced himself to a group of surprised Coalition troops. 'Hey, fellas,' the fugitive dictator allegedly said, 'what's up?'

"Representatives from US Central Command happily announced Hussein's capture just an hour later, eager to announce to the world, as well as uneasy Iraqi citizens, that the brutal despot had finally been apprehended. Better yet, capturing Hussein alive means chances are good that a closure-generating war crimes trial might be in the offing. There is, it seems, one catch: Hussein himself. While the infamous Butcher of Baghdad has been alarmingly forthcoming and cooperative with investigators, the depth of what he does not appear to know has left them stymied.

"'Hey, from those American flag patches on your shoulders, I noticed that you're, um, not from around here," Hussein reportedly told his captors. "What's all the fuss about?'

"Hussein later admitted that he had been "hanging out" at a friends house since early March and had not been keeping up with current events. Hussein confessed to feeling a bit "out of sync" since his friend's satellite dish was on the fritz and he'd not seen a newspaper since late February."

Source


*Ø* Blogmanac | Ode to Glenlightened


If you see Glen, say gday


If you see Glen, say gday
he might be up in Sydney
he left here last Halloween,
infection in the kidney.
Say for me that I’m all right
though things get kinda stressed,
he might think that I’ve forgotten him,
don’t say I do my best.


If you get close to him
don’t step upon his toes
kiss him for me, but just a peck
he might punch me in your nose.
Whatever makes him lucid
better let him have his way
for the bitter taste still lingers on
from the night I tried to make his day.

*Ø* Blogmanac | 'Roman Cosmetics' Found at London Temple Dig


LONDON (Reuters) - Archaeologists excavating the site of a major Roman temple in London have found a sealed box containing a white cream still bearing the fingermarks of the person who last used it, nearly 2,000 years ago.

"This is of major significance," said Museum of London curator Francis Grew Monday. The substance, which will now be chemically analyzed, could be face cream or even face paint, he told reporters. "We are in completely uncharted territory here. Not only is the quality of workmanship of the box exceptional, but to find one in such good condition still sealed and with its original contents will raise huge interest around the world," he added.

Museum conservator Liz Barham who opened the fist-sized cylindrical tin box for the first time Monday, in front of the world's media, described the smell from the half-full container as "sulphurous" and "cheesy."

The box was found at the bottom of a ditch on the edge of the site of the temple next to the merging of two major roads into Roman London -- Watling Street from the port of Dover and Stane Street from the garrison town of Chichester. The site -- which last year revealed a stone tablet with the earliest known inscription bearing the Roman name of London -- dates from 50 AD and contained two small temples, a guest house for travelers, plinths for statues and a stone pillar.

"The site has been remarkable. It has revealed far more than we could possibly have expected," said Gary Brown, managing director of Pre-Construct Archaeology, which has been digging the soccer pitch-sized area for the past year. Apart from the tin box and stone tablet, the site in modern day Southwark, about two miles south of central London, has also revealed pieces of statues, leather shoes and a wooden writing tablet among many other artifacts.

It will disappear under concrete this Summer when construction of a shopping and housing complex starts.

Source

*Ø* Blogmanac | Afghanistan: Warlords Implicated in New Abuses
Report Details Threats to Women's Rights, Freedom of Expression

New York, July 29 - Afghan warlords and political strongmen supported by the United States and other nations are engendering a climate of fear in Afghanistan that is threatening efforts to adopt a new constitution and could derail national elections scheduled for mid-2004, Human Rights Watch said in a new report released today.

The report warns that violence, political intimidation, and attacks on women and girls are discouraging political participation and endangering gains made on women's rights in Afghanistan over the last year.

"Human rights abuses in Afghanistan are being committed by gunmen and warlords who were propelled into power by the United States and its coalition partners after the Taliban fell in 2001," said Brad Adams, executive director of the Asia Division of Human Rights Watch. "These men and others have essentially hijacked the country outside of Kabul. With less than a year to go before national elections, Afghanistan's human rights situation appears to be worsening."

The 101-page report, "Killing You Is a Very Easy Thing for Us": Human Rights Abuses in Southeast Afghanistan, documents army and police troops kidnapping Afghans and holding them for ransom in unofficial prisons; breaking into households and robbing families; raping women, girls and boys; and extorting shopkeepers and bus, truck and taxi drivers. The report also describes political organizers, journalists and media editors being threatened with death, arrested and harassed by army, police and intelligence agents. The subject area of the report, the southeast of Afghanistan and Kabul city, is one of the most densely populated areas of Afghanistan.

Because soldiers are targeting women and girls, many are staying indoors, especially in rural areas, making it impossible for them to attend school, go to work, or actively participate in the country's reconstruction. In many places, human rights abuses are driving many Afghan families to keep their girls out of school. The atmosphere of violence, along with resurgent religious fundamentalism in parts of the country, is endangering the most important human rights improvement since the end of the Taliban--the ability of girls to go back to school.

"The fact is that most girls in Afghanistan are still not in school," said Adams. "In many cases, returning refugee families who sent their girls to school in Pakistan or Iran are afraid to do the same in Afghanistan."

The testimony of victims and witnesses implicates soldiers and police under the command of many high-level military and political officials in Afghanistan. These include Mohammad Qasim Fahim, the Minister of Defense; Hazrat Ali, the military leader of the Eastern Region; Younis Qanooni, the Minister of Education; Burhanuddin Rabbani, the former president of Afghanistan; and Abdul Rabb al-Rasul Sayyaf, a powerful former mujahidin leader to whom many of the officials involved in the documented abuses in Kabul city and province remain loyal.

The report urges the Afghan government to sideline and pressure abusive leaders and to seek more international assistance in its efforts.

Human Rights Watch called on the United States, the United Kingdom, Iran, Russia and other external powers to end their support for local strongmen and commanders involved in human rights abuses.

Full report

*Ø* Blogmanac | Shackled refugee starts campaign



"Australia: A FORMER Burmese political prisoner shuffled through Brisbane's CBD in leg irons today at the start of a campaign to raise awareness of the recent bloody crackdown in his home country.

"Htoo Htoo Han, 33, winced in pain as he slowly made his way through the city centre at the start of a three-week tour which will take in Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra.

"The shackles, which will rub his ankles until they are raw, reminded Mr Han of the three years he spent in prison in Burma from 1989 after a pro-democracy student uprising.

"In prison, the then 19-year-old Mr Han was subjected to daily beatings and torture, and was chained for almost a year in a cell so squalid his body swelled because of the unsanitary conditions."

I got it here

Free Burma radio stations

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


Also from Australia

"Blair is facing a storm of accusations that he beat up the threat of weapons of mass destruction to sway a sceptical public. But could the same charge be made against the media? Were intelligence agencies planting faulty intelligence through journalists to pave the path to war? And, more disturbingly, were some of those journalists willing participants in the stage managing of that information?" Read on about an Oz controversy

Monday, July 28, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | A potpourri of important actions to take and background information from Voice4Change.org


Terror To Empire
By Stewart Nusbaumer

With Democrats fearful and media silent, the Bush Administration has transformed the war against terror into a war for empire. Can Americans stop this madness?

The Bush Administration hawks are lumping together all kinds of reasons and excuses under the rubric of terrorism and exploiting the horror of 9/11 for political and corporate gain -- the war against terrorism has become, in fact, a war for empire. Instead of enhancing our national security, the Administration is making America more vulnerable, more susceptible to even more deadly attacks.

The Democrats, however, refuse to oppose this hemorrhaging of the war on terrorism, a war spreading to the four corners of the world. Democrats seem paralyzed, petrified of being labeled unpatriotic and soft on terrorism, excluding a few honorable mentions. Let’s face it, what disturbs Democrats the most is not the death of young Americans, but losing the next election.

The rest of the story


*Ø*Ø*Ø*



Though The Heavens Fall
By William Rivers Pitt
t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Friday 25 July 2003

The political fortunes of the Bush administration are never so strong as when people are dying. A review of newspaper headlines from September 10, 2001 clearly shows an administration under serious attack from all quadrants. That changed after some 3,000 people were killed the next day, and George has never looked back. The attack of September 11 was the best thing to ever happen to George W. Bush. He knows this, and uses those attacks to great effect in promoting everything from aggressive wars to tax policy.

Recall that it was Bush who said, on October 4, 2001, “We need to counter the shock wave of the evildoer by having individual rate cuts accelerated and by thinking about tax rebates.”

Recall that it was Bush, one year and four days later, who said, “We have experienced the horror of September 11…Facing clear evidence of peril, we cannot wait for the final proof -- the smoking gun -- that could come in the form of a mushroom cloud.”

The rest of the story


*Ø*Ø*Ø*


Take Action: Stop The Energy Policy Act of 2003

S.14, "The Energy Policy Act of 2003," sponsored by Republican Sen. Pete Domenici of New Mexico, points in the wrong direction. At a time when America needs safe, clean, affordable energy, this bill is harmful to consumers and the environment.

This regressive bill (along with its accompanying energy tax finance package, S.1149) includes provisions that:

-- Repeal the Public Utility Holding Company Act (PUHCA), a vital electricity consumer protection, which would allow for the expansion of deregulation and more Enron style schemes

-- Offer public financing of up to half the costs of constructing new nuclear reactors, leaving taxpayers liable for an estimated $14-16 billion

-- Encourage nuclear irresponsibility by promoting nuclear waste reprocessing and extending liability protections for nuclear plant operators through the permanent reauthorization of the Price-Anderson Act

The rest of the story


*Ø*Ø*Ø*


Fall 2003 Season of Struggle

Join Jobs with Justice this fall as we fight for the rights of workers in the United States and throughout the hemisphere.

This fall, three major mobilizations give us the opportunity to link the issues of Immigrant Rights, Global Justice and the Fight for Organizing and Collective Bargaining Rights. Clearly these are not separate fights, but part of the same struggle to win justice for all. Join us as we enter this Season of Struggle!

The rest of the story


*Ø*Ø*Ø*


Register Your Opposition to California Recall!

Here’s what happened: Anti-choice Congressman Darryl Issa has spent more than a million dollars generating petition signatures that are now forcing a vote to recall the pro-choice Governor. The candidate behind it is
Republican Congressman Darryl Issa.

Make no mistake about: Issa is a real threat. He’s supported a Constitutional amendment to criminalize abortion. He voted for a bill that would establish a back door gag rule – allowing health care companies and HMOs to tell their doctors what services and information they can and can’t provide to their women patients. He voted twice to deny women in the
military the right to use their own money for abortion services. He’s earned a 0% rating from our organization every single year he’s been in office.

Around the country, anti-choice governors are approving restrictions on women’s rights that put the government in the middle of our personal decisions. They’re working to outlaw safe abortion procedures, and trying to undermine Roe v. Wade.

The rest of the story

*Ø* Blogmanac July 28 1540 | King Henry VIII has Thomas Cromwell beheaded

1540 King Henry VIII of England beheaded Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex, and married Catherine Howard.

The first Cromwell to lead an English revolution, Thomas was born the son of a blacksmith at Putney, London, in 1485, who had saved money and become a brewer, or else a fuller.

Thomas got a fair education, went to Europe, mastering several languages. He became a merchant then a soldier, and served in Italy. In England he became a lawyer and soon attracted the attention of Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, who made him his solicitor. In 1523 he was elected to the House of Commons and in two years Wolsey employed him as his chief agent in the period of violence and repression of Roman Catholics, the dissolution of the monasteries. In this period, monastery land was seized and sold off cheaply to nobles and the newly emerging merchant class. On Wolsey's fall he accompanied him in his retirement to Esher, but soon returned to court.

Cromwell made his way into royal favour, by being advocate for the king in the break with Rome. Soon he became the main adviser to the crown, but the Catholic party hated him. He raised rapidly to wealth and honours – and the estates of dissolved monasteries contributed to his wealth. He was actively involved in Henry's marriage to Anne of Cleves; when the king was disappointed in her he took his anger out on Cromwell. Archbishop Cranmer pleaded for him in vain, but Cromwell was executed in the Tower of London for high treason. A nephew of Thomas Cromwell inherited the estates, and was the great-grandfather of Oliver Cromwell, the famous ‘Protector’.

Dissolution of the Monasteries at Wikipedia

More

Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email


*Ø* Blogmanac July 28-29 | Throw water today!

Monday and Tuesday seven weeks after Pentecost:
Vardavar – Rose Day, Armenia
The Transfiguration of Jesus Christ – known as Vardavar in Armenian – is one of the Armenian Orthodox Church’s most important feasts. Celebrated on the Monday and Tuesday seven weeks after Pentecost, the feast is marked by a popular custom: On that day people pour cold water on each other. Indeed, throwing water at people – or throwing people into rivers and streams – is quite an integral part of the holiday. Throwing water on complete strangers is just as likely as on relatives and friends. Some families offer the traditional matagh (sacrifice) of lamb, feasting beside or near water.


The Oxford Companion to the Year (Blackburn, Bonnie & Leofranc Holford-Strevens, Oxford University Press 1999) says that this was once an Armenian pagan midsummer festival of Anahid, the most prominent goddess in the pre-Christian pantheon of ancient Armenia, who was offered roses and doves. Anahid's feast days occurred in spring and autumn, the most important ceremony dedicated to her being held on the fifteenth day of Navasard, the first month of the ancient Armenian calendar.

Vardavar coincides with the time of harvest, and there was formerly a tradition that the first apples of the year were eaten on the day of Vardavar. In Shatakh, Armenia, on the evening prior to Vardavar, young men would stack piles of hay before setting fire to them to usher in the sunrise. Apples were baked within these haystacks, while young girls danced around the pyres. In mountainous regions of Armenia, tightrope walkers performed at fairs and feasts where horse riding and water games were common.

*Ø* Blogmanac July 28, 1902 | Albert Namatjira, Australian artist



Caught between two worlds: Albert Namatjira

Born on this day in 1902 at the Ntaria (Hermannsburg) mission in Australia’s Northern Territory, Elea (baptised Albert in 1905) Namatjira became the first Australian Aboriginal artist to gain national and international fame. His life, however, was marred by racism, misfortune and depression.

Albert Namatjira was born to Christian parents whose background had been as tribal people in the northern deserts. He attended the school at Hermannsburg, a mission about 225 km (140 miles) from the remote outback town of Alice Springs, and at 13 was taken into the bush for manhood initiation ceremonies in his Aranta tribe.

Work as a camel driver took him to parts of Australia’s red centre that he might not otherwise have visited, places that appeared in his work. He had learned to draw in school, and from the late 1920s Namatjira had contact with white Australian artists, who came to ‘the Centre’ in search of magnificent scenery afforded by that part of the world. In 1936, one visiting artist, Rex Batterbee, taught the keen student how to paint in the European style.

Namatjira’s first public showing was two years later, in Melbourne, and proved to be a great success as his superb watercolours drew the attention of art lovers. Over succeeding years his fame grew for his haunting landscapes of land and gumtrees, and with it came financial rewards. In 1954, he met Britain’s Queen Elizabeth on her Australian tour. The Queen purchased several of his paintings, including Ghost Gums in the Macdonnell Ranges.

Married (to a woman of another tribe, which attracted great displeasure amongst his people) and with seven children, Namatjira tried to lease a cattle station (ranch), but paternalistic laws in the Northern Territory at the time disallowed this. Though his name was known in virtually every home in his ancestral land, the Aboriginal celebrity’s attempts to gain permission to build a house in Alice Springs also met with a firm wall of forbidding racism.

Albert Namatjira descended into depression and alcoholism, eventually finding himself jailed for two months for providing alcohol to family members. Despite his fame and success, his life had become a litany of injury, hospitalisation, imprisonment and despair, and he died in 1959, aged just 57, a broken man.

The person who had first shown all Australians, indigenous and non-indigenous, the heart of their own continent, was a man of two cultures as widely different as it is possible to imagine, and never fully accepted by either.


Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email


Sunday, July 27, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac Add to your Favorites! | Our Free Radio-TV portal

Tune in to a huge small planet


Do you want to be able to access electronic broadcast media from your computer, without having to pay, search or use those corporate players with all the ads and sneaky ways of putting adware on your machine?


I really believe our own portal is the best-kept secret at Wilson's Almanac. It's got a great interface without loads of ads, and the number of stations you can tune into is fantastic. I use it nearly every day myself, when the programming in my local area is no good. Tune into literally hundreds of stations from so many countries I doubt we've even heard of some of them. When not thinking universally, think globally.

Tonight I'm finding out about the military disturbances in the Philippines, and also listening to radio live from the Isle of Man, a small island in the Irish Sea. (I should have tuned in on their national day, as I wrote an article on their ancient customs on that day.) One great feature of our portal is that you can click Random and take a world tour at your own desk. Get out of the local rut -- it's a huge small planet!

Music of all varieties, and fast-breaking news from your choice of stations -- it's a bargain, and free. Just click this globe and check it out. Add it to your faves and never have a quiet evening at your computer again.

PS It's perma-linked in the left-hand column of the Blogmanac, near the top.

*Ø* Blogmanac | Hunter S writes on Bush and more

Welcome to the Big Darkness
By Hunter S. Thompson


"Hi, folks, my name is still Thompson, and I still drink gin with ER Nurses at night -- but in one particular way, I am a New Man, a different man, a more dangerous man than I was the last time we talked. And that was a few weeks ago, eh?

"Indeed, I can walk again, and I like it, because last month I felt an acute spasmodic pain in my spine when I walked. There was nothing cute about it, no socially redeeming factor. It just plain sucked.

"But I have just returned from an extremely intense few weeks at the world-renowned Steadman Hawkins Clinic in Vail, Colo. (yes, the same city where Kobe Bryant ...), where I had radical surgery to repair what was beginning to give me some pain. Great pain on some days, and I finally decided to get rid of it."

Go gonzo


*Ø* Blogmanac July 27 | The Seven Sleepers



Feast day of Saints Malchus, Martinian, Dionysius, John, Serapion and Constantine, the Seven Sleepers
These Christian saints were Ephesians (ie, from Ephesus in Turkey), walled up by Emperor Decius (249 - 251) in a cave for their faith, in 250 CE. They were found by masons in 479, and were only asleep, and thought that they had been asleep only one night, instead of 229 years.

Rubbing from his eyes the sleep of more than two centuries, Malchus made his way into town to buy bread for the others, and was amazed to see crosses on buildings, for when he fell asleep Decius’s Roman gods were all that could be worshipped. The bakers were amazed at the coins he offered, and thought that the young man had found treasure.

When Malchus saw them talking together, he was afraid that they might take him before the emperor, and asked to be let go, saying they could keep the strange money – and the bread. The bakers said if he would share the treasure they wouldn't tell anyone, but Malchus was so afraid he couldn't speak. The bakers tied a cord around his neck and dragged him through the city, where all the citizens abused him, saying that he had found a treasure and was keeping it secret.

The outraged townsfolk (no doubt brandishing torches) brought him before St Martin and Antipater. Malchus reaffirmed that it was his money and he’d got it from members of his family, but, of course, his interrogators had not heard of these relatives, and asked how he could have money hundreds of years old ...

Read the full story of this Rip Van Winkle archetype from ancient folklore

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


*Ø* Blogmanac July 27| Domhnach Chrom Dubh

Last Sunday in July
Festival of Domhnach Chrom (or Crom) Dubh, Ireland

Originally to the god Lugh; connected with festival of Lammas. Also connected is John Barleycorn, personification of grain, who is killed by being cut at this time.

*Ø* Blogmanac | Mind that elephant!


NEW DELHI — India's working elephants are to be fitted with reflective patches on their rears to prevent fender-bending road accidents that sometimes result in more than a damaged trunk. The Wildlife Trust of India introduced the reflectors last week to help drivers spot the working pachyderms at night in the Indian capital.

"The butt reflector, roped to the [seat], costs just [$2] and is the simplest way to protect them," trust Program Director Aniruddha Mookerjee told Reuters news agency.

Working elephants are often used at weddings, festivals and by the tourist industry and often have to walk long distances along the city's chaotic, congested roads.

The trust took the safety initiative after an elephant was severely hurt by a speeding truck last December. The elephant was put to sleep after veterinarians said it could not recover. "You could see tears streaming from its eyes as it lay in pain. You can't have elephants being hit by cars and trucks," Mr. Mookerjee said, adding the trust planned to introduce the reflectors for elephants in other cities as well.

An estimated 33,000 elephants are left in India — a quarter of their 19th-century population — and many are put to work in construction, logging, security patrols and other businesses.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) has accused Indian state governments of routinely exploiting elephants. "Elephants live for more than 70 years if left unmolested in the forest, yet their average life span in captivity is reduced to 14 miserable years," said Anuradha Sawhney, the head of PETA India.

Source



*Ø* Blogmanac | Classified Section of 9/11 Report Faults Saudi Rulers
NYTimes, Washington — Senior officials of Saudi Arabia have funneled hundreds of millions of dollars to charitable groups and other organizations that may have helped finance the September 2001 attacks, a still-classified section of a Congressional report on the hijackings says, according to people who have read it.

The 28-page section of the report was deleted from the nearly 900-page declassified version released on Thursday by a joint committee of the House and Senate intelligence committees. The chapter focuses on the role foreign governments played in the hijackings, but centers almost entirely on Saudi Arabia, the people who saw the section said.

The Bush administration's refusal to allow the committee to disclose the contents of the chapter has stirred resentment in Congress, where some lawmakers have said the administration's desire to protect the ruling Saudi family had prevented the American public from learning crucial facts about the attacks. The report has been denounced by the Saudi ambassador to the United States, and some American officials questioned whether the committee had made a conclusive case linking Saudi funding to the hijackings.

The declassified section of the report discloses the testimony of several unidentified officials who criticized the Saudi government for being uncooperative in terrorism investigations, but makes no reference to Riyadh's financing of groups that supported terror.

Some people who have read the classified chapter said it represented a searing indictment of how Saudi Arabia's ruling elite have, under the guise of support for Islamic charities, distributed millions of dollars to terrorists through an informal network of Saudi nationals, including some in the United States.

The Saudi ambassador to the United States has angrily denied that his country had failed to cooperate with the F.B.I. and C.I.A. in fighting terrorism and dismissed accusations that it helped finance two of the hijackers as "outrageous."

Behind the immediate issue of whether Saudi Arabia played any role in terrorism are a complex web of political, military and economic connections between the two countries. Successive Republican and Democratic administrations have aggressively sought to maintain the relationship with a huge producer of oil and an ally in the Arab world.

Full text

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


Meanwhile...

What Congress Does Not Know about Enron and 9/11
By Atty. John J. Loftus
In order to give Enron one last desperate chance to complete the Taliban pipeline and save itself from bankruptcy, senior levels of US intelligence were ordered to keep their eyes shut and their subordinates ignorant.

"A captured Al Qaida document reveals that US energy companies were secretly negotiating with the Taliban to build a pipeline. The document was obtained by the FBI but was not allowed to be shared with other agencies in order to protect Enron. Multiple sources confirm that American law enforcement agencies were deliberately kept in the dark and systematically prevented from connecting the dots before 9/11 in order to aid Enron’s secret and immoral Taliban negotiations."

Copyright: John Loftus
Continue reading at Information Clearing House



Wilson's Almanac special

*Ø* Blogmanac | Why did Bush just sit there?





5-Minute Video of George W Bush on the Morning of 9/11

At 9:03 AM on 11 September 2001, the second airplane hit the South Tower of the World Trade Center. President Bush was in Florida, at the Emma T. Booker Elementary School, listening to children read. Chief of Staff Andrew Card came over and whispered in Bush's ear, "A second plane hit the second tower. America is under attack."

What did the Commander in Chief do? Nothing. He sat there. He sat for well over 5 minutes, doing nothing while 3,000 people were dying and the attacks were still in progress.

Not only did the leader of the free world sit as his country was attacked, the Secret Service also did nothing. Bush was appearing in public at a previously announced photo-op. He was a sitting duck. The attacks were ongoing at that point (planes had yet to hit the Pentagon or the field in Pennsylvania), and nobody knew how much more destruction was going to happen. Were there two, three, four, eight more planes hijacked and on their way to crash into prominent buildings? Was one headed for the school, where anyone who checked the President's public itinerary would know he was located?

Remember, Bush said he saw the first plane hit, on TV. There was no film of that at the time!

Click to see it, read it, at Wilson's Almanac

*Ø* Blogmanac | Throw him in a Guantanamo cage!



US Code, Title 4, Chapter 1, Sec. 8 (g):
"The flag should never have placed upon it, nor on any part of it,
nor attached to it any mark, insignia, letter, word, figure, design,
picture, or drawing of any nature."


Thanks www.whatreallyhappened.com

Saturday, July 26, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | UPI pulls 9-11 story

Remember when Colin Powell went before the Security Council of the UN and lied that he had an audio tape that showed that Osama bin Laden was a friend of Saddam Hussein, when in fact, the tape showed bin Laden was calling for the assassination of the Iraqi President's assassination? Here's some more in that vein.

9/11 Report: No Iraq Link to al-Qaida
By Shaun Waterman
United Press International

Wednesday 23 July 2003

"WASHINGTON - The report of the joint congressional inquiry into the suicide hijackings on Sept. 11, 2001, to be published Thursday, reveals U.S. intelligence had no evidence that the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein was involved in the attacks, or that it had supported al-Qaida, United Press International has learned.

"The report shows there is no link between Iraq and al-Qaida," said a government official who has seen the report.

"Former Democratic Georgia Sen. Max Cleland, who was a member of the joint congressional committee that produced the report, confirmed the official's statement."

Read it at TruthOut, and thank you Almaniac Lynn Perry for alerting me to this.

Lynn writes:


"I went to truthout.org and found the first story. I always go to the original and read the story, just in case there are updates or whatever, in this case, the story had been stricken (see the second link). So I'm sending this along in the interesting of dissemination of information."

