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Saturday, November 20, 2010
Britain: Without government intervention, natural gas would be too cheap
Friday, November 19, 2010
Why gay conservatives worry about gay marriage
My own view is that whatever marriage might mean for the happy couple, the reason the rest of us give it society’s imprimatur is that it’s the best way to keep the wandering male at home, to raise socialised children. Weaken the marriage and you weaken the chances of the next generation being good citizens. All the rest - the love, the happy-ever-afters - is just icing on a sternly healthy cake. From this central truth comes what should be the conservative case against gay marriage, or, at least, conservative concerns about a redefinition of marriage and the weakening of an already compromised tradition that helps to protect us all. Therefore gay marriage advocates who claim that the case for gay marriage is opposed only by homophobes, religious bigots and haters are lazy, ignorant, obsessively self-admiring or a combination of the above. Those who say marriage must be redefined to end homophobia are using the wrong tool for the job, and damaging it in doing so. The rest at Mr Bolt's place. |
Amid the climate gloom life goes on and nature thrives
Left orthodoxy maintains that the story of man's interaction with the ecosphere is a story of habitat degradation leading to species extinction. That's the headline. But by overstating the risks of climate change, and underestimating the capacity of humans and other species to adapt, we risk missing the chance to address real, pressing, soluble environmental problems.Scientists at James Cook University last week announced they have discovered an exquisite new species of pygmy seahorse, 200 kilometres off the coast of Cairns. At less than half a centimetre long, the tiny creature may be the smallest vertebrate.The discovery adds to the work of 2700 scientists from 80 countries who just completed the first Census of Marine Life. The census increased the estimate of known species from 230,000 to 250,000, finding "an unanticipated riot of species, which are the currency of diversity".A startling find is the "rare biosphere" of microbes - species surviving in numbers of less than one in 10,000. These tiny cohorts subsist among masses of a dominant competitor, apparently waiting and hoping that conditions will change to allow their moment on the evolutionary stage. They seem to be a planetary insurance policy so that even if nutrient or temperature conditions change over time, there will still be an abundance of microscopic sea life in the food chain.Outbreaks of the crown of thorns starfish on the Great Barrier Reef have reduced by half over the past decade. Scientists have no way of explaining their pattern of aggression and regression but it is clear that runoff from the farmers of north Queensland is not the main culprit.Our lack of perspective derives in part from shortness of memory. The rest here. Via Greenie Watch |
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
I heartily endorse this tweet
I know, it's politically incorrect and if I thought about it too much I would appreciate the problems with it (I suppose), but really, I'm just over all this bullshit acknowledging of traditional owners. It's a completely meaningless term and is actually contradictory. Either you are the traditional owner of land or you are not. Other than for unimproved Crown land, aboriginal people are not the owners of land and there is nothing to be gained by this well-intentioned sop that effectively seeks to delegitimise our presence in this country. Now, you may pine for a time before British Australia and wish that the British had never come here and established the modern nation state called Australia. But we aren't going away. Non-aboriginal Australians aren't going to pack up and move back to where ever they or their families came from. And yet we tolerate this idea that implicitly says that our presence here is illegitimate, that there are people with a claim to this country that is real, whereas ours is not. We put up with that ersatz "traditional" welcome to country ceremony that didn't exist until 40 years ago when Ernie Dingo and another fellow made it up. Do we Australians really need to be welcomed to what is our own country? Our sensibilities should be troubled by the dispossession of the aboriginal people and the disastrous effects it had on them, but it happened. It can't be undone and it wont be undone. So we are all here together and surely the last thing people rotting in the remote communities, or the deracinated urban aborigine passing generational failure and disadvantage to yet another generation, is to be encouraged to nurse grievances about the wrongs of the past and wallow in an impotent victimhood? Because, gee, hasn't that been working a treat for the last thirty or forty years? The greatest tragedy of the 2007 federal election was the fact that at just the moment we had a government that had found the courage to 'name' the failed policies of the past for what they were, and to declare that we had to do things differently, we changed the government and we have gradually seen since the old alliance of the white urban Left and those aborigines who profited from the disadvantage of the rest of their people reassert the disastrous policies of the rights agenda, separatism and victimhood. I'm sick of symbolic gestures that are more about white people feeling good about themselves, (and superior to the less 'enlightened'), than about making sure this current generation of aboriginal kids isn't destroyed like the ones before it. And let's be honest about this shall we? Even here in Perth's suburbs I can see exactly that happening. Kids tagging along with their parents (who have never worked a day in their lives) as they wait before half past eight in the morning with social security money for the bottle shop to open, and a day's drinking to begin. Kids whose formative years is a never ending succession of violence, foul language and the most appalling anti-social behavior. Kids who are doomed to fail at school before they even get there. But what makes our inner-city hipsters angry? Apologies and preambles to the friggen constitution. |
