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Wednesday 12 December 2007

Auch der Bayer will gesünder leben

Zum Rauchen vor die Tür

Bayern hat jetzt das bundesweit schärfste Gesetz zum Nichtraucherschutz. Der Landtag stimmte mit großer Mehrheit für die Vorlage der CSU. Demnach darf ab Neujahr in Gaststätten des Freistaats, in Bierzelten und öffentlichen Gebäuden nicht mehr geraucht werden. Zahlreiche Wirte hatten zuvor mit Aktionen und Protesten deutlich gemacht, dass sie die Neuregelung ablehnen.

Bericht des BR

Thursday 15 November 2007

Der Entführungsfall MM

Ich weigere mich schon seit längerem den Namen auszusprechen. Ich weiß nicht, wie viel über den Fall in Deutschland berichtet wurde, hier war er mehrmals ausführlich in den Primtime Nachrichten. Meine Meinung habe ich schon an anderer Stelle kund getan. Nun aber hat die Titanic sich des Falls angenommen. Und die Ms sind empört. Und wollen klagen. Natürlich ist das nicht lustig. Zumindest nicht für sie. Aber sie tun sich keinen Gefallen damit, die Story and die große Glocke zu hängen. Sie wäre so schnell in Vergessenheit geraten. Welcher Engländer liest deutsche Zeitungen? Gar Satiremagazine?

Netter Bericht in Hauptsache Kultur, HR. Maintower hat es es indes nicht verstanden. Mehrfach im Beitrag zitiert, Titanic sei hier geschmacklos und makaber (ist das nicht ohnehin das Gleiche?), lässt der Moderator am Ende über Telefon abstimmen: Finden Sie den Titanic Artikel geschmacklos? Ja. Nein." All das, liebe Leute, ist Satire. Die Titanic will genau so sein, sonst macht sie sich unglaubwürdig.

Oder hat der HR am Ende seine eigene Satiresendung und Maintower nur als Verkleidung verwandt? Es geht fast unter, aber der Weiße Ring wird als "Täterschutzorganisation" angekündigt.

Es wird Titanic dieser Tage aber auch zu leicht gemacht. Die MM Kampagne schrie schon in der ersten Woche nach Titelblattstory. Da sind sie ja jetzt sehr milde mit der Doppelseite gewesen. Und jetzt müssen sie nicht mal über die Grenzen schauen. Der bekannte Satiriker Wolfgang T. äußerte sich wie folgt über den Altkanzler:

"Seine Frau im Dunkeln in Ludwigshafen sitzen zu lassen, wie es Helmut Kohl gemacht hat, ist kein Ideal "

Großes Kino, Wolf. Grandios.

Saturday 20 October 2007

Freiburg kanns auch!

I do apologise, Freiburg. They don't have a logo. Yet. But they have used the football methaphor. Ok, may be a bit hackneyed. It still makes a good reading though.

German understatement

The whole thing must seem odd for the English speaking world. A lot of Germans also wonder if the "Exzellenzinitiative" is a good idea. In its attempt to close ranks with the Harvards and Oxfords of this world, the Federal Government decided to fund a number of universities with a speacial grant. This grant is called "initiative for excellence" and worth EUR1.9bn. According to the department of education and research it was founded "to establish internationally visible research beacons in Germany". Exzellenzinitiative may be a catchy title and also gives it the academic touch it probably needs. It is, however, rather hard to pronounce. Konstanz Uni's press office has already had some problems with it (see below).

In the second round of the initiative six more universities were chosen by the German Research Association (DFG) and the Science Council yesterday. The Technical University Karlsruhe and both of Munich's universities (LMU and TH) won in the first round in October 2006. Germany's new elite universities are:

RWTH Aachen, FU Berlin and Universities Freiburg, Göttingen, Heidelberg and Konstanz.

The decision entitles them to some EUR100m in Government funds over the next couple of years. Let's prentend for one moment that this is a very good idea and that there is no criticism.

You would expect the lucky winners to promote this success in any way they can to attract students and business, wouldn't you? Let's have a look at their websites then.

It seems that no one of the Heidelberg staff has noticed that their employer was awarded a new title. There is absolutely nothing on the website. Oh, sorry. I missed it. There is a link in the menu on the left hand side. Almost invissibly. 1/10.












Some 100km further South, the colleagues in Konstanz are indeed aware of their prize. The didn't feel, however, that it is worth more than a press release. 3/10. Take a closer look at the wording of the headline. It honestly says, even in the English version: "Exzellenzinitiative: Universität Konstanz wird Exzellenzuniversität. Exzellenzuniversität Konstanz - mehr Informationen". Hello, McFly? Anybody home? A five year old could have been more creative. I have sent them an email saying that I have never read anything that boring.

Similarly unspectacular, FU Berlin calls itself "light tower of science". There is a nice image on Spiegel online. My god, welcome your students to the Elite University in the capital!

Even duller is Göttingen's version (my home uni btw!): "Excellence initiative: success." Wow! That's creative. 2/10. What about: Wer in Göttingen studiert ist exzellent!

The only university that has a good PR team seems to be Aachen. They actually use the term "exzellent" in the headline of the press release and furthermore have created a new logo - even better than Munich's. Almost there, guys. Just one more thing. An English translation of the website might attract foreign students and business as well. 8/10.

