Sunday, 23 June 2013

The Round-up Weeks 24-25

Hello and welcome to the Birmingham Skeptics Round-up. First of all I’d like to ask if anybody out there has a connection with a person with a name beginning with S? I’m getting a woman with glasses and a large bank balance, something like Scally.... or Silly? Anyway, the overwhelming feeling that I’m getting is that she is very pleased with herself, although there are many around her that are feeling confused even some that are far away.

If you have ever felt cheated by the services of a psychic this is perhaps
not the way to try and get recompense .

It seems totally unjust that as I sit here typing this on a dull and damp Sunday that my eyes should be itching and my nose streaming due to that supposedly summery malady of hay fever.
Perhaps acupuncture can provide a solution!

Let’s have a little section on some evolutionary wonderment. First up for you paleontological twitchers some illustrations from
a field guide to winged dinosaurs. Hopping along next are some exquisitely colourful amphibians.

Still on natural history and the evolution of feathered things Kate Yandal takes on an interesting question in the (perhaps unfortunately titled article if you come from the UK and never left the 70s) “
Why Many Birds Don’t Have Penises

From real life evolutionary processes to the beautiful and hypnotic world of the artificial with
aDiatomea.

An interesting piece from Dave Logan on the need for
inclusivity of those oft misunderstood geniuses in the workplace.

You know that unpleasant but essentially self-limiting illness
norovirus? Well here is a free sample of a preventative and cure from those lovely people over at Healing Downloads.

Pointing and laughing at plainly ridiculous beliefs is easy, but not always appropriate. How do you react to somebody who adopts
a ridiculous suicidal diet in the belief that it will help them live longer and better?

This seems like the logical place to put a list of i
llogical things that people believe in.
Of all the pictures it was no.3 that evoked the biggest response from me, p
robably due to some evolutionary psychology factor or other. And we’ll smoothly segway here into a promotion for our next excellent talk from evolutionary psychologist Kat Ford on just how good we really are or aren’t at discerning character from faces.

Mind you, perhaps that old debate on the significance of
nature vs nurture is not so dichotomous after all.

First of a recurring lego theme here as word gets out that they are launching their own
Mars Rover. Not to be outdone by the Lego Boffins, Europe is well underway for their next planned Rover to the red planet. It may well have to be that we satisfy ourselves with mechanical exploration unless they can find a good solution to the radiation problem.

You might have noticed in the article about the Lego Rover a link to
Lego Cuusoo where fans can submit models for consideration. One cool person is using this to try and get Lego to redress its gender bias and promote women in STEM and other fields.

Head for the hills, as
New Age terrorist unleash their ultimate weapon!

Girl Guides no longer have to declare allegiance to God. In the interest of balance I should point out that other non-religious organisations for the occupation of your children exist. We should however remember that religious persecution is a real problem and consider the human rights of such groups as the Pastafarians.

How to destroy your opponents using
math when playing monopoly. A fascinating story of maths warriors and an interesting discussion on recognising success from David McRaney. If maths is a subject that floats your boat then put down the 27th of November in your diary. We have Simon Singh coming to Birmingham Skeptics to reveal The Simpsons and their Mathematical Secrets. I don’t need to be psychic to know that this will be a popular and brilliant talk.

The final Lego connected story here as we look at the
effects of angry Lego figures on our children.

Emil Karlsson takes on Mike Adams’ climate change denialism.

The longest day has come and gone and we’re in that countdown to winter so old friend Dean Burnett takes us through the
supposedly happiest day of the year.

The anti-vaccination community of Australia
thankfully continue to struggle in what has been a very bad couple of years for them.

A review here of a book on the
child abuse scandal within the Catholic Church. If you like books, discussions and interesting company then make sure you come along to this month’s Book Group to discuss Guns, Germs and Steel. The month after that will be Ben Goldacre’s Bad Pharma.. And if you can’t wait that long to meet up with some lovely sceptical type people then we have our social this week at the Square Peg, hope to see you there.

Dope testing in Formula 1, but for cars and not people.

The
Francis Crick Institute takes a step closer to reality and contributing to the fight against devastating diseases. Actor Brian Cox also promotes the potential benefits of genome sequencing in the understanding of the human condition.

