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June 28, 2009

How is Obama doing?

During the US presidential election campaign, we all knew that expectations of Barack Obama were so high that the reality was bound to disappoint. On the inauguration of Obama as president, we all knew that the honeymoon period could not last for ever. At the end of his first 100 days in the White House, we all knew that the challenges he faced were unprecedented: the economic recession, health care, climate change, Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran. Given all this, some criticism from faint-hearts and even concern from supporters was inevitable. But this is a guy who is barely half a year into what should be an eight-year term of an historic and transformational nature..

So, how is Obama doing? The signs are good. On Friday night, the president achieved a political breakthrough when the House of Representatives passed a historic bill to combat climate change, binding the United States to cut levels of carbon emissions. I share the positive assessment of Michael Crowley, a senior editor of the "New Republic Magazine", as expressed in this article.

June 27, 2009

Remembering the Katyn massacre

What each of us knows and doesn't know is very varied and very personal, but I've been surprised and saddened at how few people I know have heard of the Katyn massacre of 1940.

The Wikipedia page on the subject introduces it as follows:

"The Katyn massacre, also known as the Katyn Forest massacre (Polish: zbrodnia katyńska, 'Katyń crime'), was a mass murder of thousands of Polish military officers, policemen, intellectuals and civilian prisoners of war by Soviet NKVD, based on a proposal from Lavrentiy Beria to execute all members of the Polish Officer Corps. Dated March 5, 1940, this official document was then approved (signed) by the entire Soviet Politburo including Joseph Stalin and Beria.

The number of victims is estimated at about 22,000, the most commonly cited number being 21,768. The victims were murdered in the Katyn forest in Russia, the Kalinin (Tver) and Kharkov prisons and elsewhere. About 8,000 were officers taken prisoner during the 1939 Soviet invasion of Poland, the rest being Poles arrested for allegedly being "intelligence agents, gendarmes, saboteurs, landowners, factory owners, lawyers, priests, and officials." Since Poland's conscription system required every unexempted university graduate to become a reserve officer, the Soviets were able to round up much of the Polish intelligentsia, and the Jewish, Ukrainian, Georgian and Belarusian intelligentsia of Polish citizenship."

The reason I mention the subject of the Katyn massacre now is that an impressive and moving Polish film on the subject has just been given a very limited release in Britain and I have recently seen it. You probably won't get the chance to see the film yourself, but you can read my review and I would encourage you to read more of the Wikipedia article.

June 26, 2009

Am I a white supremacist?

I've just had a text message from a British friend who is currently working in the United States. He told that he was in the lobby of a hotel in Connecticut where 'SiteCoach' would not allow him to access my web site on the grounds of 'white supremacy'.

Check out whether you think I'm that evil by accessing the offending material.

The shame of Iran (4)

Four international trade union organisations (ITUC, ITF, IUF and EI) have declared today as the international day of solidarity with Iranian workers to support their struggle for their basic rights. Members of these confederations around the world will organize practical support towards workers in Iran today. Further details of the day of action here.

This initiative was decided long before the recent presidential election and the protests which followed but clearly it could hardly be more timely. There are, of course, massive media restriction in Iran, but it looks as if there have been at least 17 deaths in the course of the demonstrations. The BBC reviews the current impasse here.

June 25, 2009

It's my birthday (again)

Today's my birthday. This is surprising to me because I'm sure that I had one last year - but they seem to keep coming. As my wife says, it's better than the alternative.

Last year, it was a special birthday; this year, it's a routine one (I'm 61). In fact, so routine was it that I was working: chairing a meeting on the mobile sector for Consumer Focus. However, colleagues at CF were really kind and delivered a birthday cake with candles. Thanks, guys!

June 24, 2009

The PILL pilot trial (5)

For 12 weeks now, I've been taking a "polypill" each day as part of an international pilot trial for the treatment of people at raised risk of cardiovascular disease such as as heart attack or stroke. So this morning, I made my fifth and final visit to the International Centre for Circulatory Health at St Mary's Hospital at Paddington in London.

For the last time, I had my blood pressure taken three times, a blood sample was taken, and I was weighed. Throughout the trial, I have not felt different at all. This either means that I have not experienced any side effects from the "polypill" or that I have been not taking the pill at all but a placebo. I won't know till the results if the trial are published in Spring 2010.

