Streetlife
After the soundsystems cleared Notting Hill was left with a mess. Two days of colourfull Carnival, big parade and a load of sun showed me London as I have never seen before. Streetlife; one milion people dancing, talking, singing and drinking, could london ever be more fun?
Cycling pays off!
Hello all ex, current and future platform 8rs, I want to draw attention to the fact that we we’re last years most environmental friendly platform when it comes to means of transportation. I like to give some attention to a group of Bicycle couriers in the Netherlands that will do an overnight ride from 400 kilometers through the Netherlands. All to attract people to other, more friendly ways of transportation.
Predictions about the growth in traffic for western europe say that there is almost a dubbel amount of road transportation in 2010 compared to 1990. This growth has lead to a heavy increase of polution in the air especially in the city’s. Do we really need all this traffic on our roads? As a Cyclist I say no! Not as much and not as destructive. There are many opportunities when it comes to environmental friendly ways of transportation. The bike is where part of our future lies, no pollution, no noise, no sleepingdisorder, no increase of blood pressure en above all no stress!
Keep up the cycling and check these links:
http://dutchmessengers.nl/index.htm
http://www.dutchmessengers.nl/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=3928#3928
we found a birds nest, and plenty of bird sit to go with it. those are the old scholl levers and knobs to contol the crane
this walkway is usually submerged. bassie checking to see if the coast is clear and then legging it across the platform
approach route
we wanted to get onto the crane on the left. which is on top of this huge platform that just sits in the river. so we just got into the river bed further down and walked down to the platform. cus it was low tide we could walk out to it and climb up through it onto the platform itself. that was the risky bit because it was completely flat and visible to security. so there was a quick run across to the shelter of the crane and then we managed to get up as far as the big box bit in the middle, where the driver sits an the all the main cogs are. they had welded mesh grids around the base of the ladders to stop people climbing up so we went up the underside of the ladders which is fine but if you slip you fall about 8metres into the river. I was so scared but it was such a good buzz! Below is the place upstream where we got in. the cranes are just visible above the railway bridge in the foreground. It was amazing how industrial the whole place even though it was in the centre of London
any takers?
tomorrow at vauxhall bridge 16 30
Why doesn’t America believe in evolution?
Human beings, as we know them, developed from earlier species of animals: true or false? This simple question is splitting America apart, with a growing proportion thinking that we did not descend from an ancestral ape. A survey of 32 European countries, the US and Japan has revealed that only Turkey is less willing than the US to accept evolution as fact.
Religious fundamentalism, bitter partisan politics and poor science education have all contributed to this denial of evolution in the US, says Jon Miller of Michigan State University in East Lansing, who conducted the survey with his colleagues. “The US is the only country in which [the teaching of evolution] has been politicised,” he says. “Republicans have clearly adopted this as one of their wedge issues. In most of the world, this is a non-issue.”
Miller’s report makes for grim reading for adherents of evolutionary theory. Even though the average American has more years of education than when Miller began his surveys 20 years ago, the percentage of people in the country who accept the idea of evolution has declined from 45 in 1985 to 40 in 2005 (Science, vol 313, p 765). That’s despite a series of widely publicised advances in genetics, including genetic sequencing, which shows strong overlap of the human genome with those of chimpanzees and mice. “We don’t seem to be going in the right direction,” Miller says.
There is some cause for hope. Team member Eugenie Scott of the National Center for Science Education in Oakland, California, finds solace in the finding that the percentage of adults overtly rejecting evolution has dropped from 48 to 39 in the same time. Meanwhile the fraction of Americans unsure about evolution has soared, from 7 per cent in 1985 to 21 per cent last year. “That is a group of people that can be reached,” says Scott.
The main opposition to evolution comes from fundamentalist Christians, who are much more abundant in the US than in Europe. While Catholics, European Protestants and so-called mainstream US Protestants consider the biblical account of creation as a metaphor, fundamentalists take the Bible literally, leading them to believe that the Earth and humans were created only 6000 years ago.
Ironically, the separation of church and state laid down in the US constitution contributes to the tension. In Catholic schools, both evolution and the strict biblical version of human beginnings can be taught. A court ban on teaching creationism in public schools, however, means pupils can only be taught evolution, which angers fundamentalists, and triggers local battles over evolution.
These battles can take place because the US lacks a national curriculum of the sort common in European countries. However, the Bush administration’s No Child Left Behind act is instituting standards for science teaching, and the battles of what they should be has now spread to the state level.
Miller thinks more genetics should be on the syllabus to reinforce the idea of evolution. American adults may be harder to reach: nearly two-thirds don’t agree that more than half of human genes are common to chimpanzees. How would these people respond when told that humans and chimps share 99 per cent of their genes?
Porshe Police
The days of glory are over finn.
This is how it used to be back in the days (1985).
Porshe Targa 911 and 912.
Military Families against war
a short video by rose gentle mother of Gordon Gentle killed in Basra 2004.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1bHGJvaelFU
Unconditional ceasefire NOW
Sat 5th August 12.00 assemble Speakers Corner Hyde Park. Come down if you can.
Above are photos from the 22 July demo. Which was really good if only just to show solidarity with the communities of Palestinian and Lebanese people that live in London. I think the support of all communities was really appreciated. I made the Tony poster and a Lebanese man ended up getting me to photograph him carrying it. The scribbled placard sums up the situation perfectly…
http://www.stopwar.org.uk/
union of concerned scientists
http://www.ucsusa.org/global_security/nuclear_weapons/nuclear-bunker-buster-rnep-animation.html