Tweets is about all I’m up for today. There are a lot of things going wrong in my life at the moment (again), though to be fair, there are probably tens of millions around the world who would swap their life for mine in an instant. Just look what President Assad is doing to his own people in Ghouta at the moment with the help of Russia’s Putin.
And I’m not one of the thousands of women and girls kidnapped by Boko Haram in northern Nigeria. The Musab al-Barnawi faction has apparently confirmed that they have the 110 girls most recently kidnapped from Dapchi. The mother of the leader of that group says her son is a “… very nice boy. He will not harm them, he will not touch them, and he will not kill them.” She also says they will give the girls back. “They will definitely give us the girls. All I am begging Nigerians is to calm down, be prayerful, everything will be over in God grace.”
If you believe that you’ll believe anything.
We’re still waiting for literally thousands of other girls and women to be returned, including over one hundred of the Chibok girls. Remember the #BringBackOurGirls campaign? That was 2014. Time flies when the media attention isn’t on the situation.
The sort of problems I mostly have are First World Problems, such as two of my sports teams failing to win on the weekend. The Black Caps (NZ men’s cricket team) lost to England, and the NZ Breakers (men’s basketball) lost to Melbourne United in the first game of the semi-finals series. Thank goodness for the Crusaders (men’s rugby) who had a good win over the Stormers (South Africa). And NZ’s Tom Walsh is still world champion in the shot put and got a new championship record in the process.
In young countries like New Zealand and Australia, victories in sports are significant. The mood of the whole country can change if the wrong team loses. For example, if the All Blacks (NZ world champion rugby team) has a big loss close to an election, the incumbent government worries. It makes swing voters more likely to vote for an opposition party, and New Zealand has a lot of uncommitted voters.
On with the tweets. I’ve been mucking around with getting these tweets for several days, so some may be old or out-of-date by now. Sorry about that.
Political Tweets
This is a really good point! I’m going to think of something else to call what Russia did to the US and others, and is continuing to do. Probably cyber warfare, but I’m open to other suggestions.
(Via Ann German.)
I’ve been guilty of this myself, but I think we would all be better served if we stopped calling what Russia did “meddling.” When my Mom calls to tell me what color tie to wear on TV, she’s meddling. What the Russians did was conduct asymmetric warfare on our electoral process.
— Josh Campbell (@joshscampbell) February 27, 2018
I can’t get over how disgusting this is. I actually think it’s even worse than all the shennanigans over fake White House meetings and the Nunes memo that attempts to paint Democrats and the FBI as doing something wrong when they didn’t. Although that’s wrong, we’ve come to expect that kind of extreme partisan political behaviour from too many Republicans. But with this situation, Nunes is in charge of the Senate Intelligence committee in the most powerful country in the world. They’re supposed to provide a watch dog role, and he can’t even manage the basics of keeping private text messages private. WTF is wrong with these people?
(Via Ann German.)
NEWS: The bipartisan leaders of the Senate Intelligence Committee have privately concluded that the HPSCI majority leaked Mark Warner’s private text messages to Fox News. https://t.co/pn9uLfGtZN
— Nicholas Fandos (@npfandos) March 1, 2018
News from inside the White House.
(Via Ann German.)
After a crazy 24 hours, sources close to Trump tell Axios that he’s in a bad place — mad as hell about the internal chaos and the sense that things are unraveling. https://t.co/tm70Fp0iVR
— Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1) March 1, 2018
Electoral Reform Tweets
I couldn’t agree more!
(Via Ann German.)
The Electoral College is pretty much Affirmative Action for Republican presidents
— CancerManReborn ???? (@CancerManReborn) February 28, 2018
Economics Tweets
This short video from Robert Reich is from Facebook. If you’ve ever wondered what the big deal is about Ayn Rand, Reich explains it here. He speaks of Rand in the US context, but of course many of us have politicians for whom unbridled capitalism and complete selfishness are their values.