Here is the second report:

"9/11 report:By Shaun Waterman
UPI Homeland and National Security Editor
Published 7/25/2003 1:50 PM
WASHINGTON, July 23 (UPI) -- On July 23 2003, United Press International published an article about materials believed to be in a report to be released July 24 regarding investigations into the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

"UPI cannot further stand by this story as originally filed and will have a corrected version soon." Source: UPI


* Ø * Ø * Ø *


Here's another hot story from TruthOut:


White House, CIA Kept Key Portions of Report Classified

By Dana Priest
Washington Post


"President Bush was warned in a more specific way than previously known about intelligence suggesting that al Qaeda terrorists were seeking to attack the United States, a report on the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks indicated yesterday. Separately, the report cited one CIA memo that concluded there was "incontrovertible evidence" that Saudi individuals provided financial assistance to al Qaeda operatives in the United States.

"These revelations are not the subject of the congressional report's narratives or findings, but are among the nuggets embedded in a story focused largely on the mid-level workings of the CIA, FBI and U.S. military ..."
Source

Highly recommended
*Ø* Blogmanac | Useful fix for all who send URLs

Do you have Internet Explorer (Version 4 or later)? When you're on a good webpage and you want to tell a friend, do you click the Mail icon, or perhaps go to File/Send? And when you do, does it create an email with an attachment? Well, I used to have that as well. What a drag. We want the URL link inside the email, not attached.

A few months ago I found a better way, and I think this is it below. (It might be a different one, but I can't test it to find out because I already have my solution installed. I have, however, read the ReadMe file and it sounds identical to me.)

This lets you send an email with the URL of your fave page within the email, not merely attached. Your correspondents will thank you.

Click here to download."
Source

A dip of me lid to the two and only Baz le Tuff.

*Ø* Blogmanac July 26 | The Mayan calendar

3113 BC The Mayan calendar began.



What will happen in December, 2012?
Dire Gnosis: A Database on the year 2012
2012 Webring
More on 2012
Native American religions at Sacred-Texts.com

*Ø* Blogmanac July 26 | The death of Moll Cutpurse

England's first highwayman was a woman

1659 Today marks the death of Moll Cutpurse (Mary Frith, alias Markham), the notorious underworld figure of 17th-century England. Born in 1584, Moll robbed travellers on Hounslow Heath, including Oliver Cromwell's associate, General Fairfax, for which she was sent to England’s most notorious prison, Newgate Gaol. In the attire of a man, she plied her trade as Britain’s first ‘highwayman’, as well as a fence and petty thief. Moll became the subject of a play written within her lifetime, The Roaring Girl.

As a child, Moll was what we would today call a ‘tomboy’:

She was a very tomrig or hoyden, and delighted only in boys' play and pastime, not minding or companying with the girls. Many a bang and blow this hoyting procured her, but she was not so to be tamed, or taken off from her rude inclinations. She could not endure that sedentary life of sewing or stitching; a sampler was as grievous to her as a winding sheet; and on her needle, bodkin and thimble she could not think quietly, wishing them changed into sword and dagger for a bout at cudgels. Her headgear and handkerchief (or what the fashion of those times was for girls to be dressed in) were alike tedious to her, she wearing them as handsomely as a dog would a doublet ; and so cleanly, that the sooty pot hooks were above the comparison. This perplexed her friends, who had only this proverb favourable to their hope, that " An unlucky girl may make a good woman "; but they lived not to the length of that expectation, dying in her minority, and leaving her to the swing and sway of her own unruly temper and disposition.

She would fight with boys, and courageously beat them; run, jump, leap or hop with any of her contrary sex, or recreate herself with any other play whatsoever.

Source

She lived to be 75, and her last request was to be buried face down, in order to be rebellious even after death. When she died of ‘a dropsy’ she was interred in St Bridget's churchyard. On her marble headstone was inscribed the following epitaph, composed by John Milton (1608-1674), but seven years later it was destroyed in the Great Fire of London:








Here lies, under this same marble,
Dust, for Time's last sieve to garble;
Dust, to perplex a Sadducee,
Whether it rise a He or She,
Or two in one, a single pair,
Nature's sport, and now her care.
For how she'll clothe it at last day,
Unless she sighs it all away;
Or where she'll place it, none can tell:
Some middle place 'twixt Heaven and Hell
And well 'tis Purgatory's found,
Else she must hide her under ground.
These reliques do deserve the doom,
Of that cheat Mahomet's fine tomb
For no communion she had,
Nor sorted with the good or bad;
That when the world shall be calcin'd,
And the mixd' mass of human kind
Shall sep'rate by that melting fire,
She'll stand alone, and none come nigh her.
Reader, here she lies till then,
When, truly, you'll see her again.


More
And more



Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email



Thanx, Baz le Tuff

*Ø* Blogmanac | Phillip Adams on sport



I looked at a rugby match to research my appearance here today, and it’s bloody bleeding obvious, the problem. There’s one ball and all those blokes; it doesn’t make sense. Given them all a ball, and they’d all settle down, there would be none of that awful conflict, no aggression flowing over into the stands. It doesn’t make sense.
Phillip Adams, Australian writer and broadcaster, on sport Source

There are four absolute prerequisites for this planet to get anywhere in what might well be the few years remaining.

As long as TV, agribiz and religion hold their preeminence, the prospects for peace, Nature and prosperity are slim. The fourth factor that must be removed is competitive sport. More on this on another occasion.

I was pleased to find out yesterday that Australia's – if not the English-speaking world's – most interesting 'public intellectual' Phillip Adams, is also aware of the importance of the sports factor. On an execrable radio program I chanced to hear, interestingly enough called The Sports Factor, Adams was a guest for once, rather than the interviewer, and the topic was Can you love sport and think at the same time?

I didn't know until then that Adams has a progressive analysis of sport (though I'm not surprised, as he's among the Australians with the clearest understanding of what's happening), and was delighted to find that he does. Unfortunately, the doyen of broadcasters sounded somewhat tired in the discussion, and despite making some incisive remarks, he was far from his scintillating best. On the other hand, his antagonists on the panel failed to sparkle at all, one of them sounding as though, he had, in preparation for the formidable Adams, rehearsed Whistler-Wilde-style repartee for a week and a half, but not quite pulling it off. Adams even when weary (and unsportingly set up to be outnumbered by opponents) was more than a match for the pro-competition touts.

One regrets that the topic under discussion was not designed to allow for analysis and criticism of the more serious negative value of sport, which is not that one cannot think and love sport at the same time. The problem with sport is that virtually without exception it is based on competition, at a time that the survival of the planet depends on its exact reverse. Cooperation is what needs to be taught children now, yet worldwide they are inculcated with methods of opposing and beating others – a form of child and planet abuse if ever there was one.

Despite the flimsy excuse for a radio discussion, it was encouraging to see a debate on the few pros and many cons of sport at all, because this "fourth factor" in preventing catastrophe – this Fourth Horselaugh of the Apocalypse – is scarcely on the intellectual agenda at all, and is even missing from the discourse of almost every progressive forum today. More power to Phillip Adams's arm, and let's hope we hear much more on the sports factor, from him and other media figures. They will need courage to challenge the mainstream myths that hold our species back, but what else is worth fighting for – tin trophies and badly printed triangular rags?


Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email

*Ø* Blogmanac | Watching BushCo Crumble
Ratings slipping, economy tanking, lies spiraling, credibility shot. Try not to cheer

"This is what happens when it's all a house of cards.

"This is what happens when you build your entire presidency on an intricate network of aww-shucks glibness and bad hair and cronyism and corporate fellatio and warmongering and sham enemies and economy-gutting policies and endless blank-eyed smirks that tell the world, every single day, whelp, sure 'nuff, the U.S. is full of it.

"Shrub's ratings have dropped below 50 percent for the first (and probably not the last) time since they surged hugely right after 9/11 and he was hoisted in front of a wary America and puffed out his chest and pretended like he could find Afghanistan on a map and promised he would bomb every damn country on the planet that didn't have a McDonald's or an Exxon or a secret U.S. chemical-weapons deal ..."

By Mark Morford, a columnist worth subscribing to (free)

Friday, July 25, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | Hot Potato
'Don't Worry It Is Safe To Eat'
by Andrew Rowell


As the UK government continues to wriggle over weapons of mass destruction, of sexing up dossiers and general spin, Tony Blair argues that there is no greater charge against a prime minister than for him to have personally falsified claims on which to take a country to war.

That may be so, but another grave charge would be personally ordering the sacking of a scientist who was involved in some of the first independent tests on GM, especially if those tests showed evidence of harm, and also especially if the orders came from Monsanto, via the White House. This is what Dr. Arpad Pusztai, who raised concerns about GM food in 1998, claims happened to him.

Five people have said that they were told that Tony Blair ordered the sacking of Dr. Pusztai.

Here is Dr. Pusztai's story. It raises many unanswered questions about new Labour, its link to the biotech industry and the safety of GM food.

Continue reading at ZNet

*Ø* Blogmanac July 25 | Oyster Shell Day, or, from fisherman to horseman

Feast of St James the Great

This Apostle (not to be confused with James the brother of Jesus whose ossuary was allegedly found recently) was a son of Zebedee, a fisherman of Galilee, and brother of John the Evangelist. He was among the circle of people closest to Jesus. He was tried and executed in Jerusalem in the year 44 CE by Herod Agrippa.

St James the Great is the patron saint of Spain, where he is said to have preached, and it was in Spain that a remarkable transformation came over the legend of this fisherman. At the Battle of Clavijo, 841, between Ramiro, King of Leon, and the Moors, when the Christians were losing, St James appeared in the field, on a charger decorated with scallop shells, and armed, he slew 60,000 of the Moors. The Spaniards founded the Order of St James of the Sword (Santiago de Espada).

‘A stupendous metamorphosis was performed in the 9th century when from a peaceful fisherman of the Lake of Gennesareth, the apostle James was transformed into a valorous knight, who charged at the head of Spanish chivalry in battles against the Moors. The gravest historians have celebrated his exploits; the miraculous shrine of Compostela displayed his power; and the sword of a military order, assisted by the terrors of the inquisition, was sufficient to remove every objection of profane criticism.’
Edward Gibbon

The city of Compostela became the seat of the saint, from the legend of his body having been found there. He has been seen fighting later at Flanders, Italy, India and America. Or, so it is said. Charles V conquered Tunis on St James's Day. Pilgrims to the shrine wore a scallop shell on cloak or hat.


When his relics were being conveyed from Jerusalem, where he died, to Spain, in a ship of marble, the horse of a Portuguese knight plunged into the sea with its rider. When rescued, the knight's clothes were found to be covered with scallop shells. It might be that the use of the scallop device derives from the pilgrims' using shells as primitive cups and spoons, or it might derive from the earlier Roman festival of the sea goddess, Salacia (WA, Jul 23).

The pilgrimage to Compostela became almost as popular and important in medieval Europe as that to Jerusalem. Because of this, 17 English peers and 8 baronets have scallop shells in their arms as heraldic charges. Note that it is not only in Europe that scallops and pilgrimages go together. In 19th Century Japan, too, certain pilgrims adorned themselves with scallop shells.

Remember the grotto
English children in olden days collected old shells, bits of coloured stone and pottery, leaves, flowers, and so on and built a little ‘grotto’. This harked back to the old ritual of constructing shell grottoes on St James's Day for the use of those who could not afford the pilgrimage on that day to the shrine at Compostela. The English children would cry “Pray remember the grotto”.

St James’s wort (Senecio jacobaea) was named after this saint, perhaps because it was used to treat diseases of horses (and St James is known to the Spanish as a horseman) or because it blooms around this time. The name St James’s wort was also sometimes used for ragweed and shepherd's purse. Apples were blessed on this day by the priests, and at Cliff in Kent, England the rector traditionally distributed a mutton pie and a loaf to as many as ask for it.

At the Fiesta de Santiago in Loiz Aldea, Puerto Rico, villagers still act out the characters from the battle of St James against the Moors. Some wear their faces painted white, dressed as Spanish Conquistadores, while others impersonate the Moors, who are represented (of course) as grotesques, with carved, horned masks. Some villagers become clowns, and others “crazy women” (men dressed in women’s clothes).

There is an old English saying that “Who eats oysters on St James's Day will never want”. St James's Day falls during what also became known as the close season for oysters, meaning that by act of parliament they are prohibited to be harvested until today. We may assume that oysters obtainable so early in the season would be a luxury only eaten by the rich.

Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email


Spam report

I must get about 100 spams a day. I wouldn't mind so much if they didn't come with computer-generated subject headers like this one today:

We can assist with Diplomas effeminate

Thursday, July 24, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | New Maps Expose Further Holes In Government's SIEVX Story



Did the Australian government let
353 men, women & children drown?



New holes in SIEV X story

"Almost two years after the tragic sinking of the SIEV X, new disclosures are exposing more holes in the official version of events - Tony Kevin reports:
Little Johnny Howard
"The official version went through several stages. First, [Prime Minister] John Howard was confidently claiming just four days after the disaster that the boat sank in Indonesian waters; that it was not Australia's responsibility.

"Later, Senator Hill and defence witnesses were saying the boat sank in or near the Sunda Strait. Finally Admiral Raydon Gates concluded (in his written review of evidence submitted to the CMI Committee in July last year) that:

"'Defence can only speculate as to where the vessel foundered.'"

Read more about this latest SIEVX development
SIEVX Chronology

*Ø* Blogmanac | The ugly truth of America's Camp Cropper
Robert Fisk is a well known international journalist, and his report from Iraq is very disturbing.

"Qais al-Salman ... hated Saddam, fled Iraq in 1976, then returned after the "liberation" with a briefcase literally full of plans to help in the restoration of his country's infrastructure and water purification system ..."

Read Fisk's report on how this man was beaten up by the "liberators", and the camp the US won't let Amnesty International inspect.

*Ø* Blogmanac | You saw it here first






Well, the minimized, optimized version anwyay. The original is about half a megabyte and thus big for display in websites and emails; this one weighs in at a (still rather hefty) 49kb.

To the artist who made the original, whoever you might be: more power to your (stick-like) arm, and I hope I've done it justice.


*Ø* Blogmanac | The Memory Hole Carries the Tale

Officials admit 9/11 was avoidable; FBI research reports:


High-Ranking Officials Admit 9/11 Could've Been Prevented
Appearing one at a time, usually deep within articles, these quotations are now
gathered in one place.


Selected Titles of FBI Research Reports, 1953-60
Michael Ravnitzky reveals the existence of dozens of publicly unreleased FBI
reports, mostly concerning communism, here.

*Ø* Blogmanac | 24 "Deceptions" In 704 words
A Buzzflash Reader Commentary
by Pete Goodwin
"It took a lot of Prozac and Norvasc but I finally finished parsing the POTUS' "Denial and Deception" (their words, not mine) SOTU address.
So, without further adieu, in order of their appearance, here are
24 "deceptions" in 704 words from the President's 2003 State of the Union Address"


1. "We will not deny, we will not ignore, we will not pass along our problems to other Congresses, to other presidents, and other generations." How about the nearly $7 trillion national debt that's increasing by $475 billion or more this year and every year that Bush remains in office.

2. "Our first goal is clear: We must have an economy that grows fast enough to employ every man and woman who seeks a job." Highest unemployment in a decade, climbing higher every month.

3. "…the best and fairest way to make sure Americans have that money is not to tax it away in the first place." Unless you're poor or middle class.

4. "92 million Americans will keep, this year, an average of almost $1,000 more of their own money." Bill Gates goes into a bar where nine unemployed workers are nursing their beers. "Whoopee we're rich!" shouts one of them. "The average net worth of every one in this room is 3 billion dollars."

5. "I ask you to end the unfair double taxation of dividends…" The federal government levies an income tax on the pay of every wage earner. That pay is then taxed again for Social Security, Medicare, State income tax, unemployment benefits, workers comp… That's sextuple taxation. Why not end that!

6. "…we continue to work together to keep Social Security sound and reliable…" Looted $150 billion from the "lockbox" this year alone.

7. "I have sent you Clear Skies legislation that mandates a 70-percent cut in air pollution from power plants over the next 15 years." Actually it allows increased air pollution from coal fired power plants.

8. "I have sent you a Healthy Forests Initiative, to help prevent the catastrophic fires that devastate communities, kill wildlife, and burn away millions of acres of treasured forest…" Allows logging of previously protected national forests.

9. "I urge you to pass both my faith-based initiative and the Citizen Service Act…" Which violates the Constitutional guarantee of separation of church and state.

10. "In Afghanistan, we helped liberate an oppressed people. And we will continue helping them secure their country, rebuild their society…" Still not liberated outside of Kabul, not secure and not even remotely rebuilt two years after we "won" the war.


11. "We have the terrorists on the run. We're keeping them on the run." Osama and Saddam don't seem out of breath to me.

12. "And this year, for the first time, we are beginning to field a defense to protect this nation against ballistic missiles." The experts agree, it won't work and will cost billions more than projected.

13. "Our government must have the very best [mis]information possible…"

14. "Today, the gravest danger in the war on terror, the gravest danger facing America and the world, is outlaw regimes that seek and possess nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons." I agree, but the regime is in Korea, not Iraq.

15. "Once again, we are called to defend the safety of our people, and the hopes of all mankind." Our people are now less safe and mankind is mainly hoping for the removal of GW and his gang.

16. "Our nation and the world must learn the lessons of the Korean Peninsula and not allow an even greater threat to rise up in Iraq…" How about we learn the lessons of the Korean Peninsula and deal with Korea, an actual bona fide threat unlike Iraq.

17. "The United Nations concluded in 1999 that Saddam Hussein had biological weapons sufficient to produce over 25,000 liters of anthrax ... 38,000 liters of botulinum toxin…materials to produce as much as 500 tons of sarin, mustard and VX nerve agent …upwards of 30,000 munitions capable of delivering chemical agents."
Hmmm, still haven't found any WMD, not even a little one.

18. "Saddam Hussein had an advanced nuclear weapons development program…The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa. Our intelligence sources tell us that he has attempted to purchase high-strength aluminum tubes suitable for nuclear weapons production." Wow, a trifecta of deception in one paragraph.

19. "Evidence from intelligence sources, secret communications, and statements by people now in custody reveal that Saddam Hussein aids and protects terrorists, including members of al Qaeda." Intelligence sources like Karl Rove and Paul Wolfowitz?

20. "…for the safety of our people and for the peace of the world, we will lead a coalition to disarm him." Where would we be if it weren't for those brave fighting troops of Palau, Tongo and the Solomon Islands?

21. "We seek peace. We strive for peace." So we wage an unproved war?

22. "…if war is forced upon us, we will fight with the full force and might of the United States military -- and we will prevail." Forced on us? Prevail?

23. "And as we and our coalition partners are doing in Afghanistan, we will bring to the Iraqi people food and medicines and supplies -- and freedom." Not enough food, medicine, supplies or freedom to go around in either Afghanistan or Iraq.

24. "Americans are a free people, who know that freedom is the right of every person and the future of every nation." Unless your government enacts a "Patriot Act."

Source

*Ø* Blogmanac July 24, 1725 | John Newton, clergyman, writer of Amazing Grace

Amazing grace, how sweet the sound
That saved a wretch like me,
I once was lost, but now am found,
Was blind, but now I see.


Full text (including the true original)

I suppose you know that Gilligan's Island can also be sung to this tune.

*Ø* Blogmanac | The vagina monoliths

Was Stonehenge an ancient sex symbol?



"Stonehenge has dominated the Wiltshire landscape for more than 4,000 years and is one of the world's most important heritage sites, but its purpose has remained a mystery.

"Some researchers have claimed the stone circles were used as a giant computer; others that Stonehenge was an observatory for studying stars and predicting the seasons; and a few have even argued that its rings acted as a docking pad for alien spaceships.

"Now a University of British Columbia researcher who has investigated the great prehistoric monument for several years has announced he has uncovered its true meaning: it is a giant fertility symbol, constructed in the shape of the female sexual organ."

Source

*Ø* Blogmanac July 24 | Feast of St Christina the Astonishing (Mirabilis)

Any reader who has incurred the wrath of a father will relate to this saint, as will anyone who has been thrown into a furnace for five days, had their tongue cut out and been rescued by angels.

Christina’s father, Urban, a devout pagan, had a number of golden idols. Oddly defying the Fifth Commandment, eleven-year-old Christina broke them, then distributed the pieces among the poor. Infuriated by this pre-adolescent petulance, father became the persecutor of his own daughter, having her beaten with sticks and thrown into a dungeon – reasonable enough so far, I hear you say.

Christina remained unshaken in her Christian faith, so Urban had her body torn by iron hooks, then fastened to a rack above a fire. In case any dad reading should try this at home, one notes that the flames shot back toward the onlookers, and several of them died. I myself have only ever done this when my daughter broke some of my best idols, and she was fully 17 at the time.

Christina was thrown into the lake of Bolsena in Tuscany, Italy, but was rescued by an angel and seen wearing a stole and walking on the water, accompanied by several angels. Hearing she was still alive, wicked Urban died in a painful paroxysm, making my point about being discerning with punishments.



Oh no, not another torment guy!
Urban was succeeded by another judge, Dyon, who persecuted her even more (then miraculously died), following which there was another persecutor, named Julian, who cried “Magician! Adore the gods, or I will put you to death!” Apparently deciding to stick with the strength, Christina was thrown in a raging furnace, and survived five days of burning. Serpents and vipers were thrown into her prison but did not touch her, instead killing the magician who had brought them there, but she restored him to life after first converting him. Finally, her tongue was cut out. Had her father lived I’m certain he would never have done this, though parents of 11-year-olds will understand the tempation.

At Tyro, a city which formerly stood on an island in the lake of Bolsena, but has since been drowned by the waters, Christina was eventually killed with arrows, and in art she may be portrayed with arrows, with a millstone, or her other symbol, a knife.

The legend of St Christina is actually that of St Christine of Tyre (cf Tyro), imported from the Eastern Church and adapted to local traditions in Tuscany. Both legends are tales of physical ordeals and miraculous happenings. The legend dates to the late-4th Century at Bolsena where recent archaeological evidence has shown that the patron of St Christina’s Church was indeed venerated there in medieval times. A miracle occurred in her church in 1263 when the sacrament turned to blood, and the stains are still to be seen on the floor. Or, so it is said.


Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email

Wednesday, July 23, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac July 23 | Festival of the Neptunalia and Salacia, ancient Rome

Tethys bore to Okeanos the swirling Potamoi ... She brought forth also a race apart of daughters.
Theogony 337-346

A day for the Roman Sea God, Neptune, and his wife Salacia, goddess of the open sea. Inland, she rules over springs of highly mineralized waters. The goddess Sulis, worshipped at the sacred hot springs at Bath, England, appears to be an aspect of Salacia. In the northern tradition, Neptune and Salacia are equivalent to the Norse god, Aegir, and his consort, Ran.

The Romans celebrated mostly with al fresco events today, although the poet Horace (Odes 3.28) preferred to stay home with a girlfriend and superior wine.

To the Greeks, the sea god was Okeanos, the great fresh water river encircling the earth, and his wife was Tethys, goddess of the nursing the young and of the underground flow of fresh water. She was called Tethys the loveley, and lovely haired Tethys.

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


*Ø* Blogmanac July 23 | Sun enters Leo


Leo: Lion's Head Fountains
We often see in fountains the water flowing from a lion’s mouth. This ancient custom originates with the Egyptians who used this device to symbolize the inundation of the Nile, which happens when the Sun is in Leo (23 July to 22 August). The Greeks and Romans adopted the style for their fountains, and it was passed through the European nations.

How many zodiac signs are there?
The Real Constellations of the Zodiac

John Mosley of the Griffith Observatory and the Belgian astronomer Jean Meeus investigated this question in 1999 and found that the planets (minus Pluto) actually pass through 24 constellations.


Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email



*Ø* Blogmanac July 23, 1987 | Poindexter says "Ummmmm"
Convicted gunrunner and liar to the American people, US Admiral John Poindexter, was reported to have used the phrase "I can't recall”, or some variation thereof, 184 times during his five days of testimony in the Iran-Contra scandal hearings. Poindexter lost his job as National Security Adviser under Ronald Reagan, and was convicted of conspiracy, lying to Congress, defrauding the government, and destroying evidence. In 1990, the convictions were overturned as Congress had given him immunity in exchange for his testimony, despite the fact that his evidence to Congress turned out to be untrue.


On February 13, 2002, President George W Bush found the admiral admirable, and appointed him Big Brother – Director of the Pentagon's Terrorism Information Awareness Office. Beset by international ridicule, and with an eye to public relations, the US government has changed the name from Total Information Awareness Office to convey more convincingly the impression that its purpose is related to terrorism.

Online pranksters have published John Poindexter's home phone number, photos of his house and other personal information to protest the TIA program.


Scandal? What Scandal? Bush's Iran-Contra appointees are barely a story

An Interesting Day President Bush’s movements and actions on September 11, 2001

Toddler's T-shirt for discerning readers

New from Cafe Diem!



The image on T-shirt back

Visit Café Diem for your toddler’s Total Awareness Information logo T-shirt. Also mugs available.



“On February 13, 2002, Americans were warned that our nation was facing the threat of danger to homeland security. Three hours later it happened, but nobody told America.That day, John M. Poindexter was appointed Director of the Pentagon's Information Awareness Office.” Source

*Ø* Blogmanac | Blair Denies Leaking Scientist's Name
HONG KONG/LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Tony Blair angrily denied suggestions on Tuesday that he allowed David Kelly's name to be leaked to media in a row over the Iraq war which apparently drove the scientist to suicide. As opinion polls showed his personal rating being hammered, Blair told reporters during a flight to Hong Kong he believed he had done nothing wrong.

"Emphatically not. I did not authorize the leaking of the name of David Kelly," he replied sharply in response to reporters' questions.

