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Oh....there is a woman on my TV with a beard, 10 morning show....

How many women need to shave???

And should they? Should hairy women come out of the closet and just go natural???
 
From: http://news.ninemsn.com.au/national/2012/11/23/06/32/woman-sues-over-alleged-foster-child-rape

"Mother sues over alleged foster child rape"

Appears to me that one or more public servants right royally failed in their publicly funded job(s) and either mistakenly or deliberately lied to the foster mum and, as an eventual result, her own 8 year old son was allegedly raped and her older son has apparently now turned to drugs as a (bad) way of dealing with "failing his little brother".

It also appears to me that "the state" / public service is choosing, of all things, to sue the mother of the allegedly raped 8 year old boy. A boy who would not have been allegedly raped if the family had been properly informed about the 15yo foster child.

What tha ?

Among other things, how to turn people off fostering !

Oh, and as for the public servants who failed to do the right thing and should be deemed directly and utterly responsible for what happened afterwards ?

"More training" ... and if "the state" is allowed to gets its way, paid for by the mum of the allegedly raped 8 year old.

As per this: http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/...family-more-pain/story-e6frerc6-1226523087149 here is hoping that the premier steps in and the particular department gets special and deserving "Newman" attention.

From that 2nd link

The foster mother is suing the department after it failed to tell her the sexual history of a 15-year-old foster child who allegedly raped her eight-year-old son. But, in a stunning move, the Child Safety Department is pursuing the mother with lawyers arguing that she was negligent in not supervising her son.

The actions of the department are a disgrace. There is nothing else that can be said for a group of heartless people who let down a woman in the most appalling of ways and then decide to pursue her through the courts.

regarDS
 
...I saw this article today...

Smart specs may replace guide dogs
Updated: 18:14, Saturday November 24, 2012
Smart specs may replace guide dogs

skynews_819854.jpg

Researchers say smart specs for the blind could replace guide dogs in two years.

The hi-tech glasses are designed to prevent 'legally blind' individuals with a small degree of residual vision from bumping into objects.

They use tiny stereo cameras in the frames to project simplified images onto the lenses which become brighter the closer an object is.

From January next year, the glasses will be tested in a series of trials involving 160 people with severely impaired sight in Oxford and London.

Developer Dr Stephen Hicks, from Oxford University, said he hoped a finished model will be commercially available in around two years.

The cost is expected to be around STG600 ($A927) - slightly more than a smart phone. In comparison, a guide dog costs up to STG30,000 to train.

Hicks said the spectacles were designed as a navigational aid, not to restore lost vision.

'The glasses work using a pair of cameras that determine the distance of objects and we simply translate that into a light display,' he said. 'This is not restoring sight, but we can improve spatial awareness.'

Around 300,000 people in the UK are registered as legally blind.

Of these, 90 per cent possess some residual vision allowing them to detect blurry shapes and differences between light and dark.

Research has shown that fewer than half of people who are legally blind attempt to leave their homes on a daily basis, said Hicks.

'The aim is to increase the independence of the hundreds of thousands of people who are visually impaired in the UK,' he added.


A pilot study last year is said to have yielded 'very encouraging' results. Volunteers trying out the glasses managed to master them within a few minutes.

'People were able to recognise where a table was, where a wall was, and when a person was five metres away,' said Hicks.

Technology built into the glasses could give them expanded functions, such as reading printed words out loud via an earpiece, or scanning barcodes to display the prices of shop items.

The research was funded through the National Institute for Health Research Invention for Innovation (i4i) programme.

People that are fully blind from birth obviously could not use these could they?... 'legally blind' in this case means that they see 'something' but it is blurry... legally blind in this instance to me doesn't actually mean 'blind' in it's true sense that I can make of it but...

...it got me 'a-wonderin'... if a person is totally blind from birth then they would never have ever seen images whatsoever... so therefore...

