Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

Saturday, April 10, 2010

In the Interests of Balance

Here are the contact details of my Labour opponent taken from his official election literature



This from the man who in his first intervention in the Digital Economy Bill Debate said:

"I am listening with great interest to my hon. Friend and I am a great follower of Star Wars. I realise now, however, that my hon. Friend has identified himself as Yoda."


Hat tip to Love and Garbage who's also blogged about it.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

The 'Flash Mob' Bonspeil


The Royal Caledonian Curling Club may have sought and failed the correct clearance from authorities to hold a bonspeil on the Lake of Menteith for the first time since 1979. But the cancellation didn't prevent a return to more innocent times before health and safety held such sway.

A Facebook group that had been set up announced soon after the announcement of the cancellation shouted out:

"Bring your stones, bring your skates if you prefer, or just bring your self. Take heed of the warnings but do it anyway. See you Saturday."
So yesterday 2,000 curlers turned up, to enjoy the once in a lifetime chance to partake in a grand match on a frozen loch or lake.

The rather appropriately named, for such subterfuge, owner of the Lake Hotel Ian Fleming said the event was very much in the spirit of the 19th Century bonspeils:

"It's as we suspected: a lot of people have made individual decisions to come and celebrate the freezing over of the lake for themselves. Lots of people are just walking out on to the lake, because it might be the only time in their lives they get to do it."

Mr Fleming who himself was skating on the Lake on Friday evening said that curlers turned up Midnight with floodlights and so the first 'flash mobbed' bonspeil in history came to be.

Colin Grahamslaw, chief executive of the Royal Caledonian Curling Club, who had called off the official event when the authorities and emergency services were unable to give their backing said:

"It's great. What we're seeing is what you'd hope for on a busy weekend in such a beautiful setting. It's nice that people have been able to take advantage of that."
The ice is reckoned to be far deeper than the seven inch requirement that the club say is necessary for such events. Welcome to the 21st Century Bonspeil a mixture of the traditional and the modern.

UPDATE: Pity Kevin McKenna didn't check all his fact before publishing this well written Comment is Free piece today.

Tuesday, September 08, 2009

Better Late Than Never. No Just My Views On Election Night

I was going to write about my reasons to keep counting of the General Election votes on a Thursday night last night. However, due to my own local difficulties with Internet I'm now somewhat late to the boat and a little anti-climatic.

Therefore, I reckon I've got to make it good. Though I do make a couple of points I don't see made anywhere else down at the bottom if you want to scroll past the impassioned prose of the rest of this. Readers who want to know what Marvin the paranoid android is up to have clearly opened the wrong page.

Being Northern Irish I'm well used to the votes being counted the next day. The reason that happened the whole time that I was growing up, was security. Not as some have argued the security of the votes, but of the count staff, attendees and their cars parked outside in the dark on a Northern Irish night. There are other seats, such as Orkney and Shetland or the Western Isles were on occasions of course attempts to get all the votes into the count on the night come to naught because the vehicle that was meant to be doing the transportation is called out on its day job as an air sea rescue helicopter.

Maybe it is because of my Northern Irish school days that you think I'd agree with Anders Lanson. However, the first election that I was sent to bed during was 1983. But I snuggled under the covers with Radio 4 playing rather my usual night time listening of John Peel, then rushed home from school to catch the Northern Irish results. Counting the next day doesn't even mean it'll be over by lunchtime. In 1987 after a convenient gap for my parents to go to bed I snuck back downstairs to turn the TV back on, where I was still sat in the morning when my father came down for breakfast to me saying, 'It's Thatcher. Again!'.

As a adult in 1992 it was back to radio, as I wasn't actually living in a house with a TV. But there was preparation to be done ahead of heading off to Preston for OM's Easter Evangelism so that breakfast I wasn't quite able to say it was Major, that point occurred somewhere on the M6. '97 of course as dawn broke Tony and Cheri arrived at the after show party too late to stop Prezza and Mandy dancing to D-Ream. 2001 I almost choked on my tea in Stoneyburn when they announced the size of Ed Davey's new majority. Nervous, me!

So why should we keep as many counts as possible on the night itself. Firstly as Andrew Reeves points out the campaign staff and activists have literally got to the point where adrenaline takes over. Many will have even taken a week, fortnight or longer off in the build up to the election. Their body may be telling them enough, but there is still more to be done. So as Darrell points out arising the next day refreshed can help but there often are times where there are also council votes polled on the same day.

