Kickass chicks

By Legal Eagle

This post was inspired by a post at Hoyden about Town, which listed favourite kickass chicks from TV shows. I love a kickass chick. My present favourite is Starbuck from Battlestar Galactica.

But then I got thinking: why do I love kickass chicks so much? Well, secretly, it’s how I wish I could be. Despite the fact that I failed my yellow belt in Shotokan karate twice. Yes, the yellow belt is the first one above white. Pretty sad, I know. (I understand my co-blogger more than makes up for my lack of skill in karate.)

I remember my aunt telling me about the time she and my uncle were in Morocco. My uncle went out for his customary solo jog at dusk but returned ten minutes later, breathing heavily, and locking the door behind him. My aunt, who had been having a snooze, looked at my uncle curiously. Then she heard a male voice from outside praising my uncle’s lips. “I was just going out for a run, but now I’m being harassed!” said my uncle. My aunt yawned and said, “Welcome to being a woman.” She was right. Few woman would dare take a solo jog at dusk in an unknown city.

It’s a constant anxiety for women. Think of those hoax e-mails that get forwarded on to women warning about the risk of getting carjacked, raped or killed. The startling thing about these kinds of e-mails is that they specifically target women. Obviously, they tap into a collective unconscious which sees women as vulnerable victims.

But a kickass chick can take a solo jog at dusk in an unknown city, and punch the living daylights out of a spurious carjacker. She doesn’t have to be rescued by the dashing superhero - she is the hero. She’s tough, attractive, sassy and smart, but she also makes mistakes from time to time or  shows her vulnerability. That’s why I love her. Of course, as noted by commenters at Hoyden, the kickass heroine is not without problems. Does a kickass woman have to reject her femininity before she becomes a hero, suggesting that women can’t be heroes unless they behave like men? Or is she a bold challenge to the male hero stereotype? Personally, I enjoy the contradictions of such a portrayal.

Anyone else out there have a secret desire to be a kickass chick?

Native Title reform proposal

By Legal Eagle

The Age has reported that the Victorian government is considering a native title reform proposal which sidesteps the Native Title Act altogether:

Under the overhaul — which would require sweeping changes to existing laws — Aboriginal groups that could prove a traditional, rather than continuous, connection to land would be able to forge agreements with the Government to jointly manage areas such as national parks. Sea claims could extend to three nautical miles offshore.

Activities such as mining and major public works on jointly managed land would require traditional owners’ consent before they could proceed.

The 2002 Yorta Yorta decision by the High Court found that there had to be a continuing connection by a normative society before native title could be established. Accordingly, the Yorta Yorta people from Northern Victoria could not establish native title. They had been dispossessed by squatters against their will, and representatives of the group had attempted to petition the colonial government in 1881 to get their land back, but were unsuccessful. They were punished doubly: first, through the original dispossession, and then by the subsequent legal decision that the dispossession severed the connection with the land. The High Court also found that the Native Title Act was the source of native title rather than the common law.

Three cheers for bypassing the Native Title Act, say I. Groups like the Yorta Yorta deserve recognition of their interest in the land, and native title under the Native Title Act is simply too narrow to provide that. I have long thought that the Native Title Act should be scrapped altogether and a new system should be established. Hopefully this is the start of a more nuanced system of recognition.

Blogrolling

By skepticlawyer

We’ve just had a general blogroll defestification and update, and you’ll note some new people in both sets of picks. Welcome to Witty Knitter, the new Pavlov’s Cat, Penguin Unearthed, Blogger on the Cast-Iron Balcony, Iain Hall, DeusExMacintosh, Jarrah Job (formerly known as fatfingers) and Strange Times. All of you have also commented pretty regularly, and we greatly value your input.

Our general policy with blogrolling is that a given blogger goes into Legal Eagle’s or my ‘picks’ column based on (a) subjective preference and (b) who discovered them first. Obviously enough, we both enjoy each other’s bloglinks — just because you’re on LE’s list doesn’t mean that I don’t read your blog, and vice versa.

As you’ll no doubt have noticed, LE has done much better than me at finding interesting blogs, although I’m very pleased with my solitary find — Strange Times. I didn’t realise until Jason Soon promoted some of their posts over at Catallaxy that a blogger I’ve long admired — David Jackmanson — is one of their writers. David is a gifted photographer and I used to steal his images regularly when I was Chooser-in-Chief at Club Troppo’s Missing Link. He can also take a great deal of the credit for organising the recent nation-wide protests against Rudd’s befuddled internet censorship plan. So more power to your pen/camera, David!

Pwned, taxpayers

By skepticlawyer

The ‘Big Three’ have decided to spend a goodly whack of their taxpayer bailout… thanking taxpayers. Here’s one of their exercises in fawning mismanagement:

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And here is the only appropriate response (101st Fighting Photoshoppers, Unite):

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‘Cleanliness is next to Godliness’

By skepticlawyer

Or, the use of hygiene as a proxy for moral worth.

