Are You Taking a Piss?

Man peed way out of avalanche:

"A Slovak man trapped in his car under an avalanche freed himself by drinking 60 bottles of beer and urinating on the snow to melt it.

Rescue teams found Richard Kral drunk and staggering along a mountain path four days after his Audi car was buried in the Slovak Tatra mountains.

He told them that after the avalanche, he had opened his car window and tried to dig his way out.

But as he dug with his hands, he realised the snow would fill his car before he managed to break through.

He had 60 half-litre bottles of beer in his car as he was going on holiday, and after cracking one open to think about the problem he realised he could urinate on the snow to melt it, local media reported."

Hoaxes And Advertising

There is a proliferation of spoof or hoax adverts going around the Internet lately. One such is the recent VW Polo Ad:

"A suicide bomber blows himself up inside the car, but the car is so tough that it contains the explosion. Seems to push the envelope a bit too much to be an actual ad commissioned by Volkswagen, and sure enough it's not. It's a 'spec ad', created by leeanddan.com. Spec ads are 'speculative ads' created to show potential clients what kind of work you're capable of doing. In other words, Volkswagen never endorsed this material."

The company caught wind of the fake ad and reacted by trying to stop the spread of the spoof across the Internet. Right. That's like an ant trying to stop a bulldozer. There were threatening emails, denial press releases, and cease and desist letters. What did this accomplish? Not much. All it did was to force the spoof and the conversation about the spoof to race around the Internet even faster. It's everywhere. It's now a permanent fixture on thousands of websites.

I was reading an article in the Times of Zambia that shows how Chawama residents use hoax odd stories to highlight public interest issues.

Apparently, the residents of this township in Zambia have a long tradition of using all sorts of bizarre and humorous stories that spread like wild fire and, which rapidly bring people together to appreciate the seriousness of any public interest issue.

"In 2002 when perpetual roadblocks became a thorn in the flesh of Lusaka bus drivers, a strategy was mapped out in Chawama to end the problem.

The story was told of a driver who plunged his minibus in the infamous Blue Water dam with seven police officers dying inside with him?

It was all lies but, according to minibus driver, Given Kafwimbi, "It somehow helped us because police reduced on roadblocks along the Kafue road."

The Blue Water hoax tragedy spread so wildly that police spokesperson Brenda Muntemba had to issue up to five Press statements within the same month refuting the claims.

Still people did not believe her until some concerned stone crushers around the dam confirmed there had not been any minibus which plunged into the dam."

Report Links the Orphan Crisis in Africa and Terrorism

Albina du Boisrouvray, president of a leading NGO aiding and lobbying for the support of the hundreds of millions of AIDS orphans and all vulnerable children, today praised the report of the Global Business Coalition on HIV/AIDS (GBC)
just released in Davos pointing out the link between the AIDS orphan crisis in Africa and terrorism.

'I am grateful that such a powerful group has raised this issue again at meetings of the World Economic Forum,' said the president of the Association Francois-Xavier Bagnoud (FXB) 'There, in previous years, I lobbied presidents, former presidents, heads of corporations, mayors, and business leaders for the same cause.

She said that she 'urged them to take this on as a priority emergency to prevent AIDS orphans and other vulnerable and destitute children from becoming a global security risk. Already, in almost a dozen African countries 10-year-olds have been forced to fight. Others, just to survive, have resorted to becoming terrorists, criminals, drug dealers, prostitutes, child soldiers or turning themselves into human bombs,' she said.

Dry Sex

This blog post mentions Dry Sex as a possible factor, largely unacknowledged, in the spread of HIV/AIDS in Southern Africa.

Widely practised in Zimbabwe, Malawi, Zambia and South Africa, dry sex is hardly ever spoken about. It is penetrative sex between a man and a woman, where the woman has previously inserted a substance- methylated spirits, antiseptics, coarse salt, snuff, bicarbonate of soda, vinegar, talcum powder, ice, alum, Zam-Buk, traditional muti (usually prescribed by a traditional healer), soil with baboon urine, shredded newspaper, household detergents or bleach- into her cervix in order to make her vagina dry. Some women insert drying herbs in a cloth or stocking, which they keep inside during foreplay and remove just before penetration to 'make the thing behave, as one woman put it. They do this so when their lovers enter them, they are 'dry and clean,' because both men and women see their wetness as a sign of promiscuity and dirt.

The article cites an example;

Sipewe Mhakeni used herbs from the Mugugudhu tree. After grinding the stem and leaf, she would mix just a pinch of the sand-colored powder with water, wrap it in a bit of nylon stocking, and insert it into her vagina for 10 to 15 minutes. The herbs swell the soft tissues of the vagina, make it hot, and dry it out. That made sex 'very painful,' says Mhakeni. But, she adds, 'Our African husbands enjoy sex with a dry vagina.'

In my opinion, the use of condoms renders this practice irrelevant as condoms are lubricated. I do not know how prevalent this practice is amongst Zambians,it should be dicouraged. Women should not sacrifice sexual safety to men's pleasure.

2 Kwacha Banknote at Ebay

Now, this is a very interesting way to prop up the exchange rate of the Zambian currency. Someone is auctioning Kwacha banknotes at feeds.com.br which is an associate of Ebay.

The old 2 Kwacha note is currently valued at R$1.00. Watchout Bank of Zambia!

101 Dumbest Moments in Business

This year's Business 2.0's annual "101 Dumbest Moments in Business" package has plenty of ironic gems in it. The fifth annual review includes the most shameful, dishonest, and just plain stupid moments of the past year.

Where Have All the Children Gone?

The Tech Central Station reports on why the birth rate in Europe is falling:

"In the so-called 'New Europe', the situation is even gloomier. According to UN projections, Latvia will lose 44 percent of its population by 2050 as a result of demographic trends. In Estonia, the population is expected to shrink by 52 percent, in Bulgaria 36 percent, in Ukraine 35 percent, and in Russia 30 percent. In comparison with these figures, the projected population decline in Italy (22 percent), the Czech Republic (17 percent), Poland (15 percent) or Slovakia (8 percent) looks like a small decrease. France and Germany will lose relatively little population, and the population of the United Kingdom will even see a slight growth -- thanks to immigrants."

AlterNet: The 10 Worst Corporations of 2004

The AlterNet reports on The 10 Worst Corporations of 2004:

"The year's most egregious price gougers, polluters, union-busters, dictator-coddlers, fraudsters, poisoners, deceivers and general miscreants. "

Email Is Dead

The changing world of online communication and collaboration, fueled by real-time tools such as instant messaging, blogs and wikis, could drive the evolution of online collaboration in any number of directions.

For today's kids, e-mail is dead. They use IM. It is their e-mail. They only get e-mail from people they don’t want to talk to.

Watch the younger generation. What we see these kids doing today is what’s going to happen in our business tomorrow.
Kids’ actions show that users will assemble tools in terms of what works for them and what does not. When kids want to talk long distance they download Skype (a VoIP client). They experiment with blogs and wikis.

Junior High

Someone by the name of Ricardo Cortes has written A new pot-friendly book—for kids. The "It’s Just a Plant" is available on the Barnes & Noble Website this month.

“The book is not pro-drugs by any means,” says Cortes, 31, a T-shirt and skateboard designer who lives in Prospect Heights. “It’s about reconsidering the drug laws.”

David R. Anderson of the Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America responds, “On the one hand, it’s almost laughable, but beyond that, it’s just irresponsible. No one would write a book called It’s Just a Drink.”

And one final question for Cortes: Are you high? “No,” he says. “It’s a little too early in the day for me.”

Beautiful Blackbird

The Lincoln Tribune reports on The Coretta Scott King (CSK) Award Celebration, held last week at the Gaston College's Myers Center Cafeteria in Dallas.

