Monday, October 22, 2007

[hong kong slugfest] mahjong tiles v broomhead


Why would, as the Asian Times put it, two of Hong Kong's aging tais-tais [a Chinese term for a privileged woman of leisure] be of any interest to you or me?

That’s answered in the first line of the article:

Cheered on by the political class, [they] are publicly slugging it out, to the utter amusement of the common folk.

Sort of like Boris, without the niceness.

The prize for this contest is the Legislative Council seat left vacant by the recent death of Ma Lik, chairman of DAB, which is of little interest to us. The winner will only have the seat for 10 months before fresh elections for the entire council are called.

First Contestant

Anson Chan Fang On-Sang, for a start, has a wonderful name.

Even better is the epithet applied to her - Chan Sei Man:
“... for her icy smile which is said to resemble 40,000 mahjong tiles. She’s 67 and was known, before an unfortunate situation, as the “conscience of Hong Kong.”
Her popularity took a plunge when she took on the task to promote the state security bill in September 2002. Aside from the concerns over the bill's potential threats to civil liberties, her responses to the public bordered on insults.
Second Contestant

Regina Ip Lau Suk-yee, GBM B.A., MA, MSc, M.Litt
Anson’s former subordinate and ex-security chief, since 2002, she has become such a controversial figure that detractors resorted to taking shots at her bushy hairstyle, nicknaming her "Broomhead".

She has openly admitted that she although she dislikes the nickname Broomhead, she would not change her hairstyle just to please her critics, retorting:

"If I can't even defend my hairstyle, how can I defend Hong Kong?”
In the current battle, her opening salvo appears to have been:
“I’m ten years younger than her!”
The point of the battle

Without going too far into Hong Kong politics:
“a power struggle has been going on for the last couple of years between the leaders and [rising] younger members of the Democratic Party, flagship of the whole pro-democracy movement.”
Hence the need to pressgang one of the elitists into action - hence Chan.

The more serious side of her is her anti-sedition legislation and being seen as being in Beijing’s pocket. Ip, despite her "democracy come lately" stance, has Beijing's support since the DAB and the pro-government Liberal Party are backing her with organizational support.

Still not interesting?

The Asia Times pleads with you:
For outsiders to understand the exquisite nature of this fight, some characteristics of Hong Kong society need to be understood.

Hong Kong is a highly stratified society where everybody is expected to know his place and to keep himself there. At the top of this society are some two dozen or so established families who, generally, do not soil themselves with such common activities as politics.

Some members of these families see themselves as rightful heirs of the British in the running of Hong Kong. They will not come right out and say so, of course. They simply expect to be courted by the powers-that-be. The British cultivated them; the Chinese did not. Or not to the extent that the British did.
So the common populace are greatly enjoying when Lady Ice asks:
"I wonder who is a sudden democrat, myself or Regina?"
… and when Broomhead, who was quoted as saying:
"Adolf Hitler was returned by universal suffrage, and he killed 7 million Jews ... one-person, one-vote is no panacea,"
… now argues passionately for democracy.

The pollsters are having a field day and though the result of this bi-election counts for little in Beijing dominated Hong Kong, for the ordinary citizen, a common street slugfest between two Grand Dames sullying themselves to win the common vote has been impossible not to savour whilst the spectacle lasts.

In our own western situation where the lights are going out all over the free world, the need for the elite to still kowtow to the common man must surely strike a chord.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

[food prices] comparative world mini study

This took a bit longer than expected.

Visitors to this site were asked if they would submit current prices for a list of ten food products, in supermarkets or similar, in their part of the world.

This is my collation, using $US for all prices at current conversion rates:

• Euros = 1.42 US dollars
• British pounds sterling = 2.04 US dollars
• Canadian dollars = 1.02 US dollars
• Australian dollars = 0.90 US dollars
• US dollar = 24.5 Russian roubles
• 1 kg=2.2lbs, 1lb=0.454kg
• 1 gallon [Imp]=4.546 litres, 1 litre=0.22 gallons
• 1 gallon[U.S.]=3.785 litres, 1 litre=0.264 gallons

Special thanks to: The Morningstar [England], Jmb [Canada], Julie [Wales], Liz [Wales], Welshcakes Limoncello [Sicily], Jacque LeBlanc now in Sicily [Honolulu prices], Sean Jeating [Europe], who gets the prize for the most meticulous list, LFB_UK *The Legend* [England], Colin Campbell [Australia], Ruthie [U.S.A.] and also to Sally in Norfolk [England] and Gracchi [England].

The original data is here.

Notes: Interesting, in this list, to see some identical prices in different parts of Europe or Britain which suggest the price has been set. With the Russian prices, bear in mind that a four year trained teacher at school earns 5 700 roubles [$232] a month.

