Expat in Israel.

Tuesday, February 03, 2004

Israeli peace activists get UK coverage shock

From yesterday’s (sorry too busy) Guardian: an interesting, fair, balanced, detailed article by the fabulous Linda Grant about MachsomWatch, the group of 150 or so Israeli women who check up on the checkpoints.



If only the BBC could do similar and start giving serious radio, TV and internet coverage of the various Israeli peace / moving forward initiatives and the people involved. Maybe the recent Hutton shock will at last get the beeb to look even more widely into the gap between its lofty aspirations and promoted ideals, and the reality of certain blind spots where the journalistic standard seems lower and often biased (see posts passim).



Re Linda Grant: I highly recommend her writing esp When I lived in Modern Times. Set in Tel Aviv just after WW2, it cleverly interweaves the modern Bauhaus architecture with the modern ideals of the new immigrants especially the women and how the reality did not turn out as they imagined and fought for.



Countries I have visisted

How depressing. So much to see.



Create your own visited country map

Monday, February 02, 2004

Sharon - No Jews in Gaza

Am I dreaming when I read this? Could Arik Sharon have said such a thing?

Spam

As my various email accounts fill up with just under one hundred spams and viruses, I found this statement by Message labs on the CAN-SPAM act.

Sunday, February 01, 2004

Stupid intelligence failures

Following on from Adrian’s post re the Time article, I’m even more interested in the intelligence failures as a result of over-reliance on technology:



Kay's tale is a reminder that there is no substitute for on-the-ground human intelligence—the very kind that U.S. spymasters have lacked in Iraq and elsewhere for years. The U.S. overestimated the current WMD program in Iraq, but it underestimated WMD operations in Iraq before the 1991 war and, more recently, in Libya, Iran and perhaps North Korea. The shortfall in humint is everyone's fault. Administrations going back to the mid-1970s have favoured more technical means of eavesdropping over sending spies into danger.




For years a bipartisan group of spooks and ex-spooks has advocated overhauling the US’s massive, $35 billion-a-year intelligence bureaucracy and putting it under a single, all-powerful director, a scheme that has met with ferocious bureaucratic blockades. Kay noted last week that "closed orders and secret societies, whether they be religious or governmental, are the groups that have the hardest time reforming themselves in the face of failure without outside input." But as U.S. intelligence failures pile up—notably relating to 9/11 and Iraq—it may be that the war on terrorism can't be won until the spy agencies find the courage to change themselves.




Let’s just say someone I know very well worked in various parts of the world for a leading US ‘defence contractor’ on let’s just say electronic covert intelligence projects for various US intelligence organisations. As an electronic engineer their job was to design, build and implement the let’s just say various electronic systems required. It was the spooks’ jobs to filter and make use of what was gathered.




Instead of doing so those in charge assumed electronic/computer/automated-led intelligence gathering could replace rather than enhance human knowledge. Sadly the overshadowing of professional expertise (both engineers and analysts) by the managers and bureaucrats resulted not only in intelligence failures per se. This attitude was also responsible for catastrophic failures or near-failures which have never yet been made public. A similar, public, example is the US space programme where engineers' concerns were ignored or suppressed by managers resulting in not one but two space shuttle disasters.




It also brings home the wider picture of something I’m professionally involved with: the immense challenges of achievieng change in long-established organisations which take on a life of their own and have an extreme amount of vested interest in not changing even if not changing decreases the effectiveness of the organisation...



