Year: 2006
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Hysteria At Large
Armando Iannucci, in today’s Observer, sums up my feelings about the hysteria that is washing over us at the moment. But he says it much better, and funnier, than I could. -
The Pear Tree
The pear tree in the garden is laden down with fruit.
We don’t know what variety of pear it is, but we know that we can cook them. We’ve already had some poached in red wine, cooked by the mother of a friend. And last night, I tried out a recipe from Nigel Slater’s Kitchen Diaries: poached pears with ice-cream and chocolate sauce. Very simply poached in a sugar syrup with a vanilla pod – but they tasted delicious.
The next recipe for pears that I might tackle is Pear and Almond Tart from Amanda Hesser’s The Cook and the Gardener. But I probably need to take a deep breath, it’s a traditional French recipe that looks complicated and time-consuming. That’s one thing that makes me favour Slater’s recipes – they seem simple, yet they deliver excellent results.
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Your Experience May Vary
While I’m not particularly looking forward to next Tuesday, I trust that the experience will not be too similar to that undergone by Steven Wells. His tale of the Philadelphia health system is both screamingly funny and terrifying.(hat tip to Granny for the link) -
Taking The P*ss
For non-British-speaking readers, the title translates as "having a laugh at someone’s expense". It seemed an apposite title for this rumination by Orac, over at Respectful Insolence. Look, just because Gandhi did it, doesn’t mean to say that it’s a good idea…
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Under the Knife
A couple of weeks ago, I noticed a swelling in my groin. Oh, bugger, I thought, it’s not a hernia… Oh, but it was… That was confirmed by the local doctor.
I mean, there’s something faintly ridiculous about a hernia. You would think that evolution would design the muscles around the abdomen to hold it all in, but no, the small intestine is just gagging for the chance to *pop* out through the muscles and luxuriate as an unwelcome swelling under my skin.
I wouldn’t mind so much, but I’ve been here before. Admittedly, it was fifty years ago, but still: "been there, done that, got the T-shirt". Then, as a child of seven, and the first time I’d been operated on, it was all a bit scary. I still remember being wheeled into a room just by the operating theatre and being left there for what seemed like hours (it was probably all of five minutes). I got thoroughly worked up because, as I lay there on the trolley, I could look around the room at all the glass-fronted cabinets stuffed to the gills with knives, saws, scalpels and things that, while I had no idea of what they could do, certainly seemed to be promising a lifetime of pain.
Fast-forward fifty years, and here I go again. Once more into the breach, dear friends. Or rather, once more to repair the breach… This time, this being the Netherlands, I don’t get a general anaesthetic. Oh no, I get a needle in my back that is supposed to deaden my nether regions while the surgeon fiddles around. I’m not sure which is worse, actually. To pass out completely and to be blissfully unaware, or to be conscious and have the chance of hearing the surgeon say "oh, shit".
I saw the anaesthetist yesterday to agree on the method of anaesthesia. Well, in principle, one has a choice, but I have the impression that people end up with whatever the anaesthetist wants.
I confess that it didn’t boost my confidence one jot when the anaesthetist asked to see my back. I assumed that he wanted to see where he was going to stick the needle, but he was muttering that it must be very low down. I suddenly realised that he was looking for the hernia. "Er, no," I hastily clarified, "the hernia is in my groin – at the front, not at the back". Duh. I’m seriously considering following a friend’s suggestion and using a felt-tip pen to mark the spot, together with helpful messages such as "my leg does not need to be amputated", and "my kidneys are perfectly fine, thank you very much".
I have to report to the hospital at 07:45 am on Tuesday morning. With luck, they’ll kick me out, still breathing, more or less in one piece, but with the bonus of extra stitches, later that day.
Watch this space.
Update: A Dutch friend points out that the Dutch word for "slipped disc" is "hernia", while the Dutch for "hernia" is "lies breuk" (pronounced leece brurk). That is almost certainly the cause of the confusion with the anaesthetist, but the worrying thing is that I’m pretty sure that I didn’t say "hernia". As best I can recall, he consulted my case notes and then asked to see my back. When I said that I had a "lies breuk" (in my best Dutch), he then scratched something out and wrote something else in my notes. The more I think about it, the more the felt-tip pen plan seems like a good idea…
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What’s Your World View?
Another quiz to pass the time…My (unsurprising) result was:You scored as Materialist. Materialism stresses the essence of fundamental particles. Everything that exists is purely physical matter and there is no special force that holds life together. You believe that anything can be explained by breaking it up into its pieces. i.e. the big picture can be understood by its smaller elements. Materialist
94% Existentialist
81% Modernist
75% Cultural Creative
44% Postmodernist
44% Fundamentalist
31% Romanticist
25% Idealist
13% What is Your World View?
created with QuizFarm.comThe Theory Is Great, But The Reality Sucks
I’m really curious to see how the Great Terror Plot will actually pan out. My money is currently on it being a damp squib born of a couple of deranged losers (who bonded in the daffodils), with a few innocents caught in the police lasso.
Much has been made of the liquid-based explosives. However, this commentary on the known characteristics of the most likely constituents would seem to suggest that the practicality of successfully mixing up a brew in an aircraft in flight is akin to a snowball surviving in Hell.
