joshlachkovic

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This made me laugh

“So far, I am not finding running to be as addictive as heroin (I should point out here that I have never taken heroin and do not condone the taking of heroin). Here are some things I am finding it as addictive as: sticking pins in my eyes, drinking petrol and having my hand slammed repeatedly in a door. Which is, I hope, a vaguely amusing way of saying “I am not finding running addictive in the slightest. I am, in fact, finding it extremely painful”.

From Bryony Gordon’s updated diary on her training for an October-time ten-mile run.

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Monday Morning Pre-Work Roundup

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The New Republic reiterates a current American concern that 2008 was a lucky year for Obama, rather than a good one. The Telegraph mirrors popular public desire for Brown to comment on the release of the Lockerbie bomber, further articulating the Prime Minister’s silence. Meanwhile at The Telegraph, Boris Johnson talks lower exam requirements, and Janet Daley writes about the elections in Afganistan.

Back across the Atlantic, leftovers from yesterday include The Washington Post’s questionning of “Is he Weak?” Finally Politico has quotes from McCain saying Ted Kennedy’s absense from the house makes a “huge, huge difference” to the Health care debates that have been dominating this week’s press cycle.

Feel very tired, tried going to bed aroud one last night and just couldn’t do it. Must have been up for at leasst an hour and a half rolling aroud, listening to Bon Iver.

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Who needs the right to attack the left, when the left do that job for us?

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Today’s Observer leaks details on a conversation six weeks ago between brown and Gaddafi concerning the release of the Lockerbie bomber. The Guardian is fastly becoming the most critical newspaper of Brown’s premiership, and this example is simply by posting news, let alone debating opinion.

As previously mentioned, I think the release is a disgrace, if it turns out there has been a month and a half long plan in place involving Brown, then this will become even worse. At the moment Scottish Parliament is far enough detached from UK Government as a whole that I don’t feel responsible, but Brown’s involvement encompasses Britain. The U.S. opinion has fallen dramatically toward Scotland, and now this could extend to England as well. No longer is Brown simply putting our country in jeopardy with itself, but also worsening foreign relations further.

Personally I think William Hague will make a fantastic Foreign Secretary, and am looking forward to a government that doesn’t cause permanent embrassment for the British people.

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A Cup of Tea

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Photography: Beehives.

I adore coffee, and I have loved coffee for much longer than I would even drink a cup of tea. Coffee stimulates, coffee concetrates, and coffee surpresses lethargy. Coffee is great to wake up to, its great to revise to, and its great to write to. Yet on a Sunday afternoon, with the news-sites open, and a laptop poised for leisure, I feel like the anti-christ with a cup of coffee by my bedside.

This summer I have had a temporary job as a ‘General Assistant’, amongst other jobs serving tea and coffee was one of those duties. Throughout the furore of complaints about the sub-standard coffee, the noise from teamakers always came out on top; all in desperate need for a ‘good cup of tea’.

The good cup of tea is about as steeped in British tradition as one gets; Orwell’s 1946 essay ‘A Nice Cup of Tea’ would be considered entertaining material, if it wasn’t for the fact that he is amogst millions that take tea making, very seriously.

I find no fewer than eleven outstanding points. On perhaps two of them there would be pretty general agreement, but at least four others are acutely controversial.

He writes before his page-long essay on the ins and outs on a perfect Orwellian cup of tea. Indeed I agree with him on a lot of points, but where I fall down, and this is a point that my summer of tea making has also reiterated, is my desire to put sugar in tea.

Lastly, tea—unless one is drinking it in the Russian style—should be
drunk WITHOUT SUGAR. I know very well that I am in a minority here.
But still, how can you call yourself a true tea-lover ifyou destroy
the flavour of your tea by putting sugar in it? It would be equally
reasonable to put in pepper or salt.

Orwell would be proud of today’s tea climate, unlike his post-war Evening Standard audience, contemporary Britain seems devoted to the lack of sugar.