Interestingly, I'm currently reading "Bad Science" by Ben Goldacre. He explains how the trials of medicines and treatments are conducted and the pilot trial in which I have participated has followed all the key principles, such as equal numbers of people being allocated on a random basis to take the pill or a placebo and 'double-blinding' where neither the person conducting the trial nor the person who is the subject of the trial knows whether the subject is taking the pill or the placebo.

All medicines approved for use in this country have to undergo such rigorous testing and yet so-called alternative and complementary medicines can be sold with amazing claims without any scientific testing.

All change in Manchester

In the early part of this week, I visited Manchester to speak at a conference on next generation broadband. Now I was brought up in Manchester and went to school and university there, so it's always a pleasure to return to the city which has undergone enormous redevelopment since I left in 1971. Also I still have relatives there, so I spent the night before the event with my brother, his partner and their delightful daughter (my niece) and then, after the conference, I had dinner with my step-mother and her partner.

My brother drove me through the part of Manchester where we lived as kids more than 40 years ago. We lived in a district in the south of the city called Fallowfield which was always popular with students and is now dominated by them. More specifically, we lived behind and above a dry cleaning shop on Wilmslow Road called "Silver Wings" where our mother - a single parent with three children - was the shop manageress. All the shops in the parade have now changed ownership and where we used to live is now a Kentucky Fried Chicken!

June 21, 2009

My ever-smarter iPhone

I bought an iPhone within days of its release in the UK as I blogged here and, in no time at all, I was enthusing about its wonderful features here. However, it's only recently that I've started to use the e-mail facilities and to download applications.

Now along comes version 3.0 of the Operating System which became available this week and which I downloaded this weekend. It makes over 100 changes to the operation of the iPhone - some 13 of which are described here. As far as I'm concerned, the smart phone has changed the world - well, mine anyway. It simply rocks.

June 20, 2009

Ten days that shook my world (5)

Regular readers of NightHawk will know about my recent loss of connection problems with my Internet service provider Pipex, but you can remind yourself here.

Once I obtained my Net connection back again, I lodged an immediate and detailed complaint with Pipex. I was not satisfied with the response so I took the matter to the ombudsman Otelo. They would not accept the appeal because they said that I had not exhausted Pipex's own procedures.

So I escalated the complaint within Pipex in a letter sent on 3 June 2009. What do you think happened?

I had a response in a letter dated 12 June 2009. Bizarrely this stated that three out five specified items of information were not available in my original letter and that therefore the company was unable to act upon my complaint. What were these five items of information?

Customer account number:
I was astonished that Pipex needed me to supply this information since the company's own customer systems ought to provide this from my name and address.

Customer's full name:
This was of course contained in my original letter.

Customer's address including postcode:
This too was of course contained in my original letter.

Customer's date of birth:
I have no idea why Pipex requires this information (except perhaps as a security check).

Customer's contact telephone number or e-mail address:
Since Pipex is my Internet service provider, it provides my e-mail address and, since my loss of service resulted in frequent calls between me and the various lines of support in Pipex, I thought that my contact number was well-known to the company.

Is it any wonder that so many people choose not to complain or give up when faced with this Byzantine response? I've now supplied Pipex with all the information it requested and now await a speedy and helpful response. Well, I can hope ...

The shame of Iran (3)

Is Iran on the verge of another revolution? The complete rejection of the protesters' concerns by the supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei suggests that either the demonstrations will collapse or they will be put down forcibly or they will ignite a revolutionary movement.

Where does the reformist leader Mir Hossein Mousavi stand in all this? It is difficult for him now to speak publicly and freely. So it's especially interesting to have this view from Mohsen Makhmalbaf, an Iranian filmmaker and spokesman for the Mousavi campaign.

June 19, 2009

One billion hungry

Around one billion people - a record - are now going hungry which represents almost one in six of the world population - further information here.

The world's oldest man

He's British and he's 113 - information on the remarkable on Henry Allingham here.

Diversity in reading

After a couple of months, I've decided to pick up the challenge of my American cyber buddy Dana Huff, an English teacher, who blogged about a meme called "Diversity in reading" - see her posting here.

