But We Had Music

21/04/2024

BUT WE HAD MUSIC
by Maria Popova

Right this minute
across time zones and opinions people are
making plans
making meals
making promises and poems

while

at the center of our galaxy
a black hole with the mass of four billion suns
screams its open-mouth kiss
of oblivion.

Someday it will swallow
Euclid’s postulates and the Goldberg Variations,
swallow calculus and Leaves of Grass.

I know this.

And still
when the constellation of starlings
flickers across the evening sky,
it is     enough

to stand here
for an irrevocable minute
agape with wonder.

It is     eternity.

Hat tip: The Marginalian


Who chooses best?

21/04/2024

Who chooses best – the government or people?

Free trade is under increasing threats as countries become more protectionist.

People who think this is good don’t understand that trade restrictions empower the state and disempower people.

They restrict choice, add costs and often lower quality.

The only fair trade is free trade.


Word of the day

20/04/2024

Somnificator – a person who induces sleep in others; a very boring speaker.


What happened to academic freedom?

20/04/2024


Woman of the day

20/04/2024


What is a woman?

20/04/2024

What is a woman?

That is a question that few, if any, would have asked, and few, if any, would have had to think about a few years ago.

Now it’s a politically loaded question, and one which some find difficult to answer.

One who doesn’t is J.K. Rowling who nails it in this explanation to her critics:

You’ve asked me several questions on this thread and accused me of avoiding answering, so here goes. I believe a woman is a human being who belongs to the sex class that produces large gametes.

It’s irrelevant whether or not her gametes have ever been fertilised, whether or not she’s carried a baby to term, irrelevant if she was born with a rare difference of sexual development that makes neither of the above possible, or if she’s aged beyond being able to produce viable eggs.

She is a woman and just as much a woman as the others. I don’t believe a woman is more or less of a woman for having sex with men, women, both or not wanting sex at all. I don’t think a woman is more or less of a woman for having a buzz cut and liking suits and ties, or wearing stilettos and mini dresses, for being black, white or brown, for being six feet tall or a little person, for being kind or cruel, angry or sad, loud or retiring.

She isn’t more of a woman for featuring in Playboy or being a surrendered wife, nor less of a woman for designing space rockets or taking up boxing.

What makes her a woman is the fact of being born in a body that, assuming nothing has gone wrong in her physical development (which, as stated above, still doesn’t stop her being a woman), is geared towards producing eggs as opposed to sperm, towards bearing as opposed to begetting children, and irrespective of whether she’s done either of those things, or ever wants to.

Womanhood isn’t a mystical state of being, nor is it measured by how well one apes sex stereotypes. We are not the creatures either porn or the Bible tell you we are. Femaleness is not, as trans woman Andrea Chu Long wrote, ‘an open mouth, an expectant asshole, blank, blank eyes,’ nor are we God’s afterthought, sprung from Adam’s rib.

Women are provably subject to certain experiences because of our female bodies, including different forms of oppression, depending on the cultures in which we live.

When trans activists say ‘I thought you didn’t want to be defined by your biology,’ it’s a feeble and transparent attempt at linguistic sleight of hand.

Women don’t want to be limited, exploited, punished, or subject to other unjust treatment because of their biology, but our being female is indeed defined by our biology. It’s one material fact about us, like having freckles or disliking beetroot, neither of which are representative of our entire beings, either.

Women have billions of different personalities and life stories, which have nothing to do with our bodies, although we are likely to have had experiences men don’t and can’t, because we belong to our sex class.

Some people feel strongly that they should have been, or wish to be seen as, the sex class into which they weren’t born. Gender dysphoria is a real and very painful condition and I feel nothing but sympathy for anyone who suffers from it.

I want them to be free to dress and present themselves however they like and I want them to have exactly the same rights as every other citizen regarding housing, employment and personal safety. 

I do not, however, believe that surgeries and cross-sex hormones literally turn a person into the opposite sex, nor do I believe in the idea that each of us has a nebulous ‘gender identity’ that may or might not match our sexed bodies. I believe the ideology that preaches those tenets has caused, and continues to cause, very real harm to vulnerable people.

I am strongly against women’s and girls’ rights and protections being dismantled to accommodate trans-identified men, for the very simple reason that no study has ever demonstrated that trans-identified men don’t have exactly the same pattern of criminality as other men, and because, however they identify, men retain their advantages of speed and strength.

In other words, I think the safety and rights of girls and women are more important than those men’s desire for validation.

I sincerely hope that answers your questions. You may still disagree, but as I hope this shows, I’m more than happy to have this debate.

Standing up for women and girls is not transphobic.

It is possible to do that without fearing, or hating, trans people.

They have a right to dress how they wish and be who they want to be but those rights do’t trump others’ rights to dignity and safety.

People can change their appearance and their names, they can also mangle language by adopting  different pronouns, but they can’t  change biological reality.

Stating that isn’t hating any individuals or groups, it’s stating facts, as J.K. Rowling has done so well.


Word of the day

19/04/2024

Yassification – the act of making something better, especially more visually appealing; giving someone or something a glow-up or makeover; the process of making something relevant to or suggestive of LGBTQ+ culture.


Sowell says

19/04/2024


Woman of the day

19/04/2024


Pot, kettle, black

19/04/2024

Some journalists are blaming politicians for the lack of trust in the media.

This is a very sooty pot calling s slightly dusty kettle black.

Politicians usually rank at or near the bottom of trust surveys and one reason for that is the way they are treated in and by the media.

Too many journalists, and the media outlets they work for, go for gotcha moments, stories which show politicians in a bad light and breathless criticism rather than reasoned analysis.

Too often they do it in a way that lacks balance, background and respect.