"The Award is given to African-American authors and illustrators who produce creative, inspirational and educational books for children and young people. Ashley Bryan, author, illustrator and a 2004 Award winner, created 'Beautiful Blackbird' as an ode to black, the most inclusive color of all. The story is adapted from a folk tale written by the Ila-speaking people of Zambia and carries a message of self-acceptance, tolerance and beauty from within."

About Zambian (African) Dancing and Wining...

I read this and couldn't fight that nostalgic ache.

"I was brought up in Zambia at the time the disco revolution was just beginning. Many of you posters on here were just pikininis when us guys would spend weekend after weekend clubbing,posing in cars we pushed out of our Father's driveway while he lay snoring. Disco music was just becoming very popular with the likes of the BG's, UB 40, Maddona's Holiday, and loads of funk from Afro Americans was sweeping the dance scene. 'You can ring my bell' was the beat we boogied to, and boogie was the lang on the streets among the kids who belonged to this generation. "

When Bloggers Make News

The WSJ.com covers a story about how "Bloggers are finally moving from the alleys and side streets of the Internet into the mainstream. And as their visibility and clout increases, some are asking: what are the rules of the road? There is no exam to pass or society to join to become a blogger -- anybody can set up a 'Web log' to publish his or her ideas -- ".

Gmail Tips - The Complete Collection

I received an invitation to test Google's email service, Gmail. I have used the service mainly for personal emails. There are number of facilities that are impressive. The storage capacity, searchbox and conversations are very handy. Conversations links group related emails letting you easily track what was sent and to whom it was sent.

You can view the complete collection of
Gmail Tips Here.

Fair And Balanced

See this video aired on Fox News Channel.

And have a good look at The madness of King George on (inauguration) coronation day.

Dear White Fella

This is really sick as in funny. Coupla tings yo orto no

Times Online - Best of 2005

After a long while, I eventually made my way to my drinking well. Well, the locals call it a champagne bar. I have been conscious of how superficial the place can be at times.

What struck me last night was the humility and how people were ready to help. The tsunami, with all the misery it wrought has struck a chord across cultures. People everywhere want to help, and are prepared to do so.

I was literally challenged to sort out the HIV/AIDS issue in Africa, particularly Zambia. I do not pretend to be a saviour, but I'd like to think I can do something about our predicament. For a start let's welcome the assistance that is being showered and one day, perhaps, we can return the favour. In the meantime, let's all ponder on this The Best of 2005:

"It's your holiday - so why should you spend it saving the planet? Because it's fun. Yes, responsible travel can open up a whole world of new adventures. Brian Schofield and Matt Rudd report on how and why it's worth being worthy"

Streamload - Share Videos and Photos - Online MP3 Access

A company called Streamload is offering consumers a free 10 gigabyte online storage locker for multimedia files, potentially raising the stakes for larger companies such as Yahoo and America Online.

Streamloadtypically provides online storage space for a price, making it one of the few companies to survive in that business through the dot-com shakeout. However, it is increasingly competing with larger companies that offer online homes for digital photographs, and even the huge archive space provided by Google's Gmail service.

Company executives say the offer of big online storage lockers, once used only by advanced computer users, is now more relevant to a broader public that has large collections of digital photographs and MP3 files.




EPIC 2014

What is Epic? The Future of News is EPIC

National Peace through Tourism Week

Travel Video Television News reports: " Republic of Zambia, has declared the week of February 6 to 12, 2005, "National Peace through Tourism Week." The week was selected to correspond with the 3rd IIPT African Conference being held in Lusaka, February 6-11, 2005, and to jump start the "Visit Zambia 2005" Campaign.

The week begins with a parade on Sunday in Lusaka – and the issuing of a “Peace through Tourism Week” Proclamation to be carried by the media throughout Zambia.

Husband, 78, kills wife over suspected infidelity

The AngolaPress reports:

"Harare, Zimbabwe, 01/14 - A 78-year-old Zimbabwean man appeared in court in the south of the country Thursday on charges of beating his wife, 73, to death over suspected unfaithfulness.

Police spokesman Trust Ndlovu said Khaza Mlotshwa of Mangwe District, was brutally murdered Monday by her husband, after accusing her of having extra-marital affairs with unnamed men.

The accused was not named and the case has been adjourned.

Although marital murders are not uncommon in Zimbabwe, this particular incident has shocked the community, given the age of the couple. "

Visit Zambia

I guess there is no more excuses for not travelling to Zambia this year. I think, every Zambian and wannabe Zambian should travel to Zambia in 2005. Call it a home coming, self-awareness or self-discovery, back to my roots, home sweet home. Zambia is where it's at this year, baby!!

Now that British Airways has reduced fares by 30%, it is only a few hours hard earned dosh away.

How about a carnival style razzmatazz to top it all, just a thought. I think the nice chaps at the tourism office are able to pull this one off. Since everyone is heading to Zambia, it only makes sense.

See you in Zambia!!"

holstarmusic

The Holstar's style is Versatile, coming from lusaka, Zambia Central Africa, Holstar has become an Mcee to reckon with,spitting Venomous lethal Rhymes, Metaphors and similes, with the ability to make fake mcees dissapear.
Download for Free

Fake Love Tokens Fool Flies

Animal Planet reports:

"Females among many insects and animals, including humans, enjoy receiving gifts during courtship, but a new study on flies reveals that males can woo their intendeds with worthless, fake love tokens, even if such cheating is otherwise undocumented for the species.
By the time the female fly realizes her lover is a cheapskate and beats him off with her wings, the male already has mated with her and leaves with his faux present to find another partner. "

President of Fabricated Crises

The washingtonpost.com reports:

"Some presidents make the history books by managing crises. Lincoln had Fort Sumter, Roosevelt had the Depression and Pearl Harbor, and Kennedy had the missiles in Cuba. George W. Bush, of course, had Sept. 11, and for a while thereafter -- through the overthrow of the Taliban -- he earned his page in history, too.

But when historians look back at the Bush presidency, they're more likely to note that what sets Bush apart is not the crises he managed but the crises he fabricated. The fabricated crisis is the hallmark of the Bush presidency. To attain goals that he had set for himself before he took office -- the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, the privatization of Social Security -- he concocted crises where there were none. "

Searching in vain

I see the weapons hunters have folded up shop:....

Search for Banned Arms In Iraq Ended Last Month


Rodeo in Salem

Ali G Nearly Gets Lynched at Virginia Rodeo .. Read article

Random webcams from the Net

Opentopia : "These webcams were found by Google. Their owners might or might not have intended for them to be public. But they obviously are. Many of them are security cameras in companies or semi-public places"

Zambians are No.1 Wife Beaters

Scoop: Violence Against Women And Role Of Media: "A Multi-Country Study, is a comprehensive analysis of domestic violence in nine developing countries based on data from Demographic and Health Surveys finds high rates of domestic violence in all cases and specifies that over 40% of women in several countries report being victims of spousal or intimate partner abuse. In summary, the number of ever-married women reporting spousal physical or sexual abuse was highest in Zambia (48%), Colombia (44%), and Peru (42%) and lowest in Cambodia (18%), India (19%), and the Dominican Republic (22%). About one in three women in Egypt (34%), Nicaragua (30%) and Haiti (29%) reported such abuse. Interestingly, in most countries, the highest rates of violence occur in moderately wealthy households and not, as commonly assumed, among the poorest households. Women are most at risk at home and from men they know, usually a family member or spouse."

GMail Messages are Vulnerable to Interception

A couple of developers have found that GMail Messages are Vulnerable to Interception.

If you are a regular GMail user - or someone that corresponds with one - you might want to either rethink the privacy of your communications, or perhaps make some noise with the folks at Google's email service.

Genetic HIV Resistance Deciphered

Scientists unravel the mysteries of AIDS immunity, finding that ethnicity and heredity make some people resistant to HIV infection -- but only if they have the right genes.
Wired News reports

Why don't Christians live what they preach?

Alan Wolfe, famous contemporary scholar and director of the Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life, has just published a penetrating study of American religious life. Evangelicals figure prominently in his book.