TIME.com: So Much For the WMD

Just don't ever ask me to believe 'received wisdom' ever again
What CIA analysts imagined to be dispositive evidence of Saddam's nuclear ambitions turned out, in Kay's judgment, to be proof of plain, old-fashioned greed. For months the Administration claimed that finely machined aluminum tubes, imported with ever higher tolerances—that is, precision in their specifications—were part of a campaign to produce gas centrifuges for the production of weapons-grade nuclear fuel. But after examining the tubes and talking to the scientists who procured and used them, Kay became convinced that the increasing tolerances were to meet not technical requirements but finanCIAl ones.(sic) The ever changing tolerances meant new purchases, which in turn meant that the engineers who were working on Saddam's missile programs, for which the tubes were in fact destined, had continuing contracts from which to skim money. Kay concluded, "An analyst looks for rational explanations and usually finds them in the technical realm they're used to, but Iraq was almost like a parallel universe. The explanations were driven not by technical reasons but by the moral and personal depravity engendered by the regime. A rational person would look at it one way, and it would be completely wrong, because in this parallel universe there was a different set of rules."


In the meantime, US and British troops will have to stay there for some years to come. Just wonderful. It's four years exactly since I came to Israel. One thing I have learned is to take everything I hear from Israelis about the Middle East with a very large pinch of salt.

Days of dread

It's yet another Sunday, wet and the Kinneret is full. Hopefully skiing may become a possibility this week. Here at work , yet another developer leaves, this time for Canada with his family. Oh dear. Out of interest, I took the test on the Canada government web site and got one point less than he does. The difference is, of course, that he has a visa and I don't.


A tip for everyone today. Just don't read the news. It only gets worse than you imagined.

Saturday, January 31, 2004

Now even Bush admits WMD doubts

No surprise there then. Now just pick the pieces up and try to do better next time.

Friday, January 30, 2004

Mad Mel is not the messiah, he’s a very naughty boy

Or the protocols of the elders of Braveheart.



So Catholic fundamentalist group member and actor Mel Gibson decrees that the Jews were correction are after all responsible for the killing of his lord. He’s made a self-financed film about it, due to be released in the US shortly.



Not surprisingly organisations such as the American Jewish Committee have criticised the film as pandering to deep-rooted Jew-hatred and Jewish stereotypes. Even the catholic church finally repudiated the “Jews killed Jesus” line at Vatican II way back in 1965.



The film and the expected critical public debate will no doubt set back inter-faith relations internationally and give succour to Christian and Islamic religious fundamentalists and other assorted fascists who no doubt will in turn trot out the old libels such as “Jews control the media” to justify whatever happens. Sigh.



Where do you draw the line? Where does artistic freedom end and incitement to racial/religious/cultural hatred begin?


Thursday, January 29, 2004

Destination Mars - Reconstructing Spirit's hopeful road to recovery

trying to get Spirit to work on Mars is hard work.

Woodhead's Law: "The further you are from your server, the more likely
it is to crash." (particularly appropriate in this case)

It would appear to be a problem with the number of file handles.

More

10 dead and many wounded. I heard several reasons why it happened today and don't believe any them. Meanwhile, the prisoner, body exchange continues.

Bomb

A bomb has exploded in Jerusalem. No news of casualties. Damn.

Wednesday, January 28, 2004

Hutton - from the pdf

However, in the context of the broadcast in which the 'sexing up' allegation was reported and having regard to the other allegations reported in those broadcast, I consider that the allegation was unfounded as it would have understood by those who heard the broadcasts to mean that the dossier had been embellished with intelligence known or believed to be false or unreliable, which was not the case.

Translated it means 'The Beeb screwed up'.

Hutton

The desire of the PM to have a strong dossier may have subconsciously influenced John Scarlett and the Joint Intelligence Committee to produce a strongly worded document .

It's all in the mind.

Hutton

No 'dishonourable, duplicitous, underhand strategy' by the prime minister.
Is that clearly understood?

Hutton delivers Kelly verdict

And with one bound, our hero goes free.

Tuesday, January 27, 2004

BlogMadness 2003

I've submitted one of my 2002 posts for BlogMadness 2003. For those who choose, vote for any of the worthy posts on the linked page.

Jerrold Kessel

I wondered what happened to him. He used to be the local CNN reporter. As he has an Israeli wife, he's decided to stay and write for Ha'Aretz.

Monday, January 26, 2004

Towards a smoke-free London

A comprehensive survey of Londoners just out shows overwhelming demand for a ban on smoking in public places. Of the 34,446 respondents who live and/or work in London:


  • 86% are bothered by tobacco smoke in public places
  • 78% would like to see all indoor public places in London becoming completely smokefree.
  • 74% would support a law to make all workplaces (including eg restaurants) smokefree.


Full results here.



As a confirmed foodie and cafĂ© society person. regardless of whether I’m in one of London’s top restaurants, having a quick bite at a noodle bar or just a cup of coffee, I see no reason why I need to have my experience blighted by breathing smokers’ discarded fumes. It’s unpleasant, unhealthy, makes my eyes water, my throat sore and my clothes stink. Smoke respects no boundaries. Air conditioning is not a satisfactory answer. Smoking and non-smoking sections are unworkable.



I actively patronise and promote places I like which are smoke-free and likewise actively do down what would otherwise be a fab restaurant, bistro or cafe if they allow smoking. I love contacting newly opened or recommended foodie joints, making a booking then as an aside saying ‘oh I assume you are non-smoking’. If they disagree, I cancel the booking saying I’ll get back to them when they go smoke-free.



Don’t get me wrong. As an ex-smoker, I absolutely support a smoker’s human right and choice to smoke. Equally it is my human right and choice not to smoke which includes not inhaling smokers’ smoke and not working, living, eating and drinking in a smoky atmosphere.



The Labour government, strongly influenced by the tobacco lobby, continues to dither with time-wasting voluntary compliance initiatives which after 6 years have had little effect. Voluntary total smoking bans have never worked anywhere else in the world, even where there are a majority of non-smokers. This is why countries such as Australia, various US states such as California and cities such as New York have legislated against smoking.



It would be nice if Mayor Ken has the power to do a Bloomberg and ban smoking in greater London.


Dean should come clean on privacy

This is about a National ID card system, something the USA doesn't have in common with the UK but not Israel.


A card system with some form of biometric information would be a start but is not a sure fire way of being certain you are who you say you are. It reminds me of the defense establishment I worked at some years ago. The swipe cards used there were picked apart by people who has no problems in understanding the technology and were well supplied with equipment to decode and reproduce them.


When I worked in Hamburg for a German company, I was amazed to see how dongles were collectively dismantled, picked apart and copied. Here in Israel, .... no, I'll stop right now.

Bill Gates

Bill Gates may in future, be addressed as Bill Gates KBE (Knight Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire).


Just to make it clear, he will be awarded this purely honorary title by "Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and Her other Realms and Territories Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith." She is also Queen of Jamacia, Barbados, Bahamas, Grenada, Saint Lucia,Saint Vincent and the Grenadines ,Antigua and Barbuda , Belize,Saint Kitts and Nevis, Solomon Islands ,Tuvalu , Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

News in Israel

There is the usual crowd of headlines but the one that sticks in my mind most is this exchange of lots of prisoners in exchange for one live Israeli and some dead ones. Like a lot of people, the whole thing smells. Hezbollah , of course, well try and repeat their capture of Israelis for the next round and so it goes on. Time to say stop. No more swaps.

Sunday, January 25, 2004

Linux aids Axis of Evil, SCO claims

Darl McBride, a Microsoft sock puppet claims that Linux aids Axis of Evil.It is well known that North Korea, Libya, Iran and Sudan turn their noses up at pirated copies of Windows 2000, prefering to install Red Hat Linux for weapons research. What a load of bollocks. The original letter is here in PDF format. Darl McBride also claims that Linux is full of copyrighted SCO code although he's very shy in showing the world just what Unix code he owns. Bah, hambug.

Saturday, January 24, 2004

At a West Bank Checkpoint, a Soldier's Duty Is to His Father, Too

Read this and weep.

