We are all inextricably linked: to each other; to all the other beings sharing our journey through the universe on Spaceship Earth; to every living thing; to our planet’s entire biosphere – and, indeed, to all of space, and all of time.
George does it again, and inspires me. This great man should receive a Nobel Prize.
A major means of humanity’s attack on nature is overfishing. The worst attack on land-based nature is agriculture — we do need to feed those eight billion humans, somehow.
Suppose we could provide abundant food without torturing and killing animals, releasing terrible chemicals into the environment, using fossil carbon (agriculture is powered by dieseline), covering 70% of the planet with unnatural landscapes. Imagine all the beauty and wonder that could return if we could rewild much of Earth.
The technology is available, now, and it has been well tried in many fields. It is the basis of producing age-old traditional foods, and modern medicines, and various substances needed in industry.
There are now eight billion of us on Spaceship Earth (and counting), and although it’s only a relatively small proportion of the total, a great many of our fellow travellers are undergoing tremendous suffering while the rest of us turn a blind eye to their plight. If only we could think beyond arbitrary geographic and archaic national boundaries, and consider all the other 8,000,000,000-1 humans as our relatives. Mitakuye Oyasin. We need more than just ‘us’ to warrant calling ourselves ‘civilized’. We need a ‘united us‘.
Pink Floyd – On The Turning Away (Remastered 2019)
On the turning away From the pale and downtrodden And the words they say Which we won’t understand Don’t accept that what’s happening Is just a case of others suffering Or you’ll find that you’re joining in The turning away
It’s a sin that somehow Light is changing to shadow And casting its shroud Over all we have known
Unaware how the ranks have grown Driven on by a heart of stone We could find that we’re all alone In the dream of the proud
On the wings of the night As the daytime is stirring Where the speechless unite In a silent accord
Using words you will find are strange Mesmerized as they light the flame Feel the new wind of change On the wings of the night
No more turning away From the weak and the weary No more turning away From the coldness inside
Just a world that we all must share It’s not enough just to stand and stare Is it only a dream that there’ll be No more turning away
Pink Floyd, ‘On The Turning Away’
Please help fight Somalia’s climate famine
In Somalia, 7 million people are in danger of starving – and half of all children are severely malnourished. Hospitals are becoming overwhelmed and parents are being forced to make impossible decisions about who to feed.
The country is being devastated by the worst drought in 40 years. Without rain, nothing grows anymore – and aid isn’t arriving fast enough.
Somali doctors and aid workers are racing the clock – but another starving child is admitted to hospital every single minute. Resources are running out, and doctors are terrified.
The last famine here killed 250,000 people. We cannot let it happen again.
Avaaz has 70 million members, and if we each give just a bit, we can make a real difference. Together we’d fund lifesaving medical care and food packages for thousands of people – and power a massive campaign, pushing governments to unlock urgent aid and slash the carbon pollution that’s forcing millions into catastrophe.
Let’s join together in an epic global effort to stop children starving on the climate frontlines.
In recent years I’ve come to fear marketing speak. Phrases such as ‘innovative software initiative’ send chills down my back and tend to make me break out in a cold sweat.
Back in January I posted about the upcoming retirement of Windows 8.1, and announced that I intended to migrate to a Unix-based OS. Further consideration, prompted largely by the comment thread that post elicited, persuaded me against going down that road. The main reason is that my employer uses Windows, and, working from home, I need to be able to interface with their systems. There’s also the reality that the learning curve to make the switch from Windows 8.1 to 10 will be less steep than grappling with an OS with which I have only a passing familiarity.
As the old saying goes, “The first hit’s free.”
So, instead, I bought a Windows 10 installation disk a few months ago, and that has been taunting me from my desk ever since. (I bought it from eBuyer.com; yes, it would have been – slightly – cheaper to get it direct from micro$haft, but they only offer a download installation and I like to have disks available against the day that a hardware failure forces a PC replacement.)
As 10Jan2023 looms ever closer, the time has come to bite this bullet. I’ve been assured that the software switch itself should be seamless, but there will be a fair amount of struggling with the latest round of ‘enhancements to the user experience’; of that I have no doubt.
Lethal Weapon – Roger Murtaugh is too old for this shit.
Long story short: I may be offline for a while. We’ll see. Wish me luck?
Why can’t they bin their pets’ wrapped crap? It’s not like such motion’s costly. ‘Twould foster friendship ‘cross the map – and make me type less crossly!