Last week, a man died when — so it appears — two paramadics failed to render appropriate assistance. The legal phrase is ‘wilfully neglecting to perform duty in a public office’. The circumstances aren’t clear, but reading between the lines (among other things) one suspects they were holding their noses. Why? Apparently the old chap lived in squalor, but not the kind brought about by poverty (he was employed as a civil servant, and apparently well paid). His house was filthy:

After Barry Baker, 58, died at his home in Braybon Avenue on 29 November, the paramedics were suspended on suspicion of neglecting a public duty.

Two South East Coast Ambulance Service staff allegedly made derogatory comments about Mr Baker’s home.

The small rubbish-removal company charged with cleaning up the wreckage has posted photographs on its website detailing the scale of the mess. They’ve also now been linked to by the BBC, which could be interesting for their server if nothing else. Two of the photographs are included below, as I doubt the company will keep the same front page for any great length of time.

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This story, of course, is feeding into the Karen Matthews saga — she also had a filthy house, coupled with filthy children. It is also broaching wider public concerns, not only about ‘the underclass’, but about what David Cameron is calling ‘Broken Britain’. This account — from the wildly popular ‘coppersblog‘ — catches the angst from a police perspective:

Not long ago, I attended a house where the woman was complaining that her neighbours were throwing eggs at her windows. She was a mother of five, aged 24. Each of her children was the progeny of a different man (or boy) and none of them was supported by his or her father, in any way. The woman had left school with no qualifications whatsoever and had never worked. None of the fathers had ever worked; all were criminals of one stripe or another. It’s hard bringing up five children on your own, true, though she was an adult and she’d made her own bed (metaphorically, I doubt literally). The house was inexcusably filthy: piles of dog faeces of several different ages lay on the carpets, some of it trodden in by young feet. The woman sat in her armchair, in her house paid for by taxpayers, smoking Lambert and Butler and shouting at me about the neighbours. 

This is not about material poverty: she had a big telly (admittedly, not a plasma), and a VCR, and a big computer game console, and a CD player, and a diet of relatively expensive fast food. It’s about human nature, and a lost generation (or two). Some people are, by nature, of the underclass. They are lazy, venal and greedy and they see an inch and try to take a mile. Fifty years ago, they had a hard time doing this: now it’s very easy.

Our job, in the new civil war, is to stop them.

Although not written by PC David Copperfield (the blog’s founder), this account ties into the issues that Copperfield has raised himself, first on his blog, and then in his very popular book, Wasting Police Time. For a long while, no-one knew who the anonymous ‘copper’ who wrote the blog actually was, only that he was (very obviously) a copper and (very obviously) alert to the bureaucracy and mismanagement that were destroying British policing. Wisely, he outed himself only after he’d (a) published his book and (b) migrated to Canada and taken a job with the Mounties Edmonton City Police, which involved a very different style of policing.

Inevitably, seeing things like this hardens you. I’ve only looked down the legal end of the telescope, but dealing with the same people — day in, day out — and watching them waste court time is very dispiriting. After a while, you start thinking that some folks are clearly incapable of finding any compass, let alone a moral one. And then you start to realise: I had to be taught to be clean and well-organised as a child. It didn’t come naturally, and I have to admit I was lazy. And my mother’s solution to my laziness was repeated floggings and standover tactics.

She’d been ‘in service’ as a girl and young woman. This polite euphemism means ‘working for the landed gentry’. Even after she emigrated to Australia, her primary income was earned cleaning middle-class peoples’ houses. She taught me all the skills a servant needs — cooking, cleaning, sewing. The only one I never mastered was knitting, but I can do all the others. I’ve also absorbed by osmosis her values. Like the ambulance men, I too instinctively recoil at a filthy house. Interestingly, as a child I saw the ‘filth=moral reprobate’ applied pretty equally to men and women, too.

Perhaps the most telling incident cropped up during the research for my novel. An elderly chap who lived a couple of streets away broke his leg and hip very seriously, necessitating a lengthy hospital stay. The wife of one of my interview subjects offered to ‘wash his dishes’ for him, whereupon she discovered a house considerably filthier than Mr Baker’s. It took six of us a week to clean it. Unusually, the man in question hadn’t had any time in the military (either Red Army or Waffen-SS). None of the ex-army men were dirty. One told me how a young man from Polish West Ukraine had left his bed unmade in the barracks because making it was ‘women’s work’. The Germans flogged him. The rest learnt, but — once again — they’d had to be taught. And not just frightened by flogging: the German or Russian Lance-Corporals and Quartermasters had to teach them the relevant skills, from peeling a potato to mopping the floor to knitting a sock.