Fashion news

In an announcement today, Arik Sharon gave the first details of what will prove an exciting concept for this years fashion conscious peace makers. Yes, it's the world's first reversible fence. At the touch of a button, this amazing creation can be



  • A security fence
  • A peace fence
  • An apartheid wall
  • An expression of rejection for Islamafascists
  • An obstacle to peace
  • A border.
  • Can completely invert and make itself into hydroponic solar power greenhouses .
  • An attractive wall ornament with motifs by Martha Stewart.

This world's first design from Israeli scientists has the world buzzing and has overshadowed news that frozen water has been found on the South Pole of Mars. The offical opening will take place this summer.

Friday, January 23, 2004

Death wish or hold your Tonge

Liberal Democrat MP Jenny Tonge is at it again. She is not content to be generally unhelpful to the Israel-Palestine peace process by painting one-dimensional pictures on her Christian Aid-sponsored missions and referring to Israelis as Nazis. Now she fancies herself as a suicide bomber. I heard someone mutter that perhaps she could figure out a way to get her wish without killing anyone else…To use her spurious argument: of course no one could possibly agree with such sentiments but one could fully understand the frustration of the person making them.



Fortunately her constituents don’t need to go to the trouble to vote her out as she is stepping down at the next election. It would be nice if the leader of the party in the meantime at least sacks her from her front bench position as spokesperson for children.


Special Report

In a surprise announcement today, researchers from the Technion in Haifa announced a potential solution to the controversial Security Fence currently under construction in Israel.



In front of a crowd of the press and TV, a new personal Security Fence was displayed. This lightweight hi-tech portable device will be issued to all Palestinians and will enable them to regain freedom of movement whilst protecting the Israeli public from terror attacks.



Hailed as a step forward in the peace process, the device can be manufactured in bulk for less than $100 thus reducing the cost of the fence estimated to be around $1.5 billion when its 700 kilometer length is complete.


Thursday, January 22, 2004

Innocent until proved guilty

Whilst the latest furore over who bribed who and with what continues, I shall not comments until charges are filed and the verdict known. If any.

Make a better bra

No pictures here. Just a story of a 25 year old Glaswegian women who had an idea for a better bra and made it happen. It was good enough for Julia Roberts in Erin Brockovich. It's even good enough for Camilla Parker Bowles.


Regretfully I will be unable to fully test this fine British product and report back. Anyone else out there?

Wednesday, January 21, 2004

Yanks Have No Sense Of Humour Or Irony Especially Regarding Bomb Threats At Airports Shock

Speaking of comedians, the award for the stupidest Brit of the month must go to Samantha Marson. At Miami airport she said not once, not twice but three times that she had not one, not two but three bombs in her luggage. The state of Florida will see her in court on 6 Feb.

And back down it goes

The outpost at Tapuah is back down again having being partially rebuilt after being knocked down yesterday. They must be on piece work.

Very funny

Re my request for ‘more like this please’ examples of Arabs/Muslims and Jews working together, here’s another one. Americans Rabbi Bob Alper and Egyptian-born Ahmed Ahmed have been working together for two years as the comedy double act “One Arab. One Jew. One Stage. Two Very Funny Guys”. Here’s an interview. They’re performing in London this weekend.



Down and up again

So the porr old IDF knocks it down and the Kahanists put it back up again. I wish the builders next door would work as quickly.

Tuesday, January 20, 2004

An extreme inspiration

A team of Israeli and Palestinian peace campaigners get cold.

I was wrong

The West Tapuah synagogue dedicated to Rabbi Meir Kahane looks like it is coming down.

Energy Towers

This is an interesting idea. Build a one kilometer tower in the desert. Make it about 400 metres across. Pump seawater at the top to cool hot dry air. The air becomes cooler and heavier and sinks downwards. At the bottom of the tower the air will be moving at 20m/sec and could be used to drive turbines.


More details on this idea can be found
here.