Thank you, Mr President

There are a lot of reasons to criticise US President George W Bush. And I have done that on this blog a number of times. It seems though that the anti-Bush camp does not mention his few positive moves. I do. Because it is only fair and in this case also very important.

Bush met the Dalai Lama this Wednesday. "Privately", they said to calm down the fire and brimstone breathing Chinese. Does it matter? I don't think so. A US President cannot meet someone privately. It will influence the world in any case.

You could argue that this move was not very brave, given that Bush is in the last month of his presidency. His has nothing to loose. Well, on top of the meeting with, Congress awarded the "man of faith and sincerity and peace" with a gold medal. Its highest award.

The German chancellor Angela Merkel infuriated Bejing when she had met the Dalai Lama in September. Well done, chancellor.

Saturday 13 October 2007

Bella Italia?

The Italian people have voted overwhelmingly in favour of a labour and pension reform in a referendum on 8th October. Landmark agreement, great success for the fragile government under Romano Prodi. Fine. Reading on the FT article you find this in the last paragraph:

The Italian government spends about 14 per cent of GDP on pensions, the highest rate among OECD countries, for Italians to enjoy one of the youngest retirement ages of 57 years. The proposals would gradually raise the minimum retirement age to 61 between 2008 and 2013.

What? 61 years? Throughout the country not until 2013. And there is no outcry! Hey, you leasy buggers: Get going! This is disgraceful. Germany is going to raise the retirement age to 67! And then you wonder where the clichés come from...
Der Deutschlandfunk fasste es etwas anders.

Italien: Mehrheit der Beschäftigten stimmt für Erhöhung des Renteneintrittsalters
Bei einem Referendum über die Erhöhung des Renteneintrittsalters in Italien hat eine breite Mehrheit der Beschäftigten mit Ja gestimmt. Nach vorläufigen Ergebnissen votierten mehr als 82 Prozent für einen im Juli zwischen den Gewerkschaften und Ministerpräsident Prodi erzielten Kompromiss. Danach soll das Renteneintrittsalter schrittweise von jetzt 58 auf 61 Jahre steigen. Am Freitag wird das Kabinett in Rom über den Entwurf beraten. - dradio-newsletters: Deutschlandradio 20 Uhr Nachrichten vom 10. Oktober

Kann mir das mal jemand erklären?

Sunday 30 September 2007

WELTMEISTER AGAIN!

2-0 over Brasil! Germany has won the World Cup. The women's that is. Two terrific goals in the second half secured Sylvia Neid's team the victory over Brasil. Just after the interval Birgit Prinz (52') scored from 13 metres. Finally, Simone Laudehr scored in the 88th minutes with a brilliant header.

To quote the BBC2 commentator: "The are quite simply the best around!" Nadine Angerer was voted best goalkeeper of the tournament; she saved a penalty from Marta (Brazilians never seem to have a surname, I wonder why). The team did not concede a single goal throught the World Cup.

It's also the first time a team has ever defended their title. Germany won the Cup in the USA in 2003.

Saturday 11 August 2007

Empfehlungen für den baldigen Rentner E.S.

"Um erfolgreich ein Unternehmen zu führen, müssen zwei Dinge stimmen: Fachwissen und Persönlichkeit. Stoiber hat weder fachlich Ahnung noch Charisma."

Headhunter Dieter Rickert über die Chancen des bayerischen Ministerpräsidenten in der Wirtschaft. Edmund S. scheidet in zwei Monaten aus dem Amt.

Oh, sorry, you would like to read it?





Friday 10 August 2007

And finally: Bryan

While Cerys is on Sky News on Sunday, I have eventually published my first article.

Tuesday 7 August 2007

There is something (or someone) good in the world

The BBC interviewed the US soldier who exposed the abuse of Iraqi prisoners in Abu Ghraib.

Joe Darby being asked if he saw himself as a hero or a traitor: "
I see myself as a soldier who did his job. No more, no less."

Monday 6 August 2007

If you come across an AK-47...

... call the DoD. It might belong to the 190,000 they gave to the Iraqi forces. It was said that they can't rule that these weapons might now be used by the insurgents. So, against their own forces.

I have a deja vu here. Didn't the CIA support of the mujahideen in the war in Afghanistan in the 80s? Apparently one "freedom fighter" (R. Reagan) was called Osama bin Laden...

See also David Gardner's article in Friday's FT.

Sunday 5 August 2007

For Life

This week has been depressing. For one one from the doorstep community told me that he's terminally ill and that doctors had told him he'd be lucky to see the end of September. I really feel sorry for him. He's a nice guy, very frienldy, always greets.

Secondly, I read an article in the guardian weekend magazine about prisoners who had been sentenced to life without parole. Bad enough, they were kids when the committed the crime. And worse still, two of them actualy didn't kill anyone. They were complicit to murder. I knew that the judicial system in th US is strange. I knew about the death penalty of course. And thought that's bad enough for a democracy. Pustekuchen.

I have learned that life sentenced actually means imprisonment for life. You never leave prison,. You die in prison. In one way or the other. Excuse my ignorance, in Germany it's 15 years.

