All I can say is good for them, I wonder how long it will take for the people in this country to wake up to the fact that no one should be in a constitutional position by birth right.
I decided that the world is too rich in absurd happenings and pronouncements for me to let them go past without comment, but that I didn't want to "politicise" my photoblog. So here we are with my thought or thoughts for the day
Saturday, 31 May 2008
Nepal votes to abolish monarchy
All I can say is good for them, I wonder how long it will take for the people in this country to wake up to the fact that no one should be in a constitutional position by birth right.
Friday, 30 May 2008
Fortune-tellers targetted in new Consumer Protection Regulations
From The Times on Line: "Fortune-tellers will have to tell customers that what they offer is “for entertainment only” and not “experimentally proven”. This means that a fortune-teller who sets up a tent at a funfair will have to put up a disclaimer on a board outside.
Similar disclaimers will need to be posted on the websites of faith healers, spiritualists or mediums where appropriate, as well as on invoices and at the top of any printed terms and conditions."
Thursday, 29 May 2008
Blair 'to devote life to faith'
Mr Blair, who recently converted to Catholicism, said: "Faith is part of our future, and faith and the values it brings with it are an essential part of making globalisation work."
So far the history of the world is a continuous saga of wars and destruction, more frequently brought about by waring religions, or shall we call the superstitions, than anything else. Even the latest war Blair took this country into, against Iraq, was called a Crusade by George Bush. I don't think that this was an accident, I think this deluded nincompoop actual thought that he was fighting a religious war, and our lap dog of a PM followed him. It's about time some one tried to sort the world out based on logical, humanist reasoning, without resorting to "magic".
Wednesday, 28 May 2008
China Karma
"Then all this earthquake and all this stuff happened, and I thought, is that karma? When you’re not nice, that the bad things happen to you?"
That Hollywood actors say stupid things really is not surprising, the frightening thing is that the utterances of minor celebrities warrant a large amount of news print.
Tuesday, 27 May 2008
MPs back personal carbon credits
Monday, 26 May 2008
Tiger Mosquito danger
It seems that the trade in second hand tyres, where the larvae are carried in water in the rims, and the popularity of Luck Bamboo, a house plant transpoted in wather filles pots has helped spread the insect.
To date there have been no confirmed reports of the mosquito in the UK and the public health risk remains low. Suspected sightings occur every summer, but thus far have always been identified as the endemic species Culiseta annulata.
Perhaps we need posters, like the ones that appeared many years ago with pictures Colarado Beetles to help us identify this new danger.
Sunday, 25 May 2008
The real folly of the Iraq War.
Saturday, 24 May 2008
Possibly the worst Paper in Britain
Friday, 23 May 2008
When is a tree fern not a tree fern?
Well clearly that depends who you are. If you are a half Greek, half Belgian Prince who got asylum here by marrying one of our German Princesses, then it is if you say it is. That rather rude and ill-tempered aristocratic fossil, the Duke of Edinburgh visited the Chelsea flower show yesterday. When talking to Jamie Durie, a gold medal winner the Duke remarked “what a lovely tree fern”. Mr Durie politely told the Prince (not the pop singer) that it wasn’t actually a tree fern but a Cycad called Macrozamia moorei. Without waiting for the finished sentence, the Duke turned and walked away muttering “I don’t want a bloody lecture”. Grumpy old men shouldn’t surprise anyone. This is different however; it is born out of an attitude of total snobbery and contempt for “ordinary” people that is endemic to this parasitic line. I know that nowadays this wing of the European Royals have little or no power and are wheeled out, only as tourists attractions, at our quaint but totally irrelevant ceremonies. Now is the time to pack them off somewhere, let the Cornish reclaim their lands and let them fade away quietly. .
Thursday, 22 May 2008
Influence
One of the most hotly debated topics this past few days has been where should the boundaries on embryo research be set. I think that any advances in research using human cells will raise ethical questions that need to be resolved. One thing that, to some extent, has puzzled me is why the debate on ethics has largely been portrayed as science versus the church. Most scientists will have their own set of ethical values, as do most people in any walk of life. I am sure that it is quite unjustified to equate ethical values and morals with religion. I am quite sure that most people from any culture have a sense of right and wrong. This won't require a faith in a mystical, unseen force and will almost certainly vary from person to person and between cultures. Surely the idea of an elected parliament is to debate and fix the ethical rules that society will follow. I don't think that within our parliament there should be a group, following a three-line whip, imposed by a force out side of that chamber and that has no accountability to the electorate.
