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Something to Think About

    People seldom improve when they have no other model but themselves to copy.
    Oliver Goldsmith


    Nothing is terrible except fear itself.
    Francis Bacon


    Happiness... it lies in the joy of achievement, in the thrill of creative effort.
    Vincent Van Gogh


Archive for October 7th, 2007

How to easily make MP3s of BBC radio programs (Linux only)

I really like to listen to BBC Radio programs. Unfortunately the BBC chooses to make their programs available in Real Audio format which I really dislike. Really, really, really dislike. It also means I can't put the programs on my MP3 player. Well, courtesy of Stuart we have a handy script for quickly and easily saving our favorite BBC Radio programs under Linux.

The only tricky part is extracting the proper RTSP URL. Thankfully Stuart provides us with an easy method to do this as well:

Obtaining the ram file is still pretty easy, in fact using the command line to get it is easier than copying the previous link. So on a Linux command prompt enter:

curl http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio/aod/genres/comedy/aod.shtml?radio4/nowshow | grep [.]ram

Where the link is a copy of the link to start playing the file. This should give one line on the console starting something like:

<a href="/radio/aod/shows/rpms/radio4/nowshow.ram">
<img src="/radio/aod/images/ico_realplayer.gif" width="16" height="12" alt="" border="0" align="left" vspace="1" />Listen using stand-alone Real Player</a><br clear="left" />

Put this link to the .ram file into my script … [and] add the http://www.bbc.co.uk on the front, and this will create an mp3 or ogg file of the show.

I've mirrored Stuart's handy script, which he makes available under the GNU GPL, here just in case it should ever go missing. Use the attachment link at the bottom of this post to download it and rename to listenagain.sh.



Myanmar’s prisons continue to fill with monks

Myanmar Juntas say arrests continue (updates via AFP and gulf news): A relentless crackdown on Myanmar’s pro-democracy activists showed no sign of easing with the junta announcing on Sunday that 78 more people have been detained in spite of global outrage and new sanctions.

These were in addition to 2,093 people who were detained earlier, of which 1,215 were released by Saturday, the paper said. Authorities also took in 533 monks for questioning “to differentiate between real monks and bogus monks.” They said 398 monks have been sent back to their monasteries.

Dissident groups and foreign governments say more than 6,000 people have been locked up after last month’s protests, the biggest in nearly two decades. The government says 10 people, including a Japanese photographer, were killed in the violence. However, independent sources said the death toll is likely in the hundreds.

“Day and night, we had to sit in crowded rows with our heads bowed down. If we spoke, looked up or fell asleep, we would be hit,” said the monk, who asked not to be named. “We weren’t allowed to move it all, not even to go to the lavatory – we had to just do it where we were sitting. Once in the morning, and once in the afternoon, the guards would come and give us water, but it would be only one or two bottles for 50 people or more.”

Some of the prisoners, he said, had severe wounds sustained during arrest, with cuts and gashes on arms and legs that had gone right through to the bone. Yet despite the filthy, insanitary conditions in which they were being held, no medical treatment was offered whatever. During his time in custody, he claimed, he saw numerous fellow inmates pass out as they sat in the holding area. Three, he believes, died from their injuries.

At one point, a group of abbots from a monastery thought to be sympathetic to the military regime were brought in to ask the monks to swap their filthy robes for civilian clothes. The request, however, was interpreted as a symbolic “defrocking” designed to humiliate them. It prompted an outburst from the prisoners that led some of their soldier guards to show remorse. Some of the monks said to the soldiers, ‘You are committing a religious crime by trying to remove our robes from us, how can you do this?

Monks Myanmar Burma pray Anna from singapore wrote to me sending a prayer (by charlie elkind):

pray for what you cannot see.
Pray clearly for
what you can only faintly grasp.
Pray silently
from the core of your being.
Pray for healing.
Pray for humanity.
Pray lovingly
Pray deeply —
pray so deeply that
the prayer and the praying
become one.
Anna mentions: “… this prayer touched me deeply. What has been happening in Burma is very disturbing to me. Feeling so helpless, i can only pray for the people of Burma and that the world will respond to their plight, not just to the present crisis but also the systematic oppression of the tribal Burmese that has gone on for so many years and of which, has gone unnoticed for so long.”