In 2001 the Northern Irish council vote had been moved due to Foot and Mouth to GE day. Some of the results weren't known until Monday (you can't count on the Sabbath in Northern Ireland). In 2003 in Scotland we did rise afresh for our council counts, although I'd not been to bed. In 2007 of course many of us went back having had nothing resolved overnight. I'd also disagree with Mark Valladares that we're not as sharp after being up all night after the 1999 Scottish counts the local activists in West Lothian were alert enough the next morning, ok 4 hours later, to call three recounts in a tight council ward. Admittedly it ended up slightly safer as a 21 vote SNP majority than the original notification.

In 2005 I was out on the eve of poll delivering to almost 10pm, then not home much before 11. Ready to get up suited an booted to get to my first polling station at 7am to greet my first voter. My first supporter was at 7:02. The first comment about us Lothian candidates looking like a scene from Resevoir Dogs as we saw the Kennedy's off at Prestonfield House Hotel the night before came at my 3rd polling station at about 7:30 standing beside Fiona Hyslop MSP. Of course I had to explain it to Fiona because the one thing that the real political activists don't get to do much of during the campaign is actually sit down and watch the news. We catch snippets, read the paper while on the move, listening to the radio, or going through the post and emails at the end of the day. But to actually sit down and watch the news, that is a luxury. We may have tipped off to a good story being lead so we may manoeuvre our way to a TV set for 6pm or 10 pm, for a couple of minutes, but no more than that.


Even the start of the election night coverage is largely lost on us. We'll be at the count, possibly even on the TV as the camera's pan the various halls up and down the country where the counts are taking place. Too busy looking at ballot papers rather the couple of screens that may be dotted around in restful locations around the venue. You see we still cannot rest, there is a job to be done. Leaving the count all over the country until the following day, isn't going to help us get any more rest. Candidates will still be pacing their houses frantically waiting until it is their appointed time to enter the count hall. Agents will still be a mixture of a bag of nerves wondering if their candidate, their campaign has done enough to hold on, or to overcome. The only points through the night at which the agent will not be a panic is when the candidate calls knowing that at least one other person won't be asleep.

Of course we can't all be activists in Sunderland, able to pack up shortly after 11pm to head home, result declared MPs elected, and get in front of a TV with maybe 5 or 6 at most declarations made of imminent. Although we do hope for a quick count, or at least one on time with the timetable the Returning Officer has giving in their briefings in the weeks before, or first thing on the night. But a bundle check or a recount doesn't mean we are ready to slope off, no it merely gees up up ready for action. As we know that the TV cameras will be honed on us beaming our image to the insomniacs, political anoraks, the campaigners from Sunderland and whoever else has declared and is off to their party with a glass of wine, not a cup of coffee, in hand. The 6 millions BBC viewers at a peak before 2am in 2005 didn't include me as my count was only declared at 1:45. The first TV I saw was on leaving as the SNP (someone will tell me who) then Jo Swinson swiftly took two seats off Labour as we were leaving the hall.

Caron has written about the faboulousness of election nights and having shared with her the heartache of 405 votes in Edinburgh South*, the joy of Dunfermline and West Fife in a full office in the wee small hours, plus breaking down on the way back from Glenrothes. She mentions the last as her cure, but I guess she'll be up until dawn and beyond with the rest of us next time. For those of you who know Caron that is 'way' past her normal bed time.

Some have muted the idea of a weekend poll, that isn't necessarily the best thing. For starters the weekend after Tony Blair strode into Downing Street for the first time was the May Day Bank Holiday weekend. If we'd had a poll that weekend, what would the turnout have been? What would the result have been? Unless you have fixed terms in which you know 4/5 years in advance the polling day, and that is doesn't clash with major times when people are away. You don't think a Government would try and use a holiday to their advantage? Look only as far as last summer when Labour moved a quick writ for Glasgow East. The last two weeks of that three week campaign coincided with the Glasgow Fayre holiday.