Here is his evaluation:

This is roughly the situation of Western or at least American evangelicalism today.

In spite of the Christian movement's proud claims to miraculous transformation, recent polls have showed that members of the christian evangelical movement divorced their spouses just as often as their secular neighbors. They beat their wives as often as their neighbors. They were almost as materialistic and even more racist than their pagan friends.

Scandalous behavior is rapidly destroying American Christianity. By their daily activity, most 'Christians' regularly commit treason. With their mouths they claim that Jesus is Lord, but with their actions they demonstrate allegiance to money, sex, and self-fulfillment.

The findings in numerous national polls conducted by highly respected pollsters like The Gallup Organization and The Barna Group are simply shocking. 'Gallup and Barna,' laments evangelical theologian Michael Horton, 'hand us survey after survey demonstrating that evangelical Christians are as likely to embrace lifestyles every bit as hedonistic, materialistic, self-centered, and sexually immoral as the world in general.

Divorce is more common among 'born-again' Christians than in the general American population.

Only 6 percent of evangelicals tithe.

White evangelicals are the most likely people to object to neighbors of another race.

Sexual promiscuity of evangelical youth is only a little less outrageous than that of their nonevangelical peers.

The Onion | Zambia Elects Black President

The Onion reports on election of the first ever black president in Zambia. President Bilikisu Adewale, a 49-year-old black man served as Zambia's Foreign Minister from 1998 to 2004. Addressing the largely black crowd, he pledged to defend the interests of the nation's sizable black community.

Among his chief campaign promises was to increase funding for schools in Zambia's inner cities, outer cities, and middle cities—areas with a high concentration of blacks.

"Do you realize that in this nation of more than 10 million people, there is not a single black-history museum or black cultural center?" Adewale asked. "Did you know that at the University of Zambia, there are no black fraternities and no black student union? This must change. And it will, starting today."

Civil Rights' Tower of Strength

Charles Cobb Jr writes for the washingtonpost.com:

James Forman, executive secretary of Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) -- which organized voter registration campaigns in the toughest areas of the South during the civil rights movement died Monday at 76.

He leaves a lot behind, most of it unrecognized and unappreciated. I am writing as one of those shaped by Forman. It is worth making the argument right here, and Forman would appreciate it, that the southern civil rights movement of the 1960s is largely misunderstood. His own invisibility as one of the great forces in that movement is one example of just how deeply it was misunderstood.


"You have to constantly think about what it is you are really fighting for, Jim taught us. And it was Jim who began to connect us to Africa, the southern African liberation movements, in particular. He had done graduate work in African studies at Boston University. The slogan 'One Man One Vote,' which we used in our voter registration campaigns across the South, was borrowed from the independence movement in what is now Zambia. "

'no' Simple Life

N.J. school says 'no' to 'Simple Life'.
Producers of the show starring hotel heiress Paris Hilton and her friend Nicole Richie had approached school officials in December, offering to pay $5,000 to film an episode at a school in the mostly rural community 30 miles west of Atlantic City.

But some parents responded angrily, saying the co-stars weren't fit role models.

"I just feel that it's ludicrous that the Board of Education and the administration would invite Paris Hilton to teach 11-, 12- and 13-year-olds, and Nicole Richie, too," parent Sue Barber said last week. "Their reputation leaves a lot to be desired."

Bob Marley to be exhumed

The wife of reggae star Bob Marley said Wednesday that she plans to exhume his remains in Jamaica and rebury them in his 'spiritual resting place,' Ethiopia.

Read full story for latest details.

Woman tore off ex-lover's testicle

Read this ThisisLondon article:
"A jilted woman today admitted ripping off her ex-lover's testicle with her bare hands after he refused to have sex with her.
Amanda Monti, 24, flew into a rage after her ex-boyfriend, 37-year-old Geoffrey Jones, rejected her advances at the end of a drunken house party.
She yanked off his left testicle, which was later handed to him by a friend with the words: 'That's yours.' "

CIDRZ Warning - Food Outlets

The message from theMpelembe Email List sends out a chilling warning:

"For your information

Warning- Food outlets

11 January 2005

To friends,
Please read and take note of the warning - people can
be devils indeed!If you need more information, please
contact:

Julia Malembeka
Administrator - HR
Centre for Infectious Disease Research in Zambia
(CIDRZ)
Plot No. 1210, Addis Ababa Road
P.O. Box 34681
Lusaka
Tel #: 260-1-254784
Cel # 260-96-959991
Importance: High

Warning...Warning.....Warning...
This is something you may want to take note of:
ONLY USE KETCHUP/TOMATO SAUCE IN THE PACKET IN FAST
FOOD OUTLETS!!

Yesterday man was caught placing blood in the
ketchup/tomato sauce dispenser at a fast food outlet
(to remain unnamed). It is believed that the man is
HIV+.

So be sure to let your friends/family know. Only use
items that come in a closed packet.

Please pass it on. SEND this message TO AS MANY
PEOPLE AS POSSIBLE."

Apple - Mac mini

The Apple - Mac mini is finally here, and it boasts a miniscule price to match: Mac mini starts at $499.

The People Who Owned the Bible - a story

Talented sf anf fantasy writer Will Shetterly
has written a short-short story called "The People Who Owned the Bible" and blogged it under a Creative Commons license. It's a corker.
Then Jimmy Joe Jenkins's DNA proved he was the primary descendent of the translators of the King James Version of the Bible. At first, Jimmy was satisfied with ten percent of the price of every KJV sold and 10 percent of every collection plate passed by any church that used the KJV. But when some churches switched to newer translations, Jimmy sicced his lawyers on all translations based on the KJV. That got him a cut of every Bible and every Christian service in English. Some translators claimed their work was based on older versions and should therefore be exempt, but none of them could afford to fight Jimmy in court.
So the churches grumbled and paid Jimmy his tithe, except for the Mormons, Christian Scientists, Seventh Day Adventists, Quakers, and Unitarian Universalists. Jimmy said their teachings hurt the commercial value of his property and refused to let them use the Bible. All of those groups dissolved, except for the Unitarian Universalists, who didn't notice a change.

Shift Diary

Shift Diary

Unbelievable and fascinating. This is the circa 1998 internal message board used by the support staff of a Florida call girl ring, foolishly left unsecured so Google could crawl it.

Dip in to any part of the page and it's like lifting a rock off a hill of sleaze. The girls are unreliable. The johns are dumb. The male madame is driven to extremes of emotion over office messiness. A rival escort agency tries to steal the talent. Everyone is hustling, and not just in the obvious ways.

I found this site while researching the obscure bubblegum musical "Toomorrow," an uncommon mispelling which appears on this page. What a treat!

A minister's timely death

A minister's timely death

The Reverend Jack Arnold, 69, dropped dead of cardiac arrest while giving a sermon Sunday at the Covenant Presbyterian Church near Orlando, Florida. His last words? "And when I go to heaven..."

Man auctions ad space on forehead

From BBC NEWS Technology :

"A 20-year-old US man is selling advertising space on his forehead to the highest bidder on website eBay.
Andrew Fischer, from Omaha, Nebraska, said he would have a non-permanent logo or brand name tattooed on his head for 30 days.
'The way I see it I'm selling something I already own; after 30 days I get it back,' he told the BBC Today programme.
Mr Fischer has received 39 bids so far, with the largest bid currently at more
than $322 (£171). "

Art director named Russell Jones got calls for Ol' Dirty Bastard

This from The New Yorker: The Talk of the Town: "Russell Jones is a forty-four-year-old art director who lives in Park Slope, Brooklyn. In the early winter of 1996, he and his wife began to receive some unusual phone calls late at night. They would pick up the receiver and a voice would shout "Yo, Dirty!" or just "Dirteee!" and then hang up. Jones was mystified; he thought that maybe his number had been written down in a bathroom stall somewhere. A few weeks later, Jones,s young cousin, who was conversant in hip-hop, stopped by.
"You know that rapper Ol' Dirty Bastard?"
"Uh, not really."
"His real name is Russell Jones. That's why you get those calls."
"No way. It can't be."