Monday, January 19, 2004

Invasion of the body snatchers 21st century director’s cut

UK doctors who dissected dead bodies without consent of the person or their next of kin are being sued by distraught relatives. This continues a long history of doctors, surgeons and medical students engaging in body snatching and grave robbing in England, Scotland, Canada, US and no doubt elsewhere.

At last Negev

A new town has been started in the Negev. This is welcome news even though it had to be done in secret to avoid bothering the Bedu.

Yigal Amir

Yigal Amir, who assassinated prime minister Yitzhak Rabin in 1995, wants to get married. Amir's bride-to-be, Larisa Trimbobler, is an ultra-Orthodox new immigrant from the former Soviet Union, a doctor of philosophy and the mother of four children. She got divorced just to marry him.


Update:


Some Knesset twit thinks this is a suitable basis for legislation. The Rabbis have been there before.


Mofaz Orders Synagogue Destroyed

I am stunned sometimes by what goes on this country. The practise of building things first and asking for permission later is fairly common. Near Tivon, a Bedouin family that had a restaurant built a conservatory for Friday overflows. It proved very popular except with the local authorities who eventually came along with a JCB and demolished it.


Now our Defence Minister wants to knock down a synagogue in Tapuah West. I'll bet one Iraqi dinar against one dollar he doesn't manage it.


The house we're trying to buy has an illegal extension built on to it. We're insisting on it being sorted out before we buy it and various people involved in the sale, including lawyers say ' Don't worry, everyone does it. It'll be OK'. Sure.


Sunday, January 18, 2004

New Uk ambassador

Zvi Hefetz makes it as ambassador to the Court of St James. Amuse yourself with this Wiki entry.

Saturday, January 17, 2004

Diplomats behaving...

Ambassador Zvi Mazel destroyed an artwork depicting a Palestinian suicide bomber in a Stockholm museum on Friday. Good for him. Perhaps he could have been more creative and pissed in it?

Friday, January 16, 2004

Start-up number three here we come

Oh the joys of being self-employed again (not). Instead of having kesef credited to one's account on the same day each month, it's back to chasing invoice payments in a diplomatic but result-achieving manner...

Post exhibitionism

An article about Israeli blogs here. What? No Imshin? No Tal.G or Ribbity frog. Only Hebrew ones get a mention more's the pity.

Women in Iraq

Zeyad from healing Iraq is rather annoyed about the change in marriage laws in Iraq from secular to being controlled by the clerics. Riverbend is even more annoyed and decries the return of 'temporary marriages'. That's prostitution to you and me.

Boyfriends

'She Who must be Listened To' is rather hot and bothered about eldest daughter's new boyfriend, the latest in a long line. He seems a nice boy but my lefty liberal partner is all sniffy about him being a Bedouin. I relentlessly point out that the prinicple of equality should be ruthlessly applied but alas, it is of no comfort at all.

Thursday, January 15, 2004

What have the Arabs ever done for us?

Derek Brown offers some advise to Robert Kilroy-Silk who said.

We owe Arabs nothing," he wrote. "Apart from oil, which was discovered, is produced and is paid for by the west, what do they contribute?" Arabs, according to the sage of the sob story, are "suicide bombers, limb amputators, women repressors".


Derek gives us this view of daytime televison.

Cheap, mindless, voyeuristic, shallow, nasty, lobotomised daytime telly


Wednesday, January 14, 2004

Speaking of hydrogen and oxygen

Following on from Adrian’s elemental post yesterday….perhaps Saddam Hussein actually did plan to extract the H2 from the H2O to send to his pal London Mayor Ken “George Bush is the greatest threat to life on this planet that we've most probably ever seen” Livingstone…



Today the first hydrogen-powered fuel-cell-driven “zero-emission” buses took to the London streets for a two-year trial. In goes the hydrogen, out comes just water vapour.

