Author: Geoff Ebbs

  • Sweepers arise – your brooms await

    Sweepers arise – your brooms await

    Evil, evil lawn
    The evil of grass: fossil fuel and water intensive, worse still: inedible!

    On occasion conservationists are portrayed as party poopers. Green wowsers, in contrast to the wee green people who epitomise a party wherever they appear; lepers rather than leprechauns, perhaps.

    The occasions vary. The Howard government felt we spoiled their fun locking refugees in cages in the desert. Woodchipping and land clearing companies feel we spoil their fun trashing a major national asset. That’s rules for you. Every time the police breathalyse someone at 0.15%, POOF, another party’s over – replaced by an instant hangover.

    Of course, one person’s party is another’s riot. The music that soothes my teenage daughters disturbs the paying guests of the Catholic retreat next door. The sound of lawn mowers may be music to someone’s ears, to mine it is the mad clatter of petrol addicts fighting nature with all the sanity of an acid-freak battling lizards in the bath.

    You, I suspect, do not consider graffiti to be art. Personally, I think graffiti is mostly silly and occasionally wonderful, but I am equally offended by bad and boring architecture.

    I am never as offended by visual pollution as I am by noise. You can look the other way or close your eyes, but your ears are always open.

    Given my distaste for the timbre of the two stroke engine, it will not surprise you, Dear Reader, that I do not like leaf blowers.

    I believe that creating order gently through the humble act of sweeping is meditation. I revel in my efficiency with the yard broom and the crisp swish of bristles relaxes me as does a babbling brook.

    By comparison, donning the earmuffs and eyeglasses to wave the noisy, smelly beast that blows is like smashing through the window of the florist in your four wheel drive to buy a bunch of long stemmed roses.

    Apparently, I am not the only weirdo to feel this way. 20 cities in California have banned them outright. Celebrity gardeners argue on television for their right to peace and quiet, or the freedom to blow leaves as they see fit.

    While I have restrained myself from crash-tackling the local newsagent at 6.30 in the morning, I do discourage our elected representatives from spending rate monies on energy intensive machines that can be replaced with a little, old-fashioned elbow grease.

    The Cage is on 4ZZZ FM, 102.1FM Wednesdays between 12 and 2am.

  • Church closes ranks on rebel Pope

    Church closes ranks on rebel Pope

    Pope Francis
    Pope Francis is unpopular with the institutional hierarchy

    The Catholic Herald this week openly criticized Pope Francis’ statements that we must not equate Terrorism with Islam.

    It is the most recent in a series of high profile criticisms of the Pope by Catholic commentators. Pope Francis told reporters last week that we must not mention terrorism by Islamists without reference to Christian terrorism. He also said, “Terrorism is the work of fundamentalists. All religions have their fundamentalist sects.”

    He noted that Christianity and Islam share the same notion of conquest, and blamed imperial and colonial interference in the Middle East for the current unrest.

  • Cholera outbreak threatens Sudanese refugees

    Cholera outbreak threatens Sudanese refugees

    Sudanese refugees carry water provided by Oxfam
    Sudanese refugees carry water provided by Oxfam

    A cholera outbreak in Juba, South Sudan is threatening 15,000 refugees, as the government struggles to provide drinking water to the parched region.

    Oxfam reported one year ago that the water treatment plants and ground water supplies were unable to keep up with the increasing refugee population. For the last twelve months, the government has trucked water into the capital.

    Last week 6,000 more refugees arrived, swelling the number of Sudanese refugees to 1.6 million.

    Cholera is a water borne disease that rapidly kills people through vomiting and diarrheah.

    http://www.gurtong.net/ECM/Editorial/tabid/124/ctl/ArticleView/mid/519/articleId/19675/IOM-Responds-To-Suspected-Cholera-Cases-In-Juba-South-Sudan.aspx

    https://www.nrc.no/news/2016/july/thousands-displaced-by-fighting-in-south-sudan/

    https://www.oxfam.org/en/south-sudan-crisis-south-sudan/clean-water-runs-dry-juba-south-sudan

  • Australian Census controversy over identity and religion

    Australian Census controversy over identity and religion

    UK religious beliefs
    Christians are no longer in the majority in the UK

    Controversy mounts around religion and identity in the 2016 Australian Census. Political parties, activists and religious leaders have robustly criticized the Australian Government for collecting the names and IP addresses of people who complete the Census online this year. The government insists this is simply to verify the accuracy of the data and the names and addresses will not be used for any other purpose. Other groups have expressed concern at the inclusion of a “no religion” category in the question about religion. Athiests have actively lobbied for the category to minimize the influence of right wing Christians. Hate speak groups have used the controversy to promote their misinformation campaigns.

    http://censusnoreligion.org.au/

    http://spectator.com.au/2016/07/i-dont-believe-in-no-religion/

    https://openparachute.wordpress.com/tag/religion/

  • Greenwood looks at local food laws

    Greenwood looks at local food laws

    Local ecological food
    Local food has health as well as economic benefits

    Greenwood is the latest town in the US state of Maine to consider a law protecting local food producers from State and Federal laws that favour industrial food producers. The proposed ordinance states “We hold that federal and state regulations impede local food production and constitute a usurpation of our citizens’ rights to foods of their choice.” So far, 16 cities in Maine have passed similar audiences. Cities as diverse as Baw Baw in rural Australia and Yemen

    http://www.sunjournal.com/news/lewiston-auburn-oxford-hills-river-valley-franklin-bethel/0001/11/30/greenwood-ponders-local-food-ordinance-protect-farmers

  • New Cool blue pigment discovered in Oregon

    New Cool blue pigment discovered in Oregon

    Image of YinMn crystal
    The molecular structure of YInMn

    Scientists in Oregon have discovered a “cool” blue paint that is non-toxic and remarkably stable even at high temperatures. The University has partnered with Ohio-based pigment manufacturer, Shepherd Color to commercialise the product. It will be some years before the product is tested by Toxic substances regulators and is available as a commercial pigment to ceramic or paint manufactures. Experts in the pigment industry point out that the pigment is currently at least 50 times more expensive than existing cobalt based pigments.

    http://chemistry.oregonstate.edu/content/story-yinmn-blue