Saturday, May 10, 2008

[when champions age] it's sad to see




It was the MCG in a year I can't even recall. On a visit to Melbourne, my mate had tickets for the Test match with the Windies and we went along on a perfect day for cricket.


The Aussies were batting and the new ball was not given to Malcolm Marshall from the other end, as I'd supposed but to other bowlers. I wanted to see Marshall bowl, recalling the terror he'd inspired from a few years earlier with that whippy action and lethal projectile.

After lunch they threw him the ball and it was a different man. Line and length, medium fast, he was hit away by, at that time, only reasonable Australian top order batsmen. The essential thing I could see was that there was no fear any more in the opposition's eyes.

The Third Umpire sums up Marshall's gifts:

Malcolm Marshall was their finest quick during their 1980s heyday, seriously rapid, hostile and extremely consistent; but he complemented these gifts with subtlety and real cricketing intelligence.

Plus he was a lovely man off-field, by all reports.

Cue Schumacher. As the BBC said in 1996:

The seven-times world champion celebrates his 36th birthday on Monday, but the German said he is confident of continued success.

"I have the odd small ache or pain every now and then but they are only small ones," he said. "I am not getting worn out and especially not psychologically. I still enjoy what I do immensely. "In sport, you can't rest on your past victories. You have to take the challenge again and again."


Ian Botham, Denis Lillee, Michael Jordan, Tyson,
Martina Navratilova, Gary Ablett Snr at Geelong - they all started playing smart or not so smart with age. It's truly sad to see a magnificent champion no longer able to cut it when he could have blown away the current opposition on his day.

Yes, they know it one day has to end. Yes, they know they must be a bit more subtle, a bit more roguish these days. They see the writing on the wall. As champions, of course, they'll get over it, come to terms with it [excepting Ablett and Tyson and to an extent - Jordan].

So is that what we're seeing now with Federer, a truly wonderful player, as Sampras was before him? One commenter's thoughts expressed at BBC Online:


It is the SIXTH defeat by six different players in SEVEN tournaments for Federer this season. This also credits all the analysts who clearly previewed the end of unilateral dominance of Federer since last year as all the guys know he is no longer unbeatable.

With this technically very limited backhand,it is obvious that Federer will not win the FO this year again bacause there are better clay-courters like Ferrer, Almagro, Davidenko and Nalbandian who will cause him all sorts of trouble on the surface.

Maybe it would be better for Federer to start thinking now about defending his title in Wimbledon which will be very difficult. I expect many more defeats for Federer to come this season as winning a serious title this year (Master Series or GS) looks so laborious for him.

Martina on aging:


"I did this for the enjoyment of the game and that still is there. I'm pleased with how I'm playing. I can still put it together at this age and not having played for four years. I'm having a great time. It doesn't get any better."

Navratilova said she was moved when she spotted an elderly woman with a walking support who came to watch her play in Eastbourne.

"How honored can you get for people to be making an effort like that to see you play tennis?" she said. "It's a treat and why there will never be any regrets if I don't win."


And a comment all former champions could relate to:


I've been in the twilight of my career longer than most people have had their career.

Friday, May 09, 2008

[thought for the day] friday evening


I think I see some light at the end of the tunnel but maybe it's just an oncoming train.
If you haven't yet read it, good messieurs et mesdames, might I suggest this for your bedtime reading tonight?

[st louis ghost train] mystery solved ... perhaps


The legend

One night in the 1920s, a CNR engineer was checking the tracks near St. Louis when he got hit by a train and lost his head. Now, at night a light from a phantom train or lantern appears - it's the engineer looking for his head.

Some people checked it out:


St. Louis Saskatchewan
Mayor Emile Lussier, who runs a hotel at the foot of an iron bridge once used by the old trains, did not believe tales of the nightly ghost train. So he once went with his brother-in-law to the crossroads with a somewhat daring plan in mind.

"So far as we knew, nobody had actually walked the tracks. So we did," says Lussier.

They walked about a mile along the old track bed, without seeing anything. Then suddenly, "there was a light right at our heels -- a strong light that cast shadows. When we turned around, it was gone."

Lussier's son and some friends decided to go out to the old track bed to see for themselves. Lussier stayed at the crossroads as the boys hiked off down the old track bed. As he watched them in the distance, something very strange occurred.

