Every
Sunday morning on BBC TV there's an hour-long discussion of moral
issues. What this usually boils down to is differing
religious believers spouting their own brand of bigotry based on
their reading of one 'holy' book or another. Albeit one by one and
not shouting. So not remotely Spanish. But, when it comes to bigotry,
there's few that can out-do the Muslim Brotherhood. Their government
in Egypt – in the face of the UN's attempts to get a declaration of
women's rights together - has provided 10 reasons why this shouldn't
happen, stressing that its implementation would 'destroy society'.
Personally, I think it's time for a schism in Islam. Above and beyond
that of the Sunnis and Shiites, I mean. Leaving the 7th century
Neanderthals behind in the desert.
On
a lighter note, The
Washington Post is said
to host an annual competition for clever folk who can do amusing
things with words. Click here for a full list of winners. One of the challenges is supplying alternate meanings for common words. After the
week I've had with my mother, no one will be surprised to hear that
my favourite is:- Coffee,
n. The person upon whom one coughs.
Talking
of words, so-called Americanisms that creep into (British) English
can be sonorous or they can be – as was once said in another
auditory context - 'like a pistol let off at the ear-hole.' I put the
one I read today – burglarised – very much in the latter
category. Especially as we already have a perfectly good (and shorter) word –
burgled.
I
read of the deposit theft developments in Cyprus with incredulity,
seeing it as little more than institutionalised theft. And taxation
without representation. Revolutions have been inspired by less. The
dictum that kept recurring to me was “The effect of every major
reform is the exact opposite of that for which it was designed.” So, we will see but I suspect the responses will be momentous.
Talking
of the EU, a Cambridge historian writing in New Society has written
on “The German Problem”, which first emerged in 1870, I suspect.
Possibly earlier. Here's his final paragraph:-
Today,
Germany is both too strong and too weak, or at least too disengaged.
It sits uneasily at the heart of an EU that was conceived largely to
constrain German power but which has served instead to increase it,
and whose design flaws have unintentionally deprived many other
Europeans of sovereignty without giving them a democratic stake in
the new order.[Think Cyprus!]
The question we face now is this: how can the Federal
Republic, which is prosperous and secure as never before, be
persuaded to take the political initiative and make the necessary
economic sacrifices to complete the work of European unity?One way or the other, the German question persists and will always be with us. This is because, whenever Europe and the world think they have solved it, events and the Germans change the question.
You
can read the entire article here.
I
did a little check on my mother's name, Barbarita, and confirmed there are few others with the same handle. Though she isn't unique.
Talking of my mother . . . She may still be ill, bed-bound and 88 but
this evening, as on every day for the past week, she has sneaked into
my bedroom, negotiated a passage between the desk-chair and my
suitcase on the floor, closed the curtains and put a walking stick
along the bottom of the curtains 'to prevent a draft'. This evening,
I filled in a form for her to sign,
containing her bank details. Despite knowing that I have a First
Class degree in law (from back when almost nobody got them!) she
still went through the form line by line before signing it. As I may
have said, it gets tough at times.
Finally
. . . How are the polar bears faring? If you think that global
warming is decimating them, you'll find this article interesting.
Normally, I'd provide a link but the paywall would keep you out. So
here's the whole thing:-
It is now seven years since Sir David was first wheeled out by the BBC as the main cheerleader in its campaign to whip up panic over man-made global warming. In two documentaries, he presented himself as a one-time “climate sceptic” who had now been convinced by the evidence. The only problem was that, as he repeated a series of familiar alarmist mantras, there was little sign that he had checked the evidence for any of them: not least his claim that, thanks to the melting of Arctic ice, the world’s polar bear population, already down by a quarter, could be facing extinction.
Pressure groups such as Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth had already made polar bears the most iconic image for their crusade to save the planet. WWF, in its relentless pursuit of funds, was moving on from pandas to appealing to the public to “pay £3 a month to adopt a polar bear”.
Vainly, in the face of this avalanche of propaganda, did an array of experts and bodies such as the US National Biological Service and the International Union for the Conservation of Nature point out that, thanks to curbs on hunting in the Seventies, the world’s polar bear population had, in fact, risen from 10,000 in 1966 to 25,000 or more in 2006; that all but one of their 19 main groups were significantly increasing in numbers; and that, based on observed data rather than highly questionable computer models, there was not a shred of evidence of any threat to the bears from climate change.
Al Gore twice famously fell flat on his face in promoting the cause, first when his film An Inconvenient Truth focused on the fate of four bears that were later shown just to have drowned in a storm; then when he made big play with a picture of two bears on a half-melted iceberg, which the photographer later protested she had only taken because it was a striking image, unconnected in any way with climate change.
But although Al Gore may have been notoriously reckless in misusing evidence, he has no pretensions to being a scientist. Sir David’s reputation, on the other hand, is that of a man with respect for science, although this did not prevent him in 2009 from supporting a ridiculous BBC publicity stunt involving a giant blow-up plastic polar bear floating down the Thames, or making polar bears a key feature of his Frozen Planet series in 2011, ending in a propaganda pitch for global-warming alarmism that somehow managed to overlook the fact that polar sea ice had recently been greater in extent than at any time in 30 years.
When, last week, the Global Warming Policy Foundation published a new report, Ten Good Reasons Not to Worry About Polar Bears, Matt (now Lord) Ridley referred in his foreword to Sir David’s bizarre determination to ignore the evidence. The report’s author, Susan Crockford, an experienced Canadian polar bear expert, explains just why there is no connection between the thriving polar bear population and climate change, and how this has been concocted into one of the great urban myths of our time.
Nothing is going to stand in the way of Sir David’s reputation as a national treasure, even though it rests so largely on the extraordinary skill of the cameramen who make his documentaries so memorable. But for his readiness to lend his immense prestige to a scare story that defies all the evidence he deserves no respect at all.
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