I have also learned that kids can be jailed. For life. In one case a 17-year old was convicted because her boyfriend, the killer, accused her of actively taking part in the murder - in contrary of what he said while question first by the police. So the murder actually made a deal by testifying that his girlfriend took part in the murder. The result, he gets a 20-50 year sentence with the chance of leaving prison earlier for good bevaiour. She gets life without parole. What kind of world is it, we are living in? An injustice that cries out to high heaven.
Even here, we can add some sarcasm to the already absurd story.

"When she was sentenced, the judge ruled that the time she had spent in jail awaiting trial - 264 days - should be credited against her term of incarceration. What does that mean?"

Weisheit

Ich dachte, wenn ich schon keines der wichtigsten Bücher gelesen habe, sollten sie doch zumindest auf meinem blog erscheinen.

Liste der rezensierten Werke
(in Klammern die Namen der Rezensenten)

  1. Die Bibel (Rudolf Augstein)
  2. Homer, Odyssee (Herbert Bannert)
  3. Platon, Apologie (Urs Jaeggi)
  4. Vergil, Aeneis (Bernhard Kytzler)
  5. Tacitus, Germania (Heinrich Böll)
  6. Longos, Daphnis und Chloë (Bernhard Kytzler)
  7. Augustinus, Bekenntnisse (Golo Mann)
  8. Die Erzählungen aus den tausendundein Nächten (Iring Fetscher)
  9. Wolfram von Eschenbach, Parzival (Peter Wapnewski)
  10. Gottfried von Straßburg, Tristan (Peter Wapnewski)
  11. Das Nibelungenlied (Peter Wapnewski)
  12. Dante Alighieri, Die Göttliche Komödie (Horst Rüdiger)
  13. Giovanni Boccaccio, Das Decamerone (Herbert Heckmann)
  14. Thomas Morus, Utopia (Rudolf Augstein)
  15. François Rabelais, Gargantua und Pantagruel (Herbert Heckmann)
  16. Michel de Montaigne, Essais (Rolf Michaelis)
  17. Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen, Der abenteuerliche Simplicissimus (Günter Kunert)
  18. Blaise Pascal, Pensées (Iring Fetscher)
  19. Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe (Ulrich Greiner)
  20. Jonathan Swift, Gullivers Reisen (Eberhard Lämmert)
  21. Henry Fielding, Tom Jones (Ludwig Harig)
  22. Laurence Sterne, Tristram Shandy (Rudolf Walter Leonhardt)
  23. Voltaire, Candide (Robert Minder)
  24. Johann Wolfgang Goethe, Die Leiden des jungen Werthers (Reinhard Lettau)
  25. Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, Anti-Goeze (Dieter Hildebrandt)
  26. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Die Bekenntnisse (Rolf Michaelis)
  27. Karl Philipp Moritz, Anton Reiser (Peter Laemmle)
  28. Immanuel Kant, Zum ewigen Frieden (Rudolf Walter Leonhardt)
  29. Ulrich Bräker, Der arme Mann im Tockenburg (Peter Wapnewski)
  30. Friedrich Schiller, Ästhetische Schriften (Hans Platschek)
  31. Denis Diderot, Jacques der Fatalist und sein Herr (Helmut Heißenbüttel)
  32. Jean Paul, Siebenkäs (Leo Kreutzer)
  33. Friedrich Hölderlin, Hyperion (Rolf Michaelis)
  34. Georg Christoph Lichtenberg, Sudelbücher (Klaus Schröter)
  35. Johann Wolfgang Goethe, Die Wahlverwandtschaften (Reinhard Baumgart)
  36. Heinrich von Kleist, Erzählungen (Eberhard Lämmert)
  37. Johann Peter Hebel, Das Schatzkästlein des Rheinischen Hausfreunds (Hartmut von Hentig)
  38. Die Brüder Grimm, Kinder- und Hausmärchen (Hartmut von Hentig)
  39. E. T. A. Hoffmann, Kater Murr und Kreisler (Hans Mayer)
  40. Giacomo Casanova, Geschichte meines Lebens (Manès Sperber)
  41. Joseph von Eichendorff, Aus dem Leben eines Taugenichts (Petra Kipphoff)
  42. Stendhal, Rot und Schwarz (Luise Rinser)
  43. Georg Büchner, Lenz (Peter Schneider)
  44. Honoré de Balzac, Verlorene Illusionen (Hans-Jörg Neuschäfer)
  45. Charles Dickens, Oliver Twist (Ludwig Harig)
  46. Nikolaj Gogol, Die toten Seelen (Horst Bienek)
  47. Søren Kierkegaard, Entweder – Oder (Heinz Josef Herbort)
  48. Heinrich Heine, Deutschland. Ein Wintermärchen (Wolf Biermann)
  49. Edgar Allan Poe, Phantastische Erzählungen (Dieter E. Zimmer)
  50. Herman Melville, Moby Dick (Rolf Hochhuth)
  51. Arthur Schopenhauer, Parerga und Paralipomena (Rudolf Walter Leonhardt)
  52. Karl Marx, Der achtzehnte Brumaire des Louis Bonaparte (Oskar Negt)
  53. Hans Christian Andersen, Märchen (Egon Monk)
  54. Gottfried Keller, Der grüne Heinrich (Adolf Muschg)
  55. Gustave Flaubert, Madame Bovary (Eberhard Lämmert)
  56. Iwan Alexandrowitsch Gontscharow, Oblomow (Hans J. Fröhlich)
  57. Victor Hugo, Die Elenden (Hanns Grössel)
  58. Lewis Carroll, Alice im Wunderland (Dieter E. Zimmer)
  59. Iwan Sergejewitsch Turgenew, Väter und Söhne (Reinhard Baumgart)
  60. Wilhelm Raabe, Abu Telfan oder Die Heimkehr vom Mondgebirge (Hans Mayer)
  61. Leo Tolstoi, Krieg und Frieden (Walter Kempowski)
  62. Adalbert Stifter, Erzählungen (Ilse Aichinger)
  63. Fjodor Michailowitsch Dostojewski, Die Dämonen (Luise Rinser)
  64. Friedrich Nietzsche, Menschliches, Allzumenschliches (Rudolf Walter Leonhardt)
  65. Emile Zola, Germinal (Günter Wallraff)
  66. August Strindberg, Sohn einer Magd (Helmut Heißenbüttel)
  67. Knut Hamsun, Hunger (Gabriele Wohmann)
  68. Oscar Wilde, Das Bildnis des Dorian Gray (Rudolf Walter Leonhardt)
  69. Anton Tschechow, Erzählungen (Peter Urban)
  70. Theodor Fontane, Der Stechlin (Peter Härtling)
  71. Thomas Mann, Buddenbrooks (Hans Mayer)
  72. Robert Musil, Die Verwirrungen des Zöglings Törleß (Thomas Brasch)
  73. Rainer Maria Rilke, Die Aufzeichnungen des Malte Laurids Brigge (Jürgen Becker)
  74. Heinrich Mann, Der Untertan (Alfred Kantorowicz)
  75. Marcel Proust, Auf der Suche nach der verlorenen Zeit (Walter Mehring)
  76. Jaroslav Hašek, Die Abenteuer des braven Soldaten Schwejk (Pavel Kohout)
  77. James Joyce, Ulysses (Wolfgang Hildesheimer)
  78. John Dos Passos, Manhattan Transfer (Siegfried Lenz)
  79. Franz Kafka, Das Schloss (Dieter E. Zimmer)
  80. Hermann Hesse, Der Steppenwolf (Petra Kipphoff)
  81. Alfred Döblin, Berlin Alexanderplatz (Rainer Werner Fassbinder)
  82. Ernst Bloch, Spuren (Fritz J. Raddatz)
  83. Sigmund Freud, Das Unbehagen in der Kultur (Hermann Glaser)
  84. Leo Trotzki, Mein Leben (Christian Gneuss)
  85. William Faulkner, Licht im August (Hans C. Blumenberg)
  86. Franz Kafka, Erzählungen (Hans Mayer)
  87. André Gide, Tagebücher (Hans Mayer)
  88. Anna Seghers, Das siebte Kreuz (Susanne Schäfer)
  89. Albert Camus, Der Fremde (Reinhard Baumgart)
  90. Heinrich Böll, Erzählungen (Wolfgang Weyrauch)
  91. Jean Genet, Querelle (Fritz J. Raddatz)
  92. Ernest Hemingway, Der alte Mann und das Meer (Dieter E. Zimmer)
  93. Max Frisch, Stiller (Joachim Kaiser)
  94. Claude Lévi-Strauss, Traurige Tropen (Peter Wapnewski)
  95. Samuel Beckett, Das letzte Band (Benjamin Henrichs)
  96. Günter Grass, Die Blechtrommel (Fritz J. Raddatz)
  97. Jean-Paul Sartre, Die Wörter (Fritz J. Raddatz)
  98. Bertolt Brecht, Geschichten vom Herrn Keuner (Benjamin Henrichs)
  99. Uwe Johnson, Jahrestage (Rolf Michaelis)
  100. Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Don Quijote (Golo Mann