Pre-Mueller Time Tweets
Well, well, well. (Three holes in the ground.)
(Via Ann German.)
Execs from Apollo, the private equity firm, and Citigroup both had W.H. meetings with Jared Kushner.
Following the meetings, Apollo lent $184 million to Kushner’s family real estate firm. Citigroup put up $325 million, NYT reports.https://t.co/t4swvtnR7D
— Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1) March 1, 2018
It’s all catching up with him. I’ve heard people who know him say he’s brilliant, and maybe he is. He also seems to think that the rules don’t apply to him – a common problem with the highly intelligent.
(Via Ann German.)
????KUSH????
Filling out an SF-86 is tough, but “it’s even harder when you’re a corrupt, entitled snake who repeatedly lies about your finances to federal investigators & serves as a living, breathing poster child for privileged venality.”????~@TheRickWilsonhttps://t.co/Ugd6CEBZgz
— Dr. Dena Grayson (@DrDenaGrayson) February 28, 2018
Gun Safety Tweets
Un-effing-believable! Perhaps this is another reason why Trump refuses to institute the sanctions against Russia that have bi-partisan support?
(Via Ann German.)
If you think the NRA-Russia connection is fanciful, here’s an NRA statement from 2014 opposing Obama’s sanctions on Russia, because it limits Russia’s ability to export guns to the USA. https://t.co/kY79Y8XrWw
— Ronald Klain (@RonaldKlain) February 28, 2018
I naturally read the article in the tweet above before I re-tweeted it. Here’s what happened.
I clicked to read the article. A box popped up complaining “gun control activists [are] doing what they do best: exploiting tragedy to advance their political agenda.” etc and asking for a donation to be used to target legislators. Do the words Pot, Kettle, and Black ring a bell? pic.twitter.com/19xPrM8ifD
— Heather’s Homilies (@HeatherHastie) March 3, 2018
Keep reading until you find it!
Vowel placement is everything. pic.twitter.com/BmlxGOCzZU
— You Had One Job (@_youhadonejob1) March 3, 2018
Excellent! This man is a plague on his country.
(Via Ann German.)
NEW: Advertisers flee InfoWars founder Alex Jones’ YouTube channel amid outcry over his endorsement of conspiracy theories about Parkland shooting survivors https://t.co/rJkmXvW7rs
— Caroline O. (@RVAwonk) March 3, 2018
Religion Tweets
This speaks for itself:
Egyptian TV Host Kicks Atheist Out of Studio, Recommending Psychiatric Treatment pic.twitter.com/tXFyj9GF85
— MEMRI (@MEMRIReports) March 2, 2018
It’s almost a century since ‘The Protocols of the Elders of Zion’ was proven to be a fake but the Egyptian professor of Israeli Studies is still talking as if it’s real. He also “blames” Jews for the spread of atheism. https://t.co/BkeQty1twK
— Heather’s Homilies (@HeatherHastie) March 2, 2018
This is the video linked to in my tweet above:
Egyptian Professor of Israeli Studies Abd Al-Razzaq Suleiman: If Attacked, Israelis Threaten to Implement The Protocols of the Elders of Zion on the Gentiles https://t.co/dKXc4NJ0J0
— MEMRI (@MEMRIReports) February 28, 2018
Healthcare Tweets
The flu is killing a lot of people in the northern hemisphere this season and the flu vaccine isn’t covering all strains, especially the Australian strain that went north after the last southern hemisphere winter. Despite NZ being much closer, that strain wasn’t a problem here last year. There is a vaccine for it now, and it is included in this year’s flu vaccine in NZ.
2018 flu vaccine beefed up to combat new strain, via @nzherald https://t.co/muIW7Wnbyl
— Heather’s Homilies (@HeatherHastie) March 1, 2018
In the video in this tweet, which is from November 2017, the speaker says that around 7% of USIans have depression. Other sources I’ve read say that it’s more like double that. The World Health Organization reports that in developed countries the average rate of depression is about 15%. What that means is that whether we realize it or not, we all know someone with depression.
https://t.co/w9iQgcosNL via @TEDTalks
— Heather’s Homilies (@HeatherHastie) March 5, 2018
Inspiring Tweets
This is what it’s all about – the look on that little girl’s face.
