The Asker Trilogy, Highway America, The New Zealand Tour Commentary, The Life and Times of Freddie Fuddpucker
Saturday, August 4, 2012
AN INTERNATIONAL DISASTER BODY
New
Zealand's bold plan
to rebuild a city
to rebuild a city
By Kurt Bayer
New Zealand Herald
6:00 PM Monday Jul 30,
2012
A scene from Christchurch on February 22, 2011 when 185 people died |
A covered sports stadium
is the showpiece inclusion in the rebuild blueprint for earthquake-damaged
Christchurch city center announced today.
The much-anticipated
blueprint includes 12 key sites for major facilities, including a new
2000-capacity convention center at a "postcard location" by the Avon
River, a huge aquatic and indoor sports facility, revitalized square with a new
central library, and Ngai Tahu cultural center.
Shops, restaurants, bars
and cafes are expected to line the picturesque river's edge, as well as the
sports stadiums, in a push to make the revitalized city "very much like
Melbourne", according to Prime Minister John Key.
The compact center of a
rebuilt Garden City, designed to "solve the problem of too much land, not
enough demand", will rise from a sweeping space flanked by the twisting
Avon and a leafy, bright "college-campus style" frame.
It will take minutes to
walk from the new city square, to the 35,000-seat covered stadium, which will
have natural, fixed turf. Cycle ways will link historic Hagley Park to
downtown.
The blueprint will
result in a low-rise city, with a maximum height limit on new buildings of 28 meters,
or up to eight storeys, and will be divided into precincts of health, arts and
entertainment, retail, as well as the justice and emergency sectors.
Mr Key and Canterbury
Earthquake Recovery Minister Gerry Brownlee officially unveiled the highly
anticipated blueprint this evening.
"As a former Cantabrian
I am delighted to see this plan for new development and to know construction
will soon be underway to rebuild my old hometown," Mr Key said.
The Christchurch Central
Development Unit (CCDU), set up in April by the Canterbury Earthquake Recovery
Authority (Cera) to plan the CBD rebuild, was given 100 days to come up with
the blueprint.
The city center was
largely destroyed in the magnitude-6.3 earthquake of February 22, 2011, which
claimed 185 lives.
Investors and developers
say they have been unable to consider any rebuild plans until they knew the
location of the new civic facilities. Mr Brownlee said the recovery plan
contained a blueprint for a smaller, greener, central city that will set
Christchurch apart from any other urban center.
"The plan and its
implementation are being watched by the rest of the world, which has also been
supportive of Christchurch in its time of need," Mr Brownlee said.
"I anticipate a
light, airy, college-campus style feel for the home of numerous innovative
Christchurch companies and public sector agencies."
Mr Brownlee refused to
say how much it may cost, saying only that the Government had allocated $5.5
billion on the earthquake recovery so far and had already spent $2.45b.
The Government will be
working with around 800 city property owners, and will have the powers under
the Cera Act 2011 to compulsorily buy land it needs to make way for key
facilities.
Further details on a new
hospital, advanced technology hub, and a justice precinct are expected to
follow in coming months.
Christchurch Mayor Bob
Parker said the plan was a "bold vision" while the blueprint received
rave reviews from developers and investors at tonight's glitzy launch at the
city council headquarters.
Millionaire city
property owner Antony Gough said the city had been in "uncharted
waters" but now had "a chart to lead the way".
Christchurch Airport
boss Jim Boult believed the new central city would be the envy of similar sized
cities throughout the world.
There were detractors,
however, with about 250 people attempting to disrupt the launch with a vocal
protest outside the council building, with chants including, 'Fix our homes
before the CBD', and 'Mr Key, hear our plea, we need a road to recovery.'
Wider Earthquake
Communities' Action Network (WeCan) spokesman Mike Coleman said today marked
further evidence of a "corporate recovery" while residents in the
eastern city suburbs were being "left to flounder".
"They open up the
champagne bottles for the CBD but there's mere drips of water for the plebs in
the suburbs."
Lindsay Carswell of the
Christchurch Civic Trust welcomed the "bold vision" but questioned
whether it would "actually happen."
Peter’s Comment
A bold, far-sighted plan
but Christchurch will never feel like Christchurch ever again to the people who
survived and still live there.
There is growing
evidence that rescue and recovery from major disasters like Christchurch should
be controlled by an international disaster organization. Events like
Christchurch are just too big for a single nation to cope with.
