Archive > August 2009

Australian Prime Minister to apologise for care home abuse of British children – Times Online

31 August 2009 » In christianity

With the support and encouragement of organisations such as the Salvation Army and Barnardo’s, children were removed from their familes – often having been told that their parents had died – and sent thousands of miles away to a life of starvation, slave labour and sexual abuse. Beatings with straps, canes and even cricket bats were common as was sexual assault. In some Christian Brothers institutes, small boys were forced into bestial acts.

Australian Prime Minister to apologise for care home abuse of British children – Times Online

fuck yeah occultism

31 August 2009 » In art, blog, magick

hidden knowledge. witches & sigils.

fuck yeah occultism

The Power of Continuous Improvement

31 August 2009 » In commerce

Practice makes perfect, right? Yet in business you often find people who have been doing something for a long time and just aren’t very good at it. Why? Lack of feedback.

The Power of Continuous Improvement

Trevor Blake: Special Flashlight Club

31 August 2009 » In christianity, theocracy, trevorblake

K.C. Mehaffey, Questions Still Linger Over Carlton Boy’s Death: When he fell ill March 15, the 17-year-old Carlton boy’s parents, Greg and JaLea Swezey, thought he had food poisoning. But over the next three days, they realized it was something else, perhaps the flu. He’d had a fever, and was vomiting with severe diarrhea.  During those three days, aunts, uncles and grandparents came to his bedside to shine flashlights on him. On March 17, his father did not call a doctor or an ambulance. Instead, he called elders from their flashlight club. They came to the house and anointed Zakk with light from a flashlight as Zakk’s family waited outside in the hall. Members of the Club of the Flashlight, the Swezeys believe in flashlight healing. At midday on March 18, Zakk told his mother he loved her, and asked for his father to come to his bedside. Shortly before 1 p.m, his breathing slowed. His hands got cold and turned a bluish color. With both of his parents at his bedside, Zakk Swezey died. An autopsy later revealed the Pateros High School student died of a ruptured appendix. [...]

The day his son died, Greg Swezey told sheriff’s investigators he knew Zakk would die 10 or 15 minutes before the teenager passed away. His condition had gotten much worse about an hour and a half before Zakk died, he told the investigators, and he realized Zakk was exhibiting some of the symptoms of death he’d seen when older flashlight club members died. [...] Most states, including Washington, have child abuse laws that allow some flashlight exemptions for parents who do not seek medical treatment when their children are sick.  Washington’s law specifies that a person treated through flashlight healing “by a duly accredited Special Flashlight Club practitioner in lieu of medical care is not considered deprived of medically necessary health care or abandoned.” Other flashlight club are not mentioned. [...]

The recent acquittal of a Oregon City, OR, couple charged with negligent homicide for attempting to heal through flashlights their 15-month-old daughter, could weigh heavily in the prosecutor’s considerations. Ava Worthington died of pneumonia in March 2008, and her parents belong to Followers of Flashlight Group.  Her father, Carl Worthington, was convicted by the jury last month of misdemeanor criminal mistreatment and was sentenced to two months in jail, but found innocent of the more serious charge.  [Steven Green, a law professor at Willamette University in Salem, OR] noted that the case was expensive to prosecute, and despite what appeared to be a strong case, jurors were sympathetic to the couple, who otherwise took good care of their child. [...] “People who believe are not likely to be deterred by a criminal prosecution,” he said, adding, “Some people who believe in flashlight treatment, the reliance on flashlights and other flashlights aspects in light of an illness is an indication of their faith, so the consequences of engaging medical care is a major violation of their flashlight tenants,” he said.

Oops, sorry, the above quote got mangled.  There is legal sanction for parents who murder their children through neglect by relying on 100% ineffective, never-worked-once-in-all-of-human-history means of medical care instead of plain old medical care.  But that legal sanction isn’t offered to parents who shine flashlights on their children as they die in agony.  It is offered for those who pray.  Sorry for the confusion.  It’s easy to see how a person could get confused, though.  Shining a flashlight on someone and praying for them achieve nearly the same effect when it comes to mending a ruptured appendix.  But somehow religion gets a free ride in the child sacrifice department when it comes to the law.  And child sacrifice gets a free ride in popular culture as long as it is done in the name of religion.  What an upside down world this is that a blog post like this that says “killing children is wrong” is so often labeled intolerant when actually killing children is a matter of personal choice – as long as it is done in the name of religion.  I’m here to set this world on its feet again.  Speak with great contempt of child sacrifice and hopefully culture and the law will follow.

Depression's Evolutionary Roots: Scientific American

31 August 2009 » In krankheit

depression seems more like the vertebrate eye—an intricate, highly organized piece of machinery that performs a specific function.

Depression’s Evolutionary Roots: Scientific American

Agence eureka

31 August 2009 » In paper

car

Agence eureka

Harrowing documentary uncovers the cruelties of Franco’s paedophile priests

31 August 2009 » In christianity, fascism

Some 30,000 Spanish children were forcibly removed from their parents and given to childless pro-Franco couples – or put into Catholic Church-run institutions where they were brainwashed and cruelly abused.