(Via Ann German.)
This is for all those who tell me I’m too negative, and never post anything positive. Feast your eyes on this gorgeousness… pic.twitter.com/REKjjVUIRu
— Evan Handler (@EvanHandler) March 2, 2018
These libraries are just wonderful. When I was young it was my dream to do my PhD in history at Oxford University and be able to go to the Bodleian every day. I was only 19 when I hurt my back the first time and ended up in hospital for three months. I did escape for a few months, but had to return for my first major back surgery just after I turned twenty.
(Via Ann German.)
As a celebration of #WorldBookDay, we take a look at the planet’s most beautiful libraries… pic.twitter.com/iksqnK6Diy
— Lonely Planet (@lonelyplanet) March 1, 2018
Sports Tweets
How cool is this?! Penny-Farthing racing!
There was a time when cycling was a challeging, ‘boneshaking’ thing. This is a men race ‘Penny Farthing’ bikes, aka ‘boneshakers’, around a track in this quirky footage from 90 years ago in Herne Hill, London https://t.co/B0wpFCEx9o pic.twitter.com/ODxG2AlutU
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) March 4, 2018
Science Tweets
I’m not sure whether to say, “Wow,” or be very, very scared!
(Via Ann German.)
Even the system’s creators were surprised by its new skill. https://t.co/Rutp8yWhpg
— Futurism (@futurism) March 3, 2018
Scenic Tweets
One of the countries I most want to visit – France.
(Via Ann German.)
Contrasting crops in Provence, France pic.twitter.com/7Xctiiq7d2
— Life on Earth ???? (@planetepics) March 1, 2018
An amazing pic from Hawai’i
(Via Ann German.)
Lava, the milky way, a meteor and the moon all at once in a single photo. Kilauea #Volcano, Hawaii. [800×1123] https://t.co/RdNzS5fgWa #earth pic.twitter.com/k71tfoqACD
— WallpaperNewz (@WallpaperNewz) March 4, 2018
I want to go here!
Ventanas Resort in cabo san Lucas , Mexico pic.twitter.com/cWkhnfi1Pm
— Earth Authentic (@earthearlap) February 27, 2018
Illuminated Manuscript Tweets
There are so many cool things to find in illuminated manuscripts from the medieval period and earlier. I’m going to start posting some of them.
People in medieval Britain and Europe traveled extensively around Europe and as far as the Holy Land, but rarely to Africa or Asia. They had heard of animals from those places, and had them described to them, but often had no idea what they actually looked like. Here, for example, is a panther drawn from a description.
If you have never seen a panther, here is one
[The Hague, KA 16, 14th c.] pic.twitter.com/cv5SgqMJ0S— Damien Kempf (@DamienKempf) February 27, 2018
The illustrators had great imaginations.
Weekend plan: go hunting
[Beinecke, MS 229, 13th c.] pic.twitter.com/KIkCHn13TZ— Damien Kempf (@DamienKempf) February 24, 2018
Women in History Tweets
March is Women in History month.
(First three tweets via Amy Carparelli, remainder Ann German.)