PeerCast P2P Radio

Start your own Internet radio station with peerCast .

PeerCast is a new, free way to listen to radio and watch video on the Internet. It uses P2P technology to let anyone become a broadcaster without the costs of traditional streaming. This means you get to hear and watch stations not normally found on commercially funded sites.

'I failed Zambia, says president'

The BBC News reports:
"Zambia's president has apologised to his country for failing to tackle poverty, but insisted he will stay in office until elections are due in 2006.
'It has not been possible to reduce poverty and I feel sad about it,' Levy Mwanawasa said, describing the issue as 'one of my failures'. "

Aniston, Pitt separating after 4 years of marriage

....Incase you live under a rock then you must have missed that Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston have split. Opps you didn’t get that the first time? Brad and Jen have split. Oh I know what i forgot to tell you

URL: CNN.com - Aniston, Pitt separating after 4 years of marriage - Jan 8, 2005

Blogger fired

Waterstone's fires 11-year-employee for blogging. ead his account at The Woolamaloo Gazette

Masturbating boys cause a stir

Riot Hlatshwayo from South africa reports:

Sexily-dressed women in a small Limpopo town have fallen prey to a group of teenage street kids that masturbate in public whenever they see them.

Alternatives to "Opening a Can o' Whupass" for the Less Confrontationally Inclined.

BY IAN CAREY, brianmcarey@aol.com:

"Unsnapping a Purse o' Politeness
Decanting a Carafe o' Contrition
Unzipping a Fanny Pack o' Friendliness
Sipping a Demitasse o' Diplomacy
Refrigerating the Tupperware o' Temperance
Unscrewing a Thermos o' Thoughtfulness
Gently Folding a Napkin o' Negotiation
Checking the Date on a Carton o' Caution
Serving an Ap�ritif o' Avoidance
Unpacking a Portmanteau o' Panic
Emptying a Wastebasket o' Withdrawal
Sealing and Applying Postage to an Envelope o' Escape
Lightly Greasing a Ramekin o' Retreat
Applying a Beechwood Veneer to a Hutch o' Hiding
Cleaning Out a Drawer o' Disappearance"

Guide to Combatting Comment Spam

Six Apart Guide to Combatting Comment Spam:

"This document describes how malicious or unwanted comments ('comment spam') affect weblogs, the techniques spammers use to abuse weblogs, and the tactics that can be used to prevent and defend against these attacks. Also included is a review of the strengths and weaknesses of each tactic, instructions for implementing them on your weblog and ones which we recommend for the best protection.
Throughout this document, we refer to comments and comment spam, but these references apply to all reader-submitted content, including both comments and TrackBacks, except where specified."

Meritocracy in America

The Economist.com reports:

"Whatever happened to the belief that any American could get to the top?

THE United States likes to think of itself as the very embodiment of meritocracy: a country where people are judged on their individual abilities rather than their family connections. The original colonies were settled by refugees from a Europe in which the restrictions on social mobility were woven into the fabric of the state, and the American revolution was partly a revolt against feudalism. From the outset, Americans believed that equality of opportunity gave them an edge over the Old World, freeing them from debilitating snobberies and at the same time enabling everyone to benefit from the abilities of the entire population. They still do. "

Truth and Bill Gates

Dan Gillmor on Grassroots Journalism: Truth and Bill Gates:

"CNet's interview with Bill Gates has any number of howlers, but a couple of them stand out.
He claims, for example, that Internet Explorer is the best browser. Insulting people's intelligence is par for the course for Gates, but this one is beyond laughable.
More serious, and ugly, is Gates' attack on people who want to restore a modicum of balance to today's grossly tilted system of intellectual property. He snidely dismisses 'some new modern-day sort of communists who want to get rid of the incentive for musicians and moviemakers and software makers under various guises. They don't think that those incentives should exist.'"

Tortoise Adopts Stray Hippo

Yahoo! News reports on a 120-year-old giant tortoise living in a Kenyan sanctuary has become inseparable from a baby hippo rescued by game wardens.


Knowing is Beautiful

Liam Scheff writes: "As a journalist who writes about AIDS, I am endlessly amazed by the difference between the public and the private face of HIV; between what the public is told and what's explained in the medical literature."

Have you ever wondered why we drive on the left side?
The Autoworld explains: "Ever wondered why we drive on the left while others drive on the right? The obvious answer would be, driving on the left is a legacy left to us by the Brits. However, let's delve a little deeper. The "rule of the roads in mainland Europe and the majority of countries in the world, including the United States, is to drive on the right.

In the United Kingdom and most countries that belong to the Commonwealth, the rule of the road remains to drive on the left. These include countries like Malaysia, Australia, New Zealand, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Kenya, Zambia, some Caribbean islands, India and Pakistan. This rule also applies in Thailand and Japan.

The origin of the rule of the road dates back to how people travelled in violent feudal societies. As most people are right handed, it made sense to carry any weapon in the right hand. When passing a stranger on the road, it is safer to walk on the left so that the weapon is always between yourself and a possible opponent. Jousting knights also hold their lances in their right hand and passing each other's left. So it would be safe to say that the original "rule of the road" would be to travel on the left side of the road."

Reputed Klansman Nabbed for 1964 Slayings

The Associated Press/AP Online reports:

"America in 1964 was still a country divided by race, but Congress would pass the Civil Rights Act and the world would honor Martin Luther King Jr. with the Nobel Peace Prize. But there was still trouble between blacks and whites - angry words, sometimes more.

James Chaney, a 21-year-old black man, and two white men - Andrew Goodman, 20, and Michael Schwerner, 24 - were shot to death that year, working for the cause. Their killer was never caught. Now, 41 years later, a reputed member of the Klan, Edgar Ray Killen, is in custody for the slayings. "

The Behavior of Genes Nature and Nurture

The International Herald Tribune reports:
'The right genes make all the difference.' Or so declares an advertisement, as a boy portraying the son of Andre Agassi and Steffi Graf holds his own in a match against Taylor Dent. While neither science, nor this television commercial, can explain much about how the genes of the tennis stars' son might affect his tennis game, people are comfortable linking genes to athletic prowess.
Many people, however, are leery of attributing other components of behavior to genes personality or intelligence, or social traits like fidelity, for example. They're troubled by the ethical implication, as if a nod toward the genes diminishes the role of the environment and free will. It is nature versus nurture: a debate that has spawned extremist views on both sides, from Nazism (nature) to Marxism (nurture). The truth is that DNA is both inherited and environmentally responsive, and recent animal studies go far toward resolving nature versus nurture by upsetting the assumption that the two work differently. The discoveries emphasize what genes do (producing proteins that are the building blocks of life), rather than simply who they are (their fixed DNA sequence).

Take a peek at Exeem

The Exeem file-swapping program, still in beta, promises to merge the strengths of BitTorrent and Kazaa.

Lifer Sentenced to Three Years, In Prison!

The Associated Press/AP Online reports:
"A man serving a life sentence for murder was sentenced to three additional years in prison for passing out cheese sandwiches while in jail.

Douglas Eugene Wilson, 45, pleaded guilty Monday to possession of contraband and was sentenced by District Judge Thomas Kane.
Prosecutors said Wilson had the sandwiches while in jail awaiting trial on the murder charge and he tried to give them to other inmates, which is a violation of jail rules.

A sheriff's deputy testified at a hearing in May that they warned Wilson not to pass food to other inmate then shocked him with a stun gun when he ignored them.

Wilson was tackled and handcuffed after he reportedly charged a deputy. Second-degree assault and attempted second-degree assault charges against Wilson were dropped in exchange for the contraband guilty plea.