Of course Friday isn't necessarily a free day on the campaign trail. In West Lothian, and Edinburgh, as other locations, the lamppost posters and/or stake boards have got to start to come down, they have to be down within 3 days of the polls closing. So after a few hours sleep, it is up again with the radio tuned in to try and listen to the Northern Irish and other remaining counts. Others will be at the office starting to clean it up, the lease may well expire at 5pm on the Friday. As these are often loaned on a week by week basis any delay in the clean up would incur an extra week of rental on possibly a redundant office space. This is a hidden another extra cost that maybe Mr Quist should factor in as well as the overtime, or loss of service through a Friday count. Also has one Mark reckoned for this potential knock on effect to a delay in the count.

Yes there are pros for moving the count to the next day, but there are also cons to be considered. I hope I have pointed out a few of them. To be honest the campaign the for me doesn't end at some small hour of the Friday morning, it still has 3 days to go. Any lost hours at the end of that week might limit my commitment beforehand. Especially if the election is moved to a weekend and weekend days to clear up are lost. Therefore I have signed up to the Facebook Group and felt the need, even after the delays of last night, to write about this.

*Though never again will I be left with a box of 'white' wine sat beside me all night, we'll get a working corkscrew for the red.

Saturday, September 05, 2009

Men Have Eating Disorders Too





I'm the first to admit that I used to be lighter, that I don't like the slight bulge of middle aged spread around my middle. But I used to be an athlete, I was eating the required calories to complete the training and racing and my body though thinner was tuned muscle. I don't have an issue with a little extra poundage, I know the work I went through before was not for body image reasons but for sporting achievement, however that isn't always the case.

When Jo Swinson launched her campaign about Airbrushed ads leading to unrealistic images only related to girls and women. Of course that is part of the 'Real Women' policy paper that is before conference later this year.

As I Tweeted or commented at the time the same applies to men. There are magazines aimed at men that show the idealised male torso in adverts for cologne, underwear or whatever, just like there are those that affect the women amongst us. For the gay male there are additional sightings of the somewhat 'perfect' form by whatever means. Bombarded by images men are also likely to try and emulate those images.

The problem for the men with eating disorder there is the added problem that often their condition is not taking seriously enough, even by doctors and other health practitioners. Currently of the 60,000 people with an eating disorder only 10-20% are male. Yet amongst men, and in particular gay men, the image of what is average is at the lower end or below what is actually ideal for their body type and height.

While Jo is looking at potential causes there is a great need for males with eating disorders to get help with the effects. There is a Facebook Group set up to highlight the issues of male eating disorder, promoting a Downing Street petition stating:

'We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to ensure men with eating disorders are given the same opportunities for treatment and care as female sufferers and are by no means discriminated against by their doctor / other health practitioner because they are male.'


Please go along and sign it too.

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

My Cousin is in London

Just received this on Facebook from We're Related.




Sadly I have got a lot of reseach on my family tree and none of Barack Obama's parents or Grandparents or Great Grandparents feature in the fourth, third or second cousins to make him have a chance of being my 4th cousin once removed. Good April Fool though.

Friday, February 20, 2009

My First Album Meme

A little bit of weekend fun. Yeah something else I grabbed off Facebook.


MY FIRST ALBUM...RULES:


1 - Go to Wikipedia. Hit “random”or click http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random


The first random Wikipedia article you get is the name of your band.



2 - Go to www.quotationspage.com and select "random quotations"or click http://www.quotationspage.com/random.php3


The last four or five words of the very last quote on the page is the title of your first album.



3 - Go to Flickr and click on “explore the last seven days”or click http://www.flickr.com/explore/interesting/7days


Third picture, no matter what it is, will be your album cover.





4 - Use Photoshop or similar to put it all together.





5 - Post it with this text in the "caption" or "comment" and TAG the friends you want to join in...


Here are my results:

"Pretend it isn't the case" by How Low Can You Go?

Thursday, February 05, 2009

Top of the Pops for 25 Reasons

Do a search in Google for "25 random things about me" go on, you will, you will, you will.

This meme is a worldwide phenonum there are over 14.9 million page returns. That is actually 10 times more than yesterday evening when I started to contemplate writing this thing up. And what is that sat at the top of the heap. Only little old me, no wonder my stat porn is through the roof and staying there.

So as some of the other MSM are looking, and even doing their own lists of 25 here are 25 11, for the moment at least, interesting ones that I have found out there. These are in no particular order just ones that caught my fancy.