Sunday 29 July 2007

Maybe that's the only way...


Sehen wir's mit Humour. Das Tourteam von tagesschau.de präsentiert eine amüsante Analayse von Kollegen und Alberto Contador. Es klingt wie eine Satire ist aber offensichtlich eine Aufzeichnung der gestrigen Pressekonferenz des maillot jaune.

Thursday 26 July 2007

Please have pity on us!

Anything less than the termination of the Tour de France is unacceptable. How can it get more embarrassing? Even before the start in London on 7th July it didn't look very bright. Apart from Jan Ullrich most of the German top cyclists (retired and active) confessed being involved with doping. Also 1996 champion Bjarne Riis admitted to have taken EPO.

So, did we think that the others were all clean? Let's pretend we believed this. What do the recent events show us?

To begin with there was the positive doping test of Telecom rider Patrick Sinkewitz. We then saw the preliminary peak when Alexandre Vinokourov was convicted and his Astana team withdrew subsequently. The following day Christian Moreni confessed and Cofidis dropped out as well. Thenof course the climax, when Michael Rasmussen was sacked by his team Rabobank over his lies about his whereabouts earlier this year.

Ah, right, that means the controls work. I recall Floyd Landis's "victory" last year. No, sorry, guys. I won't believe a word of what you say. "Cheating" will always be on my mind if I see the maillot jaune. Be it Contador, Evans, Leipheimer or whoever in Paris or elsewhere.