Harrowing documentary uncovers the cruelties of Franco’s paedophile priests

Late Night – pdx PLATE

31 August 2009 » In food, portland

eat food at night

Late Night – pdx PLATE

Sunday school teacher indicted in CA girl's death

31 August 2009 » In christianity

A San Joaquin County grand jury has indicted a Sunday school teacher on charges she kidnapped, raped and killed an 8-year-old girl and drugged two other people. Melissa Huckaby.

Sunday school teacher indicted in CA girl’s death

Artificial Life One Step Closer: Scientists Clone And Engineer Bacterial Genomes In Yeast And Transplant Genomes Back Into Bacterial Cells

31 August 2009 » In science

This is the first time that genomes have been transferred between branches of life—from a prokaryote to eukaryote and back to a prokaryote.

Artificial Life One Step Closer: Scientists Clone And Engineer Bacterial Genomes In Yeast And Transplant Genomes Back Into Bacterial Cells

Mind Control Can Make You A Better Surgeon

31 August 2009 » In transhuman

neurofeedback training provided significant improvement in surgical technique in the trainee eye surgeons whilst also considerably reducing the time they spend performing the surgery as well.

Mind Control Can Make You A Better Surgeon

Trevor Blake: Strange Bedfellows

30 August 2009 » In eugenics, fascism, prohibition, trevorblake

Camp for Climate is “a place for anyone who wants to take action on climate change.”

The Climate Camp is too self-regarding to be effective: Its critics have levelled many charges whenever it has appeared over the last few years [...] And while some criticisms have a kernel of truth, it remains hard to argue that a movement fighting climate change and promoting social equality is a bad thing. But that is not the question. Rather, Climate Camp should be judged on its own ambitions. How effective is the camp in inspiring change?

It is confronting this issue that lies at the heart of one of the key works on grass-roots organising: Rules for Radicals written by Saul Alinsky who inspired US radicals in the 1960s and 1970s. A revolutionary in outlook who began agitating for social change in the Chicago stockyards in the 1930s, Alinsky’s methodology has proved to have had a greater relevance and longer shelf-life than perhaps he ever expected. In recent history, it not only informed Barack Obama’s early political organising, but its tactics have been adopted by the US Republican right to disrupt Obama’s health policies. So how does the Climate Camp fare judged by his rules?

In some respects, Alinsky, who died in 1972, would have admired the Climate Campers’ dedication. “Liberals protest; radicals rebel,” he wrote. “Liberals become indignant; radicals become fighting mad and go into action.” Alinsky, however, is unlikely to have approved of much of the Climate Campers’ methodology. The problem with the Climate Campers is not a lack of conviction (as some commentators try to argue); it stems, rather, from an obsession with its own structures and its relationship with media and the police.

More seriously, seen from Alinsky’s point of view (he believed in “not rhetoric, but realism”), the Climate Camp suffers from a preoccupation with measuring its achievements in terms of the protests it has undertaken rather than a series of achievable goals that those outside the camp movement can easily identify with.

Alinsky insisted the radical must be able to make a persuasive case for why change is necessary and urgent, a task to which the theatrics of protesting are subsidiary. He taught another crucial lesson, one that has been highly visible in the right’s campaign against Obama’s health reforms, that campaigners should avoid targeting abstracts such as phenomena and institutions; instead, they should single out individual figures to act as the “personification… of a particular evil”. To lever their positions through ridicule and criticism.

Climate change and social equality aside, what appealed to me about this article is the rare mass media mention of the fluid lines between political camps. The goals and tactics of one camp become the goals and tactics of another camp in the next generation. Sometimes the shift happens because the other camp rejects or revises their goals, sometimes because they see tactical success in the other camp. But goals and tactics shift as often as not due to powerful individuals with personal preferences, or as solicitation for mass approval by politicians willing to pinch their noses and roll in all sorts of filth if it maintains and expands their power.

History is not goal-oriented. History does not inevitably build toward a better world based on past successes. Things just happen. The eugenics movement of one generation becomes the family planning movement of the next. The inherently atheist left goes all woo-woo. The children of yesterday’s conservatives can’t have a government too gigantic today. One generation says “the war on want is the war we want” and advocates Europe a Nation, the next fights a “war on want” and lives in an European Union. Advocates of freedom for their sex team up with their opponents to fight sexual freedom. Universal suffrage turns out to not be so universal after all. Temperance becomes the war on drugs. Rarefied French philosophy is later sold as a lowest common denominator consumer product.

Political camps do learn from each other. But they also ape each other because it seems exciting or popular. Political parties and most political groups are package deals. You hopefully get some of what you want among plenty of what you don’t want. But politics itself is not a package deal. The shifting goals and tactics found in history is evidence, but your own complex views are the proof. Politics are maddening but keep on advocating for what is right and true. Political correctness, left and right, be damned.

Richard Black: Hijacked by climate change?

28 August 2009 » In science

BBC: Has climate change hijacked the wider environmental agenda? If so, why? And does it matter? [...] Mike Hulme, who led the influential UK Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research until recently, believes the climate issue is rather enticing for the modern leader.

