The Anonymous Widower

Who’s Eating All The Pies?

And it would appear everything else!

Accordiung to a report on BBC Breakfast Time, a third of the obese people in the world, live in North America.  But only six percent of the world’s population live there!

I think that the answer is a no brainer!

June 18, 2012 Posted by | Health, News | , , | Leave a comment

The Mounties on Guard

Yesterday, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police provided the mounted guard on Whitehall.

I doubt, I’ll ever see this again in my lifetime.  There is a photo gallery here from the Toronto Star.

I wonder how many of the tourists snapping away didn’t realise that it was Canadians on guard. Surely MP on the saddle-cloth was a giveaway, something was different.

Surorisingly, the event doesn’t seem to have been reported in the television news. I found out from yesterday’s copy of The Times.

May 24, 2012 Posted by | News | , , | 2 Comments

Fracking May be Good for You

There is a great deal of opposition to the use of fracking to extract gas from shale in this country.

I went to a lecture at the Royal Geograhical Society yesterday called Unconventional Gas.  It was very enlightening and I can draw various conclusions from the lecture. You can find out more about the lecture here.

The first is that there is a very large amount of gas available to be extracted using fracking and a lot of it is in countries, with pretty stable regimes, like Australia, Canada and the United States.

The second is that gas prices in North America are falling fast, because of the large amounts of gas now available. I believe, that Canada has far too much gas for its own use and will soon start to export.

So it is not inconceivable, that Europe will start to import gas from North America rather than from regimes like Russia and Qatar.

Am I wrong to therefore suggest that because of fracking, we may well find that our gas prices start to drop?

I have deliberately not discussed the use of fracking in the UK and Europe.

The technologies employed are still very much under development and have been used mainly in the very underpopulated parts of the United States and Canada.  The extraction is now moving towards more populous states, like Pennsylvania, and only when it is totally accepted by the inhabitants there, will it be time to use it in Europe.

In the meantime we should keep a strong watching brief, investing in resarch in the best universities, as I outlined here.

But as with many things, there are many against the technology, when it starts to be used, but now it is totally accepted.  Just look at the opposition Brunel, Stephenson and others had when they started building railways!

May 10, 2012 Posted by | News | , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Web Programmer At Risk of Execution In Iran

This is from Amnesty International.

Web programmer Saeed Malekpour could be executed at any time in Iran. His death sentence was confirmed by the Supreme Court on 17 January 2012 and a court official has indicated that his death sentence may have now been sent for implementation.

 

Saeed Malekpour, a resident of Canada and Iranian national, aged 36, was again sentenced to death on 19 October 2011 by Branch 28 of the Revolutionary Court, and it was confirmed by Branch 32 of the Supreme Court on 17 January 2012. On 14 February 2012, one of Saeed Malekpour’s lawyers visited both courts to ask about his case, but learned that the file was being held at neither court. Comments from a court official suggested that this is because Saeed Malekpour’s file has been sent to the Office of Implementation of Sentences.

 

Saeed Malekpour was sentenced to death for “insulting and desecrating Islam” after a program he had developed for uploading photos online had been used to post pornographic images without his knowledge.  Branch 28 of the Revolutionary Court sentenced him to death in October 2010 following a trial that reportedly only lasted 15 minutes.  After a June 2011 announcement that the Supreme Court had returned the case for further review, Branch 28 of the Revolutionary Court imposed again the death sentence as well as prison sentence of seven and a-half years. Amnesty International understands that although he has legal representation now, for much of his detention Saeed Malekpour has had no access to legal counsel.  

 

Saeed Malekpour had been living in Canada since 2005, but was arrested in October 2008 while visiting his family in Iran. He was allegedly tortured while held for over a year in solitary confinement in Tehran’s Evin prison.  In 2009, Iranian state television repeatedly aired a “confession” by Saeed.  In an open letter dated March 2010, Saeed Malekpour stated his “confession” was extracted after prolonged torture following orders by Revolutionary Guard interrogators.

