Saturday 15 April 2017

Easter 2017

Hand decorated Easter Eggs
Many events listed on religious calendars which share a common date frequently involve the fusion of different beliefs either inadvertantly or deliberately. Easter is one very clear example whereby the calendar event relates to a specific event in Christianity (the death and resurrection of Christ) but the practices of celebration have multiple sources including pagan and other non Christian religions.

Easter eggs are a point in case. While there is a strong connection between the Christian faith and the cruxifiction and arising of Christ, there is evidence of practices involving eggs from Ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia and Crete which provided influences on early Christians. Paschal eggs, a well established custom in central Europe, involved the exchange of gifts of hand-decorated eggs but shares its origin with the traditional symbol of springtime, fertility and rebirth. The early Christians of Mesopotamia are believed to have stained their eggs with the colours of green and yellow. The Easter egg in general is meant to represent the empty tomb of Jesus Christ.

The use of chocolate eggs originates from the 16th and 17th century in Germany where the "Easter Hare" included sweets in his basket of coloured eggs which were distributed to children. In the 20th and 21st Century, Easter now denotes a general 'chocolate festival' usually with little religious connection.

Australian Opera - 2017 Season - La Boheme

Australian Opera 2017 Season - La Boheme - Cafe Momus
Puccini's La Boheme is a staple of any opera company's performance repertoire and in any given two year period almost always makes an appearance on the seasonal programme. Director Gale Edwards has repositioned La Boheme in the 2017 version into the historical period of the Weimar Republic in Germany on the eve of the Nazi period. The sets and costumes are reminiscent of the 1930s with just a hint of the nationalism and arising Nazi influence which characterised that period. In many respects this version of La Boheme often resembles the musical Cabaret  given the Cafe Momus is more of a cabaret/cocktail lounge replete with bare breasted young women gliding along the poles of the private boxes.

The opera is in four Acts and centres on the relationship of two couples - the first being Rudolfo, a writer poet and Mimi a young seamstress and the second, Marcello, a painter and Musetta, a singer and former flame of Marcello's. Rudolfo and Marcello share a studio together visited by their comrades Colline, a philosopher and Schaunard, a musician. Like their other contemporaries, they are very poor and scratch out a living.

Essentially La Boheme is a story of tragedy and lost love and the opera concludes with the death of Mimi. The sets are impressive, the casting of the singers well chosen (Arthur Espiritu as Rodolfo, Andrew Jones as Marcello, Greta Bradman as Mimi, Julie Lea Goodwin as Musetta) and the staging of the production is faultless. Nonetheless the repositioning of La Boheme into Weimar Germany hits a jarring note and provides a needless distraction. The presence of quasi fascist uniforms and a drum corp of the League of German Girls adds to the disconnect between Puccini's original work and the reinterepretation. In this sense it is not a successful production.

Friday 14 April 2017

Wikileaks - friend or foe of the public interest ?

Recent statements from the Director of the US Central Intelligence Agency describing Wikileaks as a 'non state hostile intelligence service' should not altogether be dismissed. A cursory review of the material released on the website reveals that the vast majority of the content constitutes intelligence leaks from Western democracies with no documents sourced from Russia or from China. There is some documentation about the Church of Scientology (but very old), some from Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Syria and Yemen but not much else in terms of other nation states with totalitarian regimes. Wikileaks is therefore quite biased in terms of what it releases or what it is able to obtain. Perhaps the potential threats from China and Russia, both of whom have counter-intelligence capability in cyber warfare is enough to deter Wikileaks from disclosures about those regimes or perhap's its more of a case of not biting the hand that feeds you.

Saturday 25 March 2017

Earth Hour 2017 - Saturday 25 March



Once again it's Earth Hour - continuing environmental awareness, now in its tenth year. From 8.30pm to 9.30 pm. In this age of energy consciousness, the relevance is greater than ever. The website link is: Earth Hour website

Sunday 5 March 2017

CRISPR - genetic engineering has arrived

                                                                                          Shutterstock
The ability to precisely alter, delete and rearrange the DNA of any living organism, including humans - once the realm of science fiction or futurists it has become a reality with the development of the biotechnology known as CRISPR or in its extended form, CRISPR-Cas9. The non abbreviated version is 'clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats' with the Cas9 part referring to a particular enzyme. CRISPR has a number of existing and potential applications such as:
  • disease control and discovering the DNA sequences for viruses, thus opening the way for new treatments.
  • influencing ecology by introducing disease-resistant genes into wild populations of parasitic insects reducing pathogen transmission to humans.
  • adding climate and pest resistant characteristics into food crops.
  • editing hereditary disease susceptible genes in humans.
CRISPR operates by using a cellular scalpel, an enzyme Cas9, to cut DNA. The enzyme is guided to its destination by a RNA guide that ensures that Cas9 cuts out the target nucleotides of DNA allowing the insertion of a different chain of nucleotides which were included in the CRISPR package. The potential changes as a result of this biotechnology are profound and in many cases hard to accurately foresee. Vectors for diseases could be genetically altered and rendered harmless (such as mosquitoes), food crops could be made climate change and pest resistant, threatened species of animals could be made hardier to survive and human hereditary health conditions prevented.

There are also dangers with this biotechnology - the risk of the unknown: for example, inadvertently shifting viruses and other pathogens from one species to another thus creating diseases for which there is no known protection or treatment. But will the advantages gained outweigh the risks ?

Saturday 4 March 2017

Mosquitoes - the threat expands with a warmer climate

The Summer warnings in NSW in early 2017 of the potential for an outbreak of Ross River Fever again underscores the risks posed by pathogens carried by mosquitoes who readily benefit from warmer and moister weather. Ross River Fever was first isolated in the Ross River region near Townsville, Queensland, over half a century ago. Since that time the condition has been identified as being fairly endemic across Australia in warmer regions and in near neighbouring countries such as Papua New Guinea. During periods of colder temperatures the risk is minimised as the carrier mosquitoes are limited in their breeding cycle however with milder temperatures, longer Summers and intense periods of storm activity with higher humidity, the mosquito's geographic range is expanded. Matched with a longer breeding season due to these same conditions, the propensity for greater disease outbreaks is very real.

Across the planet similar concerns are being expressed in relation to various species of mosquito which are vectors for a range of dangerous pathogens either endangering life or causing serious debilitating effects.  Only a handful of the known 3,500 species of mosquito feed on human blood and these are only female as male mosquitoes live off plants. This handful are, nonetheless, devastating in impact for diseases such as malaria alone kills over 400,000 people a year. The chief culprits are listed on the table below: 

Mosquito species
Pathogens carried
Aedes aegypti
Found in cities, this species feeds almost exclusively from human blood.

Zika virus
Chikungunya
Yellow Fever
Dengue Fever
Aedes albopictus
An aggressive, adaptable species which can colonise the habitats of other mosquitoes.

Zika virus
Chikungunya
Dengue fever
Haemagogus
A major carrier of yellow fever, they can be identified by their metallic sheen.


Yellow Fever
Anopheles
This species has long front feelers and is the only genus that transmits malaria.


Malaria
Lymphatic filariasis
Culex quinquefasciatus
Common around the world, this species are night feeders and lay their eggs in dirty water.


Lymphatic filariasis
West Nile fever


Zika virus has become the most recent addition to the list of dangerous pathogens in North and South  America but it is not alone. In Brazil, Mayaro, a monkey virus is now infecting people in the North West of that country as a result of mosquito transmission. As much of the debate on climate change focusses on energy generation and adaptation technology and design, an equal amount of effort is needed on examining the public health ramifications across a range of impacts. Ultimately these may have a much earlier effect.