Monthly Archives: August 2007

Politics

Australia: land of the gagged

In its attempts to fight off Peta, which has a long-running campaign against mulesing – the removal of large pieces of flesh from lambs rumps, so that meriinos can be bred with more large flesh to be chopped off, the Australian government plans in future to sue anyone who launches a successful campaign against anything at all:

So if you’re asking Australians not to buy lipstick tested on caged rabbits, rugs woven by Pakistani slaves or suits made with mulesed wool, then pray your boycott calls don’t succeed, for the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission is about to be given the power to sue you out of the water if they do.

Feminism

Another middle-class thug gets a slap on the wrist

Anaesthetics consultant Stuart Brown, 37, threw his wife to the floor and punched her at least 24 times as she lay at his feet.
He claimed a “red mist” descended after she went to sleep in the spare bedroom.
The vicious assault on Carol Mcewan followed regular verbal and physical abuse during their seven-year marriage.

The “penalty” – he has to pay his (one how hopes ex-)wife £500.

The second such case in a week.

Feminism

Act to save an Iranian woman

Urgent action is being called to save an Iranian woman from deportation that will put her in extreme danger:

Pegah Emambakhsh is an Iranian national who sought asylum in the UK in 2005. Her claim failed despite appeals and she was arrested in Sheffield on Monday 13th August and taken to Yarlswood detention centre. She is likely to be deported back to Iran in the near future.
If returned to Iran she faces certain imprisonment and possibly stoning to death. Her crime in Iran is her sexual orientation – she was in a relationship with another woman.
Ms Emambakhsh escaped from Iran, claiming asylum after her partner was arrested, tortured and, it is feared, has been sentenced to death by stoning. Her father has also been arrested, tortured and interrogated about Pegah’s whereabouts.

See the Outrage site for details on who to write to.

UPDATE: The Italian government has also taken up Ms Emambaksh’s case.

History

Extreme cookery

The 18th-century cookery writer Hannah Glasse recommended that “to save Potted Birds, that begin to be bad” required dunking the birds in boiling water for 30 seconds, then retopping with new butter.

To make her potted beef taste like venison, she added salprunella (melted nitre – saltpetre – reacted with charcoal dust). Even some of her contempotaries were horrified; William Ellis, author of The Country Housewife’s Companion of 1750 complained this treatment made food “unpleasantly dry”. Today we know it was also carcinogenic.

Sometimes you wonder how our ancestors survived….

(From Emily Cockayne, Hubbub, Filth, Noise and Stench in England 1660-1770 p. 101-2. Which had been really looking forward to, but which I found disappointing – something about the catalogue nature — chapters are headed “ugly”, “itchy” “mouldy” etc, and I felt a bit like I was reading a trainspotter text.)

Feminism

The 90K a year thug and the judge who doesn’t get it

Even the Daily Mail is showing a touch of shock: a man slashes his wife with a knife, comprehensively beats her up, and then finally brands her with a steam iron.

The punishment? Before you read further, guess… imagine what a working class bloke who did this to a stranger down the pub would get.

The answer to what Colin Read, 25, “Cambridge graduate” and “£90,000-a-year executive” got: a £2,000 fine, and no community service, “because he is too busy”. (Tough – a whole week-and-a-bit’s wages!)

A report recommended a community service order, but Recorder William Featherby questioned how Read would fit it in around his long working hours.
He said he was concerned that Read had denied the offences despite overwhelming evidence and he called the iron attack “appalling”.
But the judge said it was the circumstances of the marriage that had provoked Read and that now those circumstances had gone, sending him to prison would “help no one”.

What’s the bet the “circumstances” of his next relationship will be, to him, equally provoking? About 100% I’d reckon.

And it is not like the state has told him — or lots of others like him — that there’s anything really wrong with this behaviour.

Environmental politics

More bad climate/food news

Rains in June and July have failed to break the drought in NSW. More than three-quarters of the state is now in that status, including parts that are usually consiered guaranteed green, dairying areas such as Lismore and Murwillambah.

And the French grain harvest is the third bad one in a row[story in French], falling below predicted levels due to weather and associated diseases.

As that Le Monde piece notes, for the third year in a row world production will be below consumption. (Preumably stored supplies make up the difference.)

But that can’t go on forever – stocks in Europe are the lowest in 28 years, just two and a half months’ consumption.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the reference price for wheat in France has gone up 86% in one year.