I see many e-mails like this. To the Iranians justice seems to be a word with seven-letters and that is all.

This one touched me, as I’ve written programs to upload pictures and othe files to the Internet.  As far as I know no-one has used them for any illicit purposes.

February 19, 2012 Posted by | Computing, News | , , , , | Leave a comment

David Starkey and the Canadian Solution

I watched the political programme on BBC1 last night, This Week.  One of my favourite broadcasters, David Starkey, gave a history lesson about Canada.  He has a reputation for being difficult, but I needed to borrow a picture from one of his books for a web site and he was charm personified.

Fifteen years ago, the dominion was in a terrible mess, with massive borrowings and a stagnant economy.  The new government cut very deeply and within three years many of the problems had been solved.  Now Canada has the strongest growth rate of the countries in the G7.

Whoever wins the election must cut and cut very deeply.  But they won’t!

April 13, 2010 Posted by | World | , , | Leave a comment

Disorganised and Unfair Olympics

The Winter Olympics in Vancouver have come in for a lot of criticism.  I’m not going to be too outspoken, as we have the Summer Games in London coming up, but it does strike me that the Canadians have made some fundamental mistakes, that with hindsight could have been avoided.

They could have done nothing about the lack of snow, unless of course they could have found a way to move Europe’s and the United States’ unwanted snowfalls to where they were needed.

But to me one thing stands out.  The Olympic flame is the centrepiece of any Games and they have surrounded their’s with a fence, that obscures it to the public.  They say they were worried about vandals and the like, but it would not have been beyond the wit of the designers to protect it with say a moat and a low safety rail.  I suspect if they’d asked the keeper of the monkeys at Vancouver Zoo, he would have had a much better idea!

They got a lot of others things wrong, like the finances, but then they did in Montreal too.

I would also criticise them for giving their own competitors more time to try out the tracks and courses, in the hope of winning more medals.  I hope we don’t adopt the same attitude for 2012 as Games should be remembered for fairness not cheating.

But lastly, I will criticise them for one small thing, that would have been so easily overcome by a small amount of replanning.  The medal ceremony for the ladies’ skeleton bob was held at three in the morning UK time, which was an absolutely wonderful idea for a once-in-thirty-years event for the UK.  As it was 24 hours after the event, they could and should have scheduled it for a convenient time for the UK’s news networks. 

But then they had expected a Canadian to win!

As I have said many times before, all major projects and events are often judged by the attention to detail by the organisers.  Canada has failed with the details.

London 2012 must take note.  According to this blog on the BBC, they are!

February 21, 2010 Posted by | Sport | , | Leave a comment

The Halifax Explosion

I usually read the obituaries in The Times.  Even if it’s just to check that I’m still here.  But then I wouldn’t be in that esteemed organ!

Today there was an obituary of Marcus Chambers. He was not a man I’d heard of, but I do remember the triumph of Andrew Cowan driving a Hillman Hunter in the 1968 London-Sydney Marathon.  He was the brains behind it all.  One thing that is not in the obituary was that the car was tuned to run on the very low grade petrol, that would be all that was obtainable on much of the route.

Sad to think, that such a race would not be possible today, as you just can’t drive all the way. Well not safely, as the route included Tehran and Kabul.

But what caught my eye in the obituary is the Halifax Explosion, which Marcus Chamber’s parents survived. Two thousand people died, when an ammunition ship blew up in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

The Halifax Explosion occurred on Thursday, December 6, 1917, when the city of Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, was devastated by the huge detonation of the SS Mont-Blanc, a French cargo ship, fully loaded with wartime explosives, which accidentally collided with the Norwegian SS Imo in “The Narrows” section of the Halifax Harbour. About 2,000 people were killed by debris, fires, or collapsed buildings and it is estimated that over 9,000 people were injured. This is still the world’s largest man-made accidental explosion.

That was a terrible tragedy.

September 7, 2009 Posted by | Sport, World | , , | Leave a comment