Wednesday, 21 May 2008
The NHS at William Harvey Hospital
Tuesday, 20 May 2008
Coughing at the opera
Sunday, 18 May 2008
Bush's big Sacrifice
Bush's golf claims 'a slap in face'
Veterans have said President George Bush's claim that he gave up golf to show solidarity with US soldiers serving in Iraq was a disgraceful "insult to all Americans".
Brandon Friedman, a veteran US infantry officer who served in both Iraq and Afghanistan, said Mr Bush's claim that he sacrificed golf for the war was a "slap in the face" for US troops.
The president said he gave up the sport in 2003 out of respect for US soldiers killed in the war, which has now lasted more than five years.
Mr Friedman, who is vice chairman of the US veterans' organisation VoteVets, told the Press Association: "Thousands of Americans have given up a lot more than golf for this war.
"For President Bush to imply that he somehow stands in solidarity with families of American soldiers by giving up golf is disgraceful. It's an insult to all Americans and a slap in the face to our troops' families."
Mr Friedman went on: "It just shows he's a guy who doesn't understand the idea of sacrifice for your country and military service. Giving up golf is not a sacrifice.
"It shows how disconnected he is from everyday Americans, especially those who are serving in Iraq and their families. It shows he can in no way relate to them."
He added: "I just wonder what past commanders-in-chief would think of this, looking down upon this guy."
On the day the US death toll in Iraq reached the grim milestone of 4000, Mr Bush was pictured hugging a 6ft bunny at the White House as part of the annual Easter Egg roll - an Easter Monday tradition at the White House since 1878.
In the interview with the political newspaper Politico and Yahoo, Mr Bush said: "I didn't want some mum whose son may have recently died to see the commander-in-chief playing golf. I feel I owe it to the families to be in solidarity as best as I can with them. And I think playing golf during a war just sends the wrong signal."
Saturday, 17 May 2008
Royal Rubbish
Friday, 16 May 2008
Intellectual Poverty
"The interesting question about atheism is, what is the theism being denied? Have you ever met anyone who believes what Richard Dawkins does not believe in? The God that is being rejected by such people is a God I don't believe in either."
This makes no sense what so ever. If you are an atheist you don't believe in God, any God, that is all theism are rejected. How these various superstitions are interpreted by individuals or groups round the world is surely immaterial. What Dawkins has done is his writings is to pick out different stupidities in a multitude of groups. That the Cardinal doesn't recognise this is surely his problem, not the writers.
Thursday, 15 May 2008
Alien Life
Pope's astronomer insists alien life 'would be part of God's creation'
By Peter Popham in Rome
Thursday, 15 May 2008
The Vatican's official newspaper has endorsed the possibility that the universe could contain intelligent life beyond Earth, while insisting that aliens would be "our brothers" and "children of God" as much as human beings are.
The Pope's astronomer, José Gabriel Funes, a Jesuit priest, told L'Osservatore Romano that there would be nothing surprising about the existence of intelligent extra-terrestrials.
"Just as there is a multiplicity of creatures on Earth, so there could be other beings created by God [beyond it]," he said. The interview suggests that the Church's hierarchy may be paving the way to showing that Pope Benedict XVI is more open to the ideas of modern science than he has previously seemed to be.
Pope Benedict has spoken in favour of "intelligent design" in the past and has damned evolutionary ideas that leave no room for God.
Fr Funes, in the interview, admits that, for him, evolution is a given. He also said that he believed in the Big Bang theory as the most likely explanation for the origin of the universe, and that the Bible should not be held to account for its lack of scientific accuracy. "Fundamentally," he said, "the Bible is not a book of science... It's a love letter written by God to his people in the language of two or three thousand years ago... So one cannot ask the Bible for scientific responses."
The existence of alien beings would not create a problem for believers, he insisted, "because one cannot put limits on the creative freedom of God... They would be part of creation."
Pope Benedict has reminded believers that "Revelation teaches us that [man] was created in the image and likeness of God", and that "man is the only creature on Earth that God has wanted for his own sake".
Tony's view I have little time for any religious pronouncements, but at least this one is more inclined to make me laugh, rather than cry or burst a blood vessel of indignation. But why are the ramblings, of an obvious madman, servant to another, reported in the paper.