25 Random Things about my 49ers Fandom in the week after Superbowl why not have a look at 25 things that make you a fan.

25 Things About Being Gay on Facebook an interesting reply back at the trend from a Gay Magazine. Though there are some of the things in this list that even heterosexual Facebook users can relate to.

25 Randy, er Random Things about Jack Humphrey I'm not sure how common the thought is but I'm sure several people have send a private 25 Randy Things list off. To be honest I did and got a return.

25 Random Things About Corey J Feldman who as he says on his Twitter is no the 80's teen actor.

25 Random Things About Tom Harris MP 26 if you add the fact that Tom apparently doesn't know how to make a note on Facebook, maybe he should ask Uber Labour 2.0 John "I didn't use to do t'internet" Prescott

Who has done one as well.

25 Random Things About Queer Musings as the blogs name reflects this is very intorspecitive

25 Freaking Random Things About me that are going around in my head

25 Random Things on You Tube yeah people are Vlogging it as well.


25 Random Things From the Korean American Christian Media.

25 Random and Personal Things About John Taylor

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

The Movie Quote Game

Got another tag on Facebook and thought I'd share it with you all. I'll reveal the answers as they are guessed either here or there.

Pick 20 of your favorite movies.
- Go to IMDb and find a quote from each movie.
- Post them in a note for everyone to guess.
- NO GOOGLING/using IMDB search functions.
- NO LOOKING AT MY PROFILE TO SEE MY FAVORITE MOVIES!!!

As Jonathan Calder has hat tipped me I big up Rick Vaughan who without the wonders of Facebook would be consigned to the summer of 1991 in my life and a team in Bradford.

Easy one to start

1. Did you hear that? They shut down the main reactor. We'll be destroyed for sure. This is madness.

Star Wars : Episode IV - A New Hope - Alex Wilcock*

2. A:What are they singing?
B: [translating] They run this way. They run that way. They are confused. They are afraid.
A: We are afraid?
[shouts]
A: We are afraid?
B: You are cowards.
A: You *bastards*.

3. A: We were just wondering if, if it is good to just leave a few things to, to chance?
B: We want to give your child the best possible start. Believe me, we have enough imperfection built in already. Your child doesn't need any more additional burdens. Keep in mind, this child is still you. Simply, the best, of you. You could conceive naturally a thousand times and never get such a result.

Gattaca - Will Howells

4. A: I was dreaming about God.
B: What did he say?
A: Nothing. He was playing tennis. Perhaps that's where God is all the time and that's why you can't see Him when you're awake, do you think?
B: I don't know. I don't know about God.
A: Perhaps He's our dream... and we're His.

5. Debi Newberry: You're a psychopath.
Martin Q. Blank: No, no. Psychopaths kill for no reason. I kill for *money*. It's a *job*. That didn't come out right.

Grosse Pointe Blank - Will Patterson
Though Andrew Tate points out it is Minnie Driver talking to John Cusack

6. You traveled the world... Now you must journey inwards... to what you really fear... it's inside you... there is no turning back. Your parents' death was not your fault. Your training is nothing. The will is everything. If you make yourself more than just a man, if you devote yourself to an ideal, you become something else entirely. Are you ready to begin?

So far Jennie Rigg has correctly indentified this as a Batman movie. Which Mr Wilcock correctly identifies as Batman Begins and were spoken by fellow Ulsterman Liam Neeson as Henri Ducard.

7. A year passed: winter changed into spring, spring changed into summer, summer changed back into winter, and winter gave spring and summer a miss and went straight on into autumn... until one day...

Monty Python and the Holy Grail - Jenny Rigg

8. Just for the record, I was only staring at your ass for the first 15 minutes!

Cayote Ugly - Richard Gadsen and yes it is Kevin to Violet (Jersey)

9. Sucking the marrow out of life doesn't mean choking on the bone.

Dead Poets Society - Yousuf Hamid

10. If word got around that I had been liberated for half a million dollars, I could never show my face in polite society again. Diamonds have no value except that which is placed upon them.

11. A: Look at them. They're just asking for it. Maybe the human race deserves to be wiped out.
B: Wiping out the human race? That's a great idea. That's great. But more of a long-term thing. I mean, first we have to focus on more immediate goals.