If you ever need a dose of true Bible based insanity then look no further than
Prophecy News Watch.

Most of these links have been provided by the excellent Roy Beddowes. If you get a bit impatient waiting for these round-ups you should
like our Facebook page where he keeps it populated with a regularly updated stream of the rational and not so rational wonders of the internet.

Here’s a short run through of some of his latest posts for us:

Carl Sagan’s universal order of creation, illustrated., Astronaut gives lecture from space. Gay priests forum uncovered in the Vatican. Transit of the ISS across the Moon. Inside Alpha, an atheist’s foray into Christianity. And finally the Daily Mail admits fracking for vitriol.

If you fancy having a go at doing one of these round-ups for us then let us know via any of the usual methods and we’d be more than happy for you to do so. We’d even send you over a list of links that you could use or ignore.

Remember to come along to our events and to look further into the future keep checking
on this webpage. Please note our upcoming open mic night. We’ve had a couple of applications but we’re looking for more so don’t be shy.

Finally we’ll leave you with this sceptical warning for the guilty parent:




This round-up was put together by Patrick Redmond with the welcome assistance of Roy Beddowes.

Thursday, 13 June 2013

The Round – up Wks. 22 to 23.

Hello and welcome to another Round-up.

Creationism is the hot topic this week at Sitp so, fresh from his stint on the BBC’s best advert for atheism, The Big Questions, we had Jonny Scaramanga visiting us on Wednesday night to tell us about his fundamentalist experiences, old beliefs, and the goings on “Inside Britain’s Creationist Schools”. This was a fantastic talk and if you were unlucky enough to miss it Jonny has a channel up on YouTube with some of his back story and you can check here to get hold of the DVD when it’s all edited and nice.

Psychic Sally’s libel case against The Daily Mail started on Monday 10th June and is slated to last at least three weeks. Talk about conflicted! Well, I (don’t) like The Daily Mail and I (don’t) like Sally Morgan, but which is better? Only one way to find out… With bonus Daily Mash repost and an extract from Richard Bacon’s A Series of Unrelated Events to boot.

Zack Kopplin at The Guardian reports that Louisiana's legislators are continuing their legislative jihad to keep the theory of evolution out of the state's public school science classrooms. 

Yoga opens you to Satanic possession
says GOP candidate,
 luckily there's a high energy workout that doesn’t compromise your spiritual beliefsMore gems from the confused E.W. Jackson here.

What a week! Fitting a kitchen and dealing with nuisance neighbours has led to interactions with a plumber wearing a copper bracelet and a Peeler sporting a blue holographic Power Balance band. Plenty of rib digs from Mrs B to ‘be nice’– oof!

By marketing products as “free from” GM, aspartame, MSG and parabens, supermarkets are playing on people's fears based on rumours about these substances.
Similarly, Professor Joe Schwarz explains that the important point to understand is that the presence of a chemical is not the same as presence of risk.

Global flood in 2345BC – whole of Ireland evacuated! Let’s read that again…

When the abuse of insulin injections, syrups that cause vomiting and fasting pacts amongst friends fail in keeping your weight down, how about resorting to a painful hernia repair patch stitched to your tongue? Hmm…perhaps someone should mention this treatment to Michael Douglas who invokes a very strange law of similars as a cure for his cancer. Anybody care to suggest a (preferably clean) name for Michael’s new ‘opathy’?

Research by Oxford University Psychologists suggests that a 'belief in science' may help non-religious people deal with adversity by offering comfort and reassurance.

Ghosts, Triskaidekaphobics and tetraphobics stigmatize properties.

To boldy go: Star Trek Darkness promotes bestiality claims another pastor who fails to understand evolution, biology, species, etc.

Penned by Paul Burns for Freethinker Magazine and almost as long: If cats wrote the Bible.

Misplaced decimal point could sink submarine. A mere 70 tons too heavy!

Senior Salvation Army officials go on record that LGBT parents should be put to death, as the Bible instructs.

Not sure if this is really Round-up material – just found it a bit odd: William Windsor (goat).