Monday, November 15, 2010
Coldest Arctic autumn since 2004, following coldest summer on record
http://ocean.dmi.dk/arctic/meant80n.uk.php
This has been the coldest autumn in the high Arctic since 2004, after the coldest summer on record. Hansen’s claim that it is the “hottest year ever” are based on his imaginary Arctic temperatures. |
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Mother Jones reader "I can't do this anymore...This is OUR Iraq War of lies and fear"
I can’t do this anymore, this climate change hysteria. And I consider myself both progressive and a liberal too, so hear me out. I found out what “they” all agree on, they agree that the effects of CO2 are predicted to be anywhere from unstoppable warming, to no noticeable effects at all. No wonder they all agreed. And it’s been 24 years. We look like we WANT this climate hell to happen. We have been had folks. This is OUR Iraq War of lies and fear. I’m both embarrassed and ashamed for endorsing this CO2 mistake through two and a half decades of dire warnings of doom and Armageddon.. But I was too much of a climate coward to actually say out loud: THE END IS NEAR. Because it’s exactly the same thing! I actually gave my kids CO2 death threats. Why? Why did I do this for so long? Let history know that this responsible environmentalist is now a Green Climate Change Denier.
From Real Science
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Green Jobs Cut Despite $500 Million Government Subsidy
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Don't get caught in the web of conspiracy theory truthiness
Wel, I'm actually going to point to something from the Fairfax media for a change!
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Friday, November 12, 2010
4G may trump Gillard’s $43 billion #NBN
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Amnesty International tries to defend helping a former terrorist sell his book
| Amnesty International tries to explain to me why it’s helped a convicted terrorism supporter to profit from his crime by helping to flog his white-washing book for Christmas. The answer in part is apparently that most of its members wouldn’t mind:
I suspect Amnesty International is now an institution focused more on it's own survival and which has possibly outlived its usefulness. |
Stubborn Antarctic ozone hole refuses to change. Maybe it wasn't CFCs causing it after all?
Another scientific consensus bites the dust?
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Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Taxpayers to pay $24 million for a "Centre of Excellence in the History of Emotions"
The Federal Government is promoting the massive humanities grant, which will focus on historical events such as the Black Death, as a solution to the nation's dire mental health problems.
But Australian of the Year Patrick McGorry has criticised the lack of direct funding for mental health research.
Oh, dear God, apparently it isn't!
Federal Innovation, Industry, Science and Research Minister Senator Kim Carr linked the project to statistics showing almost half of Australians aged 16 to 85 years had suffered a mental disorder.
"That is why it is critical that we fund research into the way we deal with everyday problems," Senator Carr said in a press release last month.
Riiiight. So, the Black Death was an "everyday" kind of problem. But it gets worse people. Part of this "research" will involve the performance of an opera!
A related Shakespearean drama production, a Baroque opera and an art exhibition will be produced as part of the research grant.
I'm sorry, but if the government and the universities have money to waste on projects that are so clearly useless and pointless, then it is also just as clear that our universities are not under funded. Quite the opposite by the looks of it. But the fact that it's Senator Kim Carr who has put his name to yet another outrageous wasting of taxpayers' money should come as no surprise to anybody.
Also, time to abolish the Australian Research Council by the looks of it.
Thank you Mr Obama - US gets lectured by Iran on violence against women etc at the UN
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Friday, November 5, 2010
A cutural and political disaster in the making - two-thirds born here, but only a third call themselves Australian
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Organic vegetables 'no better for health' than conventionally grown ones
Really, no surprises here in my opinion. Via the Food & Health Skeptic:
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Tuesday, November 2, 2010
The "evidence" alcohol is more harmful than heroin? A one day workshop!
I don't believe it. The media around the world have yet again been played for suckers by an attention seeking activist "researcher." And, completely predictably, this highly dubious and simplistic claim has been simply regurgitated without question or a moment's thought by the press and the television stations. Alright, no surprise here really, but one does wish that just for once these people would actually do their jobs properly. Thankfully, we have "new media" outfits like Spiked Online who aren't prepared to take any press release they receive on face value and aren't afraid to ask some inconvenient questions.
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