12. A: Are you classified human?
B: Negative, I am a meat popsicle.

The Fifth Element - Cole007

13. So this affair you're not having - is it not with a man, or not with a woman?

14. A: I mean, there's every reason to suppose [pause]... that the game ultimately derives from the wholly unjustified right of the medieval lord to the unpaid labour of villains and serfs at haymaking and harvest.
B: You know, you're really beginning to get the idea.
A: Thanks.

Another Country - Jonathan Calder

15. I know I've made some very poor decisions recently, but I can give you my complete assurance that my work will be back to normal. I've still got the greatest enthusiasm and confidence in the mission. And I want to help you.

2001: A Space Odyssey - Will Howells

16. You wouldn't hit a man with no trousers on, would you?

The Italian Job (1969) - Andrew Tate

17 Aragon: Are you frightened?
Frodo: Yes.
Aragon: Not nearly frightened enough. I know what hunts you.

LOTR: Fellowship of the Ring - Will Howells**

18: Now, explain it to me like I'm a four-year-old.

19. It was not my intention to do this in front of you. For that I'm sorry. But you can take my word for it, your mother had it comin'. When you grow up, if you still feel raw about it, I'll be waiting.

Kill Bill Vol. 1 - Mina Ward

20. I'm lucky, he's lucky, we're all lucky!

Rocky Horror Picture Show - Jenny Rigg

* The fact that a rather well-tongued (as in spoken tongue...ooh you filthy minded lot) gent has partaken on this will mean I'll probably not hear the end of it for week, months or years.

**And he identified Aragon as the main speaker.

Sunday, February 01, 2009

25 Random Things About Me.

Ok I got tagged in Facebook and this is the sort of level my brain can cope with just now.

Rules: Once you've been tagged, you are supposed to write a note with 25 random things, facts, habits, or goals about you. At the end, choose 25 people to be tagged.
  1. I have won trophies or medals in five different sports.
  2. Coming from Bangor, Northern Ireland I applied to Bangor, University, North Wales (though I didn't take their offer)
  3. I hacked away at a wall in Berlin. I wasn't a vandal it was the Summer of 1990.
  4. I was the first writer on H2G2 to have written 100 edited solo entries (although to be honest that was purely down to a editing decision in the great publishing house of Ursa Minor as the true first got his ton 7 days later)
  5. At University I served on the committee of three organisations for at least two years each....
  6. ...I also co-founded the Irish Society on St. Patrick Night by collected enough signatures around the bar after a conversation at our table.
  7. I was very briefly expecting to live for a year right next down to Highfield Road, Coventry City's old ground. I ended up living still less than 100m away...
  8. ...that year when Liverpool were visiting I was heading to the car to head north as the Liverpool team coach pulled past our car port.
  9. I once had Kenny Daglish stand next to me twice at Euston station in one evening. But was too dumb struck to speak to my childhood hero.
  10. I have seen Liverpool play at 10 venues. None of them Anfield.
  11. I ran 4 competitive 10k road races during the 3 week period I was sitting my A'levels.
  12. I have run sub 4 minutes miles.
  13. On the day of the Northern Ireland Devolution referendum. I turned up late for the triples match we were playing at Rathriland but met the club secretary who's I'd spoken to on the phone outside the polling station to get directions to the green.
  14. In the first NI assembly election my vote for Jane Morrice NIWC never transferred to my normal first preference Alliance candidates, nor anyone else, either in full or part, as she was the last candidate to be declared elected by STV.
  15. I have written a series of micro biographies all with the word count of 45 Words.
  16. I have played chess against times colomnist Raymond Keane, also GM Daniel King and was in the same club as South African anti-arpartheid activist and journalist Donald Wood.
  17. I have an ...ology. I took Archaeology in Lower Sixth as I was only taking 3 A'levels I got an A.
  18. My birthday has on several occasions been celebrated at, or travelling to/from, Lib Dem Federal Conference.
  19. I've been writing poetry for over 25 years.
  20. My head has been split open in accidents on four occasions and my nose has been broken three times (all three while playing in goal).
  21. I share my first two initials with the Grandfather whose birthday I was due to arrive on. I arrived a week late
  22. Last season I only missed two competitive games that Livingston played in home or away (one I was home for my birthday, the other I was working on 2 January). This season that was ruined early on by the Glenrothes by election.
  23. I have been in every county in England except Cornwall, and every mainland adminstrative district in Scotland. But hardly ventured into Wales.
  24. I have travelled the length of Europe Overland from the Atlantic coast of Spain to Kiev (though not all in the one trip).
  25. There are 14 varieties of tea in my kitchen (including herbal blends) and only one type of coffee (for guests).

