Ok..that's just in jst - a funny picture I thought worth sharing! But here's a more traditional one -- stunningly beautiful Easter eggs.
Obama's spending proposals would ... create new spending commitments and run up large deficits, in the hopes that the dollars poured into health care and education will create a new baseline for government's obligations, which in turn will create the political space for tax increases on the middle class. Like the starve-the-beast approach, the Obama strategy puts off the hard part till tomorrow: Give them tax cuts today, conservatives said, and they'll swallow spending cuts tomorrow; give them universal health care, universal pre-K, subsidies for green industry and all the rest of it today, liberals seem to be thinking, and they'll be willing to pay for it tomorrow. ...
[I]f you can change the baseline of social spending that Americans expect from their government before that day of hard choices arrive - and once created, government programs are awfully hard to get rid of, whether they're actually effective or not - then you've tilted the landscape of negotiation in liberalism's favor, and ensured that a post-Obama entitlement compromise will look a lot more like social democracy than a pre-Obama compromise would have.
In the Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo), fighting continues among various rebel armies, tribes, the Congolese army and U.N. forces. ... Once more, caught in all of this are the local civilians, terrorized by fleeing and advancing troops of all kinds.
Saving Gorillas - The Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund International
Dedicated to the conservation of gorillas and their habitats in Africa through anti-poaching, regular monitoring, research, education and support of local communities, DFGFI uniquely continues to promote the ideals and vision of Dr. Dian Fossey.
..we should take this opportunity to celebrate more than just one man and an idea. We should celebrate the spirit that drove Darwin and many other exceptional people to explore previously unseen parts of the world and to unearth the history of life. Their adventures and discoveries have transformed our view of nature and our place in it.
Do read the article to read about the heroic journeys and work of Alfred Russel Wallace and Henry Walter Bates, who "undertook even longer voyages under more difficult conditions than Darwin" in arriving at their theories of evolution / natural selection. If Charles Darwin were alive today, he'd be Simon Cowell
The nearest we get to witnessing the survival of the fittest is in The X Factor
How would Charles Darwin feel if he were alive today, a radio show asked this week? Much like the rest of us I imagine - pretty depressed.
Oh, I suppose he could enjoy a smug “told you so” over the Vatican's admission on Tuesday that the theory of evolution may, erm, be on the right track after all. And he could have a laugh by clicking on www.creationism.org and discovering that there are still people who believe that Noah really did squeeze all those animals on to the Ark because, and this is a quote, “one could fit, for example, a dozen brachiosaurus eggs in the trunk of a car, with room to spare!”
But there'd be bad stuff too. On the Origin of Species wouldn't be much of a seller down at WH Smith because there's no tie-in fitness DVD and he doesn't have a story to tell about his time in rehab. It's doubtful he'd get his own series with the BBC because they've already got one beardie talking about Nature and that's Bill Oddie.
And I reckon he'd be consulting his lawyers right now about the weird, commemorative £2 coin that the Royal Mint has just brought out in his honour. Have you seen it? It features a picture of Darwin gazing into the eyes of an ape with an expression that seems to say: “Your place or mine?”
But I'd guess the thing that would most depress Darwin in 2009 would be that he'd start to wonder whether he'd got his theories all wrong. I certainly would. It is hard, for instance, to swallow the idea of natural selection when you gaze upon the über-rich creature that is Jocelyn Wildenstein. This is a woman who spent a reported £2.7million on cosmetic surgery and once said: “I lost my peripheral vision after my last cheek implant but I weighed it up carefully and realised I only used it for driving, so it was a decision I could live with.”
Sex industry slowsAnd another related news about economy hurting a segment of the population :)
Brothel owners in Europe and the United States say belt-tightening is undermining a once-lucrative industry.
Rich Cut Back on Payments to MistressesOh...the worries of being rich! ;)
You know times are tough when the rich start cutting costs on their mistresses.According to a new survey by Prince & Assoc., more than 80% of multimillionaires who had extra-marital lovers planned to cut back on their gifts and allowances. Still, only 12% of the multimillionaire cheaters said they plan to give up on their lovers altogether for financial reasons.
Amsterdam to halve shop window brothels and marijuana cafesSigh...what is the world coming to! ;)
Amsterdam will on Monday unveil plans to clean up the city's old town and red light district by halving the number of shop window brothels and cafés where marijuana is sold legally.
