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Diary of a B+ Grade Polymath ([personal profile] tcpip) wrote2007-10-15 12:17 pm

Palestine, Elections, UNIX and Science!

Last Thursday attended a University of Melbourne forum with Dr. Ghada Karmi speaking on the need to establish a "one (secular, democratic) state" solution in Palestine; as a two-state solution simply isn't possible anymore; there were some 250 people there with an hour for the talk and an hour of questions afterwards. It was also a discussion around her latest book Married to Another Man, which is a well-referenced, accessible and personal introduction to the topic. Her talk in Adelaide, has attracted some debate. On the tram on the way back home there was a small group of young pro-Israelis discussing the talk (although during the presentation they scattered themselves throughout the lecture theatre). One rather enthusiastically rejected Dr. Karmi's suggestion to read the works of Jewish scholar Norman Finkelstein on the grounds that he is a holocaust denier. I really should have opened my mouth at that point; Finklestein is a critic of what he justly calls the "holocaust industry"; but that's not the same thing as denial: Finklestein's parents were both in the Warsaw ghetto. His mother was shipped to Majdanek concentration camp, his father to Auschwitz.

In a more local country where the Basic Laws don't dictate a particular religion, an election has been called. Opinion polls indicate that the Howard government is well and truly on the way out and I suspect that he knows it as well. This is why, I suspect, that he has turned to indigenous reconciliation and has just claimed that Medicare shows that the Coalition is caring. When one spends their life in public office, typically one wants to be remembered from something positive; to date the Prime Minister has left behind of that nature. So expect a "kinder, caring" slate of promises from the PM in this election. Frankly however, as The Age editorial remarked on the indigenous issue: Sorry Mr. Howard: Too Little, Too Late.

Attended one day of AUUG 2007 and was delighted to talk at some length with Marshall Kirk McKusick. Was especially impressed with Enno Davids' presentation and have put in a request for a related to talk at Securecon. Challenging talk by [livejournal.com profile] arjen_lentz; will be dining with him tonight.Also testing the waters to see if VPAC will be interested in a FreeBSD cluster. Military's "gay bomb" (sounds like an X-rated "Get Smart" movie) wins Ignoble Award, although with some serious challengers. British court notes nine minor errors in Al Gore's film, as he wins the 2007 Noble Peace Prize.

[identity profile] ruth-lawrence.livejournal.com 2007-10-15 02:44 am (UTC)(link)
I have noticed a number of minor errors in popular science works.

Gore's strong claims are, to me, typically USan. They are prone, especially by UK cultural standards, to hyperbole (IMO).

As for the election: here's hoping that a succesful stunt won't be pulled by the Coalition (whom I believe don't care for all equally, not at all).

It's time for change here.

[identity profile] strangedave.livejournal.com 2007-10-15 03:06 am (UTC)(link)
I'd be less chaitable to Howard. My theory is that senior cabinet figures have acknowledged they are losing the election, and have decided on a strategy of shoring up the inner city seats (like Bennelong, Wentworth, etc), abandoning the mortagage belt blue collars that got them in last time. I think it will fail, though.

The Gore thing wasn't even nine errors, but nine 'errors' - points that deserved discussion/clarification,onyl some of which were really errors. And while the climate change deniers have been crowing about the decision, they really have no grounds to do so - the judge accepted the IPCC as the standard of truth, and explicitly rejected the 'tech the controversy' argument that would have given denialism a look in. So kids will learn a little about the politicisation of science.

[identity profile] delibash.livejournal.com 2007-10-15 04:20 am (UTC)(link)
word to the wise - in order to sustain the rich one must have an abundant pool of the poor. i live in a working class hispanic neighborhood of new york. of course, their condition cannot be compared with that of the palestinians. but the principle is the same. those who do not "belong" must toil. in the end, in my opinion, it comes down to simple racism. the grand master plan is always a failure...

[identity profile] beingfrank.livejournal.com 2007-10-15 06:14 am (UTC)(link)
I'm worried that it's not as cut and dried as the opinion polls might suggest. Winning the seats is the tricky bit, and that could be harder.

[identity profile] zhenzhi.livejournal.com 2007-10-15 08:07 am (UTC)(link)
i can't believe it took so long and so much to get australians to realise howard is an arse! i hope the boot that kicks him out is HUGE!

[identity profile] ser-pounce.livejournal.com 2007-10-15 11:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Yay for election! Howard is really scrambling this time. Acknowledging Aboriginals a month before an election......convenient.
reddragdiva: (geek)

[personal profile] reddragdiva 2007-10-16 12:26 am (UTC)(link)
Heh. I started that McKusick article.