As this was on Facebook not all the taggees were bloggers. But I did tag Malc, Jeff, STB and Duncan from the Blogosphere.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Dear Auntie...Yours Disgusted of Bathgate

I've just sent this off the following to the BBC complaints department.


I am disgusted to learn that the BBC has chosen not to show the DEC appeal.

If such charities as British Red Cross, Christian Aid, Help the Aged, Islamic Relief, Oxfam, and Save the Children cannot be trusted to make an impartial appeal I doubt that the BBC is truly as impartial as it wishes to appear.

I use the BBC sources as one of the top party political bloggers and often link through to news on you site. I will be refusing to do RSS feeds and various Twitter updates. I shall be obtaining my news for use on my blog from other sources until the DEC appeal is shown on the channel my taxes help fund.


I urge you do a number of things.

Write and complain to the BBC, this can be done via their website.

Sign the online petition.

I encourage you to join the Facebook Group The BBC has refused to run the Gaza appeal on TV - help change its mind

If you are a fellow blogger, don't use BBC sources in you blogging until this is overturned. Advise the BBC of this in you complaint.

If you use Twitter and Follow any of the BBC News Tweeters unfollow from them. At the time of my unfollowing there were 10,022 followers of @bbcbreaking. This is a visable number to us and the BBC of just how widespread the feelings against this decision.

Last week the web lobby managed to apply pressure on Gordon Brown over MPs expenses. This week we appear to be asking the BBC to be humane.

Monday, January 12, 2009

Facebook Join Censorship Over Gaza

Overnight I recieved the following message on Facebook from Abbas Goya creator of the Group A note from Jerusalem -- We need to STOP Israeli assualt NOW!! It looks as if along with the MSM Facebook is trying to hide the world from the facts of what is going on in Gaza at the behest of Israel.

Warning if you follow on the link below you may find it disturbing. However I make no apology for that, this is the reality of what is going on. This is why the assault on Gaza must stop now and not be allowed to escalate further.

"Facebook has issued a warning to me relevant to our cause. You might be
interested to know.

"I uploaded and posted a news video clip on my wall, a clip produced by
Reuters - found @ http://www.rowzane.com/0000_2008/e_m12/gaza-1.wmv - displaying the hospital crew taking care of injured children in Gaza. The length of
video was 45 seconds and I appropriately called it "Gaza in 45 seconds".
Facebook considers it a " hateful, threatening, graphic, or that attack an
individual or group", has sent me the following warning asking me to approve
the warning. I request to either provide specific proof as to Facebook
accusing warning OR remove the warning and reinstate the video clip.

"If you too agree that the warning is unjust object it by
sending an email to "Facebook" warning+yf64oz=c@facebookmail.com

"Facebook warning:

"You uploaded a video that was reported for violating Facebook's Terms of
Use. After reviewing the video, we have decided to remove it. Facebook removes
reported videos that are hateful, threatening, graphic, or that attack an
individual or group. We also remove videos that are not of a personal nature,
meaning they were not created by and do not feature either you or your friends.
Continued misuse of Facebook's features could result in your account being
disabled.

"If you have any questions or concerns, you can visit our FAQ page at http://www.facebook.com/help.php?topic=wvideoI acknowledge I
have read this information."

Thursday, January 08, 2009

Facebook Ban at Work

At work in the staff restroom areas we have a couple of PCs not linked up through the server but straight to an outside line. It is from here that the agents and other staff can access the websites that are blocked from their networked machines with the proviso that they do not breach other company guidelines regarding legality and decency.

Well it appears that as of some point since this morning that these machines are now blocking Facebook. Something that they had already blocked from desktop machines early last year. Now many of us use that site to make our arrangements for the evening weekend. Guess the agents will just be making good old-fashioned outbound calls to do any arranging just now.

I can't be bothered going back to pick up 'my' laptop just to log on to check my Facebook updates just now so I'll just have to catch up with all your goings on later folks. Once I head to the guitar shop to acquire some new strings so I can meme this.

Wednesday, January 07, 2009

Facebook for Gaza

Dear reader if you are also a Facebook user may I direct you to two groups.