(1) People that are fully blind... if they run their fingers over their spouses face... how do they build up a 'picture' of their face?... do they build up a contour map of their face whereas its lines in their heads that form some sort of 3D image?...

(2) People that are fully blind... do they dream when asleep?...

(3) People that are fully blind... they wouldn't see images while dreaming because they've never seen anything... what do they 'see'?...

(4) People that are fully blind... when they are walking around their own homes that they've walked around for say 10 years... do they build up a mental 'picture' of their surroundings in their heads or would it be like data going into a computer to build up an 'image' of their surroundings?...

(5) People that are fully blind... when they listen to Big Brother... TV in general or movies... I wonder how it plays out in their head?... would it be like us listening to music with our eyes closed and imagining a video clip?... hardly probable due to their never have 'seen' in the first place... what do they imagine?...

...I have a sudden... whole new perspective on just how hard it would be to be totally blind after writing this... does anyone have ideas of how I can get answers to those questions?... does anyone know the answers to those questions because one of their relatives are blind and have discussed it with them?... or Internet links?... Blind people and how they perceive things in their head holds a fascination for me at the moment...

...I have to excuse my ignorance in this subject... I am curious though... and... I am so lucky that I can see... cheers.
 
I had some of the same wonderings, and asked my professor of medicine friend.

He explained what totally blind from birth people 'see', just total black, and like when you close your eyes and rub them.
 
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I had some of the same wonderings, and aksed my professor of medicin friend.

He explained what totally blind from birth people 'see', just total black, and like when you close your eyes and rub them.

...whoa!... now that's interesting!... first thing I did was to do that and I saw 'flashes' of specks of light and dark... interesting... thanks for that kxk... cheers.
 
Yeah, I get rainbowy things sometimes, but it's a hard concept to wrap your head around - total black, and if you have never seen I guess you can't even imagine visual stuff.
Freaks me out thinking about it.

It was a few years ago, so can't recall the whole discussion, now I think of it he probably said blind people don't even see those colours when you rub your eyes - will ask when I see him next:)
 
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...I saw this article today...



People that are fully blind from birth obviously could not use these could they?... 'legally blind' in this case means that they see 'something' but it is blurry... legally blind in this instance to me doesn't actually mean 'blind' in it's true sense that I can make of it but...

...it got me 'a-wonderin'... if a person is totally blind from birth then they would never have ever seen images whatsoever... so therefore...

(1) People that are fully blind... if they run their fingers over their spouses face... how do they build up a 'picture' of their face?... do they build up a contour map of their face whereas its lines in their heads that form some sort of 3D image?...

(2) People that are fully blind... do they dream when asleep?...

(3) People that are fully blind... they wouldn't see images while dreaming because they've never seen anything... what do they 'see'?...

(4) People that are fully blind... when they are walking around their own homes that they've walked around for say 10 years... do they build up a mental 'picture' of their surroundings in their heads or would it be like data going into a computer to build up an 'image' of their surroundings?...

(5) People that are fully blind... when they listen to Big Brother... TV in general or movies... I wonder how it plays out in their head?... would it be like us listening to music with our eyes closed and imagining a video clip?... hardly probable due to their never have 'seen' in the first place... what do they imagine?...

...I have a sudden... whole new perspective on just how hard it would be to be totally blind after writing this... does anyone have ideas of how I can get answers to those questions?... does anyone know the answers to those questions because one of their relatives are blind and have discussed it with them?... or Internet links?... Blind people and how they perceive things in their head holds a fascination for me at the moment...

...I have to excuse my ignorance in this subject... I am curious though... and... I am so lucky that I can see... cheers.

Your post really made me think about something I had never really considered before. Someone who was born blind would have no concept of anything visual so surely the mental picture they build up would be nothing like reality? I wonder would it be worse to be blind forever or to become blind, I guess that is not really a fair question everyone is different. I have a friend with retinitis pigmentosa. He is one of 3 boys and they all have RP.

My friend started losing his sight when he was in his early 20's but it was a slow degeneration until he was about 45 years old. He is 56 now and almost completely blind. My friend didn't cope well initially, major denial refused to go to RSB to retrain in a new job (he was a Nurse) he was really angry for years. In his mid 40's he started to come to terms with it a bit and went to RSB for help.
 
It's a scary thing, being without a sense. Though for sure having it and losing it would be more traumatic than never having it at all. I imagine other senses would compensate in some way.. but to be without any one of them. Sad.

I've been interested in synaesthesia - possibly a lost sense, or maybe a crossover - ever since I heard of it. It's the ability to 'feel' colours. I've talked to people who, when they listen to music, feel the colours of it. Or when they look at... say kids blocks with numbers on it in colours how they are wrong... like the number four is never green, it's just wrong. It fascinates me this extra perception that some people have. From what I've read it's possibly a sense that we used to need but evolutionarily is now redundant.

I want it!

Sometimes I get a sense of a particular feeling that is a colour, or a sensation, or a person. But nothing at all like my understanding of a person who has this synaesthesia thing. I try to think of things in colour to perhaps develop this.

lol, weirdo eh? Hear colours? Feel colours? Smell colours? How cool. :)
 
It's a scary thing, being without a sense. Though for sure having it and losing it would be more traumatic than never having it at all. I imagine other senses would compensate in some way.. but to be without any one of them. Sad.

I've been interested in synaesthesia - possibly a lost sense, or maybe a crossover - ever since I heard of it. It's the ability to 'feel' colours. I've talked to people who, when they listen to music, feel the colours of it. Or when they look at... say kids blocks with numbers on it in colours how they are wrong... like the number four is never green, it's just wrong. It fascinates me this extra perception that some people have. From what I've read it's possibly a sense that we used to need but evolutionarily is now redundant.

I want it!

Sometimes I get a sense of a particular feeling that is a colour, or a sensation, or a person. But nothing at all like my understanding of a person who has this synaesthesia thing. I try to think of things in colour to perhaps develop this.

lol, weirdo eh? Hear colours? Feel colours? Smell colours? How cool. :)


Stephen Fry did a segment on Synaesthesia a few years ago on QI. It's an interesting phenomena. He does a little experiment asking the panel what colours certain things are. I wonder if everyone sees the same colour for everything. ie Is a musical note that is blue for someone, blue for everyone? I don't think it would be, I think it would be different for everyone in the same way that some noises are appealing to some people and like nails on a blackboard for others. People all react differently from outside stimuli (stress, emotive response etc), I think you would your synaesthetic response would be different as well. I also think more people probably have it than we realize but to a more minor extent so that we don't even really notice it..

I checked youtube, the QI segment is online

[youtubevid]hqQIL4nuB-g[/youtubevid]
 
Ooooooooooo I love this sort of stuff....I know a girl who is synaesthetic, mildly, she described it as like swimming in colours.

I think my mum may have had it mildly, she loved to compare/match/link things, and described things in that sort of way.

Have allways been fascinated with how people see/sense the world differently.
Started when at school studying the Impressionists - most of them were short sighted and thus saw the world differently.

And being short sighted/myopia/astigmatism sufferer myself - well you can visualise differently with/without glasses, watching stuff come into vision from the distance with no glasses for eg, like cars at night.
Myopia is a lot like impressionist paintings blurry edges/prettier world.

And colour blindness - is almost exclusively a male issue, so rare for women and really common for men and different forms.
Most men really can't tell the difference between blues/greens/greys/khakis, weird watching them.

And sticky - re the blind dreaming, blind from birth no visuals, blind later - if before 5 lose visuals quickly, after 5 eventually visuals fade.
But they dream about smells, sounds, textures.