So to answer the questions about my recent reading:

1. Name the last book by a female author that you’ve read.

"The Believers" by Zoe Heller [my review here]

2. Name the last book by an African or African-American author that you’ve read.

"Dreams From My Father" [my review here] and "The Audacity Of Hope" [my review here] by Barack Obama

3. Name one from a Latino/a author.

"My Life" by Fidel Castro [my review here] and “Life Of Pi” by Yann Martel [my review here]

4. How about one from an Asian country or Asian-American?

"The Kite Runner" [my review here] and "A Thousand Splendid Suns" [my review here] by Khaled Hosseini

5. What about a GLBT writer?

Sorry - nothing here

6. Why not name an Israeli/Arab/Turk/Persian writer, if you’re feeling lucky?

“The Almond” [my review here] by Nedjma (Moroccan) and ”A Woman In Jerusalem” [my review here] by A.B. Yehoshua (Israeli)

7. Any other “marginalized” authors you’ve read lately?

"The Reader" [my review here] by Bernhard Schlink (German), “Sophie’s World" [my review here] by Jostein Gaarder (Norwegian), “One Day In The Life Of Ivan Denisovich” [my review here] by Alexander Solzhenitsyn (Russian), “Life & Times Of Michael K” [my review here] by J.M. Coetzee (South African), "Slumdog Millionaire" [my review here] by Vikas Swarup (Indian), “The Sorrow Of War" [my review here] by Bao Ninh (Vietnamese)

So how about you? How diverse is your reading?

June 18, 2009

Obama and that fly

What did your MP claim?

If you live in the UK and you want to know what expenses your Member of Parliament has claimed recently, BBC online has helpfully provided this guide.

When were the First & Second Reichs?

Even today, there are constant references in the media to Nazi Germany, otherwise known as the Third Reich. Adolf Hitler boasted that his Reich would last for a thousand years but, in fact, it only lasted for 12 years (1933-1945).

But, if this was the Third Reich, when were the First and Second Reichs?

In fact, the First Reich is the title retrospectively given to the Holy Roman Empire of which modern-day Germany was only one part. This lasted from the beginning of the 9th century to beyond the middle of the 19th century - almost a thousand years (and presumably the inspiration for Hitler's vain boast).

The Second Reich (also known as The German Empire) is the term given to the period from the formation of modern-day Germany by Otto von Bismark to the end of the First World War - the period from 1871 to 1919 (the Weimar Republic of 1919-1933 is not called a reich).

Further information here.

June 17, 2009

The shame of Iran (2)

Thanks to my web site and blogs, I have contact with people all around the world - including Iran. In the last few days, it has been very difficult for me to contact my friend in Tehran who voted in the presidential election for the challenger Mir Hossein Mousavi. My contact (no identifying details for obvious reasons) has just managed to send me this brief message:

"Thanks for asking about me and my family. the demonstration is going well here in Tehran. we are continuing to reach out to our objectives. it is huge and widespread. Here every news websites are blocked, during the days when there is going to be demonstration, Mobiles are out of reach. the speed of internet is so low that I hardly can open my email. anyway, I write to you in more detail in the future. it seems that it is not safe to do it now."

June 16, 2009

10 things you don't know about the Earth

Check out these facts here.

My favourite is that it would take about 42 minutes to fall down a hole to the centre of the Earth and reach the other side (try it and see).

10 things you don't know about the Sun

Check out these facts here.

My favourite is that, although the Sun is 4.55 or so billion years old, it has another 6.3 billion more years to live (that's somehow reassuring).

June 15, 2009

How does homeopathy work?

In the UK, today marks the start of Homeopathy Awareness Week. This is an annual event and this year's theme is a natural approach for the symptoms of hay fever.

So how does homeopathy work exactly? The site states: "Scientifically it can not yet be explained precisely how it works, but new theories in quantum physics are going some way towards shedding light on the process." So, basically they don't know.

What we do know is that the substances involved contain nothing that can have any pathological effect. The site explains that: "Homeopathic remedies are a unique, potentised energy medicine, drawn from the plant, mineral and animal worlds. They are diluted to such a degree that not one molecule of the original substance can be detected."

I'm currently reading "Bad Science" by Ben Goldacre. He devotes 35 pages to a demolition of the nonsense that is homeopathy.