First up is research fellow Dr Xiaoya Ma. She has been a palaeontologist here for 7 years, and researches 500-million-year-old fossil animals. Dr Ma led a new field of scientific research called neuropalaeontology. #WomenInSTEM https://t.co/kcDJesj88y pic.twitter.com/zViQKmJQ2T
— NaturalHistoryMuseum (@NHM_London) March 1, 2018
#WomenInSTEM: Andie Hall is a research assistant in our Molecular Biology labs, spending her days working with DNA. She says: ‘My advice for starting-out? Be proactive. Get experience wherever you can, keep reading, keep learning and meet scientists.’ https://t.co/kcDJesj88y pic.twitter.com/1XVchn428C
— NaturalHistoryMuseum (@NHM_London) March 2, 2018
Nearly half a century ago, Apollo 11 landed on the moon thanks to a remarkable group of female coders. #WomensHistoryMonth https://t.co/H3SPSzbNko pic.twitter.com/yBh8FyQ7rQ
— Science Friday (@scifri) March 1, 2018
And did you know that a number of African American women mathematicians and engineers made calculations that helped NASA win the space race? #WomensHistoryMonth https://t.co/WzVYJwfrM0 pic.twitter.com/aWe1xwcIIA
— Science Friday (@scifri) March 1, 2018
You may recognize actor Hedy Lamarr from old movies—but she had a brilliant, inventive mind and played a major role in laying the foundations of today’s wireless internet. #WomensHistoryMonth https://t.co/dYVSbU6GQm pic.twitter.com/fFEOcsWjbo
— Science Friday (@scifri) March 1, 2018
Outside of Mr. McGregor’s garden and in her own life, Beatrix Potter—author of “The Tale of Peter Rabbit”—had a curious eye for the natural world around her. #WomensHistoryMonth https://t.co/nJTUdUBrND pic.twitter.com/Dk6aMjaw46
— Science Friday (@scifri) March 1, 2018
And Anna Atkins, the first person to publish a book of photography, showed a predilection for botany. #WomensHistoryMonth https://t.co/cNkONyeper pic.twitter.com/7nV70CliGz
— Science Friday (@scifri) March 1, 2018
Women in History Tweets: Overview
Having trouble keeping up with all the remarkable women in science? Here’s an illustrated guide. #WomensHistoryMonth https://t.co/p06x9LiRiK pic.twitter.com/zkRjqlCCan
— Science Friday (@scifri) March 1, 2018
That was quite a ride through some remarkable history! But it doesn’t have to be #WomensHistoryMonth to remember the scientists who paved new paths in their fields. Now, meet the women pioneering the future of STEM. https://t.co/uOJhwT9owS pic.twitter.com/KCkDEcEIlv
— Science Friday (@scifri) March 1, 2018
Fun Tweets
Groan …
Bored to death pic.twitter.com/xTswYfdhuL
— Damien Kempf (@Damien Kempf) March 2, 2018
Ha!
(Via Ann German.)
— 41 Strange (@41 Strange) March 1, 2018
Unfortunate Facebook logo placement!
Unfortunate Facebook logo. pic.twitter.com/b9qGkXJQAN
— You Had One Job (@_you had one job 1) March 4, 2018
Chinese translations never fail as a source of amusement …
Think I’ll pass. pic.twitter.com/QUJxzeuVEl
— You Had One Job (@_you had one job 1) March 4, 2018
Lox him up! (I didn’t even know what lox was until last year. We just call it smoked fish.)
(Via Ann German.)
This was never what my people intended when they created smoked fish. https://t.co/xF1FaeFkUP
— Molly Jong-Fast???????? (@Molly Jong Fast) March 3, 2018
Anthropoid Tweets
The first tweet below was on Jerry Coyne’s site a few days ago, (that’s how long I’ve been doing this post!) and I was going to pinch it anyway because it’s so lovely. Then, Ann German sent it to me too with a second tweet that provides more info and a wider angle on the video.
Sound On: This made my night. A baby chimp being rescued from poachers in the Congo and being flown to safety. I watched it three times and felt less stressed. The pilot is so kind and gentle. pic.twitter.com/nX1TOUCbyb
— Yashar Ali ???? (@yashar) March 1, 2018
2. For those of you who are asking, the pilot’s name is Anthony Caere and he is Belgian.
Here is the video from a wider angle! pic.twitter.com/qICV8sMalO
— Yashar Ali ???? (@yashar) March 1, 2018
Marine Tweets
Ha!