Pendant (n). One who, by correcting others, gives himself (or herself) just enough rope by which to hang.
Me, 1993
Having been a ‘pendant’ (by the above definition) for many years, I’ve gotten into the habit of questioning my own preconceptions about yIn ‘u’ Hoch je (Life, the Universe, and Everything). Colour me pretentious, but I actually believe that this is a Good Thing, especially in this (anti-)social media dominated era, where misinformation and disinformation foster bad memes and ‘FAKE NEWS!!!!1’. Being constantly on guard for the possibility that one’s view of reality could be wrong is, surely, a useful attitude. Training an open mind is, I believe, the route to wisdom.
The results were very interesting. I learned about Rayleigh scattering, Mie scattering and the Tyndall effect – but only a little: most of it went straight over my head (if you’ll pardon the pun).
One of the persuasive arguments I discovered was that human activity during the day kicks up pollutants into the atmosphere, so that, come evening, the Sun’s light is scattered more. This atmospheric dirt settles overnight, so the morning and evening skies can appear different.
And one thing I found particularly fascinating was that we can perceive a difference because of how our eyes work.
I was, however, unable to come up with a definitive answer.
Here’s an extract from one article this search revealed:
According to atmospheric physicists David Lynch and William Livingston, the answer is “yes, and no.”
All “twilight phenomena” are symmetric on opposite sides of midnight, and occur in reverse order between sunset and sunrise, the authors note in “Color and Light in Nature” (Cambridge University Press, 2001). That means there’s no inherent, natural cause of a major optical difference between them. However, two human factors break their symmetry.
The first is in our heads. “At sunset, our eyes are daylight adapted and may even be a bit weary from the day’s toil,” Lynch and Livingston write. “As the light fades, we cannot adapt as fast as the sky darkens. Some hues may be lost or perceived in a manner peculiar to sunset. At sunrise, however, the night’s darkness has left us with very acute night vision and every faint, minor change in the sky’s color is evident.” In short, you may perceive more colors at dawn than at dusk. [Red-Green & Blue-Yellow: The Stunning Colors You Can’t See]
Human activities also drive a divergence between them. “At sunset the sky is full of pollutants and wind-borne particles,” the authors write. “During the night, winds die down, smog-producing urban activity eases and the atmosphere cleanses itself. The dawn is clearer than any other time of day.”
If there is a difference between the appearance of skies near dawn and dusk due to the increase of pollution in the air during the day (and I don’t doubt that), then, surely, this effect will be greater in urban areas, due to smog.
Couple that with the concept of ‘normality’: it’s a natural tendency to believe that what experience teaches each of us to expect (in all manner of things) is ‘normal’ for everyone else, too. So, if you live in an urban area, you’ll be used to this greater dawn/ dusk sky difference effect… and perhaps come to believe that this is the same everywhere, and for everyone. Although I grew up in ‘The Smoke’ (London), for the last two decades I’ve lived in a rural area, where there’s never any smog. As I write this, the Sun is going down, and the sky seems to me just as blue as it was this morning.
So, perhaps it’s unsurprising that Goldie should both consider that this particular photograph is ‘definitely’ a morning one and find it hard to understand why I can’t see that. He’s absolutely right that this photo was shot in the morning: I got that straight from the horse’s mouth.
But being right about this image doesn’t mean that it’s always possible to tell a rising Sun from a setting one in every case; there are too many variables. Thanks to Goldie, I’m now better prepared to guess this of a similar photo, but I hope that I will always refrain from stating my opinion with certainty.
Perhaps it’s evening: Contemplating reflections Of the shadow of the day More tasks ticked off (Yet the list is longer) Time to rest.
But then again:
Perhaps it’s morning: The inherent promise Of a nascent dawn Beckoning excitement (No time to tarry) Time to move!
As with so many things, It depends how you look at it.
Is the Sun going down? Is the Sun coming up? The true answer is “neither” As it’s just an illusion; A matter of perspective.
With no Sun there’s no shadow, No meadow, No trees.
The Sun gives us life.
Hurrah!
@lacharpenta, I thank you again for your kind permission to use this wonderful image.
Things are pretty hectic Chez Wibble at present. As I had nothing prepared for this week, I scanned my drafts and finished off this one based on the post prompt I offered back in March. (That got a less than stellar response, but, no worries).