Green thought, in a green shade, Green views The Watermelon Blog Green on the outside, social justice inside
"We can do better" (Kennedy) |
Richest fluency
"This is what you shall do: Love the earth and sun and the animals, despise riches, give alms to everyone that asks, stand up for the stupid and crazy, devote your income and labor to others, hate tyrants, argue not concerning God, have patience and indulgence toward the people, take off your hat to nothing known or unknown or to any man or number of men, go freely with powerful uneducated persons and with the young and with the mothers of families, read these leaves in the open air every season of every year of your life, re-examine all you have been told at school or church or in any book, dismiss whatever insults your own soul; and your very flesh shall be a great poem, and have the richest fluency not only in its words but in the silent lines of its lips and face and between the lashes of your eyes and in every motion and joint of your body." Walt Whitman
The Goodies
good television
good movies
good books
good poetry
more good books
good songs
good children
good boys
good people
good leaders

Try a lucky dip:

Strange
Bedfellows
John Howard
Kevin Rudd
Al Gore
George Bush
Malcolm Turnbull
Leon Trotsky
Thomas Huxley
Oliver Goldsmith
Kurt Vonnegut
Tony Blair
Samuel Pepys
Winston Churchill
Peter Costello
Joan of Arc
Fidel Castro
Sarah Williams
Peter Beattie
Ned Ludd
De-Anne Kelly
Barack Obama
Kylie Minogue
Tony Abbott
Alexander Downer
Barbaro
Sam Kekovich
Alan Bennett
Osama bin Laden
Rupert Murdoch
George Lakoff
Bjorn Lomborg
Adolf Hitler
Ayn Rand
George Orwell
Julia Butterfly Hill
Saddam Hussein
James Carville
Charles Darwin
Philip Cooney
Jacky Kelly
Irshad Manji
James Lovelock
Bob Hawke
Brendon Nelson
Barnaby Joyce
Robert Menzies
Robert Tressell
Slim Dusty
Noel Coward
Samuel Johnson
Walt Whitman
Edmund Hillary
Robert Byrd
Phillip Adams
Alisa Camplin
Arnold Schwarzeneger
Blogger's Cut
Best slices from the watermelon
Future to the back
Ox power
Whacko Texas
Ticked off
Inhaling the Sixties
God unwilling
Bakers Oven 5
Game over
All change for
Dog bites man
Whale tears
Flowers for bosses
Curtin spinning
Gotta love it
Dodgy intelligence
A glass darkly
Truth and consequences
Media-ocrity
Cant get me Im part of the society
Growing like woody weeds in the nanny state
|
One of those human-animal hybrids reared its head again the other day and said 'Moooo'. A team of scientists in the UK, at Newcastle University, have applied for permission, as part of their stem cell research program, to create embryos by fusing human DNA with cow eggs.
The reason for doing it? Purely practical - human eggs are as scarce as hen's teeth, cows eggs as common as, well, hen's eggs. So if you are doing research to try to make the life of humans not quite as nasty, brutish and short as it can be for many, it makes sense to use cow eggs in experiments to see how best to develop stem cells, and to investigate disease development. No big deal, you would think, just a recipe for egg cooking that says: replace the bit that eventually makes an egg a cow, the nucleus, with a nucleus that eventually makes an egg a human; let the non-nuclear part of the egg nourish the human nucleus until it has divided a few times; remove from oven, after a few days, when done.
But instantly came the usual outrage. Never understood it before, but this time it was clear - 'you may begin to undermine the whole distinction between humans and animals' said a bioethicist, and 'if that happens, it might also undermine human dignity and human rights'. The problem then, is that the fact that you can do the process - substituting a nucleus of one species for the nucleus of another, and having the resulting egg continue on its merry way, oblivious to 'human dignity', shows yet again just how close humans are to other mammals.
And we can't let people understand that, can we, otherwise they might begin to see that evolution isn't a theory but a statement of the obvious. And the links between all life forms, not just mammals, was accentuated when a study of bees showed that the DNA coding for their biological clock was very similar to that of mammals. A study of the DNA of bees also confirmed their evolutionary history, being derived from an African origin (just like humans!) and a very old fossil bee, the oldest yet found, showed close links to wasps, from which bees evolved. Yet another non-missing link.
But keeping such facts away from people is par for the evangelical course, and more recently we have had the extraordinary demands from evangelicals that the National Museum of Kenya remove its display of human evolution. Hiding the ancestral human fossils from Kenya away is yet another example of closing your eyes to the reality of life on Earth, occupying a faith-based planet instead of a reality-based one. Taking some of the evidence for the reality of the links between humans and animals (are the hominid fossils human or animal, that is the question, and where do you draw the line? You can't of course, and that is the problem that evangelists, fighting all over again the war they lost in 1859, can't recognize) and hiding it from children and child-like adults, is a sign of people whose world is crumbling. How much evidence can you hide before the whole theory of religion comes tumbling down?
On the other hand there are still people who believe that there were WMD, and links with Al Quaeda, in Iraq. The evidence against that faith is hidden by politicians as strongly as the evangelicals are trying to hide the evidence of evolution.
{ Post a Comment }
Well said
{ 7:55 AM, 5 December 2006 }
{ Posted by snowy }
It's the arrogance of the evangelicals that gets me all the time. And the stupidity.
permission
{ 1:38 PM, 30 November 2007 }
{ Posted by Anonymous }
Can I use the first sentence of your blog in a poem?
[David says - why not, as long as you acknowledge me!]
Edited by mrpickwick on 29 November 2007 at 9:43 PM
Steaks so high
{ 7:55 PM, 1 May 2008 }
{ Posted by Phil19 }
Thanks David,
I am interested that the Brits are allowed to carry out sensible R&D like this but Aussie scientists are prevented from doing so by law. I just don't get it. Some of my cousins already display a few bovine characteristics so I don't see the downside.
Check out Dana's perspective: http://www.cowswithguns.com/cowpilation_album.html
Cheers
Phil
{ Last Page } { Page 460 of 927 } { Next Page }
|
"You are a person of some interest,one comes to you and takes strange gain away." (Pound)
"I find that I can have no enjoyment in the world but the continual drinking of knowledge. I find there is no worthy pursuit but the idea of doing some good for the world." (Keats)
People listen!
Browse recent entries (below), or select a
Category
Climate change Crop Marks (my novel) Dream Economics Education Environment Evolution Fire Health History Conquerors Infrastructure Iraq Media Nuclear power Politics federal Politics general Religion Rural life Shepherds Calendar The Arts Values Water
"We do not choose our convictions, but they choose us and force us to fight for them to the death." (Wedgewood Benn)
Recent Entries
Say Aaaaah Mirror mirror on the wall Louis et moi Eternal truths Quiddities and quillets I see your $10 billion and raise ... No going back Must try harder Smile for the camera Animal crackers Room with no view Petrol Tales Costs nothing to be civil Just like money in the bank I heard the news today If a sparrow falls Viva la Republic What would Jesus do ... ? Dumb, dumber and dumbest Train wreck I protest Time of the preacher Especially sweat To boldly go Dangerous ideas
"nothing startles me beyond the moment. The setting sun will always set me to rights - or if a sparrow come before my window I take part in its existence and pick about the gravel." (Keats)