I’ve noticed, since I’ve been at Oxford, that lots of people are almost as bad as Mr Baker at keeping themselves ‘tidy’. But Oxford has its ‘scouts‘, you see, people who do for Oxford students what my mother did for the Duke of Connaught. Often Polish immigrants overseen by the sort of cheery Englishwoman who could have stepped straight from the cutting-room floor of Mike Leigh’s Vera Drake, they clean our rooms and report exceptionally messy members of the future ruling-classes to the Dean (a very scary individual, even for 30 year old graduate students). I’ve also noticed that I’m often the only one who knows how to do the same things the scouts do. I’ve encountered people who don’t know how to clean a toilet.

But the middle-classes have a fall-back: their education and income. For the most part, there will always be a scout for them, even though the label will change with geography and circumstances. The poor (and unpartnered men of a certain vintage, as I suspect was the case with Mr Baker, and know to be the case with the man I described above) don’t have that fall-back. And they’re often unfit to do anything else. I get notes from my scout where every word is mispelled. Another scout — who leaves the common room and kitchens spotless — cannot read or write at all. I went to show him how to write his name, once, just so that he could sign his timesheet. ‘Oh no, Miss, don’t bovver, they tried for ten year at school. Didnat do no good’.

When she visited Oxford, my socialist sister (and she is, the real deal - Labor Left and all) noted the College staff eating provided lunches, and the grave care the Collegiate system took for them. ‘It’s very civilised, the way they’re cared for, eating in their own defined space’. But she also noticed the fawning and scraping, the ’sir’ and ‘ma’am’ directed at people often half their age.

‘I think that’s the trade-off’, I said. The poor and the dull get cared for, while the rich and talented get their rooms cleaned. And people of both sorts point and giggle at the single mother or older single man who can’t keep his house ‘tidy‘ (this phraseology has particular resonance in Wales).

I’m reluctant to equate moral worth with hygiene, even though I know hygiene is essential for many other things (successful care of an infant, for example). That said, schooling that fills people with false hope as to what they can achieve in years to come is genuinely blameworthy. Believing you can be a rock star while simultaneously failing to learn how to read (and while failing to be taught anything that could make you even remotely employable) suggests that whoever runs the schools in this country is telling more lies than your local Amway man (’anyone can get rich in this business’).

Waiting for the other shoe to drop…

By skepticlawyer

Having made a couple of grumpy ‘plague on both your houses’ comments over at LP’s epic — but good — thread on the eleventy-third Israel/Palestine blow up, here’s a funny from DeusExMacintosh on the topic. For those interested in the actual politics (apart from me being grumpy), then there’s also (good and thoughtful) coverage over at the Australian Libertarian Society, Catallaxy and The Better Part of Valour.

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Parenthood

By Legal Eagle

‘Having a child is surely the most beautifully irrational act that two people in love can commit. Bill Cosby

Both times after I have given birth, I have been simply overwhelmed by the love I feel for my babies. It’s a deep-seated, primal kind of love, accompanied by a fierce desire to protect. Sometimes we forget that we are basically animals too.

I can’t really fathom the mind of a parent who would deliberately harm their child, or stand idly by while another person harmed their child. This was brought to my mind by Skepticlawyer’s post on the cases of Shannon Matthews and Baby P.

One of the hardest things about being a parent is that you can’t protect your child from every bad thing that might happen. There are those things which you can try to control, such as telling your child not to stick that fork in the power point, or to always look before she crosses the road. And I will try to bring my children up to be decent, polite human beings. However, many things can’t be controlled by a parent, from Acts of God to choices made my children when I am not there to guide them. I suspect the hardest task for me as a mother will be accepting that.

The recent death of 15-year-old Tyler Cassidy at the hands of the police shows that a child can sometimes make terrible choices. I understand why the police shot the boy - he had threatened nearby workers at Kmart, and attacked a police officer with a knife, refusing to stop even when sprayed with capsicum spray. If I saw my colleague being charged by a knife-wielding teenager and I had to make a split second decision whether to shoot, I probably would have chosen to shoot. Better that than to allow him to kill or seriously injure an innocent bystander.

On the other hand, I can also understand the terrible pain suffered by the boy’s mother, and her anger. Understandably, she thinks of her son as her scared little boy. And she called the police after her son fled the family home, expecting them to protect him, but they did not. Perhaps she regrets telling the police where her son was.  But in the end, they had to choose between protecting the boy and protecting themselves and innocent others.

I will always see my children as my babies on some level. Since the arrival of my son, my daughter has been concerned, asking me, “Am I still your baby too?” My answer has been that, for better or for worse, she will always be my baby. Even when she doesn’t want to be my baby any more (ie, by the age of 12 at the latest).