An ICM poll in the Guardian newspaper on Tuesday showed public trust in Blair -- once one of the most popular premiers in British history -- slumped by 12 points in the past month to 39 percent. It also showed Blair's personal approval rating had dropped to minus 17, down from plus seven on the so-called "Baghdad Bounce" immediately after the war.

Blair's denial of any involvement in the naming of Kelly appeared to conflict with comments on Monday by his official spokesman, who said the prime minister's office had been consulted about the process which led to Kelly being named, but that the Ministry of Defense had made the decision.

"We were consulted but the Ministry of Defense were the lead department and remained the lead department," he said in London. British newspapers interpreted that as an attempt by Blair's team to place responsibility for the name leak at Defense Secretary Geoff Hoon's door.

Source

*Ø* Blogmanac | Time for legal limbo to end
The possibility of the US administration suspending legal proceedings against UK nationals held in Guantánamo Bay raises more questions than it answers, Amnesty International has said, while reiterating its absolute opposition to the USA's proposals for trials by military commissions.

On 3 July, the Pentagon announced that President Bush had named six foreign nationals -- currently in US custody -- as the first people to be subject to the Military Order he signed in November 2001 providing for indefinite detention without charge or trial of people suspected of involvement in "international terrorism" or trial by military commissions. These executive bodies will have the power to hand down death sentences against which there would be no right of appeal to any court.

It emerged that two of the named prisoners were UK nationals, Moazzam Begg and Feroz Abbasi, causing huge concern in the United Kingdom.

No charges have yet been levelled against any of the six detainees, and no military commissions appointed.

"We call on the US government not just to suspend its plans for military commissions, but to rule out such unfair trials altogether, once and for all," Amnesty International said. "We stress that such proceedings should not just be ruled out in the case of UK nationals, but for any of the hundreds of foreign nationals held in US custody in Guantánamo Bay, in Bagram Air Base, and in undisclosed locations around the world."

Amnesty International repeated its call for all those held in US custody to be given access to legal counsel and to be able to challenge the lawfulness of their detention in a court of law. If suspected of crimes, they should be charged with recognizably criminal offences and brought to trial within a reasonable time, in proceedings which fully meet international standards for fair trial and without recourse to the death penalty, or else they should be released.

Only a few days ago, President Bush said of the Guantánamo detainees that "the only thing I know for certain is that these are bad people".

"By once again showing utter disregard for the presumption of innocence, President Bush has shown why justice will neither be done nor be seen to be done if the trials by military commissions go ahead," Amnesty International stressed, pointing out that the executive, led by President Bush, completely controls the commissions and takes the final decision on any verdicts handed down, including on whether a condemned defendant lives or dies.

"It is time for this legal limbo to end, and for the USA to admit it took a wrong turning with the November 2001 Military Order," Amnesty International continued. "International security is best served by full adherence to international law and respect for fundamental human rights standards".

Guantánamo Bay: Urge the USA to guarantee fair trials for all! Take action here

Tuesday, July 22, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | Shrub's 2003 Africa safari


"THE PRESIDENT: Good morning, and thank you for tuning in. I especially want to thank the tens of fives of you listening on America's two remaining black-owned radio stations. They'll be returning to their regular hippity-rap-hop lineup just as soon as this carefully targeted stump speech is over.

"Earlier today, Mrs. Bush and I returned from our week-long trip to the nation of Africa"

I got it here

*Ø* Blogmanac July 22, 1376 | The Pied Piper came to Hamelin

(Dates vary widely) The Pied Piper came to Hamelin (Hamlin), Brunswick, Germany, and led the children out of town.

The story of the Pied Piper of Hamelin was popularised in English by the poet Robert Browning in his narrative poem of that name.


It comes from an old German legend translated into English in 1605 by Richard Verstegan, who gave this as the date. (A 14th-century account gives the date as June 26, 1284.) The oldest remaining source is a note in Latin prose, made one and a half centuries later (1430-1450) as an addition to a 14th-century manuscript from Lüneburg.

We do know that something remarkable happened in medieval Hamelin that changed the town forever. Somehow, 130 of the town's children were taken away, and the grief imprinted itself on the village's soul such that even the town church had a stained-glass window installed that showed the children being led away by this stranger.

The stranger, dressed in pied, or multicoloured, clothing, offered to rid the town of Hamelin of its plague of rats, for an agreed price. He played his pipe and the rats followed his beguiling tune down to the WeserRiver, all drowning. The burghers of Hamelin refused to pay the piper, so he began piping his charming song and the town’s children, entranced, followed him to a mountain cave, which as if by magic sealed itself shut.

Many people have proposed explanations for the famous legend. Perhaps the most likely is that the Bishop Bruno of Olmütz (now Olomouc) went on a Crusade recruitment drive for his diocese. Many family names in Olomouc bear a strikingly similarity to those in Hamelin.

According to one writer, early editions of Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable ascribed the origin of the expression ‘to pay the piper’ (to be made accountable) to the Hamelin legend, but in the centenary edition did not. (It does appear in the online Dictionary, here.)It is probably more likely that the expression derives from the practice of paying itinerant pipe musicians for a song, as in the fuller expression, ‘He who pays the piper calls the tune”. More on this by Prof. Wolfgang Mieder.

More

*Ø* Blogmanac July 22 | Global Day of Action Against Killer Coke


"This Tuesday, July 22, sees the launch of a global campaign to boycott Coca Cola products in solidarity with Colombian trade unionists. Last year, 184 Colombia unionists were assassinated by paramilitaries just for being trade unionists. Over 4000 have been murdered since 1986. The boycott has been called by SINALTRAINAL, a Colombian foodworkers union currently suing two Colombian-based Coca-Cola bottlers - Bebidas y Alimentos and Panamerican Beverages - in US courts over their alleged role in the murder of trade unionists by right-wing paramilitaries."
Read on

*Ø* Blogmanac | The world's top microbiologists are dying

More on Dr David Kelly following Nora's report on the British scandal that is embroiling Tony Bland and his war machine (below)


"Mr Mangold also revealed Dr Kelly had been taken to a safe house but "he hadn't liked that, he wanted to come home.""
Source
Why was David Kelly in a safe house?

More on Kelly

The world's top microbiologists are dying
Defence Secretary ordered outing of Kelly

What the papers say about the row over David Kelly's death
Even Voice of America is reporting this story!
Balochistan Post in Pakistan reports it as murder
10 Downing Street media release

At time of posting, Indymedia UK has nothing at all on the subject
Neither does Indymedia Central, USA nor Yellow Times

*Ø* Blogmanac | Impeach? Did someone say impeach?

Bush deserves to be impeached
By ERIC MARGOLIS -- Contributing Foreign Editor

07/20/03: "Worse than a crime, it was a blunder," was how the cynical Talleyrand famously described Napoleon's murder of the Duke d'Enghien.

The same may be said of President George Bush's attempts to murder the leader of a sovereign nation, Saddam Hussein, and his foolhardy eagerness to invade Iraq.

Thanks to Bush's blundering, nearly 50% of U.S. Army combat units are now stuck in a spreading guerrilla war in Iraq , costing $4 billion US monthly, that is becoming the biggest, most expensive, and bloodiest foreign mess since Vietnam. This when the U.S. is threatening military action against North Korea.

As the furor in Washington grows over Bush's admission of now-discredited claims about Iraqi uranium imports from Africa in his keynote state of the union address, administration officials are viciously blaming one another.

George Tenet, the CIA's meek director, became the fall guy for the uranium fiasco, though he repeatedly warned the White House its claims were unsubstantiated.

Blame rightly belongs to Bush himself, and to his woefully inadequate national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice. Either they knew the uranium story was false, or they were unfit for high office.

For one thing, uranium ore is no more threatening than cake mix.

To weaponize it, ore must be laboriously transformed into uranium hexafluoride gas, then separated and enriched in huge, highly visible plants, equipped with "cascades" of thousands of high-speed centrifuges.

The U.S. knew there were no such nuclear plants in Iraq. French intelligence warned it the Niger story was bogus.

Nor had Iraq any means of delivering nuclear or biowarfare weapons. In short, Iraq had zero offensive capability, and posed zero threat.

At the time, Bush's critics, including this column, dismissed as hogwash his claims Iraq was an "imminent threat" to the U.S.

We were denounced as "unpatriotic" and "friends of Saddam" in the pro-war press.

Former UN weapons inspector Scott Ritter, who challenged White House lies, was vilified and smeared with loathsome personal attacks by the neo-con U.S. media.

The Niger uranium story may have come from Vice President Dick Cheney's office.

Three days before the invasion of Iraq, Cheney actually claimed Iraq "has reconstituted nuclear weapons."

As the Niger uranium scandal grows, it is increasingly clear the White House's campaign to drive Americans into an unjustified, unnecessary war had nothing to do with Iraq's alleged weapons, nor its internal repression.


Whipping boy

Bush's crusade against Iraq was designed to assuage Americans' fury and fear over 9/11 by making Saddam Hussein a whipping boy for the attack in which he had no part.

The jolly little wars against Afghanistan and Iraq were also designed to make Americans forget the Bush White House had been caught with its pants down by 9/11, and was asleep at the switch in the Enron financial disaster.

Who now remembers that Attorney General John Ashcroft actually cut spending on anti-terrorism before 9/11, or that Washington was giving millions to the Taliban until four months before 9/11?

How better to get Americans to support a war than by insinuating, as did Bush, that Iraq was responsible for 9/11, and claiming Saddam was about to attack the U.S. with weapons of mass destruction?

A pre-emptive attack on Iraq was urgent to save America, insisted Bush.

A weak-kneed Congress and credulous public went along with White House warmongering, while the spineless UN secretary general, Kofi Annan, and UN arms inspector Hans Blix wriggled like jellyfish.

Most Democrats, including some presidential candidates, joined Bush's lynch mob.

It was not just the Niger canard.

A torrent of lies poured from the administration, all aimed at justifying a war of aggression, thwarting the UN Security Council, ending UN inspections in Iraq and grabbing Iraq's oil riches.

Virtually all administration claims about Iraq's weapons had been disproved by UN inspectors before Bush went to war.

Exposed as fakery are the "drones of death;" aluminum tubes for centrifuges; chemical munitions bunkers; mobile germ labs; hidden Scuds; links to al-Qaida and "poison camps;" Saddam's smallpox; Saddam's secret nuclear program.

And the biggest canard of all: Bush's absurd claims there was "no doubt that the Iraq regime continues to possess and conceal some of the most lethal weapons ever devised," and that it "threatened all mankind."

Thanks to the shameful complicity of the U.S. media, which amplified White House propaganda, Americans were led to believe Iraq attacked the U.S. on 9/11, and was in league with al-Qaida.

Bush's faux war on terrorism was redirected, by clever White House spin, into a hugely popular campaign against Iraq.

The failure to kill terrorist leader Osama bin Laden was covered up by the rush to kill Saddam.

The litany of lies produced by the White House and its neo-con allies would be farcical were it not for the deaths of so many Americans and Iraqis.

Of course, all politicians lie.

But lying to get one's country into an unnecessary war is an outrage, and ought to be an impeachable offence.

Source


[My two cents: "Of course, all politicians lie." It's interesting to go back to the archives and compare speeches and news items from the past to what we're hearing today--interesting and shocking and frightening! Take, for example, the following remarks made by Bush at a ceremony honoring economist Dr. Milton Friedman on May 2, 2002:

"Milton Friedman has used a brilliant mind to advance a moral vision:
the vision of a society where men and women are free, free to choose,
but where government is not as free to override their decisions. That
vision has changed America, and it is changing the world."

Hmmmm........... What a difference a year makes. Now, just a little over one year later, we are very aware of all the
surveillance and police state tactics in place which allow the government to override the decisions of the people at every turn; where any freedoms to choose are determined by the Patriot Act. Many of these tactics have been implemented in Britain and Australia, as well. Moral vision? The White House has no moral vision! As Dwight Eisenhower tried to warn us decades ago, the military industrial complex has taken the place of we, the people. IT does whatever it wants for its own
greedy purposes with little, if any, thought to the welfare of the people--except when it comes to taking away jobs, raising taxes and spending our money and our "cannon fodder" on military means of creating projects for their friends' corrupt companies to earn obscene amounts of money while not paying taxes. That's the "big picture" that all the little issues that fill the mainstream media are designed to distract us from understanding. As my favorite 20th Century philosopher used to say, "I don't want to get on a rant, here. It's just my opinion. I could be wrong." -- Dennis Miller -v]

*Ø* Blogmanac | Blair says he won't resign over suicide


LONDON (AP) -- Prime Minister Tony Blair said he would take full responsibility if an inquiry finds the government contributed to the suicide of scientist David Kelly -- identified Sunday by the BBC as its main source in accusing the government of hyping weapons evidence to justify war in Iraq.

Blair, dogged on his trip through east Asia by angry charges about the Ministry of Defense adviser's death, said he has no intention of resigning over the dispute, as some critics at home have demanded. He welcomed the BBC's announcement, which temporarily shifted the angriest public criticism from his administration to the broadcaster, whose credibility came under attack.

"In the end, the government is my responsibility and I can assure you the judge (heading the inquiry) will be able to get to what facts, what people, what papers he wants," Blair told Sky News. The prime minister also said at a joint news conference with South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun in Seoul that he would testify in the investigation.

Kelly's suicide has visibly shaken Blair, who learned of it at the start of an exhausting Asian trip after flying first across the Atlantic to give a speech to the U.S. Congress. He appeared tense and preoccupied during appearances Saturday in Japan, and his characteristic wide grins were replaced by a withering glare when a reporter shouted: "Have you got blood on your hands, prime minister?"

Blair's government and the state-funded BBC have been embroiled in a bitter, drawn-out battle over a May 29 radio report by journalist Andrew Gilligan. The report quoted an anonymous source as saying officials had "sexed up" evidence about Iraqi weapons to justify war and insisted on publishing a claim that Saddam Hussein could deploy some chemical and biological weapons within 45 minutes -- despite intelligence experts' doubts.


After Kelly, a quiet, bearded microbiologist with a sterling international reputation, told his Ministry of Defense bosses he'd spoken to Gilligan, the ministry identified him as a possible source for the report.

Kelly was questioned by a parliamentary committee, and just days later, on Friday, police found his body in the woods near his Oxfordshire home. They said he bled to death from a slashed left wrist.

Source

"How can an inquiry into Dr Kelly's death fail to examine the reasons for war?

The Government has not quite crossed the Rubicon but is wading about in midstream in its efforts to confine the inquiry.

Lord Hutton has been asked to do the impossible. He has been handed the job of inquiring into the events that led to the tragic death of Dr David Kelly, and in the same breath has been warned off looking into the events that led up to the war on Iraq. It would take a combination of the judgement of Solomon and the skills of precision engineering to keep these two lines of inquiry in separate compartments."


quoting Robin Cook at Independent.co.uk

Monday, July 21, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | Understanding Chechnya

Toonimations at Wilson's Almanac


Almost always when the mainstream media report on Chechnya, it seems to me that they ignore the historical background.
This brief chronology is useful as an introduction to understanding the war, and this list of links is very good as well.

*Ø* Blogmanac July 21 | Mayan New Year*



In Central America lived the Mayan people, whose sophisticated calendar was central not only to their timekeeping, but indeed to their entire culture.

For the Maya, each day, year, decade and millennium was controlled by its own deity. To calculate which deity presided over a particular unit of time, a calendar was maintained. This calendar, which, like our was a solar, or sun-based calendar (unlike lunar or soli-lunar calendars of some other cultures), was of 365 days. Every 52nd solar new year, which might fall in any season, was considered dangerous, for it was a time that the gods might disengage form their other pursuits, and bring time to an end. Apparently, the fears of the Maya were without foundation we are still here. Or, so it is said.

* Variable

Great Mayan calendar site
The Planet Directory has a section on almanacs and calendars

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


Celebratory day of Damo
Born on Museum Street in Crotona, Italy, Damo of Croton was the daughter of Greek philosopher and mathematician, Pythagoras of Samos, and his wife Theano. All of his secrets were entrusted to her at his death. Damo wrote treatises on the construction of a regular tetrahedron and the construction of a cube, and a book on advanced geometry, An Account of Pythagoras.


Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email



Don't let the awkward squad fire over my grave.
Robert Burns's last words; he died on this day in 1796

Any breakdown is a breakthrough.
Marshall McLuhan, Canadian media analyst, born on July 21, 1911

Cocaine is God's way of telling you you are making too much money.
Robin Williams, Scottish-born American comic actor, born on July 21, 1952

*Ø* Blogmanac | Recent googles that found the Blogmanac
15 Jul, Tue, 08:21:10 Google: hulk sun news manhood spain "united kingdom"
15 Jul, Tue, 05:00:26 Google: Guilin Latex Co
15 Jul, Tue, 19:46:31 Google: 2003 emails and links of medical doctors in Solomon Islands
15 Jul, Tue, 23:54:59 Google: guestbook of past president hong kong bowling congress 2003
16 Jul, Wed, 11:53:21 Google: 2003 email address and guestbook of businessmen in poland

*Ø* Blogmanac July 21,1969 | What did Armstrong really say?

“That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind.”




These are some of the most famous, and most eloquent, words ever uttered, indelibly engraved on the global consciousness by Neil Armstrong on that day in July 1969. And yet, if he said “… one small step for man”, leaving out the indefinite article, the sentence doesn’t make much sense. What did he really say, and were his words scripted for him by PR suits at NASA?

In an article in the December 1983 Esquire, author George Plimpton revealed all. The words were all of Armstrong's own composition, according to the publicity-shy astronaut himself, as well as his colleagues and NASA officials. Armstrong didn't even consider what he might say until after he and Buzz Aldrin landed on the lunar surface, because, he wasn't sure he would get a chance to speak on the moon at all.


“I thought the chances of a successful touchdown on the moon's surface were about even money - fifty-fifty,” Armstrong told Plimpton, “An awful lot of the puzzle had not been filled in; so much had not even been tried. Most people don’t realise how difficult the mission was. So it didn’t seem to me there was much point in thinking up something to say if we’d have to abort the landing.”

As for the words: it sounded like he said “That's one small step for man”, rather than “for a man”, which would have made more sense. In fact, Armstrong claims that he did say “That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind” (the way it appears in every book of quotable quotes issued since 1969). He told Esquire that the ‘a’ went missing in the transmission, which was through a voice-activated system called VOX. “Vox can lose you a syllable every so often,” Armstrong explained – thus ending another of life’s little mysteries.

Do you think Armstrong’s version is true? Listen and let us know what you think.

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


Neil Armstrong walked on the moon at 0256 hours Universal Time on Monday, July 21, (but in the USA it was Sunday July 20) 1969, or Julian Day 2,440,423.

Together with Universal Time (formerly Greenwich Mean Time), astronomers use this time scale (which has nothing to do with the calendar of Julius Caesar) to obviate the dating problems that exist from the perspective of Planet Earth with its dateline and different timezones. It was developed by Joseph Scaliger (1554-1609); no one knows why he chose to start his system from January 1, 4713 BC, nor why he named it after his father, Julius.


Who was that other guy?
It's said that at the 25th anniversary celebration of the first moon walk, at the White House, in July 1994, Armstrong and Aldrin went in to meet Bill Clinton, while the other guy just circled the block in the car.

Armstrong in the news today

Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email

Sunday, July 20, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | Loch Ness discovery


"London: Traces of a 150-million-year-old water-dwelling dinosaur - believed to have been a 10.5 metre-long plesiosaur - have been found on the banks of Scotland's Loch Ness.

"The Jurassic-era fossil of four perfectly-preserved vertebrae was found by a man who plucked it from shallow water on the bank of the loch.

"Gerald McSorley, 67, turned it over to the National Museum of Scotland, who are conducting tests on the rare find, the first of its kind in Scotland for more than a century.

"However, scientists say the bones are definitely not those of Nessie, the lake's legendary monster."

Read more

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


*Ø* Blogmanac | China's 'Loch Ness Monster' resurfaces
"China's legendary 'Lake Tianchi Monster' has surfaced anew, with local officials reporting sightings of as many as 20 of the mysterious and unidentified creatures in a lake near North Korea.

"Sightings of the strange beast - China's version of the 'Loch Ness Monster' - date back more than a century, but like Scotland's famed "Nessie" reports vary and remain unconfirmed.

"On the morning of July 11, several local government cadres caught sight of a school of mysterious creatures swimming through the lake in the Changbai mountains, in northeastern Jilin province, the Beijing Youth Daily said."
Source

*Ø* Blogmanac July 20 | Feast day of St Margaret
Margaret was a virgin martyr of the third century, known to Greeks as St Marina. Olybrius, governor of Antioch, loved her beauty; being rejected, he put her in a dungeon where the Devil came to her in the form of a dragon. She held up the cross and the dragon fled. Her flower, according to the folklorist Hone, is the Virginian dragon's head; Dracocephalus virginianum.

Folklorist Waverly Fitzgerald writes that the plant, wheatfield poppy, supposedly sprang from the blood of the dragon she slew. Long before, it was dedicated to Diana and Demeter as the source of healing sleep and death. Her other flower, the daisy, is also called in France La belle Marguerite.

Margaret is the matron saint of childbirth.

Picture: Saints Michael and Margaret killing the 'Devil as Dragon' in Lindfield Church

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


Feast day of St Wilgefortis, or Uncumber
Wilgefortis, daughter of the King of Portugal, made a vow of chastity. When her father tried to make her marry she prayed for deliverance and immediately grew a copious beard. Her suitors fled and her father had her crucified. Known in England as Uncumber or Liberata, she was invoked by women who wanted to ‘uncumber’ themselves of suitors or troublesome husbands.

The story and feast day of St Uncumber might derive from the stories of the Corinthian Aphrodite who grew a beard and impregnated women.

* Ø * Ø * Ø *



Osorezan Taisai, Bodai-ji Temple, Mutsu-shi, Aomori, Japan, July 20-24

Mt Osorezan is believed to be a gathering-place for dead souls – a gateway to the dead. Women mediators called Itako help visitors hear the voice of the dead relatives. The pathway to the summit is studded with pinwheels placed by parents praying for deceased children.

During the Grand Festival several dozen blind female shamans (itako) act as the mediums of communication, clicking their strings of beads as they enter a trancelike state and convey messages from the spirits to grieving relatives. More

*Ø* Blogmanac July 20 | Fiesta at Monastery of Profitis Ilias, Cycladic island of Thera or Santorini
A great annual religious fiesta when all visitors are invited to join the islanders in a meal of a traditional dried pea and onion soup, followed by dancing of the traditional Syrto and Repati folk dances.

In 1628 BC there was a huge volcanic eruption on Santorini that was estimated to have had three times the force of the 1883 Krakatoa explosion. (Krakatoa was heard over 7.5 per cent of the world’s surface.) Some authorities believe the Santorini explosion might have given rise to the Atlantis legend.

*Ø* Blogmanac July 20, 1549 | The Norfolk Rising (or Commotion), aka Ket’s Rebellion

Kings are wont to pardon wicked persons, not innocent men. We have done nothing to deserve such a pardon. We have been guilty of no crime.Robert Ket, whose Norfolk rebellion was at a high point on July 20, 1549

1549 The Norfolk Rising (or Commotion), aka Ket’s Rebellion

the Oak of Reformation, where Ket's people tried greedy landlords
At Mousehold, England, a herald of the king was turned away, his message of conciliation from the monarch to some 16-20,000 rural insurrectionists rejected. The herald had promised the king's pardon to all who would depart quietly to their homes.

The rebellion of farmers and farm workers was aimed at bringing attention to the economic problems faced by agricultural workers in East Anglia. Like the Diggers (founded exactly one century later, in 1649 by Gerard Winstanley) and even the rather more conservative Levellers, the rebels demanded the abolition of land enclosures, the end of private ownership of land, and the dismissal of counsellors. A commonwealth was established on Mousehold Heath.

The ‘commotion’ was led by Robert Ket (or Kett), a fairly prosperous landowner (he held the manor of Wymondham in Norfolk) and tanner, and he and his followers occupied the city of Norwich, but were defeated on August 25 by the overwhelming military power of the Earl of Warwick.

They had met daily under ‘the Oak of Reformation’, upon which many of them were later hanged. Robert Kett was executed at Norwich, and his body was hanged on the top of the castle on December 7, 1549.

More
Land and Freedom Pages
Wikipedia on the Diggers
Wikipedia on the Levellers
Modern Diggers

Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email



* Ø * Ø * Ø *


Would you like to help?
If you think the Blogmanac ain't too bad, will you take five minutes and write a brief review at Blogarama please? We feel there are a lot of people who would enjoy visiting us but, of course, there is no money for promotion. Your Blogarama review will probably help us crank up the ol' word of mouth. Also, it helps us know what you love or hate there (don't hate anything). Thanks heaps.

Saturday, July 19, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | Ruthless and Truthless

"Evidence is piling up and riling up."

Passing It Along
By Paul Krugman

07/18/03 (New York Times) Here's another sentence in George Bush's State of the Union address that wasn't true: "We will not deny, we will not ignore, we will not pass along our problems to other Congresses, to other presidents and other generations."

Mr. Bush's officials profess to see nothing wrong with the explosion of the national debt on their watch, even though they now project an astonishing $455 billion budget deficit this year and $475 billion next year. But even the usual apologists (well, some of them) are starting to acknowledge the administration's irresponsibility. Will they also face up to its dishonesty? It has been obvious all along, if you were willing to see it, that the administration's claims to fiscal responsibility have rested on thoroughly cooked books.

The numbers tell the tale. In its first budget, released in April 2001, the administration projected a budget surplus of
$334 billion for this year. More tellingly, in its second budget, released in February 2002 — that is, after the administration knew about the recession and Sept. 11 — it projected a deficit of only $80 billion this year, and an almost balanced budget next year. Just six months ago, it was projecting deficits of about $300 billion this year and next.