When the stroy broke last night I was hoping that the peloton would have the guts to say au revoir to the Tour. The start today abviously proved me wrong. Okay, it was naive to assume that all cyclists would leave, especially because it's the teams and sponsor who have control.

But how can Alberto Cobtador feel comfortable in is maillot jaune now? After Rasmussen's sacking, the Tour presents it's next suspect
asks German's daily Süddeutsche Zeitung. The Spaniard had allegedly contact to doping doctor Fuentes.

Left: Doping at the Tour has a long history: Many times winner Lance A. drinking with a mate.

Salbutamol (Petacci), EPO, blood doping (Vinokourov), Testosteron (Sinkewitz, Moreni). It is hard to keep it all in mind. A friend of mine said, why don't they allow all this stuff. Then they would at least admit that they can't control and the Tour would be fair. A radical view. Maybe. It is, however, the only credible alternative to my demand above.

Saturday 21 July 2007

Vattenfall hat seine Hausaufgaben nicht gemacht

Man fragt sich dieser Tage, wie es zu den Störfällen in den AKW Krümmel und Brunsbüttel kommen konnte. Als ich mich 2002 für meine Magisterprüfung mit dem Thema Krisenkommunikation befasste, fand ich für die Störfallserie der Hoechst AG 1993 sehr umfassend Literatur. Die von dem Konzern begangenen Fehler scheinen denen von Vattenfall sehr ähnlich zu sein.

Folgen der Öffentlichkeitsarbeit der Hoechst AG
Bewertung
- späte Informationen
- unglaubwürdige Informationen
- Fehleinschätzungen
- Verhaltensregeln

Eine Nachfrage bei Aventis würde sicher nicht schaden. Den PR Verantwortlichen seien unten stehende Werke ans Herz gelegt.

Das Foto zeigt eine mit dem ausgetretenen Farbenvorprodukt ortho-Nitroanisol verschmutze Anlage auf dem Hoechst Gelände in Frankfurt Griesheim.

Gärtner, Edgar. „Erfahrungen aus einer Störfallserie“. In: Rolke, Lothar/Rosema, Bernd/Avenarius, Horst (Hg.): Unternehmen in der ökologischen Diskussion. Opladen 1994: 223-230.

Kepplinger, Hans Mathias/Hartung, Uwe. Störfallfieber. Wie ein Unfall zum Schüsselereignis einer Unfallserie wird. Freiburg und München: 1995.

Kesselring, Sven : Die Störfälle bei Hoechst im Frühjahr 1993. „Eine Fallstudie zur sozialen Konstruktion ökologischer Konflikte“. In: Brand, Karl-Werner/Eder, Klaus/Poferl, Angelika (Hg.): Ökologische Kommunikation in Deutschland. Opladen 1997: 269-306.

Raketenabwehr

USA äußern sich besorgt über Aussetzung des KSE-Vertrags durch Russland

Die Suspendierung des KSE-Vertrags durch Russland ist international kritisiert worden. Die USA äußerten sich besorgt. Ein Regierungssprecher sagte in Washington, man werde in den kommenden Wochen mit Moskau über das weitere Vorgehen sprechen. Bundesaußenminister Steinmeier betonte, das Abkommen, sei zentraler Bestandtteil der internationalen Abrüstungsarchitektur. Auch Polen, Tschechien und Rumänien bedauerten die Entscheidung Russlands. Nach Angaben des Kreml soll die Suspendierung in 150 Tagen in Kraft treten. Präsident Putin hatte das Abkommen, das Obergrenzen für konventionelle Waffen festlegt, bereits im April im Zusammenhang mit dem geplanten US-Raketenabwehrsystem in Polen und Tschechien in Frage gestellt. - Der 1999 geänderte KSE-Vertrag war von Russland fünf Jahre später ratifiziert worden, von den NATO-Staaten dagegen nicht. Sie machen dies von einem vollständigen Abzug russischer Truppen aus Georgien und Moldawien abhängig.

Auszug aus dem Newsletter des Deutschlandfunks vom 14. Juli 2007

Thursday 5 July 2007

Nukes are back

Just read that the US and Russia agreed to reduce their arsenal of strategic weapons.

The foreign ministers, Rice and Lawrow, even agreed to only hold on to as many weapons as necessary for the security of their countries.

I wonder what that means. Article II of the START between the Soviet Union/Russia and the US states that ICBMs have to be reduced to 1,600 and wareheads to 6,000. Well, START expires in 2009 and that's why the above mentioned talkes took place.

I mean, great effort, only 6,000 nukes. Are there chances that this number is reduced even further. Great, it would possible mean that they can only annihilate the planet, how often? Four times? Three times? Twice?

You may want to ask CND for councel.