America's Best Christian takes time to explain to less informed Christians the curious details of the Lord's concept of marriage: Betty Bowers Explains Traditional Marriage to Everyone Else.

Consumers don’t know that taking megavitamins could increase their risk of cancer and heart disease and shorten their lives reports Paul A. Offit at The New York Times.

Simply asking people whether they experienced an event can trick them into later believing that it did occur: Studying the misinformation effect on Dutch soldiers deployed in Afghanistan.

During a speech on the senate floor, a Democratic lawmaker cited an interesting source to urge his colleagues to get serious about climate change; The Bible.

Swears abound at Short & Spiky as a question is posed. Does Homeopathy rot your brain?

Half the size of a paperclip, weighing less than a tenth of a gram, inspired by the biology of a fly, with submillimeter-scale anatomy and two wafer-thin wings that flap almost invisibly at 120 times per second: Flight of the Robobee.

Nothing to see here, just a regular day at the office: Pope performs exorcism.

Following the evidence: Magician Uri Geller teaches much about Bible miracles.

Can’t say we’re surprised by this statement from the next article ‘Every day in a small museum in Kentucky, a few hundred adults and children stare at a diorama of Adam sitting next to a placid dinosaur’; no doubt slack-jawed too as we would be. Slightly late for Darwin Day nonetheless an interesting read - Big trouble in Creationist paradise.

Further updates from the Creation museum comprise of an exhibit to include unicorns and dinosaurs and, in a push to diversify, adding secular fare such as zip lines and sky bridges. Sounds like a good way to celebrate your kinship with the primates – go ape.

Emil Karllson takes on Intellihub, an online “alternative” news site that claims to provide “independent news for independent minds”, in this excellent point by point takedown of a recent ant-vaccine post:  Irrefutable Evidence Shows That Anti-Vaccine Activists Still Have No Clue.

Bringing things to a close, there’s just space to point you towards our future events and book club pages, and keep an eye on our FB and Twitter updates; we may have a surprise speaker in store later in the year.

“If there is one thing about science that everyone should understand, or that would at least clear up much misunderstanding, then it is the concept that science offers only provisional knowledge about the world, and not anything absolute”. Not so good if you like your dinosaurs just the way they are: (For Ken)….. F U science! (NSFW due to >20 swears)




This week’s Round-up was compiled by SitP regular Roy Beddowes.

Friday, 24 May 2013

The Round-up Week 19-20

A picture of bowling ball earth.
Welcome one and all to the weekly round-up of bits and bobs that have fallen off the web and into sceptical clutches. If you missed our latest talk by Julia Hyland then shame on you, it was a very different experience to the usual SitP as these ace photos by resident photographer Simon Brettell show. But then again, every month brings you something different at Birmingham Skeptics as a glance down this web page will illustrate.

Let’s start with a great link that will stay current for a long time,
here’s where you are today and for many todays to come.

Angelina Jolie made the news lately with her brave and informed decision. Our old friend Dean Burnett takes some of the more ridiculous commentators on this to task.

From star of the nerd community to dependent on the herd community
Mayim Bialik disappoints this blogger. Just in case you need a reminder of why anti-vaccination is a bad thing.

Have you been loving the antics of the tweeting, singing space oddity that is Astro Chris Hadfield? Well it seems not everybody has, and this blogger has a bit of an axe to grind.

I love gadgets and gizmos and shiny flashing things in general, but it’s as good to cast a sceptical eye over the claims of some of these as it is the offerings of your local apothecary. Here are a couple of good examples with insect repellents and audio cables don’t throw away those coat hangers!

Another must buy has to be non-GM salt.

Witches are brought down towards earth in Swaziland and a look at the kind of curses we all use.

Next up is a thoughtful piece by Mike Hanlon on the persistence of unreason and the continued survival of quackery in a scientific age.  Mind you, it’s perhaps not slo surprising that quackery thrives and survives when respected corporations such as the BBC gives tacit approval to some of its more dangerous and harmful outlets.

It’s frustrating when the BBC get things so wrong as they can be so good. I’m always entertained by their constantly updating science stories on such wonderful topics as our fantastic fungal feet and evolving and elusive cockroaches. Not from the BBC but in a similar vein is this tiny but beautiful new species of spider discovered in China.