100 Notable Books of 2008 ..via NYT. Also: Michiko Kakutani’s 10 Favorite Books of 2008 and Janet Maslin’s 10 Favorite Books of 2008
Year-end review: Apple’s best of 2008
Best New and Improved Software of 2008
In his compelling new book the scholar and former diplomat Peter W. Galbraith not only reminds us that the Iraq war has been a costly, bungled operation, but he also argues that the war has had the opposite effect of virtually everything that President Bush and his administration promised the American public it would have:
- A war intended to eliminate (what were later found to be non-existent) weapons of mass destruction in Iraq “ended up with Iran and North Korea much closer to having deployable nuclear weapons.”
- A war intended to help combat terrorism has led to the recruitment of more terrorists and the spread of Al Qaeda to Iraq.
- A war intended to create a bulwark against the ayatollahs in Tehran turned into a “strategic gift to Iran” and the empowerment in Iraq of pro-Iranian Shiite theocrats.
- A war intended to make Israel more secure has made that country more vulnerable to threats from Syria, Iran and Hezbollah.
- A war intended to showcase American power has ended up underscoring “the deficiencies of U.S. intelligence, the incompetence of American administration and the limitations on the American military.”
- A war meant to boost America’s global leadership “has driven U.S. prestige to an all-time low” over the last five years and alienated important allies like Turkey.
..whence–depressed
By false opinion and contentious thought,
Or aught of heavier or more deadly weight,
In trivial occupations, and the round
Of ordinary intercourse – our minds
Are nourished and invisibly repaired...
“I fear the government has passed the point of no return,” said Ron Chernow, a leading American financial historian. “We have the irony of a free-market administration doing things that the most liberal Democratic administration would never have been doing in its wildest dreams.”Of course, we need to get out of the current mess before we worry about how to avoid it again!
..
“It’s pure crisis management,” Mr. Chernow said. “It’s the Treasury and the Federal Reserve lurching from crisis to crisis without a clear statement on how financial failures will be handled in the future. They’re afraid to articulate such a policy. The safety net they are spreading seems to widen every day with no end in sight.”
"I would love it if everyone could contemplate this ocean of mountains and glaciers. They put me through the wringer, but it's so beautiful. The night will be long but beautiful."
d'Aubarede, along with ten others, is feared dead in one of the worst mountaineering accidents. Also dead is the first ever Irish to climb K2 - Gerard McDonnell, who started his adventure with the words:
“Let luck and good fortune prevail !!! Fingers crossed."
He made it to the peak but died on the way back. More online updates on the K-2 Tragedy, if you are interested.
The
One of the biggest mountain climbing tragedy is the 1986 K2 Tragedy in which 13 climbers from several expeditions died. The other such tragedy, was the 1996 tragedy on Mt. Everest, made famous by Jon Krakauer's Into Thin Air; also made into a horrible TV movie that I caught parts of some time back). Btw, though I had read about Anatoli Boukreev's rebuttal to Krakauer's book with his own version of what transpired on the South Ridge in The Climb, I did not realize that when the tragedy happened, there was another crew on the other side of the mountain, where people perished too. Just now, I read that....the storm's impact on climbers on the mountain's other side, the North Ridge, where several climbers also died, was detailed in a first hand account by British filmmaker and writer Matt Dickinson in his book The Other Side of Everest.
This reminds me that I never got around to reading Into Thin Air. Five-six years ago, I started the book but then moved to his earlier book, Eiger dreams: Ventures among men and mountains, thinking I'll get back to it later but somehow never did.
Mountaineering or even climbing of any sorts is an activity I would never attempt but I remember reading Eiger Dreams, a collection of essays by Krakauer on climbing, and in doing so entering a whole other fascinating world that never will be mine to experience. The experience was obviously not quite like reliving the actual accomplishment of these adventerous souls and yet it was far more deeply experienced than even seeing a good documentary showing them climbing these trecherous mountains.
Isn't that why we read -- to enter into worlds that we would otherwise never experience?
For better or for worse, this is the life some people decide to live. More power to them for living life to its fullest! Their philosophy is probably best reflected by a quotation by Helen Keller, which another mountaineer, Alex Lowe, used to have on his office wall:
"Security is mostly a superstition. It does not exist in nature, nor do the children of men as a whole experience it. Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. Life is either a daring adventure or nothing at all."
Alex apprently had some crazy adventures on mountains and after having climbed mountains like Mt. Everest, K2, and Annapoorna, died on the Shishapangma, the fourteenth highest mountain in the world and the lowest of the eight-thousanders; which is interestingly also the last of the top 14 to be climbed successfully, with the first successful attempt coming in 1964. The first was the scaling of the Annapurna, 10th in the list of 14, which was scaled in 1950 by French climbers, Maurice Herzog and Louis Lachenal.
Anyways, such is life...or rather to usurp Vonnegut's words yet again: And so it goes!