A middle management executive and a shopgirl earn 12 000 roubles and a check in girl for an airline earns 20 000. A doctor with five years experience earns about 10 000 roubles. The pension is 3000 roubles.

Prices in brackets below are all in U.S. dollars for comparison and refer to standard measures - either kilogramme, litre, whole [chicken], dozen [for eggs] or loaf.

1. Beef, in the form of mince:

Safeway Washington $4.49 1 LB 90% Lean Ground Beef 10% Fat [$9.16]
Ruthie [U.S.A.] A pound of ground beef is about $3. (I'm not sure what "beef mince" is, I'm assuming it's what we would call ground beef) [$6.60]
Jmb [Canada] beef mince, medium qual. $9.90/kg [$10.10]
The Morningstar [England] Beef mince: .5 kilo 1.40 [$5.71]
LFB_UK *The Legend* [England] Beef Mince 92p 500g [$3.75]
Julie [Wales] Minced beef per kilo £2.59 - (on offer - 2 kilos for £2.59) [$5.28]
Liz [Wales] Beef mince: £8.23 a kilo (organic lean steak mince) [$16.79]
Sean Jeating [Europe] Minced beef: 1 kg = 4,90 Euro [$6.96]
Welshcakes Limoncello [Sicily] 1 kilo minced beef - €7,89 [$11.20]
James [fSU] 52.80 roubles/450g [$2.16]
Colin Campbell [Australia] Mince $10 [$9.00]

2. Chicken, in the form of whole frozen bird:

Safeway Washington 3 LB Perdue Whole Chicken Fresh $3.87 [$8.51]
Ruthie [U.S.A.] A whole chicken is $6-$9, depending on the brand [$7.50]
Jmb [Canada] chicken,whole 5.91/kg [$6.02]
Julie [Wales] whole medium sized chicken - £3.50 [$7.14]
Liz [Wales] Chicken: £5.59 (large) [$11.40]
Sean Jeating [Europe] chicken, whole bird frozen (1,4 kg) = 2,49 Euro [$3.53]
Welshcakes Limoncello [Sicily] chicken here by weight - €3,45 per kilo [$6.86]
James [fSU] 107.60 roubles/1.4kg [$4.39]
Colin Campbell [Australia] chicken,whole 6/kg [$7.56]

Article continues here.

[new england] leaf peeping heartbreak

Every fall, Marilyn Krom tries to make a trip to Vermont to see its famously beautiful fall foliage. This year, she noticed something different about the autumn leaves.

"They're duller, not as sparkly, if you know what I mean," Krom, 62, a registered nurse from Eastford, Conn., said during a recent visit. "They're less vivid."

"It's nothing like it used to be," said University of Vermont plant biologist Tom Vogelmann, a Vermont native.

He says autumn has become too warm to elicit New England's richest colors.
Say it’s the government’s fault, say it’s ours, say anything you like and apportion the blame as you will but please, please, don’t stick your head in the sand and pretend it’s not happening.

[noah’s ark] saving the devil

We write a lot about the dire things going on with world leadership but sometimes a heartwarming story pops up, where concerted action by a particular group might result in some good being done:
Less cuddly than the koala, less quirky than the kangaroo, the Tasmanian devil is not everyone's cup of tea. But the rare carnivorous marsupials, known for their blood-curdling yowls and their insatiable appetite for wombat carrion, may not be around for much longer.

Scientists are trying to preserve the species by sending a Noah's Ark population of healthy animals to zoos and sanctuaries on the mainland. Institutions in Europe and the United States are also expected to play a part in Project Ark, aimed at conserving the creatures and, if possible, releasing them back into the wild if and when the disease is eliminated.

[england] beware the lion’s heart

Captain Phil Vickery: "I can't fault anyone - the players, the supporters. We've had a magical time here. Fair play to South Africa. They were the better team and this is their victory."

Flanker Martin Corry: "We can't fault the effort and the heart that the team showed. The format didn't go to plan and it is so disappointing that we lost."

Winger Mark Cueto: "Everyone wrote us off at the start of the competition. We came out of the pool stage and put some massive performances in and showed what our group is all about."

Sold down the drain in Lisbon by it’s supposed leader and due to be chopped up into regions, besieged on all sides by the world, having now suffered a very public but by no means humiliating loss, anyone who now writes England off doesn’t know his history.

[food price survey] where are the americans?

Just about to close the food price survey [click on pic] and it's a shame none of my American readers - The Daily Ramble, Ruthie, even Bob G - wanted to join in, otherwise it would have been a true world comparison in tomorrow's article.

Thanks to the Brits, Canadians, Europeans and Antipodaeans who submitted prices of staple goods - it makes for interesting comparisons and I'll post on it tomorrow.

Update: Apologies to Jacqueline le Blanc, who supplied Honolulu prices!

Sunday update: The lists are currently being compiled and will be displayed later in the morning.