"The light lit everyone up. It looked just like a globe -- really bright. And yet, they didn't see a thing."

Lussier points to that episode as an indication the "phantom light", as some people in St. Louis prefer to call it, "appears in two very different ways".

Serge Gareau took some visitors from Alberta one evening for the midnight phenomenon.

"We sat there for about an hour, and nothing was happening," Gareau recalls. "And then all of a sudden we saw this light. It was just like a train coming. A bright light coming at us, with a little red light towards the bottom."

Enthralled, the Gareaus and their friends watched "for a good two hours" as the steady white beam and its crimson companion appeared to approach, but never arrive.

The solution to the mystery is quite possibly in white below.

Click here

All right, that appears to be that. Well, what about this then?

"I don’t think it’s car lights," says Rita Ferland, one of the few people who’ve seen the phantom beam in broad daylight.
... or this?

Scientists on the scene have also confirmed sighting this apparition. They saw the light of the train on the tracks and saw it get closer like the train was travelling forward.

The Ghostlight

Windows Media - Low Quality (3.2 Mb for dial-up connections)
Windows Media - Mid Quality (10.6 Mb for faster connections)
RealPlayer - Low Quality (1.1 Mb for dial-up connections)
RealPlayer - Mid Quality (15.1 Mb for faster connections)

Well I've looked at everything available now and the footage is not exactly conclusive. I don't see everything flooded with light although they all report it does sweep around the trees at them. Why not photograph that? If true that it does flood the area in light, can't see how that can be headlights 5.3 miles away. And why not everyday? And how in the middle of the day?

Two teenagers reported their alternator caught on fire. Again - their word. I can see the taillights might be the red lantern but why not two lanterns? The light splitting could be car headlights front on at a dip in the road.

Wish we could see a vid of the whole thing.

[new nationalism] the writing on the wall


There is most definitely a new trend around the world. Actually, the feeling was always there but now it is more articulated at governmental level:

Foreigners go home.

Starting with an extreme example, Burma:

Burma wants supplies but not foreign aid workers, its foreign ministry says, hours after the UN chief urged military leaders to prioritise relief work. Burma was "making strenuous efforts" to get aid to affected areas by itself and was not ready for foreign teams, a statement in a state daily said.


Pleading guilty myself, sitting, eating a Russian breakfast while I posted this weeks ago, there does seem to be a new nationalism afoot, a new withdrawal into the national self. Applying that old chestnut to any country you care to name:


It might be a hopelessly disorganized cesspit but it's OUR cesspit!


So while the whole thrust of the sphere is global - look at the visitors to this site for a start - in RL there is an opposite discernible trend. According to The American Conservative, in a recent piece in the FT , Larry Summers, Clinton's old aide, warns that:


…growth in the global economy encourages the development of stateless elites whose allegiance is to global economic success and their own prosperity rather than the interests of the nation where they are headquartered. As one prominent chief executive put it in Davos this year:

“We will be fine however America does but I hope for its sake that it will cut taxes and reduce regulation and put more pressure on young people to study in the ways that are necessary for it to be able to keep competing successfully.”

The AC goes on:

Similar concerns about the way the “rise of nationalism” frays global economic ties, have been raised by Bob Davis in another anti-business daily, the Wall Street Journal on Monday:

During the long march toward globalization, international borders and trade barriers came down. Communism fell. Protectionist walls in Latin America and elsewhere were dismantled. Governments — long prone to meddling in trade — took a back seat to broader market forces.

In a globalization manifesto, New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman declared that the Internet and other planet-spanning technologies were erasing national boundaries. The world, he said in a 2005 best seller, was flat.

No longer. The global economy appears to be entering an epoch in which governments are reasserting their role in the lives of individuals and businesses. Once again, barriers are rising. Call it the new nationalism.


And:
Now borrowers shun the IMF and World Bank. Trade talks are shelved. Barriers to foreign investment are rising around the world. State-owned companies are expanding, particularly in oil and gas. Public support of immigration restrictions is growing in countries from the U.S. to India.

Sovereign wealth funds from Asia and the Middle East are now propping up wobbly financial institutions in the U.S. and Europe, and may hunt next for real-estate bargains.
All three presidential candidates say they would pass tougher financial-market regulation and would also boost government programs to retrain workers battered by the global economy.

