Thursday, December 31, 2009
2010
So- happy new year and decade.
PS- my good friend is a New Year's baby so lots of happiness to you!
Saturday, December 26, 2009
The Feast of Stephen
It is also Boxing Day, a day when poor boxes were opened and the money inside was offered to the poor.
This article in American Thinker expounds the sadness and bleakness of Christmas and life in general under communism. Read the whole thing.
Yet one of the inescapable paradoxes of Communism is the fact that the godless state, which professes the virtue of materialism, can then so completely fail to provide even the material necessities that most in the West take for granted. Although there were rubber chickens and wooden pop guns in the market, there was a general absence of everything else. By the time Christmas rolled around, there was little variety of food, and milk had disappeared from the stores. Fresh fruit, including oranges and bananas, vanished entirely, as did all fresh vegetables, except for an aging stock of potatoes, carrots, and turnips. Other than some suspiciously outdated and moldy-looking sausages, meat was in short supply. What there was, along with the potatoes, carrots, turnips, and sausages, was the bland production of the state canneries: jams, jellies, canned vegetables and fruits, potted meat and chicken, and an adequate quantity of bread to be washed down with ample supplies of locally produced plum brandy, beer, and wine.
It might seem that the state had at least provided an adequate caloric intake, but every day I saw people of all ages, from young women with infants cradled in one arm to old men in ragged suits, fumbling through garbage bins for bread crusts and bones.
Christmas was also accompanied by the unrelieved cold. The Communist state had guaranteed heating and electricity for all, just as it had guaranteed universal free medical care, but blackouts were frequent and long, and water shortages predictable: two days off, one day on. Every night, the heat was turned off at nine o'clock. I slept in a cold room under a mountain of blankets, sometimes lying awake as my breath rose like smoke in the moonlight. Then I got very sick, but I refused to be taken to the hospital for fear of being made sicker.
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Merry Christmas
My favourite bit on the Charlie Brown Christmas special is when Linus tells Charlie Brown what the true meaning of Christmas is.
No matter what, please do have a Merry Christmas and an enjoyable and safe day off.
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Monday, December 21, 2009
Christmas Week: Holiday Movies
As we all prepare during the final days before Christmas, we might want to kick back and relax with some holiday favourites.
It's a Wonderful Life: watch Jimmy Stewart chew the scenery and Clarence get his wings in this Christmas-time favourite.
A Christmas Carol: this film version of Charles Dickens' Christmas classic makes us love Christmas all over again.
A Christmas Story: why get a pair of socks when you can get an Official Red Ryder Carbine-Action Two-Hundred-Shot Range Model Air Rifle?
Die Hard: nothing says the peace and joy of Christmas like blowing up terrorists.
Sympathy for Lady Revenge: a wonderfully crafted Korean film that starts off Christmas-y but gets dark. Really, really dark.
These last two entries aren't movies but are really worth watching.
"Miracle on Evergreen Terrace": Bart tries to cover up his nearly disastrous antics during Christmas. Minus the Cajun sausage.
"A Charlie Brown Christmas": the Browniest of Christmas specials. My favourite bit is when Linus recites from the Gospel according to Saint Luke.
Don't have time to watch these shows? Go here.
Archaeologists have found a dwelling from the time of Jesus. Sweet.
Friday, December 18, 2009
Freaky Friday
The Ugly Canadian.
Usually the "Ugly Canadian" is a total dweeb who sews a Canadian flag on his backpack and labours under the misconception that the world loves him and will totally forgive him if he is rude, demanding, ignorant of the local culture and mangles the language. According to Mr. Murray Dobbin, however, the Ugly Canadian is one who doesn't do enough to ward off global warming, supports the military effort in Afghanistan, is appalled by China's many human rights abuses and seeks new economic opportunities . Mr. Dobbin's screed is basically anti-Harper and is so ridiculous that it shouldn't be responded to but I will- a little. Canada is not even remotely polluting when compared to China whose people are nothing more than coolies living in cancer villages. Canadian troops are doing more to stabilise a restive region of the world that countries like the former Soviet Union screwed up in the first place than peaceniks who decry Canada's presence there.
I'll stop here and suggest that Mr. Dobbin compare his lot in Canada to one in North Korea or Cuba. No doubt, his screed would have gone unnoticed by the half-literate populations there as their access to the Internet is strongly controlled or non-existent.
When not eliminating Africans or Asians to save the planet, getting rid of one's household pets become the next best thing in saving the planet from global warming the causes or existence of which no one can really prove absolutely. According to a recent book, Time to Eat the Dog? The Real Guide to Sustainable Living, by Robert and Brenda Vale of New Zealand, household pets have a very sizeable "carbon footprint". Assuming one buys into this footprint (or pawprint, as the case may be) stuff, let's point out that owning a pet can be costly, therefore, many choose not to get one. If some people do, they might go overboard in its care. Even so, given this absurd notion, I'd rather spend an entire afternoon talking with my dog (God rest his fluffy soul) than drown in the "green" cesspools created for everyone by hypocrites and extremists. He was more intelligent, charming and definitely more cuddly.
(how can anyone eat a face like that?)
Cap and trade, essentially, is a sort of barter system wherein a central authority sets a limit (cap) of emissions companies can expel. Companies must purchase "credits" which allow them to expel emissions. If they must emit more, they must buy these credits from companies which expel less. If one wasn't paying attention, it seems like a decent enough idea. In truth, it's as useless- and harmful- as carbon off-sets (paying someone else to make up for your "environmental mistakes" by planting trees and such). An article in the Wall Street Journal maintains that cap and trade serves only to tax, create unemployment and move industries elsewhere:
We should add that all of this is precisely what Kyoto envisioned. The idea is to tax Western industry and then send the proceeds to developing countries as an incentive to join the anticarbon crusade. But unless governments close their borders to foreign investment, business will flow to where the carbon tariff is least punishing. China and India understand this, which is why they won't agree at Copenhagen to anything that reduces this advantage.
It's a waste of time.
And now for happier things....
Ffffffffudge......