The commentary leads the author (Perry Metzger) to entertain three possibilities:
- The terrorists had a brilliant idea for how to combine oxidizer and a ketone or ether to make some sort of nasty organic peroxide explosive in situ that has escaped me so far. Perhaps that’s true — I’m not omniscient and I have to confess that I’ve never tried making the stuff at all, let alone in an airplane bathroom.
- The terrorists were smuggling on board pre-made organic peroxide explosives. Clearly, this is not a new threat at all — organic peroxide explosives have been used by terrorists for decades now. Smuggling them in a bottle is not an interesting new threat either — clearly if you can smuggle cocaine in a bottle you can smuggle acetone peroxide. I would hope we had means of looking for that already, though, see below for a comment on that.
- The terrorists were phenomenally ill informed, or hadn’t actually tried any of this out yet — perhaps what we are told was a "sophisticated plot" was a bunch of not very sophisticated people who had not gotten very far in testing their ideas out, or perhaps they were really really dumb and hadn’t tried even a small scale experiment before going forward.
It probably won’t surprise you to learn that my money is on (3).
(hat tip to Schneier on Security)
The Primeval Forest
This is a brilliant shot of the sort of forest that exists deep in one’s imagination (well, at least it does in mine). Click on the photo to see it full size and then sink into your memories of childhood dreams all those long years ago…I Rest My Case
To all those idiots who say that being gay is not natural because it doesn’t exist in the animal world, I simply point to this heartwarming story of storks raising their chicks.Multitasking
I find it difficult enough to concentrate on one task, so Tapan Dey has got me knocked into a cocked hat.While we’re on the subject of doing multiple things at once, Dr. Crippen draws my attention to this piece of hard wiring in the neurons. Can you do it?Thames Town
Prince Charles, eat your heart out. You may have been able to build Poundbury, incorporating your twee ideas of a fantasy British village, but I think Thames Town has trumped your hand. Being built by the Chinese in Songjiang, about 30 km from Shanghai, this is shaping up to be, in the words of Jonathan Glancey in the Guardian today, "a grotesque and extremely funny parody of an olde English town seen through Chinese eyes, and built by canny British developers".
The Guardian story claims that Thames Town is only one of seven satellite towns, the other six each have a national architectural style taken from a country as a theme. However, according to this story on designbuild-network.com, there are in fact nine towns being built, borrowing from the UK, the USA, Russia, Spain, Sweden, France, the Netherlands, Germany and Italy. I wonder what Holland Town will look like?
Run For The Hills
To paraphrase Hermann Göring, "when I hear the words management consultancy, I reach for my gun". This news has got my trigger-finger real itchy.
Reverse-Engineering Religion
Who designed the cow? That’s the question that Daniel Dennett posed when he began his address to the audience at this year’s TED conference. He uses it to examine the memes of religion. It’s worth watching and pondering. I was pleased to see that the lancet fluke manipulating the ant made an appearance.
Spot-On, Marina!
Marina Hyde, in this piece for the Guardian’s Comment is Free, muses about the reports that terrorists have not only been training in far-off Pakistan, but also on Beatrix Potter’s doorstep, in England’s Lake District.
I share her view that really, there is something risible about these narcissistic losers bonding in the daffodils on the shores of Lake Windermere. But her point is absolutely to the point:
It does not belittle murder to admit that that murder is being planned by a bunch of intense, lost, silly boys. But it should absolutely affect our response. Is it truly worthy of us to dismantle long-cherished legal freedoms for this lot?
Absolutely not, is of course my reaction. And I totally agree with her when she writes:
This should not for a moment suggest that the danger from such people is not real. But being unable to laugh at it is a danger itself. It implies a critical lack of self-belief, suggesting virtues and values to be so tenuous that they can be shaken by Mittyish socio- or psychopaths, when the reality is that we will never be able to fully protect ourselves against some kinds of ingenuity.
Er, Tony, are you listening?
Wheels Turn Slowly on the IOM
Robert, over at his Links and Things blog, draws my attention to the fact that the government (Tynwald) of the land of my birth (the Isle Of Man) have at last equalised the age of consent at 16 for both heterosexuals and homosexuals. They have also at long last repealed section 38 – a nasty little piece of legislation – that was modelled on the UK’s section 28.Windows Live Writer
Microsoft has released the beta of a Windows-based tool to prepare blog entries and then upload them into Windows Live Spaces or other Blog environments (e.g. Blogger, LiveJournal, TypePad and WordPress). This blog entry was prepared using it. You can get it from here.
Apparently, it’s extensible. Someone is working on a plug-in to link it with photos held on Flickr, which is something that I would find useful…
In Praise of Gates
It looks as though Bill and Melinda Gates have had enough of pussyfooting around the misguided HIV abstinence campaign of the US government. And about time too. They are now spelling out the reality, instead of the cloud cuckoo land envisaged by the US government and its backers from the religious right.Granny Gets a Vibrator
May I just draw your attention to a blog: Granny Gets A Vibrator. It’s written by a woman who is by no means a spring chicken or in the best of health, but who is seizing life by the throat and shaking it heartily. You go, girl!I can’t recall now whose blog I read with the pointer to granny, but thank you, whoever you were.

