Katharine Murphy: Our casual acceptance of terrorism measures endangers liberty

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2017/oct/07/casual-acceptance-terrorism-measures-endangers-liberty

Katherine Murphy writes about it in The Guardian.

She says:

“State politicians waved through Malcolm Turnbull’s proposals for a face recognition database and 14-day detention with barely a shrug

Leaders in western democracies are quick to declare in times of national security emergencies that the threat of terrorism cannot change our way of life.

It really is time to cut the crap. Terrorism has changed our way of life, and in profound ways.  .  .  .   .  ”

Further on she says: ” . .  .  things have changed.”

“We should not pretend otherwise. All the Churchillian rhetoric, while well intentioned and fashioned to soothe, insults the intelligence of the electorate.”

 

I agree with what Katherine Murphy says in her article. What do you think?

 

 

Sintra et al

I am very impressed by this very detailed post and want to reblog it.

swissrose's avatarThe Little Wash-House

I hardly know where to start with this post – no amount of images could cover the impressions, really, and it becomes clear that travelling vicariously is going to have its limits for some of you! How I admire the travel writers of old who must assume that their readers are unlikely to follow in their footsteps and to need to describe what they have seen in suitable phrasing…

We flew into Lisbon and very warm summer weather, picked up our rental car and headed to the coast for a few days, thanks to a wedding invitation – German friends have decided to tie the knot and as they are closely connected to Portugal, they decided festivities would take place there. Different!
On arrival, however, we were greeted by a very unrestrained and raging Atlantic crashing full force into the most westerly coast of Europe – and it had brought…

View original post 1,721 more words

‘Our Ocean’ conference tackling plastic waste and other threats to our seas

http://www.dw.com/en/our-ocean-conference-tackling-plastic-waste-and-other-threats-to-our-seas/a-40821386

. . . . .

“Plastic is now “on the menu,” Britain’s Prince Charles said as he kicked off the Our Ocean conference on Thursday, warning that “we are very close to reaching the point when whatever wild-caught fish you eat will contain plastic.”

. . . . . .

Experiences in my Life

It has been a while  since I added anything to my childhood memories. If I had another look at it now to see what I have written  some time ago, maybe I would find a few things in there that I do not remember so well anymore now. With time the memories seem to fade somewhat. This is why it is important to write down the things that I do still remember now.

Today I thought about it how blessed I am that I have a number of great-grandchildren. Yes, there are five of them now. Grandson Tristan has two girls, grandson Ryan has two boys, and granddaughter Roxanne has one boy. The two girls are nine and ten years. The boys are five and three years, whereas Roxy’s little Carter is now 10 and 1/2 months.

Since all of us do not live very close together,  I cannot see the family on a daily or weekly basis. Even a regular monthly meeting is usually not on the cards for Peter and me.  After all we are both in our eighties. Still, I am very happy that Peter can still drive enabling us to participate in special family celebrations. A few times a year our extended Family does come to visit us. I am always thrilled when a lot of visitors turn up at our place!

Everyone tells  us that it  is great that our family keeps in contact for birthdays, and at Christmas time and Easter. I do appreciate this very much and am very grateful for it. It is very rewarding to see the growing up of  great-grandchildren.  Watching them at their different stages kind of reminds me of my own childhood.

I often ask myself: What was I like at such and such an age? I still do have vivid memories about some events and some family members from the time when I was about three or four. So would my great-grandchildren perhaps remember people and events from the here and now when they are in their eighties?

When I go back to the time when I was about three or four, Cordula often comes to mind who was just eight months younger than I was. We could see each other quite often. Actually, I think she was a bit like a sister to me. When her Mum took Cordula for an outing. I was often allowed to go with them. I have such good memories about these walks! I cannot recall that my Mum ever asked Cordula to come along with us when my Mum took me for  an outing somewhere. I think occasionally Cordula would come to the apartment where I lived to play with me. But usually I would go for visits to  where Cordula lived just two floors further up on the fifth floor.

To me – even as a child – these  five story high Berlin apartment buildings  were just perfect as a  place to live  in. When we moved to a desolate country area because of ever   increasing bomb raids on Berlin, I missed Berlin very much.

Last year when we went for  a visit to Berlin, we  stayed in an area where  all the buildings  were five stories high. All of them were beautifully restored and maintained. “Wie im tiefsten Frieden”  – like there was absolute peace. This is what we used to tell us during the war when anything seemed like it was before the war started. These buildings I  am referring to were last year well over 100 years  old!

 

 

What leads to Writing about my Experiences?

Doing a ‘Proust.’ published by Oosterman Treats Blog

Doing a ‘Proust.’

The above was published on the 2nd of October 2017. It fascinated me to find out about the importance of Marcel Proust. I researched on the internet a bit about Marcel Proust and published here the things I found of special interest:

Source: Marcel Proust Biography

The following write-up I found very interesting:

“French novelist Marcel Proust was one of the greatest writers of the twentieth century. His books abandoned plot and dramatic action in favor of the narrator‘s descriptions of his experiences in the world.”

Well, it says that Proust’s books “abandoned plot and dramatic action  in favour of the   narrator’s description of his  experiences in the world.”