In this time of peace and happiness, it is important to share love and by love I mean fudge. Here is a recipe for cream cheese fudge:
5 ounces good-quality milk chocolate, finely chopped
2 ounces unsweetened chocolate, finely chopped
6 ounces cream cheese, softened
Pinch salt
3-1/2 cups sifted or strained confectioners' sugar
1 tsp. vanilla
Line an 8 inch square pan with a doubled length of regular-weight aluminum foil, shiny side up; set aside. In small heatproof bowl, combine chopped chocolates. Set over hot water on low heat (water should not touch bottom of bowl); stir frequently until almost melted. Remove from heat and hot water; carefully dry bowl bottom and sides. Stir chocolate until melted and smooth. Set aside.
In large bowl, beat softened cream cheese and salt with large spoon or sturdy hand-held electric mixer on medium speed until smooth. Add sugar, one cup at a time, beating after each addition until smooth and incorporated; scrape bowl bottom and sides and mixer beater(s) with rubber spatula frequently. Add vanilla with last half-cup of sugar.
All at once, add melted chocolates, which should still be warm. Immediately blend in thoroughly. The fudge will stiffen very rapidly, so if you start blending it in with an electric mixer you'll probably need to finish blending it in with a large spoon. Make sure the fudge is an even color; scrape bowl bottom and sides well.
Working quickly, scrape fudge into prepared pan. With back of a large spoon, press fudge into as even a layer as possible (you might have to finish this by using the backs of your fingertips, but do so as briefly as possible. A slight oily layer may form on top, but this will be reabsorbed quickly.)
Chill fudge for at least one hour before cutting. To cut, use a large, sharp, straight-edged knife. Remove uncut fudge, still in foil, from pan; transfer to cutting board. Peel foil back from edges. Cut into small squares. To keep cuts neat, it will be necessary to rinse the knife blade under hot water, then dry it, frequently.
Store in refrigerator, tightly covered, or freeze. Fudge can be eaten refrigerator-cold or brought to room temperature, covered, before serving.
Variation: For fudge that is slightly less sweet and a shade darker in color, use 4 ounces of milk chocolate and 3 ounces of unsweetened chocolate.
3 sticks | cinnamon |
2-3 pieces | dried Seville orange peel |
2-3 pieces | dried ginger (not ground) |
some 10 | cardamom seeds (whole) |
some 10 | cloves (whole) |
1 cup (2.5dl) | water |
Also: |
sugar |
1 bottle of wine (or similar amount of black currant or grape juice for a non-alcoholic alternative) |
What to do:
· Heat spices and water to boiling, then turn off heat and let stand overnight |
· Sieve/filter out the spices |
· Add the wine (or juice) |
· Add sugar to taste (that should be a minimum of one deciliter (=2/5 of a cup); we’re talking Swedish cooking here!). You probably have to heat it first so that the sugar dissolves, then see if you want to add some more |
· Heat. Note that alcohol evaporates at 72 degrees Celsius (or is it 78?) so you want to be a bit careful! |
|
Thursday, December 17, 2009
Finally....
The Alberta Court of Appeal said in a decision released on Tuesday that Kibrom Gebreweldi Teclesenbet, who had moved from Sudan five days before the assault, cannot claim he had not yet adjusted to Canadian standards. The judges quashed a conditional discharge and replaced it with a 30-day jail sentence. "To suggest it might be acceptable to beat one's wife with a stick elsewhere does not mitigate the seriousness of the offence," they wrote.
Up your nose, cultural relativism!
A Bowl of Stupid With a Side of Crazy
Where do we start?
It's bad enough a conference that could decide the economic fate of participating nations still continues despite record cold temperatures, Al Gore being publicly embarrassed and Climate-gate but to include Hugo Chavez and Robert Mugabe? I thought the point was to legitimise the conference? What does it say when these tyrants are given a free reign?
Climate "activists" deface a Canadian flag because of the oil sands in Alberta. The total area of the oil sands in Alberta stretch 140,000 square kilometres with about 500 square kilometres of land disturbed by oil sands surface mining activity, are estimated to produce173 billion barrels of oil and make up "about five per cent of Canada’s overall greenhouse gas emissions and less than one-tenth of one per cent of the world’s emissions". China, apparently, has soaring greenhouse emissions with "more than 400,000 people die every year as a result of air pollution, an estimated 190 million people drink water so contaminated that it makes them sick and 40 per cent of its land mass is affected by soil erosion. Indeed, the Chinese desert is expanding at a rate of 1900 square miles per year and is already encroaching on Beijing". Yet China hasn't faced the scathing vitriol Canada has. I suppose it's easier to attack a Western country than cut off an arm of the Sinoctopus.
(China in all its smoggy glory)
As for the flag defacers, grow up. You're not going to walk in minus forty degree Celsius temperatures and we all know it. How many resources have you consumed with your ridiculous stunt?
An eight year old boy in Massachusetts was suspended from school and ordered to undergo psychological testing before returning to school after he drew a crucifix.
From the article:
An eight-year-old Massachusetts boy was suspended from school and ordered to undergo a psychological evaluation after drawing a figure of Jesus Christ nailed to the cross.In my time teaching, I've seen kids draw reindeer instead of cars, put ink their mouths, sing songs, dance when there is no music and behave when presented a cookie or sticker. I've also seen kids with anger issues. I've seen kids blithely rattle off the garbage they watch on TV because their parents are too lazy to monitor their watching habits or even engage them in another activity altogether. Never once would anyone suggest these children needed help. Did it not occur to the teacher to quietly ask the boy why he drew what he did or go out on a limb and make a cognitive connection between Christ on the Cross and the Christ-Child in a manger (not that we're allowed to discuss any of these things)? Did it not occur to the teacher that the over-reaction was more harmful than helpful?The second-grader drew the crucifix after his teacher asked children to sketch something they associated with Christmas. But the boy's father said he then got a call from the elementary school informing him that his son had created a violent drawing.
"When she told me he needed to be psychologically evaluated, I thought she was playing," the boy's father told the Taunton Daily Gazette.
The drawing in question shows Jesus on a cross with Xs in place of his eyes to symbolize death.
The man, who asked for his name not to be published to protect the child, said his son gets specialized reading and speech instruction at school, and has never shown any tendency toward violence.
"He's never been suspended. He's eight years old. They overreacted," he said.
The child drew the picture shortly after taking a family trip to see the Christmas display at the National Shrine of Our Lady of La Salette, a Christian retreat site in Attleboro, Mass.
