The Octopus Double Ring / Brass Knuckles is lasercut from 1/8″ Black Acrylic — via Etsy
Need you a simple automatic watch? The Cadence Ecomatic Sport is a mere $225 an runs a Miyota 8215 movement and has a leather wristband — via Wrist Watch Review
The Phoenix Zoo has just recieved eight Komodo dragon babies on loan from the Los Angeles Zoo. Four males and four females, all from the same clutch, hatched between 6 August and 11 August. They weigh about 5 ounces each — via ZooBorns
The vintage Ducati here sits at the start of that lineage: it’s a factory Sport Corsa Desmo 350, and one of just six works machines in existence. It’s the machine that introduced the wide case
single, a new crankcase design that later found its way into the road bikes — and the design that made Taglioni realise that Ducati could develop the single no further — via Bike EXIF
When I was editor of The Age, I thought about hiring Andrew Bolt as a columnist. Indeed, I think I even met with him to see whether he had any interest in coming back to the Age. (Bolt was on the Age staff when I joined the paper in the early 80s.) I thought Bolt might add … how should put it … a certainly unpredictability to The Age oped page. As it was, I don’t think Bolt had any interest in joining the red rag I edited and looking back, I’m glad it never happened. That’s because inevitably, sooner or later, Bolt would write a column that I would refuse to publish. And then I’d have a martyr to free speech on my hands.
I would not have published the two columns for which Bolt was found to have contravened the Racial Discrimination Act. I would not have published them firstly because (I hope) in the editing process, there would have been questions raised — by me, by the oped page editor, by our lawyers perhaps — about the facts
on which Bolt built his pieces which basically argued that some people had chosen to identify themselves as Aborigines to reap material rewards of one kind or another. I would not have published them even if the columns were factually accurate because I thought the tone of the columns was nasty and demeaned the people he was writing about.
There’s a lot of nonsense talked about free speech, especially by people who are in a position — and who do so daily if not hourly — to make decisions on what is acceptable speech and what isn’t in the public sphere. Editors, news directors, executive producers of current affairs and news programs, even the esteemed editor of The Drum, decide the limits of free speech all the time and they do so, not merely on the basis of what is legally safe. Often they make this decision on gut feeling, on their understanding of their readership or their audience, of the traditions and history of the organization that they are fortunate enough to run for a period of time.
Of course, I am not talking about the blogosphere here, where mad people and sane people, people consumed with hatred and bile and people who want only to serve the public good — and all those in between — feel like they have a licence to say anything and damn the consequences. Still, while the media revolution may be upon us and the old media gatekeepers of what is acceptable speech and what isn’t might be, Canute like, holding back an irresistible tide, at the moment, the old media still delivers mass audiences and for that mass audience, public speech is not free and never has been — via redwolf.newsvine.com
The chief of Amnesty International says Australia’s treatment of asylum seekers and Indigenous people is deeply disturbing and an international embarrassment.
In his first interview while in Australia, Amnesty secretary-general Salil Shetty told ABC’s Lateline that Western nations, including Australia, are rapidly losing credibility when it comes to human rights.
He says the Federal Government’s stymied Malaysia Solution is not in line with international refugee laws — via redwolf.newsvine.com
Jones Studio designed the Thurston Wine House in Paradise Valley, Arizona — via CONTEMPORIST
In March 2011, Bulova announced the appointment of Sir Richard Branson, Founder of Virgin Group, as the brand ambassador for Bulova Accutron; this week, Bulova announced the Bulova Accutron Sir Richard Branson
Limited Edition Watch. It is a sharp looking and well spec-ed watch — titanium case, automatic mechanical movement that is COSC certified (ie meets high standards for accurate timekeeping, and a nicely styled black dial with 24-hour/GMT second time zone reading on the dial (the 24 destinations listed on the dial correspond to one of the world’s 24 time zones). The dial is actually a stylised representation of the globe, with longitude and latitude lines included — via Perpetuelle
John H Brackenbury highly commended. Four-spotted Orbweaver. (Araneus quadratus). Mare’s Way, Cambridgeshire, England — via British Wildlife Photography Awards 2011
























RSS – Posts