Wednesday 27 June 2007

Moving House in Downing Street

Some headline from the shortest move in history. Interstingly New PM Brown often wasn't the number one headline as Blair has been confirmed as Middle East envoy and Merkel gets some credit at the end of German presidency. Here we go. The German tageeschau.de runs a rather dull "Erst Premier, jetzt Gesandter", Where as Der Spiegel (German weekly magazine) focuses on "Brown's Independence Day" ("Browns Unabhängigkeitstag") The Swiss are also dull, the headline of Neue Zürcher Zeitung reads "Blair zum Nahost-Sondergesandten ernannt" (and continue in smaller print, "Browns Kabinett soll am Donnerstag vorgestellt werde",


and Die Zeit simply informs "Blair ist neuer Sondergesandter" (Blair is new special envoy) . Interstingly Süddeutsche Zeitung is the only that doesn't rank the news among the top three. In fact it's the fourth headline after Merkel re Poland, Merkel re Marco and, yes, Merkel re the Kaczynskis. And the SZ also seems to be the only paper that claims to know that the German Government is not amused about Blair's new job (Bundesregierung irritiert über Berufung Blairs).

Tuesday 26 June 2007

Adieu Ténéré

I've sold my motorbike today. My dad stored it for me in a garage and has recently convinced me put to up for sale. Obvioulsy he was right as I haven't used it in two years. And even in my last year in Germany I rarely took it for a ride. Still a bit sade though. we had a good time. So from Whitechapel in London it's good-bye.

Monday 25 June 2007

Military Might II

Mit einiger Verspätung hier eine Meldung zu den weltweiten Rüstungsausgaben.

Stockholmer Friedensforschungsinstitut: 2006 rund 3,5 Prozent höhere Rüstungsausgaben

Die weltweiten Rüstungsausgaben sind im vergangenen Jahr auf die Rekordhöhe von rund 900 Milliarden Euro gestiegen. Damit seien 3,5 Prozent mehr als noch 2005 für militärische Zwecke ausgegeben worden, teilte das Stockholmer Friedensforschungsinstitut mit. Als Grund für die Entwicklung wurde der von den USA ausgerufene Krieg gegen den Terrorismus genannt.

Den weltweit größten Rüstungsetat haben die Vereinigten Staaten, auf die allein 42 Prozent aller Militärausgaben fallen. Deutschland liegt auf Platz sechs der Rangliste noch vor Russland. In Asien verwendete erstmals China das meiste Geld für Rüstung. Den Angaben zufolge sind die Mittel in diesem Bereich weltweit in den vergangenen zehn Jahren um ein Drittel gestiegen.


dradio-newsletters: Deutschlandradio 20 Uhr Nachrichten 11.Juni 2007

Wednesday 20 June 2007

What a foreigner might find peculiar

Ich wollte diesen post eigentlich auf English schreiben. Dann fiel mir ein, lästern über Einwohner eines Land in dem man zu Gast ist sollte ich wohl lieber in meiner Muttersprache. Dieser Artikel ist der Start der Serie "Pecularities", die ich in loser Folge posten werde. Den Start macht die Schlange.

Es gibt diese Dinge, die man amüsant findet, weil sie anders sind als "zu Hause". Dann jene, die unverständlich erscheinen, weil man den Sinn dahinter schlichtweg nicht erkennen kann. Schließlich solche, die einfach nur nerven, weil sie absurd sind und einen dazu direkt betreffen.

Mit folgender Schilderung einer amüsanten Begebenheit bediene ich ein Klischee. Ich bemühe mich normalerweise, Klischees zu widerlegen, weil ich sie meist, wenn nicht unberechtigt, so doch übertrieben sind und der Sache nicht gerecht werden. In diesem Fall aber kann ich es nur bestätigen. Eine englische Kollegin tat das auch. Engländer lieben das Schlange stehen und praktizieren es regelmäßig. Besonders gerne vor Bankautomaten (cash points oder ATMs). Mittlerweile schaue ich mich schon verwundert um, wenn ich an einem ATM vorbeikomme und es stehen nicht mindestens fünf Leute an. Meistens ist er dann "out of service".

Das beste Beispiel ist die Barclays Filiale gegenüber Old Spitalfields Market. Dort habe ich Sonntag nachmittags mehrmals über 20 Menschen gesehen, die sich brav angestellt haben, um Geld abzuheben. Zugegeben, es befindet sich keine Bank in unmitelbarer Nähe.

Um mich nicht in Details zu verlieren, verweise ich auf meinen post vom Oktober.

P.S. Selbstanalysen in Sachen queuing wurden bereits angestellt.

Saturday 9 June 2007

We don't want your missile defence...

... especially because it does not work!

ACTION:
Ask your Member of Parliament to sign EDM 1517 National Missile Defence, sponsored by Jeremy Corbyn MP

EDM 1517
NATIONAL MISSILE DEFENCE
18.05.2007


Corbyn, Jeremy

That this House expresses concern at US intentions to develop National Missile Defence (NMD) bases across Europe and the UK's continued involvement at Fylingdales and Menwith Hill in both the operational and logistical components of NMD and the advancement of the space based infra red system; is further concerned that the programme will encourage a new nuclear arms race; fears that it will put the UK in the frontline in future wars whereby the US will have the technological and military capability to launch first-strike attacks without fear of retaliation; and recommends that the Government withdraws its support and encourages the US to cease this programme, which is widely interpreted as aggressive not defensive.

Tuesday 5 June 2007

Another Cold War?

Meanwhile the Russian President is re-aiming his ICBMs at European cities and the US have triggered a new cold war. And all that because of a missile defence system that does not work, did never work and will never work. I don't want to put myself in the limelight, but I the then called NMD was subjsct of my thesis.