Toni Saunders, a non-profit educational consultant, said the boy's father reached out to her for help after trying to have his son moved to another school because "he's traumatized by everything that has happened.
"I've had kids suspended for idiotic things before, but I've never had to deal with anything like this," Ms. Saunders said.
I believe this in my bones: there are people who are so desperate for attention that they would drag people down to get it.
Religious charitable groups could be forced to choose between abandoning their values or going out of business if an Ontario Human Rights Tribunal decision is not overturned, an Ontario Divisional Court was told yesterday.
An Ontario tribunal ruled that Christian Horizons had no right to fire a woman after she entered into a homosexual relationship. I'm sure this woman is proud of herself. While she gets to luxuriate in a bath of her own self-pity, a charity which helps the disabled could shut its doors forever. She knew the rules going in and could make any decision with her life but no matter- it's better to pout, whine and destroy religious charities. Where should the needy go? To the government? Nowhere? Thanks for the selfishness. If spoiled individuals or special-interest groups take away the rights of private groups, how does it benefit anyone?
Don't forget to write to Santa!
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Mid-Week Mellow
This is Haeundae Beach in Busan, South Korea. This photo was taken in August during a spell of twenty-plus degree Celsius weather.
If you're in Saskatchewan, you might prefer to be on that beach now.
Might.
More than likely.
Anything's better than forty below.
Just saying.
Monday, December 14, 2009
Monday
(Above is a photograph of unseasonable warmth. The earth is covered in some sort white warm stuff and, if you really squint, there is a polar bear eating another polar bear.)
Days before Christmas: eleven
Days before the next ice age: not sure
I do know that temperatures in Saskatchewan have been dropping WELL below zero. It must be because Canada is an absolutely filthy country, unlike picturesque China.
Gentlemen, start your engines.
Random Christmas fact: did you know that artificial spiders and webs are often included in the decorations on Ukrainian Christmas trees. A spider web found on Christmas morning is believed to bring good luck. More facts here.
Sarah Palin is coming to Canada. Sweet......
Saturday, December 12, 2009
Week Round-Up
On Wednesday, we saw a cat clean a dog's clock.
On Friday, I posted about Climate-gate, the controversy no network wants to talk about.
Today marks the first day of Hanukkah, the Jewish festival of lights. I bid greetings to all. Please see this Star Trek menorah.
Tomorrow is not only the third Sunday in Advent but the feast day of Saint Lucy, the patron saint of eye problems. In Sweden, girls dressed as Saint Lucy would offer their families coffee and saffron buns.
Yep, December is a pretty fun month.
Friday, December 11, 2009
Climate-gate: Now With More Cheese
I've been a little remiss about the scandal gleefully termed as Climate-gate. The upshot of Climate-gate is this: someone hacked into e-mails sent from the Climate Research Unit (CRU) at East Anglia University. These e-mails suggest that data was doctored and deleted and that publicly-funded scientists conspired to not only destroy and distort data concerning global warming (the belief that the world's temperature is rising due to man-driven activities) or its newest euphemism- climate change- but to charge through any opposition. Though the CRU is not the only research institute, it one of the most prominent. The revelation of these damaging e-mails has hurt the climate change cause and caused its chief believers to fly into a tail-spin.
One of the most prominent believers in climate change is former Democratic vice-president Al Gore. It should be noted that Mr. Gore is not a scientist, nor have his political achievements been stellar. He does, however, live in a rather large and "un-green" house, flies across the globe and takes town cars to talks about a subject he is not wholly familiar with but is very well compensated for. He will not take unscripted questions or debate openly with anyone. His documentary, "An Inconvenient Truth", for which he was awarded an Oscar, is riddled with errors (please see here). Things like the sea is rising (the ice melting in Greenland will not cause catastrophic flooding because of the position of the ice, the need for constant warmer temperatures and the fact that this ice may melt millennia from now) and carbon dioxide driving up the world's temperature (it does not) are refuted by sound scientific studies. Mr. Gore doesn't mention these studies in his book which is widely distributed to schools. He doesn't mention any references at all.
When the e-mails came to light, Mr. Gore, at first cocooning himself from the blowback, then responded by saying the e-mails were "taken out of context" (emphasis mine):
Q: There is a sense in these e-mails, though, that data was hidden and hoarded, which is the opposite of the case you make [in your book] about having an open and fair debate.
A: I think it's been taken wildly out of context. The discussion you're referring to was about two papers that two of these scientists felt shouldn't be accepted as part of the IPCC report. Both of them, in fact, were included, referenced, and discussed. So an e-mail exchange more than 10 years ago* including somebody's opinion that a particular study isn't any good is one thing, but the fact that the study ended up being included and discussed anyway is a more powerful comment on what the result of the scientific process really is.
It's one thing for Al Gore to assume adults want to hear his unqualified opinions and pronouncements on the state of the earth's environment, even to the point of developing social, economic and even educational policies which affect entire countries and their economies, but to now assume they don't know when they are being hood-winked. Priceless.
From: Phil JonesTo: Sandy Tudhope Subject: Latest draft of WP1 Date: Thu Nov 12 10:18:54 2009
Cc: "Wolff, Eric W", Rob Wilson , "Bass, Catherine" , "Turney, Christian" , Rob Allan , Keith Briffa , "t.osborn@xxxxxxxxx.xxx"
Dear All (especially Chris/Catherine), Here's the latest draft of WP1. All in the group have now commented and amended this. You should have the 3 supporting letters from Tree partners. Eric was contacting Eric Steig and Sandy (see below) is contacting 3 coral people. There is an issue about a Map. Rob W put one in his PhD page. This shows the corals. If we were to add the tree-ring sites we would mainly get a splodge of points in South America and NZ. Ice cores would just be over the AP and in the low-lat Andes. Issue is one of space. We already have 3pp fo this WP. Refs will reduce to about 0.5pp once we go to et al for 3 or more authors. A map would be useful for presentation to NERC, but is it essential for the submission? I'm away from tomorrow lunchtime for the weekend. Back in on Monday. Hope we'll be looking through more complete drafts next week! Cheers Phil
At 19:02 11/11/2009,
Sandy Tudhope wrote: Dear Phil et al, Good to speak to you earlier Phil and Rob W.. Please find attached a slightly modified version for WP1 ... I've just changed the coral section a bit. Briefly, I've identified the new coral coring sites (rather than get bogged down trying to describe how we will use analysis of model output to prioritise), plus I've added back in some references and details that I think help, but don't add too much length. I've written to Janice Lough, Julie Cole and Kim Cobb re being Project Partners (I actually spoke to Kim and she is keen). FIGURE: I still think it might be useful to have a map in the main proposal ... basically like the one Rob has in the PhD proposal ... we can simply have boxes around the tree ring and ice core regions. This map needn't be any larger than Rob already has it ... but it does help illustrate where we will get/have data. What do you all think? Cheers, Sandy
Prof. Phil Jones Climatic Research Unit Telephone +44 (0) 1603 592090 School of Environmental Sciences Fax +44 (0) 1603 507784 University of East Anglia Norwich Email p.jones@xxxxxxxxx.xxx NR4 7TJ UK
(search the rest here)
Ten years ago? Right.