Last year in the vacuum caused by prolonged coalition negotiations, the media gave us lots of their reckons based on speculation.

They kept on about the time negotiations were taking and bemoaned the lack of anything to report.

They could have used the time when there was little if anything to report about the negotiations to do long-form interviews of  the new MPs,  about whom few of us would have known anything.

Local media did the obligatory interviews of MPs in their area but such work seems to be below the notice of  the press gallery, unless they stir up a controversy.

They comment on diversity – or lack of it – but rarely, if ever, cover the skills and experience MPs bring to the job.

They’ll crawl through social media looking for long ago transgressions of the media’s standards, but rarely if ever highlight anything positive, or inspirational.

The media has a very important role in holding the powerful to account. They should not, as too many did with Jacinda Ardern and still do for Chloe Swarbrick, be unquestioning and act as it they are part of an MP’s public relations team.

And they should be fair, balanced and as ready to show the good as they are to highlight the bad.

Perhaps then, the public would have a less jaundiced view of politicians and it might be less difficult to recruit good people to stand for parliament and councils.

If you are interested in learning about the new MPs, where they’ve come from, what motivates them and what they want to achieve as MPs,  tune into the Taxpayer’s Union Taxpayer Talk, where you can listen to MPs in Depth.


Word of the day

18/04/2024

Multilocular – having or divided into many small cells; chambers or vesicles; having or comprising several small cavities or compartments.


Job losses in perspective

18/04/2024

Losing a job is hard for those affected but reporting on public sector jobs too often shows no perspective.

Some of the positions that have been cut were ones that weren’t filled and some people would have taken voluntary redundancy to take on other work or retire.

Apropos of perspective – there have been about 3,000 jobs cut but more than 18,000 jobs were added to the public service since 2017, around 2,500 in the last six months, and for what?

It certainly hasn’t been for improvements in education, health, infrastructure or anything else that the public would notice.

Tough times require tough measures and that’s tough on people who are facing  involuntary job losses.

For another perspective, the public sector job losses are similar to those lost after the oil and gas ban:

Those jobs were in the private sector which paid tax rather than costing it.

When you put the jobs cuts into perspective with those added in the last six years and the necessity to make serious reductions to government spending, this is necessary surgery for a public service that has got too fat.

 


Woman of the day

18/04/2024

The names Watson and Crick are well known for their work on DNA, but who knew that their work was based, without her knowledge, on that of Rosalind Franklin?


Show no-show

18/04/2024

The New Zealand Agricultural Show – better known to many as the Christchurch show – will be a no-show this year.

The 2024 New Zealand Agricultural Show – an annual fixture on the Christchurch event calendar – has been cancelled and more changes may be on the horizon. . . 

The show has run for 161 years, cancelled only for a World War and Covid.

Show week is also Cup week and the racing will still go ahead, but no show will be a big blow for Christchurch businesses which will miss the visitors who would have come to the city for the show.

Hospitality and retail will be hardest hit but the loss of custom won’t be confined to the city. Businesses which supply raw ingredients to cafes and restaurants, for example, will also lose out.

Stock competitions will still go ahead, but that will bring only a relatively few people to the city compared with the tens of thousands who normally come for the show.

This is a financial blow to the city, and the loss of a valuable opportunity to bring country and town together.

A contributing factor to the A&P Society’s  problems was the cancellation of the show in 2020 and 2021.

The then-government that chucked money in all directions refused to underwrite large events to allow them to go ahead with planning without the risk of crippling costs if they had to be cancelled at the last minute.

The Christchurch Show has been the country’s biggest. The Upper Clutha Show in Wanaka isn’t as big as the Christchurch one but it has been growing year by year will take over that title until the city one is resurrected – if that happens.


Word of the day

17/04/2024

Otiosity – lazy; indolent; of no use; lacking use or effect; pointless or superfluous; an encumbrance or a superfluity; producing no useful result; futile; idle; functionless; being at leisure; the condition or state of being unoccupied or inactive; ease; idleness, laziness; redundancy.


Sowell says

17/04/2024


Woman of the day

17/04/2024


Horse back in front

17/04/2024

The government is making it less difficult to undertake coal mining:

Resources Minister Shane Jones has announced changes to coal mine consenting he says will reduce barriers to extraction and bring it into line with other types of mining.

The government’s first Resource Management Amendment Bill, to be introduced next month, will make changes to the Resource Management Act, freshwater environmental standards, and the National Policy Statements for Freshwater Management and Biodiversity.

It will remove additional controls for coal mining introduced by Labour that were set to end the consenting pathway for existing thermal coal mines from December 31, 2030.

Jones, in a statement, said the government’s planned changes would ensure New Zealand’s access to locally sourced coal so processors would “not be forced to rely on imported coal to meet their needs”.

The previous government’s policy was both virtue signaling and greenwashing.

It looked like it was better for the environment but it was worse, forcing the country to import coal that was of poorer quality than most of what could be mined here.

He said the impacts of extracting coal were “similar, if not the same, as those occurring in mining other minerals” and the changes would enable a wider range of consent applications for coal mining.

“Coal is a small but mighty part of New Zealand’s productive output and makes a significant contribution to regional economies,” he said.

“On the West Coast, coal extraction provides for the families of 280 workers at Stockton Mine which produces around 80 percent of our $300 million in sought-after premium coal exports, used in international steelmaking.” . . . 

Too much of what the previous government did put the green cart in front of the scientific and technical horses at a very high economic, environmental and social cost.

The new policy puts the horse in front again.


Word of the day

16/04/2024

Galère – a group of people having a common interest; group of people of the same sort or class.; a coterie of undesirable people. an unpleasant situation; a long low ship with one deck, moved by oars (and often sails).


Sowell says

16/04/2024