Rare photo of a shark stepping on a Lego. pic.twitter.com/FFmVwMTLp8
— You Had One Job (@_youhadonejob1) March 4, 2018
I told you octopuses were cool!
(Via Ann German.)
Peek-a-boo! Get to know the gloomy octopus today. This amazing cephalopod, once thought to be nocturnal and reclusive, has been spotted over the last 5 years being very social. Turns out, groups of 12+ live together in small “cities.” pic.twitter.com/1d5lKYr7CH
— American Museum of Natural History (@AMNH) March 3, 2018
Other Animals Tweets
Now that’s a hedgehog! It looks like the same one Jerry Coyne sent me on Facebook. It has such an expressive face!
(Via Ann German.)
When you’re ready for summer and realize your body isn’t ????????
by https://t.co/VqgyCKK0Ty pic.twitter.com/OSi9v3v7dS— Life on Earth ???? (@planetepics) March 2, 2018
Of course, that’s not a normal hedgehog lifestyle. Here’s how to look a after them in the real world.
The Wildlife Garden Project: How to help hedgehogs in your garden
with @WildlifeGardenP #Nature #RatedAwww #Nature_Facts_Advice @HeatherHastie @albertisaurus @susanewington @HoneytheJR @andrepellerin @StephenParry80 @MrSinister53
–https://t.co/hePnLpQcAp— Amy Carparelli (@AmyAmylou1993) March 1, 2018
Bird Tweets
Paleontologists have found a couple of new species of birds in New Zealand’s past – two tiny flightless rails.
NZ’s two new (but long-lost) flightless birds – tiny rails, via @nzherald https://t.co/1xtGhE8HiY
— Heather’s Homilies (@HeatherHastie) March 4, 2018
Dog Tweets
What a kind man.
This elderly man is making sure his dog stays dry in the rain ???? pic.twitter.com/C92YN3CeHR
— The Dodo (@dodo) March 3, 2018
Find the dog!
Chihuahua or muffing? pic.twitter.com/E3a9BfWouw
— You Had One Job (@_youhadonejob1) March 4, 2018
Cat Tweets
Simon’s Cat is ten years old!
Purrthday Cake (A 10th Birthday Special) – Simon’s Cat | BLACK & WHITE https://t.co/s0lPFH9pmX via @YouTube
— Heather’s Homilies (@HeatherHastie) March 4, 2018
Cat’s are like water …
A bowl of flour pic.twitter.com/UqsNWFfmem
— Life on Earth ???? (@planetepics) March 2, 2018
Just like mum!
#cats #kitten #kitty #funnycats #kittenvideo #catvideo #cute #cutecats #funnykitten #funnykitty #Kittens #cat #pets #catslover #catsofinstagram pic.twitter.com/m5ktAy5OcC
— cat lover (@moonlig58287069) February 8, 2018
Ann German sent this to me, and it’s too good not to post again!
I can’t stop watching this pic.twitter.com/cqA8lGZqPl
— sam baker (@SamBaker) March 1, 2018
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I love mediaeval art, especially when they show animals doing weird human things. The medieaval mind was exposed to too many pathogens or maybe just lots of mead.
Well, they’ve found a strong correlation between witch burning and times when the wheat was likely infected by ergot. It probably took a threshold to tip a community into a place where they’d consider it, and mass ergot poisoning would do that.
There was also a theory that ergot poisoning was responsible for the medieval dancing manias. I don’t know if that has been debunked, but I thought it a compelling hypothesis on the face of it..
I found more footage of that penny farthing bike race. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8HRpVV_x3N4. The extended footage, shot from the particular vantage point that it is in relation to the wheels, is kinda mesmerizing.
Commiserations on the cricket – New Zealand made a memorable effort to come so close after sinking from 80-1 to 107-6. All other individual performances in the match were dwarfed by Kane Williamson’s ton on a difficult pitch and with his team under the cosh.
As I was watching, I was thinking if we win, there’s no doubt Williamson would be man of the match.