It’s about time too. Fuel cell technology is being developed not just for buses but all manner of powered vehicles, engines and other devices. And of course it’s not just about pollution reduction: global oil reserves are predicted to be depleted as early as mid-century. So does that mean the west will then have no use whatsoever for the oil kingdoms of Saudi Arabia et al?


Another suicide bomber

Yet more deaths and injuries at the Gaza crossing this time.

Facing a biometric future

The last workplace was all about biometrics. I was struck by this article by the Beeb that talks about including biometric information being included on passports. According to this article iris recognition is superior to all. Bah humbug. Voice is easier. Those iris scanners cost around $250 for a PC version, The industrial strength one for airports will set you back around $30,000. A microphone good enough for voice authentication costs around 1$ wholesale. Pity I couldn't stay with that company. They have a future.


The reason for all this interest in biometrics is that the USA has mandated that all passports issued after October this year for countries in the visa waiver program shall have biometric information inserted into the passport. This is a problem. The UK will not be ready until some time next year after trials have been carried out. The other difficulty is enrollment. If you want to be sure that the person applying is who they say they are, then one basic step is that there has to be a face-to-face meeting at the point of enrollment. The State department is less than happy about having to personally interview some 4.5 million Europeans that want to visit the USA each year and need a new passport. It's bad enough here in Israel where every Israeli wanting to travel to the USA must have an interview.


There is a department disagreement here as well. The Justice department has long experience with fingerprints and prefers those. The State department is hooked on photographs of the face. It may be that there will be both. Iris recognition won't make it because 80% of all crossings into and out of the USA happen on land and nobody has developed a portable iris scanner.


Here's an article on how to spoof various biometric devices. They didn't try to break our voice system though and we were at Cebit that year.


Given the problems, the USA is about to embark on a twenty year mistake. I have little confidence in large scale database projects run by Governments.

Tuesday, January 13, 2004

I can't resist it

US Soldiers Uncover Iraqi Nuclear Threat
by L.S. Clossey



BASRA, IRAQ (LSC)--Gen. 'Buck' Turgidson announced Friday the discovery of
vast hydrogen reserves concealed in the Persian gulf. Other alarming
evidence suggested the Hussein regime had been planning on using the
hydrogen to construct hydrogen bombs, or to crash a hydrogen-filled
dirigible into a soft target.



Every two hydrogen atoms had been carefully attached, possibly by Iraqi
scientists, to an oxygen atom. Indistinguishable from water, the
resulting compound had been stored in the Persian Gulf, possibly for
future use in hydrogen bombs. The total amount of hydrogen concealed is
still unknown, although the hydrogen/oxygen compound has been founded
throughout the Gulf, which covers a surface area of 92,500 square miles
(239,600 square km).



"There's enough hydrogen reserves here to build one hydrogen bomb for
every church-going man, woman, and child in America," said Gen. Turgidson.



Specially trained dogs sniffed out textbooks at a partially bombed-out
former high school in Basra. Some books included technical information
about the chemistry of this compound. Others, disguised as history
textbooks, included pictures of the Hindenburg explosion at Lakehurst
Naval Air Station, New Jersey, May 6, 1937. The 804-foot- (245-metre-)
long airship had been inflated by hydrogen.



A senior Bush administration official suggested that the President had
long suspected that the Hindenburg airship had been sabotaged by Saddam
Hussein.



The White House expressed surprise at the sudden discovery, which had been
scheduled for November 1.


Monday, January 12, 2004

Kilroy woz ’ere

We must separate Islamophobia, racism and political correctness from the real danger of movements which brainwash people into suicidal terrorism. Will Hutton puts it very well.



As well as condemning racism, we must also condemn radical Islam for providing succour to terrorists.



Radical Islam represents the biggest challenge to Western civilisation since the demise of fascism and communism. Rooted in a pre-Enlightenment worldview in which religious text has the force of law and the Islamic community is innately superior to all others, the belief that there is redemption for martyrs in the afterlife fuels extraordinary acts of terrorism.



Combine this with the deeply held belief that Islamic religion, culture and society has been profoundly humiliated, and you have the cocktail that one day may lead some young men and women to immolate themselves on a BA flight or on the Tube. How to understand this threat and how to respond has become the most important issue of our age.



The leaders of the radical terrorist groups, and the mosques that support them, are open in what they are doing: they are launching a war of civilisations they believe they will win.



I share the view that Islam can be pluralistic, has the capacity to generate the secular societies we have in the West - already only a minority of European Muslims regularly attend mosques - and that the Western world has a major responsibility for what has happened. If we abandon dialogue and interaction we are lost. But I refuse to make my starting point that there is at present no potential clash of civilisations and that Islam can be wholly excused responsibility for the ideology of the terrorists. Muslim fundamentalists do believe Islam is a superior moral universe to the West - and it is that that permits terrorists to disregard of the sanctity of innocent human life and the indiscriminate way lives can be sacrificed. They are, after all, infidel.



We cannot and should not respond with an unrigorous, soft multiculturalism that pleads such values are equivalent to our own and legitimate within their own cultural context. Nor should we fall into the trap of stereotyping Islam as universally menacing.


Google Search: Demo

It would seem that last night's demo got publicity around the world. Just wonderful. Now the whole planet thinks we're all a bunch of right wing loony fanatics bent on taking over the entire West Bank and Gaza.

Last night's demo

Around 120,000 turned up which makes me jealous. The left can't get a fraction of that.

Sunday, January 11, 2004

A quote I never thought to see

"The Likud is the extreme left, Labor is the insane left, and Meretz have crossed the lines, hurling rocks at soldiers," Ben-Eliyahu said. See here for all the gory details.

Why Greater Israel vision has perished

Alex Brummer, the City Editor of the Daily Mail and member of the Board of Deputies of British Jews has an intersting article in the Guardian.
What is clear is that, with or without Palestinian agreement, Israel now sees a two-state solution as the only option. Without it, Israel's struggle to protect its democracy and human values and its status as a place of refuge for the dispossessed Jews of the world will be lost

Weather

It's cold and wet up here in the North of Israel. If you wish to view the local beach, I can recommend IsraCam. Click on beach cams, then Haifa back door. You can also see the snow on Mount Hermon and the working chairlifts where I hope to be this week.


Who was it that said 'Jerusalem prays, Tel Aviv plays and Haifa works'?


IsraellyCool has a caption competition. Try your hand. This blog will be USA election free this year as there is already a surfeit.

Saturday, January 10, 2004

Sperm , eggs and organic food

I would like to reinforce the post my blog partner made yesterday. This article of the effects of pesticides makes grim reading.

Human fertility has been decreasing since the birth of intensive agriculture over 50 years ago. Average sperm counts among healthy American men dropped 58 percent between 1938 and 1988. In Europe, sperm counts dropped by 3.1 percent each year between 1971 and 1990. Studies from Belgium, France and Scotland have also shown losses in sperm quality, motility, development and the number of normally shaped sperm.


If that wasn't bad enough, try this.
The reason for falling sperm quality and quantity is thought to be a cocktail of dietary hormones and pesticides , some of which can disturb the body's own hormones. Some pesticides have been linked to masculinisation of female animals, feminization of male animals, eggs found in the testes of roach in UK rivers, low egg viability, enlarged ovaries and reduced penis size in Florida alligators and female-female pairing in birds.

Eggs growing in my testes? No thanks.

Friday, January 09, 2004

Changing currents

More reasons to only eat organic farmed salmon. Organically reared salmon from Scotland and Ireland are kept humanely in much better conditions. Growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides, antibiotics, colourings and other persistent noxious chemicals are not used. Aside from that, organic farmed salmon tastes much better and closer to wild salmon!