Of course, like all of us, I've met people who are adamant that homeopathy works. Of course, for some people it does 'work' - but it works no better than a placebo because it is a placebo.

Words of the day: placebo and nocebo

A placebo is an intervention that makes a person feel better even though nothing medical or scientific has actually been done - further information here.

A nocebo is an intervention that makes a person feel worse even though nothing medical or scientific has actually been done - further information here.

The placebo effect (and the nocebo effect) can be incredibly powerful.

June 14, 2009

The shame of Iran (1)

The Shah of Iran was a brutal dictator whose secret police were outrageously cruel. But the Islamic Republic is failing to deliver the economic prosperity and political freedoms which so many Iranians desire.

The presidential election was an extraordinary event with vigorous campaigning, huge rallies and a dramatic television debate between the two main candidates. Officially the result was as follows:

Mahmoud Mahmoud Ahmadinejad: 62.6%
Mir Hossein Mousavi: 33.8%
Mohsen Rezai: 1.7%
Mehdi Karroubi 0.9%
Turnout: 85%

Source: Interior Ministry

However, it seems astonishing that the authorities could know the result only hours after the close of the polls and that Ahmadinejad could genuinely achieve such a decisive victory when the support for Mousavi was evidently so strong.

My next holiday - not till the Autumn - will be in Iran. Obviously I'm going there to view the superb Islamic architecture and archaeological sites, but I was hoping that I would find a new political environment - more open, more tolerant, more concerned with the economy, less hostile to the West.

A ceramicist on the Hill

Vee and I live at the foot of Harrow-on-the-Hill, a charming and historic corner of north-west London. This weekend, the area hosted an annual event known as Harrow Open Studios when the work of 30 or so local artists is displayed to the visiting public in a variety of locations.

One of our dear friends Rachael Williams was one of those who work was on view, so we made a point of calling into her workshop and looking at some of her creations as a talented ceramicist.

June 13, 2009

PMR-GCA: making a real difference

My friend Mavis Smith - whom I visited on a recent trip to Gateshead - has had a tough retirement because of her Polymyalgia Rheumatica (PMR) and Giant Cell Arteritis (GCA). But she hasn't let it get her down; instead she's become Chair of a support group for those with PMR-GCA in the North-East of England.

The group has just launched a very professional and helpful web site which you can view here. Mavis and her group are making a real difference.

The popularity of "Jai Ho"

I really enjoyed the film "Slumdog Millionaire" [my review here] and later read the book on which the movie was based [my review here]. The music for the film was excellent and I was bought the CD by my wife. Especially joyous is the final song "Jai Ho".

Now, three and a half months ago, I blogged on the question "What does 'Jai Ho' mean?". I've been astonished at how many visits this posting has received and continues to receive after all this time (try Googling 'Jai Ho' and you'll see what I mean). I've been even more amazed by the number of comments submitted on the posting - almost 60 and still counting.

We established quickly that "Jai Ho" means something like "Victory to you" but this hasn't stopped people posting (increasingly silly) comments.

June 12, 2009

How does Brain Gym work?

I've just started reading "Bad Science" by Ben Goldacre. An early target of the book is a movement called Brain Gym which is practised in many schools in Britain and various institutions around the world. Goldacre calls it "so obviously, transparently foolish".

So how does Brain Gym work exactly? Well, let's go to the official web site for the movement in the UK and study the explanation. We are told "we have considerably greater experience of the effects of the programme than we have certainty as to how it works". It is said about why it works: "The investigation of the neuroscience that underpins Brain Gym is an eagerly awaited project for the future. We can only at the present time hypothesise about why without actually knowing."

Now do you understand how it works? No? Neither do its practitioners. Of course, it's sensible for children to take breaks, do exercises, and drink water - but there's no reason to invent 26 fanciful exercises and pretend that some special neuroscience is at work.

June 11, 2009

What's the most expensive public toilet in the world?

Some time ago I blogged about the most expensive cup of coffee in the world. Today I have a new concern: the most expensive public toilet in the world.

Now, of course, many toilets are free to use. But charging for women started with the addition of locks in the UK and gave rise to the expression 'to spend a penny'. That was before decimalisation, so we were talking of one old pence which is equivalent to 0.4 pence in current currency.

