Monthly Archives: October 2007

Science

Today’s really important story

A vaccine trial in Mozambique has reduced cases of the disease by 65% – in infants.

It was only a small trial, but it involved real conditions on the ground – i.e. really difficult conditions, and the vaccine could easily be given with other childhood vaccines already given with excellent coverage in Africa and Asia.

So it seems, it works and it is practical, and it could save an awful lot of lives (and morbidity). (Hopefully eventually also in pregnant women – who suffer greatly from the disease.)

Blogging/IT Environmental politics Feminism

A cure for an itchy voting finger

Thanks to Jim, who’s named this blog as No 13 in the Top Twenty Green Blogs. There’s also a people’s choice award, so should your voting finger be feeling a little itchy through lack of a chance to exercise it at Westminster, here’s your chance. There are some great blogs there – the observant might have noticed that my blog roll has been augmented…

Philobiblon also makes an appearance in the Britblog roundup No 139. Chameleon did, as ever, a truly stupendous piece of work, and offered, within her feminism section (not a regular feature of the roundup, I’m afraid to say), a piercing commentary on my abortion post, working from Susan Bordo’s Are Mothers persons?, with a great quote: “In practice, our legal tradition divides the human world as Descartes divided all of reality: into conscious subjects and mere bodies (res extensa). And in the social expression of that duality, some groups have clearly been accorded subject-status and its protections, while others have regularly been denied those protections, becoming for all medical and legal purposes pure res extensa, bodies stripped of their animating, dignifying and humanising ‘subject-ivity”.

As I said, not your average roundup….!

(You can also listen to the audio version, on Pods and Blogs from Radio Five Live.)

Politics

Depressing and cheering

Yet another British political party is seeking a new leader – Menzies Campbell having been pushed on to his sword by the Liberal Democrats. What’s depressing is that there isn’t a single woman even being mentioned as an outside possibility for the leadership.

Indeed, was the last woman being seriously considered for the leadership of one of the three biggest British political parties Margaret Thatcher? (I wasn’t in the country all of that time, so I’d be interested to know if there were any other runners.)

But the good news is that Caroline Lucas was overwhelming elected female principal speaker of the Green Party, and is clear out standout individual – and might even be our leader soon.

Politics

Aussies, vote if you can

Well the Australian election has been called and finally, _surely!_ Australians will get rid of John Howard, the man who dragged the country back to the 1950s. Landing in my inbox is a reminder that if you’re overseas you can still enrol if you aren’t enrolled already, but only until Wednesday, 17 October at 8pm (Australian EST). (The form or if you already have your name on the roll, but need to change details you have until Tuesday, 23 October, 8pm.)

But that’s only if you “have been overseas for less than three years and intend to return to Australia within six years of your date of departure”. So, no, I haven’t got a vote: Australia has very restrictive rules about overseas electors – surely not unrelated to the fact that Australians overseas are certainly on balance more liberal (with that vital small “L”) than their homestaying compatriots.

Tis a pity, since it would be nice to vote in a proper election – i.e. one where you have some chance of actually demonstrating your preferences through PR. Voting for the Senate was always fun: most people vote “above the line”, so you just follow an order of preferences selected by your party of choice, but you can also vote “below the line” – numbering as many as you want. I always put Fred Nile as the highest number, then worked my way backwards – the middle got a bit boring, but each end was fun.

(I suppose at this point I should apologise to poll workers across the land…)

And it would seem that the Greens are in with a significant chance of holding the balance of power in the Senate – although they are going to have a hell of a job given just how far Australian politics has been dragged to the right by Howard.

Environmental politics

Idiot of the week

The “prize” can be awarded, very early, to the driver of the Hummer(!) parked on double-yellow lines, blocking the cyclepath and most of the pavement, in Marchmont Street this afternoon. The registration number was “E8 CAR”. Where’s a traffic warden when you need one?

Books

A library and a dead rat

Over on My London Your London I’ve been extolling the virtues of the London Library and its members. How should you classify a dead rat?