Catégorie : English

  • La fête au 10 Downing Street

    La fête au 10 Downing Street

    Le 10 Downing Street a organisé l’an dernier en décembre une fête de Noël avec une 30taine de personnes alors que de telles réunions étaient interdites par les mesures Covid.

    Ce dernier scandale a éclaté il y a une semaine quand un journal puis une chaîne de télévision ont prouvé qu’une fête avait bien eu lieu.

    Notamment avec l’enrégistrement d’un exercice de répétition de conférence de presse qui avait été tenue avec Allegra Stratton, ancienne porte parole du Premier Ministre. Des collègues posaient comme des journalistes. Et leurs questions et et rigolades ont bien révélé qu’il y avait eu une fête.

    La vidéo montre que la porte parole s’en amusait et disait clairement qu’elle n’était pas présente, mais qu’il n’y avait eu quatre jours auparavant aucune mesure de distanciation.

    Boris a déclaré après la fuite de la vidéo que toutes les dispositions avait été respectées. Comme d’habitude le mensonge. Encore un reflet du délabrement de la politique en Angleterre

  • The dangers of a secure life

    The dangers of a secure life

    “Make a radical change in your lifestyle and begin to boldly do things which you may previously never have thought of doing, or been too hesitant to attempt.

    So many people live within unhappy circumstances and yet will not take the initiative to change their situation because they are conditioned to a life of security, conformity, and conservation, all of which may appear to give one peace of mind, but in reality nothing is more damaging to the adventurous spirit within a man than a secure future.

    The very basic core of a man’s living spirit is his passion for adventure. The joy of life comes from our encounters with new experiences, and hence there is no greater joy than to have an endlessly changing horizon, for each day to have a new and different sun.

    If you want to get more out of life, you must lose your inclination for monotonous security and adopt a helter-skelter style of life that will at first appear to you to be crazy. But once you become accustomed to such a life you will see its full meaning and its incredible beauty.”

    Source unknown

  • « Get Back » & Simon’s souvenirs

    « Get Back » & Simon’s souvenirs

    An old friend from the days at the Lycée Français de Londres, with a truely admirable life, Simon Goodman, lives in the United States and has just posted this discovery whilst watching the three-part series about the early days of the Beatles.

    « Watching « Get Back » episode 2 and half way through George interrupts rehearsals to open a bag … from me & my brother!!

    Our record shop « One Stop » on South Molton St. was a few blocks from Apple. Every Friday we would send the Fab 4 a bag of new releases. »

    Simon adds in comments : « This took place fairly early in January 69. »

    Did they pay he is asked? « Always! And sometimes if I made the delivery personally they would give me a few spliftas for the weekend!!« 

    Another friend comments : « They could of written another 5 tracks if you had not kept disturbing them 😂« 

    Pour info : Diffusé sur Disney Channel, « The Beatles : Get Back » relate l’histoire de John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison et Ringo Starr alors qu’ils préparent leur premier concert depuis plus de 2 ans et s’attellent à l’écriture et aux répétitions de 14 nouvelles chansons. Face à des délais quasi impossibles à tenir, la série documentaire montre combien l’amitié unissant les membres du groupe s’est trouvée mise à rude épreuve »

    Simon Goodman : Voir l’article du Gardian,  sur FaceBook « The Orpheus Clock« , lire son livre et ailleurs. « The passionate, true story of one man’s quest to reclaim what the Nazis stole from his family, their beloved art collection, and to restore their legacy. »

  • Josephine Baker – réaction et vidéo

    Josephine Baker – réaction et vidéo

    Je savais que c’était un événement à ne pas rater, et qu’inhabituellement j’allais me mettre devant la télévision en fin d’après-midi. Je n’ai pas été déçu!

    J’ai assisté à une production télévisuelle grandiose. J’imagine que rarement des équipes de télévision sortent autant de matériel: caméras au sol, perchées sur d’immenses grues, et de multiples prises de son en direct. Le scénario de la manifestation a du se préparer pendant de longs mois, producteurs et réalisateurs se sont surpassés.

    Mais surtout, cette cérémonie m’a touché assez profondément. L’hommage à Joséphine Baker cumulait tant de valeurs en lesquelles je crois: l’humanisme, la condamnation du racisme, du sexisme, la joie de vivre, l’importance de l’éducation des enfants, les musiques du jazz et de la chanson française.

    Je vivais un moment sinon de ma génération, mais de mon époque. Je pensais beaucoup à mon héritage français, à mes grand-parents et à mon oncle Blaise. J’évaluais mes parts de trans-national, françaises et anglaises et leurs importances respectives.

    Sans juger laquelle était la plus importante, je ne pouvais qu’être fier quand Emmanuel Macron à terminé son discours en disant: « Ma France c’est Joséphine ».

    En soirée, je savais que j’allais écrire quelque chose. Voilà c’est fait, et en accord avec mes vues binationales, voici une petite vidéo de la BBC.