There's no mystery about why the administration's budget projections have borne so little resemblance to reality:
realistic budget numbers would have undermined the case for tax cuts. So budget analysts were pressured to high-ball estimates of future revenues and low-ball estimates of future expenditures. Any resemblance to the way the threat from Iraq was exaggerated is no coincidence at all.

And just as some people argue that the war was justified even though it was sold on false pretenses, some say that the biggest budget deficit in history is justified even though the administration got us here with cooked numbers.

Please read on.

*Ø*Ø*Ø*


Democrat sugests possible grounds for Bush impeachment
July 18, 2003, 07:30

Bob Graham, the US democratic presidential candidate, said yesterday there were grounds to impeach President
George W. Bush if he was found to have led America to war under false pretences.

While Graham did not call for Bush's impeachment, he said if the president lied about the reasons for going to war with Iraq it would be more serious than former President Bill Clinton's lie under oath about his sexual relationship with Monica Lewinsky.

"If in fact we went to war under false pretences that is a very serious charge," Graham, the senior US senator from Florida, told reporters in New Hampshire. "If the standard of impeachment is the one the House republicans used against Bill Clinton, then this clearly comes within that standard," he said.

Democrats as well as some republicans have raised questions about the unsubstantiated claim Bush made in his January state of the union speech that Iraq was seeking uranium from Africa in its pursuit of weapons of mass destruction.

Deception by Bush
Graham's comments came as reporters followed up on his remarks earlier this week that any deception by Bush over Iraq might rise to the standard of an impeachable offence as defined by the republican-controlled House of Representatives when it voted to impeach Clinton. Clinton was ultimately cleared by the US Senate after being impeached by the House.

After his appearance in New Hampshire, Graham issued a statement saying he was not calling for Bush's impeachment and saw the issue as a largely academic one, adding that if Bush had misled the American public he would pay the price for it in the 2004 presidential election.

In Washington yesterday, Bush told a news conference that the speech reference was based on sound intelligence and that he was certain that Saddam Hussein, the ousted Iraqi president, was trying to reconstitute his nuclear weapons program. "We will not be proven wrong," he said with Tony Blair, the British prime minister, at his side. - Reuters

Source

*Ø*Ø*Ø*


Excerpt from a "must read."

A firm basis for impeachment
Irresponsibly uninformed, or purposely deceitful?
By Robert Scheer, Creators Syndicate, Working for Change

-- We now know that before Bush's January speech, Robert G. Joseph, the National Security Council individual who reports to Rice on nuclear proliferation, was fully briefed by CIA analyst Alan Foley that the Niger connection was no stronger than it had been in October. It is inconceivable that in reviewing draft after draft of the State of the Union speech, NSC staffers Hadley and Joseph failed to tell Rice that the president was about to spread a big lie to justify
going to war.

On national security, the buck doesn't stop with Tenet, the current fall guy. The buck stops with Bush and his national security advisor, who is charged with funneling intelligence data to the president. That included cluing in the president that the CIA's concerns were backed by the State Department's conclusion that "the claims of Iraqi pursuit of natural uranium in Africa are highly dubious."

For her part, Rice has tried to fend off controversy by claiming ignorance. On "Meet the Press" in June, Rice claimed,
"We did not know at the time -- no one knew at the time, in our circles -- maybe someone knew down in the bowels of the agency, but no one in our circles knew that there were doubts and suspicions that this might be a forgery."

On Friday, Rice admitted that she had known the State Department intelligence unit "was the one that within the overall intelligence estimate had objected to that sentence" and that Secretary of State Colin Powell had refused to use the Niger document in his presentation to the U.N. because of what she described as long-standing concerns about its credibility. But Rice also knew the case for bypassing U.N. inspections and invading Iraq required demonstrating an imminent threat. The terrifying charge that Iraq was hellbent on developing nuclear weapons would do the trick nicely. --

Full text here.

*Ø* Blogmanac | U.S. Had Uranium Papers Earlier

Officials Say Forgeries on Iraqi Efforts Reached State Dept. Before Speech

"The State Department received copies of what would turn out to be forged documents suggesting that Iraq tried to purchase uranium oxide from Niger three months before the president's State of the Union address, administration officials said.

"The documents, which officials said appeared to be of "dubious authenticity," were distributed to the CIA and other agencies within days. But the U.S. government waited four months to turn them over to United Nations weapons inspectors who had been demanding to see evidence of U.S. and British claims that Iraq's attempted purchase of uranium oxide violated U.N. resolutions and was among the reasons to go to war. State Department officials could not say yesterday why they did not turn over the documents when the inspectors asked for them in December.

"The administration, facing increased criticism over the claims it made about Iraq's attempts to buy uranium, had said until now that it did not have the documents before the State of the Union speech."

The Washington Post via TruthOut

*Ø* Blogmanac July 19-20 | Adonia, ancient Greece
A holy enactment of the wedding of Adonis and Aphrodite took place at this time. Celebrated only by women, the Adonia was a summer festival held at Athens and Alexandria, and had Egyptian roots. Images of Adonis and Aphrodite were laid on a silver couch and on the second day cast into the sea, along with potplant-type arrangements called Adonis Gardens, which assured the renewal of vegetative growth with the summer rains, or, so it is said.

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


Celebrating Lammas – Lammas is nearly upon us

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


Lizzie Borden took an axe
Gave her mother 40 whacks.
When she saw what she had done
She gave her father 41.

Children’s song, 19th Century America; Lizzie Borden, famous accused murderess, born July 19, 1860

1860 Lizzie Borden, alleged American parricide
Although eventually acquitted of the crime, birthday girl Lizzie Borden will always be remembered as the girl who “gave her mother forty whacks” with an axe. Her name entered American folklore and will remain there for a long time, regardless of the presumption of innocence.

Virtual Borden House Try to solve the mystery

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


1847 The Choctaw nation of American Indians gave $750 for Irish famine relief.

1873 William Gosse named Ayers Rock (Uluru) in honour of South Australian Premier Sir Henry Ayers. In March 1983 it was leased from the traditional Aboriginal owners by the Australian Government on a 99-year lease for $100,000 a year. Uluru, the world's largest monolith, is at the very heart of the continent, and is thus part of the Almanac's symbol.

*Ø* Blogmanac Third weekend of July | La Festa del Redentore, Venice



Every year on the 3rd Saturday of July, Venice celebrates the festival of Christ Redemptor or the Redentore.

In 1575 after the people of Venice prayed for an end to a plague, the illness dropped away. The Doge Alvise Mocenigo had made a solemn vow to build, should the plague lift, a votive temple, “that generations to come will solemnly visit in perpetual memory of the received miracle”. On the third Sunday in July of the same year, His successor, Doge Sebastiano Venier, proclaimed the Serenissima Republic free from the plague and he fulfilled the vow to build a temple of thanksgiving to the Redeemer. The church was built on the Giudecca island and the foundation stone was laid on May 3, 1577. On July 21, 1578 an open-air altar with tabernacle was opened and in four days a bridge consisting of 80 galleys was laid across the Giudecca Canal.

To mark the event a boat bridge was built to take worshippers to the spot were the new church was being built. The church was designed by Andrea Palladio and completed in only 15 years.

To this day that event is commemorated by the city by building the boat bridge across the Giudecca Canal to take people to the church. In the evening people will take to their boats and spend the night watching a splendid firework display on the lagoon and will wait for the sun to rise.

Pilgrims walk from the city to Giudecca across the decks of boats while spectators gather on waterfront balconies. People eat sweet and sour sole with pine nuts and raisins, and deck boats and houses alike with flowers and party lights. Handel’s famous Water Music was written in 1771 for this spectacle, and it is played as fireworks are let off.


Thank you Almaniac Sylvia de Vanna for sending in much of this information

More
And more

Venice; the Giudecca, looking towards Fusina, by Turner


* Ø * Ø * Ø *


*Ø* Blogmanac Third Saturday of July | Tolpuddle Martyrs Festival, UK


The Tolpuddle Festival is held every year to commemorate the sacrifices made by the Tolpuddle Martyrs, six farm workers whose courage in standing up to their ruthless bosses is credited with the birth of the UK’s trade union movement.

Their struggle began in 1833 when, close to starvation and facing a wage cut for the third year in a row, a handful of farm workers led by George Loveless decided to start a ‘friendly society’ to protest against their meagre pay. Loveless’s landowner, James Frampton, employed a spy to infiltrate meetings of the newly-formed society. The informer took back to his master the information that the members had voted an oath of secrecy at the beginning of the meeting, an act that was illegal under an obscure 1797 law. Thus, on March 19, 1834, Loveless, his brother James and co-workers James Brine, Thomas and John Stanfield and James Hammett were sentenced to seven year’s transportation to the Australian penal colonies of New South Wales and Van Dieman’s Land [Tasmania], despite an 800,000-strong petition complaining about their unjust treatment.

In June 1835 the British Government offered the men conditional pardons which the men rejected out of hand, demanding free pardons because they had done nothing wrong. Nine months later their demands were met and they returned home the following year as heroes.

More


Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email


*Ø* Blogmanac July 5 | Will you review the Blogmanac please?




If you think this blog ain't too bad, will you take five minutes and write a brief review at Blogarama please? We feel there are a lot of people who would enjoy visiting us but, of course, there is no money for promotion. Your Blogarama review will probably help us crank up the ol' word of mouth. Also, it helps us know what you love or hate here (don't hate anything). Thanks heaps.

PS Is this the future of the Almanac ezine? LOL

Friday, July 18, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac July 18, 1552 | Happy birthday, Mr Potato Head



“Rudolf II, patron of Kepler and briefly Brahe was fascinated by alchemy, astrology, and other ways in which human art interfered in or perfected nature. Here one of his court painters has, through art, depicted Rudolf as an assemblage of natural objects: fruits, vegetables, grains, and flowers.” Source


Emperor Rudolf II of Bohemia (1552-1612), like our other birthday boy, John Dee (below), an unconfirmed one-time owner of the Voynich Manuscript. He is believed to have been the first owner of the mysterious manuscript, which he bought from an unknown seller for 600 ducats.

Terence McKenna - VoynichManuscript rc.mp3
Voynich Ms photo gallery
Wilfryd Micha³ Habdank-Woynicz (Voynich)
More
More
People associated with Voynich Ms
Leonardo da Vinci and the Voynich Manuscript

* Ø * Ø * Ø *



Dr John Dee, English astrologer, alchemist and mathematician was also born today, in 1527. He was visited by King Rudolph II (above) in his dwelling.

More on Dee, at Wilson's Almanac Scriptorium
Click for a big image of Dee
More
And more
Yet more
The Alchemy Website
Timeline of alchemists
John Dee Society
Map of the Arctic By Dee

"So how come such a significant philosopher - one of very few in a country then considered an intellectual backwater - barely features in British history books? Because of his notorious links with magic."
BBC Discover: John Dee



*Ø* Blogmanac July 18 | Gion Matsuri, Japan


Gion Matsuri, Kyôto, Japan (the entire month of July)
Heralding the heat of summer comes an ancient Japanese festival. Gion Matsuri is an annual celebration centred around Yasaka Jinja (Gion is an old name of this shrine), and it is one of the three biggest local festivals in Japan. It is held over one month from the Kippu-iri ritual on July 1, through the Nagoshi ritual on the 31st, with the procession of floats on July 17 being the climax and the most famous event of the festival. However, a colorful variety of events takes place before and after. Gion Festival is more than a festival for the communities around Yasaka Jinja Shrine, and involves all of the city of Kyôto, the long-time capital of Japan.

In 869, the year of the birth of Yozei, the Emperor of Japan, the entire country was struck with a plague. So Emperor Seiwa, the 56th imperial ruler of the nation, dispatched his special messenger to Yasaka Jinja shrine to pray for the immediate end of the plague. The plan was to placate the divine wrath of Susanô, brother of the solar goddess Amaterasu. He was instructed to have his servants plant in the imperial garden, in offering to Gozu Tennô, a Shintô divinity (also called Gion; Heavenly King), 66 decorated halberds (hook, or broad-axes) representing the country's 66 provinces. This was to be done the seventh day of the sixth month of the lunar calendar. It was a strategy that succeeded. Or, so it is said.

A century later, Kyôto's inhabitants decided to express their gratitude to the Gion shrine's divinities by organizing in their honour a great festival. After the mid-15th century, each float was especially decorated by wealthy citizens with many imported materials or ornaments, so the procession’s popularity and brightness was established.

The highlight is the eve (Yoiyama) on the 16th followed by Yamaboko-junko – a procession of towering floats through the streets – on the 17th. Thirty-one colourful floats (yamaboko) form a long procession, pulled through the main streets of the city. The yamaboko are decorated with many time-honoured treasures and ornaments.

There are two kinds of floats, 23 of them being called Yama, and the other eight called Hoko. The Yama weigh more than a ton, are carried by long poles on the shoulders of about 16 men, and are tastefully decorated with figures from Japanese myth and legend. The Hoko weigh between four and six tons and are as tall as 24 metres high. They are set on four massive wooden wheels each with a diameter of three metres, each float being drawn through the streets by groups of men.

All floats are set up in advance by the people living in the ward to which each float belongs. On July 2, the order of the floats in the parade is determined by lots drawn by Kyôto's mayor. They are then positioned at different points until the procession starts on the morning of the 17th, when the mayor in an ancient costume confirms the order.

More
And more
Yet more
Gion Matsuri photos

Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email

*Ø* Blogmanac | How many people have died in the Congo war?
Each dot represents 100 people. This is just a sample:


......................................................................................
......................................................................................
......................................................................................
......................................................................................



See how many more

Gawd, I really hate spam with subject headers like

almanac the best ANTlSP A.M software? D Um gZVBrtF z eFH

At least they got my handle right I guess.
I've even had spam from Bible publishers.

*Ø* Blogmanac July 18 | Team members -- best wishes


Blogmanac team member Jeannine (J-9), as many regular readers know, has just had surgery for IBC, Inflammatory Breast Cancer. Our friend is back home and feeling absolutely lousy and in great pain, and has months of chemo and radiation ahead of her. We all send our love and best wishes to her. J-9 wants everyone to know about this rare and awful disease as IBC is usually not detected by mammograms or ultrasounds, so J-9 says awareness is terribly important.



Nora has been off this week due to medical reasons and we look forward to seeing her back real soon.

These two women are passionate and dedicated workers for peace and social justice and many planetary issues, so our healing thoughts go out to them.

*Ø* Blogmanac July 18 | A new Briscoe



Many members of the Almanac ezine are familiar with the work of David Briscoe whose photos often grace our pages. Here's a new one -- check out more at his free gallery which has a permanent link in the left-hand column of this Blogmanac. Thanks mate!

*Ø* Blogmanac | New at the Scriptorium



I've uploaded some new articles to the Wilson's Almanac Scriptorium in the past few days. The latest is about various rain prognostication days from European (mainly English) folklore.

Some other newbies at the Scriptorium:
The month of June Sacred to the goddess Juno
Folklore of July
The Dog Days of Summer What's the background of this common expression?
Lady Godiva Who was the naked lady on the horse?
The Fairlop Oak Fair How one man created a tradition of celebration
Vikings! Lindisfarne, and the Cuerdale Hoard
The Heart that Would Not Burn The life and death of Percy Bysshe Shelley, in brief
Assassination and a prophetic dream Dream that told of the death of a British Prime Minister
July 5: Tynwald Day The ancient annual ceremony on the Isle of Man
Mumtaz and Jahan The love affair that created the Taj Mahal
Event over Tunguska What exploded over Central Siberia in 1908?

As always, these new articles are listed in the Articles Index. Send some bucks for the overdue $420 Internet bill and I'll write some more. Aww, what the hell. I'll do it anyway.

Thursday, July 17, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac July 17 | The legend of Kenelm


Lo, in the lyf of seint kenelm I rede,
That was kenulphus sone, the noble kyng
Of mercenrike, how kenelm mette a thyng.
A lite er he was mordred, on a day,
His mordre in his avysioun he say.


[Now, take St Kenelm's life which I've been reading;
He was Kenulph's son, the noble king
Of Mercia. Now St Kenelm dreamt a thing
Shortly before they murdered him one day.
He saw his murder in a dream, I say …]
Geoffrey Chaucer, The Nun's Priest's Tale



Strange tale of dreams and mystery

Kenelm was an English prince and saint, the son of Coenwulf (Kenwulf), King of Mercia, in the early 9th Century. Tradition says he was murdered on his sister's order, at Clent, Worcestershire. This wicked sister, Quendreda (Cynefrith or Quoenthryth), wanted to be Queen of Mercia, but young Kenelm stood in the way.

Somewhere between 812 and 821, Quendreda bribed her brother’s tutor, Askbert (really), to take seven-year-old Kenelm on a hunting trip to the forest of Clent in Worcestershire, far from his home in Winchcombe, and whilst he was there to murder the boy. At this time, young Kenelm had a prophetic dream, as recorded by Jacobus de Voragine in The Golden Legend, or Lives of the Saints:

“And in this while, and at that same time, this young holy king was asleep, and dreamed a marvellous dream. For him seemed that he saw a tree stand by his bedside, and that the height thereof touched heaven, and it shined as bright as gold, and had fair branches full of blossoms and fruit. And on every branch of this tree were tapers of wax burning and lamps alight, which was a glorious sight to behold. And him thought that he climbed upon this tree and Askeberd his governor stood beneath and hewed down this tree that he stood on. And when this tree was fallen down, this holy young king was heavy and sorrowful, and him thought there came a fair bird which flew up to heaven with great joy. And anon after this dream he awoke, and was all abashed of this dreme, which anon after, he told to his nurse named Wolweline. And when he had told to her all his dream, she was full heavy, and told to him what it meant, and said his sister and the traitor Askeberd had falsely conspired his death. For she said to him that he had promised to Quendred to slay thee, and that signifieth that he smiteth down the tree that stood by thy bedside. And the bird that thou sawest flee up to heaven, signifieth thy soul, that angels shall bear up to heaven after thy martyrdom.”

The day of the hunt arrived, and Askbert and Kenelm made for the woods. After the exertions of the chase, the young lad soon tired with the heat and lay down under a tree for a nap. Askbert, meanwhile, began to dig a grave.

Askbert took out his sword to kill the boy, but Kenelm awoke and said “You think to kill me here in vain, for I shall be slain in another spot. In token, thereof, see this rod blossom”, and stuck his walking stick into the ground. Over the years, this grew to be a great ash tree, which was known as St. Kenelm's Ash. Askbert managed to slice off the boy's head, whereupon a white dove flew out of the boy's head and flew away.

Jacobus de Voragine:

“And anon, his soule was borne up into heaven in likeness of a white dove. And then the wicked traitor drew the body into a great valley between two hills, and there he made a deep pit and cast the body therein, and laid the head upon it. And whilst he was about to smite off the head, the holy king, kneeling on his knees, said this holy canticle: Te Deum laudamus, till he came to this verse: Te martyrum candidatus, and therewith he gave up his spirit to our Lord Jesu Christ in likeness of a dove, as afore is said.”

Askbert buried the prince’s body and went to tell the triumphant Quendreda of his success.

Jacobus de Voragine informs us,

“And it was so that a poor widow lived thereby, which had a white cow, which was driven in to the wood of Clent. And anon as she was there she would depart and go into the valley where Kenelm was buried, and there rest all the day sitting by the corpse without meat [food, grass]. And every night came home with other beasts, fatter, and gave more milk than any of the other kine [cattle], and so continued certain years, whereof the people marvelled that she ever was in so good point and ate no meat. That valley whereas Saint Kenelm's body lay is called Cowbage.”

The miracle of the dove

The murder was miraculously made known at Rome by the dove, which alighted at St Peter’s, bearing in its beak a scroll with the words

In Clent cow pasture, under a thorn,
Of head bereft, lies Kenelm, King-born.


[or, depending on source:
In Clent in Cowbage, Kenelm, king born,
Lieth under a thorn, His head off shorn.]


which it deposited on the high altar. Clerics tried to read, but they could not make it out, as it was written in English. At last, however, an Englishman was found, and he told them what it said. The Pope sent emissaries to England to discover the meaning, and before long the searchers found a grave under a thorn by a white cow. When the body was removed from the grave a light shone and healing water sprang from the ground – it became known as Saint Kenelm’s Well, and in time, a small village called Kenelmstowe sprang up around the site of his martyrdom ...

... Read the rest of the tale at the Scriptorium's articles department


Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email

*Ø* Blogmanac | NADER: Vote Kucinich in Primaries

"It's not too early to get to know the candidates, one of whom we'll
count on not only to get us out of the mess we're in in the U.S., but to
restore our peaceful relationships with others around the world."



NADER SAYS: Vote Kucinich in Primaries

Friday's Cleveland Plain Dealer reported:

"Consumer activist Ralph Nader, still undecided about running again as a third-party candidate, said yesterday that he is urging Democrats to vote for Rep. Dennis Kucinich in the presidential primaries next year...Unlike some of his rivals, Kucinich 'says publicly what he believes privately,' Nader said at a breakfast meeting with reporters. 'At this point, I am urging Democrats to vote for him in the primary.'

Info


IOWA LABOR LEADER: Kucinich is the Up-and-Comer

Sunday's Des Moines Register reported on remarks of Jan Corderman, president of Iowa's influential AFSCME union:

"I think that probably the up-and-comer...is Dennis Kucinich." Kucinich has "had a real presence here in Iowa recently" and has received an enthusiastic reception, said Corderman, whose 13,000-member union is the state's second largest. "Our folks are impressed with his position on issues," she said. "He's definitely a man of the people. But he's also
one that people need to hear more about."

Info


KUCINICH STILL CHALLENGING IRAQ WAR

Continuing his leadership on Capitol Hill in questioning Bush administration claims that led us to war, Rep. Kucinich held a news briefing Tuesday morning with former intelligence officers on the use (or misuse) of intelligence before the war in Iraq. Joining Kucinich was Ray McGovern, a former CIA analyst of 27 years who prepared the President's Daily Brief in the 1980s, and Andrew Wilkie, a senior intelligence analyst at Australia's Office of National Assessments until his resignation
a week before the Iraq war in protest of the way intelligence was used to justify Australia's support for the war.


KUCINICH FIGHTS FOR PEACE DIVIDEND

When Dennis Kucinich calls for more spending on healthcare, education and environmental cleanup to be paid by cutting the bloated military budget, he is often outnumbered on the campaign trail. (Howard Dean has challenged Kucinich on that stand.) He is also typically outnumbered in Congress, as Associated Press reported days ago:

"Though the defense bill accounts for about one-sixth of federal spending, it has generated little debate. After the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, lawmakers have been reluctant to deny the Pentagon the equipment it says it needs to defend the country. But Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, an anti-war Democratic presidential candidate, said the bill does little to make America safer. 'The only thing this Congress will take care of today are the profit-gouging defense contractors,' he said.


FUNDRAISING WAY UP

The Kucinich campaign has released its quarterly financial report, showing the biggest percentage jump in fundraising of any presidential campaign. We far exceeded expectations. Help us continue this momentum by making a donation here today.


WHY OUR CAMPAIGN KEEPS GROWING

Is it because the New York Times is covering us fairly or fully? No. It's because you keep circulating our email alerts to others on the Internet!

Find more info on the campaign here.

Wednesday, July 16, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | We Need a New Precedent!

From Lisa:

Swami's WORLD WIN Campaign to Elect Ourselves and Choose a New Precedent


We Need a New Precedent!

A Message From Swami Beyondananda:

Early this year, my inner voice told me loudly and clearly to campaign for President. Now my inner voice, like my outer
voice, speaks with a slight East Indian accent, and so is sometimes difficult to understand. When I recently replayed my inner messages, I realized the message was, "we need a new precedent."

Yes, in these unprecedented times, what we really need to do is set a new precedent -- and a new President will follow. Because if we only do things the way we've always done them, we'll only get what we've always gotten. Even a rat will stop pulling the lever when there is no more reward, and as an optimystic I have to believe we humans are smarter than rats.

So let's elect ourselves and choose a new precedent. In fact, while we're at it, let's choose a whole platform of precedents. And we can start with government of the people, by the people and for the people -- where the government actually does our bidding, not the bidding of the highest bidder. If that happened, it would be truly unprecedented.


Now Take the Democrats -- Please!

Yes, we have looked to the various political parties to make a change -- and we've been disappointed. Take the Democrats -- please. Ever since that electile dysfunction they suffered back in Florida, they just haven't been able to get an election, have they? And so, if we want to provide stiff opposition to the current fossilized fools in power, we must become the upstanding citizens our Founding Fathers intended -- and elect ourselves.


Let's Turn Those Devotees Into ... Votees

Years ago, many spiritual people got turned off to the dirty world of politics, and devoted themselves to finding inner peace. And they found it, which is great. But in a world with less and less outer peace, it is no longer appropriate for the peacekeepers to keep the peace to themselves. That is why we have launched our Blisskrieg and declared "all out peace." All of that peace we've been developing inside -- time to let it all out! And time for all of those devotees to
become ... votees.


Laughter Can Bring Down the Irony Curtain

And that is the mission of the Swami for Precedent campaign and the Right-to-Laugh Party -- to turn the devotees into votees, to give the "silenced majority" a voice, to awaken a slumbering body politic, and to use the magic of laughter to lift the Irony Curtain which separates the people from the truth. In response to the laugh-threateningseriousness we face thanks to both terrorism and the war on terrorism, we think it's time for a real political "party" -- and that is our slogan, "One big party, everyone is invited ... all for fun, and fun for all!"


What If We Used One B2 ... To Be One?

And if we're going to invite everyone to the party, we must make sure there are enough refreshments to go around. I don't know about you, but I don't think it's any fun to fight over a few crumbs. It's way more fun to bake a bigger pie. That is why, the Right-to-Laugh Party is offering a radically ridiculous idea ... what if we took a small portion of the resources we currently use on behalf of death and destruction, and used it for mass construction instead? Talk about raising the laugh-expectancy on the planet. What if we took the $2 billion we now spend on each B2 bomber, and
used it to create something that benefit all? What if we used one B2 ... to be One?


