Reflections on life at “De Witte Wand”…

  • Dancing Robot

    The Japanese continue their fascination with all things robotic with this one, demonstrating its prowess at traditional dance. I doubt whether it could do Hip-Hop…
     
     
    More about the background here

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  • Joe Orton

    Today marks the 40th anniversary of the death of Joe Orton, killed by a series of hammer blows from his lover Kenneth Halliwell, who then promptly took an overdose. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography has an excellent entry on Orton, penned by Michael Arditti, no mean slouch himself as an author. That link, by the way, will only work for this week, as the ODNB only allows permanent access to its entries for subscribers, so get it while it’s hot. Alternatively, if you want a longer biography, then pick up a copy of John Lahr’s excellent Prick Up Your Ears, or see the film of Alan Bennett’s adaptation of the book (also called Prick Up Your Ears).
     
    And on the subject of six degrees of separation, I met Elena Salvoni and her husband, Aldo, a couple of times when I dined at the L’Escargot restaurant in Soho many years ago. Elena was the formidable manageress of the restaurant at the time, and a great Soho character. The Salvonis were the immediate neighbours of Orton and Halliwell. As Lahr writes: "Orton was killed between two and four in the morning. The Salvonis, whose bedroom was adjacent and who were awake, heard no struggle or argument".

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  • Wilders Strikes Again

    Every country has its share of politicians who display signs of being either loons or would-be demagogues. Here in the Netherlands we have Geert Wilders, who yesterday called for a complete ban on the sale of the Qu’ran or its use in mosques. Well what’s sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander, I say, if you’re going to ban the Qu’ran, then logically you should also ban the Bible, which is also not short of toe-curling passages and injunctions to kill the non-believer. But, of course, the publicity-hungry Mr. Wilders and his sympathisers can’t see that particular beam lodged firmly in their eyes. A more measured response came from Afshin Ellian, advisor to ex-Muslim Ehsan Jami, whose beating-up outside of his local supermarket apparently initiated this wild idea from Wilders. Ellian pointed out that instead of banning the book, firmer measures should be taken against the radical imams and mosques that use the Qu’ran to spread hatred.

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  • Keep Trying Those Buttons

    Brian Sack, over at Banterist, has a nice little video skit: Switching to a Secure Frequency. I have had days like that sometimes. 

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  • A Late Night Tonight

    Oh dear, it looks as though I’ll have a late night tonight. First up is Dangerous Knowledge on BBC Four, starting at 23:05. The documentary will look at the work and lives of three brilliant mathematicians and an equally brilliant physicist: Georg Cantor, Ludwig Boltzmann, Kurt Gödel and Alan Turing. And then at 00:35 tomorrow morning is another chance to see Derek Jacobi in Breaking the Code, which is an excellent film adaptation of the stage play about Alan Turing.
     
    Black coffee and matchsticks at the ready…  

    2 responses to “A Late Night Tonight”

    1. Brian Avatar
      Brian

       why matchsticks?

    2. Geoff Avatar
      Geoff

      You use them to prop your eyes open… 

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  • Excising Evolution

    I don’t watch much Dutch TV, I find little of it to be worthwhile; and I certainly don’t watch any of the output of the EO (Evangelische Omproep), the religious broadcasting company here in the Netherlands. So I missed the fact that the EO had licensed David Attenborough’s great Life of Mammals series. The EO has both broadcast it, and made it available on DVD with Dutch dubbing and subtitles.
     
    But the real news is that the EO has also excised any references that Attenborough makes to evolution. Here’s two examples, shown in a side by side comparison:
     
        
    While I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised at this, I still find this pretty disgusting behaviour by the EO. More examples of this rewriting of reality to fit their creationist folklore can be found here.
     
    (hat tip to Phil Plait, over at The Bad Astronomer, for drawing my attention to this)

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  • Apostate Attacked

    Hopefully this is not a portent of things to come, but the news that ex-Muslim Eshan Jami was attacked outside a supermarket near his home last Saturday does not leave me feeling particularly confident about the future. I’ve just got a copy of Paul Sniderman and Louk Hagendoorn’s When Ways of Life Collide, an examination of multiculturalism and its discontents in The Netherlands. The thesis is that the Dutch social policies that were designed to protect the distinct way of life of Muslim immigrants and promote tolerance are in fact breeding intolerance on both sides.
     
    Time will tell.

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  • Deventer Book Market

    Last Sunday saw the 19th annual book market held in the town of Deventer. There were 878 stalls set out in the town. If they were laid end-to-end, that’s six kilometres of stalls groaning with books. I managed to pick up some bargains: The Science Book for €5 and a hardcover first edition of Robert Nye’s Merlin for €4. There was one stall devoted to pop-up books, which are a particular weakness of mine. They had a nice example of a pop-up devoted to the works of Alfred Hitchcock, and another that had pop-ups of six of Frank Lloyd Wright’s houses, but alas, the prices asked I could not justify to myself. Frankly, Amazon is far cheaper, even with the postage. And then there was the stall that had an amazing book on Magritte, a snip at €225 in place of the original price of €995. I left that one behind as well.
     