Many countries sent
teams to Christchurch within hours of the main event on February 22, 2011 and
that help was certainly appreciated. But New Zealanders were in control with
little or no experience of major disasters and the lack of a properly coordinated
international response has left Christchurch and New Zealand with a legacy of
errors, delays and frustrations that the country will have to live with for a
very long time.
All of the above can be
said without pointing an accusing finger at any particular official, politician
or organization. In fact the leadership of Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker, just
to mention one, was and continues to be outstanding.
JETSTAR AUSTRALIA
Has Jetstar’s star fallen?
A Jetstar Airbus A-330 |
Posted on Facebook by Daniel Hazard after flying Brisbane to Sydney, in Australia
I was on the tarmac queuing to board flight DJ189 last
night from BNE to SYD @8:30. It was particularly cold and we would have been
waiting outside for about 8 minutes before we were able to board via the front
stairs. I noticed an elderly lady in a wheelchair waiting at the bottom of the
stairs, in the cold, where there were also strong aviation fumes. I notified
the head steward when I reached the cabin, as I felt it was inappropriate that
someone of that age should be left outside in the cold while the rest of us
able-bodied passengers boarded ahead of her. My comment was treated with
derision and I was informed that the head steward's responsibilities "did
not include anything outside the plane". He did not even attempt to
address my concerns and I noticed that the lady was the very last passenger to
board the plane. I find it hard to believe that Jetstar could not have assisted
this woman to board earlier, or in fact, at all during the boarding process.
Other passengers certainly took notice and it made my trip very uncomfortable
due to the obvious disrespect bestowed on the elderly woman. I am happy to
speak to someone about this further. It was an absolute disgrace.
Peter’s
Comment
Jetstar is a budget subsidiary of Qantas Airways and has
been beset by passenger complaints since its launch a few years ago. They
operate Airbus aircraft with comparatively inexperienced crews. There is even a
website devoted to Jetstar complaints: http://www.dontflyjetstar.com/
However, I flew Jetstar a couple of times without finding
fault other than crammed seating. They were the cheapest at the time so I suppose
you only get what you pay for.
With a good book you can
block out the poor service
PO Box 110, Ngatea 3541, New Zealand
Print books: http://www.gypsybooks.co.nz
For your Kindle: https://www.smashwords.com/books/search
There is another way in which cheapest is not always best
and that is in the choice of aircraft. In some aviation circles there is a
saying: Boeings are designed by experts and can be flown by idiots. Airbuses
are designed by idiots and must be flown by experts. Because most pilots and crew, like passengers,
value their hides most will want to fly in Boeings thereby leaving the Airbuses
to the least experienced crews.
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
INDIA AND CLIMATE CHANGE
How
Climate Change and the Monsoons Affect India’s Blackouts
India's blackouts have left nearly 700 million people without
power. The unstable monsoons are adding to demand for electricity—and climate
change could disrupt the summer rains even further.
Waiting for the monsoon in India |
Blame it on the rain—at
least partially. Northern India has been plagued by prolonged blackouts over
the past few days that have left some 600 million
people without regular power. The electrical grid has never
covered the entire country—around 300 million of
India’s 1.2 billion citizens lack access to regular electricity—and isolated
blackouts are common even in urban areas that normally get juice. But the
collapse of the grid this week is something else, spreading to 22 of the
country’s 28 states, with much of the capital of New Delhi plunged
into darkness, hundreds of trains left dead in their tracks and car stalled
thanks to the failure of traffic lights.
Though India’s regular
experience with blackouts make it that much more able to deal with a prolonged
power loss like this one—hospitals, offices and even homes have backup diesel
generators and make frequent use of them—the disaster will make it that much
harder to buy into the idea that the second-most populous country in the world
is ready to compete with China on the global stage. Said Chandrajit
Banerjee, director general of the Confederation of Indian Industry, in a statement:
The electricity supply in India |
As one of the emerging economies of the world,
which is home to almost a sixth of the world population, it is imperative that
our basic infrastructure requirements are in keeping with India’s aspirations.
The developments of yesterday and today have created a huge dent in the
country’s reputation that is most unfortunate.
What’s behind the
blackout? It’s not clear yet, though India’s rickety power grid is hardly
invulnerable to stress. And that stress may be increasing, as growing industry
and personal use in an increasingly rich India—think air conditioners to cool
the subcontinent—outpace India’s ability to actually generate electricity.
And that’s where the
monsoon could become a major problem. The great summer storms—which provide
three-quarters of India’s annual rainfall—came late to the country this year,
leaving much of northern India gripped in a killer drought and
unrelenting heat. While the slow monsoons are unlikely to have directly caused
the blackouts—the rains finally began to fall recently,
enough to reduce temperatures—parched farmers in agricultural areas are turning
to electric pumps in large numbers to bring groundwater to the surface for
irrigation. If the monsoons continue to be erratic and slow in a global warming
future, the demand for electricity to compensate for the heat and the drought
will only increase.