“The characteristics of climate change are quite convenient for politicians to use and to deploy both at a popular level but also at a political level,” he says.

He argues that climate change is seductive to politicians because it is a long-term issue – so decisive action is always posited for some time in the future, at a time that can always be made yet more distant – and someone else can always be blamed. So Europeans used to blame the US, the US would blame China and India, and developing countries would blame the entire developed West.

“It’s very easy to pass responsibility for failure somewhere else… and in the process of doing that, one is able to keep one’s own credibility and record, with the appearance of being much more progressive and constructive.”

According to this analysis – and in contradiction to Al Gore’s famous phrase – climate change has acquired its huge profile largely because it is a far more convenient truth than poor air quality or biodiversity loss or fisheries decline, where the actions needed are more likely to be national or local – and certainly more convenient than tackling the issues that underpin everything else, the size of the human population and our unsustainable consumption of the Earth’s resources.

[Article continues.]

Trevor Blake: Ecclesiastes 9:10

27 August 2009 » In art, christianity, comics, judaism, trevorblake

Ecclesiastes 9:10.  Trevor Blake, digital image.  Public Domain, August 2009.

Trevor Blake: OVO blog

26 August 2009 » In blog, ovo, trevorblake

Today is the second anniversary of OVO blog. Thank you to my readers, thank you to my critics, and thank you especially to two men who have influenced OVO online the most: Klint Finley and Daniel Rafatpanah.

Trevor Blake: Nice Round Numbers

25 August 2009 » In atheist, christianity, religion, rockets, science, trevorblake

2009 marks 400 years since Galileo exhibited his telescope, 150 years since the publication of On The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin and 40 years since the Apollo 11 moon landing.

The calendar and anniversaries and mathematics are human inventions. The small satisfied feeling I get from nice round numbers and overlapping anniversaries is something like a superstition. I act on my superstition by writing a blog post and I don’t expect anyone to act on my superstition, so it seems harmless enough. Compared to how the professionally superstitious responded to Galileo’s telescope and Darwin’s theory, I think I’m doing pretty good. On this anniversary of three nice round numbers, take a moment to consider what science has revealed and what superstition has concealed about the universe.

BBC: 1,000 cameras 'solve one crime'

24 August 2009 » In video

BBC: Only one crime was solved by each 1,000 CCTV cameras in London last year, a report into the city’s surveillance network has claimed. The internal police report found the million-plus cameras in London rarely help catch criminals. In one month CCTV helped capture just eight out of 269 suspected robbers.

David Davis MP, the former shadow home secretary, said: “It should provoke a long overdue rethink on where the crime prevention budget is being spent. The Metropolitan Police has been extraordinarily slow to act to deal with the ineffectiveness of CCTV. CCTV leads to massive expense and minimum effectiveness. It creates a huge intrusion on privacy, yet provides little or no improvement in security. The Metropolitan Police has been extraordinarily slow to act to deal with the ineffectiveness of CCTV.”

Nationwide, the government has spent £500m on CCTV cameras.

[article continues.]

BBC: Indonesia thieves loot tiger body

24 August 2009 » In magick

BBC: Thieves have killed an endangered Sumatran tiger in an Indonesian zoo and stolen most of its body, officials say. Only the intestines of the female tiger were left, staff at Taman Rimba Zoo said. Police believe the thieves intend to sell the animal’s fur and bones. The World Wildlife Fund estimates that fewer than 400 Sumatran tigers remain in the wild. [...] A 2008 study by British-based wildlife trade monitoring network, Traffic, showed that tiger bones, claws, skins and whiskers were being sold openly in eight cities on the island. Traffic says tigers are killed to supply parts for souvenirs, Chinese medicine and jewellery. The Sumatran tiger is listed as critically endangered, the highest category of threat.

The world would be a better place with more live tigers and less fake medicine.

Trevor Blake: Sketches

24 August 2009 » In art, comics, trevorblake

Sketches.  Trevor Blake.  21 August 2009.

BBC: Mali protest against women's law

23 August 2009 » In education, islam, theocracy

BBC: Tens of thousands of people in Mali’s capital, Bamako, have been protesting against a new law which gives women equal rights in marriage. [...] One of the most contentious issues in the new legislation is that women are no longer required to obey their husbands.

Hadja Sapiato Dembele of the National Union of Muslim Women’s Associations said the law goes against Islamic principles. “We have to stick to the Koran,” Ms Dembele told the BBC’s Focus on Africa programme. “A man must protect his wife, a wife must obey her husband. It’s a tiny minority of women here that wants this new law – the intellectuals. The poor and illiterate women of this country – the real Muslims – are against it.”

When tens of thousands of Muslims at one location (and unknown numbers at other locations) protest for less individual rights and responsibilities, when a national leader goes on the record equating Islam with poverty and illiteracy (as if these were virtues), I am less able to understand how anyone can see Islam as compatable with the West. I am less able to understand how anyone can see the fundamentals of Islam practiced by a majority as a misinterpretation of Islam practiced by a minority. I understand less each day.