Darwin in action?
Dingwall Pupils fall ill after drinking vaping fluid http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-46591746
If I lived in Dingwall, I'd try to find anything to the numb the pain.....
Darwin in action?
Dingwall Pupils fall ill after drinking vaping fluid http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-46591746
This could go on the politics thread, but I’ve had enough of that for a bit.
Factfulness by Hans Rosling, a (deceased) Swedish public health professor, shows using undisputed data, that our perceptions about the world (it’s getting worse) are in fact wrong, and we need to guard against the habit of assuming the worst. He proves his point by using data from an international survey of 12,000 people, including Nobel laureates, where in a multiple choice set of 12 questions about health, poverty, population, education, the average score was 2 out of 12. For example only 7% of UK respondents knew that the proportion of the worlds population living in extreme poverty has halved in the last 20 years, rather than stayed the same or doubled.
All the trends he examines, except climate change/pollution, are positive. All the perceptions, including on climate change, the only area where most people believe what is proved, are negative. He doesn’t argue that we should relax and that everything is going to be fine, quite the reverse, but it’s fascinating stuff all the same.
This could go on the politics thread, but I’ve had enough of that for a bit.
Factfulness by Hans Rosling, a (deceased) Swedish public health professor, shows using undisputed data, that our perceptions about the world (it’s getting worse) are in fact wrong, and we need to guard against the habit of assuming the worst. He proves his point by using data from an international survey of 12,000 people, including Nobel laureates, where in a multiple choice set of 12 questions about health, poverty, population, education, the average score was 2 out of 12. For example only 7% of UK respondents knew that the proportion of the worlds population living in extreme poverty has halved in the last 20 years, rather than stayed the same or doubled.
All the trends he examines, except climate change/pollution, are positive. All the perceptions, including on climate change, the only area where most people believe what is proved, are negative. He doesn’t argue that we should relax and that everything is going to be fine, quite the reverse, but it’s fascinating stuff all the same.
My poor explanation. He proves that our perceptions of many trends in the world are incorrect, things are much better than we seem to believe. But he does not say we have nothing to worry about, or the future is sorted.Forgive me as I'm confused. Are you saying that Rosling disproves the perception that things are getting worse, i.e. things are actually either unchanged or perhaps improving, and yet he also argues that things are going to deteriorate?
Haven’t read the whole book yet, not sure. Cheer up Eeyore.That doesn't cheer me up much, I'm afraid. Climate change and pollution are things that weigh heavily on my life outlook, so no relief there. Does he deal with the likelihood of nuclear Armageddon? That must have increased in recent years.
My poor explanation. He proves that our perceptions of many trends in the world are incorrect, things are much better than we seem to believe. But he does not say we have nothing to worry about, or the future is sorted.
Haven’t read the whole book yet, not sure. Cheer up Eeyore.
That was aimed at Stroller, not you my little ray of sunshine.You're the second person this week to liken me to Eeyore.
You're the second person this week to liken me to Eeyore.
I’ll have a look at that, I was never a fan, altogether too smarmy, but I know he is held in high regard by some surprising people.Anybody else catch the Bob Monkhouse thing on BBC four last night? It was a performance in front of an invited audience of younger comedians in a small club in London, recorded a few months before he died. His comedy is a slick and clever as ever, but the performance moves on to reminiscences and stories about his contemporaries and a surprisingly moving interview with Mike Yarwood. The love and admiration from the audience is palpable. Recommended.
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I’ll have a look at that, I was never a fan, altogether too smarmy, but I know he is held in high regard by some surprising people.
I recently genuinely shocked my son playing him some Derek And Clive. I loved this smut back in the 70s, when it was truly subversive. It is even more out of place in the 21st century and feels much darker, but I still love the manic nihilistic drive to be offensive. Don’t think I could listen to a whole LP all the way through though. Getting a positive response to ‘Have you heard of John Cooper Clarke?’ Or ‘what’s the worst job you’ve ever had?*’are fantastic short cuts when meeting new people.
* the correct response being ‘retrieving lobsters from Jane Russell’s arsehole’. Of course.
Anybody else catch the Bob Monkhouse thing on BBC four last night? It was a performance in front of an invited audience of younger comedians in a small club in London, recorded a few months before he died. His comedy is as slick and clever as ever, but the performance moves on to reminiscences and stories about his contemporaries and a surprisingly moving interview with Mike Yarwood. The love and admiration from the audience is palpable. Recommended.
You must log in or register to see media
I’ll have a look at that, I was never a fan, altogether too smarmy, but I know he is held in high regard by some surprising people.
I recently genuinely shocked my son playing him some Derek And Clive. I loved this smut back in the 70s, when it was truly subversive. It is even more out of place in the 21st century and feels much darker, but I still love the manic nihilistic drive to be offensive. Don’t think I could listen to a whole LP all the way through though. Getting a positive response to ‘Have you heard of John Cooper Clarke?’ Or ‘what’s the worst job you’ve ever had?*’are fantastic short cuts when meeting new people.
* the correct response being ‘retrieving lobsters from Jane Russell’s arsehole’. Of course.
Anybody else catch the Bob Monkhouse thing on BBC four last night? It was a performance in front of an invited audience of younger comedians in a small club in London, recorded a few months before he died. His comedy is as slick and clever as ever, but the performance moves on to reminiscences and stories about his contemporaries and a surprisingly moving interview with Mike Yarwood. The love and admiration from the audience is palpable. Recommended.
You must log in or register to see media
Anybody else catch the Bob Monkhouse thing on BBC four last night? It was a performance in front of an invited audience of younger comedians in a small club in London, recorded a few months before he died. His comedy is as slick and clever as ever, but the performance moves on to reminiscences and stories about his contemporaries and a surprisingly moving interview with Mike Yarwood. The love and admiration from the audience is palpable. Recommended.
You must log in or register to see media
Anybody else catch the Bob Monkhouse thing on BBC four last night? It was a performance in front of an invited audience of younger comedians in a small club in London, recorded a few months before he died. His comedy is as slick and clever as ever, but the performance moves on to reminiscences and stories about his contemporaries and a surprisingly moving interview with Mike Yarwood. The love and admiration from the audience is palpable. Recommended.
You must log in or register to see media
).