Remember Harold Camping and his message that the end was nigh? Well it seems this time that it just might be.

The government approves 25 new religious schools. And if bringing religion into matters of education wasn’t bad enough how about its influencing the administration of healthcare?

Here are some questions that Greta Christina thinks might offend atheists. Here’s an atheist that wasn’t offended but gave a great answer to a pretty dumb question.

Read this story of film maker Vikram Gandhi and his experiences a fake yet successful Yogi, then listen to him tell the story in his Tedx talk.

The discovery of some smashed up skulls makes this writer wonder if Stone Age people were worried about zombies. Seems like a lot of speculation to me but to be sure they should send Tony Robinson and the boys in to dig a few trenches and drink some real ale, that’d provide a definitive answer. Here’s a better use for a load of bones, a beautiful and macabre ossuary in Czechoslovakia.

Just why are barns red?

The current news is that Matthew Inman of The Oatmeal has brought the Tesla museum a good step further into existence. (Did you see what I did there, hey, hey… I’ll get my coat)

Apparently forcing your employers to do Scientology exercise will not lead to a harmonious workplace. Who would’ve thought? If you want more information about the Scientology organisation just wait a bit and they’ll have a shiny new centre in the heart of our very own city.

Russian style flying saucer patents.

Daniel Loxton says that Skeptics are not Everythingologists. But then how would he know?

Do you shop at Abercrombie and Fitch? I don’t think I fit their target demographic if this is anything to go by.

What if a bowling ball was blown up to the size of the Earth?

For an ongoing miscellany of stories such as these make sure you follow us on Twitter and “Like” our lively Facebook feed. Our next talk is on Wednesday 12th of June with Jonny Scaramanga, “Inside Britain’s Creationist Schools”. One last date for your diary, Rogue Reporter and friend of Birmingham SitP is back in Brum for one night only. I'll be there and can't wait to see how his talk has developed since from his first visit here all that time ago, it was brilliant then.

That about wraps it up, just time to leave you with the aforementioned Chris Hadfield to play us out:




This round-up was eventually put together by Patrick Redmond with much help from the ever reliable and much appreciated Roy Beddowes

Friday, 10 May 2013

Round-Up Shorts – Wk17 to 18.

Picture of Muppet Scientist
Hello and welcome to the latest bare-bones Round-Up.

Let’s kick this week’s edition off by pointing you towards our Future Events page, and what a glorious shiny events page it is with all 2nd Wednesday of the month slots filled right up to November, you lucky people. There’s so much good stuff to be had there without me banging on about it here wasting precious Round-Up space. Tootle on over and have a look-see.

Right up to date with the first of our links: Six years on from this Jon Ronson cruise experience, blundering predatory ghoul, Sylvia Brown, is still getting it wrong.

Fancy having a go yourself? No, not like Sylvia Brown pulling vague answers out of her nether regions, How to Cold Read. Now there’s an Open Mic Night challenge.
Anyone up for it?

Just the weather for them – Skeptic
shorts.

Going back to our skeptic roots:The unseen force that drives Ouija boards and bomb detectors.


Meaningless labels applied to your existence – we have a test for that: Astrology, a Practical Test: Objects that affect you at birth.

Lifted straight from our Facebook page, BBC interviews Barnum Statement generator - gives oxygen to bullshit:  Graphology - discriminating against people on the basis of pseudoscientific non-sense for over 100 years.

Today’s weather is brought to you by….Christian Cloudbusters, and there's a new climate change theory in town.


Bruise on the noggin caused by non-contact mystical wavy hand energy.
Allegedly.

A CAMPAIGN has begun to safeguard the future of Scotland's only homeopathic hospital.


The scientific process through stock photography. Will somebody please turn that microscope round!

Genesis 9:20-25 And Noah began to be an husbandman, and he planted a vineyard: And he drank of the wine, and was drunken; and he was uncovered within his tent. And Shem and Japheth did facepalmeth. It’s in the Bible. Must be true then!

This week’s candidates for Tool of the Week:-

Local election 2013: 'Put disabled down' councillor re-elected in Cornwall.

BNP calls on members to breed more after elections disaster.
How about ‘breed’ off.