I reckon this is  exactly how I would like to be  able to write. I very much long to write about my experiences in this world. And I always only wanted to write for the followers of my blogs but also for my family and future descendants. I like the idea that family members, that come after me, can perhaps make themselves a picture of me as a person and the experiences in my life. I am 83 already. I published in my blogs whatever I have written so far. I hope my desire to write a bit more is strong enough to discipline me to actually do some  more writing during the time that is still left to me.

http://www.notablebiographies.com/knowledge/Marcel_Proust.html

Source: Marcel Proust Biography

http://www.notablebiographies.com/Pe-Pu/Proust-Marcel.html

Born: July 10, 1871
Auteuil, France
Died: November 18, 1922
Paris, France 

French author

French novelist Marcel Proust was one of the greatest writers of the twentieth century. His books abandoned plot and dramatic action in favor of the narrator‘s descriptions of his experiences in the world.

http://www.notablebiographies.com/knowledge/Marcel_Proust.html

Marcel Proust

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Read more: http://www.notablebiographies.com/Pe-Pu/Proust-Marcel.html#ixzz4uVm6qzKr

Author Ijoma Alexander Mangold

Here I publish some links about author Ijoma Mangold  as well as some copies of some relevant articles. Sorry, I could not find anything in English. I added two videos, one is in English. You may find it interesting to find out something about Donna Tartt’s Pulitzer Prize winning novel ‘The Goldfinch’. Ijoma Mangold was today a guest in the Deusche Welle program ‘Der Tag’:

https://www.rowohlt.de/autor/ijoma-mangold.html

 

Ijoma Mangold

“Ijoma Mangold, geboren 1971 in Heidelberg, studierte Literaturwissenschaft und Philosophie in München und Bologna. Nach Stationen bei der «Berliner Zeitung» und der «Süddeutschen Zeitung» wechselte er 2009 zur Wochenzeitung «Die Zeit», deren Literaturchef er seit 2013 ist. Zusammen mit Amelie Fried moderierte er die ZDF-Sendung «Die Vorleser». Außerdem gehört er zum Kritiker-Quartett der Sendung «lesenswert» des SWR-Fernsehens. Mangold lebt in Berlin.”

 

https://www.rowohlt.de/hardcover/ijoma-mangold-das-deutsche-krokodil.html

Das deutsche Krokodil

Meine Geschichte

“Ijoma Alexander Mangold lautet sein vollständiger Name; er hat dunkle Haut, dunkle Locken. In den siebziger Jahren wächst er in Heidelberg auf. Seine Mutter stammt aus Schlesien, sein Vater ist aus Nigeria nach Deutschland gekommen, um sich zum Facharzt für Kinderchirurgie ausbilden zu lassen. Weil es so verabredet war, geht er nach kurzer Zeit nach Afrika zurück und gründet dort eine neue Familie. Erst zweiundzwanzig Jahre später meldet er sich wieder und bringt Unruhe in die Verhältnisse.
Ijoma Mangold, heute einer unserer besten Literaturkritiker, erinnert sich an seine Kindheits- und Jugendjahre. Wie wuchs man als «Mischlingskind» und «Mulatte» in der Bundesrepublik auf? Wie geht man um mit einem abwesenden Vater? Wie verhalten sich Rasse und Klasse zueinander? Und womit fällt man in Deutschland mehr aus dem Rahmen, mit einer dunklen Haut oder mit einer Leidenschaft für Thomas Mann und Richard Wagner?
Erzählend beantwortet Mangold diese Lebensfragen, hält er seine Geschichte und deren dramatische Wendungen fest, die Erlebnisse mit seiner deutschen und mit seiner afrikanischen Familie. Und nicht zuletzt seine überraschenden Erfahrungen mit sich selbst.”

 

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Goldfinch_(novel)

The Goldfinch (novel)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Goldfinch
The goldfinch by donna tart.png

First edition
Author Donna Tartt
Cover artist Carel Fabritius
The Goldfinch – 1654
Country United States
Language English
Published September 23, 2013
Publisher Little, Brown and Company
Media type Print, e-book, audiobook
Pages 784 pp.
ISBN 9781408704950

The Goldfinch (2013) is the third novel by American author Donna Tartt, her first new book in 11 years.[1] It won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2014 among other honors.[2]

The novel is a Bildungsroman told in the first person by Theodore Decker who, at the age of 13, survives a terrorist bombing at an art museum in which his beloved mother dies. Staggering out through the debris, he takes with him a small, Dutch Golden Age paintingThe Goldfinch, which will serve as a singular source of hope as he descends into a world of crime. The painting is one of the few surviving works by Rembrandt‘s most promising pupil, Carel Fabritius; almost his entire oeuvre was destroyed in the Delft explosion of 1654, in which Fabritius was killed.

. . . . . .

Beginning of October 2017

DSCN3404

 

I can’t believe that today is already the 4th of October. The different months just come too quickly. I feel as though it must still be September!

Well, these beautiful flowers in the picture I received last Sunday, which was the 1st of October. On Monday we had a public holiday here in NSW and Victoria of Australia. So this long weekend was a good   time for travelling. Our daughter Monika for instance and a lot of her family travelled to Victora over last weekend. I hope now that Monika can see us after work sometime this week so she can tell us all about their trip to Victoria. I think they stayed for one night in Benalla where our son Martin lives now.

We had daughter Caroline and Matthew staying with us last Sunday. We went for lunch to the TREASURE COURT restaurant at the Dapto Leagues Club which I enjoyed very much. I had small prawns in Curry sauce and boiled rice. We also had vegetarian mini spring rolls  as an entree. And all four of us had beautiful Chinese tea. We each got a fortune cookie with our tea. Caroline and I took our cookies home and did only open them at home. Can I remember what it said  on the cookies’ verses? Sorry, no I can’t.

 

With our coffee at home we had savories instead of cake. I took some more pictures of my beautiful flowers on one of the following days: