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Jennifer Marohasy

Jennifer Marohasy

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Archives for September 2011

Which Books Should be Banned?

September 30, 2011 By jennifer

ACCORDING to the American Library Association (ALA) the book most American parents have wanted banned over recent years is ‘And Tango Makes Three’ about two male penguins that adopt a fertilized egg and raise the chick.  According to Walt Brasch writing at On Line Opinion:

“Gays saw the story as a positive reinforcement of their lifestyle.

“Riding to rescue America from homosexuality were the biddies against perversion. Gay love is against the Bible, they wailed; the book isn’t suitable for the delicate minds of children, they cried as they pushed libraries and schools to remove it from their shelves or at the very least make it restricted.

“The penguins may have been gay-or maybe they weren’t. It’s not unusual for animals to form close bonds with others of their same sex. But the issue is far greater than whether or not the penguins were gay or if the book promoted homosexuality as a valid lifestyle. People have an inherent need to defend their own values, lifestyles, and worldviews by attacking others who have a different set of beliefs. Banning or destroying free speech and the freedom to publish is one of the ways people believe they can protect their own lifestyles.”

The books that make me cringe are always about what I perceive to be the distortion of science.   I described three of the worst in a piece I wrote for ABC Radio National’s Ockham’s Razor in 2005:

“Several books have been published this year by celebrity scientists warning that unless we change our ways, civilisation as we know it is doomed. Tim Flannery in ‘The Weather Makers’ explains that our addiction to coal is impacting on our weather systems. In ‘A Big Fix: Radical solutions for Australia’s environmental crisis’, Ian Lowe advises that the situation is so desperate we abandon the traditional scientific method. Jared Diamond in ‘Collapse: How societies choose to fail or survive’ explains how the elite can lead us in the wrong direction.

The very worst was Lowe’s ‘A Big Fix’ and in particular his contention that we abandon the traditional scientific method.

“Professor Lowe begins his new book by stating, ‘I am a scientist’. But then on page 86 explains how we should abandon the traditional scientific method in favour of ‘sustainability science’ which ‘differs fundamentally from most science as we know it’. The Professor writes that, ‘The traditional scientific method is based on sequential phases of inquiry, conceptualising the problem, collecting data, developing theories, then applying the results. … Sustainability science will have to employ new methods, such as semi-quantitative modelling of qualitative data, or inverse approaches that work backwards from undesirable consequences to identify better ways to progress’.”

While it might be tempting to wish such a book were banned given that it appears to promote the corruption of science, I should perhaps be grateful Lowe has so clearly articulated this popular, if misguided, concept called ‘sustainability science’.   Once something is clearly articulated, it should be easier to discuss and it is through discussion we can best hope to reasonably argue the pros and cons of apparently subversive ideas.

References/Links:

Banning the First Amendment, Walt Brasch  http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=12681

We need real science for the environment – send Chicken Little to Hollywood, Jennifer Marohasy http://www.abc.net.au/rn/ockhamsrazor/stories/2005/1509193.htm

Filed Under: Opinion Tagged With: Freedom of Speech

Andrew Bolt Guilty: But is it Really About Freedom of Speech?

September 28, 2011 By jennifer

TODAY, in the Federal Court, well-known columnist and political commentator Andrew Bolt was found guilty of racial discrimination.   In particular he was found guilty of mocking people who do not look aboriginal, but call themselves aboriginal.   He was condemned on the basis of comment in two columns one entitled ‘It’s so hip to be black’ and ‘White fellas in the black’.

The Judge found that, “the two newspaper articles, were reasonably likely to offend, insult, humiliate or intimidate the people in question (or some of them), and that those articles were written or published by Mr Bolt and HWT including because of the race, colour or ethnic origin of those people.”

Reading the relevant section of the Racial Discrimination Act (Sect 18C) it seems the Judge would have had no choice but to find Bolt guilty because the articles were indeed intended to offend and the attack was made on the basis of colour and race.  But surely the Racial Discrimination Act was intended to protect people likely to be discriminated against on the basis of their colour and ethnicity, NOT to protect people unlikely to be discriminated against because they just aren’t black.

Indeed it is perhaps important that people like Andrew Bolt are allowed to comment on what appears disingenuous, that is white people calling themselves aborigines?

Various commentators have suggested that the judgment has broad implications for freedom of speech in Australia.  But might it not be just an anomalous judgment forced by the apparent absurdity of the situation?

****************

Judgment:

Eatock versus Bolt, September 28, 2011

http://www.austlii.edu.au/cgi-bin/sinodisp/au/cases/cth/FCA/2011/1103.html

Background:

Michael Connor on Andrew Bolt on Trial

http://www.quadrant.org.au/magazine/issue/2011/5/andrew-bolt-on-trial

*****

This blog is normally limited to discussion of issues concerning the natural environment, but given the claimed implication of the judgment on freedom of speech and the right to offend…  I am posting.

Filed Under: News, Opinion Tagged With: Freedom of Speech

Extreme Weather Events are Killing Fewer People

September 26, 2011 By jennifer

DESPITE concerns about global warming and a large increase in the number of reported storms and droughts, the world’s death rate from extreme weather events was lower from 2000 to 2010 than it has been in any decade since 1900, according to a new Reason Foundation study.  Following is the media release:

THE Reason Foundation report chronicles the number of worldwide deaths caused by extreme weather events between 1900 and 2010 and finds global deaths caused by extreme weather events peaked in the decade running from 1920 to 1929, when there were 241 deaths a year per million people in the world. From 1930 to 1939 there were 208 deaths a year per million people. But from 2000 to 2010 there were just 5.4 deaths a year per million people in the world. That’s a 98 percent decline in the weather-related death rate since the 1920s. Extreme weather events were responsible for just .07% of the world’s deaths between 2000 and 2010.

[Read more…] about Extreme Weather Events are Killing Fewer People

Filed Under: Information Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Exceeding the Speed of Light

September 23, 2011 By jennifer

I can’t find confirmation at the CERN website, but various media reports indicate new experimental work has found subatomic particles that travel faster than light.

The speed of light is considered the Universe’s ultimate speed limit.  The foundation stone for Einstein’s special theory of relativity was the constancy of the speed of light.

More here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-15017484

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Energy & Nuclear

How to Get Your Child Expelled from School

September 22, 2011 By jennifer

Ian Plimer not only finished school, he went on to University, graduated and then worked his way up to the esteemed rank of Professor.

He has been Professor and Head of Geology at the University of Newcastle, is Emeritus Professor of Earth Sciences at the University of Melbourne, and currently lectures at the University of Adelaide.   He has already published more than 120 scientific papers on geology and seven books on a range of science related subjects including ‘Telling lies for God’ (Random House) and his best-selling ‘Heaven and Earth’ (Connor Court).   So why such a provocatively entitled eighth book ‘How to Get Expelled from School”.  Because it’s a guide to climate change for pupils, parents and punters’!

Getting expelled from school is not something anyone would wish on their child…  So I’m suggesting you only buy the book if your children have already finished school.

It’s available here:  www.connorcourt.com .

Filed Under: News, Opinion Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Dugong Slaughter Suspended

September 22, 2011 By jennifer

Good news! Traditional hunters have agreed to suspend the hunting of dugongs and turtles in North Queensland. More here.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Indigenous, Whales

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Jennifer Marohasy Jennifer Marohasy BSc PhD has worked in industry and government. She is currently researching a novel technique for long-range weather forecasting funded by the B. Macfie Family Foundation. Read more

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