Physical exercise prevents you becoming gay, claims UK councillor candidate


Destined to be as ubiquitous as microwave ovens, 3D printing is about to take off, however, I’m quite taken by the simplicity of this design: Darwin's Cladogram Tree with Finches.

Co-discoverer of Evolution by Natural Selection soon to have a statue at The Natural History Museum.

Round-Up Property section: Wallace house up for sale.

Have vampires and wizards replaced aliens in our imaginations? James Gray at the RA: They didn't come from outer space.

In a merger of past and present cultural tracking,
FEMA Planning 'Zombie UFO Crash' Disaster Exercise.

DNA Collected from Found Objects Used to Create 3D Portraits.

Fossil Cookies.

Brain science with a difference: Prosopagnosia - The woman who can't recognise her face.



Use of placebos by athletes should be regulated. It’s cheating, claims expert.

One full year of solar motion captured in a figure of '8' loop with a weird name.

Free your mind and your ass will follow: Why Does Music Feel So Good?

Fox News guest: Scientific ‘enlightenment and reason’ led to the Holocaust.

Traditional psychological diagnoses are going out of style.
A powerful organization of mental health researchers has said it will not be using the new DSM-V. Correction.


As life has evolved, it's complexity has increase exponentially, just like Moore's law.

What I would say to creationists if I was more of a dick. Rant and swears alerts – don’t say  you weren't warned.

A Boy And His Atom: The World’s Smallest Movie.

Let’s end with some implosions.






This week’s Round-up was hastily compiled by SitP regular Roy Beddowes.


Friday, 26 April 2013

The Missionary Position Christopher Hitchens - Brum Skeptics Book Group



The book club met in Yorks Bakery to discuss Christopher Hitchens writing about Mother Theresa. 10 people attended and as the book was only 100 pages we had nearly all read the whole book.

Thinking about Mother Theresa most people in the group felt that prior to reading the book they were aware of her, had never thought about her much but knew she was ‘good’. She is famously good- I can remember learning to read from a book detailing her good works.

Christopher Hitchens challenges the myth within national consciousness that she is good on a number of levels:

  1. She claims political neutrality accepting donations from (seemingly) anyone who will donate to her mission.  This neutrality though hides a political element – she has been photographed with some controversial political figures – and as she is famously good lends credence to their political platforms.
  2. She helps the ‘poorest of the poor’ and the ‘lowest of the low’ but she does this by trying to assist them in enduring their suffering- sitting at the bedside of the sick mopping their brows, rather than by trying to bring about structural change that would provide jobs and services to change their condition.
  3. Her position on population control is controversial- she is very much against both contraception and abortion whilst working in countries where resources are struggling to meet the needs of an expanding population. In her Nobel prize acceptance speech she described abortion as the greatest threat to peace.
  4. Her organisation demonstrates an absence of accountability- large amounts of money are raised by her organisation and it isn’t used for the purposes we would expect. It isn’t used to build modern hospital, or to provide medicine; large amounts don’t appear to be used at all and sit untouched in bank accounts. The organisation doesn’t publish accounts demonstrating good stewardship of these funds.     
  5. She is criticised for her missionary zeal- the purpose of her work is for the greater glory of god. Funds are devoted to alter ornaments and nuns have secretly converted the sick on their death beds.


Our conclusions as a group after some wide ranging discussions were slightly unexpected. We felt that within her world view (which we weren’t prepared to accept) she did think she was doing good. If you accept the conceit that heaven exists and noble suffering will gain you entrance then her actions make sense. We felt that she hadn’t been duplicitous about her world view but that ‘we’ had chosen to assume it was something else (although, it did seem slightly hypocritical that she had accepted expensive medical attention when she was ill). In short we accepted that she had done ‘bad’ but not that she was evil.

We discussed charity (the nature of giving, whose benefit is it for- the giver or the receiver) and international development. When looking at international aid we considered its purpose (to help the starving, to ensure politicians enter heaven, to secure British jobs and contracts or to stem migration).

The book itself came in for some criticism. It was very short and a number of areas (such as the structure and function of the organisation) would have benefitted from expansion. Direct quotes from people who had worked with Mother Theresa were used to illustrate points which added weight and life to the book. Christopher Hitchens has fantastic use of language constructing some brilliantly descriptive insults).