. Power of Love might not be enough“, says monk who feld Rangoon Terror. “Politics is not the concern of the monks but this time we saw the people getting poorer and poorer and their trouble get bigger and bigger. We thought the monks could negotiate between the regime and the people and show loving kindness to both sides.” - Vida, 48, were among the first monks to escape from Rangoon.

MEANWHILE our totally hypocrite, so called ‘big powers’ and international authorities are still busy with their STUPID sanction gameplay, childish debates in lame security council and fruitless UN drafts of condemnation!

… big question remains, Can this extra-ordinary saffron revolution bring peoples’ right and democracy in Myanmar?

:: Further Resources:
. global protets held for myanmar
. escape from Myanmar
. thousands march around the world to protest crackdown
. myanmar dissidents claim 6000 arrests, military says 500
. may freedom and peace find its place in myanmar
. online petition - stand with Burmese protestors

Are religious people more generous?

There’s a very interesting article on The Edge, by psychologist Jon Haidt, called “Moral Psychology and the Misunderstanding of Religion.” Haidt takes some ill-conceived cheap shots at the so-called “New Atheists,” but that that shouldn’t get in the way of some important questions he raises. Haidt suggests that in some ways, religiosity is more socially useful than liberal nonbelief, and argues that religion is beneficial on a personal level as well.

surveys have long shown that religious believers in the United States are happier, healthier, longer-lived, and more generous to charity and to each other than are secular people. Most of these effects have been documented in Europe too. If you believe that morality is about happiness and suffering, then I think you are obligated to take a close look at the way religious people actually live and ask what they are doing right.

. . .

surveys have shown for decades that religious practice is a strong predictor of charitable giving. Arthur Brooks recently analyzed these data (in Who Really Cares) and concluded that the enormous generosity of religious believers is not just recycled to religious charities.

Religious believers give more money than secular folk to secular charities, and to their neighbors. They give more of their time, too, and of their blood. Even if you excuse secular liberals from charity because they vote for government welfare programs, it is awfully hard to explain why secular liberals give so little blood. The bottom line, Brooks concludes, is that all forms of giving go together, and all are greatly increased by religious participation and slightly increased by conservative ideology (after controlling for religiosity).

Note that this is not just Haidt; in many social science circles, such conclusions are fairly routine. (So much so that it’s been picked up in religious apologetics; I often hear self-congratulatory conservative Christian references to their superior generosity.) There are always some difficulties in interpreting such results, as, for example, P.Z. Myers points out in his response to Haidt. In particular, it is difficult to sort out what in the personal benefits and prosocial behavior being considered is due to supernatural commitments and what is due to people enjoying a supportive community where they are in the majority. It is also fair to ask how much of religious prosocial behavior is directed toward their own community of belief, distinguishing between in-group and out-group. But such questions occur to social scientists as well, as you can see, for example, by Haidt mentioning that the benefits of religion appear in secular Europe as well as the religion-mad United States, and Brooks pointing out that religious people do more secular giving as well.

Now, this still is a murky area of research, with far from certain conclusions. Many atheists insist that we should be able to construct better societies if we minimize the influence of religion; it would certainly go too far to say that our current scientific knowledge precludes this. It may even be true that a mere cultural falling away from organized religion, as in Western Europe, is all we need, and that we can successfully organize prosocial behaviors such as generosity and the health and psychological benefits of communities even in such a secular environment.

But there is also reason to be doubtful. There is a body of research suggesting that supernatural commitments are an integral part of the most common, least costly human mechanism to bring about such social benefits. Saying that we can separate the supernaturalism and irrationality from the community and benefits will not work if religion just happens be the way that our species of ape organizes its moral communities. In the end, I’m not entirely convinced by the most aggressive opponents of religion, mainly because while I agree with how they highlight the nasty aspects of supernatural belief, they also downplay or ignore the significant costs of the kind of rationality and naturalism we favor.

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