Indeed my addition of sugar is not something I do to retract from the taste of tea, moreso it combines my love for sugar and all things sweet. My coffee has two and a half sugars, my Earl Gray only has two. Yet re-reading Orwell’s essay now is making me recosider the merits of trying something new. I know very well that I am now in the minority, and so perhaps I will take a leaf from his essay, and try it for a fortnight without sugar.

My journey with tea has only been existent for a couple of years, I am by no means a tea-snob (for how can I be when I take sugar with my tea?), nor am I an expert, but I’m excited about where my future with tea goes. The subculture and even culture of tea and tea-drinkers is suprisingly encompassing; everyone has an opinion, everyone knows an anecdote, everyone has their own special way. I’m looking forward to exploring more, and in the mean time I’m going to have my first cup of Earl Grey; milk, no sugar.

George Orwell’s ‘A Nice Cup of Tea’ (orig. 1946 - Evening Standard)

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The Disgrace

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THE SICKENING hero’s welcome accorded by Libya on Thursday to the mass murderer convicted in the 1988 Lockerbie bombing is an indictment both of the government in Tripoli that choreographed his homecoming and of the Scottish justice minister who ordered his release on “compassionate” grounds.

The Scottish minister, Kenny MacAskill, said he released Abdel Basset Ali al-Megrahi, a former Libyan intelligence agent, because he is suffering from prostate cancer and is expected to die within three months. His decision to free Mr. Megrahi after he had served just eight years of a minimum 27-year sentence is a travesty of justice. It suggests indifference for the 270 innocent victims who died at Lockerbie and contempt for their anguished relatives.

For a blood-soaked killer like Mr. Megrahi, it was quite enough compassion that he was permitted visits from his wife and family in the Scottish prison where he was serving his sentence. To bestow freedom and the comforts of home on a man serving a life sentence for one of the most horrific acts of terrorism in modern times is a breathtaking abuse of power. Having shown not the slightest trace of mercy for his innocent victims, there was only one appropriate way for Mr. Megrahi to have returned home: in a box.

To recap: Mr. Megrahi was found guilty by a panel of three Scottish judges of planting the bomb that exploded Dec. 21, 1988, aboard Pan Am Flight 103, en route from London to New York. The resulting fireball transformed Lockerbie, a small Scottish village, into a ghastly tableau of carnage. The 189 Americans who died included many children and youths, among them several dozen students from Syracuse University. In addition to the passengers and crew, 11 people were killed on the ground.

Mr. Megrahi’s joyful airport homecoming, which featured flag-waving crowds bused to the airport by the authorities, is proof that the government of Moammar Gaddafi feels not the slightest trace of remorse for the slaughter at Lockerbie, despite having admitted its complicity in the bombing and paid $2.7 billion in compensation to the victims’ families. It makes a mockery of Washington’s decision to elevate Libya’s status from international pariah to the community of civilized nations. If the Libyan regime does not heed the U.S. demand that Mr. Megrahi remain under house arrest until his death, the Obama administration should consider reinstituting sanctions.

From http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/08/21/AR2009082103326.html

There are few issues that really anger me. Yes there are things that come from politics, or governments, or monarchies, that are disgraceful, embarassing, and upsetting, but rarely do they incite enough emotion to actually anger. For something to actually anger me, it usually must have a personal connection; a relationship must be built whereby I feel personally angered by an action.

The release of the Lockerbie bomber does not hold any personal connection to me, but boy has it angered me. Here we have a committed mass-murderer, and despite the appeals from mindless libertarians, he was tried and found guilty, despite other claims. If we are to start doubting his guilt, then the same must be said of all criminals who plead innocence but were convicted otherwise. We have released back into the throngs of applause and celebration, a murderer who had no concern for humanity, no cocern for empathy, and certainly, no concern for compassion. He should never have been given any such release; the dowside of his cancer is that he will never serve the full length of his term; death is the easy escape for a person I dare not even grace with the titling of ‘person’, for without humanity he certainly is no huma.

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(via onetwofail)
Some people have too much time on their hands; but this is brilliant.

(via onetwofail)

Some people have too much time on their hands; but this is brilliant.