Monday 4 June 2007

Military Might

It's worth taking a look at military budgets from time to time. It seems that the news is dominated by the fear of China military and the extraordinary rise in the defense budget. Have a look at the DoD budget below. Within seven years it will have risen to $481.4 billion. That's 62 percent. And btw the almost Norway's and Denmark's GDP combined (Source: The Economist: Pocket World in Figures. 2007 Edition).

The President’s 2008 Budget:
  • Provides $481.4 billion for the Department of Defense’s base budget—a 62-percent increase over 2001—to ensure a high level of military readiness as the Department develops capabilities to meet future threats, defends the homeland, and supports the all-volunteer force and their families;
  • Supports operations in the Global War on Terror by providing an additional $93.4 billion in supplemental funds for 2007 and $141.7 billion for 2008, including funds to accelerate efforts to train and equip Iraqi and Afghan Security Forces;
  • Continues ground force modernization and the expansion of Special Operations Forces;
  • Enhances missile defense capabilities by adding additional interceptor missiles and sites to expand coverage against new threats;
  • Provides a 3.0-percent increase in basic military and civilian pay; and
  • Aligns military health care premiums and copayments for retirees under 65 years of age with general health insurance plans.

Sunday 3 June 2007

Brain drain (East) German style II

Speaking of the devil. Thanks for reading my blog, Angela.

The German government wants to launch a programme to stop the migration of young Germans from Eastern Germany.

It's not yet been decided where the two pilot projects will bet set up. They have
€4m for the next two years. Good luck.

A tiny little difference

I knew that everything is biger in America. With the experience of five West Wing seasons I should have been prepared. Yet it struck me when I read Martin Amis's Blair portrait in this weeks Guardian weekend.

"When Blair goes somewhere, he relies on a staff of 30 (and five bodyguards). When Bush goes somewhere, he relies on a staff of 800 (and 100 bodyguards); if he vistits two countries on the same trip, the firgure rises to 1,600; three countries, and the figure is 2,400. At the other end, Blair will settle for whatever transport is made available. Using freight aircraft, Bush takes along his own limousine, his own back-up limousine, his own refuling trucks and his own helicopters. Mm, murmured a chastened Brit. You make our lives seem very simple. This was, shall we say, the diplomatic way of putting it."

Indeed. Even in this list of superlatives, I think that the helicopters and the refuling trucks stand out.

Apparently the presidential motorcade includes 35 vehicles. Not including the helicopters and trucks, I suppose.

Friday 1 June 2007

Brain drain (East) German style

The low birth rate has been a German problem for some years now. This is especially true for the East. In so far, the findings of the report of the Berlin-Institut für Bevölkerung Entwicklung (Population and Development) are hardly surprising.

It is worrying though as they shows that the government has not been able to tackle the problem. Young and well educated people move to the West or foreign countries. Why shouldn't they? The aveage unemployment rate for the Eastern Bundesländer has been 20 percent for years.

It is also not new that the Neo-Nazi and other radical right wing groups are popular in the so called new states. It is very distressing indeed that they attract especially young people, mostly teens and young men. And one conclusion is that those who stay only have an average education. Some of them are more likely to believe (Neo) Nazi propaganda as it offer so easy solutions. Something along the lines of 'foreigners steal your job'.

You have to ask yourself why black world cup tourist were warned to to go to certain areas in Berlin and Brandenburg. Lonely Planet did the same before the world cup fever started.

My feeling is that these problems are widely ignored by politicians. I remember that the funds for anti-nazi programmes and for organisations who try to give these kids some future. I reckon it helps a lot if the only explain the world to them and make them aware of other cultures. Tell them, that it is mostly foreigners who empty there wheelie bins and that being gay is nothing unnatural or wrong.

Sad but true, people were killed because of her skin colour, sexual orientation etc.

Sunday 27 May 2007

Have you seen her? No. STOP IT!

This Madeleine story has been going on my nerves for a while now. Basically since it started. Don't get me wrong. I feel sorry for this family and wish them that they find her soon. But the whole country is getting crazy about this thing. Well, at least the media is. Leave it to the tabloids! Please! I cannot stand it anymore! If you don't bother carry on reading, my point is simply this. Why should this girl and her family deserve more attention than any other abducted person?

There were
846 offences in 2002/03 in England and Wales alone. Also has anyone ever questioned that the media hype may do the girl more harm than good? I mean decreasing her chances to be found alive?

It was predictable that The Sun would exploit the story. But live coverage from the BBC? Eleven minutes prime time with anchor Hugh Edwards live from the Algarve (10 o'clock news 15th May BBC1)? And what was the news? Well, that there was no news. The couple had been seen walking on the beach. But there was an agreement that media would not bother them with interviews. Nice, they are so respectful.

Earlier this week it was reported that the parents feel guilty because they hadn't been with her when she was abducted. Jesus, of course! What did you think? That they are happy about it.

There is more. Today the Prime Minister in waiting demanded that the Portuguese police should release more details of the case. Can someone please tell him to stay out of this.

And when you think it can't get any worse... BBC online has justed annouced that the parents are to see the Pope.

