Archive for the 'news' Category

Barak Obama’s Race Speech

Quite possibly the most worthwhile 37 minutes of YouTube I’ve seen.

Watch: Barak Obama’s speech ‘A More Perfect Union’.

If someone this intelligent and balanced, and - it seems to me - downright good, can become the President of America then something amazing will have happened.

I don’t have a vote there, but I can still hope…

Disclaimer: Yes, it’s a home-made YouTube ‘embedded link’ screenshot; I still haven’t fixed the bug with this blog template which brakes YouTube videos. Terrible inconsistency, bad usability yesyes… all those things.

Mark Beaumont has completed an 18000 mile route around the world to return to Paris, where he started 195 days ago.  See the BBC’s Pedaling Around website about his trip.

Congratulations Mark!

Now there’s an idea…

Sam

Let it snow (and blow)

The BBC’s forecast for tomorrow looks interesting:

Weather Forecast

Come on, snow, you can do it.  Tell you what, I’ll go and take photos of you if you come?

Sam

Water, water everywhere

Luckily we do have plenty of drops to drink though. This photo was from 7.30 this morning, on the A44 at Lovesgrove near Aberystwyth. Usually that sign is standing in a field.

There are stories about the trains being cancelled and roads impassable into Aberystwyth. The Pont Dyfi bridge at Machynlleth often closes during floods, but that’s not the main route in from Shrewsbury to Aberystwyth.

Still, it’s pretty, isn’t it!

I just saw on the BBC News an article about a road cyclist who has been killed on the A82 in Scotland, near Fort William.

This makes me rather sad. Different things affect people in different ways. Hearing about cyclists being killed in accidents on the road is something which makes me most sad by reading it in the news.

I had never heard of this man before now. He was apparently a very promising racer, having broken Graeme Obree’s 10 mile record time and the won the British time trial Circuit among other titles. He was 34 and had a wife and two young daughters.

There aren’t any details of the accident, beyond that it involved a van. Motor vehicles have their uses, but they do also make the roads they share with cyclists potentially dangerous for the latter (which, of course, is a reason to do more cycling on roads and less driving on them - not to stop cycling on roads). Terrible events like this make that so sad.

View this photo on my Flickr page

The photo above was from our Land’s End to John o’Groats cycle tour in 2005, showing me unicycling on the same A82, near Glencoe south of Fort William. In much of rural Scotland there is only one road going between places, so there is no choice but to cycle on some busy ones.

Edit: I realise that this photo doesn’t illustrate how busy it can be - it was a well-timed Jonathan Greenaway photograph to show pretty things like mountains more than cars.

The joy of english is that ‘read’ and ‘read’ mean both the present-continuous and past tense, and you can’t tell without either context or pronunciation. I meant the past-tense version, like the colour, not the riverside plant. I don’t often get a paper at the weekend, and don’t make a habit of reading the Women section (although, thinking about it, I secretly like reading ‘girl’ books or whatever, as a non-girl can often learn more about them by seeing what they want to say when it’s not supposed to be for guys than what makes it as far as the ‘advice about females’ in general or men-targeted stuff - it feels like a kind of back-stage thing), but there were Circumstances. Yes, they deserve that capital letter.

It involved a conspiring combination of my phone’s clock, Which (and indeed What?) Digital Camera magazine, McCoy’s crisps, Arriva Trains Wales, darts, dominoes, Jeremy Clarkson, John Humphries, gentle but persistent rain and a pint of Greene King in The Green Dragon pub.

So, for reasons you really shouldn’t expect me to expand upon, I was reading the glossy Women section which falls out of the Observer Sunday newspaper. Most of it didn’t interest me that much, but I did read an interesting article:

Is virginity the last taboo?

Yes, says a group of hip, savvy and successful Christians. Elizabeth Day meets today’s new radical twentysomethings

You don’t get the whole effect with the online version, as it doesn’t have the several photos of the girls being interviewed - very glamorous etc., and much like any other professional models on the other pages. Apart from the rather petty (given the context) comment I could make on how perhaps Christians shouldn’t revel in being able to glam-up and parade as ostentatiously as anyone else, I was impressed at how sympathetic and admiring the article was.

The Observer (and/or Guardian on weekdays), as a left of centre liberal publication (which is why I choose to read them), isn’t renound for giving religious types an easy ride. Often quite rightly. But what this article is at pains to convey is that these girls (is it patronising to use that word for unmarried females over 25? Maybe.) aren’t weird, judgemental or pushy. There’s no talk of doctrine or damnation throughout. The Silver Ring Thing is given pretty short shrift. They’re just worth comment because they seem different, for having found satisfaction in doing things with some restraint required… not for being needlessly un-cool or for annoying people.

Sam

The church in Baghdad

This Sunday we had a visit to our church from Barnabas Fund’s Patrick Sookhdeo, who spoke graphically about violence and discrimination of christians in Iraq, and about the threatening ideology of Islam against christianity.

And I felt rather unneasy, but not for the reasons he wanted.  I am told that he is apparently an academic authority on jihadist ideology, and is a former muslim.  But I still felt like I was not being given an objective and fair picture of either the violent actions or the motivation.

All I can really add is this article from the New York Times about the newly elevated Cardinal of Baghdad, Emmanuel III Delly.  He is a prominent christian leader from Mosul in Iraq, and surely is worth hearing too:

“Christians and Muslims have lived together here for 1,400 years,” Cardinal Delly said in an interview. “We have much in common; in Iraq, the Christian house is next to the Muslim house.”

“I am not happy when people ask, ‘How is the situation for Christians?’” he said. “Those who kill don’t kill only Christians. They kill Muslims as well — the situation is the same for both.”

So it’s not that things aren’t terrible, but that it’s surely more complicated than ‘nasty muslims’ attacking ‘nice christians’.