We were glad to have read the book, it changed how we saw Mother Theresa and one participant working in international development felt that it would change some aspects of her work.

After the book discussion we adjoined to the pub where we discussed the relative merits of cushions, Iron Man films and the potential existence of Shrewsbury. 

This is the documentary Christopher Hitchens made before writing the book.



This review  was by Jade Quarrell

Wednesday, 24 April 2013

The Round-Up – Wks 15 &16


Time to resuscitate the Round-up; stand back nurse!

Welcome back to our weekly collection of link based interestingness. Whilst we’re administering green glowing serum and CPR let us point you towards our forthcoming talks that we lovingly put together to challenge and entertain you.

We produce awesome skeptical DVDs too if you can’t make it to us on the night.

On May 8th, Julia Hyland will be with us Bringing Disease to Life in an interactive talk on medical make up effects. Hopefully, the participants on the night won’t have too awkward a train/bus ride home; and Will Storr will be with us in September to tell us about his Adventures with the Enemies of Science. Those helpful people at The Rationalist Association have been kind enough to turn out a short review of Will's book here. Speakers for June, July, August and September are primed and ready to go so keep checking back here for updates. Oh, and don’t forget our usual monthly book club meet in May too. Here’s a bit more information on the continuing story of Henrietta Lacks as it’s our book club pick.

Just digging around the RA site I’ve come across this excellent collection of graphic-novels-every-humanist-should-read, fortunately your friendly neighbourhood Birmingham skeptic doesn’t have far to go to for a local comic book store. And this I just have to have a copy of – checkout complete – gimme!

What with the death of Margaret Thatcher, the Boston bombings and QED, let’s see what we can pull out of the big news stories from the past week or so:-

This is still languishing on my to-read pile. An excerpt from Hitch 22: That Time Margaret Thatcher Spanked Christopher Hitchens.

Having had my interest piqued by a recent lecture, and with some whisperings of a future talk at Sitp,  here’s a piece on the Boston bombings and the fallibility of memory when gathering eyewitness accounts, accompanied by this article from the Beeb on the unreliability of crowd-sourced material and how internet detectives got it wrong. Here’s another on the Saudi Marathon Man.

The effects of James McCormick's morally bankrupt behaviour.

Properish science now with white coat and glasses and everything: Proof that water has memory; featuring Paul the glass of water.

From the firmament to the earth: When you poop in space, everyone screams & Archaeologists Find a Classic Entrance to Hell.

The number of humanist wedding ceremonies in Scotland will soon overtake the number of Church of Scotland weddings, it has been claimed.

As mentioned by Robin Ince during the recent convention - did anyone complete QED bingo?  Eyes down. Dressed like Who, 42; Elevatorgate, No.8. For your prize of a mini picnic table condiment holder please contact Tulpesh in Sweden.

Creation Mathematicians Demand Equal Time for Biblical Pi in the Classroom.

Icelanders love genealogy, so much so that Engineers at Iceland University have developed an Icelandic app that warns you if your date is a relative; complete with 'Incest Prevention Alarm' feature.

Award winning anti-racism poster becomes national campaign tool.

The DOH tell Andrew Wakefield to go do one, I mean, issued a statement dismissing claims from the discredited doctor. Dean Burnett breaks out the law of misinformation similars.

And the award for the “Most obscene title of a peer-reviewed scientific article” goes to… Professor Jean-Marc Dewaele. (Warning - features some bloody excellent swears)

Two disturbing stories from India: Auctioning virginity off to the highest bidder & Is this what Indian men really believe? Skipping across the Persian Gulf for this outrageous example of the law of retribution.

Distance to Mars in pixels. The return trip is quicker by sidebar.

Want to go to Mars? Dutch organisation Mars One says it will open applications imminently.

Sounds like Scientpoetryology rap: The asteroid belt provides a convenient low-gravity platform for travel to other parts of the “gah-LAX-ee.” And we learn that to outsiders, our solar system is known as “Space Station 33.” It can only be… Hubbard.