Other e-mails indicate there were personal attacks, demands of endorsement, and lack of data to support some claims about temperature over the centuries.
Even someone whose understanding of climate science is rudimentary can find the discord in these e-mails and be concerned. After all, the recommendations of these scientists are the basis for "carbon cards" and "Earth hours".
Part of the reason why Mr. Gore doesn't debate openly is the inevitable skepticism. When former Alaska governor Sarah Palin asked the current administration to boycott the Copenhagen climate talks given the uncertainty the newly discovered e-mails put on current climate belief, Mr. Gore called her a "denier".
Pretty catty (not the above one).
Mrs. Palin's response:
The response to my op-ed by global warming alarmists has been interesting. Former Vice President Al Gore has called me a “denier” and informs us that climate change is “a principle in physics. It’s like gravity. It exists.” Perhaps he’s right. Climate change is like gravity – a naturally occurring phenomenon that existed long before, and will exist long after, any governmental attempts to affect it. However, he’s wrong in calling me a “denier.” As I noted in my op-ed above and in my original Facebook post on Climategate, I have never denied the existence of climate change. I just don’t think we can primarily blame man’s activities for the earth’s cyclical weather changes. Former Vice President Gore also claimed today that the scientific community has worked on this issue for 20 years, and therefore it is settled science. Well, the Climategate scandal involves the leading experts in this field, and if Climategate is proof of the larger method used over the past 20 years, then Vice President Gore seriously needs to consider that their findings are flawed, falsified, or inconclusive. Vice President Gore, the Climategate scandal exists. You might even say that it’s sort of like gravity: you simply can’t deny it.
Ouch- to Mr. Gore!
The fact that Al Gore- and others (especially those who would never touch China or India for their environmental "transgressions")- will never abandon "climate change" suggests a cultish attitude rooted in the multi-million dollar "green" industry. I'm sure there are many jokes about green and money but I'll dispense with them here. At the very least, the revelation that these e-mails and the following repercussions should have firmly planted a seed of doubt in everyone who tries being environmentally conscious. Science has been swallowed not by the mythical fundamentalists but by the very people who hide their true intentions behind the veneer of proper scientific inquiry. Carbon taxes and cap-and-trades will only serve to squash economies. Carbon cards are, at the very least, fascistic and complete invasions of one's privacy. The failure to disclose and peer-edit puts the scientific community in the light of narrow-minded boors who lord their alleged superiority over everyone.
We need truth, not rhetoric or alarmism.
Wednesday, December 09, 2009
Tuesday, December 08, 2009
Why We Say Merry Christmas
I can see from the few who responded to my poll (thanks, guys) that overwhelmingly "Merry Christmas" is the preferred greeting over the generic "Happy Holidays". In a time when we brush over or deliberately omit things for fear of giving offense, it is this conscious decision that stands a better display of culture and festivity.
Imagine for a moment one is in Japan. As Japan is a country with a homogeneous population, culture and language, one would be hard pressed to observe the things one usually observes. With the exception migrant workers, everyone is Japanese. The Japanese have three writing systems and a unified language. People are usually Shintoist. In the past century, modern Japanese culture lent itself to the juvenile but, by and large, it's still a culture of self-effacement and adherence to strict mores. Though the Japanese don't usually observe Western holidays, they make up for it by having some rather colourful and stylish festivals. New Year's Day (Shogatsu) is massively fun with cards, hanetsuki (badminton), decorated entrances, auspicious murmurings, visits to shrines and temples and eating soba noodles symbolising long life. Setsubun, held in the first few days of February, is marked with the expulsion of evil spirits and bean-throwing.
Now imagine a single individual, foreign in origin, who declared that he (or she) spoke for everyone and demanded changes to these long-standing festivals. Hiragana is lovely to look at but there's no way anyone can master it in a day, and you can forget about kanji so everything would have to be conducted in English (and in French in Canada). Not everyone in the world is Shintoist. Perhaps those elements in the festivals that are particularly Shintoist can be eliminated to suit a more Christian audience (though when I was in Japan I cannot recall Christians behaving in such a way but we're imagining here). The idea of driving away of evil spirits is just too much for some to understand so that will have to go. Throwing beans could injure someone's eye so that will be given a miss. Fortune-telling is wrong in some cultures so that's out. Spaghetti could easily replace the nutty texture of soba noodles because noodles are noodles are noodles (sidebar: I don't really mean that, food purists). There might be room for compromise by listing other holidays with Shogatsu and Setsubun even though they might have absolutely nothing to do with each other.
So, with a little rearranging, two of the biggest festivals in Japan have become more palatable to other cultures. Should the Japanese acquiesce or should they root themselves firmly into the ground and say: "This is who we are and this is what we do"?
Herein lies the quandary. For some, it might seem the essence of fairness and "multiculturalism" to change Christmas or omit entirely. Is that the case? Christmas is a Christian holiday as neither the Romans, Druids nor the Vikings celebrated the birth of the Christ-Child. Christmas has incorporated many of its more familiar aspects such as the Christmas tree and card-sending (even, unfortunately, consumerist aspects). Whole swathes of people celebrate Christmas in one form or another. Even the Japanese find room in their busy schedules for Christmas.
