Author Archives: Natalie Bennett

The underfunded Aboriginal community

It is the common claim made in the Australia (as around the world with regard to many disadvantaged groups) that the Aboriginal community has received extremely high levels of funding, and the “fact” that there is little to show for this investment is its failing, not that of the general community.

It is one of those assumptions seldom put to the test, but in the case of one community – Wadeye in the Northern Territory, which has been in the news recently for all of the wrong reasons – it has been. The results are telling:

Governments had spent far less per head on an Aboriginal person in Wadeye than on the average territorian – almost $2000 a year less. Wadeye, the sixth-largest town in the territory, was being short-changed to the tune of $4 million a year. Less was spent there despite the region’s average life expectancy being 46, despite an average 16 people living in each dwelling, and despite high levels of sickness, unemployment and illiteracy…

Governments spent 47 cents on a school-aged child in Wadeye for every dollar spent on an average territorian child. And compared with spending on schools in large urban areas such as Darwin, the real figure could be five cents.

The results are pretty much what you’d expect.

My new toy

bicycleOk, so you’re wondering why I went to Peterborough. Well the answer is this, otherwise known as an eBay rush of blood to the head. I’ve been riding a staid and heavy, but nicely stable hybrid (mixture of road and mountain bike) ever since I started cycling in London, but having been taking it out past the 30 mile-day mark recently started to think that it was really making life hard. And if I was ever going to have a hope of making the Dunwich Dynamo’s 120 miles I’d need all the help I could get.
I’ve always thought that my back wouldn’t take drop handlebars, but I came to realise just how much extra work I was having to do to push the torso against the wind. So for £31.05 plus a £20 train fare, I decided to give this a shot.

I’ve only taken it out once so far, for a tootle around the block, and I realised then it is going to take some getting used to, particularly in traffic. It is like switching from riding an old hack to a young thoroughbred.

It is not unstable exactly, just highly responsive to the slightest movement. And I really haven’t worked out the gears at all yet. I seem to be able to change up but not down, so now have it on the highest of the gears. There are no marks on the two gear levers, and I think they move the gears rather than have fixed positions … can anyone explain?

(Otherwise I’ll have to go down to the bike shop and look really silly – “got this bike; how do I change the gears?”)

P.S. While I was trying to understand my gears came across the wonderfully comprehensive Wikipedia entry on “bicycle”. Some fascinating physics in there…

A new group blog

Because I don’t spend enough time at the computer already (right!), I’ve just joined a new group blog – Revise and Dissent, on the History News Network. Quite how it will work out I’m not quite sure yet (I don’t think anyone is), but I’ve used my first post to look at the way various aspects of agricultural history I’ve dealt with here this week have come together in my mind.

The honour of the first post there goes to Alun, whose own blog has long been on my blogroll. He asked an interesting question: From an archaeological perspective) is vandalism of ancient sites a bad thing?

The irritations of WordPress 2

Anyone know of any plug-ins or other fixes for the extremely irritating WordPress post writing machinery, which seems to randomly throw in paragraph or break marks, and to strip them out, and generally drive you crazy? (I’d be quite happy to go back to the old version, which was MUCH better!)

Peterborough Cathedral: Prominent women, tragic women

peterboroughcathedral
Off on Thursday to Peteborough, for reasons to be described elsewhere. But had enough time to check out the truly spectacular cathedral, the majority of which was built between 1118 and 1238, although there’s been a church here since 655AD.It had a rough first half-millennium – destroyed by the Danes in 870, burned down by accident in 1116 . Then it had a disasterous fire in 2001, which means the inside has a very “newly restored” feel.

But you can’t beat the view above, across the lovely grassed square at the front of the cathedral.Its second glory is the painted ceiling pictured below, dating back to about 1230. This must have been a truly important place then – perhaps a growing wool economy? – althought the important was helped by an enthusiastic abbott, Aelfsey (abbott from 1005-1055 – he must have started young).

A chronicler described him as “a laborious bee”, and gullible is another word that might have been applied. He collected “part of Aaron’s rod, piece of Our Lord’s swaddling cloth, a shoulder blade of one of the Holy Innocents [the babies killed by Herod] and a piece of bread from the feeding of the 5,000″. Although it was his successor who got “St Oswald’s arm“, which was to be the monastery’s most important relic until the Dissolution.

A really battered memorial, perhaps fairly really, of John Chambers, the last abbott, who became the first bishop of the diocese of Peterborough (so quite happy to change sides) marks that.

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Friday Femmes Fatales No 58

Ten great posts from 10 new (to me) women bloggers. It is here every Friday (more or less ..)

Starting off this week with THE big internet issue, Laura Scott on Rare Patterns sets out the case for net neutrality.

Staying political, Litbrit on The Last Duchess concludes If It Walks Like a Racist – or Drives a Border Patrol Buggy Like One, it is probably George Bush.

Turning on the science, The Disgruntled Chemist on Nice Shoes, Wanna Fock (perfectly safe for work, unless the title is likely to cause upset), answers in the negative a question I’d previously pondered: Do room air-purifiers have any effect at all?

But not all science is so well founded, as Nyarly on Dispatches from Tanganyika found when she looked at the details of that American-British health study. One problem – all of the research subjects were male.

Heading towards the personal side, Denise on Dot Moms (a group blog with some 40 members) has some advice for women expecting twins: “Sit down. Just sit. Call me and remind me what its like.” Staying with babies, somewaterytart on Tart Juice addresses “some seriously ill-informed comments about baby safety”.

Katie on Everyone Else Has A Blog writes for Blogging Against Disabilism Day: It “isn’t just about random fucked up blokes shouting ‘Cripple!’ in tube stations.”

If you’re feeling the need for some healthy reading, Molly on Orangette was going to bring cupcakes, but settled for some healthy, and yummy looking lima beans instead. On the same topic, but in a different language, C’est Moi Qui l’ai Fait is exploring wildflowers and pesto. (Plenty of pics if you’re not feeling up to reading the French.)

Finally, going multimedia, on The Pink of Perfection, my first femme fatale video-blog (vlog if you fancy jargon) – a picture tells a thousand words in the transformation of a humble chair.

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If you missed last week’s edition, it is here. (If you’d like to see all of them as a list, click on the category “Friday Femmes Fatales” in the righthand sidebar. That will take you to a collection of 580 (and counting) women bloggers.)

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Please: In the next week if you read, or write, a post by a woman blogger and think “that deserves a wider audience” (particularly someone who doesn’t yet get many hits), drop a comment. It really does make my life easier. (Thanks to Penny this week!)