The Manhelpin Project -- A World Win Campaign

During World War II, America focused all its resources on the Manhattan Project -- a team to develop the first atomic bomb. What we need now is a Manhelpin Project -- renewable, nonpolluting energy so abundant we don't need armies to protect it. Instead of the fear-based emergency mentality, we must encourage a love-based emerge `n see policy that will ultimately result in way more fun for way more people. It will be a World Win campaign where the whole world wins!

Are you following me? Well, please don't follow so closely. I get a little paranoid when I think I'm being followed,
especially these days.


Join the Right-To-Laugh Party, and We'll Laugh Ourselves In

So please join my World Win Campaign to elect a new precedent.

Elect to vote, and vote every day with your dollars and attention.

Join the Right-to-Laugh Party (see below).

Practice random acts of comedy designed to heal the heart and free the mind, and report back to us.

Don't get even -- get odd! Each of us is one-of-a-kind, so you are totally unique, just like everyone else. Once you
realize how odd you truly are, you will lose all interest in getting even. Entertain that odd possibility that we humans were actually meant to evolve in consciousness, and now is the time. Why? Because it is too late to do it sooner.


© Copyright 2003 by Steve Bhaerman. All rights reserved. May be re-printed and recirculated with proper attribution
only. Please include copyright statement and the following: To find out more about Swami's Right-To-Laugh campaign,
call toll free at (800) SWAMI-BE or find him online here.

*Ø* Blogmanac | High hopes for injection centres
"A scientific report into the trial of a heroin injecting room in Sydney's Kings Cross, has found the centre saves lives. The report has been embraced by the New South Wales Government, which is planning to extend it."
Source


*Ø* Blogmanac July 16 | Voudon pilgrimage of Saut D’Eau, Haiti


Today, thousands of Voudon (Voodoo) believers from Haiti and abroad will make a pilgrimage to the sacred waters of Saut D’Eau, a waterfall (pictured at right) where Erzulie Freda (pictured below) – the Voudon spirit of love, art, romance and sex – appeared twice in the 19th century.

Freda is a beautiful, wealthy white woman, a promiscuous love goddess-seductress, difficult and demanding, who loves luxurious items such as perfume, champagne and gold. Her sister, the dark-skinned Erzulie Dantor, is the spirit of motherly love, cognate of Saint Barbara Africana in the Roman Catholic Church. Dantor is heterosexual in the sense that she has a child, but she is also the patron loa, or saint, of lesbians. When Erzulie Dantor appears at a ceremony via possession, she speaks a stuttering monosyllable, “ke-ke-ke-ke-ke!”.


Origins of the religion
Where and how did Voudon originate? There are numerous explanations, including one that proposes that the earliest slaves in the West Indies, Yoruba people who had come from the West African regions of Dahomey, and parts of modern Togo, Benin and Nigeria, brought with them a faith in a powerful fetish and guardian spirit called Vodo.

Another possible derivation of the word comes from a medieval evangelist named Peter Waldo, or Valdez, who lived in Lyons in France at around the end of the eleventh century. Valdez, appalled by the extravagant practices of the Church of his time, saw it as his mission to re-establish the Church to its pristine state in which followers of Christ sold their goods and gave the proceeds to the poor, as exhorted by Jesus. Soon he was teaching a religion that included esoteric and occult elements.

Valdez gained adherents who called themselves after their leader. However, before long their name became corrupted and known as Waldenses, or Waldensians, or, in French, Vaudois.

Naturally enough, the Roman Catholic Church vehemently opposed the new sect and denounced it as satanic sorcery. In the name of Jesus, they persecuted the Waldenses, finally massacring large numbers of them in the 12th and 13th centuries. However, this was not before the Waldenses had gained adherents in far-off regions of France. It was one of the precursors of the Protestant Reformation, and also experienced a revival in the sixteenth century.

In 1677 Spain ceded Haiti to France and soon Roman Catholic missionaries travelled to the West Indian island to convert its people. Angered by their religions, the priests identified them with the heretical sect of the Waldenses and applied their name, in the Creole dialect, to those Haitians. (Many Voudon priests were martyred or imprisoned, their shrines destroyed, because of the threat they posed to Euro-Christian/Muslim colonialism.) Eventually ‘Vaudois’ changed to become finally voodoo, the name that, with various spellings, we know today.

Today, some 60 million people worldwide practise the old religion, and similar religions such as Umbanda, Quimbanda, Santeria and Candomble are widespread in South America and elsewhere. Voudon, like these others, is often portrayed rather ignorantly in popular culture as some kind of evil cult, a misperception which is quite far from the truth and derives from historical colonialist dynamics.



Each voodoo god has a symbol known as a vèvè, and this is Erzulie Freda's



Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email




Peter Waldo, or Valdez
Waldenses, or Waldensians
Erzulie Freda Shrine (commercial)
Erzulie Freda banners
African symbols
Erzulie Dantor rite
Henna symbols
Erzulie Dantor magic
Dark goddesses in Voudon
How to Spell V-o-d-o-u
Useful links
More
Voudon FAQs
African-based religions

Tuesday, July 15, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac July 15 | Rainy days ahead?



Feast day of St Swithin (Swithun)


Watch the weather today

Our story today takes us back more than a millennium, to the days when the British Isles were beset by Viking raids and Charlemagne’s empire ruled supreme in Europe. St Swithin (or Swithun) was Bishop of Winchester, England, and adviser to King Egbert of Wessex (died 839) and probably tutor to his son Ethelwulf. He was called the ‘drunken saint’, but no such behaviour is recorded of him.

Swithin was the one who introduced tithing into England: he persuaded King Ethelwulf to enact a law, by which he gave a tenth of his land to the church, on condition that the king should be prayed for every Wednesday in every church forever. Among other remarkable feats, Swithin once restored broken eggs.

Swithin’s consecration by Ceolnoth, Archbishop of Canterbury, seems to have taken place on 30 October, 852. We don’t know the date of his birth, but he died on July 2, 862.

An old English legend says that the good bishop wished to be buried in the churchyard of the cathedral, in a humble grave outside the north wall, so that the ‘sweet rain of heaven might fall upon his grave’. Nine years later his monks tried to move his remains inside the cathedral but there was a violent thunderstorm for the following 40 days and 40 nights. Believing their beloved late bishop to be weeping in distress, they abandoned the venture. Miraculously, two rings of iron, fastened on his gravestone, came out as soon as they were touched, and left no mark of their place in the stone. When the stone was taken up, and touched by the rings, by themselves they fastened to it again.

A century passed and 971 came around (the year Eric Bloodaxe became the second king of Norway, by the way, not that Eric has anything to do with our tale, sorry, but it’s such a great handle). Swithin was canonized (declared a saint – St Swithin was never actually canonised by a pope; he is a ‘home-made saint’) and, following a vision by St Aethelwold (909- 984), the monks decided to honour him by placing his body in the Winchester Cathedral choir rather than outside amongst the common folks’ graves. So….

They booked July 15 for the ceremony of the ‘translation’ of his relics (bones), and this time it was successful. His head is in one part of the cathedral and his body in another. Oh, and one of his arms ended up in St Svithun’s Cathedral at Stavanger, Norway.

St Swithin’s shrine was destroyed during the Reformation and a new one was dedicated in 1962. Various miracles have been performed at the tomb, such as the cure of a hunchback, and of a man with a “grievous ailment in his eyes”. Or so it is said.

Swithin is appropriately patron of drought relief; of Stavenger, England, and of Winchester.

How did St Swithin's legend come about?
Possibly there was an even more ancient tradition relating to a day about this time of year and we note the pervasiveness of similar customs in Europe. Other rain prognostication days in Europe include: St Médard's Day (June 8), France; Saints Gervais and Protais (June 19), St Godelieve, Belgium (July 6); the Seven Sleepers, Germany (July 27). Keep watching the Almanac for these.

Examination of the meteorological records of England reveals the legend to be fallacious. Nineteenth-century British folklorist Robert Chambers found that between 1841 and 1860, a dry St Swithin's day was actually more likely to have the larger number of succeeding wet days! Those who believe in this superstition ignore the fact that it is based upon the dating of the Julian calendar and therefore could not hold for 40 days from the current July 15, which is based on the Gregorian year, a calendar that Britain did not adopt until 1752.

Rain today “blesses and christens the apples”. Apples should not be picked or eaten before this day. All apples growing at this time will ripen and come to maturity.

To mark St Swithin's Day, you could read more international weather wisdom, featuring such gems as "snow is due when the cat washes behind both ears". Or you can sing (and play) along to Billy Bragg's musical ode.
Today’s weather

*Ø* Blogmanac | Viva la France!

BUSHOUT (Blog en français)

Pour une coalition mondiale pour que Bush ne soit pas réélu en 2004


I guess it was bound to happen. I suppose I shouldn't be surprised. And I wasn't prepared for the double-take I did when I saw this blog. My eyes bugged out and my jaw hit the floor--just like in the cartoons! It's nice to know we have a coalition working along with us made up of people around the world, but I can't help it . . . it's also pretty darned FUNNY!!!

No. It's not a joke. BUSHOUT, The Blog, is absolutely serious and it has been created especially to build a coalition of French-speaking people to work actively to make sure that W is not re-(s)elected in 2004! I don't know if its creators are from France, from Quebec, another French-speaking country or the U.S., but I hope wherever they are they are able to appeal to all French-speaking voters in America. Bon chance!!

For any of our readers who are or who know French-speaking people, by all means make this an action and bring it to the attention of as many people as possible.

Source

Monday, July 14, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac July 14, 1912 | Happy birthday, Woody Guthrie!
Woody Guthrie, American folk singer/songwriter (This Land is Your Land)

This song is almost always sung as a patriotic song, which is why the last three stanzas are usually deleted. Most schoolchildren aren't even aware of their existence, yet they are essential to the song's meaning.

This Land is Your Land (in D)
Woody Guthrie

CHORUS: This land is your land, this land is my land
From California to the New York island
From the Redwood forest to the Gulf Stream waters
This land was made for you and me

As I was walking that ribbon of highway
I saw above me that endless skyway
I saw below me that golden valley
This land was made for you and me

I roamed and rambled and followed my footsteps
O'er the sparkling sands of her diamond deserts
While all around me, a voice was saying
This land was made for you and me

When the sun came shining and I was strolling
And the wheat fields waving and the dust clouds rolling
As the fog was lifting, a voice was chanting
This land was made for you and me

As I went walking, I saw a sign there
On the sign it said NO TRESPASSING
But on the other side it didn't say nothing
That side was made for you and me!

In the squares of the city, in the shadow of the steeple
In the relief office, I seen my people;
As they stood there hungry I stood there asking,
Is this land made for you and me?

Nobody living can ever stop me
As I go walking that freedom highway
Nobody living can make me turn back
This land was made for you and me.

*Ø* Blogmanac July 14 | Fête Nationale, France: Happy Bastille Day!
1789 The Fall of the Bastille

Rien. (Nothing.)
Diary entry by King Louis XVI on July 14, 1789


When the revolutionary mob stormed the French prison they were surprised to find most of the cells empty but for the miserable scratchings of prisoners on the walls. Only seven prisoners were resident, under the relatively (for his time) lenient penal policies of King Louis XIV. Among those inmates, Marquis de Sade is believed to have triggered the assault by crying that people were being executed inside.

Three of the prisoners were old men, legitimately incarcerated; two of these had become insane, no doubt because of the horrible conditions in the cells. The other four prisoners had been in the Bastille for only four years each, for various crimes such as forgery. The seven were paraded through the streets as heroes, though the revolutionaries must have been disappointed that they did not have more to show off.

It was widely believed at the time and for years afterwards, that the wasted body of the celebrated Man in the Iron Mask had been found there, with the mask still on his skull.

Held for over forty years in various prisons during the reign of King Louis XIV, the Man in the Iron Mask was an unknown prisoner. When travelling from prison to prison, he always wore a mask of velvet, not iron. He was buried as ‘M. de Marchiel’, but his true identity has never been revealed. One suggestion was that he was the Duc de Vermandois, an illegitimate son of Louis XIV.

Alexandre Dumas in his romantic novel suggested that he was an illegitimate elder brother of the king, with Cardinal Mazarin his father – a suggestion originally made by Voltaire.

Lord Acton, the British historian, suggested a minister of the Duke of Mantua, who, in his negotiations with the king, was found to be treacherous and imprisoned at Pignerol.

Whenever he was moved, he was diguised with a velvet and whalebone mask, though it entered the popular imagination that this mysterious, unknown character, was masked with iron. He died on November 19, 1703. His dungeon was scraped to the stone, and his doors and windows burned, lest any inscribed message get out to the world and thus reveal his identity, and Louis's great cruelty to the representative of another state.


Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email



Bastille Day (Fête Nationale), France (public holiday)
Célêbraté with Frênçh rècipés
Bastille Day e-cards

*Ø* Blogmanac | Australia to Become Nuclear Power
"Australia has the option of becoming a nuclear power through a deal with the United States. It has been claimed Australia will gain nuclear weapons and atomic expertise in the deal.

"A former government science adviser says the new Au$600 million nuclear reactor will ensure Australia has the capability to start a nuclear weapons program.

"In the event of a regional crisis, Australia will have access to tactical nuclear weapons from the US. This deal is Australia's insurance in case the US does not come to Australia's aid in the event of war."
Source

*Ø* Blogmanac | Speculation about Chilean Beach "blob" over
"Chilean scientists have made a positive identification of the gelatinous carcass of a sea creature that washed up on a beach around three weeks ago.

"A DNA analysis was not required for final identification after dermal glands in samples that belong only to sperm whales, the largest toothed whale, and the deepest diver of all whale species.

"As the carcass of a sperm whale decomposes, it literally becomes a "skeleton suspended in a semi-liquid mass within a bag of skin and blubber" that mass eventually splits and the skeleton sinks leaving only the blubber and skin afloat."
Source

*Ø* Blogmanac | 20 Lies About the "War"

"Falsehoods ranging from exaggeration to plain untruth were used to make the case for war. More lies are being used in the aftermath."

Read the list from Independent.co.uk

Sunday, July 13, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | DON'T DUB ME, DUBYA



"And reading or watching news of this decision isn't raising as much ire, eh?"

PM calls off medal ceremony in US
By Oonagh Blackman and Paul Gilfeather, July 12, 2003

TONY BLAIR has ditched plans to receive a "thank you" medal from President Bush next week for backing the war on Iraq.

The Prime Minister and the President scrapped the ceremony as it would have triggered a furious backlash in Britain where controversy over the war is raging.

Mr Blair is engulfed in a growing crisis over the legality of the war and the Daily Mirror can reveal American officials have had intensive talks with the PM's aides over the past week.

Pictures of a smiling Mr Blair having the Congressional Gold Medal pinned on him by President Bush would have been beamed around the world at a time when British and American soldiers are still losing their lives in Iraq.

It would have been a public relations catastrophe and stirred up fresh fury in the Labour ranks. Democrats in the US have also fiercely opposed the idea of a medal as they have branded the war illegal and accused President Bush of misleading the American public.

Mr Blair arrives in Washington on Thursday to make a speech to Congress, a rare honour for a foreign leader. The Washington visit is the first leg of a round-the-world trip by Mr Blair and his wife Cherie.

The PM's official spokesman said: "The Prime Minister will address a joint meeting of Congress and have talks with President Bush. But there will be no presentation of a medal."

When asked why the ceremony was scrapped the No10 official said: "That process is still going through in the US. It has to go to the Senate first and then to the House of Representatives."

Mr Blair is hugely popular in the US for backing the war, but his close links with the right-wing Republican president have infuriated his own Party.

Yesterday ex-Defence Minister Peter Kilfoyle said: "Personally for Mr Blair it is preferable for him not to be seen to be getting this medal.

"It would have played as a huge negative for people in the Party."

The PM will fly on to Tokyo, Seoul, Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong.

Source

[My question regarding ". . . a furious backlash in Britain where controversy over the war is raging" above: How can Americans possibly be so cold and crass and self-serving as to have so little outrage over our own part in the unjust debacle of violence called 'the war in Iraq'? -v]

*Ø* Blogmanac | Oh, Shrub! Prez opens mouth to change feet



Did you hear Shrub's parting words to the African people? I suppose he was concentrating so hard on not calling Africa 'Asia', and calling it a continent and not a country, but is that really an excuse?

His farewell speech to Africa closed with:

God bless Africa! And God continue to bless America!



Imagine you go to the house of some desperately poor neighbours. You rock up in a chauffeur-driven Mercedes and wearing an Armani suit that their kids made in the sweatshop you set up next door. The lives of your neighbours are beset by starvation, domestic violence, fatal diseases and premature death of loved ones. Mother and father both have AIDS. Junior died of injuries last week -- from a weapon made in your factory.

After walking around outside to survey your lakes of oil and vast reserves of diamonds underneath their weed-infested garden -- you come inside, eat their food, tell them what a great place they have and what a shame it is that you and your people have never visited before and never will again. However, you'll be sending some people round to advise on how to spend their last $7.00.

Then you part with these choice words of Christian love and brotherhood:

God bless you! And God continue to bless me!



Oh, Shrub! You really are more of a deadshit than we ever knew.

*Ø* Blogmanac July 13 | Feast of the Miracles, Brussels, Belgium


The 19th-Century English folklorist, Robert Chambers (The Book of Days), told of a quaint annual celebration in Brussels.

If a Sunday, the fiesta started on July 13, or the first Sunday after the 13th, and it went for 15 days. On the first day, there was a procession of the Holy Sacrament of the Miracles. This consisted of three consecrated wafers, with a miraculous, albeit anti-Semitic, story behind them.

In 1369 there lived at Enghein, in Hainault, Belgium, a rich Jew named Jonathan, who paid another Jew, a poor man named Jean de Louvain, to steal some wafers from the Church of St Catherine in Brussels, for the purpose of using them in an anti-Christian ceremony. For his sins, Jonathan died soon after the theft, murdered by person or persons unknown. His widow gave the wafers to a group of Jews who used them in a defiling ceremony on Good Friday, 1370.

With “horrid imprecations” they ceremoniously stabbed the wafers with poniards. To their amazement, blood flowed from the wafers. The Jews were exposed, and burned at the stake on May 22, 1370. Three of the original 16 wafers were restored to the clergy of St Guduli, where they have remained as sacred objects ever since. They have worked miracles, and even stopped a plague in 1529. Or, so it is said.


Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email


Medieval Anti-Semitism
Today’s Special on the Menu of Hate

*Ø* Blogmanac Uniting Church president hits out over Iraq war, Tampa

"The retiring president of the Uniting Church in Australia has launched a scathing attack on the Howard Government and the Federal Opposition, over their handling of the Iraq war and the Tampa crisis.

"He says the nation's democracy is under attack.

"The Reverend Professor James Haire says information that is emerging casting doubts on the existence of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction points to a self created serial ignorance among the nation's political leaders.

"Professor Haire says what is emerging from the lead up to the Iraq war demonstrates yet again the abysmal moral standards within the United States, United Kingdom and Australia.

"He has described Australia's foreign, immigration and welfare policy as rotten, and says the lack of a credible federal opposition is as much to blame as the government."

Source

*Ø* Blogmanac | Rubber (?) dollies: the Hulk with the Bulk


Shocked six-year-old Leah Lowland checked out a mystery bulge on her 'Incredible Hulk' doll - and uncovered a giant green willy. Curious Leah noticed a lump after winning the monster (catchphrase “You wouldn’t like me when I’m angry”) at a seaside fair.

When she peeled off the green comic-book character’s ripped purple shorts, she found the two-inch manhood beneath them. Horrified Leah immediately ran to mum Kim and reported the find.

Kim has called for a ban on the saucy toy. She said: “A hulk with a bulk like this just shouldn’t be allowed."

Story from the Sun

*Ø* Blogmanac | Rubber dickies: Giant condom a record?
BEIJING, China (Reuters) -- One size fits ALL?

"A bright yellow condom covered the facade of a 20-storey, phallic-shaped hotel in the southern Chinese city of Guilin to mark U.N. World Population Day in the most populous nation on the globe ...

"The Guilin Latex Company has applied to the publishers of the Guinness Book of World Records to recognize their giant condom, 80 meters (260 ft) tall and nearly 100 meters (330 ft) around, as the world's biggest, the Xinhua news agency said."

Source

*Ø* Blogmanac | Rubber duckies head for land after 11-year odyssey


"Thousands of rubber ducks and other bath-time toys are due to become the unlikely allies of oceanographers 11 years after they were cast overboard from a container ship en route from China to Seattle.

"The floating flock of 29,000 ducks and their companions - turtles, beavers and frogs - is heading for the New England coast, bleached and battered after a journey around the Arctic. Oceanographers say the trip has taught them valuable lessons about the ocean's currents."
Source

Saturday, July 12, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | Forced fatherhood a la Aussie
This is a big issue and all-too-common experience for men in Australia, whether the exploiters be lesbians or just women wanting a baby. Men are required to pay the woman 18 per cent of their gross pay -- equivalent to about 32 per cent of their take-home pay -- for 18 years. It will happen whether the male wanted a child or not, and regardless of any of the circumstances of the sexual intercourse, including what the woman told him at the time, even if she claimed to be infertile, post-menopausal or on contraception. I know from experience.

"A VICTORIAN man who donated his sperm in the 'usual and customary manner' - by having sex with a lesbian - has been found liable to pay child support.

"Despite the man and the lesbian couple agreeing the sperm donor would have no legal rights or financial responsibilities to the child, the Family Court found the man was responsible because the baby was conceived through sex.

"Had the father, known only as ND, supplied his sperm through artificial means, or had his child been adopted, he would not be liable for the financial rearing of the child.

"The judgment, which upheld an earlier Melbourne magistrate's decision that ND be assessed to pay maintenance, was yesterday labelled 'outrageous' by men's groups."

Source

Choice for Men: Forced Fatherhood & Reproductive Rights

You know those golf days?


Don't you hate that? You've finished a round with your mates, you're on the way back to the '19th hole' for a quick one before the missus starts phoning the clubhouse, and suddenly, out of the corner of your eye, you notice some dead saint in one of the hazards.

Click the thumb

*Ø* Blogmanac July 12 | Feast of St Veronica


Saint Veronica derives from a late-medieval legend. She was supposedly a woman of Jerusalem; when Christ passed carrying the cross, she wiped his face of sweat and blood with her veil. His image stayed on the cloth, which became Vera-Icon (Latin: true image). She thus became St Veronica. The cloth is a relic at St Peter's, Rome.

In bullfighting the most classic movement with the cape is called Veronica, as the cape is swung slowly before the face of the beast, like Veronica's wiping of Christ's face.

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


He is a singular character – a young man with much of wild original nature remaining in him; and so far as he is sophisticated, it is in a way and method of his own. He is ugly as sin, long-nosed, queer-mouthed, and with uncouth and somewhat rustic, although courteous manners, corresponding very well with such an exterior. But his ugliness is of an honest and agreeable fashion, and becomes him much better than beauty.
Nathaniel Hawthorne, American writer, on Thoreau

Our life is frittered away by detail. Simplify, simplify.
Henry David Thoreau

1817 Henry David Thoreau, American tax resister, essayist and author, most famous for Walden and his treatise on civil disobedience.

If a thousand men were not to pay their tax-bills this year, that would not be a violent and bloody measure, as it would be to pay them, and enable the State to commit violence and shed innocent blood. This is, in fact, the definition of a peaceable revolution, if any such is possible.
Henry David Thoreau

I wanted to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life, to live so sturdily and Spartan-like as to put to rout all that was not life, to cut a broad swath and shave close, to drive life into a corner, and reduce it to its lowest terms, and, if it proved to be mean, why then to get the whole and genuine meanness of it, and publish its meanness to the world; or if it were sublime, to know it by experience, and be able to give a true account of it.
Henry David Thoreau, "Where I Lived, and What I Lived for," from Walden; or, Life in the Woods


“Hailed by some as the first environmentalist, Thoreau was a profound philosopher on the human condition. His essay Civil Disobedience was inspirational for Tolstoy and Mohandas Gandhi.

Walden published in 1854, details two years and two months lived in the second growth forest around the shores of beautiful Walden Pond, not far from his friends and family in Concord. Thoreau embarked on the two-year experiment in simple living on July 4, 1845 ...

“He was a student and friend of Ralph Waldo Emerson and a Transcendentalist." Source: Wikipedia

NPR: Thoreau's Walden, Present at the Creation

Shop Thoreau

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


1895 Richard Buckminster Fuller, American writer, visionary and engineer

“In 1927, at the age of 32, Buckminster Fuller stood on the shores of Lake Michigan, prepared to throw himself into the freezing waters. His first child had died. He was bankrupt, discredited and jobless, and he had a wife and new-born daughter. On the verge of suicide, it suddenly struck him that his life belonged, not to himself, but to the universe. He chose at that moment to embark on what he called “an experiment to discover what the little, penniless, unknown individual might be able to do effectively on behalf of all humanity.” Over the next fifty-four years, he proved, time and again, that his most controversial ideas were practical and workable.



“During the course of his remarkable experiment he:

•was awarded 25 U.S. patents
•authored 28 books
•received 47 honorary doctorates in the arts, science, engineering and the humanities
•received dozens of major architectural and design awards including, among many others, the Gold Medal of the American Institute of Architects and the Gold Medal of the Royal Institute of British Architects
•created work which found itself into the permanent collections of museums around the world
•circled the globe 57 times, reaching millions through his public lectures and interviews.

Source: Buckminster Fuller Institute (listed in Planet Directory)

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


More news on J-9
Some readers will know that the surgery that our Blogmanac team member, J-9, underwent today was very serious. I'm happy to report that I've spoken to her and, although she's in more pain than she was prepared for, she is alive, joking and taking a fantastic atitude into a bright future.

