Friday, April 10, 2009

For those with a fear of heights

No offence intended

Spot the turkey

A distant relative of mine


The photo was taken on Monday 14 August, 37,329 BCE

Progress?


We did this in 1969. That was 40 years ago. What have we achieved since then?

Optical Pollution

A Spanish post box


This photo was taken in northern Catalonia in Summer 2008. It was 43 degrees celsius that day.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

What we are

The news headlines on one day last week. I suppose this just about sums up our species:

• North Korea launches rocket, defying world pressure
• Obama launches effort to rid world of nuclear weapons
• Slain police officers mourned at Pittsburgh precinct
• Murder of five children shocks Washington trailer park
• Families of N.Y. shooting victims begin to bury dead
• Hundreds of Christians mark Palm Sunday in Jerusalem
• Week's best photos: Unemployment Olympics, a royal visit
• NCAA Tournament
• NBA
• NHL
• MLB
• NFL
• Soccer
• Golf

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

A little something about Da Vinci


In 1998, Henri Robert Ferdinand Marie Louis-Philippe of Orleans, Count of Paris, celebrated his 90th birthday at Amboise Castle overlooking the river Loire near Orleans. Amongst the 300 guests at the Chateau were Prince Rainier of Monaco, ex-king Michael I of Romania, and Otto von Habsburg of Austria.

The Loire River Valley (the largest in France) has about 80 castles which were built between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. When Charles VII chose nearby Chinon Castle as his palace in 1427, the valley flourished as the centre of politics and culture in France.

Castle Amboise, located 25km east of Tours, started life as a fortress in Roman times. Charles VII, who was greatly influenced by the culture of the Italian Renaissance, commissioned Italian architects, garden designers and painters for the re-construction of the castle.

King Francis I of France invited Leonardo da Vinci to spend the last years of his life in Amboise at the Court of France. In the autumn of 1516, Leonardo da Vinci arrived in Amboise with the Mona Lisa.

Leonardo lived in the small castle of Cloux (now known as Le Clos Luce) in Amboise. This small castle is situated between the town and Castle Amboise - the King's castle.

Already paralysed down his right side, Leonardo wrote his last will and testament on 23 April, 1519 and died 5 weeks later on 2 May. He was 67 years old.

Da Vinci was one of the supposed Grand Masters of a secret society that apparently guarded the Merovingian blood line.

Well said, Mr Biden! Cheney, take a hike!

Vice President Joe Biden said Tuesday his predecessor, Dick Cheney, is "dead wrong" when he says President Barack Obama's national security policies are making the United States less safe. Biden said the exact opposite is true and added that President George W. Bush's vice president was part of a dysfunctional decision-making system.


"I don't think he is out of line, but he is dead wrong. ... The last administration left us in a weaker posture than we've been any time since World War II: less regarded in the world, stretched more thinly than we ever have been in the past, two wars under way, virtually no respect in entire parts of the world," Biden said. "And so we've been about the business of repairing and strengthening those. I guarantee you we are safer today, our interests are more secure today than they were any time during the eight years" of the Bush administration.

Since becoming president, Obama has ordered the closing of the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and banned certain interrogation methods for suspected terrorists.

Cheney last month said the Bush administration programs involving suspected terrorists were critically important and overturning them had made the country less safe.

"I think those programs were absolutely essential to the success we enjoyed of being able to collect the intelligence that let us defeat all further attempts to launch attacks against the United States since 9/11," Cheney said.

"I think that's a great success story. It was done legally. It was done in accordance with our constitutional practices and principles," he said. "President Obama campaigned against it all across the country. And now he is making some choices that, in my mind, will, in fact, raise the risk to the American people of another attack," Cheney said.

Biden said he and Obama are working to repair the United States' reputation, which was damaged abroad by the unpopular 2003 invasion of Iraq. He also said Obama's team is working together, unlike Bush's.

"Look, everybody talks about how powerful Cheney was," Biden said. "His power weakened America, in my view. Here's what I mean by that. What I mean by that was, there was a divided government."

He said Cheney had his own sort of national security council and there was the actual National Security Council.

"There was (Secretary of State Colin) Powell, who didn't agree with Cheney," Biden said, "and Cheney off with (Defense Secretary Donald) Rumsfeld."

Biden promoted Obama's administration as more conducive to better decision making.

"The strength of this administration is that the president and I work in concert. I am very straightforward in my views. I am as strong — I hold them as strongly as I ever have."

But he said those decisions are made with one National Security Council, "a united national security team."

Biden was interviewed on CNN's "The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer."