Monthly Archives: May 2008

Miscellaneous

Weekend reading

* More evidence of the basic unsustainability of Australian agriculture: you might have read about summer rains and floods, but they’ve utterly failed to replenish the water in the Murray-Darling basin, and another El Nino – which in Australia means drought – looks to be settling in.

* A fascinating reflection on life on other planets – and why finding it might be bad news. No not the obvious “they are smarter than us and might decide to eat us”, but a much more sophisticated argument about how if they died out, it’s not a good sign for us.

* Good news: the Christian church is dying out in Britain – now all we’ve got to do is disestablish it fast (so other religions don’t try to jump into its place), and stop news organisations regarding celibate old men as some sort of experts on social issues – and particularly on the fate of women’s bodies, such as in the abortion debate.

* An interesting piece on the history of cyclones and cyclone research, and on how Mauritius has learned to live relatively safely with them.

Women's history

No, not that Chaucer, but Alice

Badly in need of a little rest and recreation, I’ve spent most of today pottering around with the potplants (the potatoes have finally taken off), cleaning the kitchen (badly overdue – and I’d recommend never, never getting the sort of benchtop that you have to oil), doing the ironing, and watching a bit of what I gather is BBC4’s medieval season on iPlayer. Through that I was introduced to Alice Chaucer, who’s certainly quite a character in her own right. That was her maiden name, but since she went through three husbands its rather hard to keep up with all of her titles.

She was the granddaughter of that other Chaucer, a rich woman in her own right by her maturity and a major political player at court. In short from the ODNB:

Alice Chaucer grew to be an extremely wealthy widow through her parents (from whom she inherited in 1437), her three valuable marriages, and her own policy of buying up land during her last long widowhood. By these means she accumulated estates in twenty-two counties, from three of which in 1454 she received an income of £1300. She was wealthy enough to be a crown creditor in 1450 and in the 1460s. That her lifestyle was fairly lavish and that she was something of a literary patron, notably of an old Chaucer friend, John Lydgate, are substantiated by the inventory of her goods and books made in 1466 when she left East Anglia and came home to Ewelme.

And the presenter was wandering around what I gather was this still surviving almshouse, (picture):

On 3 July 1437 the couple were licensed to found an almshouse at Ewelme, called God’s House, for two chaplains and thirteen poor men and by 1448, when the statutes were drawn up, they had added a grammar school.

A quick search suggests there isn’t a biography – definitely a subject that deserves an author, I’d suggest…

Feminism

State-mandated rape

No, I don’t think that is too strong a term for a new law in Oklahoma, which directs that doctors perform an ultrasound on women requesting an abortion:

The law states that either an abdominal or vaginal ultrasound, whichever gives the best image of the fetus, must be done. Neither the patient nor the doctor can decide which type of ultrasound to use, and the patient cannot opt out of the ultrasound and still have the procedure. In effect, then, the legislature has mandated that a woman have an instrument placed in her vagina for no medical benefit. The law makes no exception for victims of rape and incest.

Environmental politics

There is some good news

Yes, London may have a mayor Boris, which is a horrifying thought, but there is a little good news that you might not have heard; the two Greens on the London Assembly, Jenny Jones and Darren Johnson, held their seats, with an identical percentage of the vote to last time, which means 43,000 more people voted Green on the Assembly list. It was the Lib Dem vote that got caught in the two-party crunch, and they lost two seats on the Assembly, their vote falling to 11.22% (from 18.09%).

I’m pleased with the Camden vote: in the Camden and Barnet consitituency Miranda Dunn took 9.50% of the vote, only 3% behind the Liberal Democrats (which since Barnet isn’t exactly our natural constituency means, I’d hazard a guess, that we out-polled them in Camden).

And Sian Berry got nearly 4% of the mayoral first preferences, roughly half Paddick’s, and will I’m sure have done very well on second preferences – unfortunately people are still getting to grips with the voting system. Eventually I’m sure a lot more will realise they can vote for the first choice with their heart, and use their second vote to choose between the final two.

On one level it is horrifying that the BNP got an Assembly seat, but I’m not sure that it won’t be helpful as a pressure valve. and when they are exposed to the light many people who voted for them in anger and frustration will see them more clearly.

Update: over on The Daily Maybe, Jim has a full listing and analysis.

Blogging/IT

It’s a strange world, my masters

This evening (or rather early morning), frantically compiling election results, Google News failed to deliver on the London Assembly top-up list results. But he figures (which I’m hoping are the right ones), were already on Wikipedia. I hadn’t previously thought of it as a news source, but it is an interesting concept.

Environmental politics

News from Norwich

It has been buried in the news in the Conservatives surge in the British local elections, but there has been a change in Norwich, where the Green Party, for the first time has become the official opposition by taking three seats from the Lib Dems. (They missed out on this status last year by one vote.)

The city council tally is now Labour 15, Greens 13, Lib Dems 6, Conservatives 5.