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bygjohn's blog

Not the most original title, but hey...

November 2009

( Monthly archive )

So you thought I held "green" opinions

I suspect that some people who've known me for a long time may be confused by some of my postings as twenty-plus years ago I was fairly vociferously "green" in my views.

Well, the big news is: I'm still pretty "green" in my views, in fact most of them haven't changed. What has happened is that I fell out with the wider green movement some time in the 90s, mostly over climate change issues. I'm not even sure when it happened - it was gradual rather than waking up one day and thinking "I've had enough of this".

There are elements of the green movement who are essentially Luddite and won't be happy unless we all revert to living in caves, freezing in the dark and scrabbling around in the dirt for food, never able to travel anywhere on pain of execution and preferably having even our breath rationed. I have no time for this (New Troglodyte) view: it's irrational, more like a religion (complete with puritan zealotry, orthodoxy and heresy) and results in a lot of fake greenery as bad as that of the suits who've also latched onto this for their own nefarious purposes.

An example being the woman who was invited to her friend's wedding in Australia and instead of flying (boo, hiss, kill the heretics), gave up her job and spent 3 months travelling overland and by sea (in a range of doubtless dodgy vehicles with poorly maintained diesel engines spewing particulates etc). While the plane she could have caught just flew anyway, with either someone else on it or (worse) an empty seat. FFS.

So what's the problem?

That climate change happens is patently obvious: it's a dynamic system and is therefore changing all the time. What I don't buy into is anthropogenic (look it up: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthropogenic) climate change, due to global warming caused by human-generated CO2.

I really don't like the way the whole thing has been turned into a neo-religion, to the extent that anyone disagreeing gets branded as a heretic and called a "denier" as if they are equivalent to neo-nazi holocaust deniers, despite the fact that the science increasingly supports those of us that are sceptical.

I don't like the cynical way the whole thing has been adopted by the aforementioned suits, mainstream politicians (and others), as a way of scaring people into accepting yet more control/regulation/taxes/surveillance, as just another weapon in their anti-freedom, artificial-fear-induction armoury, alongside terrorism and "think of the children" paedo-hysteria.

I especially object to being patronised by said politicians (and others) about how I should support their propaganda, stupid policies etc when these are the same people that 10 or 20 years ago were calling people like me nutters, and who quite frankly wouldn't recognise "green" if it bit them on the backside...

Even worse is the kind of ignorant hysterical stuff as seen on this week's Question Time where someone was asking about why only one view of this is ever covered in the media or allowed to be discussed: some mad person started accusing him of shameful behaviour because of the people suffering in the Cumbrian floods. Which are the worst in 50 years, ie not that long ago, and if it were down to some cataclysmic temperature rise, it would mean that it was as hot then and that there has been a dip in between. Of course this is complete tripe: temperature etc goes in a bunch of cycles anyway and 50 years doesn't even constitute a blink in geological terms. As for the rapid rise in temperature causing everything bad that happens with the weather, there is a very real Inconvenient Truth: there hasn't been any rise in mean global temperature this century so far. There was 0.5 of a degree in the 90s, but nothing since. Tough one to argue against, that one...

Why am I writing this now?

Because it's looking like there are an increasing number of people who think the same way, and more who are prepared to voice their views, and because the cracks in the pro-anthropogenic-global-warming theory which were always there are beginning to become much more visible and straightforward to comprehend.

We are also beginning to see that prime movers on the pro-anthropogenic-global-warming side can be just as dodgy as their supporters claim their opposers are, when funded by oil companies and the like. Unless you think a small cartel of scientists mutually peer-reviewing each others' papers based on dubious data isn't dodgy...

In particular, check out a few things from The Register - not a comprehensive introduction or a literature search, just some articles that caught my eye over the last few months:

Midnight at midday

image479863590.jpgWell this murky photo has had the brightness turned down and even so the sky still looks brighter than what I see through my office window at the moment. Hope the rain stops before I have to go foraging for a sandwich!

MMM: its time has come at last

As part if the ongoing vinyl replacement programme, yesterday I downloaded (for the princely sum of £2.76) the remaster of Lou Reed's Metal Machine Music, just over an hour of guitar feedback noise originally released in 1975 and widely regarded at the time as unlistenable/a joke/something he used to fulfil a contractual obligation. Yet these days it doesn't sound so outlandish at all, and I always thought it was more listenable than the kneejerk responders would have you believe.

I've just played it through, and it has a lot if depth, with neo-orchestral washes appearing and disappearing, and the bit at the end where it's looped (on the original vinyl it was a never-ending leadout groove) would actually make a pretty good rhythm bed to build another piece from. Interestingly in recent years some German or Austrian bloke has transcribed it for performance on acoustic instruments (an album is available, with Reed guesting on electric guitar towards the end, apparently) and Reed has been performing similar stuff live with his Metal Machine Trio. Not bad for something written off as a joke over 30 years ago.

The only real down side of the MP3 version (apart from a surround mix on the CD) is the absence of the sleeve notes by Reed on the vinyl, and I assume they're on the CD too. These (as I recall) are pretty wonderful, if opaque, and end with one of my favourite quotes: "My week beats your year".

So turn off your preconceptions about what a Lou Reed album should sound like, or any album for that matter, open your ears and mind, and give MMM a whirl. What do you have to lose apart from less than £3 and just over an hour if your time? And if you're prone to listening to the kind of plastic manufactured pap the record companies peddle in vast quantities these days (from Coldplay to the X Factor wannabes) it might just wake you up to the kind of risks real artists sometimes take, and push you in the direction of something a little more challenging :-)

Now it's looking a bit more like November

image1578515119.jpgA cold and foggy morning, though not frozen or frosty. Guess that's it till spring: dark, gloomy, cold. Not getting you down am I? Just call me Marvin...
November 2009
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