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  • Watch The Skies

    Setting out on Sunday morning to go to the Deventer Book Market, I noticed these rather unusual (at least to me) clouds in the sky. The tops seemed to be the usual fluffy stuff, while the undersides were being drawn out into wisps. I’ve not seen this before.
     
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  • Stuff and Nonsense

    I don’t read the UK newspaper The Daily Mail. As a matter of fact, I don’t think it’s fit even to wrap fish and chips in either. This does have the fortunate side effect of ensuring that I don’t often come into contact with the opinions of its resident columnist Melanie Phillips, usually because when I do, I am left gasping for breath at the spittle-flecked lunacy of her opinions. 
     
    Still, every now and then something that Mad Mel writes is picked up and displayed elsewhere, usually because someone else also can’t believe the stuff she churns out. Here’s a good case in point. She apparently believes that science, not faith, is the new enemy of reason. Head on over to the link and read the full thing. You might also peruse the comments, which fall into one of two categories: a) detailed rebuttal of her harebrained arguments or b) an expression along the lines of "who is this idiot?" (for the best answer, see comment 58). I’ll just leave you with a taste of her tripe…
    Science cannot explain the origin of the universe. Yet it now presumes to do so and as a result it has descended into irrationality.
     
    The most conspicuous example of this is provided by Dawkins himself, who breaks the rules of scientific evidence by seeking to claim that Darwin’s theory of evolution – which sought to explain how complex organisms evolved through random natural selection – also accounts for the origin of life itself.  
    Needless to say, Dawkins has never said any such thing. Mel then goes on to waffle about Intelligent Design and the Cambrian Explosion. The only things that she makes abundantly clear are the depths of her ignorance and the idiocy of her claim that science is the enemy of reason. As the first comment notes, her homework should be to read The Ancestor’s Tale.

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  • Amsterdam Canal Parade 2007

    As promised, here’s my impressions of the 12th annual Canal Parade, held last Saturday in Amsterdam. For the first time I can recall, the weather was perfect. Most years that I’ve been present, we’ve had occasional showers, but this year there was not a cloud in the sky. That may have helped with the record-breaking turnout as well, there were 400,000 spectators lining the canals, according to police estimates. And there were 70 boats in the parade, the highest number ever.

    A number of the boats had a serious message. There appears to be an increasing number of anti-gay incidents occurring in Amsterdam and the rest of the Netherlands. Last weekend, for example, a 34-year old Irishman had his jaw and nose broken, an American gay couple were sprayed with pepper-spray or teargas and then beaten, and another couple were spat upon by a pair on motor scooters. So the unofficial motto of the Canal Parade could be said to be that emblazoned on the side of the Mr. B boat: "So you’re intolerant? – Piss off!!"

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    The figurehead of the boat also rather impressively underscored the message:

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    The rise in anti-gay violence was the theme of the Trut dance club boat, which was decorated with newspaper reports on the rise:

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    Then there was the "Pink Police" boat, with its motto: "to serve and protect Gay Amsterdam":

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    There was even a Hetero Boat, entered in the Parade to show solidarity, with the motto: "Samen anders, samen één" (different together, one together):

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    There were a couple of notable firsts in this year’s Parade. There was "Danny’s Boat" – a boat of LGBT children and their parents. This was the initiative of 14-year old Danny Hoekzema. When he first mooted the idea, the Mayor of Amsterdam, Job Cohen, rejected it, expressing doubts about involving "that vulnerable group" in the procession. He later relented, and gave his permission. In the event, you have to wonder what all the fuss was about. It was great to see the boat:

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    The other first was a boat sponsored by the care organisation Cordaan. It carried gay people who happened to also be mentally handicapped:

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    As I wrote last week, Shell didn’t have a boat in the parade this year, but there were a number of other multinationals represented, among them TNT, ING Bank and the ABN-AMRO bank:

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    This guy in the centre of the ING picture was giving it all that he had. Clearly a thwarted thespian who seized the chance to belt out a song and dance routine:

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    And of course, being a gay parade, we had the usual assortment of drag queens and muscle marys. Gawd bless ’em all:

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    The other 617(!) photos that I took that day can be seen in the complete photoset up on Flickr.

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  • While You’re Waiting…

    While you’re waiting for my report and photos on the Amsterdam Canal Parade, may I just refer you to this report on the event, which seems to touch quite well on the influences and pressure points that I feel also. 

    2 responses to “While You’re Waiting…”

    1. Wesley Avatar
      Wesley

      The driver of the car would get a prison sentence in the UK for letting a toddler do that, thankfully. 

    2. Geoff Avatar
      Geoff

      Understandable. But you do have to wonder at the mentality of some people, don’t you? 

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  • English As She Is Spoke

    There’s something about the often tortured language of academia that makes me want to scream. I begin to suspect that the reason that the phrasing is so labyrinthine is that because the emperor (or the empress) ain’t wearing no clothes. 
     
    Here’s a typical example. Salam Al-Mahadin writing in the Guardian and claiming that "Bookshops are using Muslim women’s autobiographies to peddle a bogus canon of Islamic oppression". Well, that’s what the sub-editor has put as the summary of her piece. For myself, I found it difficult to comprehend when wading through such motions as:
    "In individualising their experiences via lengthy narratives, these women contributed to the annihilation of that individuality.
     
    These accounts emerged in a discursive space already fraught with the polemics of generalisations. The veracity of the individual narratives may not be in dispute but the problematic of their deployment and the danger inherent in their exclusionary mechanisms is.  
     
    Thus "truths" about Islam, like any other truths, are produced by a paradigm of inclusion and exclusion, constraints and circulation. This is quite unique to these biographies.  
     
    The brown/black woman of the erstwhile colonial discourse may have spoken. But the din of the few voices that have been heard produce a totalising, essentialist mythology about Islam. They are heard as a symphony rather than solo concertos."  
    Er, hello? Is there any sense in there?

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  • Department of the Bleeding Obvious

    I take it that this is a review of a new SF series currently underway on American TV. It contains the classic line:
    In what may be a political statement, the US is ready to take an unpopular course of action without support from the rest of the world, but the manner in which this decision is made does not come across as particularly plausible.
    No shit, Sherlock? Colour me as completely unsurprised…  

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  • Photos Coming…

    The photos from last Saturday’s Amsterdam Canal Parade will be along shortly. I took nearly 700 photos, and most of them are currently being loaded in Flickr here. I’ll post a selection on the blog soon. 

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  • The Enemies of Reason

    This TV series sounds really good. Hopefully it will make its way to YouTube for those of us who don’t have Channel 4… 

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  • Amsterdam Pride

    This year’s Amsterdam Pride festivities started yesterday, and will carry on until Sunday. The highlight for many people, myself included, will be the annual boat parade. The weather forecast is good, so I’ll travel to Amsterdam tomorrow to take lots of photos of it.
     
    Unfortunately, this year Shell won’t have a boat in the parade. As a Shell pensioner, I feel rather sad about this, particularly following all the effort the Shell GLBT group (Pink Pearl) made to get their first ground-breaking boat into the parade in 2005. That led to other multinationals sponsoring their own boats in 2006 alongside the Shell boat.
     
    I understand from a Pink Pearl member that the reason that Shell is not participating this year in the parade is because the Shell Nederland Country Chairman gave Pink Pearl the steer to focus their limited resources (both manpower to organise these events, and yearly budget) on solving an internal Shell GLBT issue – which is Mobility across borders. At the moment gay employees are not free to move from one expatriate assignment to another with their partners (because it is illegal to be gay in many countries where Shell operates- sometimes leading to the death penalty if found with another same sex partner). The result of this is that gay people do not have equal chances to succeed in their careers if they are limited as to which countries they can work in with their partners, or they have to make choices to work in a country without their partners which does not make for a stable home life. At the moment, Pink Pearl is working on raising the awareness of this issue in Shell, especially within the Human Resources community and leadership teams.
     
    So, alas, no boat this year, but Pink Pearl members will definitely be present to cheer on the parade. Me too.  

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  • Pricking Pomposity

    I see that PZ Myers, over at Pharyngula, is also exasperated by Alister McGrath. He’s been reading a recent interview with McGrath that has appeared in the National Catholic Register. While I tend to find that McGrath’s arguments just make me want to howl in frustration with their stupidity, PZ takes the scalpel of reason to dissect them and lay them out in all their threadbare tawdriness for all to see. Nice job. 

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  • Living With Climate Change

    A rather worrying video from EUtube. It also contains another version of the graphic showing the impact of sea-level rises on The Netherlands. Sigh.
     
     

    2 responses to “Living With Climate Change”

    1. Gelert Avatar
      Gelert

      Looks like its really happening then. People never believe it till its too late.
      btw – I’m about to read this:  http://www2.bookgirl.org/index.php?page=the_end_of_mr_y – have you? It looks kinda interesting.

    2. Geoff Avatar
      Geoff

       Ooh, no I haven’t read it; sounds good. The synopsis reminds me a little of Mobius Dick, which I have read, and really enjoyed. I recommended it to my brother, and he said it was the first time in his life (he’s 72) that he had ever started to get an understanding of quantum physics…

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  • A Comprehensive FAQ

    Having had to do it a few times in a past life, then I know that compiling the list of questions and answers that go to make up a FAQ can become more of an art than a science at times.
     
    Still, I take my hat off to the compiler of this FAQ from Sainsburys, which accompanies their announcement of the fact that they will no longer be accepting cheques in their stores. It contains the following beauty:
    I have a latex allergy. What are the buttons on your chip and PIN terminals made of?  
    It’s given me an insight into some people’s lives that I never even realised existed… Although what you must do if you’re into rubber, and you have a latex allergy, I really cannot imagine. Perhaps that’s one definition of masochist? And before you jump to conclusions, I have neither of the two conditions.
     
    (hat tip to Diamond Geezer for the link)

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