In rich and poor countries alike, immigration has become a powerful political issue, as improved transportation makes it easier for people to move across borders and compete for jobs with locals.

Where does that leave a person who resides outside his own country? I'd like to think it comes down to how deeply integrated he's become in his host country, what roots he's put down and how committed he is to putting back into that host economy. In the end it is how the host country perceives him and his value.

But other factors come into play as well - the new nationalism, the need for governments to be seen to be working in the best interests of its own natives and the lumping in of all "foreigners" together, irrespective of who they are and what their purposes are.

This spills over into the restriction of foreign influences. The Chinese are not the only ones planning to control the net:

A September 25 statement from the Ministry of Information Industry banned “subversive” material—including pornography, criticism of the government, and sensitive topics like Tibet and Taiwan independence—from the country’s computer networks.

Instead, only “healthy, civilized news and information beneficial to the nation” can be posted, the ministry said. It is already a crime in China to defame government agencies, divulge state secrets, or promote separatist movements.

This plus Tibet, in the lead up to an Olympics which is looking increasingly like 1936. The pornography issue is interesting in itself if you can put the moral aspect to one side for the moment and concentrate on the strategy:

While the rest of the net is reeling from crumbling ad revenues, the sex industry has not even taken a hit because its main revenue stream is subscriptions, not advertising.

Yet companies such as
Yahoo! are opting out of the porn industry. Given the demand, the big business and the job security,this seems like a mad decision. Why?




Especially as the
slavery issue is closely connected to such big business:

It is estimated that 2/3 of women trafficked for prostitution worldwide annually come from Eastern Europe, three-quarters have never worked as prostitutes before. An estimated 500,000 women from Central and Eastern Europe are working in prostitution in the European Union alone

...
Sexual slavery in Pakistan is one of the worst in South Asia. Young girls (sometimes as young as 9 years old) are sold by their own fathers to brothels as sex slaves in big cities. Often this happens due to debt accumulated from gambling, whereby the father has no other way to raise the money than to sell his daughters.

Yahoo clearly reads either the force of public reaction to the glut of porn or else it sees a closed market of high stakes and surmises that there are better ways to turn a relatively safe profit or else it knows something and isn't saying.

Maybe that thing it knows is that morality also pays and will increasingly pay as parents and other concerned citizens turn savage and demand better porn filters but when it is seen that these are useless, in steps a regulatory agency offering a two tier internet - one protected and restricted by the agency and the other free and unfettered, eventually to be closed down, once it's served its purpose.

Meanwhile we bloggers blithely type away and post things like this article, eventually read by 2 or 3 hundred people and we feel pleased that we are doing society a favour. Actually we are pretty irrelevant and riding on the back of a game with far higher stakes. That game is the new feudalism:

The new Middle Ages will be worse for most of humanity than the older ones were for the serfs; the latter were at least needed in productive processes and thus received employment and a certain amount of maintenance.

So-called progress in technology and management methods is reducing this need, a fact currently masked by migration of formerly productive employees to service sectors, which, in the long run, are unsustainable.

In general terms, tomorrow's serf will find himself not only sub- or unemployed, but socially excluded from state-of-the-art living, be it in communications, transportation, health care, education, or recreation.

We're moving to a stage now where people are either integrating fully [i.e. citizenship] or else are being repatriated. The days which Martin Kelly refers to are rapidly coming to a close, the same days Tom Paine refers to here:

100% or more of all my contacts with clients (I am a lawyer) are by phone and email, but it's just not conceivable to execute complex deals without spending time together. If those deals are across borders, that involves travel.

I very much feel these days are rapidly drawing to a close and that if we are propertied, hopefully multi-propertied, we'll be part of the "
state-of-the-art living" referred to above but if we are in credit-delusion land, we are the new serfs.

I'm already rapidly adjusting my sights and coming to terms with the future. Here is an old post dealing with this.

Thursday, May 08, 2008

[thought for the day] thursday evening


As the cow said after attempting to jump the moon and crashing ignominiously to the earth:


The old legs just haven't got that spring in them any more.

[odd one out] all entertainers


Firstly - identify them.

Secondly - who is the odd one out and why? [There could be any reason - female, black, French or whatever but this is an unusual reason.]

Their names, clockwise from the top:

Eva Green, Elvis Presley, Vin Diesel, Michael Jackson

The odd one out?

Michael Jackson - the only one without a twin.