On another note, we lost the second game in the basketball series last night. We were thrashing Melbourne early on, but, as with the first game, it was like Melbourne just wanted the win more. The Breakers have been like this the whole second half of their season.
Commiserations from me too, Heather! I know how such an unfortunate outcome against that particular opponent can burn. As a non-parochial Australian, I don’t mind watching Australia get beaten by any team that plays well, apart from England. I never got over that bit of early childhood conditioning. I hate watching England beat anyone at all for some reason. And I love watching anyone at all beat England. I’m laughing from when Iceland knocked them out of the Euro soccer comp two years ago. That was so funny! (Apologies to any English readers. I actually read the comments in the Guardian cricket section because English cricket fans are mostly extremely sensible, and get treated badly by the ECB. I never read comments in Aust papers, for the same reason I don’t live in Australia anymore.)
Actually, the ones we hate getting beaten by the most is the effing Aussies! (Sorry mate.) We can live with England beating us when they’re better. (We’ll always get them back at rugby, netball, and often several other sports they think they’re the best at like sailing, rowing, kayaking, cycling, and even equestrian.
The really disappointing thing on the weekend was that NZ hasn’t been playing to their potential for about a month. For us, it’s Australia (especially the cricket because they’re so good) that’s the problem because they’re so effing arrogant about it when they win, which is most of the time, so they should have learnt to be humble by now. The Aussie commentators are one-eyed. Whoever they’re playing, the Brits and Kiwis usually make a point of being fair about both sides.
Did you see the way David Warner performed over the weekend? That’s why we don’t like Aussies! (I admit you’re one of the good ones!)
https://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/opinion/102002819/david-warner-is-a-typical-australian-cricket-bully-who-just-met-his-match
https://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/cricket/101971436/exsouth-african-cricket-captain-labels-australian-opener-david-warner-a-fool
What an embarrassment.
When I played cricket in the late 1980s (I quit when I was 24 because I found the ‘culture’ so repellent), there were a whole lot of Vietnam vets, who would turn up still drunk from the night before and would let out whatever remaining aggression they hadn’t let off in bar brawls. I think that’s how a lot of this idiocy started.
For a long time the Aussies were the best, and no one could touch them. They became very arrogant about it. The underarm incident of c. 1978 lives in infamy, where Captain Greg Chappell directed his brother Trevor Chappell to bowl an underarm ball so it was impossible for NZ to score a six off the last ball to win. I was watching and like everyone my age or older, I remember it.
The ongoing immigration issue, where NZers are treated like second class citizens doesn’t help, especially the Manus Island situation. People of “questionable character,” which is completely arbitrary and subjective, are imprisoned there in appalling conditions until they crack and agree to sign deportation papers. Some were even born in Australia, though to NZ born parents, and have never set foot in NZ, but being born in Australia doesn’t get you Aussie citizenship IF your parents are NZers.
If your parents are NZers but you’re born in Aussie you also don’t get free healthcare, social sservice, full education rights, and several other things every other kid born in Australia, no matter the nationality of their parents, gets.
NZ doesn’t discriminate against Australians in the same way.
I was watching it too, aged 11. Excuse me while I crawl away under a rock for a while.
I haven’t lived in or even visited Australia for 20 years. Occasionally when I read about the immigration policies, I feel like burning my passport. I know some things have changed for the better though, but I still don’t feel any urge to go back.
At the time, there were NZers all over the country getting random phone calls from Aussies apologizing for what happened. They just rang a number. So there were obviously plenty of Aussies who didn’t (and don’t) have the win at any cost mentality.
That’s nice to hear about Australians. The calls were for New Zealand to declare war on Australia was reported sympathetically in the Australian media as well.
Mohammad Hashem Alhadath Alyoum appears a courageous, calm and sane man. The one really needing psychiatric treatment is the presenter, Mahmoud Abd Al-Halim: he went berserk, I feared he would choke….
Yeah, he was quite irrational. It was like he was scared he’d get some incurable disease just being near Alyoum.