    [Photo AFP Sarah Meyssonnier]

  • La vie continue

    La vie continue

    Le 11 octobre dernier Thich Nhat Hanh célébrait sa 95ème « continuation ». Il y a bien des années le moine bouddhiste vietnamien, militant pour la paix, devenu un des initiateurs du bouddhisme zen les plus connus, maître de la méditation « pour le moment présent » et aussi fondateur du Village des Pruniers en Lot et Garonne, évoquait cette continuité de la vie, dans une parabole, celle de la feuille.

     « J’ai demandé à la feuille si elle avait peur de tomber, puisque c’était l’automne et que les autres feuilles tombaient. La feuille m’a dit : « Non. Pendant tout le printemps et l’été, j’étais très vivant. J’ai travaillé dur et aidé à nourrir l’arbre, et une grande partie de moi est dans l’arbre. S’il vous plaît, ne pensez pas que je suis uniquement de cette apparence, parce que la forme d’une feuille n’est qu’une infime partie de moi. Je suis tout l’arbre. Je sais que je suis déjà à l’intérieur de l’arbre, et quand je retournerai au sol, je continuerai à nourrir l’arbre. C’est pourquoi je ne m’inquiète pas. En tombant de la branche et en flottant jusqu’au sol, je ferai signe à l’arbre et lui dirai : ‘Je te reverrai très bientôt.’ »

    Et Thich rajoute : Soudain, j’ai eu une sorte d’intuition très semblable à l’intuition contenue dans le Sutra du Cœur. Il faut comprendre la vie. Il ne faut pas dire la vie de la feuille, mais la vie de la feuille ET la vie de l’arbre. Ma vie n’est que LA Vie, et vous pouvez la voir en moi ET dans l’arbre.

    J’ai vu la feuille quitter la branche et flotter jusqu’au sol, dansant joyeusement, car en flottant, elle se voyait déjà là dans l’arbre. C’était un bonheur. J’ai baissé la tête et je savais que nous avions beaucoup à apprendre de la feuille parce qu’elle n’avait pas peur; elle savait que rien ne peut naître et rien ne peut mourir.

    [Thich Nhat Hanh, extrait de « L’autre rive » (Parallax 2017)]

     

    “I asked the leaf whether it was afraid to fall, since it was autumn and the other leaves were falling. The leaf told me, « No. During the whole spring and summer I was very alive. I worked hard and helped nourish the tree, and much of me is in the tree. Please do not think that I am just this form, because this leaf form is only a tiny part of me. I am the whole tree. I know that I am already inside the tree, and when I go back to the soil, I will continue to nourish the tree. That is why I do not worry. As I drop from the branch and float down to the ground, I will wave to the tree and tell her, ‘I will see you again very soon.’ »

    Suddenly I had a kind of insight very much like the insight contained in the Heart Sutra. You have to see life. You shouldn’t say, life of the leaf, but life in the leaf, and life in the tree. My life is just Life, and you can see it in me and in the tree. I saw the leaf leave the branch and float down to the soil, dancing joyfully, because as it floated it saw itself already there in the tree. It was so happy. I bowed my head, and I knew that we have a lot to learn from the leaf because it was not afraid; it knew that nothing can be born and nothing can die.”

    Thich Nhat Hanh in “The Other Shore” (Parallax 2017)

  • Eye of the Moon

    Eye of the Moon

    https://giselebechaufsblog.tumblr.com/post/663910670123843584

  • ‘Incident’ delays launch of James Webb Space Telescope

    ‘Incident’ delays launch of James Webb Space Telescope

    Jonathan Amos BBC published 23/11/2021

    The launch of the James Webb Space Telescope has been put back by at least four days to allow for more checks.
    It was to have been sent into orbit on 18 December and will now go up no earlier than the 22nd of the month.

    A US space agency statement said an « incident » had occurred during launch preparations that may have caused a sudden vibration in the observatory.
    A firm date for lift-off, on an Ariane rocket, would be confirmed following the investigation, Nasa added.
    JWST is the $10bn (£7.5bn; €9bn) successor to the veteran Hubble telescope. It’s been designed to look deeper into the Universe than its predecessor and, as a consequence, detect events occurring further back in time – more than 13.5 billion years ago.
    Scientists also expect to use its more advanced capabilities to study the atmospheres of distant planets in the hope that signs of life might be detected.