Keep smiling, J-9! Lots of people care for you and are sending good wishes.

News on J-9
Our Blogmanac team member Jeannine (J-9) Wilson is in surgery as I write. We all wish her brightest blessings for this important operation.

*Ø* Blogmanac July 11 | World Population Day

The theme of this year’s World Population Day, “One billion adolescents: the right to health, information and services”, highlights the need to support young people in their efforts to lead safe, rewarding lives and contribute to the well-being of their families and communities.
Throughout the world, millions of girls and boys are deprived of an education, harming their individual prospects and those of society at large …

From Message of the UN Secretary-General, Kofi Annan July 11, 2003



More than 1.3 billion people living in absolute poverty have a right to better lives. The challenge is to improve living standards without destroying the environment. Environmental destruction, along with natural disasters had created 25 million environmental refugees by 1998. Immediate problems include increasing population pressure, food shortages, water scarcity, desertification, deforestation, extinction of plants and animals, global warming, reduced fish catches and health risks from pollution.

World Population Day 2003
Population Issues Overview

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


July 11, 1995 The killing days at Srebrenica began.
In Europe’s most horrific case of genocide and gendercide since WWII, at least 7,000 Muslim men and boys were massacred almost under the watchful eyes of United Nations troops. Perhaps if it wasn’t for the tenacity and courage of journalist David Rohde of the Christian Science Monitor, the story would not have got out to the world.

Chat to Google

Friday, July 11, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | DIO knew of Iraq doubts



"The Australian Defence Intelligence Organisation (DIO) admits it knew of doubts about intelligence reports concerning Iraq's nuclear weapons program.

"The DIO is the third government organisation to admit it knew claims that Iraq was trying to source weapons-grade uranium from Africa were possibly false before Prime Minister John Howard mentioned the allegations in a speech to Parliament ..."
Source (links to more items concerning the Australian government's lies)

* Ø * Ø * Ø *



Pentagon says Lynch not shot .... durrr
"A US military draft report into the rescue of Private Jessica Lynch in Iraq has confirmed the young American soldier was neither shot nor stabbed during her capture.

"Nineteen-year-old Jessica Lynch ... was hailed a hero after her rescue, with reports she had fought back even though she had suffered broken arms, a broken leg and multiple gunshot wounds.

"The Pentagon did not confirm the information but did not dispel it." Source

Way back on May 18, we at the Blogmanac blogged this story and this one on how they pitched the Private Ryan ... err ... Lynch ... bullshit. The Pentagon sure is quick to start invading and slow to stop evading. Don't they read the Blogmanac?

*Ø* Blogmanac July 11, 1881 | Prince George meets the Flying Dutchman


A strange red light as of a phantom ship all aglow, in the midst of which light the mast, spars and sails of a brig 200 yards distant stood out in strong relief … on arriving there, no vestige nor any sign whatever of any material ship was to be seen either near or right away to the horizon, the night being clear and the sea calm. Thirteen persons altogether saw her.Words used by England’s future King George V to describe the phantom ship Flying Dutchman, which he claimed to have seen on July 11, 1881

She is distinguished from earthly vessels by bearing a press of sail when other vessels are unable, from stress of weather, to show an inch of canvas.
Sir Walter Scott, on the phantom ship Flying Dutchman

Sixteen-year-old Prince George, the future King George V (June 3, 1865 - January 20, 1936) of the United Kingdom, as a young midshipman on HMS Bacchante, wrote in his journal that he had seen that day the phantom ship, the Flying Dutchman off the port bow.

With George was the heir to the throne, his elder brother, the mentally deficient Prince Albert Victor Christian Edward (Eddie) who later mysteriously died before becoming king, much to the relief of the British Royal Family. Eddie, who was later a modern and unlikely suspect in the Jack the Ripper case, also recorded in his journal the sighting of the Dutchman which was seen by thirteen witnesses including the lookout on the Bacchante’s forecastle (who fell and died within seven hours, it is said), and the officer of the watch.

The ghost ship was also sighted by people on board HMS Cleopatra and HMS Tourmaline in the squadron, which was commanded by Prince Louis of Battenberg, great uncle of the present Prince Philip. Prince George , with the help of his tutor, Reverend John Neale Dalton, published his account as The Cruise Of HMS Bacchante, 1879-1882, (London: Macmillan and Co., 1886).

According to which source one trusts, the spectral event occurred either between Melbourne and Sydney, Australia or near the Cape of Good Hope, South Africa.

Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email



What is the Flying Dutchman?
“Several hundred years ago, in the year 1729 to be exactly, there lived a Dutch sea captain of fearsome temperament. With his ship he sailed through the stormiest seas, and fared the hardest routes. One day however, despite all his efforts, a storm prevented him from rounding the steep cliffs of a headland. He swore to the Devil that he would never give in to Nature, and that he would sail on until he rounded the headland, even if it took him till Judgment Day. The Devil took the Captain at his word and dammed him, that he must stay as captain of his ship, now a ghostship, sailing the seas, until Judgment Day should come. The Devil left him just one small hope. Only through the love of a woman could he be released.” Source

*Ø* Blogmanac | Retraction
From www.truthout.org: Capitol Hill Blue Retracts Story
"Yesterday, truthout's lead story carried an article by Capitol Hill Blue that quoted a 'CIA insider.' This insider, a Terrance J. Wilkinson, was reportedly present at two briefings when Bush was informed of and then dismissed, evidence that his Iraq WMD claims were false. Capitol Hill Blue has run a retraction of that story.
According to Doug Thompson, author of the original story, Terrance J. Wilkinson does not exist and Thompson has been getting scammed for over 20 years. Something about this story is decidedly strange but in light of Thompson's retraction, we would be remiss not to run it." [And so would I - Nora] Read here

The fact remains that the National Security Council said on Tuesday that President Bush's claim in his State of the Union address - that Iraq tried to buy uranium from Niger - was based on forged documentation. The White House statement fanned a smouldering controversy over whether the U.S. and British governments manipulated intelligence about weapons of mass destruction to make the case for war against Iraq.
Source

*Ø* Blogmanac | Bush and Africa’s black gold


The Times - Although billed as an attempt to extend the hand of friendship to a neglected continent, President Bush’s five nation African safari is widely being seen as an effort to ensure US access to Africa’s burgeoning pot of black gold. Sub-Saharan Africa is enjoying an unprecedented oil exploration and production boom that is expected to transform the region from a modest producer to a key supplier over the next decade.

As head of a task force on future oil supplies, Dick Cheney, the US Vice-President, predicted two years ago that the region would become the fastest-growing source of energy for America. But the scale of the region’s untapped resources has taken everyone by surprise.

The US already imports about 15 per cent of its annual oil requirements from the Gulf of Guinea. This is expected to exceed 25 per cent by 2015, significantly reducing America’s dependence on the volatile Middle East.

Source

Thursday, July 10, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | If Shrub kills Hicks, why not kill all Germans?

More on Hicks and Habib
As reported here on July 4 (below), two Australian citizens have been held for 20 months without trial in the USA's Guantanamo camp. Currently, it is quite a widely debated issue in Australia, and not a few of the pundits are in favour of the US doing to Hicks (Habib's name rarely comes up, presumably because he's a sand nigger) anything it wants.

Commonly, media gurus refer to "9-11" when mentioning Hicks. It's a red herring. Hicks was caught on the battlefield of Afghanistan while defending that country from US invasion. Perhaps one day the USA will charge him with something; such a scenario seems likely now. It also is apparent that he will be tried by a military court and face a death penalty, a barbaric practice still used mainly by some Communist, Muslim and American states, discarded long ago by civilized nations, even for the most heinous criminals.

Some of the dumber of the Aussie pundits are saying Hicks supported the Taliban and thus deserves to die. They keep referring to the Taliban as having refused to hand over Osama bin Laden. How long will this myth last? For the record, the Taliban did offer to hand over bin Laden, but not to America, knowing that the USA has a madman in power. They offered him up to the World Court, but America refused to accept this perfectly reasonable offer. Instead, they want control of 'enemies' just as they want control over everything else in the world, and they'd like to subject bin Laden to the torture to which they are subjecting 600-plus Muslims in Guantanamo as I write.

Australia's government stands condemned for allowing Big Brother USA to put an Australian citizen through this traumatic set of circumstances. Those who assert that David Hicks "deserves whatever the Yanks throw at him" must fall silent when asked why it is that America has not threatened to execute soldiers who fought against them in Vietnam, Korea, World War II and any theatre of war one can name. Why single out captives from Muslim nations? War is war. Are we now to accept, among America's many other crimes against human rights, that captured soldiers are to be shot?

Australians would do well to remember that Texas, under the governorship of that dumb, slimy killer, George W Bush, had the world's highest rate of murdering prisoners, apart from Communist China. Let's keep the pressure on our own slime, John Howard et al, and make sure that no Aussies get electrocuted or shot by the Bush regime!

On the other hand, if they murder David, let's start demanding that Aussies, Poms and Yanks trawl the world for every hun, nip, gook, towelhead and dago who ever shouldered a rifle against the "Good Guys" in all wars, and that we arrest and execute all of them. They could be buried in the kind of mass grave that George's daddy had thousands of Iraqis bulldozed into (some still alive) on the Highway to Hell in 1991.

And if Shrub's cabal kills Habib, let's not mention it. He's a Muslim, after all.

Postcript: Britain has a similar thing going on.

*Ø* Blogmanac July 10 | Lady Godiva Day, Coventry, England


Who was the naked lady on the horse?
Lady Godiva – Godgyfu as her name was originally – really did exist and was a Saxon noblewoman and patron of the arts, married to Leofric, Duke of Mercia in England. The couple moved to Coventry, Warwickshire, from Shrewsbury, Shropshire (where Leofric had earned his fortune and title from the mutton trade). It is known that Leofric began spending large amounts of taxpayers’ money, as politicians are wont to do, on grandiose public works, while the people of Coventry, as people are wont to do, lived in poverty.

The legend says that Godiva, generous and strong?willed, was outraged at a poll or tax that Leofric was planning to levy on the people of Coventry, and she persistently asked him to lift the imposition, or at least use the money for the provision of works of art that the peasants might enjoy. Leofric laughed so much that he injured his left wrist slightly as he fell off his stool in the hall of the village burghers. However, the nouveau-riche gentleman offered her a deal: if his wife would ride naked on horseback through the town, then he would agree to waive the tax.

“The ancient Greeks, he pointed out, and those coarser Romans as well, viewed the nude human body as one of the highest expressions of the perfection of Nature. Nudity was not seen as erotic in any sense, but as purity, and a celebration of the wonderful form of a sensuous being displayed in all its marvelous glory for the betterment and appreciation of those enlightened enough to consider this aesthetic. To present a well formed nude body as an object of great beauty, even art, would be to offer a lesson of inestimable value to the simple peasants of Coventry, whose experiences and perceptions had never been enlightened to appreciate such perfection.

“If Lady Godiva truly believed in the crusade she was promoting, then she should lead it herself, and offer to the citizens of Coventry an example of the glorious beauty to be understood by careful consideration of a perfect nude human body.” Source

The earliest record of the Godiva legend, written a century after the supposed event, states:

"Ascend," he said, "thy horse naked and pass thus through the city from one end to the other in sight of the people and on thy return thou shalt obtain thy request." Upon which she returned: "And should I be willing to do this, wilt thou give me leave?" "I will," he responded. Then the Countess Godiva, beloved of God, ascended her horse, naked, loosing her long hair which clothed her entire body except her snow white legs, and having performed the journey, seen by none, returned with joy to her husband who, regarding it as a miracle, thereupon granted Coventry a Charter, confirming it with his seal.
From the Flores Historiarum by Roger of Wendover (died 1236), translated from the Latin by Matthew of Westminster, c.1300-1320

This medieval scribe is renowned for his exaggeration and politically biased embellishment; Wendover is more a collector of stories and legends than a genuine historian.

So it was that the good townsfolk of Coventry, in their gratitude shielded their eyes when the lady rode through town. The sole exception – the voyeur known to us as Peeping Tom, was struck blind for his rudeness.

In the Forenoone all householders were Commanded to keep in their Families shutting their doores & Windows close whilest the Duchess performed this good deed, which done she rode naked through the midst of the Towne, without any other Coverture save only her hair. But about the midst of the Citty her horse neighed, whereat one desirous to see the strange Case lett downe a Window, & looked out, for which fact, or for that the horse did neigh, as the cause thereof. Though all the Towne were Franchised, yet horses were not toll-free to this day.
From the account of Humphrey Wanley (1672-1726)

Note that the first record of Peeping Tom, above, was made fully 600 years after the event and, like Godiva’s great amount of hair that flowed down and covered her nakedness, was probably added by puritanical churchmen.

The legend is garbled
However, a fact that has almost been lost in the millennium since Godiva lived is that the good lady herself possessed the village of Coventry outright and she needn’t have begged Leofric to suspend or repeal any tax imposed upon it. Godiva controlled the collection of these herself. As Octavia Randolph points out:

“The reason for this persistent misrepresentation is simple, but profound in its implications to the unfolding of the tale. Because Anglo-Saxon woman – indeed all women in England – had by the time of even the earliest extant retelling lost the extensive property (and other personal and legal) rights they had enjoyed prior to the disaster of 1066, chroniclers wrote from the perspective of Norman law and mores.” Source

Coventry has long hosted an annual fair. Her procession at Southam, near Coventry, formerly included images of the goddesses >Holda (white) and Hela (black), and Godiva herself might be an ancient representation of the Celtic horse goddess, Epona. As the centuries rolled by, as part of the festivities, a nude woman would reenact Godiva's ride. From at least 1678 onward, the reenactment – supposedly held on the anniversary of the original ride – was a Coventry staple and continued annually with little interruption until the mid-19th Century, originally as part of Coventry's Great Whitesun Fair. Actresses in a kind of body stocking (‘fleshings’) played the parts of Godiva and her handmaids. In 1854, however, a truly nude woman on a horse crashed the pageant, creating much consternation amongst the Victorian burghers, who suspended the pageant for eight years. The Annual Godiva Procession, Coventry continues, however, and is a tourist drawcard for the industrial city of Coventry.


Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email



Lady Godiva: The Naked Truth (archaeologists find Godiva?)
Godgyfu: Godiva of Coventry

Global: Naked for peace
Naked Media Alliance
Bulgaria: Ballerina in naked protest threat
Chile: Students stage naked protest over funding
Spain: Naked protest at bull run
Spain: Naked anti-globalization
Australia: Men's turn for naked protest
Naked Protest Against Obscenity Of War
http://www.streaking.net

*Ø* Blogmanac | Getting a pop-up? No Charlton Heston here

Over the last couple of days, when I've opened the Blogmanac I've also been getting a pop-up ad for pro-gun lobby organisations.

I don't know what's causing this anomaly. In case readers think the Blogmanac team has finally gone completely troppo, here's an editorial by your almanackist, from the Almanac ezine of October 26, 2002:

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


Disarmament: Tasmania is known internationally for just a couple of things. The southernmost State of the Commonwealth of Australia, of course, is home to the Tasmanian devil, a tough little marsupial popularised by Warner Brothers cartoons.

Then there's Martin Bryant, the world's best spree killer. On April 28, 1996, Bryant, with his trusty gun, roamed through the tourist village of Port Arthur, Tasmania, killing 35 innocent people and wounding another 18. It's a world record we Australians don't want to own.

Like the British and Japanese, as well as citizens of many other nations, we Ozzies pride ourselves on not having a deranged gun culture like our poor cousins across the Big Pond, who it seems cannot even make a movie without having a shooter in it somewhere. Yet we shouldn't be so self-congratulatory; we're almost as bad. There are something like two million firearms in Australia, out of a population of 20 million people. We should have so many computers.

Last week in Melbourne, a student allegedly opened fire on his classmates, killing two and wounding others.

Let's put on our thinking caps for a moment. Apart from madness, or badness, what do these two events have in common?

I grew up on the very edge of the sprawling metropolis of Sydney, where it was not quite bush, and not quite outer suburb. There was bush all around us, and a farm across the road, but it was only a mile to a railway station and there were plenty of houses even if it was a half-hour walk to a shop. It was a blessing to have a childhood in a semi-rural area. I ate blackberries on the hoof and sat by Holy waterfall and drank from its stream -- until about 1966 when housing encroached on Paradise and my mates got a bad dose of the back-door trots from drinking the water.

In many ways my parents gave me great freedom and, like many of my mates, I rambled the streets and the bush most days, when we weren't watching Superman at 4.30. Much of the time that I rambled, I was carrying a .22 Gecado air rifle. We all did, all the boys, from about the age of 11.

No one thought anything of it. Dad taught me very well how to handle a gun safely, something that some of my friends obviously didn't know how to do. Mother certainly wouldn't look up from shelling the peas and ask, "Pip, why are you leaving the house carrying a ... a weapon?" Why should she? I didn't ask her why she was shelling peas. I always had a weapon in my hand, except when eating Coco-Pops in front of Superman at 4.30.

Neighbours would say "g'day, Pip" or smile and wave at the kid walking past their suburban houses, rifle in hand. Then they would go back to shelling peas or digging onionweed out of the petunia beds. That's how it was.

Naturally, having started to shoot at an early age, I was, and probably still am, a good shot, and I loved every moment of shooting. No, not every moment. A few times I would shoot a bird, and I felt awful and it wasn't something I did too often. Today, of course, the thought of shooting a Crimson rosella or a Rainbow lorikeet disgusts and appals me even more than it did way back when. But I was a kid, and that's what kids did in the 1960s, where I lived.

As I say, I loved shooting, and I could easily love it today, because it's in my blood. As a youth I could always get top scores at the shooting galleries at Luna Park and the Royal Easter Show. Unless, of course, they had prizes on offer, in which case the barrels were bent like pretzels. As I grew, I sometimes shot with a real twenty-two, with real bullets, the killing kind. Man, I loved it!

I love the look of a gun -- the blue sheen of gunmetal, the pride in my skill as the projectile cuts neatly through the tiny target I have set up at great distance. The smell of the discharged bullet or lead slug is as sweet to me as freshly shelled peas, or Sunday lamb roasts with mint sauce.

So, what about today, you might ask. Do I like shooting?

No. I love shooting!

Do I own a gun today, or ever go shooting?

What, are you nuts??!! I'm a man, not a boy!!

Abolish the bastards!!! Eradicate them from the face of the longsuffering earth!!!

Abundance and gratitude,

Pip Wilson


Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email


*Ø* Blogmanac | People of Dublin finally see the light


The top of the 'Spire' finally sparkled into life for the first time last weekend. The top nine metres of the 120-metre Spire on Dublin's O'Connell Street began to shimmer. As dusk fell the 11,844 tiny holes around the top glistened and the permanent aviation light at its pinnacle shone with them for the first time.

To mark the event, a time capsule has been buried under the Spire, where it is hoped it will remain for at least the next two centuries. The capsule contains a number of items which may inform 23rd century Dubliners about life in the 21st century. Source


The completed Spire finally replaces Admiral Lord Nelson's Pillar, which had dominated the street since 1808. The 100 ft. high column was blown up -- fortunately without injury to anyone -- in 1966 on the 50th anniversary of the "Easter Rising".

About the Pillar


*Ø* Blogmanac | Grasping concepts
So, after weeks of denial, the White House finally admitted President Bush lied in his January State of the Union Address when he claimed Iraq had sought significant quantities of uranium in Africa. The acknowledgment came as a British parliamentary commission questioned the reliability of British intelligence about Saddam Hussein's efforts to obtain weapons of mass destruction in the run-up to the war in Iraq.

"The report had already been discredited," said Terrance J. Wilkinson, a CIA advisor present at two White House briefings. "This point was clearly made when the President was in the room during at least two of the briefings."

Bush's response was anger, Wilkinson said. "He said that if the current operatives working for the CIA couldn't prove the story was true, then the agency had better find some who could. He said he knew the story was true and so would the world after American troops secured the country." Wilkinson retired two months later but says he wrote "numerous memos" questioning the wisdom of using "intelligence information that we knew to be from dubious sources." Source

Meanwhile, in Hinesville, Georgia:

"I thought they [the Iraqis] would be more enthusiastic. I mean, who wouldn't want to live like Americans, to live in democracy, to send your children to school? I'm surprised at how naive the Iraqis are," Mrs Sanchez said. "Who wouldn't want to have freedom? It's hard for me to understand that they don't grasp the concept."

The failure to find weapons of mass destruction counts for considerably less:

"I knew they wouldn't find any. We fooled around and gave them too much stinking time to hide them," said Scott Mortensen, who runs a coffee shop which has become a meeting place for army wives. Source

Wednesday, July 09, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac July 9, 1856 | Tesla: almost-forgotten genius

Nikola Tesla, the Croatian-born American electrical engineer, inventor of the alternating current (AC) motor, was born on this day. He was a great genius whose luck was not as great as his abilities, and for many years his name was almost completely lost to public knowledge.

Click
The unit of magnetic flux in the metric system is the ‘tesla’, as another unit is the ‘faraday’. His Tesla Coil supplies the high voltage for the computer monitor you are looking at. The electricity for your computer comes from a Tesla design AC generator, is sent through a Tesla transformer, and gets to your house through 3-phase Tesla power. The electric power of Niagara was harnessed through his inventions.

During Tesla's lifetime, the US Patent Office recorded 111 utility patents, one reissued patent, two utility patent corrections and one utility patent disclaimer. US patent number 613,809 described the first device anywhere for wireless remote control. “You do not see there a wireless torpedo,” he angrily corrected a newspaper reporter, “you see there the first of a race of robots, mechanical men which will do the laborious work of the human race.”

"When wireless is fully applied the earth will be converted into a huge brain, capable of response in every one of its parts," Tesla told Morgan


Tesla’s plan for an international wireless communications system was funded for a time by the squillionaire, JP Morgan, but Morgan prematurely lost faith in the inventor and pulled the plug on the money bin – perhaps one of the worst financial decisions of the 20th century. Tesla had to abandon his ambitious project forever. The newspapers called it, "Tesla's million-dollar folly." Humiliated and defeated, Tesla suffered a nervous breakdown.

By 1890 Nikola Tesla was generating fields that would light up, without any wires, phosphorescent tubes across his laboratory. Yet for all this, his name was forgotten for decades, until recently when at long last the public has come to know of one of history’s great geniuses.

The brilliant inventor who had been so far ahead of his time died penniless on January 7, 1943 in New York City at the age of 87. Nikola Tesla was living in the dilapidated Hotel New Yorker in a room that he shared with a flock of pigeons, which he considered his only friends.

Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email


Biography
Tesla coils
Tesla’s patents
Tesla Museum, Belgrade
Restoration of Tesla’s lab
More

*Ø* Blogmanac | More about the Mystery Monster!
Everyone is excited about the mysterious "blob" washed up on a Chilean beach


Some scientists say descriptions of the Chilean find, announced by the Centro de Conservacion Cetacea in Santiago, are strikingly similar to a specimen that washed up on a St. Augustine beach in 1896 and may be a giant octopus. Other scientists say it's probably just part of a dead whale. They say the existence of a giant octopus has never been scientifically proven. Source

"The best bet is that the grey goo is the remains of a giant squid," reported the Mail. "But some experts think the 40ft splodge of decaying flesh may be an entirely new species. Or, the paper suggests, "the last BBC reporter who crossed Alastair Campbell".

Source

*Ø* Blogmanac | Up to 17,000 unexploded bombs left in Iraq


Anything between 2,000 and 17,000 unexploded British bomblets may remain on the ground in Iraq, posing a daily threat to civilian lives, according to estimates by a British MP. The Liberal Democrat Norman Lamb's figures are based on the likely failure rates of the "sub-munitions" inside the cluster bombs used during the invasion.

Landmine Action, one of the main campaigners against the use of these weapons, believes that the US and UK forces delivered about 300,000 bomblets in the war.

Cluster bombs are highly effective against troop concentrations, but a significant proportion of the bomblets fail to explode on impact. They remain on the battlefield, in some cases in urban areas, where they can easily be picked up and detonated by children.

UN agencies say hundreds of Iraqi children have been killed or injured after collecting unexploded shells and bomblets.

Source


Tuesday, July 08, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac July 8, 1822 | The death of Shelley
Percy Bysshe Shelley (born August 4, 1792) drowned on this day, aged only 29. The great English poet was the eldest son of a Member of Parliament and grandson of a baronet. He was sent to Eton for his education, where he was mocked and bullied as ‘Mad Shelley’, and later to Oxford University from which he was ‘sent down’ – expelled – for circulating a pamphlet entitled The Necessity of Atheism.
percy bysshe Shelley
After eloping to Scotland with Harriet Westbrook he became interested in the ideas of the radical philosopher William Godwin. He began to visit Godwin's house and fell in love with Mary Godwin, the sixteen year-old daughter of Godwin by his first wife, the feminist writer Mary Wollstonecraft, who had written A Vindication of the Rights of Women, and had died eight days after Mary's birth in 1797.

Smitten by Godwin’s daughter, his marriage with Harriet in tatters, Shelley eloped to France with Mary Godwin and her 15-year-old stepsister Jane 'Claire' Clairmont. The sisters maintained a ménage à trois with the poet in various parts of Europe for the next eight years. In the summer of 1816 Claire urged that they should go to Lake Geneva (to be with the man of her obsession, Lord Byron, with whom she had previously had a one-night stand and to whom she later bore a child). It was at Lake Geneva that, as a result of a bet to see who could write the best Gothic novel, the brilliant young Mary Godwin wrote Frankenstein.

In the Autumn of 1816, Harriet drowned herself in the Serpentine in London. Two years later, Shelley, pursued by creditors, suffering from ill-health, and understandably a social outcast in England, took his lovers to Italy, “the Paradise of Exiles” as he called it, where they could live more cheaply. In Italy he wrote prolifically much of the best poetry of his career. It was in Italy, however, that he met his demise.