'Why are the taxpayers paying the judiciary to hold this hearing on some contraband sandwiches?' he said in a telephone interview with the Gazette of Colorado Springs. 'Taxpayers want to know where their money is going - there it is.'
Wilson was convicted last month of first-degree murder in the strangling death of Liza Chavez, 37."

America's obsession with fat

The Slate magazine tackles the perpetual issue of weight and self-esteem in women. This exerpt from the article simply lays out the battle lines. Laura Kipnis says Navel Gazing - Feminists still don't understand fat or our obsession with it:

"There's simply an irreconcilable contradiction between feminism and femininity, two largely incompatible strategies women have adopted over the years to try to level the playing field with men.

The reason they're incompatible is simple. Femininity is a system that tries to secure advantages for women, primarily by enhancing their sexual attractiveness to men. It also shores up masculinity through displays of feminine helplessness or deference. But femininity depends on a sense of female inadequacy to perpetuate itself. Completely successful femininity can never be entirely attained, which is precisely why women engage in so much laboring, agonizing, and self-loathing, because whatever you do, there's always that straggly inch-long chin hair or pot belly or just the inexorable march of time. (Even the dewiest ingenue is a Norma Desmond waiting to happen.)

Feminism, on the other hand, is dedicated to abolishing the myth of female inadequacy. It strives to smash beauty norms, it demands female equality in all spheres, it rejects sexual market value as the measure of female worth. Or that was the plan. Yet for all feminism's social achievements, what it never managed to accomplish was the eradication of the heterosexual beauty culture, meaning the time-consuming and expensive potions and procedures—the pedicures, highlights, wax jobs on sensitive areas, "aesthetic surgery," and so on. For some reason, the majority of women simply would not give up the pursuit of beautification, even those armed with feminist theory. (And even those clearly destined to fail.)"

Eve Ensler's one-woman show, The Good Body consists of Ensler impersonating self-loathing women. She names the usual suspects: unrealistic media images, capitalism, mothers. She also spent six years globe-trotting to 40 countries to interview other women on the subject.

There is obviously a problem with this attitude as Laura Kipnis expalins:

"One problem with this brand of global feminism is how closely it resembles narcissism on a global scale: Women everywhere mirror me. Instead, Ensler should have interviewed a few anthropologists since according to Kulick and Meneley's Fat, bodily attributes like pot bellies actually have entirely different cross-cultural meanings. Fat connotes very different things in different cultures or in subcultures like fat activism, gay male chubby-chasers, and hip hop. Fat may be a worldwide phenomenon—and increasingly so—but not everyone is neurotic about it, or they're not neurotic in the same way."

MSN Direct for Computer Watches

MSN Direct delivers personalized information to Smart Watches. Stay connected to news, MSN Messenger, sports, stocks and more. View Smart Watch demo.

70-Year-Old Woman Killed for Suspected Witchcraft

A post at ZambiaSossa cites an example of how entrenched suprstition can be in parts of Zambia:

Funny how primitive zambia is in certain areas of the country. this is a story told to me by someone who was in zambia recently.
the guy was a graduate at nrdc in lusaka and thus has experience in agriculture and all.

around sometime last yr, he went to visit his grand parents in north western province where the luvale live.
he stayed there and saw people were feeding on cassava every day. he posed a question and wondered why there wasnt maize out there, they told him that it couldnt grow.

he knew that the people didnt know how to go about certain climates and so he tried his math and a miracle happened. the maize grew and he harvested lots of bags of maize, he even planted some bananas that were growing really good to the amusement of his neigbours.

this man became the talk of town, all of a sudden people said ''buloshi'' that he was a witch who grew maize where it couldnt grow, so when the man left the village he left the bananas growing and left instructions on how to make sure they grow but none followed his math.
so when the bananas died, it was confirmed, they said buloshi (witch) because the trees died when he left.


Is this a myth or urban legendary tales meant to poke fun at the rural people?
It's a genuine topic,
The Times of Zambia (Ndola) reports: "A 70-year-old woman of Zambezi was beaten to death by eight people who suspected her of being a witch."

Very sad.

The Edge: World Question Center

"What do you believe is true even though you cannot prove it?'

This was the question posed to scientists, futurists and other creative thinkers by John Brockman, a literary agent and publisher of Edge, a Web site devoted to science. The site asks a new question at the end of each year. Here are excerpts from the responses, posted at www.edge.org"

DRUDGE REPORT FLASH 2005

DRUDGE REPORT FLASH 2005: "U.S. military and intelligence sources are denying print and broadcast reports that terrorist Abu-Musab al-Zarqawi has been arrested in Iraq, MSNBC reported Tuesday.

MSNBC said senior U.S. military and intelligence sources told it the reports are not true. A newspaper in the United Arab Emirates, al-Bayane, reported in its Tuesday edition that the Jordanian-born terrorist had been arrested in Baqouba, Iraq. Iraqi Kurdistan radio also reported the arrest of al-Zarqawi.

The U.S. military in December said al-Zarqawi likely is in the Baghdad area."

ZambiaSossa: Does anyone ever bother to read

Does anyone ever bother to read: "You see Chile, i suggested long time ago to Lex that he put just one Post where he will be posting all these links (some interesting, others boring depending on one's taste) - just adding to one thread post and if one is interested in what's the latest in the Lex news, they just go to that post or better still work with the manager to open up a link or one Lex space. I think it wud work better and organised that way. I think somehow Sup had a valid question which degenerated into chaos "

health and fitness @Dditional Information

For the latest information on a wide range of health topics.
seattlepi.com

Prescription drugs
Consumer Reports' new Web site includes comparisons of prescription drugs, including the conditions they treat and cost.
www.crbestbuydrugs.org

Clinical trials
Provided by the National Institutes of Health, the site offers information about federally funded research involving volunteers, including a summary of the study, where it's taking place and contact information.
www.clinicaltrials.gov

Nutrition sites
This Tufts University Web site rates other nutrition information sources on the Web.
www.navigator.tufts.edu

Hangovers
An article posted on WedMD.com's Web site, including tips for avoiding, treating and understanding the pain of an alcohol-induced hangover.
my.webmd.com

Google With Stock Price Near $200

Deseret News (Salt Lake City):

"Shares of Google Inc., the most popular service for searching the Web, ended 2004 near $200, capping the stock's debut year near its record price.

Google shares have more than doubled since the company's initial public offering at $85 per share in August. The stock fell $4.81 to close at $192.79 Friday on the Nasdaq Stock Market. Shares traded as high as $201.60 on Nov. 3.

The rise has given Google, based in Mountain View, Calif., a market value of $53 billion and an estimated price-to-earnings ratio of about 76, more than triple that of Cisco Systems Inc., whose equipment underpins much of the Internet that the Google name now dominates. "

Blog Creation, Readership Rises in 2004

"Readership of online journals known as blogs grew significantly in 2004, driven by increased awareness of them during the presidential campaign and other major news events, according to a study released Sunday.
Twenty-seven percent of online adults in the United States said in November they read blogs, compared with 17 percent in a February survey by the Pew Internet and American Life Project. "

Mpelembe Network- Business, Health, Entertainment

The Associated Press/AP Online reports:

"Federal officials involved in a U.S.-funded study in Uganda endangered the lives of hundreds of patients testing an AIDS drug because of careless and negligent research practices, a government whistleblower said Tuesday.

Dr. Jonathan Fishbein said officials at the National Institutes of Health overlooked safety problems with the drug, which was being used to protect babies in Africa from HIV infection during birth.
The consequences of their failure 'have grave and sometimes fatal implications for the lives of real patients,' Fishbein said at a hearing before a panel of scientists from the independent Institute of Medicine. "

Abu Musab al-Zarqawi reportedly arrested in Iraq

www.chinadaily.com.cn reports:

"Abu Mus'ab al-Zarqawi, whom the US occupation authorities declared to be the 'target number one' in Iraq, has been arrested in the city of Baakuba, the Emirate newspaper al-Bayane reported on Tuesday referring to Kurdish sources.