For Imshin

Imshin likes to know about demos in Tel Aviv as it does get in the way of the locals. This one ios on Sunday and Road closures around Rabin Square start at 3.p.m It's not Peace Now this time but the Yesha lot. I saw a poster up here in the far and distant North of Israel. Expect a bigger turn out than my side.

Hamas

This is very strange. Hamas offering a kind of peace. Not perfect by any means but a step forward. Perhaps there is hope after all.

Thursday, January 08, 2004

One state - two states

This is a dangerous move by Qureia, the Palestinian PM. If Sharon goes for a unilateral move, then the Palestinians will press for a unitary state. In other words, the end of Israel.

Galic and Israel

Another breakthrough. This time, using garlic to kill tumours in mice. She Who Must be Moved loved this one. We shall be having the stuff coming out of our ears now. Please note that garlic kills microbes as well as healthy cells. Luckily it doesn't last long in the body.

Wednesday, January 07, 2004

Iraq's Arsenal of Ambitions

For those still interested, here's a Washington Post article on Iraq's WMDs or, to be more precise, the lack of them.


I have a long standing interest in military matters having designed so much over the years for various armed forces. I was very interested to read that Iraqi scientists were playing around with rail guns. What did they have in mind I wonder. The only other project I know of in the States is some years away from being useful.

IRAQ NOW ...... A Soldier Looks Right Back at the Media.

A soldiers blog from Iraq is here. Well written.

Tuesday, January 06, 2004

BlogMadness 2003

Got a good post from 2003? Then enter it here at BlogMadness 2003 and give it your best shot.

Monday, January 05, 2004

Ehhhhhmmmm. Yuuhh knohhh zis eeeezzz, ehhhhhhhhh, toowhooo.

Introducing the proposed Israeli ambassador to the Court of St James. A Russian with a sexed-up CV and no diplomatic or public advocacy experience is bad enough. The last thing we need in London is yet another high-profile Israeli who cannot speak English properly. Now more than ever we need someone who can put the case coherently, forcefully and deliver those key soundbites. Assuming the appointment of Zvi Hefetz will now not go ahead, surely there must be an Israeli of sufficiently high calibre and experience for this crucial role. More here.

likud geting restless

Nothing to worry about here. It's just the natives getting restless and is unlikely to come to anything.

The convention will discuss proposed changes to the party constitution, many of them intended to increase the power of central committee members. Among the resolutions, the activists are demanding the right to veto any government decision. They are demanding that an MK or a minister who votes against a Central Committee decision be booted out of the party and that the committee presidency go to an "ordinary member" with the right to set aside the agenda set by the party chairman.


Seen all this before in other countries. A number of the committee are unhappy at the goodies that were handed out after the election. In particular, Bibi has failed to get four committee members appointed to the finance ministry and it's various quangos.

Home grown nasties

The local Kahanists crawled out from under their rocks again yesterday. Excuse me while I go and have a shower. I feel dirty just reading this report.

Can-Spam Act doesn't

As expected, the US Can Spam Act has done little to stop the enormous amounts of crud landing in peoples email in boxes. Hotmail has improved dramatically though due to new filtering techniques.

Sunday, January 04, 2004

Another day in Israel..

Another Sunday climbs up over the horizon and comes into view. The normal news, plane crashes, strike talks, more settlements to come and go, IDF restrictions lifted again, shootings in Nablus.


On the way back from visiting relatives yesterday, 'She Who Must be Listened to' argued with a cousin about Israel, the West bank and things in general. I got quite weary with the debate at one point. I concluded that the current Government position is to do as little as possible to solve the problem while minimising Israeli casualties. This is a copy of the approach taken by Yitzak Shamir some years ago. I doubt that there will be any change until around one year's time when George Bush becomes the 44th President of the USA.


Update:


Peter has pointed out that Presidents are numbered by the occupant, not the election. So President Bush will always be the 43rd. Sorry about that. Mea Culpa. The election to come will be the 54th.