Continued below . . . .
Continued below . . . .
Available from Amazon or Smashwords
But what will climate change do to the monsoons? Like many regional impacts, that’s difficult for scientists to predict, especially since weather data on the monsoons in South Asia is still lacking, as the Economist pointed out in an article last week:
Too little is known about summer weather systems
on the subcontinent. India is short of observation stations, weather planes,
satellites, climate scientists and modelers. The government and foreign donors
are scrambling to make amends. But even with better data, monsoons are
ill-understood once they leave the sea or low-lying land. At altitude, notably,
for instance, approaching the Himalayas, it is far trickier to grasp just how
factors such as wind direction, air pressure, latent heating and moisture
levels interact to deliver monsoon rains.
We do know that India,
like the rest of the planet, has gotten hotter over the past six decades as
man-made greenhouse gases have warmed the atmosphere. All other things being
equal, that should lead to more precipitation—a hotter atmosphere means more
evaporation and can hold more water. For the monsoons, the fact that the land
is heating up faster than the oceans should actually draw in more moisture,
which in turn should mean stronger monsoons. But that hasn’t happened yet.
Peter’s Comment
India is not only the world’s
second most populous country, but it is also growing at a rate that will put it’s
population ahead of China’s within the next few years.
India has long suffered from a
lack of adequate infrastructure and that problem will worsen as the population
explodes and as increasing personal wealth makes greater demands on the
infrastructure.
But now we are lead to believe
that India’s problems could be due to climate change, even though it is admitted
that there is little local data to back that up.
In simple terms, monsoons are
created by a combination of heat and moisture and are generally confined to
tropical regions. Therefore if the world is getting warmer, as we are so often
told, then the monsoons should start earlier rather than later.
But I believe we are often told
anything that will support the theory of climate change. Of particular note is
the alarmist way that everything about climate change is bad. But wait a
minute. Surely some places are going to be better off with a warmer climate.
Why don’t we hear about those places?
Perhaps a majority of places
will be better off with a warmer climate. Doesn’t a substantial part of the
world population take a break during winter in a warmer locale?
Perhaps the greatest tragedy of
the Indian situation is that some people would have them believe that it is beyond
their control to make their country a better place to live and do business.
LEAVE THE CAR, TAKE THE BUS
Bus Travel Making a Big Comeback
July 29, 2012 7:12 am
by Ed Perkins
Today in Travel
Riding the bus is no
longer the last travel resort for students and budget travelers. Several big
bus operators are competing for a share of the mainstream travel market with
improved buses and faster schedules.
The bus
"renaissance" in the United States was kicked off in 2006
by Megabus,
a unit of Coach USA and a subsidiary of the Stagecoach Group, a
big British rail-and-bus operator. It follows principles evolved in
the United Kingdom since 1980:
·
Buses are modern (many
are double-deckers) with onboard restrooms, Wi-Fi, and power outlets.
·
Typical route patterns
radiate from a major city to cities within a radius of approximately 400 miles
or less. Longer routes generally operate at least twice daily (one daytime, one
overnight) with higher frequencies on busy routes.
·
Stops are limited; trips
typically stop at no more than three intermediate cities between terminals.
·
Schedules are fast:
Megabus competes head-to-head with Amtrak on many of its routes, and it
usually either meets or beats the rail schedule.
·
Fares are capacity
controlled, generally starting out with at least one seat for $1, with the
price for the remaining seats increasing as more and more seats are sold.
Currently, the main
Megabus "hub" cities are Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, New
York, Toronto, and Washington, D.C. Most trips radiate from these
hubs, but a few connect one hub to another.
Greyhound has also moved
into this market, with a combination of upgrading, rebranding, and
subsidiaries:
·
Bolt Bus, a subsidiary,
operates linear routes along the busy eastern corridor
from Boston to Washington, D.C., plus a new line between Portland and Vancouver.
·
Greyhound has
"rebranded" some of its basic intercity product as Greyhound Express.
Unlike Megabus, Greyhound Express promotes longer trips, often with
connections, and operates from a combination of regional hubs in the East,
Midwest, and South with a linear California route between Los
Angeles and Sacramento or San Francisco.
·
Neon, another affiliate,
runs a system between New York and Toronto that appears similar
to Megabus.