Back to the original dilemma: why say "Merry Christmas" as opposed to "Happy Holidays"? There is a problem in denying an event or holiday the specificity and uniqueness that it possesses. By lumping Christmas in with other holidays, you make Christmas generic, not special or with a purpose. "Holiday" could mean anything. Would it be amiss to say "Happy Holidays" for St. Valentine's Day? It is a holiday of sorts.
As it goes without saying, holidays aren't the same in every respect. Is Setsubun the same as Christmas? Is Hanukkah the same as Christmas? Obviously not. By not mentioning Christmas, you (to put it dramatically) rob it of its identity. Christmas has various rituals and memes all with significance. If Christmas was not omitted but diluted to something barely recognisable, that which made it special would fail to resonate with its observers. Any celebrations would be menial task for those accustomed to the holiday in its original form and a confusing, even belittling experience for those unused to such a holiday. Do we assume that by celebrating Christmas that those of other cultures cannot follow along? Do we trust them to be active in the celebrations if they so want? What must be going through a Hindu or Buddhist's mind when they are invited to a "winter holiday" party minus the Christmas tree and carols they've been apprised of in some fuzzy photograph in a magazine somewhere? Making assumptions on someone else's behalf is- well- offensive. Isn't it better to simply live or celebrate something than to hide it?
Has anyone determined that Christmas itself is exclusive or could it be a vehicle for inclusion? As was mentioned before, Christmas is observed by many people in many ways. It is a time of great ease and celebration. By refusing to celebrate it all or in traditional ways, how do immigrants become aware of the predominant culture (or a minor culture, for that matter)? Has anyone asked them if such celebrations would bother them? I would suggest the assumptions on what is or is not offensive can only be seen as insults to their intelligence.
The greater insult might very well be on the general mind-set. Are we so bereft of cultural and intellectual maturity that we would deprive even ourselves of Christmas? It is- for the most part- who we are. In the West, we adopt cultural plurality, even see it as one of our assets. We pride ourselves in not having a state religion or culture. No one is forced to celebrate one holiday or another. It's simply a matter of population. More people than not observe Christmas. Why not say "Merry Christmas"?
Thursday, December 03, 2009
Reasons Why Burkas Should Be Banned and Education Promoted
From the article:
A male suicide bomber dressed as a woman attacked a graduation ceremony
Thursday in a small part of the capital still under government control, killing
22 people, including three Cabinet ministers, doctors and medical students.
The attack was a severe blow to a country long battered by war and
underscored the government's tenuous hold even on its small area of Mogadishu.
African Union peacekeeping troops protecting the government wage near daily
battles with Islamic militants who hold much of central and southern Somalia and
act so brazenly in the capital that they carry out public executions.
"What happened today is a national disaster," said Somali
Information Minister Dahir Mohamud Gelle, who confirmed that the ministers for
education, higher education and health were killed in the blast. The ministers
for sports and tourism were wounded in the attack inside the Shamo Hotel, he
said.
The assailants hit one of Somalia's most important efforts to
extricate itself from anarchy and violence, explaining the presence of so many
top government officials. The former medical students among the graduates came
from only the second class to receive diplomas from the medical school.
The first class graduated a year ago. Before then, almost two
decades had passed since anyone earned a medical degree in Somalia. In the
December 2008 ceremony, held at the same hotel, the graduates proudly hoisted
diplomas into the air. This year, there was mayhem as the bomb went off among 43 graduates, their families and officials who were sitting on plastic chairs
facing a small stage, leaving the dead and wounded in bloody heaps.
More than 40 people were wounded. Students and doctors were among
the dead.
Burkas not only serve as coverings for women but as clever disguises for emotional retards who attack and kill those who strive for higher things in life.
Shut up, China
In a surprisingly undiplomatic rebuke, Prime Minister Stephen Harper
was publicly chided at a traditional Chinese welcoming ceremony Thursday for
taking too long to visit the country.
The subtle but pointed rebuke came as the prime minister and his
Chinese counterpart, Wen Jiabao, sat at a large oval table for talks following a
military welcome at the cavernous Great Hall of the People.
With television cameras rolling, Wen noted that he and Harper had yet
to meet and that no Canadian prime minister had visited China in five
years.
Asked about human rights after his meetings with the two Chinese
leaders, the prime minister said he had brought up in private both specific
issues and general ones, such as the situation Tibet.
One specific issue is the case of Husein Celil, the Canadian dual
citizen whisked out of Uzbekistan in 2006 and imprisoned in China. The
government is refusing Canadian consular visits.
But Harper has also been careful not to embarrass the Chinese
by bringing up the issues in a public setting.
"We always bring these up in a way that is frank and at the same time
that is respectful of Chinese sovereignty," he said.
Researchers for the Ecology Center, a health-advocacy group based in
Ann Arbor, Mich., tested the products and released their findings in a yearly
report issued in time for the holiday shopping season.
The products tested include toys, clothing and jewelry that could be
purchased for children as gifts. The group said the toxic substances they
contain can cause developmental problems in children and are linked to
cancer.
When freelance writer Wang Jian shops for toys for her 5-year-old son,
she’s happy to pay extra for Legos blocks and Japanese-brand train sets.
The reason, she and other parents say: Foreign brands enjoy a reputation
for higher quality — a perception reinforced by the product scares of recent
months.
China may be Santa’s global workshop, but when it comes to buying
playthings for their own children, Chinese families who can afford it opt for
foreign-brand toys — even if they are made in China.
Quality and safety issues are drawing more attention as incomes rise
and upwardly mobile Chinese grow more health conscious. While virtually all toys
on the market, whether foreign or domestic brands, are made in China, factories
making foreign brands are assumed to abide by more rigorous standards to screen
out lead paint and other harmful materials.
“I dare not buy cheap wooden toys or toys with paint,” said Lin Yan, a
professor at Shanghai International Studies University, whose 7-year-old
daughter tested for elevated levels of lead in her blood.
“I have a stupid standard: I buy her expensive toys in big department
stores. I can only assume most of the expensive ones are foreign brands and are
guaranteed to have better quality,” said Lin.
Wednesday, December 02, 2009
Monday, November 30, 2009
Not a Vacation Spot
Her blog is right here (in Spanish only).
A translation of one page here (courtesy of Babel Fish).
Why visit a communist hell-hole when you can visit any other country?
It's Monday....