Shelley had often forecast his death by drowning, yet he never learned to swim, nor to navigate. While living at San Terenzo on the Bay of Lerici, he sailed in his small schooner Ariel to Leghorn to welcome his friend, the English poet Leigh Hunt.

Shelley's cremation
Off the coast of Viareggio, Ariel sank and Shelley drowned, together with his friend Edward Williams, and a young sailor boy, Charles Vivian. His fish-eaten body washed up days later and, in the presence of Hunt and fellow poet, Lord Byron, Shelley was cremated on the beach. Strangely, his heart would not burn and Mary carried it with her in a silken shroud for the rest of her life.

The months leading up to his drowning had been an intense and difficult time for Shelley and his circle. In 1821 they had received news of the death of their friend John Keats, the poet for whom Shelley wrote Adonais. At Terenzo, Mary Shelley had suffered a dangerous miscarriage. Allegra, the daughter of Byron and the highly strung Claire had suddenly died. Even before Shelley’s death, the famous literary circle was unravelling.

There was a rumour at the time that Ariel had been rammed by fishing boat, whose crew believed that the rich Lord Byron was on board with gold; years later a fisherman confessed to this but no proof exists today. Another story told of a boat pulling close and offering them help, but a voice, allegedly Shelley's, was heard to cry ‘No!’. Another account, probably fanciful, has it that local sailors shouted to Williams to lower the sails but a tall man, presumably Shelley, stopped him from doing so.

Thus it has been suggested that Percy Bysshe Shelley might have committed suicide, for we know from his letters that he was depressed at the time. He was poor and his relationships were complex. The great Keats had died aged only 25. Shelley was also feeling overshadowed by the genius of Byron, writing “'I have lived too long near Lord Byron and the sun has extinguished the glow-worm”. Although we shall never know the truth of the young genius’s death, he has left a legacy of some of the finest poems in the English language.


Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email



More on Shelley
Complete Works online
Shelley’s Declaration of Rights

*Ø* Blogmanac | Predator Kills Bald Eagle At National Zoo
National Bird Dies On Independence Day

WASHINGTON -- A bald eagle, the living symbol of the United States, died at the National Zoo on the Fourth of July, apparently after being attacked by a large cat.

Zoo officials suspect that a bobcat got into the eagle's enclosure and took advantage of the fact that he couldn't fly. Officials speculate the eagle was injured in a fierce rainstorm earlier in the week.

The male eagle died the same day that the zoo celebrated a new exhibit designed especially for bald eagles hurt in the wild. The dead eagle was housed separately from the zoo's two new eagles that were donated by the American Eagle Foundation based at singer Dolly Parton's Dollywood theme park.

Park officials said the bobcats live in nearby Rock Creek Park.

The bald eagle died Friday after suffering severe puncture wounds to its abdomen and back.

The eagle was caged alone near the Bird House and could not fly. A zookeeper found the male Thursday suffering from puncture wounds to his abdomen. Zoo officials said they believed another animal burrowed under the wire mesh enclosure.

The eagle didn't live with two younger bald eagles that star in an exhibit that recently opened at the zoo.

The eagle's death is the latest in a series of animal deaths at the park. A congressionally requested panel is expected to begin studying the deaths and animal care at the zoo.

Source
[Thanks to Lisa for this sadly ironic item. -v]


*Ø* Blogmanac | Megalithic Sites are Astronomy and Geodetics

Megaliths ("giant standing stones", menhirs) and related constructions such as cairns, dolmens, tumuli and barrows (ancient earthworks) were built by ancient man for purposes of Astronomy and Geodetics.

Stated simply, stars were used to measure the Earth and vice versa. This human achievement dates to the Neolithic Period (Stone Age), long before such technology was thought possible by modern scholars.

As discovered by Andis Kaulins, Neolithic megalithic sites are astronomy in a cohesive broadly based geodetic survey system. Megalithic sites marked geographic land borders as triangulated by astronomy, e.g. in Scotland, England and Wales, and Ireland, much as the kudurri (border stones) of Mesopotamia. In modern times, triangulation cornerstones have been put underground. In ancient days, these stones were erected on the surface - and there most of them have remained to this day.

More great information and photographs here

Monday, July 07, 2003

Having some computer probs, folks and I've been offline over one day. I'm clearing the decks on my hard disks to get some space and I'll be back ASAP. Meanwhile, stop Bush.

*Ø* Blogmanac | Lightning Strikes Preacher Who Asked For Sign

Bolt Hits Steeple, Travels Through Guest Evangelist's Microphone

FOREST, Ohio -- Damage to a church in Forest, Ohio, is estimated at $20,000 after a preacher asked God for a sign.

A member of the First Baptist Church said a guest evangelist was preaching repentance and seeking a sign from God when lightning struck the steeple.

Ronnie Cheney called the incident "awesome, just awesome!"

Cheney said the lightning traveled through the microphone, blew out the sound system and enveloped the preacher,
who wasn't hurt.

Afterward, services resumed for about 20 minutes until the congregation realized the church was on fire. The building
was evacuated.


Source

Sunday, July 06, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | Boys do better at boys' schools: research
July 6: "One of the great educational theories of the past 30 years is being turned on its head. It seems boys perform better academically, and become more sensitive men, if they attend all-male schools.

"Findings to be presented at a major conference on boys' education, beginning in Sydney today, show that boys educated without the company of girls have greater self-esteem.

"They are also more likely to pursue subjects such as art, drama and music, to get involved in debating and school leadership and enjoy reading."

Source

Thanx Baz le Tuff, who sent this in with the header 'More bleeding obvious'.

Saturday, July 05, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac July 5 | Tynwald Day

Pictured: Tynwald Day, 1896


Today they will be partying off the coast of Ireland … or is it off the coast of England … or of Scotland? In the Irish Sea between Britain and Ireland lies the Isle of Man, where men are Manx and proud of it (and so are the women). Man (or Mann) is famous for Manx cats and Grand Prix motor sports, and it is a small island with a big history.

The Isle of Man is not part of the United Kingdom, but a Crown Dependency. Queen Elizabeth II is acknowledged as Lord of Mann, and in 1979 she presided over the millennial celebrations of the Tynwald, the Manx parliament, which is commemorated each year on July 5.

The High Court of Tynwald, as the parliament is known, is of Norse (Viking) origin and at over 1,000 years old is thus the oldest parliament in the world to enjoy an unbroken existence. (Iceland’s Althing was founded earlier but its existence was interrupted.) Tynwald has two branches, the Legislative Council and the House of Keys.

The Legislative Council is the upper branch of Tynwald and its eleven members are either indirectly elected or sit ex officio. The principal function of the Council is the consideration of legislation. The House of Keys is the lower, directly elected branch of Tynwald and originally had 32 members but since about 1156 it has seated a constant membership of 24 ‘Keys’ with a varying size and distribution of constituencies.

The Chronicles of the Kings of Mann and the Isles (held by the British Library despite the requests of the Manx people for their return) tell us that Godred Crovan (who helped Harold invade Britain in 1066) was successful in 1079, on his third attempt, in his invasion of the Isle of Man, and ruled it for 16 years. It is believed that the institution of Tynwald was finally and permanently established during his reign.

Tynwald day was originally held on Midsummer's day (see Wilson’s Almanac 1,000th messageJune 25 Old Style – which was Christianised into St John's feast day; with the adoption of the New Style calendar in 1753 the day became July 5th. The order of this ceremony was established in 1417 when the first Stanley king required that the laws of his newly acquired land be set down.

OUR doughtfull and gratious Lord, this is the Condition of old Time, the which we have given in our Days, how yee should be governed on your Tinwald Day. First, you shall come thither in your Royal Array, as a King ought to do, by the Prerogatives and Royalties of the Land of Man. And upon the Hill of Tynwald sitt in a Chaire covered with a Royall Cloath and Cushions, and your Visage into the East, and your Sword before you, holden with the Point upward; your Barrons in the third Degree sitting beside you, and your benificed Men and your Deemsters before you sitting; and your Clarke, your Knights, Esquires and Yeomen, about you in the third Degree; - and the worthiest Men in your Land to be called in before your Deemsters, if you will aske any Thing of them, and to hear the Government of your Land, and your Will; and the Commons to stand without the Circle of the Hill, with three Clearkes in their Surplises …

We also know from records that on October 25, 1247 a convention of all the Manx people took place at Tynwald.

National symbol: the 3-in-1
The national flag of Man is a plain red field with the triskell (or triskelion or trinacria) emblem at its centre. This symbol dates back to the 13th century and is believed to be connected with Sicily, where a similar image was used during the Norman period. In Emblemes et symboles des Bretons et des Celtes (Coop Breizh, 1998), Divy Kervella suggests the triskell is a pagan Celtic symbol of triplicity in unity, and probably originally a solar symbol. Other Celtic examples of the three-in-one include the shamrock; the staff of the Celtic pantheon: Lugh, Daghda (Taran) and Ogme; the triune goddess of three aspects: daughter, wife, and mother; and the three dynamic elements: water, air, and fire.

Sicilian Trinacria
The triskell is similar to the hevoud, another Celtic symbol, and the Basque lauburu, and might even precede Celtic origins (for instance on the cairn of Bru na Boinne in Ireland).

According to the World Encyclopedia of Flags, by A Znamierovski (1999):

The triskelion (from the Greek "three-legged") is one of the oldest symbols known to mankind. The earliest representations of it were found in prehistoric rock carvings in northern Italy. It also appears on Greek vases and coins from the 6th and 8th centuries BC, and was revered by Norse and Sicilian peoples. The Sicilian version has a representation of the head of Medusa in the center. The Manx people believe that the triskelion came from Scandinavia. According to Norse mythology, the triskelion was a symbol of the movement of the sun through the heavens.

The celebration
Today, at St John’s, citizens of Man will assemble in the open air for an open sitting of the Tynwald parliament. Manx residents who have a grievance for which they have exhausted all the normal channels of appeal, may present a Petition for Redress of Grievance to the Tynwald Court. All day long there will be a fair and colourful folk dancing and carousing.

Happy Tynwald Day!

Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email

Some more on Tynwald Day and the Isle of Man
More
Map of the Isle of Man
Tynwald brief history
Manx Societies Around the World
North American Manx Association
The Giant’s Grave, near Tynwald Hill
Government and Constitution of the Isle of Man

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


July 5, 1977 Sandra Mansi, a tourist at Lake Champlain, Vermont, USA, photographed ‘Champ’ the Loch Ness-like monster that lives there. The explorer Samuel de Champlain had reported seeing monsters there between 1608-12.

*Ø* Blogmanac Male jab for women MPs?


Five British women MPs are coping with the macho world of politics by secretly taking a male sex hormone. A Harley Street specialist yesterday revealed he has treated the mystery five with testosterone implants. Gynaecologist Malcolm Whitehead said: “They claim it boosts assertiveness and makes them feel more powerful.

Last night Westminster was rife with rumours about who might be getting the treatment. But some women MPs were outraged by the suggestion they needed a boost to compete with their male colleagues. Minister for Women Patricia Hewitt said: “It’s one of the great myths that women need to behave like men to succeed. The truth is MPs are far more likely to succeed if they use rational argument rather than hormone-fuelled rhetoric. Is there no end to the rubbish people will say about women in senior positions?”

Story

*Ø* Blogmanac | Connery clinches worst accent nod

"A poll conducted by a British film magazine has found Scottish actor Sean Connery created the worst accent in the history of cinema ...

"'Whether he's a Russian sub captain (The Hunt For Red October) or even an English king (First Knight and Robin Hood: Prince Of Thieves), always that baritone Highland burr remains,' the verdict read.

"Close behind, in third place, came US actor Brad Pitt for his role as an Austrian mountaineer in the 1997 film Seven Years in Tibet."

* Ø * Ø * Ø *


[Meryl Streep's Australian accent in Evil Angels had them rolling in the aisles here. So did the Simpsons' Australian episode. Sort of American/Cockney.]

Read the Top Ten (And yes, Meryl is in there.)

*Ø* Blogmanac | Drumcree - still a flashpoint


Tomorrow's Orange march at Drumcree in Northern Ireland seems set to go ahead amid appeals for calm from police and churchmen. The march has been banned by the Parades Commission from proceeding along the nationalist Garvaghy Road. This is the route marchers have traditionally taken on their way back to the Orange lodge from their church service at Drumcree on the outskirts of Portadown.

There are hopes that last year's violent attacks on police blocking the Garvaghy Road by some on the loyalist side will not be repeated. The Church of Ireland Primate, Archbishop Robin Eames, has appealed for "calmness, dignity and responsible behaviour" at Drumcree tomorrow, and in the following days.

Following a week of rumours concerning a possible resolution of the stand-off between the Orange Order and residents which has persisted since 1998, there were signs yesterday that a way forward could be found. However, it seems all but impossible that one could be finalised in time for tomorrow's march.

Source


*Ø* Blogmanac | There goes another grand piano


One of France's greatest pianists will end his career this summer by destroying two grand pianos and his recital clothes in protest at what he says is the bourgeois elitism of classical music.

Francois-Rene Duchable will drop one piano into an Alpine lake from a helicopter, blow up a second and burn his concert suit on stage. Then he will put a keyboard on the back of his bicycle and travel around France giving impromptu performances.

Mr Duchable, who has been described by the French press as 'the glorious Francois-Rene' said that he has "had enough of sacrificing my life for one per cent of the population. I have had enough of participating in a musical system which, in France, functions badly and limits classical music to an elite."

Source

More power to your elbow, Francois! - Nora



*Ø* Blogmanac | Microsoft Word bytes Tony Blair in the butt
Microsoft Word documents are notorious for containing private information in file headers which people would sometimes rather not share. The British government of Tony Blair just learned this lesson the hard way.

Read the detective work here (and watch what you do with Microsoft Word docs!)

Friday, July 04, 2003

*Ø* Blogmanac | Cool anagram from Hamlet

To be or not to be: that is the question, whether tis
nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of
outrageous fortune.


Becomes:

In one of the Bard's best-thought-of tragedies, our
insistent hero, Hamlet, queries on two fronts about
how life turns rotten.

*Ø* Blogmanac | USA: Free Australians Hicks and Habib now

While Americans celebrate freedom, their gov't subjects 662 people to cruelty at Guantanamo

For 19 months, two Australian citizens have languished uncharged in America's hell-hole at Guantanamo Bay. Bush's ignorant cabal has thrown out the window the ancient human rights principle of habeas corpus -- that people cannot be held in jail without being charged. It is a crucially important principle honoured for hundreds of years by the people of all civilized countries.

They are denied access to lawyers, Red Cross, United Nations and Amnesty International representatives. They are kept in 6 feet by 8 feet concrete cells like stray dogs, under fluoresecent lights 24/7 like torture victims of the KGB. But it is not the KGB, it is the government of the USA keeping these men, like hundreds of other captives, subjected to 'cruel and unusual punishment' (against their own loudly applauded and oft-proclaimed 'best in the world' US Constitution).


Bush's lapdog Australian government will not even demand that Hicks and Habib be charged or released. Wilson's Almanac will.

"It is 19 months since American military authorities began jailing prisoners captured in the US-led war in Afghanistan at Cuba’s Guantanamo Bay, where they are denied all access to lawyers and their families. Among more than 660 prisoners from 42 countries in the concentration camp-style jail are two Australians, 27-year-old David Hicks and 46-year-old Mamdouh Habib."

Pictured: Australian citizen David Hicks, held without charge by USA

Read on

Latest news is that Hicks might face trial. As the US government itself has revealed, this will be a military court and they have suspended the normal fair rules of evidence and other acceptable forms of justice. (This has been done as part of the Shrub cabal's phony 'war on terrorism' which has ulterior motives: to steadily and imperceptibly remove the rights of Americans one by one.)

Please write to representatives and media to demand that Australian citizens not be illegally detained or tortured by the USA government. We especially hope our American friends will see that their own rights are inextricably linked with the inhumane treatment of non-American prisoners.

Footnote: David Hicks is often portrayed in the media by a photograph showing him holding a rocket-launching weapon. Don't be deceived by this photo. The Australian government, US government and their captive media want you to believe he is a danger to you. The photograph was in fact taken while he was a soldier on the side of the 'good guys' (Americans and Australians) supporting freedom in Bosnia. This fact is never mentioned, quite deliberately.



Vastlands of innocence (for July 4)
Pip Wilson, July 4, 2002

In the vastlands of innocence,
Liberty and Justice
sang to a southland and we heard the call.
We are torn, we’re all born on the Fourth of July,
purple mountain majesty washed over all
Australia’s red rocks and her blue mountain pall.

O vastlands of innocence,
manifest destiny,
great people, just people, people just the same.
They pulled down their king for a trivial thing,
and raised up another who sullied their name.
O beautiful for spacious skies and Richard Nixon’s shame.

In the vastlands of innocence,
in the wide dreaming,
mansions of marble and motels of mud.
We marvel and wonder when we hear distant thunder,
will it bring rains of plenty, or does it speak flood?
Jefferson, Franklin, or movies of blood?

O the vastlands of innocence,
Swaggart and Leary,
they send us provisions at our own behest.
Tobacco and medicine, Manson and Edison,
they ship us their best but then ship us the rest.
O would that their captains would heed our request!

In the vastlands of innocence,
by the blue harbour,
‘W’ dared and he ventured to touch
on his favourite oration, The World’s Greatest Nation.
Sweet Jesus forgive him, he ain’t travelled much,
and vanity in vain, isn’t vanity as such.

The vastlands of innocence,
Fonzie and Whitman,
adored in dark theatres and the rockets’ red glare,
we never will hate them, condemn or berate them
and part of our hearts is in their love affair.
But we must implore that the rumours of war
will wither like whispers in yesterday’s air,
like the whimpers of babies, like Mary’s last prayer.
The blood-spangled banner of hunger’s unfurled --
let the vastlands still sing the Pursuits, for the World.

Source

*Ø* Blogmanac July 4 | Good Day, Fairlop Fair

The first Friday in July, the Fairlop Fair

Traditions don’t fall from the sky, the are created by people, and sometimes by good-hearted people whose simple acts of generosity become enshrined over time and bestow on their originators a place in history. The Fairlop Oak Festival (or Fairlop Fair) is a good example.

Long ago in England – the early- to mid-18thCentury – on the first Friday in July, the Fairlop Oak Festival was held. The Fairlop Oak, a large tree, in Hainault Forest, Essex was said to have a whopping diameter of 6.7 metres (22 feet) and a girth of 20 metres (66 feet). These estimates are no doubt exaggerated; however, one Peter Kalm, a student of the great Swedish botanist Carolus Linnaeus (May 23 1707-January 10 1778), measured the tree at 9.1 metres (30 feet) in 1748.

A prosperous pump-maker named Daniel Day (1673-1767), known to his friends as Good Day (perhaps he had an Australian cousin called Gid Day), started the practice of sharing a meal with his friends (and tenants, for Day had inherited some property and this was his annual rent-collecting day) under the oak on the first Friday in July. Day was quite particular as to themeal served each year: they always ate just beans and bacon beneath the 91-metre (300-feet) circumference canopy.


The English poet John Gay (1685-1732) referred to this quaint repast:

Pedlars' stalls with glitt'ring toys are laid,
The various fairings of the country maid.
Long silken laces hang upon the twine,
And rows of pins and amber bracelets shine.


Good Day’s friends in the pump-and-block trade, about 40 of them, used to come, accompanied by a band, from Wapping town via the hamlets of Bow, Stratford and Ilford in a huge six-horse-drawn float which was a brightly decorated boat mounted on a carriage – not just any boat, but a fully rigged frigate created by Good Day who was a keen sailor.

A circus atmosphere
Day’s day developed into a major festival, complete with stalls and amusements, as more and more people became interested in the tradition. In the 1750s more than 100,000 people attended the Fair from all over London. Stalls sold gingerbread men, toys, ribbons, and there were entertainments such as puppet shows, musicians, circus acrobats and even wild beasts. Fairlop Fair enjoyed a reputation of being a very well conducted day, but as early as 1736 certain stallholders were prosecuted for gaming and illegal sales of liquor. In 1793 the Fair was banned for its bacchanalian reputation, but it emerged again the following year.

Come lunchtime, Mr Day would serve up the beans and bacon from the tree trunk, and his guests ate in booths under the shelter of the great oak. When he was old and the oak lost a limb, he took it as an omen of death and had a coffin made out of the limb, and when he died in 1767, aged 84, Good Day was buried in it. He had served his guests on this day every year for several decades. Locals continued the fair in Daniel’s absence, but nothing on this earth lasts forever.

Perhaps the great tree mourned its Good Day, for it went into rapid decline. By 1791, a sign on the oak read "All good foresters are requested not to hurt this old tree, a plaster having lately been applied to its wounds". By the early 19th Century many branches had fallen and its interior was a hollow in which several horses or cattle could shelter, with people picnicking inside the tree as much as beneath its grand canopy. They would sometimes light a fire for cooking and in June 1805 one such fire ignited ‘Fairlop’, as the tree was called, and it burnt for more than a day.

By the time Fair Day came around in 1813, the tree was almost expired and a gentleman paid a boy two shillings and sixpence to climb Fairlop and bring down the very last green sprig. Sadly, in February, 1820, the 500-year-old Fairlop Oak went the way of all Good Days and was blown over in a storm; however, in 1951, during the Festival of Britain, a new Fairlop Oak was ceremonially planted by the citizens of Essex in memory of Good Days past. The generous businessman has been remembered, too, in a play, Between Two Shores, written by Brian Kearney.

As a sad footnote, the entire Hainault Forest did not fare any better than the great Fairlop Oak. The forests of Essex had, since the times of the 11th-Century king, Edward the Confessor, been the property of the monarch with some rights accorded to the commoners.

During the mid-18th Century, around the time of our Good Daniel Day and his wonderful fair, many people struggling to make a living began making enclosures in the forest, there as in many parts of Britain, resulting in the forest officials tearing down their fences and prosecuting the small farmers. In 1817, on application from the monarch’s Commission of Woods, an Act of Parliament enclosed much of the forest for the Crown, doing away with ancient commoners’ rights in the woods. In 1851 the whole 1,215 hectares (3,000 acres) of Hainault Forest was cut down, apart from some small wooded areas on the lands of the richest farmers.

Make a good day.


Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email


Happy Independence day to our American friends!

* Blogmanac | Nazi jibe at MEP provokes German-Italian row


German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder demanded a full apology from Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi today for comparing a German lawmaker to a Nazi concentration camp guard.

Italy's six months in charge of the European Union has begun with a ferocious row in the European Parliament over the Nazi jibe directed by Mr Silvio Berlusconi at a German MEP. The Italian prime minister was in Strasbourg yesterday morning to outline his country's priorities for the EU presidency but a number of MEPs used the occasion to criticise Mr Berlusconi's record in office.

When the German social democrat, Mr Martin Schulz, attacked the Italian prime minister's governing style, Mr Berlusconi suggested that the MEP could play the role of a Kapo, or guard, in a concentration camp. "I know there is in Italy a man producing a film on the Nazi concentration camps. I would like to suggest you for the role of Kapo. You'd be perfect," Mr Berlusconi said.

MEPs booed, jeered and banged their desks in protest at the remark but the prime minister declined to withdraw it, despite an invitation to do so from the President of the European Parliament, Mr Pat Cox.

Berlusconi told reporters in Rome he would speak to Schroeder by telephone today but made no further comment.

Sources here and here



* Blogmanac | UK Forces - Kenya - Institutional acquiescence in rape?
Six hundred and fifty allegations of rape have so far been made against members of the UK army posted to Kenya for training over a period of more than 30 years, Irene Khan, Secretary General of Amnesty International said yesterday.

"The fact that so many rape claims over such a long period of time were neither investigated nor prosecuted shows a systemic failure of the UK army and may amount to institutional acquiescence which encouraged a pattern of grave human rights violations by members of the UK army."

Amnesty International has received information that UK Army officials in Kenya may have become aware of some of the rape allegations as early as 1977. Speaking at the launch of a new report "United Kingdom: Decades of impunity: Serious allegations of rape of Kenyan women by UK Army Personnel", Irene Khan called on the UK government to establish without delay an independent and impartial commission of inquiry.

Details of cases are available here in the report

Video: UK Army in Kenya: Serious Allegations of Rape (Real Player required)




* Blogmanac | Jupiter-Like Planet Discovered Light Years Away


LONDON (Reuters) - Astronomers searching for signs of a Solar System like our own said today they had found a planet very similar to Jupiter orbiting a star resembling the Sun, 90 light years away. "This is the closest we have yet got to a real Solar System-like planet and advances our search for systems that are even more like our own," said UK team leader Hugh Jones of Liverpool John Moores University.

The planet was discovered by British, American and Australian astronomers using the 3.9-meter Anglo-Australian Telescope in New South Wales. With a mass twice that of gas giant Jupiter, the planet circles star HD70642 in the constellation Puppis once every six years.

Source

* Blogmanac | Happy Birthday, America!

From Colleen:
[This isn't about religion, but about morality, and the lack thereof, in the Bush administration, especially at the top. It's a fairly long article, but the truly important parts are printed in a different color than the main text, and offer many good ideas for getting America and Americans back on track. -C]

[And not a moment too soon! -v]


RE-LIGHTING THE TORCHES OF THE AMERICAN SOUL
By Bernard Weiner, CrisisPapers.org 06/30/03

What happens when individuals or whole societies damage -- or even temporarily lose -- their soul, their spiritual anchor, their sense of themselves as moral entities?

Oh, I know that talking about "soul" and "spirituality" is anathema to a good share of the Left. Those terms often are regarded as too new-wavy or are found mostly in the camp of conservative churchgoers.

But we need to focus on the moral and spiritual aspect in our politics for a variety of reasons, including helping to re-balance our own souls amidst all the horrors being perpetrated by our so-called leaders.