Al-Zarqawi, leader of the terrorist group Al-Tawhid Wa'al-Jihad, was recently appointed the director of the Al-Qaeda organisation in Iraq.
The newspaper's correspondent in Baghdad points out that a report on the seizure of the terrorist, on whom the US put a bounty of US$10 million, was also reported by Iraqi Kurdistan radio, which at one time had been the first to announce the arrest of Saddam Hussein. "

Women lash out at hip hop's abuses

New York Daily News columnist Stanley Crouch describes Essence Magazine's campaign against the anti-woman, anti-girl messages and themes in rap songs:

"The most successful black women's magazine, Essence, is in the middle of a campaign that could have monumental cultural significance.
Essence is taking on the slut images and verbal abuse projected onto black women by hip hop lyrics and videos.

The magazine is the first powerful presence in the black media with the courage to examine the cultural pollution that is too often excused because of the wealth it brings to knuckleheads and amoral executives.
This anything-goes-if-sells attitude comes at a cost. The elevation of pimps and pimp attitudes creates a sadomasochistic relationship with female fans. They support a popular idiom that consistently showers them with contempt. We are in a crisis, and Essence knows it."

The Supernatural World Photo Gallery - Cosmic & Celestial Wonders

The auroras - borealis and australis

Wikipedia's "anti-elitism" is a feature, not a bug

A Wikipedia co-founder,Kuro5hin published an article, in which he slams Wikipedia for its 'anti-elitism' and calls on the organization to mend its ways in order to earn the confidence of academics, librarians and other learned types.

He explains:

"The root problem: anti-elitism, or lack of respect for expertise. There is a deeper problem--or I, at least, regard it as a problem...
Namely, as a community, Wikipedia lacks the habit or tradition of respect for expertise. As a community, far from being elitist (which would, in this context, mean excluding the unwashed masses), it is anti-elitist (which, in this context, means that expertise is not accorded any special respect, and snubs and disrespect of expertise is tolerated). This is one of my failures: a policy that I attempted to institute in Wikipedia's first year, but for which I did not muster adequate support, was the policy of respecting and deferring politely to experts."

I'm not familiar with the inner workings of Wikipedia, but the article seemed wrong to me. I just couldn't put my finger on it.
Now Clay Shirky -- himself an academic -- has written a wonderful and comprehensive rebuttal of the piece, explaining why complaints of "anti-elitism" are misplaced.

"Of course librarians, teachers, and academics don't like the Wikipedia. It works without privelege, which is inimical to the way those professions operate.
This is not some easily fixed cosmetic flaw, it is the Wikipedia's driving force. You can see the reactionary core of the academy playing out in the horror around Google digitizing books held at Harvard and the Library of Congress -- the NY Times published a number of letters by people insisting that real scholarship would still only be possible when done in real libraries. The physical book, the hushed tones, the monastic dedication, and (unspoken) the barriers to use, these are all essential characteristics of the academy today.

It's not that it doesn't matter what academics think of the Wikipedia -- it would obviously be better to have as many smart people using it as possible. The problem is that the only thing that would make the academics happy would be to shoehorn it into the kind of filter, then publish model that is broken, and would make the Wikipedia broken as well."

Videora - BitTorrent RSS Reader

The First Personal Video Downloading Program
Videora 1.0 is the first version of our new personal video downloading program. Utilizing BitTorrent peer to peer technology and Really Simple Syndication (RSS) feeds, Videora automatically and intelligently finds and downloads video you want to watch. With easy to use features like Wish Lists and Season Passes you will be able to watch your favorite video, no matter where you are in the world. All you need to get started is a broadband internet connection and Windows. Videora - BitTorrent RSS Reader:

Clever devils get the bird

The Times Online - Sunday Times reports: "IT REALLY is brains not brawn that women look for in a man. An exhaustive study of people from primary school to middle age has proved that clever men are much more likely to marry than those with lesser intelligence.
But for female high-flyers, the reverse is true. Their chances of walking up the aisle are considerably lower than those of classmates who left school at 16. "

Advice for Computer Science College Students

Joel Spolsky at Joel on Software - Advice for Computer Science College Students - writes:

-Learn how to write before graduating.
-Learn C before graduating.
-earn microeconomics before graduating.
-on't blow off non-CS classes just because they're boring.
-Take programming-intensive courses.
-Stop worrying about all the jobs going to India.
-No matter what you do, get a good summer internship.

Now for the explanations, unless you're gullible enough to do all that stuff just because I tell you to, in which case add: 8. Seek professional help for that self-esteem thing.

Most college students, fortunately, are brash enough never to bother asking their elders for advice, which, in the field of computer science, is a good thing, because their elders are apt to say goofy, antediluvian things like 'the demand for keypunch operators will exceed 100,000,000 by the year 2010' and 'lisp careers are really very hot right now.'

I, too, have no idea what I'm talking about when I give advice to college students. I'm so hopelessly out of date that I can't really figure out AIM and still use (horrors!) this quaint old thing called 'email' which was popular in the days when music came on flat round plates called 'CDs.' "

Video Blogs Breakout

Today, Wall Street Journal looks at the role blogs played in disseminating the footage on the Web, and to some degree via television.

Google's Billion-Dollar Idea

"Imagine you're the manager at a local Home Depot with too many lawn mowers in inventory. You're faced with cutting the price, finding another Home Depot with low inventory to take your overstock, or stretching your inventory days until the mowers sell. Regardless of the decision, it costs your store in either lower revenues or higher carrying costs.

Now imagine that solving your inventory problem requires little to no effort on your part. What if your store's computer could instantly notify Google's ad network of an overstock, triggering targeted ads to help quickly reduce your inventory? If successful, this technology would be worth billions to global retailers, who are constantly looking for ways to cut costs and shorten the cash conversion cycle.

Corporate America puts a tremendous emphasis on working capital efficiency, with inventory the main focus. Google believes it has the technical expertise to integrate millions of retail products into its vast databases, and promote them effectively around the world. Having seen what the wizards at this tech darling do with search and advertising, I wouldn't doubt them. Nor would I doubt that American companies would pay a pretty penny for this type of service."

ource:Fool.com:

China's African Safari

"Since the 1960s, China has been rather consistent in offering assistance to African countries in agriculture, heavy industries, and infrastructure development. In recent years, Sino-African trade has enjoyed particularly rapid growth. As Paul Mooney reports, many African leaders, regarding China as a reliable friend who has suffered the similar imperialist aggression by Western powers, welcome investment and development teams from Beijing. Furthermore, the Chinese have not used their economic power to place political pressure on Africa - the only exception being Taiwan. Skepticism, however, does exist. Some African scholars argue that China is simply relaying the European colonial torch of purchasing raw materials from the continent and selling value-added products back, creating an unfavorable trade balance for Africa. Whether China uses its increasing world power responsibly on issues like the Sudanese peace process is a pressing question: Will Beijing be willing to sacrifice its African partnerships to salvage its international image? -YaleGlobal"

Content Is King

During my early years in Internet development a number of buzzwords were floating around that do not get mentioned anymore. I remember Push Technology, and Content is King. Push Technology has been replaced by Really Simple Syndication (RSS) and Content is Kingis still holding fort as, well, content!

Want more traffic to your website? An easy way to distribute your news? To start all you need is content you want broadcast, an RSS news feed.
Old media is worried, they really should be worried.

The CEO of the Associated Press, in his big speech big speech to the Online News Association: 'Content will be more important than its container' in the next phase of Web development. 'That's a big shift for old media to come to grips with,' Curley added. 'Killer apps, such as search, RSS and video-capture software such as Tivo -- to name just a few -- have begun to unlock content from any vessel we try to put it in.'

The means are there to unlock content from any vessel we try to put it in. Those vessels are the big media brands themselves, including the flagships of the press fleet. Here's Admiral Curley telling them that news is becoming unhinged from 'brand,' and so we who make news content have to re-locate where we brand it, and think about adding our voice at every step.