Unfortunately, the world feels differently.
(sigh)
The federal government is devising a plan to fast-track immigrants with foreign credentials. Under this system, a foreign-trained worker will submit an application to see if his credentials will be accepted. Professions such as nurses, engineers and various medical staff are among those to whom this fast-track process would apply.
I have mixed feelings about this. Granted, there are shortages in some fields and there are well-trained workers pushed aside because they lack Canadian papers, there is also the problem of how well these workers are trained and if they can blend into the Canadian system. I know Commonwealth-educated, English-speaking citizens who have been denied the privileges granted to other Canadians because they didn't train in Canada. This was and is still a grave injustice and a great disservice to the Canadian populace who certainly could have benefited from their knowledge and experience. However, many countries thrive on standards many here would find unacceptable or unworkable. There is also the matter of Canadian-born and educated professionals who are unable to find work. Their experience should also be utilised before someone fresh of the plane.
***
From Barbara Kay:
My attention has been drawn to the disturbing phenomenon of overt Jew hatred in high schools, especially those with high populations of students from countries where Jew hatred is officially sanctioned in the law of their countries of origin.
Mrs. Kay relates testimony from a hearing of the Canadian Parliamentary Inquiry into Anti-Semitism. It's nothing short of disgusting and shocking. It's certainly a wake-up to unabated "multicultural exchange", where political correctness trumps decency.
From the article:
"Miriam" had taught in French language schools in the 1970s and 1980s in schools with large Lebanese Christian populations without incurring any anti-Semitism. In her current career she works amicably with Muslims. A child of Holocaust survivors, Miriam is demonstrably neither racist nor anti-Muslim.
In 2001 Miriam started teaching at a school largely populated by children of refugees, mainly from Djibouti and Eritrea, countries where there are no Jews but where hatred of Jews is deeply entrenched in the culture.
During the academic year of 2002-2003 Miriam started to encounter anti-Semitic taunts from students, such as "Does someone see a Jew here, someone smell a Jew? It stinks here." When she reported this and similar insults to the principal, the principal did not follow up. Indeed, the principal seemed more concerned about the students' sensibilities than hers.
The principal instructed teachers not to offend their Muslim students; they were not to look students in the eye, they were not to gesture with the forefinger to bid them approach and they were not to interfere with male students who were physically aggressive to male teachers.
During the invasion of Iraq, moments of silence were held in the classroom. Cultural presentations involved only Muslim culture and no Canadian content. Students were allowed to leave assembly during the playing of the national anthem.
The crisis of this story occurred when Miriam admonished a student for wearing a Walkman in class. The student screamed at her: "I don't have to listen to you; you are not a person, you are nothing, you do not exist as a person." When Miriam demanded he accompany her to the principal's office, the student followed her down the hall yelling, "Don't speak to me, don't look at me, you are not human, you are a Jew."
Why is this tolerated? Why are these people making Canada a haven for this kind of disgusting behaviour?! How many immigrants come into this country, work hard, make friends, send their kids to school and live as good citizens? Why should this particular rabble destroy that hard work and good will?
These incidents are not isolated.
I know of a multicultural centre that was also a scene of xenophobic snobbery and it was tolerated by those who ran it. Illiterate girls from Eritrea didn't have to shake hands with Jews or other non-Muslims. They didn't have to be acquainted with Hannukah even though Canada- as a "multicultural mosaic"- is home to several cultures and religions. Nary a word from the centre's managers.
This is something we can stop now. It's hardly "racist" or xenophobic to expect- nay, demand- that newcomers respect the values and customs of their new home, the one that gives them welfare. We should not think twice about stamping anti-Semitism or any other exclusionary behaviour. Unless we're satisfied with emotionally backward masses refusing to honour Canadian customs or with treating certain members of our society like dirty socks or being bullied at every turn, we'd better do the talking and now.
***
Now for nicer things, like Christmas cookies. It doesn't matter who you are or where you're from, cookies speak to the human condion, the condition that likes cookies.
Sunday, November 29, 2009
400
The first Sunday in Advent marks my four hundredth post.
Advent is the beginning of the liturgical year in the Church and the start of the slow crawl towards Christmas. I loathe to think that people perfunctorily put up decorations and listen to maudlin Christmas tunes and bide their time until Boxing Day. It's a sad way to prepare for one of the most pivotal moments in human history and (from my perspective) the most wonderful time of the year (stop singing). Christmas does mark the Birth of Christ. It also marks a time in our lives when we can put aside our cold remove of others and relax into a state of fellowship and good cheer.
So, stop treating Christmas as a chore. Treat it as a time to prepare yourselves. Make a batch of sugar cookie dough ahead of time and bake as needed (include the kids as they love cookies and baking is a useful skill). Forget the trendy gifts and get something your friend or relative really needs. Remember that there are people who have nothing and give. Remember that centuries ago a remarkable thing happened.
Just my thoughts.
Thursday, November 26, 2009
(sigh)
Al-Jazeera English gets CRTC approval (scroll down the page for comments)
Why?
The mouthpiece for Osama bin Laden gets approval from the CRTC. The pro-Arab, pro-Islamic news agency with its biased reporting and incredible claims match a more familiar, more publicly-funded network. Why such a decidedly controversial network has been given approval so easily beggars the imagination. The Fox News Network was allowed only after the CRTC was satisfied a combined network effort would not produce Fox News Canada. Even EWTN had to jump through hoops to get approval. Yet, Al-Jazeera will be coming to a channel near you. It's one thing to have many sources of news to choose from; it's quite another to have this particular news source.
Stupid comment of the day (from the comments at 3:45 PM ET):
It is not much of a suprise to see the amount of racist spoutings coming out
to this story. People making these comments need to remember that Canada is a
multicultural country, which does not mean we are a white anglosaxon christian
views country only. Al Jazeera would not be the first multicultural station in
Canada, we already have a Chinese language network, also the Omni stations.
There is also multicultural shows broadcast on Vision TV. The negative
commentators need to get their heads out of the sand and drag themselves into
the 21st Century. It has been less then 100 years since Women were allowed to
vote, and we still beat, torture and kill people who are different then
ourselves. Look at the issues still going on with bullying in schools and
attacks on Gays and Lesbians.Also, the negative commentors need to look more
into what Islam stands for, instead of what they see on TV and hear from other
racists around them.
