Author Archives: Natalie Bennett

Hurray for the judges

Once upon a time, judges were the people who were old-fuddy duddies, holding society back, saying “would you want your wives and servants to read this?”

Now, however, everywhere you turn they seem to be champions of what the Green Party slogan labels as “real progress” – defending human rights, and in a dramatic case in Australia, the planet’s rights.

Nicola Pain handed down her decision on the Anvil Hill coalmine on Monday … found the NSW Government failed to consider the impact that burning coal from the project would have on global warming….
Two …principles were ignored by planning authorities when they accepted an environmental assessment of the Anvil Hill mine – an omission used by Justice Pain to declare that approval flawed.
They were the precautionary principle – that serious environmental threats should be mitigated even in the absence of full scientific certainty – and the intergenerational equity principle, which says the present generation should maintain or improve the environment for future users.

Two consumer recommendations

At the risk of sounding like one of those ladies in vaguely lab-style coats on television waving an impossibly white T-shirt around while raving about a particular brand of washing powder, I just have to say how spectacularly good Ecover (ecologically friendly) Lime-scale Remover is. (I won’t however point you to their website, because it is impossibly Flash-filled.)

I bought it thinking “this will never work but at least I’ll have tried to do the right thing”, but the first time I sprayed it over my difficult large bathroom sink, it came up just like new… whoops, I do sound like the lab coat. But anyway, ’tis true.

This seems a practical point to note the arrival of a new market trading, Unpacked, selling Ecover products, and things like grains and cereals, in bulk, “bring your own container”. Excellent idea, now in Spitalfields and Portobello, and rumour suggests soon to arrive in Marylebone.

Just like grandma used to do…

So far and no further…

It has been fascinating watching the Tories trying to leap to the left of Labour (not that it really requires that big a jump – a bit of respect for basic civil liberties will get you there), while also trying not to — too badly anyway — piss off their traditional “hang ’em and flog ’em” supporters.

A speech today by William Hague today was a classic example. First off, he’s impeccable:

William Hague today called for stronger measures to protect victims of modern-day slavery in Britain as he warned that the trafficking of women and children for the sex industry was worsening. The Tory shadow foreign secretary called for greater protection of victims…

Hey, could have happily written it myself. But he can’t, or thinks he can’t for fear of what the traditional supporters will say, take the final step of ratifying a humane UN convention. He:

…stopped short of calling on the government to sign up to a convention that would allow women and children rescued from captivity a leave of stay in the UK.
The convention provides trafficking victims with a 30-day reflection period, which the government has so far resisted on the grounds that it could be abused by bogus asylum claimants.

Basic sense – lower VAT on “good” lightbulbs

There’s an early day motion calling for the VAT on compact fluorescent light bulbs (the energy-efficient ones) to the 5% level at which condoms are taxed (an interesting but apt parallel). Definitely a good one to lobby your MP on.

There’s also a petition, on which I haven’t quite made my mind up, to heavily tax the hideously inefficient (but cheap to buy) incandescent bulbs. Of course that makes environmental sense, but there could be some people left in the dark by inability to afford the efficient ones at some particularly point in time (even though they would of course save them money in the long run).

A typical bit of “science” journalism

If as a woman you ride a bicycle, you’ll never have an orgasm again … that’s the message of an article that plays the usual “active woman” scare line. Until of course you get to the facts: “There were no negative effects on sexual function and quality of life in our young, healthy pre-menopausal study participants.”

Via Feministing, with curious echoes, as a commentator there points out, of Victorian scare tactics about active women, and claims about what it would do to their reproductive health.

While looking around this, just found a History of Women in Sport timelines – some good stuff: 1804 – “The first woman jockey was Alicia Meynell of England. She first competed in a four-mile race in York, England.”

Kassia: The ‘Byzantine Hildegard of Bingen’

Another of the “rediscovered” women of history: Kassia (also Cassia, Kassiane, Eikasia and Ikasia) was a 9th-century nun in Constantinople and “the outstanding female poet of the middle Byzantine period”. She’s one of only four positively identified female Byzantine hymnographers (although it seems a safe bet there were more).

Tradition suggests that she was a participant in the “bride show” (the means by which Byzantine princes/emperors sometimes chose a bride, by giving a golden apple to his choice. But seems she wasn’t thrilled:

Struck by Kassia’s beauty, Emperor Theophilos pronounced: “Ach, what a flood of terrible things came through woman!”
She replied, yet with modesty: “But also through women better things spring.”
Stung to the heart by these words, Theophilos passed her by, and gave the golden apple to Theodora who came from Paphlagonia.

Some 49 of her hymns survive and 23 are in the liturgical books, which presumably mean they are still being sung today.

But she also wrote non-liturgical stuff, which is beautifully pithy and reminds me of the writing of the roughly contemporary Shei Shonagon. For example a few of her sententiae:

I hate the rich man moaning as if he were poor.

I hate one who conforms himself to all ways.
I hate one who does everything for recognition.

There is absolutely no cure for stupidity,
no help for it except death!
A stupid person when honoured, is overbearing to all…
If a stupid person is young and in power,
alas and woe and what a disaster!

A crisis will reveal a genuine friend,
who will not abandon one whom he loves.

Kassia became the hegoumene, Superior, of a monastery on the eastern slope of the seventh hill of Constantinople, near the walls of Constantine. It is easy to imagine her as an extremely sharp-eyed governor…
(From Anna M. Silvas, “Kassia the Nun,” in Lynda Garland (ed) Byzantine Women: Varieties of Experience 800-1200, Ashgate, 2006.)

Looking around this I found a good piece on women and medieval music, a piece about another female composer, “the daughter of Ioannes Kladas” – this also has a listing of Kassia’s works. Wikipedia, however, needs a bit of work.

A recording of women’s medieval music, including Kassia’s, is available on Amazon UK and on Amazon US.