Clearly we've had decades of inflation and so we've become used to public toilets charging 10 pence or 20 pence. Fairly recently, toilets on railway stations in London have upped their charges to 30 pence. In the passageway under Parliament Street, at the south-east corner of Parliament Square, the cost is a staggering 50 pence - which seems especially cruel since so many tourists use this passageway.

However, this week, I came across a new record. I went to the cinema at Cineworld in the Trocadero which is located between Piccadilly Circus and Leicester Square in central London. As I left the cinema, I did not pass a toilet, so I thought that I would use the one for the Trocadero complex - until I found that they were going to charge me an incredible £1 (for my American readers, that's $1.64 at the current rate of exchange). Now I call that taking the piss. So I refused to use that facility, walked down the road to Leicester Square, and used the free toilets there.

What's the most expensive toilet you've used and where was it?

Footnote: On my first visit to Budapest after the collapse of communism in Hungary, I went for a meal in a restaurant in the centre of the city and was then charged to use their toilet.

Have you had any similar experiences?

June 10, 2009

The wonder of the English language

According to the Global Language Monitor on this day at this time the English vocabulary will acquire its one millionth word. It's nonsense of course - nobody knows how many words there are today in the English language and this particular organisation has forecast on several occasions that different dates will see the arrival of the one millionth word.

But the English vocabulary is huge and growing and English is now a truly global language, so it's fascinating to use this occasion to look at a few facts about English:

  • English has twice as many words as Cantonese - the world's second largest language vocabulary
  • By comparison, Spanish has about 250,000 words and French around 100,000
  • Some 80% of the words in the English language relate to science and technology
  • The average English speaker only uses about 14,000 words - or 1.4% of the total if we accept the 1M figure
  • The most linguistically gifted English speakers are only believed to use around 70,000 words
  • The highest scoring word in Scrabble is 'quartzy' which scores 164 if played across a red triple word square with the 'z' on a light blue double letter square
These facts are taken from an article in the "Daily Mirror" newspaper published a month ago.

The same article tells us that, when Shakespeare was writing his famous plays, there were just two million English speakers and fewer than 100,000 words. Today there are estimated to be 1.53 billion English speakers and, as mentioned earlier, possibly as many as 1M words. So how did English become such a global language? The process is explained in this book and explored in this one.

According to the paper version of the "Daily Mirror" article (the information is not in the online version), the two most used words in the English language are 'the' and 'of'. Interestingly, in the nearest that I have to a second language (Czech), these words do not exist.

June 09, 2009

Word of the day: synecdoche

Synecdoche is a figure of speech in which a part is used for the whole (as hand for sailor), the whole for a part (as the law for police officer), the specific for the general (as cutthroat for assassin), the general for the specific (as thief for pickpocket), or the material for the thing made from it (as steel for sword).

You can find a fuller explanation here.

The word also occurs in the title of a current film.

June 08, 2009

Who was Thomas Paine?

Arguably he was the Englishman who has had the most influence on world affairs while combining the least recognition among today's English. He played a key intellectual role in both the American Revolution and the French Revolution and can be seen as one of the founders of the modern democratic state.

Today is the 200th anniversary of his death.

You can read his Wikipedia profile here and a BBC online anniversary feature here.

Who is doing the Twittering?

As I explained in this posting, I first tried Twitter two years ago. I soon decided that it was not for me.

Frankly, I've been surprised that two years later so many people - and much of the media - seem to have suddenly discovered Twitter and decided that it's a powerful communications tool. For some it has worked well (Stephen Fry and Demi Moore, for instance) but, for most, I suspect it's just a passing fad.

So who is doing all this Twittering. According to this piece, an examination of 300,000 Twitter users that 10% of Twitter users generated more than 90% of the content, while more than half of all Twitter users post messages on the site less than once every 74 days.

Do you use Twitter?

June 07, 2009

Who invented the banoffee pie?

Those who know me appreciate my love of desserts. Now one of my great favorites is banoffee pie.

Earlier this week, I was in a restaurant with some friends visiting from New Zealand and I chose banoffee pie as my last course. My Kiwi friends thought that the pie was American but I assured them that it was another great British invention.