What Curley was saying ran parallel to what ex-newspaper man Tim Porter said in 2003: 'The real lesson both the newsroom and the boardroom need to learn is that, in the age of the 24-hour scroll, the micro-fragmentation of electronic media, and the constant clamor for a news consumer's attention by everyone from the New York Times to yours truly, all that's left is the journalism.'"

Dan Gillmore's Last Dance for MercuryNews.com

Dan Gillmor's final column in the San Jose Mercury News runs today, marking the end of a ten-year career in reporting on tech journalism -- Dan's leaving to start a company that will enable "grassroots journalism," capitalizing on a trend that he's very parrionate about. The final column is a lovely bittersweet end to an amazing run.

And, as always, the people and institutions currently holding the clout don't cede it willingly. Governments are clamping down on us in all kinds of ways. Incumbent business powerhouses are trying to hold back the tide as well, not just to keep their positions but also to thwart new innovation that might threaten them.

These reactionary encroachments and retrenchments are not surprising. They always occur in times of swift change and challenge. In the end, they are almost always unsuccessful, because progress ultimately finds a way around barriers, and because people challenge the reactionaries.

But we need to keep the pressure up, as citizens and people who want the freedom to use these new tools and live in liberty. The stakes are high, and liberty takes work.

nursery rhymes cause violent behaviour?

"CHILDREN'S nursery rhymes contained 10 times more violence than British TV programmes shown before 9pm, after which more adult content could be shown, a research revealed recently. 'You would hear about 10 times more violence if you listened to an hour of nursery rhymes than if you watched television for an hour before 9pm on an average day,' said Dr Adam Fox of St Mary's Hospital in London.

He and his colleagues compared instances of violence in 25 popular nursery rhymes such as Jack And Jill and Simple Simon, and in television programmes on Britain's main channels over a twoweek period. Published in The Archives of Disease in Childhood, Fox admitted the approach was tonguein- cheek but said it showed that an increase in violence in children could not be blamed simply on watching too much television. "

Chinese Travel To Zambia

Chinese citizens are now free to follow in the footsteps of the eminent Chinese navigator Zheng, who made seven voyages to Africa between 1405 to 1433. Among the countries now open for group travel: Ethiopia, Kenya, Mauritius, Seychelles, Tanzania,Tunis, Zambia and Zimbabwe. Tourism insiders estimated that more than 50,000 Chinese people travel to Zambia annually, and the number is expected to double next year. The eight African nations cherish great expectation toward the world`s fastest growing outbound tourism market, said a tourism official. Read more at Travel Daily News

The Morbid Truth; People Die Worldwide Annually

In an effort to quell the media panic over human involvment in the death of us all , here is the painful tragedy of human existance . We die at some point . Here is the most ratio of deaths per 1,000 persons accross the planet earth annually.

May 2005 bring answers as to how we may enjoy each other longer , and in a sense of PEACE !

On this day in History - Jan. 02

2002 - Levy Mwanawasa took office as the third President of Zambia.

Beat The Bush

Times Online - Go natural reports:
ever fancied yourself as a park ranger? Then sign up for a bush-skills course in Zambia�s South Luangwa National Park. Accommodation is in luxury tents in the remote Chamilandu bush camp, and you�ll learn about tracking and identifying animals, approaching dangerous game, survival skills, bush cuisine and basic first aid. Game drives, walking safaris and all meals are included on the nine-day trip with Audley Travel (01869 276250, www.audleytravel.com).

Gotta Get My Stuff Done

This animationjust nails the procrastinator's mindset and is incredibly infectious. You'll see.

Food for Sex

Teenage rape victims fleeing war in the Democratic Republic of Congo are being sexually exploited by the United Nations peace-keeping troops sent to the stop their suffering.

The Independent has found that mothers as young as 13 - the victims of multiple rape by militiamen - can only secure enough food to survive in the sprawling refugee camp by routinely sleeping with UN peace-keepers.

Testimony from girls and aid workers in the Internally Displaced People (IDP) camp in Bunia, in the north-east corner of Congo, claims that every night teenage girls crawl through a wire fence to an adjoining UN compound to sell their bodies in exchange for food.

And don't even mention baboon behavior.

some err... facts ??

Female baboons have been known to engage in a primitive form of prostitution by stealing food during sex.

Power of knowledge
Clearly, the act of sex is not something that requires lessons. The consequences of sexual intercourse, however, do. If teens are uneducated about their bodies, are they going to be able to act more intelligently than the baboons?

The main goals in any evolutionary game are to eat, stay alive, and reproduce.

Consider the following insights, Thoughts on the Origins of Bipedality, about the relationships between male and female chimpanzees:
Two chimps, one male and one female, were fed food from a chute to see who ate first.

Over a 32 day test, the male was there first for 18 days while the female was there for 14. The results were that a 44% to 56% differential existed. Why was this so? One would expect that the male, who is larger in size, would be there 100% of the time.

Let us consider when the female ate first. When the female was at maximum genital swelling, when she was sexually receptive, she ate first on a regular basis. There are implications for this. If the period of sexual interest is, by implication, an extra-natural phase for women (for it makes them act dominant when they are really naturally subordinate or a male gives way because of the signals given off by the female), is there a lesson here? It does looks like female chimps spend about 14 days out of every 32 in toils to the male anyway where they got to the food first is almost a secondary part of the relationship during these 14 days. During estrus, the female advertises - call me sexually interested - for that period. Is there small consolation to getting food first during those 14 days? Unfortunately, we can not ask the chimps.

There is a second question to ask ourselves. Is the female simply hungrier during her period of sexual receptiveness and, therefore, wants the food more than the male? The female could gesture a sexual invitation and put the male in a place where he has to choose between food or sex. In this sense the male is exchanging sexual access for food, a form of prostitution. As we can see from other studies of chimpanzees may simply be enjoying life in the process of this exchange.

This is particularly the lesson of studies of Bonobo chimps who appear to trade sexual access for food. The Bonobos actually go beyond this to participate in sexual promiscuity as a means to develop bonds between members of a troop. They almost do away with the notion of dominance by doing this.

Where Is Your Relationship Headed?

Get a peek at your future together with a free free Romantic Compatibility Reading! Content provided by Astrology.com .

The Quiet War Over Open-Source

A lot of people have herad or probably used Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. We have discussed previously how we at Sossa can destribute all the valuable information garnered on this community into the mainstream. I think the Wiki is the answer.
 
I read an article by Dan Gillmor on Grassroots Journalism in which he explains:
 
For the first time in two decades I'm not on the payroll of a large media corporation. As of today I'm on the payroll of a one-person company, comprised of me, but media is still on my agenda.

As many of you know I'm going to work hard on a project to inspire, enable and create what many have been calling a new kind of journalism. In the new world that I and many others believe is coming, the grassroots will have a fundamental and crucial role in the process -- a change that I tried to outline in my book, We the Media, which appeared in the second half of 2004.

And I received an email from an editor from Wikipedia, the full content of which is outlined below:
 
Contributing news articles about African nations is often difficult due to there being less news sources (especially ones available online, and possible to read outside the country). I've gone ahead and written a sample article in that category -- hopefully those following links from your blog will see it and get inspired to post more. Ilya
Also, I came across a this blog http://yewo.blogspot.com in which the  blogger stated:
 
In my spare time, I've been contributing to Wikipedia's open-source travel guide. http://wikitravel.org/en/article/Zambia
 
I do not know about the rest of the people on Sossa community, this highlights a very exciting development in information transfer and sourcing. The Open Source Movement is gaining tremendous momentum, The quiet war over open-source.
 
The Zambian culture of proprietary approach should  be turned upside down. The bunker mentality that is so common amongst Zambians needs to be revised. Sharing or collaborating is the new and fashionable way to do things. What this means is that information is shared and distributed through open source channels that are not owned, restricted or choked by self-interest groups. Everyone has their finger on the pulse.
 