·
As with Megabus,
Greyhound's upgraded buses are equipped with onboard lavatories, Wi-Fi, power
plugs, and reserved seats. Although Bolt advertises "extra legroom,"
it doesn't specify the seat spacing. One bulletin board, however, showed a post
from a reader who measured Greyhound Express at 33- to 34-inch pitch and
18-inch width, which is actually a bit better than most economy air.
Most of the smaller bus
companies that operate in the East are going for low fares. And although many
offer Wi-Fi, their products seem to be low-end. One company, however, operates
a truly upscale product: LimoLinerruns from Boston to New York with
buses that feature wide one-by-two seating and extra legroom, along with the standard
Wi-Fi. Fares, however, are quite a bit higher than on the mass-market lines,
even higher than some off-peak Amtrak fares.
How do these new buses
compare with flying and Amtrak? I've seen several reports, by both travel
pros and individual travelers, and the consensus runs something like this:
Relax on the bus with a good book
PO Box 110, Ngatea 3541, New Zealand
Print books: http://www.gypsybooks.co.nz
E-books: https://www.smashwords.com/books/search
E-books: https://www.smashwords.com/books/search
Compared
with Amtrak, the new upscale buses are usually cheaper, they're often as
fast or faster, and they run on many routes Amtrak doesn't operate
and run more often on most routes where Amtrak does.
But Amtrak is much more comfortable.
Compared with flying, on
the relatively short-haul routes where they operate most frequently, buses are
usually much cheaper than flying and close to competitive in elapsed time when
you include the hassles of getting to/from airports and security lines. Bus
seating seems to be about the same as economy air, with the advantage of no
middle seats. On longer trips, however, buses are a real test of endurance.
My take on the new buses
is that if you're looking for minimum cost, you should give them serious
consideration for a trip of less than 400 miles. But Amtrak's a lot
more fun.
Peter’s Comment
Bus travel has long been
due for a renaissance in many parts of the world. Buses have a flexibility that
rail travel lacks and the flexibility is logistical as well as economic.
Bus operators wanting to
expand their services have one huge advantage over rail operators; the roads
already go everywhere, but rail operators wanting to open new routes are faced
with massive costs for land and infrastructure. An operator of a new rail route
can only recoup the outlay with high fares and high volume patronage, a
combination that will often be self-defeating except perhaps in mega cities.
But the real opportunity
for bus operators of the future will also be in the suburbs of major cities.
Once again the roads go everywhere but it will become increasingly difficult,
frustrating and more costly for cars to
go everywhere as buses take a larger share of the roads with exclusive lanes
and exclusive roads once used by cars.
Modern buses are nothing
like the unreliable, uncomfortable rattle-traps of the past. They are also
efficient, adaptable to route changes, can run profitably with fewer passengers
than rail services and are less likely to suffer delays.
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT
Nurse on drugs charges faces execution
By Greg Ansley New Zealand Herald
5:30 AM Wednesday Aug
1, 2012
The breaking wheel was used during the Middle Ages and in the 19th Century |
A second Australian
faces possible execution in Malaysia on drug trafficking charges, adding
pressure to a campaign to end capital punishment in a country that has more
than 800 prisoners on death row.
Melbourne nurse Emma
Louise L'aigulle, 34, is alleged to have been arrested with Nigerian Esikalam
Ndidi in a car with about 1kg of methamphetamine hidden under a seat.
Possession of 50 grams
or more of the drug is considered trafficking and subject to a mandatory death
sentence.
In November Perth man
Dominic Jude Christopher Bird, 32, will go to trial charged with offering 167 grams
of methamphetamine to undercover police officers.
The possibility of
further death sentences will further burden Australian diplomacy as it tries to
convince Asian neighbors to end capital punishment.
The San Quentin lethal injection suite |
Last month Prime
Minister Julia Gillard raised the death sentences imposed on Bali Nine heroin
smuggling ringleaders Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran with Indonesian
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.
The two have sought
clemency from Yudhoyono, their last chance of avoiding a firing squad by having
their death sentences commuted to life imprisonment.
But Yudhoyono has
already come under criticism for his decision to reduce the 20-year sentence
imposed on former Gold Coast beautician Schapelle Corby by five years, which,
with two years' remission earned for good behavior, brought her release date
back from 2024 to 2019.
The governor of Bali's
Kerobokan jail, where Corby was imprisoned after trying to smuggle 4.2kg of
cannabis into the island, has confirmed she has been recommended for a further
six-month reduction as part of this month's Indonesian Independence Day
celebrations.