Round- up quickies: Dawkins plus Stephen Law = xkcd; Wringing out Water on the ISS - for Science! ; Saudi cycling - now for women and SMOGGM.

The Museum of Mental Health in Salem was Once a ‘Cuckoo’s Nest.' Ah, Juicy Fruit...

Cartoon corner: The corn god.

This is encouraging. China says aims to banish superstition, promote knowledge. This not so much - eyeball scraping. No video? What a relief! As we’re in the bonkers treatment section: Anarchic Teapot’s jaw is floored after viewing the quite charming sounding Massage aux batons, or Chiropractic stick massage. (More swears – and gasps) Hey, why stop at three links - Animal chiropractors say their drugless, non-surgical adjustments are cheaper than vet care.

We’re not out of the crazy woods yet: Deepak Chopra takes offence at the new TED guidelines regarding invites for people who use bad science or pseudoscience in their talks and Taslima Nasreen’s take on ‘Stupid Celebrities’.

Broken dreamcatcher floods Swindon with unresolved anxieties.

Despite remarkable growth, solar and wind power aren’t making a dent in carbon emissions, says a new report from the International Energy Agency.

Since 9/11, voice scientists have been searching for a way to find a person's unique 'voiceprint': The race to fingerprint the human voice.

Adam Rutherford and Steve Jones discuss the origins and future of life, Spidergoat and bible science in this excellent episode of Start the Week. Steve Jones’ book The Serpent’s Promise is out soon, Adam Rutherford’s Creation: The Origin of Life is on the shelves right now. Go get ‘em.

Ben Goldacre gets down and dirty in the link packed What Doctors Don't Know About the Drugs They Prescribe.

Many of the ideas of conspiracy theorists are based on a misunderstanding of science—or a stubborn refusal to acknowledge it. National Geographic runs through the polls, Crispian Jago charts The Truth.

Finally, finishing as we started, in a now classic account of cocking around with hypodermics, ‘How (not) to communicate new scientific information: a memoir of the famous Brindley lecture.

You’ll be requiring a video then, Apollo 11 in 100 seconds. (Any visual metaphors connected to the above link were completely unintended)

This week’s Round-up was compiled by SitP regular Roy Beddowes.


Wednesday, 10 April 2013

Drying For Freedom



This is happening on 24th of April at the Vic

One of our aims at Birmingham Skeptics is to help support interesting events often around ideas you might not have ever even thought of before. We were contacted about a fantastic opportunity to do just that with the release of “Drying for Freedom”.  In his debut full feature, Steven Lake examines themes of electrical dependence, environmental exploitation and the role of the humble washing line.

"DRYING FOR FREEDOM is a global exploration of the environment, freedom, communities and corporate exploitation, revealing the extent of the challenge we now face. The film includes contributions from Verona, Mississippi, where investigations are underway in a unique clothesline murder case, to Concord, New Hampshire and the home of Alexander Lee the leader of the world's leading clothesline pressure group. It reveals of our electric heritage and events leading up to millions of clothesline bans within US communities where the restrictions of freedom has become an un-environmental way of life.

DRYING FOR FREEDOM is the new environmental battlefield, exploring energy waste, consumer exploitation, restrictions in basic human freedoms and the impact this has on our planet. Our future is hanging on a line!"

The film is a wonderfully engaging debut full feature from UK filmmaker, Steven Lake. The film has won awards for Best Environmental Feature and Best Artistic Response at Climate Week, it has also been officially selected for many film festivals all over the world.

This screening takes place as part of the 'Hanging Out Festival':
"The DRYING FOR FREEDOM HANGING OUT FESTIVAL is a global film festival showcasing the award winning environmental movie Drying For Freedom in venues across planet Earth."

The film will be followed by a talk and Q and A session from the director, Steven Lake.

Here is a link to the Facebook Event:




Drying For Freedom - Official Trailer from White Lantern Film on Vimeo.

This is proudly an associated event to Birmingham Skeptics in the Pub.
Skeptics in the Pub exists to put on thought provoking and entertaining events promoting science and examining the evidence behind ideas.
http://www.skepticsinthepub.co.uk/

Tickets are £5 on the door to cover the expenses of the event.