Further, if we in the progressive movement avoid the spiritual field, we certainly will be crushed in 2004, and the know-nothing forces of Bush&Co. will have free rein -- read: reign -- to carry out further imperial misadventures abroad and police-state-like constitutional shredding at home. The result will be catastrophe -- to our already shaky economy, to our national treasury (and treasures: our young men and women sent to patrol the empire), to the collective soul of America.

The United States is, and likes to think of itself as, a highly moral country, dedicated to fair play and to the belief that God takes an interest in our
democratic experiment. Americans, at heart, want to do the right thing.

When our society goes outside the boundaries of decent moral behavior -- as we did with slavery, for example -- those lapses are regarded as
aberrations, correctable as we learn more. We are in another such moment in our history right now, but we can hope that as more and more citizens
learn what's really going on behind the scenes, and face our political shadow, the pendulum will begin swinging back the other way -- if permitted to do so.

Using fear and a permanent-war scenario, the Bush Administration has been able to manipulate the American populace into turning its spiritual button to the off position. By demonizing and lying, it has put America's moral sense of itself into a kind of numbed "pause" mode.

Americans are led to wallow in the fright and negativity pushed daily by Bush&Co. and its conglomerate-owned mass media. After months and years of having this negative template laid on top of our society, it's not difficult to have one's energy sapped, to sink into a kind of fatalistic torpor, or even, because the feelings are so intense, to deny that one is having doubts at all. -- CONTINUE for this holiday must-read.

* Blogmanac | Reaping the whirlwind

Extreme weather prompts unprecedented global warming alert
03 July 2003


In an astonishing announcement on global warming and extreme weather, the World Meteorological Organisation signalled last night that the world's weather is going haywire.

In a startling report, the WMO, which normally produces detailed scientific reports and staid statistics at the year's end, highlighted record extremes in weather and climate occurring all over the world in recent weeks, from Switzerland's hottest-ever June to a record month for tornadoes in the United States - and linked them to climate change.

The unprecedented warning takes its force and significance from the fact that it is not coming from Greenpeace or Friends of the Earth, but from an impeccably respected UN organisation that is not given to hyperbole (though environmentalists will seize on it to claim that the direst warnings of climate change are being borne out).

The Geneva-based body, to which the weather services of 185 countries contribute, takes the view that events this year in Europe, America and Asia are so remarkable that the world needs to be made aware of it immediately.

The extreme weather it documents, such as record high and low temperatures, record rainfall and record storms in different parts of the world, is consistent with predictions of global warming. Supercomputer models show that, as the atmosphere warms, the climate not only becomes hotter but much more unstable. "Recent scientific assessments indicate that, as the global temperatures continue to warm due to climate change, the number and intensity of extreme events might increase," the WMO said, giving a striking series of examples.

In southern France, record temperatures were recorded in June, rising above 40C in places - temperatures of 5C to 7C above the average.

In Switzerland, it was the hottest June in at least 250 years, environmental historians said. In Geneva, since 29 May, daytime temperatures have not fallen below 25C, making it the hottest June recorded.

In the United States, there were 562 May tornadoes, which caused 41 deaths. This set a record for any month. The previous record was 399 in June 1992.

In India, this year's pre-monsoon heatwave brought peak temperatures of 45C - 2C to 5C above the norm. At least 1,400 people died in India due to the hot weather. In Sri Lanka, heavy rainfall from Tropical Cyclone 01B exacerbated wet conditions, resulting in flooding and landslides and killing at least 300 people. The infrastructure and economy of south-west Sri Lanka was heavily damaged. A reduction of 20-30 per cent is expected in the output of low-grown tea in the next three months.

Last month was also the hottest in England and Wales since 1976, with average temperatures of 16C. The WMO said: "These record extreme events (high temperatures, low temperatures and high rainfall amounts and droughts) all go into calculating the monthly and annual averages, which, for temperatures, have been gradually increasing over the past 100 years.

"New record extreme events occur every year somewhere in the globe, but in recent years the number of such extremes have been increasing.

"According to recent climate-change scientific assessment reports of the joint WMO/United Nations Environmental Programme Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the global average surface temperature has increased since 1861. Over the 20th century the increase has been around 0.6C.

"New analyses of proxy data for the northern hemisphere indicate that the increase in temperature in the 20th century is likely to have been the largest in any century during the past 1,000 years."

While the trend towards warmer temperatures has been uneven over the past century, the trend since 1976 is roughly three times that for the whole period.

Global average land and sea surface temperatures in May 2003 were the second highest since records began in 1880. Considering land temperatures only, last May was the warmest on record.

It is possible that 2003 will be the hottest year ever recorded. The 10 hottest years in the 143-year-old global temperature record have now all been since 1990, with the three hottest being 1998, 2002 and 2001.

The unstable world of climate change has long been a prediction. Now, the WMO says, it is a reality.

Source

Thursday, July 03, 2003

* Blogmanac | Independence from America Day
Byron Shire Councillor calls for an End to the US Alliance

Thanx Graeme Dunstan for sending this one:

Byron Bay, NSW, Australia: Councillor Richard Staples, member of Byron Shire Council since 1995 and member of the Tweed-Byron Greens will be welcoming participants to the Independence from America Day celebrations when it assembles tomorrow.

"I am deeply committed to preserving and strengthening the local economy, the local community and the local environment," he said. "The way forward in this regard for is to become independent from the influences of the World Bank, the World Trade Organisation, neo liberalism and economic rationalism that corporate America is foisting upon us."

Independence from America Day will be celebrated with a carnival parade through Byron at about noon and a Speak Out outside the Byron courthouse.

"Time to speak up and speak out," says organiser Graeme Dunstan who is promising an artful event, an open mike and with some oratorical fireworks.

It will be the third annual celebration of Independence from America Day in Byron Bay.

Further information

* Blogmanac | The Dog Days begin (Jul 3 - Aug 11)




In these Dog Days it is forbidden by Astronomy to all Manner of People to be let Blood or take Physic. Yea, it is good to abstain all this time from Women. For why, all that time reigneth a Star that is called Canicula Canis, a Hound in English, and the kind of the Star is broiling and burning as Fire. All this time the Heat of the Sun is so fervent and violent that Men's bodies at Midnight sweat as at Midday: and if they be hurt, they be more sick than at any other time, yea very near Dead. In these days all venomous serpents creep, fly and gender, so that many are annoyed thereby; in these times a Fire is good night and day, and wholesome, seeth well your meals and take heed of feeding violently.
The Husbandman's Practice 1729


In olden days it was believed that July's warmth, and the associated diseases, were to do with the heliacal rising and setting of the star Canicula – the Little Dog, or Dog Star (Sirius). Thus they called the period from July 3 to August 11 ‘the Dog Days’.

Sirius comes from the Greek word seirios, meaning ‘scorching’. However, another explanation exists for the naming of the Dog Star: the Egyptians named it after Sihor, the Nile, and the Romans altered this to Sirius. According to Greek mythology, Sirius was seen as the dog of Orion the hunter, and he was also called kyon, Greek for dog.

The ancient Egyptians based their calendar on the heliacal rising of Sirius and devised a method of telling the time at night based on the heliacal rising of stars called decans. The rising of Sirius marked the beginning of the sacred Egyptian year, and was celebrated each year by a festival which did not shift with the variable official year. Sirius was venerated by them and regarded as a token of the rising of the Nile (so when Sirius first appeared they retreated to higher ground before the annual flood) and of a subsequent good harvest. In fact, many Egyptian temples were constructed in such a way that the light of Sirius reached the inner chambers. The Egyptians also named the star after Thaaut, the dog, hence the ‘dog star’.

Feeling crazy today?
Ancient authors said that the day this star first rises in the morning, the sea boils, wine turns sour, dogs begin to grow mad, people get bilious, febrile, hysterical and crazy, and animals grow languid. How do you feel so far? The days are usually hotter in the Northern Hemisphere, so this was probably the reason for their superstition.

On this day, the Romans sacrificed a brown dog, to appease Canicula's rage. The Dog Star is the brightest star in the sky, situated in the constellation Canis Major, and is so bright that the ancient Romans thought that the earth received heat from it. They called the weeks following July 3 dies caniculares, a term that was translated into English in the early 16th century as 'dog days'.

Sirius was called Loki’s Brand in the Northern Tradition, after Loki, the trickster deity. In England, magistrates sometimes ordered dogs to be muzzled from the beginning of July.

Sirius in South Pacific astronomy
In Tahiti’s legend of the Birth of the Heavenly Bodies, Ta'ura (‘the Red One’) a name for Sirius, took a wife of whom princes were born, Matari'i (Makali'i) being one. Then were “created kings of the chiefs of earthly hosts on one side, and of chiefs in the skies on the other side”.

In New Zealand Maori myth, Takurua is the name of Sirius. The Tuhoe people say she is a woman who ushers in Winter, and on cold nights her shining warns of heavy frost. Winter is also often known by the name Takurua. It’s referred to as Hine-takurua, Winter Woman.

Sirius in Africa
The Bushmen of the Kalahari Desert of Southern Africa, have a ritual associated with the appearance of certain stars, including Sirius. When Sirius appears; the people call out to one another: “Sirius comes yonder! You must burn a stick for us towards Sirius. Who was it who saw Sirius?” One man says to another, "Our brother saw Sirius.” The other man says to him, “I saw Sirius.” The other man says to him: “I wish you to burn a stick for us towards Sirius; that the sun may shining come out for us; that Sirius may not coldly come out.”

The other man (the one who saw Sirius) says to his son: “Bring me the small piece of wood over there, that I may put the end of it in the fire, that I may burn it towards grandmother; that grandmother may ascend the sky, like the other one, [the star] Canopus.”

The child brings him the piece of wood and the father holds the end of it in the fire. He points the burning brand towards Sirius and says that Sirius shall twinkle like Canopus (which is in fact the second-brightest star in the sky). He sings about Canopus and Sirius; and points to them with fire, that they may twinkle like each other. Following this, he throws fire towards the stars and completely covers himself up from head to toe in his kaross (a blanket made of animal hide) and lies down.

Soon he arises, and sits down; he does not again lie down, because he feels that he has worked, putting Sirius into the sun's warmth; so that Sirius may come out in the sky and shine warmly.

Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email


* Blogmanac | hee hee...
Go to google and type in "weapons of mass destruction". Then hit "I'm Feeling Lucky".

* Blogmanac | US Should End Bully Tactics against ICC
With the expiration of its July 1 deadline to cut off military aid to states supporting the International Criminal Court, the Bush administration should end its ill-conceived campaign to weaken the court, Human Rights Watch said in a letter to U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell.

The American Servicemembers' Protection Act (ASPA) revokes military assistance to countries that have ratified the ICC, unless they concluded a separate bilateral agreement with the United States by July 1, agreeing never to hand over U.S. personnel to the ICC.

Despite a year-long campaign by the U.S. diplomatic corps, only about 48 countries have signed such agreements so far -- the majority of them small and poor countries that have not ratified the ICC treaty anyway, and therefore have no obligation to transfer U.S. personnel to the court.

"U.S. ambassadors have been acting like schoolyard bullies," said Richard Dicker, director of the International Justice program at Human Rights Watch. "The U.S. campaign has not succeeded in undermining global support for the court. But it has succeeded in making the U.S. government look foolish and mean-spirited."

"U.S. officials are engaged in a worldwide campaign pressing small, vulnerable and often fragile democratic governments," said the Human Rights Watch letter, signed by executive director Kenneth Roth. "Because most ICC member states are democracies with a relatively strong commitment to the rule of law, the threatened aid cutoffs represent a sanction primarily targeting states that abide by democratic values."

The exact number of countries that have signed bilateral immunity agreements is unclear, since some of the agreements are "secret." But at least 38 of them are classified as "less developed" or "least developed" countries by the United Nations Development Program index.

Most of the ICC's 18 judges come from countries closely allied with the United States. Luis Moreno Ocampo, an Argentine national who was most recently the Robert F. Kennedy Visiting Professor of Latin American Studies at Harvard Law School, has recently been sworn in as the court's Chief Prosecutor.

"No one really believes that Moreno Ocampo is likely to indulge in unwarranted prosecutions of American citizens," said Dicker. "It's really time for the Bush administration to wake up from its own nightmarish delirium."

Read the Human Rights Watch letter

More information on the International Criminal Court

* Blogmanac | The Top-Secret Joke
One of the CIA's deepest and darkest secrets -- a classified report about a plot by the 'Ebenezer Scrooge' terrorist group to attack SantaClaus and his reindeer -- has finally been revealed after almost 30 years. Researchers who recently uncovered the report say the joke memo warning about a potential terror attack on the North Pole, which had been classified 'secret' for decades, speaks more about the U.S. government's obsession with keeping information from the public than it does of the black humour of the spies who wrote it.

Story

* Blogmanac | School hogs Potter extras' money!


Schoolchildren working as extras on the new Harry Potter film have been forced to give the money they made to their school, it emerged yesterday. Fourteen children from Lochaber high school in the Scottish Highlands were told by headmaster Donald Campbell that work they did on Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban during school hours counted as work experience and that the money should go to a school fund. Warner Bros accordingly made a donation of £1,370 to the school. The children were, however, paid for working on the shoot over weekends.

Children from nearby Kinlochleven high school were allowed to keep their earnings, which the 'Sun' puts at £35 a day.

Source

* Blogmanac | So this is freedom
The US military have launched a huge operation to crack down on insurgents in Iraq as the civilian administrator, Paul Bremer, promised that America would "impose" its will upon the country.

In a candid interview on the BBC's 'Breakfast with Frost', Mr Bremer said pockets of resistance in Iraq would be crushed. "We are going to fight them and impose our will on them and we will capture or, if necessary, kill them until we have imposed law and order upon this country," he said.

Source

* Blogmanac | European ruling on Finucane
Amnesty International, British Irish Rights watch, and the Committee on the Administration of Justice yesterday welcomed the ruling of the European Court of Human Rights in the case of Patrick Finucane.

[Patrick Finucane, a prominent criminal defence and civil rights lawyer, was shot dead in February 1989 in front of his wife and his three children at their home in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Soon after the killing, claims of official collusion began to emerge - N]

The European Court of Human Rights has found that Patrick Finucane's right to life, which is protected under Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights, had been violated in a number of ways.

It concluded, "the Court finds that the proceedings for investigating the death of Patrick Finucane failed to provide a prompt and effective investigation into the allegations of collusion by security personnel. There has consequently been a failure to comply with the procedural obligation imposed by Article 2 of the Convention and there has been, in this respect, a violation of that provision."

The human rights groups call on the [British] government to take immediate action to give effect to the judgment of the Court.

A spokesperson for the three groups said, "this judgment confirms that there has been no effective investigation of the collusion in this murder. The Finucane family have been waiting fourteen years for justice. It is time the government stopped aiding and abetting those who have engaged in collusion and cover-ups, and allowed the full truth to be told about this case by establishing a public inquiry."

Further information from Amnesty on the United Kingdom

Wednesday, July 02, 2003

* Blogmanac | Mystery monster from deep
July 2 2003
"Chilean scientists were baffled today by a huge, gelatinous sea creature found washed up on the southern Pacific coast and were seeking international help identifying the mystery specimen.

"The dead creature was mistaken for a beached whale when first reported about a week ago, but experts who went to see it said the 12-metre mass of decomposing lumpy grey flesh apparently was an invertebrate."

Maybe it's a marlin -- Brando. Read on
Thanks, Baz le Tuff for sending this one in. (Waddaryanutz??!!)

From Almaniac Glenlightened of Melbourne, Transylvania:

Pip Wilson walks into a supermarket and buys the following:


1 bar of soap
1 toothbrush
1 tube of toothpaste
1 loaf of bread
1 pint of milk
1 apple
1 banana
1 orange
1 peach
1 plum
1 tomato
1 lettuce
1 cabbage
1 potato
1 muesli bar
1 pie
1 box of cereal
1 frozen dinner
1 single frozen pizza

The checkout girl looks at him, smiles, and says "single huh?"

Pip smiles sheepishly and replies, "How did you guess?"

She says, "'cause you're so ugly".

* Blogmanac | Almaniacs come from everywhere!



We are making friends all over Planet Earth via the Almanac. I invite you to join more than 2,000 'Almaniacs' worldwide. It's free.

Costa Rica ... Belgium ... Kenya ... Malaysia ... Iran ... Slovenia ... Canada ... Trinidad & Tobago ... USA ... Scotland ... Denmark ... India ... and more





Read here some unsolicited comments from readers in many lands, as they tell why they subscribe for free to Wilson's Almanac -- the free daily ezine.

We also have a GuestMap where you are very welcome to show other readers where you live. More than 180 Almaniacs have already hoisted their flag. :)

* Blogmanac | Dubya gets one right at last

10 Million Sign Up for 'Do Not Call' List
"Ten million U.S. phone numbers were placed off limits to telemarketers over the weekend as Americans signed up in droves for a new "do not call" list, the Federal Trade Commission said on Monday." Source

Given the form of Tony Blair and John Howard, this good idea will be taken up with alacrity in the UK and Australia. Perhaps a Coalition of the Ringing?

However, Why the Do Not Call Registry May Not Work

Tuesday, July 01, 2003

* Blogmanac | Living Well, Living Deeply

From Lisa:

Creating A Simple, More Enriching Vision of Success

by Bruce Elkin, Natural Life


“There’s a couple of hazards in Voluntary Simplicity.
One is arrogance. Another is success (artistic, commercial,
personal) which leads to temptations which lead back again
to Involuntary Complexity.”


~ Stewart Brand, creator of The Whole Earth Catalog,
in the Co-Evolution Quarterly, Summer 1977


WHILE BROWSING THE BEST SELLERS in my local bookstore recently, I was shocked to find tomes on money and success displayed alongside guides for simplifying your life and enriching your spirit. How-to-be-happy titles sat next to treatises on saving-the-earth.

“What kinds of people,” I asked my bookseller, “buy these different kinds of books?”

“The same people,” she said, smiling sweetly. I must have looked perplexed, because she leaned forward, touched me gently on the arm and said, “There’s a convergence of interests, dear, a kind of shared vision is emerging.” I thanked her and left wondering if she was right.

Researcher Paul Ray thinks so. He claims 24 percent of adult Americans are “Cultural Creatives” interested in psychology, spirituality and self-actualization. Most are strong advocates of sustainability and simpler lifestyles. Ray says this group could herald the birth of an “Integral Culture” – a synthesis of modern and traditional values and practices. However, he warns, “Our future is not ordained.”

Though the possibility of an Integral Culture is exciting, Ray rightly urges caution. It’s too easy to assume “the transformation” is happening just because we read and talk about it. We’ve heard predictions like these before. A 1977 report, Voluntary Simplicity, documented similar findings to Ray’s and predicted that, by 2000, there could be 90 million Americans practicing voluntary simplicity.

Instead, we got the eighties.

What happened? Why did we tell pollsters one thing then do another?

Continue reading

[The "Cultural Creatives" are a fascinating anthropological/sociological field of study that I find exciting. Those who choose to leave the rat race to pursue what they enjoy, stay-at-home dads, activists for peace, human rights, civil rights and the environment and many others all are examples of cultural creatives. Many live simplistic lifestyles by choice, others had a little help from the economy. Regardless, they (we) are here to stay and our numbers are growing. If we could just get to know each other--what a powerful activist and lobbying force we would be! Let's work together to create a network among us, shall we? Email Pip , Nora or myself with any ideas you may have to facilitate connecting--perhaps we could arrange for "meet-ups" as is proving successful for the progressive U.S. presidential candidates, Dean and Kucinich. Awaiting your reply, -v]

* Blogmanac | Downing St, BBC row continues
Just as Australia's taxpayer-funded national broadcaster, the ABC, is under attack for its fair reporting of the Iraq invasion, so the BBC is copping flak from ultra-con pollies in the UK.

Thank God for the ABC and BBC, which were scarcely wild-eyed radicals during the illegal invasion, but at least they presented differing views and provided some sort of sanity in the multi-million dollar propaganda war waged by Shrub & Co and their giant network of transnational PR corporations.

"A row between senior figures in the British Government and the BBC shows no sign of abating.

"MPs are split over Prime Minister Tony Blair's communications director Alastair Campbell's attack on the BBC for what he says were acusations the government sent back intelligence dossiers or Iraq, demanding they be "sexed up" to support the US-led war."

Read the story

Meanwhile, what's going on in the USA regarding investigations into the Bush Administration's nearly two years of blatant lies? Buzzflash's Maureen Farrell gives a good update today:

"The Attack Has Been Spectacular
Regardless how anyone frames it, the White House duped us. From 'they hate us for our freedoms' to 'solid evidence' of Al-Qaeda/Iraq connections, the Administration skirted some issues and manipulated information on others. In short, Bush Inc. lied and pressured others to do the same. The game plan succeeded, however, as polls repeatedly indicated that more than half of all U.S. citizens were consistently conned into believing Iraq was an immediate threat and that Saddam was involved in the Sept. 11 attacks. Meanwhile, millions of well-intentioned souls, unaware of how deeply Bush cronies are lining their war-profiteering pockets, still trust promises of Iraq's "liberation" -- even if hourly ambushes on US soldiers suggest Iraqis aren't exactly dancing in the streets." Read on

* Blogmanac | Nude protest against GM crops


Around 30 people have staged a naked protest against GM food. The protesters spelled out "no GM" with their bodies in a meadow at Forest Row, in East Sussex, UK. Organiser Mike Grenville said he hoped it would send a message to the Government of people's concern, particularly over commercial planting of GM crops.

Mr Grenville, 51, a self-employed business consultant from Forest Row, said: "I think people were very pleased to have the opportunity to express how we feel, how frustrated we are about what seems to be the foregone conclusion, and the question many people are saying is 'What do we do next?'".

"We hope others will follow our lead and find other ways to express how we feel. We do not want GM crops planted in the country at all."

Source


* Blogmanac | Irish doctor finds AIDS strain


A researcher at NUI in Maynooth, Ireland, has discovered a new strain of the AIDS virus which could have major implications in the search for a cure. Dr Grace McCormack, at the university's department of biology, made the discovery during research into the molecular evolution of HIV about three weeks ago.

Her discovery was made in blood samples from a region in Malawi, in central Africa. She had been working on the research for the past three years.

Dr McCormack submitted her findings to the official journal of the International Retrovirology Association, AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses. The findings are published in the May 2003 edition of the journal.

Significantly, the discovery was made in blood samples from the 1980s, implying the strain is one that did not survive. "We have found it in samples from the 1980s but have not seen it in any from the 1990s," she said. "It might be a strain of the virus that failed. Because of that it may give us information on how to defeat the virus. If it has failed, why has it failed?"

Dr McCormack said her discovery suggested the AIDS virus was a lot more complex than had been thought.

Her work also involves her monitoring viral changes in HIV positive people surviving over long periods, though without access to drugs or treatment. She has found "exciting changes" in the virus in such people living for 10 years and more. "Either the virus is defective in some way in these people or they are finding ways to fight it. Perhaps we can find ways to replicate that in other systems," she said.

Source

* Blogmanac | More Brain Power Needed for Mandarin Than English
LONDON (Reuters) - Mandarin speakers use more areas of their brains than people who speak English, scientists said on Monday, in a finding that provides new insight into how the brain processes language. Unlike English speakers, who use one side of their brain to understand the language, scientists at the Wellcome Trust research charity in Britain discovered that both sides of the brain are used to interpret variations in sounds in Mandarin.

"We were very surprised to discover that people who speak different sorts of languages use their brains to decode speech in different ways; it overturned some long-held theories," said Dr. Sophie Scott, a psychologist at the charity.

Source

* Blogmanac | July 1 | The month of July




July weather lore
A shower of rain in July,
When the corn begins to fill,
Is worth a plough of oxen,
And all belongs theretill.
In this month is St Swithin's Day,
On which, if that rain, men say,
Full forty days after it will
For more or less some rain distill,
Till Swithin's Day is past and gone
There may be hops, or there may be none.

Traditional (St Swithin's Day is July 15)

July
July is the seventh month of the year in the Gregorian Calendar, with 31 days. The seventh month of the year was named by Mark Antony for Julius Caesar. The Roman calendar had previously called it Quintilis, as it was the fifth month of their year.

The Dutch called this month Hooy-maand (‘hay-month’), and the old Saxon name was Maedd-Monath (because the cattle were sent to the meadows to feed) and Lida aeftevr (the second mild or genial month). Just to confuse things, the Saxons also called this time of year Hen-monath (probably ‘foliage month’), a word most likely derived from the German hain, meaning ‘wood’ or ‘trees’. Another Saxon term was Hey Monath because at this time they mowed and made hay.

The old Irish name is based on Julius, namely, Iuil. The Frankish name for the month of July is related to Hewimanoth, meaning hay month, a name that continues in modern Asatru as Haymoon. In American backwoods tradition, this is Buck Moon.

In the French Revolutionary calendar it was called Messidor (harvest-month, June 19 to July 18).

Until the 18th century, July was pronounced as the girls' name 'Julie'. Even as late as 1798 Wordsworth wrote:

In March, December, and in July,
'Tis all the same with Harry Gill;
The neighbours tell, and tell you truly,
His teeth they chatter, chatter still.

Goody Blake and Harry Gill

July begins on the same day of the week as April every year and also as January in leap years. Astrologically, this is the month of the house of Cancer (June 22 - July 22) and that of Leo (23 July - August 23). July's birthstone is ruby, signifying contentment and courage, and cornelian, signifying content.

The glowing Ruby shall adorn
Those who in warm July are born.
Then will they be exempt and free
From love's doubt and anxiety.

Traditional

More on the Roman calendar


Pip Wilson's articles are available for your publication, on application. Further details
Receive similar items free each day with a free subscription to Wilson's Almanac ezine. Send a blank email