Where do we start with this drivel?
I object to the word "racist". The contemporary use of the word is as hollow as the person using it. When once it accurately described an irrational and ignorant person or attitude, the word "racist" now finds itself as a plug for any debate that seems to go south for one side. Suddenly, it's "racist" to criticise Obama's inaction or- as the case may be- the approval of a pro-Islamic and evidently biased network which airs bin Laden's cave ravings. Did it not occur to the writer that objection to Al-Jazeera might stem from pan-Arabic bigotry? How, then, would the comment writer explain the truly horrid belief of some Arabs that black skin is "evil" (Ayaan Hirsi Ali speaks of this bigotry and pan-Arabism) or tolerating the existence of the Arab-backed janjaweed? Would this Arab-drawn cartoon of Condoleezza Rice be allowed anywhere else (with all apologies to Miss Rice)? Let's not forget that ARAB does not equal PERSIAN. Would the CRTC allow state-run news from Iran or a freedom-loving Iranian blogster hiding in Turkey? How does the writer feel about these issues?
People making these comments need to remember that Canada is a multicultural
country, which does not mean we are a white anglosaxon christian views country
only.
Too stupid to comment on. Moving on.
There are channels on Canadian television that include news shows and documentaries in other languages, including Chinese. To my knowledge, though, Canadians of Chinese descent haven't tried to manoeuvre planes into buildings. The inclusion of this fact in the aforementioned comment is some poor attempt at a red herring.
The negative commentators need to get their heads out of the sand and drag
themselves into the 21st Century. It has been less then 100 years since Women
were allowed to vote, and we still beat, torture and kill people who are
different then ourselves. Look at the issues still going on with bullying in
schools and attacks on Gays and Lesbians.
Again, too stupid to comment on. It seems that the comment-writer used this particular issue as a hobby-horse for typing up irrelevant and unsubstantiated muck and it will still come back to bite him. Yes, there are people (including homosexuals) tortured and killed- in the Islamic world. The cruelty there isn't in the same ballpark as North America where women can not only vote but be educated and get justice if someone wrongs them.
I still don't understand having a biased new agency for a handful who long to glean meaning from bin Laden's next "death to America" rant or why CRTC thought it was in Canada's best interest. It's about as sensible as the comment.
It's this paragraph that gets me (emphasis mine):
Just getting to this point has not been easy. This UN-backed trial was established in 2003 and has been teetering with uncertainty for the past two years as the current government resisted expanding the docket and the international community balked at the growing financial tab.
In fact, the trial opened in a near state of bankruptcy after widely corroborated allegations that Cambodian staff were forced to pay kick-backs to secure their jobs put a freeze on international funding.
Pol Pot fled after the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia in 1979 (the US' refusal to recognise their former enemy's, Vietnam, backing of an erstwhile Cambodia government ended up helping the Khmer Rouge). The UN finally set up a trial five years after Pol Pot died. Even then, the international community, which still labours under "carbon footprint" bunk, froze funding impeding the efforts to try the remaining Khmer Rouge leaders. Would the international community like to put its dibs in the Manhattan trial of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed?
Priceless.
American Thanksgiving
And the azurous hung hills are his world-wielding
- "Hurrahing in the Harvest", Gerard Manley Hopkins
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Climate-gate
Look through the texts yourselves and decide.
Friday, November 20, 2009
How the National Socialist Grinches Tried to Steal Christmas
The Nazi Party tried their best to remove Christ from Christmas by
paganising carols, producing glittering swastika, iron cross and toy grenade
baubles for the fir tree, research for a new exhibition has found.
Many of the changes made under Hitler, put in place to remove the
influence of the Jewish-born baby Jesus, are still in use today, much to the
alarm of modern Germans.
The swastika-shaped baking trays and wrapping paper adorned with
Nazi symbols have long gone, but traces of the Third Reich Christmas can still
be found in the subtly rewritten lyrics of favourite carols.
The discoveries have been highlighted by a new exhibition at the National
Socialism Documentation Centre in Cologne.
The Nazi version, which removed the religious references and replaced
them with images of snowy fields, remains in some song books and is sung in many households. The same goes for carols referring to Virgin Birth and lullabies
that invoke the Baby Jesus.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Homework
One father in Calgary has taken this bane to task and drew up a contract not necessarily to ban homework but to apply it differently and with less amount.
This leads to the question: is homework necessary?
I would argue: yes.
As a kid, I hated homework. I balked at it and waited for the last minute to do it. In retrospect, it wasn't prudent to do so. Not every homework assignment is pointless busy-work. It can also be an opportunity to review and practice the skill learned that day.
As I grew older and started teaching in South Korea, my North American perspective on homework completely changed. In Asia, education is one of the primary points in life. Shaped by Confucian ideals, much of Asia devotes its energies and resources to schooling. Hogwans- or private schools teaching certain subjects- were examples of the length to which parents would go to ensure their children were fully-fledged academics. Such hogwans could mean the difference between ending up at a top university or community college. As a result, children from the time they were seven years old had a fire lit under them. It was not uncommon to have students go to as many as six hogwans a week on top of going to regular school. Even their vacations were "working vacations". Imagine going to zoos or museums and then writing essays on them in the middle of August.
When I taught at these hogwans, I was expected to give my students English-language homework which, in truth, amounted to pointless regurgitation exercises that served only to show the parents that the kids were working. Writing a sentence five times doesn't count as constructive in my opinion. I would try to give my students homework that would require critical thinking rather than simply studying or rote memory work. Granted they had to review the daily lesson but they would also have to write their own sentences with the new words they learned or give me a "recipe" for a peanut butter sandwich. Sometimes they would be required to strike up an English conversation with their mums. For forty minutes a day, twice a week, in an homogeneous country, I did what I could. The homework, I believe, was taxing but not because it of the amount but because it required the kids to think critically about whatever English they learned that day. Anyone can say: "The fire truck is red" but how many can say: "The fire truck is scarlet in colour"? Yes, there are other words for red. I realise this is a simplistic example but when you consider that rote learning is the pillar of many schools here and abroad, a bit of word power and thinking on one's feet goes a long way.