One of our family friends is estranged from one of her children. I can think of nothing harder. She has to sit by and watch her child self-destruct, and she cannot put a hand out to help or stop it happening, because the child will not talk to her mother or father. The pain must be immense.

Although I have always been very close to my family, I went through periods as a teenager when I did some stupid, self-destructive things. I realise how hard this must have been for my parents to witness. For a time in my twenties, I was determined never to have children in case they did the same awful things to me that I did to my parents as a teenager.

I have a lot more sympathy and understanding for my own parents now that I am a parent. I know that they don’t give out an instruction booklet which tells you how to be a parent, and that my parents did their best. Now that I have two kids, I also know why the eldest has to be responsible and grown up (because Mummy is relying on her to be sensible) and why the younger child has to be patient (he has to wait because Mummy needs to deal with his sister’s problems first before he can get a nice uninterrupted feed).

Life is a gift. I am struck by the immense vitality and potential of my children. I hope they realise the depth of the love my husband and I bear for them. And I hope that I can give them the strength and wisdom to make their choices well. Yes, Bill Cosby is right, parenthood is a beautiful and irrational thing.

Don’t dream, it’s over

By skepticlawyer

I’ve been watching from afar as Australia’s cricketing fortunes have taken a tumble over the last few series. All sorts of prognostications and punditry have been engaged in by all sorts, but for me, it’s pretty simple. What goes up must come down. We had a lengthy period in the sun, one which is now coming to an end. I don’t think we’ll ever be really rubbish, but a drop to about number three or four on the table of test ranked nations looks in order, at least for a while.

Yes, we’ve been dudded by our own selectors and some uninspired captaincy (for a great blow by blow account of dodgy decisions as they’re made, follow Tony the Teacher’s commentary over at the After Grog Blog), but even with those errors corrected for, South Africa in particular were going to beat us sooner or later, especially in their own country. I think that they can look forward to a decent run of their own at the top, too. Not as long as ours was — they’ll struggle to beat India at home thanks to lack of a quality spinner — but India in their turn won’t be able to touch South Africa in South Africa. 

Where does this leave Australia, now the mighty have fallen? We’ll bump around for a bit while things sort themselves out. There are good players in the side — Mitchell Johnson, Simon Katich, Brad Haddin, Mike Hussey and Peter Siddle are all obviously very talented. They’re likely to be the core of the team for a while to come. The once great Matty Hayden has had his day, and it’s sad to watch his mental demons play out on the national stage in the way they have, but that’s what often happens at the end of a career. I think it’s best for him to go quietly — seeing Rahul Dravid scratch around like an old chook for an even longer period until he finally made (an agonizingly slow) hundred in a dull draw wasn’t pretty. The Indian selectors — like ours — seem inclined to let great players ‘pick their time’.

Will we be number one again? Soon? Of course to the first, but I think we’ll have a right old battle on our hands for the next five years or so. We’ll lose to India in India, and probably beat them at home. Ditto, I suspect, for England (so yes, Punter may twice lose the Ashes). South Africa will ride high both home and away for a goodly little while. Australia’s strong domestic structure will save us from the fate of the West Indies and Pakistan, once great teams humbled as much by their own administrators of the game as by anything else.

One thing I do hope is that South Africa have the talent to play attacking, attractive cricket while being number one. India — on the whole — try to play the longer form of the game attractively. Sometimes it brings them undone (as it does us), but no-one denies that it’s fabulous to watch. While not siding with the purists already in premature mourning, I do believe that Test Cricket is under challenge in ways not seen before, and not only from abbreviated forms of the game.

There are a mass of unresolved administrative issues swirling around the ICC, and India’s cricket establishment — if not the players — does not seem to take well to being the richest playing nation without simultaneously being ranked number one. They’ll now have to share with South Africa, and I suspect will find the ‘Yarpies’ considerably more difficult to browbeat with various forms of post-colonial guilt.

As it looks pretty likely we’ll lose the current test, I think Sydney is a time to start rebuilding in dead earnest. Find Katich an opening partner, for a start, and a replacement for Symonds and Lee. Give Krejza another go on a spinner’s deck. We may lose again, but we’ll also know that the only way from there is up.

Not quite New Year…

By skepticlawyer

… but lots of chuckles anyway. The insane masters of cardboard cut-outs at JibJab present their annual review. I do like the nifty stunt 2009 pulls right at the end.

  

Try JibJab Sendables® eCards today!

Boxing Day Funnies

By skepticlawyer

Channel 4 have landed themselves in a spot of hot water by getting the Iranian President, Mahmoud Ahmadinenutjob to deliver their alternative Christmas Message (the Beeb gets to broadcast the Queen’s Christmas Message). One of Mahmoud’s complaints? George W Bush is insufficiently religious.

‘Nuff said, really. Cartoon (and amusing commentary, do check it out) via DeusExMacintosh.

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