The origin of the pie was when it came to be served at "The Hungry Monk" in the village of Jevington in East Sussex. This was in 1972. The recipe was devised by Ian Dowding and Nigel Mackenzie and was often prepared by chef Lucy Baldwin

June 06, 2009

That was the week that was

In the early 1960s, there was a BBC television programme called "That Was The Week That Was" which was a bitingly funny piece of political satire. Boy, if it was around today, what material this week would have given them. I did a blog posting a week ago which anticipated some of the excitement, but all political commentators have been stunned by the events of the past five days.

Of course, we knew that there were going to be local elections and that the results would be terrible for Labour - and so it proved. Staffordshire, Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire were lost by Labour for the first time in 28 years and Lancashire for the first time since 1989. Nationwide the Conservatives now have over 10,000 councillors to Labour's less than 5,000.

We don't know all the results yet, but it looks as if the parties' share of the votes will be: Conservatives 38%, Lib Dems 28%, Labour 23%, others 11%. This is awful for Labour, but frankly it could have been worse - and it may yet get worse with the European election results (a nationwide test) on Monday threatening to fall below 20% for the party.

We also knew that Gordon Brown would reshuffle his Cabinet in an effort to retain his authority and remain at No 10. What we did not expect was that no less than six Cabinet Ministers - Jacqui Smith, Hazel Blears, John Hutton, Geoff Hoon, Paul Murphy and (most dramatically) James Purnell - would resign from the Cabinet and that Caroline Flint would put the stiletto in. Brown's refusal to say earlier in the week that Alistair Darling would remain at the Treasury and then his inability to put Ed Balls in the post betrays a real sense of weakness.

I had speculated about Peter Mandelson leaving the Business Department, but instead he has been made First Secretary of State (a totally new appellation in British politics) and his Department is to take over much of the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills (DIUS). The fact that Brown only created the DIUS two years ago and is now dismantling it is yet another example of his chronic indecision and revision.

In my earlier posting, I commented: "Additionally it is not out of the question that some MPs caught up in the expenses scandal may choose to step down now causing further by-elections." So it has proved to be. Norwich North's Labour MP Ian Gibson has resigned from Parliament as a protest at how he has been treated by the Labour NEC in respect of his expense claims. This will force a by-election to add to the one in Glasgow North-East occasioned by the resignation of the Speaker Michael Martin.

Now a key theme of my earlier posting was that there was a further ticking time bomb for Brown which had gone largely unnoticed by the political pundits: the proposed Second Reading of the Postal Services Bill which plans to bring about the part privatisation of Royal Mail. The Second Reading - which involves a vote on the Bill's principles - was due to have been held on Tuesday. However - almost missed by the media - the debate has been postponed with no new date agreed.

This makes sense politically: in the current feverish circumstances, as well as Labour backbench opponents of the part privatisation, any Labour MP who wants to see Gordon Brown step down as Prime Minister would have been tempted to vote against the measure to provoke his resignation. However, in regulatory and business terms, there are strong reasons for wanting to see the remaining sections of the Postal Services Bill on the Statute Book before the summer recess - and time is running out ...

One of my favourite sayings is: "It isn't over till it's over - and then it isn't over". Certainly the debate about Gordon Brown's future as Prime Minister is far from over and Monday is another key day. We will have the European election results and a meeting of the Parliamentary Labour Party. My own judgement is that Brown's days are numbered and I trust that he will recognise this sooner rather than later and help to affect a quick and smooth transfer of power to the new leader (hopefully Alan Johnson).

June 05, 2009

What is your Myers-Briggs classification?

People sometimes ask me what classification I obtained from the Myers-Briggs personality test. The test assigns people to one of 16 personality types.

Now I recall doing the test on a training course many years ago but I'd long forgotten the result. However, this week I was sorting out some old papers to make some room in my study and came across my test outcome.

It seems that I am ENTJ. And what does this mean? Apparently it means:

"Frank, decisive, assume leadership readily. Quickly see illogical and inefficient procedures and policies, develop and implement comprehensive systems to solve organizational problems. Enjoy long-term planning and goal setting. Usually well informed, well read, enjoy expanding their knowledge and passing it on to others. Forceful in presenting their ideas."
If you know me, do you think that this sounds like me?

June 04, 2009

The joy of voting

OK - so I've voted. Here in London, we don't have local elections, only European elections. The electoral system is a regional list system so we vote for a political party and not for one or more candidates.