When I returned to Canada and was informed by the students I was tutoring that a staggering twenty minutes cut into their TV-watching or hockey-playing time, I was purposefully indifferent. In South Korea, I saw kids fall asleep or have emotional meltdowns because the weight of their many private schools was bearing down on them. It was no surprise that I would have no pity for soft Canadian kids. Unless it was hockey, there was no real impetus to arrive at results. It is no surprise, therefore, that many students lag behind or become only marginally useful. This isn't everyone but it's enough to be concerned.
The problems in education in Canada, I feel, are threefold- the students, the parents and the teachers. Is the student motivated by the will to learn? Does he have a good attitude and work habits? Do the parents read to him? Do they encourage him to learn or take up a skill (Guitar Hero is a pretty strong argument against the perception that parents do encourage skills or hobbies. Why not actually learn to play the guitar instead of pressing a few buttons?)? Are the parents aware of what is being taught in the schools right now? Are the teachers motivated by benefits or desire to see a student excel? Is a curriculum properly balanced or watered-down so that student get little information and insight and topics therein can be completed by the end of the month? Are we all too pre-occupied (not necessarily busy) to care?
Homework does help the student practice and reinforce skills. Homework also teaches a student tolerance of unpleasant yet necessary tasks. Homework also gets the students to independently complete an assignment correctly and in a timely fashion. It isn't always pointless busy-work, as was previously stated. Some teachers do hand out homework for the sake it. This is wrong. Are the teachers expected by the powers-that-be to do so or are they inexperienced or even (hopefully not) indifferent to a student's skill level or time constraints? If a student does not know how to complete an assignment, is it because the teacher did not provide the students with the skills to finish the work or has the student been drifting off during a crucial instruction period? How much homework is too much? Twenty minutes every few nights can't be overwhelming. Are the parents expecting too little or too much? So a child doesn't want to do homework. That's not new. A review of the expected assignment is in order. Is the assignment something that can be done independently and with a little elbow grease? Some parents indulge their kids' whims and offer them a way out from a tedious yet important task. It might be cute when an eight year old pouts at math but not when he's eighteen. If the assignment is too difficult or overwhelming, why not discuss things with the teacher? I've found that unless a parent is unhappy with a test result and would rather have the teacher change it in an A, parents are very much absent from the academic scene.
I've posed these questions and observations because I think we are headed into a direction of softness and mediocrity instead of examining any underlying issues and dealing with them. Homework may not be fun but it is essential. Frowning at it won't make it disappear.
Just my thoughts.
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
It's Tuesday
Michael Moore emerges from irrelevance to tell Canadians what to do:
He says Canadians seem to be on a misguided quest to become more like Americans when it comes to health care. As a result, he tells a conference in Toronto, Canadians are straying from one of their core principles of looking out for one another.
Shut up, shut up, shut up, shut up.
First of all, Canadians do not want to be Americans; they want to be Canadians. What ignorance and arrogance to even suggest that! Way to display your stupidity, fool!
Secondly, would Moore like qualify his statement of Canadians "looking out for one another"? Is it based on his years of living in Canada? Oh, that's right! Michael Moore doesn't live in Canada and he never has. He has just has a romanticised view of Canada as a socialist utopia. Big clue, dingus: utopia means "no place". Were he to take up residence in Canada, it would be far removed from the "dregs" of Canadian suburbia. He certainly wouldn't find he has celebrity status here. We don't care about celebrities. So you've made a few movies. Big deal. Want a medal for that? Well, you're not getting one.
Thirdly, has this porcine blowhard ever been left on a gurney in a cold hospital hallway for three days, or waited in an emergency room for thirty-four hours, or had a cancer test botched? Nope.
Canada doesn't want your advice, Moore, you capitalist liar! Stuff it!
Moving on...
An excerpt from Mrs. Palin's new and wildly popular book:
From what I could see from my position in the center of the state, the
capital of Juneau seemed stocked mainly with "good ol' boys" who lunched with
oil company executives and cut fat-cat deals behind closed doors. Like most
Alaskans, I could see that the votes of many lawmakers lined up conveniently
with what was best for Big Oil, sometimes to the detriment of their own
constituents.
Whoa! From that passage, I can totally tell she cares about no one else but herself!
(WARNING: the above quote was sarcastic and not to be take seriously. Do not take internally.)
In the last election I took part in, the race was essentially down to two candidates: one representing a socialist party and the other was a self-made individual whose hard work helped define him. His working the land, however, sent most voters into a tizzy so they aligned themselves with the candidate most likely to bark for welfare cheques. The day after the election, members of a certain school board, whose ascendancy into well-paid, heavily unionised, plum positions did not depend on any real merit, were aghast- aghast!- that a farmer could have represented them in their riding.
It's this kind of toffy-nosed snobbery and uselessness that still mars civilised politics today. Obama-good/Palin-bad.
Oh really?
I commend the president for acknowledging today that “there are limits to
what government can and should do” to ease our 10.2% unemployment rate – the
highest it’s been since 1983. I also applaud his call for suggestions and
expression of openness to considering “any demonstrably good idea.” Taking him
at his word, I’d like to suggest this one: let’s learn from history and follow
the example of the man who occupied the White House in 1983 and was able to
transform an even worse recession than the one we’re currently experiencing into
the largest peacetime economic expansion in American history.
Are those the words of an ungrateful, ill-educated bumpkin? This sounds like a sensible reminder of what worked historically and economically for America. It was even pernicious. Had Mrs. Palin been a columnist rather than a governor, would her words be dismissed as easily as they are now? Obviously not. Mrs. Palin- whatever her ambitions- reminds the lazy voter (the one who forgot Obama has zero experience doing anything) that their vote was wasted. The current administration doesn't have the grip previous administrations had. To paraphrase a clueless yet photogenic character: he was elected to read, not to lead. Well, that's dandy but what about this unemployment and despotic environment polluters?
This article says it.
Louis Riel 'murdered by the Crown,' MP says
Louis Riel, a Metis rebel, was hanged on November 16th, 1885. His role in the Red River Rebellion and his subsequent capture, trial and execution have long been celebrated and reviled in western Canada. His demand for rights for the truly downtrodden in an era of loyalty to an absent and indifferent Crown paint him as heroic. The move to overturn his conviction would, ostensibly, remove the stain of villainy set up on him.