The first is that like Zimbabwe foreign journalists are being banned from the Gaza strip. A very dear friend of mine has a friend who is currently on a year out teaching in Palestine. With the media blackout and all that is going on even the Westerners, and yes there are some, who are in Palestine are being cut off. Unlike Zimbabwe from what we can gather the Palestinians want to allow foreign press in to see the other side of the story. One wonders why that is it is because the Egyptian border is permanently sealed and Israel control the only border crossings into Gaza.

Therefore please join the group calling to end the ban on international journalists reporting from Gaza.

The second I know may not bode well with all my readers. But whether you view Israel as the aggressor or the persecuted I trust that any sane individuals will agree that neither one, two or three wrongs make a right. The casualties in this conflict are heavily on the Palestinian side. With no escape route they men, women, the frail and call have to remain close to potential death or injury at all times. The USA, UK and Europe are being slow to cast blame at anyone treading too carefully. However, in the UK one political leader,Nick Clegg, has spoken out calling the west to stop arming Israel.

There is a lot of bad blood flying around the Blogosphere of late over this conflict. Neither the approach of my fellow Lib Dem Irfan Ahmed or Iain Dale the Tory Blogfather are doing the real victims any good. By carrying on a flame war and using deliberately inflammatory language about each other on the Internet they are deflecting from the issues at hand. Both are being subjective rather than objective as in unbefitting them trying to get a salient point across.

Saturday, January 03, 2009

The Water 'WHO'-ler Moment

Well I'm sure most people were merely content watching the announcement of Matt Smith's taking over the controls of and keys to the Tardis on Doctor Who Confidential but I know, cause I was one of them, that many of use were Tweeting, posting on forums, blogging, hitting websites and looking it up all at the same time.

The fact that my reveal of the name Tweet posted as soon as Matt Smith's face appeared on the screen is actually ahead of the BBC Breaking News Tweet was something I quite enjoyed. The fact that like a good Agatha Christie novel I'd already worked out the clues before hand and live blogged the final piece as looking certain before that even, even more. And now Twitter has gone down being over capacity. Yeah all us geeks are Tweeting to each other about the event and have brought down one site. Next.

Doctor Who where are you?

No must get away from the vision of Scrappy Doo as the second canine companion. I bite my thumb at you Wesley Crusher.

Watching it solely on TV you wouldn't have picked up the full excitement. This was a truly 21st Century water cooler moment. The thing is the watercooler was accessible through you own laptop. Every one from across the country and with Wil Wheaton a established Hollywooder we can say around the world was discussing it as it was being revealed without having to be sat on (not behind) the same sofa.

Matt Smith it is to be that is the answer. With all this hype on the net Steven Moffat and the rest of the team are going to have to deliver a superb 5th (or do these specials make it 6th) series of the revived series. However, having seen their work up to know I'm pretty sure we won't be let down.

Although Wil did raise and interesting question. Who will be the next companion(s)? I add in the plural as maybe it is time to return to having more than one companion again. I know the youngsters aren't used to it but having had Rose, Martha, Donna and Sarah Jane (plus the rest)all coming to the the Doctor's aid at the end of the last season, maybe we've weaned them in to the possibility.

Update: Whoops in all my excitemet I got Northern Irish news presenter Stephen Nolan mixed up with the sucessor of Mr RTD Steven Moffat

Monday, December 22, 2008

Just What Did Dale Mean?

There is a Facebook group The word "gay" is not a synonym for "stupid". The aim of the group is to disassociate the current trend among young people for saying something is a bit gay to mean either uncool, untrendy or stupid. The side affect of this of course is that those friends of such people who are gay feel the knock on effect of the word being used in this way.

Therefore you can imagine my shock that to retaliate to group of rowdy and disruptive teenagers prominent blogger, erudite broadcaster, prominent homosexual and former parliamentary candidate Iain Dale should retaliate buy say the white tracksuit he was wearing looked ridiculous and a "bit gay". Therefore I have invited Iain to join the above Facebook group as he clearly needs to learn of the issues that many young LGBT people encounter when this word is associated with stupidity.

The Conservative Party may be trying to rebrand themselves away from their homophobic past with LBGTory grouping, but when when of the most high-profile, non-elected and gay Tories shows such an attitude and blogs about although rather self-effacing after the event possibly shows how little the attitudes of those in the Tory party actually have moved on.

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