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turnthepage:

I recently got the Knife’s Silent Shout ‘Audio Visual Experience’ on DVD. Aside from being one of my favourite electronic bands, they produce some truly amazing videos, and so this live concert and visual experience was perfect. Alot of credit should be paid to Marius Dybwad Brandrud, who directed edited the whole dvd package.

Absoulutely essential to check out if you’re a Knife fan.

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My increasing dislike for the New Statesman

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The New Statesman is, tomorrow, publishing an article that, as of yet, seems to unsubstanitally correlate the current Conservative MEP’s relationships with the “neo-Nazi National Revival of Poland party (NOP)”. Worryingly George Pitcher, the religious editor at the Telegraph, has fallen trap to their journalism in his blog. From James Macintyre’ article tomorrow it does read:

The new chair of the Conservatives and Reformists group, which includes the 24 Tory MEPs, is Michal Kaminski. He belongs to Poland’s Law and Justice party, one of whose MPs, Artur Górski, described the election of Barack Obama in the US as “a disaster” and “the end of the civilisation of the white man”. Kaminski is a former member of the neo-Nazi National Revival of Poland party (NOP), which, in a direct quotation from Hitler’s Mein Kampf, says in its manifesto that “Jews will be removed from Poland, and their possessions will be confiscated”. In 2001, he condemned his own president, Aleksander Kwasniewski, for apologising over the Polish massacre of hundreds of Jews in Jedwabne in July 1941.”

The real joy from this piece, comes in the comments, where one reader (JohnT) rather rightly points out:

First of all, Kaminiski has publically distanced himself from his youthful membership of the NOP. (Have Charles Clarke and John Reid - to give only two prominent NuLab examples - distanced themselves from their enthusiastic membership of the Communist Party?)
Many Polish politicians, historians and a sizeable proportion of the Polish people also disagreed with the President’s 2001 apology on behalf of the Polish nation, as the facts of Jedwabne, the number of victims and perpetrators, the identity of the killers and the degree of deliberate instigation by the Gestapo, are all unclear and remain a matter of historical dispute. To issue an apology on behalf of a whole nation for a still unattributable action during a war in which countless atrocities occurred on all sides understandably puzzled and offended many patriotic Poles, not only Kaminski. There were public protests in Poland at the time by many mainstream parties: but I expect you find it easier to cover the story eight years later when it’s a piece in the New Statesman.
Btw McIntyre’s Labour-friendly broadside has already been extensively covered over the past few days elsewhere - Mandelson’s obviously earning his keep!
Whether Mr Kaminiski is keeping faith with his own electorate I cannot say. I do know that Macmillan Scott is certainly not keeping faith with his. He ran on a clear Tory policy ticket, and then reneged.

Further comments are rather in line with the right-wing Tory readership that the Telegraph was known for, but they make the good point; some Labour MPs have as close, if not tighter, relationships with Communism and Communist parties, and yet they are not nearly punished as much for past left-wing links as much as Tories are for right-wing links.

The whole blog; article quoting and all irritated me, the worst thing is I know in the coming week this argument will be thrown my way, at least now I have something to come back with.

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[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

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Modest Mouse - The Whale Song

While a big fan of ‘Good News…’ and ‘The Moon and Antartica’, Modest Mouse have always been quite hit and miss. Even with those two defining records, in place there is material I am not keen on. Their forthcoming E.P.”No One’s First and You’re Next” however is the most consistent thing I’ve heard from them. The featured track is my personal favourite; a dark and mid-tempo song that plays ethereal vocal layering, and places the guitar solo at the beginning; what more could you want.

Essentially a b-sides and rarities E.P., but “repolished” the album constitutes and represents the full spectrum of Modest Mouse; from the twee indie pop, to the darker edges of indie rock. The E.P. is all encompassing, and it does it with such a masterful, refreshing edge that I’m glad these recordings are surfacing now, rather than earlier versions nearer to the time. Don’t be dismayed by the nature of this E.P.; it does not fail, in any way, to measure up to the brilliance of Modest Mouse at their best.