Here's an article -http://bodyodd.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/03/09/10602730-how-do-blind-people-dream
 
Stephen Fry did a segment on Synaesthesia a few years ago on QI. It's an interesting phenomena. He does a little experiment asking the panel what colours certain things are. I wonder if everyone sees the same colour for everything. ie Is a musical note that is blue for someone, blue for everyone? I don't think it would be, I think it would be different for everyone in the same way that some noises are appealing to some people and like nails on a blackboard for others. People all react differently from outside stimuli (stress, emotive response etc), I think you would your synaesthetic response would be different as well. I also think more people probably have it than we realize but to a more minor extent so that we don't even really notice it..

I checked youtube, the QI segment is online

[youtubevid]hqQIL4nuB-g[/youtubevid]

well then I'm synaethestic... not a lot, but definitely.

Sean
 
...thanks for the link kxk... very interesting... he seems pretty cool that guy... accepts what life has dealt to him and gets on with it... I think that he'd have a great sense of humour too... cheers.
 
No worries Sticky.

I shared Uni student accomodation for about 6 months with a blind guy, who then had to move on to campus,it was really educational for me.
He had a deteriorating sight health issue, but tried to live as a sighted person for as long as possible.

I learnt a lot.
Neatest most organized person i ever met, everything HAS to have it's particualr place, right down to pot lids - string & 2 nails, you hang the string in a line between 2 nails, pot lid handle hooks onto string, these are all arranged on the inside of cupboard doors. Nifty.
 
UK media scandal - and the recommendations etc.

I had no idea how this ruined peoples lives. And Elle MacPherson sound slike a total bitch....
Elles' ex business advisor was on TV, she was a hacking victim.

Elle accused her of leaking private crap, went psycho and forced her to go to rehab as an alcoholic - non of it true.
She lost work, got really ill, and fuckin forced to 'become' and alcholic in theory and endure rehab - how weird would that be.

Bitch Elle has never apologised, or even acknowledged what really happened. Poor woman.
 
UK media scandal - and the recommendations etc.

I had no idea how this ruined peoples lives. And Elle MacPherson sound slike a total bitch....
Elles' ex business advisor was on TV, she was a hacking victim.

Elle accused her of leaking private crap, went psycho and forced her to go to rehab as an alcoholic - non of it true.
She lost work, got really ill, and fuckin forced to 'become' and alcholic in theory and endure rehab - how weird would that be.

Bitch Elle has never apologised, or even acknowledged what really happened. Poor woman.


Elle's a drama queen
 
WEAPONS stolen off a navy ship

It's not April is it?

WTF?????????? This is laughable.

You'd think that a navy ship would be secure.... Not so.

http://www.theislanderonline.com.au...stolen-from-navy-patrol-boat-in-darwin/?cs=12

OMG seriously. This is just beyond. What kind of people are guarding things like navy ships and military bases in this country?

Picture of that base
closeup-of-hmas-coonawarra-darwin-naval-base.jpg



This kind of shit would not have happened on a US ship that was docked. I think their guards would have been armed.
 
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"Party Time" "Free money"

Full article here: http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/ne...tention-policies/story-e6freuy9-1226528431205

all emphasis mine

'Party time' as PM called a 'hero' over asylum-seeker detention policies
by: By JONATHAN MARSHALL in Bogor, Indonesia From: News Limited Network December 03, 2012 12:00AM

ASYLUM seekers in Indonesia have swung into party mode and labelled Julia Gillard a "hero" after learning they will receive welfare payments and rent assistance should they make it to Australia by boat.

The wannabe citizens are ecstatic the government has conceded detention centres are beyond maximum capacity and that asylum seekers would need to be released into the community while their applications for refugee status were processed.

They would be given financial and housing support - as well as free basic health care - a massive boost from their current financial status in Indonesia where many are struggling to afford food.

However the asylum seekers, based in Puncak, 80km from Jakarta, said they feared Liberal leader Tony Abbott would be successful in his bid to become prime minister.

