Some things I liked

I’ve noticed that in these links I have a tendency to focus on US-based politics news more often than not. The last few weeks this could be forgiven as Australian politics was just getting up and going again. Parliament was sitting again, we had all the ABC shows we know and love back, including the PM on Q&A with, from what I could tell, were a bunch of Young Liberal and Young Labor kids where the questions veered from Dorothy Dixers, to preppy school kid “why can’t I get what I want?” type questions. And apart from that not much happened. I think these two stories are ripening but I don’t think we will see the full fruition of them for a little while yet.

Oh and we did see the illustrious denier-in-chief Lord Monckton debate climate scientist Tim Lambert with supervision by Alan Jones (gee, that sounds fair). Lambert was calm, well reasoned and performed well. It’s just a pity the crowd was full of one world government conspiracy theory nuts.

Climategate Revisited

One of the biggest non-controversy controversies last year was Climategate. This article brings us up to date on exactly how little it actually means and also how those who seek to dismiss climate change as not being influenced by man use ignorance to their advantage in making this case.

The common factor I tend to notice in climate change deniers is that they exhibit the same closed-mindedness they say so-called “warmists” have when presented with evidence that contradicts their own proofs. Despite Monckton’s entire argument being ripped to shreds by so many many different scientists and journalists, he’s still seen by these people as the second coming. And the coverage these people get is way over the top, and yet they still scream they have not been given the time to air their views. The current Doctor Media Watch host Jonathan Holmes covered it best here.

Fruit and Loins

It really disturbs me how much the Australian governments (state and Federal) listen to the Australian Christian Lobby. The ACL’s Jim Wallace was consulted by Stephen Conroy shortly before the release of the findings on the internet filter plan but Conroy also refused to meet with opposing groups. I’m not entirely sure how Wallace’s group can claim to represent anything other than an extreme right-wing fringe of the Christian faith and still claim to represent all Christians.

The Queensland Government addressed the issue of surrogacy for same-sex couples this week, so it was only natural that Wallace have a word. According to the World of Wallace, straight parent environments are the only safe, and stable environment for children to be raised. Pity about all that anecdotal evidence otherwise.

Aco*kalypse Now: Fear of the Gay Penis

The theory that gay men would join the army just on the off-chance of seeing a bit of straight guy penis is absolutely absurd, and borders on a gay panic defense. Here’s a hint guys: chances are, if you’re straight, gay guys don’t find you attractive. And, as the video points out, clearly nothing says “lets have gay sex” like getting shot at in Afghanistan.

CBS: Support for Gays in the Military Depends on the Question

A poll out this week from CBS shows that more people in the US are in favour of “gay men and lesbians” serving in the military than “homosexuals” serving in the military. It’s an interesting case in semantics, though I wish it had been more broad to encompass other reclaimed words like the all-encompassing “queer” or the F word. The pure clinical nature of “homosexual” draws back on 50s style fear campaigns, while gay and lesbian is so desensitised.

Fox News Tea Party Survey Fail

I’m not sure this is totally a fail if they put this as an option in the first place but it’s amusing that the result is even higher after all the attention. Especially considering that they managed to get a slight jab at them removed from a Captain America comic.

Some things I liked – iPad-free edition

The less said about Apple’s new thingy the better. It’s not that I’m dying for one or that I wish to put it in a blender, as that guy did that one time with the iPhone, there has just been a lot of media saturation for a product that really isn’t that exciting. As a friend put it, I’d be excited if it had a LCARS OS.

Charlie Brooker – How to Report the News

The boring intros with establishing shot, the awkward cutaways to hide editing flaws, voxpopping and the cliche ending; it’s my Video Journalism class all over again! I’d like to say I’m kidding but this is exactly how they taught us to make news for TV. Don’t go breaking that mould.

Scientists, the IPCC wants you

I find the rabble-rousing on News Limited blogs, in particular Herald Sun’s resident “expert” on the environment, Andrew Bolt’s to be particularly infuriating. My resolution this year is to only visit the site once a week, lest I have a stroke. Thankfully the boys at Pure Poison keep me up to date most of the time. I’ve only ever heard of a couple of people who have felt the wrath of angered Bolt readers (Former Media Watch host David Marr, who received homophobic threats after being “rude” to Bolt on Insiders, and UOW lecturer Jason Wilson, who has a very punchable face, apparently after this piece on Bolt at New Matilda) but reading how Bolt readers treat scientists who Bolt has deemed to be part of the Great Climate Change conspiracy is another thing entirely.

As the man himself so often puts it – What is it with the [Right] and violence?

Bunch of Phonies Mourn J.D. Salinger

I seriously <3 The Onion. And I think even Holden would be pleased with their obit effort. Many have tried to capture Holden’s voice before, but this one is the best I’ve seen in a while and it makes me wonder if The Onion had the obit prepared for a while, in the same morbid fashion TV news programs prepare showreels in advance in case people die (The Richard Wilkins/Jeff Goldblum incident springs to mind).

Research Shows Two Gay Parents Better Than A Single Straight One [well duh]

I’m of two minds about this. There is nothing wrong with single parents, and I don’t think equality should be gained in any way by pointing out that one type of family is better than another (that’s kinda what we should be fighting against, right?) but it is nice to have research to back what people have been saying quite a while: kids adapt to their environment and two gay parents? Not such a bad one.

Multiplexity

Tony Martin is by far my favourite comedian, and I’ve followed his work ever since I first snuck a few laughs at the Bargearse VHS at a friend’s place in Year 7. His column on films and cinema etiquette is Tony in his film geek element.

“‘Still, rather that than fucking Avatar,’ he added, pronouncing the ‘Ava’ to rhyme with ‘raver’, momentarily creating, in my mind, an image of Sam Worthington spending an entire movie operating a virtual Ava Gardner.”