Links
Huffington Post The Greens Common Dreams Australia Institute The Nation Independent Guardian Truth Dig Edge New Matilda Global warming Kitchen gardeners Conservation International Diggers Club Community Suported Agriculture Voiceless Toronto Globe International fund for animal welfare Humane Society Concerned Farmers Network Worldwatch Institute George Monbiot Sierra Club Aust Inst Health & Welfare Parks Association NSW Gun control Aust Council of Social Service Aust Council for Educational Research Education Network Australia Rural Australians for Refugees Greenpeace Bush Heritage Geoff Davies Naomi Klein BBC Mother Jones Tom Paine John Quiggin Human Rights Watch Amnesty International Doctor's Reform Society Dissent magazine David McKnight Aust Film Institute True Food Network Get up United Nations Assn Arms trade protest Michael Osborne Lee Rhiannon Intnl Peasant Movement World Conservation Union Biological Farmers of Australia Natural Sequence Farming Union of Concerned Scientists Rockridge Institute Climate action now Climate Ark Sustainable Population Australia Global warming blog Zero Footprint Charles Darwin Mars Climate Institute Jeremy Rifkin Gene ethics (GM) Slow Food movement Darwin Awards Stern Review Bob Brown Baghdad blogger Web Diary (Margot Kingston) Real Climate (science of climate change) Spatial literacy Oil and energy Stop global warming Wilderness Society Columbia Journalism Review NSW Rural Fire Service Google Book Search World Public Opinion Reporters without borders Doctors without borders Which? UK Choice Australia Energy Science Womankind Worldwide Work Foundation Rocky Mountain Institute Sustainable Development Commission International Forum on Globalisation Democratic Audit Australia Stem Cells Emily's List Electoral Commission Turning the pages Domesday Book W.I.R.E.S. Women's Electoral Lobby Leakey Foundation Richard Dawkins Intnl Agricultural Research Alpine ecology SETI at home Rare breeds Friends of the Earth Revolutionary women Afghanistan Nature & Society forum Sceptic's Society Republican Movement Tom Dispatch City of Joy aid Mumble (Peter Brent) NASA - Mars Murray-Darling Commission Marine Conservation Well Being Live science Women's Health Children & Youth World weather The Progressive Lester Brown Australian Archives Jay Rosen (Press think) World Policy Health & Global Environment Surtees Genealogy (IGI) Free census (UK) Genealogy mailing lists Farmer John Steve Waugh Jane McGrath Meteorology Global Fund for Women One World network Red Cross RSPCA Camp Quest Humanists Pierre Tristam Landscape design Creative non-violence human extinction movt Witness Save our rivers Terry Jones No sweatshops IPCC Forest Stewardship Global Security Bad science Green building Energy [r]evolution Free the bears Pamela Poole Press Emblem Inst. for Public Accuracy Progress Iraq oil Atheists of Florida Museum of Woman International Women's Day Rodale Institute David Michael Green Good LIfe Center Food First Robert Dreyfuss Oxfam Jubilee Debt campaign Astronomy photos Rock Ethics Institute Linda O'Brien Foreign policy in focus Global giving Rare species ringtones Biofuel dangers Commercial free childhood Tom Tomorrow Environment & Development Robert Kennedy Memorial Sustainability Institute Idealists Book Mooch Irish Radio Show Step it up David Korten Intnl Forum Globalization WIMN's Voices Blog Crooked Timber blog Earth Rights Intnl Women's Media FireDogLake blog Anti War Christopher Brauchli Robert Koehler Science Blog Green alliance Wildlife Coalition charity donations Idealists Aid Watch Solartopia Women blogging Envt Management Systems Fund for Peace Away with Words Peace Direct De Smog Blog UN climate change Water treaty Francophiles Peter Martin Question everything Story of stuff
Contact me directly -
greenviews at optusnet.com.au
Or subscribe to RSS feed
Subscribe
Site feed at http://www.blognow.com.au/ rss.php?w=mrpickwick

|