"Mr Abbott is not good for refugees and asylum seekers, he does not like us, he is not really a nice man," said Zia Haidari, a 25-year-old Afghanistan man who has attempted - unsuccessfully - to travel to Australia by boat seven times.

"Ms Gillard seems to understand how we feel and is trying her best.

"Abdulah Sulamani, 41, heaped praise on Ms Gillard: "She is a hero, you are lucky to have this woman for your country."

Solo mother Fatemeh Khavari, 30, told News Ltd she did not have enough money saved to travel by boat to Australia and had spent time living homeless and hungry in Indonesia with her six-month-old son.

Labor's announcement was music to her ears.

"If I can get this free money and house when I come to Australia this will make life very easy for me," Ms Khavari said.

"It is very hard right now for us, I cannot afford to buy milk formula, we are very hungry. Me and my child need the generosity of the Australian people.

"If that doesn't happen my baby may die."

Ms Khavari - whose reasons fleeing Iran were "private" - said the other factor to draw her towards Australia was free medical care.

"I cannot afford to have vaccinations for my baby so I can get this in Australia.

"The praise directed at the prime minister may be unwelcome by its recipient, with voters unlikely to be impressed with the notion asylum seekers think they are coming to a country with soft laws.

A new monthly record was set in November with 2443 people arriving on boats and Ms Gillard was asked yesterday if she would bring back temporary protection visas and tow boats back to Indonesia.

The government last month announced thousands of asylum seekers threatened with processing in Nauru and Manus Island would be released in the community in Australia on bridging visas with almost $440 a fortnight plus help to pay rent.

It is understood the government is aware large numbers of asylum seekers are rushing to get on boats in Indonesia before the monsoon season and are undeterred by the government's pledge to keep them waiting in the community for protection visas for up to five years under a "no advantage" test.

Ms Gillard said TPVs and tow backs were not policy options hours before the government announced 75 people on two boats had been rescued by the Navy off Christmas Island.

"This is a complicated issue for our nation, for nations around the world," Ms Gillard told Channel 10.

"Anybody who says that there is a simple fix to you is not telling you the truth. It takes a range of policies, and we are putting that range of policies in place."

The desperation in the voices of asylum seekers in Puncak is echoed right throughout the village, where many asylum seekers come prior to embarking on the sea journey to Australia.

They eat their basic evening meals with rusty utensils scattered around. Their tiny bedrooms contain no blankets and sleep up to eight people. The days are dull with no ability to work as work visas from Indonesian officials are non-existent for the travellers.

It is this harsh reality of life in villages like Punchak combined with the arrival of news about Labor's policy backflip that is bringing about party fever and the desire to come to Australia as soon as possible.

Seventeen-year-old Adres, who does not have a surname listed on his passport, said when he arrived on Indonesian soil three weeks ago he planned to apply for refugee status through UNHCR.

But upon learning of the over-filled detention centres in Australia he was determined to travel by sea.

"This is good news for us, if we stay here and apply for status we might not be allowed into Australia, but if we come on boat we get the money and house
," Adres said.

"This is a great thing and I am very thanking to the government in your country."

The Afghanistan teenager, whose father was killed in Pakistan, made the journey to Indonesia by plane. He saved for the journey and would use his money to engage people smugglers.

"It is a dangerous risk but worth it to get a new country with opportunities.

"This is party time."

"Free money" ?

Then again, many of you similarly don't seem to realise how many hundreds of millions of dollars Oz has to borrow every month with interest attached and no end in sight for the constant borrowing let alone even beginning to stop the ever increasing debt and start paying it back and how your childrens children will be paying back what EMILY lister Fabian Socialist Julia Gillard (and co) have so quickly spent with nothing worthwhile to show for it.

Many of you also seem to think "free money" as you continue to suckle upon the public teat to the detriment of the future of this country.

Ah, but "party on, doods" / "eat, drink, and be merry for tomorrow we die", hmmm ?

[youtubevid]idz70hx-WGA[/youtubevid]

regarDS
 
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