Renae Lawrence, a former
Newcastle panel beater and the only female member of the Bali Nine, has also
been recommended for a six-month reduction in her 20-year sentence, following good
behavior remissions of more than two years.
The appearance of
L'aigulle in a Kuala Lumpur court yesterday has swung attention back to
Malaysia, which has executed three Australians for drug trafficking.
The hangings of Perth
men Kevin Barlow and Brian Chambers in 1986, the first Westerners executed
under the harsh mandatory sentences introduced in the Dangerous Drugs Act,
caused a serious rift between Australia and Malaysia.
In 1993 Malaysia
executed Queensland heroin trafficker Michael McAuliffe.
Although the death
sentence is also imposed for murder, treason and terrorism, most prisoners
facing execution have been given mandatory death sentences under Section 39B of
the Dangerous Drugs Act.
Anti-capital-punishment
activists Malaysians Against Death Penalty & Torture say 860 people are
awaiting execution. Amnesty International says two people were executed and a
further 324 sentenced to die between 2001 and 2011.
L'aiguille and Bird face
possible execution under an act that reverses the onus of proof by requiring
alleged traffickers to prove their innocence rather than the state establishing
guilt.
Bird was arrested at a
Kuala Lumpur coffee shop in March after allegedly offering to sell 168.7 grams
of methamphetamine to undercover agents.
L'aigulle was arrested
last month when detectives searched a parked car in which she was sitting and
claim to have found drugs beneath a seat.
But there are
indications Malaysia is rethinking its laws on capital punishment. It has
appealed for mercy for one of its nationals facing execution for drug
trafficking in Singapore and has been concerned by death sentences passed on
more Malaysians elsewhere in Asia.
Within Malaysia,
activists, including the nation's Bar Association, are calling for an end to
capital punishment, senior minister Nazri Bin Abdul Aziz has supported its
abolition, and the Government told the United Nations in 2009 it proposed
replacing death with life imprisonment.
Meanwhile, in Sydney,
federal police and customs said yesterday they had seized drugs worth A$500
million ($619.6 million) after a tip from the United States Drug Enforcement
Administration.
The drugs, concealed in
terracotta pots imported in containers through Port Botany, included 306kg of
methamphetamine and 252kg of heroin.
Seven men, four from
Hong Kong and three Australian residents but also Hong Kong nationals, have
been charged with conspiring to import and attempted possession of the drugs.
Peter’s Comment
State killing of convicted
criminals is barbaric.
It is most disturbing to
note that Malaysia has a law that requires an accused to prove his innocence or
face death. That law is unspeakably vile.
Throughout history
almost every country has had a death penalty for a variety of crimes, but crime
has never been reduced by severe punishment, or by executing criminals.
States have tried every
imaginable means of execution at their disposal but the tide of crime has never
been turned, except by improving socio-economic conditions.
Continued below . . .
Continued below . . .
The means of execution
have included burning, boiling, crucifixion, crushing, decapitating, disembowelment,
dismemberment, drawing and quartering, elephant stamping, flaying, impalement,
sawing, slow slicing and stoning. But nothing ever worked they way the exponents claimed
it would.
In theory severe
punishment teaches a lesson and makes the offender think carefully before
offending again. There are several things wrong with this theory. First, most
offenders are incapable of careful, rational thought and that exactly is why
they find themselves in trouble with the law in the first place. Second, if the
punishment is so severe that the offender dies, then the punishment is
pointless as well as useless because after death the offender feels nothing.
Some say that having a
death penalty acts as a deterrent. There are several things wrong with that
claim. First, a person committing, or planning, a violent crime thinks only of
the crime and not at all about the likely consequences. Second, many people
committing a violent crime actually welcome their own death and immediately
suicide after the crime.
Then there are the
really mean-spirited people who callously say that execution is better than
wasting money keeping criminals in prison. But they have got their facts totally
wrong. It costs more to process and execute a criminal, by millions of dollars,
than it does to lock them up for a lifetime.
Eighty-eight per cent of
academic criminologists say that the death penalty is not a deterrent. Unfortunately,
the masses who think they know will
never let the politicians do what is best and indeed many politicians make rash
promises on crime reduction purely to get elected.
That has happened
repeatedly in the USA. But America has executed 13,000 people since colonial
times. Crime has reduced in America over a long period of time, but that has
been due to better living standards rather than punishment. Meanwhile the USA
remains one of 19 countries worldwide that supports the death penalty.
So to conclude, I return
to my earlier statement about socio-economic conditions. The patterns are well
established throughout history and clearly show that increases in crime can be
directly related to levels of unemployment, financial stress, hopelessness and
frustration.
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