In London, there are 19 choices so it was the longest ballot paper that I can remember. The parties are listed alphabetically, so the British National Party might obtain some votes simply by being top of the list. "The Labour Party" is listed under T rather than L.

Even after 43 years, I still have a joy in voting. I feel both a sense of power and a sense of responsibility. I am acutely aware that billions around the world do not have this right.

What happened in Tiananmen Square?

I have visited Tiananmen Square in Beijing on two occasions - once in 2000 and again in 2001. You can read about my first visit here.

Of course, today we remember what happened in the square and surrounding streets on 4 June 1989 - exactly 20 years ago. One woman who was there in the early stages of the protest and has recently made a return visit to Beijing was banned novelist Ma Jian who has written this moving piece. She notes:

"The Chinese have made a faustian pact with the government, agreeing to forsake demands for political and intellectual freedom in exchange for more material comfort. They live prosperous lives in which any expression of pain is forbidden."
At the conclusion of my visit to China in 2000, I wrote:

"The 19th century was essentially the century of Britain; the 20th century was unquestionably the century of the United States; the 21st century might become the century of China. It depends on many factors.

It depends on the quality of the political leadership and, in the short term, Jiang Zemin is due to be succeeded by the younger Hu Jintao. It depends on the extent to which the economic changes are followed by political changes, including the development of a civil society with a free media, pressure groups, independent trade unions, and ultimately political parties. It depends on how capably and rapidly the economy moves from the bricks and mortar of the industrial society to the clicks and bricks of the information society. It depends on how China uses its growing industrial and military strength at home, specifically in relation to Tibet and Taiwan, and in the global marketplace."

June 03, 2009

Ten days that shook my world (4)

I've used this blog to give a detailed account of my recent experience with Pipex whereby I lost my Internet connection for 10 days and only had it restored after around 20 calls to the Pipex first line 'support' in The Philippines and regular conversations with the second line 'support' in India. My attitude to Pipex was not improved when, two weeks after having my connection restored, I lost it again for two days.

I will, of course, be leaving Pipex but I decided first to follow through on the complaints system if only to try to improve matters for other customers. So I filed a formal complaint with Pipex, I received a weak and vague response from a customer relations staff member in the Republic of Ireland, and I took the case to the ombudsman Otelo. Now Otelo has declined to accept my complaint on the grounds that i have not yet exhausted Pipex's complaints procedure. They advised me to take up the matter with Pipex Customer Relations in Birmingham, so today I've sent them a detailed five-page letter of complaint.

It is this bureaucracy and complexity that dissuades so many customers from complaining about poor customer service. But I've not given up yet.

Many Green policies make me see red

I'll be voting Labour tomorrow as I have done in every election since I gained the right to vote 43 years ago.

I feel strongly about the issue of climate change and support measures to protect the environment but, if ever I was tempted to vote for the Green Party, I would pull back because of its anti-science policies as highlighted in this article.

One of my closest friends is doing valuable pioneering work on stem cell research, but the Greens want to ban all experiments on embryos, including those designed to improve fertility treatment, as well as embryonic stem cell work.

June 02, 2009

The magic of radionics

The "Daily Telegraph" has unquestionably achieved the scoop of the year with its exposure of the excessive and fraudulent expense claims of so many Members of Parliament. A lot of journalists have worked very thoroughly and professionally on this story.

So, why does the same newspaper report on so-called radionics without using the same need to obtain evidence that proves or disproves the claims? Shouldn't we expect this from a serious newspaper?

A totally uncritical piece from Christopher Middleton concludes "So how exactly does it work again? Best guess is that we all plug into some kind of universal energy grid and radionics constitutes a kind of battery recharging rescue service. From afar." If you ask me, this is as crazy as expecting the taxpayer to fund an MP's duck pond.

The Wikipedia page on radionics makes the matter very clear:

"Radionics is not based on any scientific evidence, and contradicts the principles of physics and biology and as a result it has been classed as pseudoscience and quackery by most physicians. No radionic device has been found effective in the diagnosis or treatment of any disease, and the United States Food and Drug Administration does not recognize any legitimate medical uses for such devices."
So why do so many people believe so many weird things? I've attempted some answers here.