Solzhenitsyn's unflinching accounts of torment and survival in the Soviet Union's slave labor camps riveted his countrymen, whose secret history he exposed. They earned him 20 years of bitter exile, but international renown. And they inspired millions, perhaps, with the knowledge that one person's courage and integrity could, in the end, defeat the totalitarian machinery of an empire.I think John Donne's poem is more appropriate here than anywhere else!
DEATH be not proud, though some have called theeA great voice for freedom (and one that suffered a lot due to the lack of it) is no more.
Mighty and dreadfull, for, thou art not so,
For, those, whom thou think'st, thou dost overthrow,
Die not, poore death, nor yet canst thou kill me. - John Donne
Alexander Solzhenitsyn, who has died aged 89 was not only a great, but a passionately committed writer – he believed it was his moral duty, in the face of systematic totalitarian obfuscation, to record Russia's 20th-century experience for posterity.Maybe one of these days I will get around to reading the Gulag Archipelago - have 2/3 volumes sitting in the basement in boxes -- picked up at a sale more than a decade back! I think the box also contains his "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich". (I checked; do not have "One day..". I have a copy of "The Love-Girl and the Innocent".)
"A man is happy so long as he chooses to be happy and nothing can stop him."
"handy How-To guide to eclipse chasing. The next two are slated for July 22, 2009 and July 11, 2010. The first will be visible in parts of India and China before heading into the Pacific, while the second will primarily be visible from South Pacific islands. For a full list of future dates, check out NASA's page of eclipse dates."This 2nd wired post also has a link to some amazing flickr albums, which link to not only some great eclipse pictures but also have some great pictures of NW China.
The devil may wear Prada — but the pope does not.
.. same-sex couples have a great deal to teach everyone else about marriage and relationships. Most studies show surprisingly few differences between committed gay couples and committed straight couples, but the differences that do emerge have shed light on the kinds of conflicts that can endanger heterosexual relationships.Not that society needs reasons to support the freedom and honor the rights of every human being to get married and share their lives with someone, without having to face repurcussions; be they of a legal or societal nature.
...
Notably, same-sex relationships, whether between men or women, were far more egalitarian than heterosexual ones. In heterosexual couples, women did far more of the housework; men were more likely to have the financial responsibility; and men were more likely to initiate sex, while women were more likely to refuse it or to start a conversation about problems in the relationship. With same-sex couples, of course, none of these dichotomies were possible, and the partners tended to share the burdens far more equally.
While the gay and lesbian couples had about the same rate of conflict as the heterosexual ones, they appeared to have more relationship satisfaction, suggesting that the inequality of opposite-sex relationships can take a toll.
...
The egalitarian nature of same-sex relationships appears to spill over into how those couples resolve conflict.One well-known study used mathematical modeling to decipher the interactions between committed gay couples. The results, published in two 2003 articles in The Journal of Homosexuality, showed that when same-sex couples argued, they tended to fight more fairly than heterosexual couples, making fewer verbal attacks and more of an effort to defuse the confrontation. Controlling and hostile emotional tactics, like belligerence and domineering, were less common among gay couples. Same-sex couples were also less likely to develop an elevated heartbeat and adrenaline surges during arguments. And straight couples were more likely to stay physically agitated after a conflict.
"It's all been a bit of a surprise," said Carla Sarkozy, formerly Bruni, formerly Bruni-Sarkozy, at yesterday's women-only charity lunch at Lancaster House, in London. "There I was, last year, on October 13, strumming my guitar." She mimed the strumming. "And then I met Nicolas. And now I've met the Queen!"Well.. for those interested in more details of her whirlwind romance with the French president, there's now a book! And not one written by a gossip-gorged tabloid writer but by Carla herself!!
How Sarko seduced meOk. Enough said. Quiet indifference would have been a better response from me to this non-news but how would we have our WTF_how-do-I-care moments for the day without our "celebrities" and their shenanigans.
It's time for another episode in the Sark-opera. The first well-informed book on President Sarkozy's speed romance and marriage with Carla Bruni, the Italian supermodel-singer, is out tomorrow. There are no bombshells but a few tasty anecdotes in Carla et Nicolas, La Véritable Histoire. Bruni talked to the two authors, Valérie Benaim and Yves Azéroual. She covers some past lovers, her career and her coup de foudre for the newly divorced president when they met on a blind date at a dinner party last November. Interesting dirt is dished against Rachida Dati, the Justice Minister and Sarko protégée, whom the authors depict as jealous of Bruni's arrival (more later).
And just like that, my #NPM2018 celebrations end with a poem today by Emmy Pérez. Not one more refugee death by Emmy Pérez A r...