In the article  Collaborating For Success, I highlighted the importance of networking by stating:
Are you willing to collaborate? Perhaps the question is, can you afford not to?

The ways in which people in companies work together and the ways
companies think and do business are undergoing radical and unavoidable
changes. What was once a business approach based on guarded and proprietary information available only to a select few people within an organization has become a business approach based on the need to collaborate – both inside and outside the four walls of an enterprise.

Five years ago, just like Dan Gilmore, I decided to walk the talk. It has been a bumpy ride, nevertheless very exciting and enriching in experience. This year marks my fifth year of running my own business. This is a victory, not just for me, but for all the friends and people who have contributed through advice, criticism, contributions and otherwise.

The path is now paved for a major push to make a difference and make a lasting mark. Together we can make it.

 


2005 List of Banished Words

From wardrobe malfunctions to erectile dysfunction, it's been a tough year all around for the guardians of English - language purists from blue, red and battleground states who long to say 'You're fired!' to offensive words and phrases.

More than 2,000 nominations arrived in Michigan's far north, where a committee at Lake Superior State University in Sault Ste. Marie released its 2005 compilation of language irritants Friday.

2005 List of Banished Words:
BLUE STATES/RED STATES – Who’s who, anyway? “I remember when I was a kid and Georgia was purple,” says Peter Pietrangelo, Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. “A good map has more than two colors.”

FLIP FLOP/FLIP FLOPPER/FLIP FLOPPING – They belong at the beach, not in a political dialogue. “Republicans used it; Democrats used it back. Flip-flop back and forth it goes.” – Jeff Lewis, Ada, Mich.

BATTLEGROUND STATE – “During an election, every state is a battleground.” -- Austin White, West Hartford, Conn.
“Did it mean Bush and Kerry would go toe-to-toe?” – Evan Cornell, Ligonier, Penn.

“… AND I APPROVE THIS MESSAGE” – Received the most nominations of the words and phrases that came out of the presidential election. From political ads to auto parts…
“What started in political ads is spiraling out of control.” – Jim Blashill, Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.
“I’ve heard three local car commercials where the morons use that phrase!” – John Venezia, Colorado Springs, Colo. –“Would a political candidate approve a message they did not agree with?” – John Gorsline, Albuquerque, NM. “I’m Kristina and I approve this nomination.” – Kristina, Granite City, Ill.

POCKETS OF RESISTANCE – “Are we talking about someone not buying a round of drinks or people shooting at each other?” – Rob of Crawley, West Sussex, UK.
“Sounds like someone having trouble pulling their hands out of their pants pockets.” – Joe Hutley, Las Vegas, NV.

IMPROVISED EXPLOSIVE DEVICE – As opposed to what used to be referred to as a bomb or mine. “Is this anything like a bomb or is it more (or less) sinister?” – Harold Blackwood, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario.

ENEMY COMBATANT – “Makes no sense. Do we have friendly combatants? Neutral combatants? Or how about enemy bystanders? If they are your enemy, just say so.” – Bill Sellers, Hampton, Va.

CARBS – low carbs, high carbs, no carbs, carb-friendly… Meant ‘carburetor’ in a previous life. Needs to be purged from our system.
“You’re not fat because you eat bread; you’re fat because you eat too much!” – Emily Price, Norfolk, Va.
“What’s the point of low-carb beer? A person that concerned about ‘carbs’ shouldn’t even be drinking beer.” Roger Briskey, Orlando, Fla.

YOU’RE FIRED! – “…and the little hand movement, too!” – Jason Ranville, State College, Penn.
One nominator suggested that to say it would soon constitute a trademark infringement.

ÜBER – Nominated by many over the past few years, including Paul Freedman, Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. “Since when has this become a prefix for everything? That’s über-rific!” – Lolina, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario.
“…Everything that is big, amazing, unique is described as über.” – Sue, Colorado Springs, Co.

‘IZZLE’ – SPEAK – By far, the abomination that received the most nominations. Some sort of ‘Rap-Latin’ suffix, as in fa’shizzle, which means ‘for sure.’
“It was clever for about five minutes, or should I say five ‘minizzles?’” – R. Glover, Waterford, Mich.
Derek Hogan of Misssissauga, Ontario, said it was cool when a rapper came up with it a few years ago, but now it’s over-used and is even being used in television commercials.
“Like Superbowl excesses, it is too much of too much,” – Daniel Baisden, Savannah, Ga.

WARDROBE MALFUNCTION – “Janet Jackson’s bodice did not ‘malfunction,’” says John Wetterholt, Woodstock, Ill. “Justin Timberlake pulled too much and too far and I could hear the cogs turning in his publicist’s head trying to come up with that excuse!”
“It wasn’t the wardrobe’s fault!” – Jane Starr, Edmonton, Alberta
“Sure to be this generation’s Watergate, misapplied to all situations both imaginable and not so.” – David Edgar, Sydney, Australia

BLOG – and its variations, including blogger, blogged, blogging, blogosphere. Many who nominated it were unsure of the meaning. Sounds like something your mother would slap you for saying.
“Sounds like a Viking’s drink that’s better than grog, or a technique to kill a frog.” Teri Vaughn, Anaheim, Calif.
“Maybe it’s something that would be stuck in my toilet.” – Adrian Whittaker, Dundalk, Ontario. “I think the words ‘journal’ and ‘diary’ need to come back.” – T. J. Allen, Shreveport, La.

WEBINAR – for ‘seminar on the web.’ “It’s silly. Next we’ll have a Dutch ‘dunch’ … bring your own lunch for a digital lunch meeting.” – Karen Nolan, Charlotte, NC.

ZERO PERCENT APR FINANCING – sending a dollar to do a nickel’s worth of work. Michael Hehn, Ferrysburg, Mich. “They could just say ‘no interest.’

SAFE AND EFFECTIVE – “Try the new, clinically proven, safe and effective wonder drug you never knew you needed…Safe and effective should not be a selling point, it should be an FDA requirement!” CW Estes, Roanoke Texas.

ERECTILE DYSFUNCTION – Do we need to hear about it daily on TV and radio, even on racecars? Firmly rejected by the committee. “Too much information!” Carolyn Jamsa, Chillicothe, Ill.

JOURNEY – “Every single person on every reality show comments on how amazing the ‘journey’ was. Since when does dating a dozen nerds over a six-week span or conniving to win a million dollars over 15 other people qualify as a ‘journey’”? – Cindy, Victoria, British Columbia.

BODY WASH – “Also known as ‘soap.’” -- Ray Hill, Jackson, Mich.

SALE EVENT – “Year-end sales are now ‘sales events.’ Now most have shortened it to ‘event.’ Does the sale exist any longer? ‘Hey, nice new Chevy, Bob!’ ‘Thanks, it was on event at the dealer last week.’” – Allan Dregseth, Fargo, ND.

ALL NEW – referring to television shows… “Of course it’s all new. Why can’t they just say ‘new’? There are no partially-new episodes, no repeat of last Tuesday’s episode with a slightly reworked Act 2.” – Greg Ellis, Bellevue, Wash.

AND MORE! – The merchants way of giving you something “value added.” “Every merchant offers carpets, flooring and more. Can we envision baskets, caskets and more? Need I say less?” – Ray of Willard, Ohio.
“Goods and services no longer have limits! Everything marketed can be something else! ‘It’s a hamburger meal, but it’s much, much more…It’s a time machine, too!” – Mark of Kanata, Ontario.

DigitalGlobe | QuickBird Images of Tsunami

For those interested in getting an idea of what the tsunami did in the Indian Ocean, there is a web site with Before and After satellite imagesof different areas.

Today Is 2005

It's hard to think about the wishes and optimism typically associated with the New Year's holiday when the news from Southern Asia continues to worsen, darken and sink in.

Happy New Year