To sum it up there are 4,270,000 hits for "Maddie" on google and the entry on wikipedia has about the length of the WW2 article. Appeals from David Beckham and Christiano Ronaldo, yellow ribbons at a football match, uncounted campaigns. The rewards total £2.6m - and counting.


And has anyone ever dared questioning this madness? Well, I have. Anyone out there joining me? Yes, found them!

And while I'm moaning 128m are still searching...

We love David M.

If there was ever polictician to praise, it must be Environment Secretary David Miliband. No, I'm not in the Labour party, they didn't bribe me or anything. I just think that he takes his job seriously and tackles a serious problem. One that has been left unnoticed, indeed ignored for far too long. I'm talking rubbish, I mean about waste and avoiding waste in particular. I am aware that after announcing the Government's plans everybody feared that the wheelie bin chips will trigger a spy rather than an environment programme.

The most important part for me, however, was that someone mentions the enourmous waste in this country. The Independent ran a brilliant campaign against waste - i.e. waste as in unnecessary items such as packagin or most interestingly carrier bags. I was shocked when I heard that Teso alone gave out four billion - this is 4,000,000,000 - carrier bags to customers last year.

The mere fact that Miliband mentioned carrier bags seems remarkable to me. He talked not only about recycling quotas the UK needs to meet, he actually talked about avoiding waste. That's the point, you don't need to recycle somehting that has never been produced and used in the first place.

So, take your carrier bag to the shop and refuse new ones. I have to tell the assisstants over and over again as they already have the new bag in their hands when I arrive at the till. But they'll learn if more people refuse it.

Of course it remains to be seen if the Government really acts though on this problem. And if Miliband will still be in his job after 27th June.

Tuesday 15 May 2007

Sorry, Bryan, but that's it

Marks and Spencer drop Bryan Ferry over the Nazi gaffe. Oh no, sorry it wasn't because of that. We wouldn't have used him for the campaign anyway, or least it was "highly unlikely". Ferry apologised for his remarks earlier. But, between us, how likely is it that this just M+S PR? A pretty bad one btw...

Friday 11 May 2007

Just as you like it

The German government wants to reintroduce border controls for the G8 summit in Heiligendamm from 6th to 8th June. Germany signed the Schengen Agreement and introduced it in 1995. So how is it possible to simply opt out for a couple of days as it suits you? It seems the government is afraid of (radical) left wing protestors and attacks.

To be fair there were attacks in the past, just remember Genoa in 2001. But I doubt very strongly that one can put so called suspects under "Vorbeugehaft" (which I guess can be translated as a preventive arrest) and indeed reintrodce border controls for a week or so - then abandon them again and say, well, principally Schengen is a good idea, but sometimes we just need the Cold War back.

Tuesday 17 April 2007

Ferry III

It's really getting confusing now. More than 300,00 hits on google. I remember finding only to German papers mentioning him. Only two weeks ago...

More in the UK
BBC
Yahoo News
Telegraph
Brandrepublic
Contactmusic.com
Mail on Sunday

Blogging
Bryan you disappoint me

Eire
RTE

Even Australia and Canada
The West Australian
Reuters Canada

Monday 16 April 2007

Sunday 15 April 2007

Bryan's Bunker

I guess Bryan Ferry had no idea that his remark in the interview for the German weekly Welt am Sonntag (4th March) a couple of weeks ago could be used against him. But then how daft can you be to admit that you admire Riefenstahl's movies, Speer's buidlings and Nazi mass parades and not think that there will be an outcry? In a German newspaper! Up to now Ferry was lucky. Even the Welt editor's were sensible enough (or gutless) to leave out the passage of the March interview (Headline: "I am a serious player") on their website. It seemed that the remarks remained almost unoticed in German media in general. Only Spiegel online and freundin, a women's magazin reported. I actually discovered it in the satire magazine Titanic (April edition) in the infamous column "Briefe an die Leser".

Today's Independent on Sunday finally reveals his "Nazi gaffe - and the outcry was prompt. And loud.

Moreover Ferry calls his West London studio "Führerbunker".

Saturday 7 April 2007

Gut, 10 Uhr 30 Gaststätte Brummer...

Die berühmt berüchtigte Satirezeitschrift Titanic (Ausgabe Juni 2001) hat das Ausstiegsprogramm des Bundesamtes für Verfassungsschutz zum Anlass genommen, bei DVU-Kreisvorsitzenden anzurufen und sich nach ihrem Ausstiegswillen erkundigt. Genauergesagt ist der Anlass der Misserfolg der eigens für die Aktion eingerichteten Hotline. Will sagen, Neonazis wollen nicht aussteigen und rufen folglich nicht da.

Warum sollte man auch darauf warten, dass sich die "Fahnenflüchtigen" melden? Titanic druckt ja auch keine Leserbriefe ab sondern "Briefe an die Leser".

Der "TITANIC-Telefon-Terror" war ein voller Erfolg. "Julius Streicher", die Redaktion hat die Namen der DVU-Kreisvorsitzenden netterweise mit denen von Nazigrößen ausgestauscht, nahm das Angebot und mindestens 25.000 Mark "finanzielle Unterstützung" dankend an. Und damit nicht genug: Für weitere 3.000 tritt er auch in die SPD ein!

Köstlich! Vor allem der Anruf im Originalmitschnitt (letzter Download).