    Webb is currently at the European Kourou spaceport in French Guiana. Engineers were in the process of attaching the telescope to its launch adapter – the large ring that will hold it in place atop its rocket – when a securing clamp unexpectedly popped open.
    The concern is the event may have sent a mechanical shock through the telescope.
    The US space agency statement read: « A Nasa-led anomaly review board was immediately convened to investigate and instituted additional testing to determine with certainty the incident did not damage any components. Nasa and its mission partners will provide an update when the testing is completed at the end of this week. »
    Dr Thomas Zurbuchen, the director of science at Nasa, said sensors that would normally be put on the telescope during transport had been taken off.
    « Just for sheer caution what we have done… [is go back] to a small number of subsystems and just do the functional tests to make sure that nothing happened as this energy went into went into the [telescope], » he told reporters.
    « When you work on a $10bn telescope, conservatism is the order of the day. »
    The telescope is considered robust. It has been built to survive the intense shaking and noise when its Ariane rocket climbs away from the launch pad.
    Part of the development testing for Webb even involved putting it on a table and vibrating it at high frequency.
    Engineers have a control room next door to the cleanroom where Webb is being held in Kourou. All the observatory’s systems are linked into the monitoring computers inside this room. The functional checks on sub-systems is therefore a reasonably straightforward process.
    Webb was well advanced in its preparations in Kourou. It was even ahead of schedule. If the current investigation finds nothing awry, Engineers will move forward with fuelling the telescope, prior to lifting it on top of the Ariane vehicle about one week before roll-out to the launch pad.
    JWST is a joint project between Nasa and the European and Canadian space agencies.

  • Boris Peppa Pig at CBI

    Boris Peppa Pig at CBI

    The speech on the 23rd November 2021 – if it can be termed as such – to the Confederation of British Industry amply illustrates the condition of British politics led (?) by Prime Minister Boris Johnson. It led not only to this remarquable spoof version by comedian Michael Spicer in his series « The house next door » – but it also was treated as a serious subject (?) on BBC News. Johnson’s initial reaction to a journalist after the speech confirms how oblivious he is to any criticism. « I’m all right Jack ». Others say he was drunk.

  • Re-invigorating European space

    Re-invigorating European space

    Account by Jonathan AMOS, BBC News. Published 19th November 2021

    It leaves me flabergasted. Not in the least surprised that Europe is FINALLY acknowlging that it is no longer leading the field, fact which it has been denying for years… but flabergasted that it is returning to previous ambitions which were abandonned. The objectives are immense and leave me full of doubt.

    A new vision for space activity in Europe has been agreed by ministers from across the continent. It aims to accelerate applications that address climate change, disaster response and the safety of satellites and astronauts in orbit.

    The manifesto was approved at a meeting in the Portuguese city of Matosinhos. It proposes also two inspirational goals – for Europe to launch its own astronauts, and for a mission to return ice samples from the outer planets.

    To realise the manifesto’s ambition will require an unprecedented increase in public funding. It would also take time, conceded Portugal’s Science Minister Manuel Heitor, who chaired the European Space Agency (Esa) gathering of member states.

    « The most important issue today was a clear and unanimous agreement to mandate the director general of Esa to follow the necessary negotiations among member states to make these ideas in this vision possible, in order to get all European citizens to better use, understand and create value out of space systems. »

    There’s general agreement that Europe as a bloc is falling behind its international competitors. America and China are rapidly pulling ahead, with Europe losing ground even in those specialities where once it used to be so strong.

    The obvious example is rockets. For two decades, the European Ariane-5 vehicle dominated the launch of large satellites, but it’s been overtaken now by the re-usable Falcon rocket of California’s SpaceX company. And in innovation, generally, Europe has been lacklustre. New space companies in America have been supercharged by private investment; European start-ups in contrast have struggled to access venture capital.

    The new Esa DG, Josef Aschbacher, is seeking to re-invigorate the European space ecosystem. He had a high-level panel examine the issues in the autumn. It was the recommendations from this advisory group that formed the basis of the manifesto put before member states in Matosinhos.

    It identifies three « accelerators » where Europe can pick up pace:
    • Space for a Green Future – Space projects that enable us to understand the current state of the planet and help us get to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. Earth observation satellites and their data are a key part of this.
    • Rapid and Resilient Crisis Response – Space applications that allow nations to manage more effectively any crises that crop up. Examples would be the severe flooding and wildfires seen in parts of Europe earlier this year.
    • Protection of Space Assets – This week’s drama surrounding Russia’s use of a missile to destroy a satellite in orbit has highlighted the need for new systems to safeguard European astronauts and satellites from interference.

    The manifesto’s two « inspirators » are really quite long term and would also be very expensive to implement. The icy moons of Jupiter and Saturn intrigue scientists because the observational data suggests they might be good places for life to take hold. Bringing samples back of their frozen terrains, or even their subsurface oceans, would certainly be an exciting endeavour. Likewise, astronauts are very good at energising young people to go into technical careers, but running a human spaceflight programme is tremendously costly.
    « Today, we have three nations (US, China and Russia) being capable of launching their own astronauts into space, with one coming up very soon, India; and there will be others on the horizon, » said Dr Aschbacher.

    « The question is – does Europe also want to have its independent access to space for future space exploration? This means the next frontiers, which are of course in low-Earth orbit, but also on the Moon, on Mars and beyond. »
    A European space summit will be held in February in Toulouse, France, where the issues will be discussed further. Dr Aschbacher is hoping momentum will build up behind a transformational increase in Esa’s budget come the next ministerial council meeting in 12 months’ time.

  • PMQs on 17th November 2021

    PMQs on 17th November 2021

    Video proof of accuracy of the Guardian article.