Category Archives: Uncategorized
100 Minutes, Or Else
Females of the Australian redback spider, one of the world's most poisonous spiders and a close relative to the black widow, demand 100 minutes of courting or else they usually cannibalize their male suitors, research finds.
I hope the copulation is good, at least.
Obama Is...
Oprah: Prophet
Anvil Shooting
Green olives in glass, black in cans?
Plants vs. Plants
Plants can't see or hear, but they can recognize their siblings, and now researchers have found out how: They use chemical signals secreted from their roots, according to a new study.
Back in 2007, Canadian researchers discovered that a common seashore plant, called a sea rocket, can recognize its siblings — plants grown from seeds from the same plant, or mother. They saw that when siblings are grown next to each other in the soil, they "play nice" and don't send out more roots to compete with one another.
But as soon as one of the plants is thrown in with strangers, it begins competing with them by rapidly growing more roots to take up the water and mineral nutrients in the soil.
OK, that's cool. But what we really need are plants that can fight zombies.
What does virtual rumor-mongering say about Christians?
Genesis
I read R. Crumb's illustrated version of Genesis, at the beach last week, while waiting for the rain to stop. Being neither a fan of the Torah or the Bible or of comic books, I'm a little amazed I was motivated to buy and read it. But I did, and now I'm smarter, I guess - at least I know what's in Genesis besides the creation stories!
There's a whole lot of genealogy, rape, incest and murder. God kills people right and left; he drowns them, takes their livestock, torments them, tricks them, then promises huge families as reward for putting up with it all. There are stories which make no sense without knowing long-lost traditions and rules of society, ex.: men keep telling people, when they come into a strange land, that their wife is really their sister, and claiming that this will stop the local ruler from assaulting them - it happens three times, to people with similar names and under similar circumstances. Why? Beats me! But Crumb thankfully gives stuff like that some explanation in his chapter summaries at the end of the book. And then there's also Noah and Lot and a whole lot of stuff about a rather, IMO, unpleasant guy named Joseph and his Egyptian adventures.
But that's Genesis: old news. And illustrated Bible books have been around forever, too. What's new about this is the illustrator, R. Crumb. And this is classic Crumb: lumpy, big-legged women, frizzy-haired men, wild eyes and heaving bosoms, all drawn with that round and wriggly style that Crumb's famous for. Plus, he shows the sex and the murder, the weeping and the fighting and the crying, and doesn't hold back in deference to religious sensitivities. "Nothing left out!", the cover proclaims. And, besides being fun to look at (though it's in no way a parody or an attempt to make Genesis seem funny or silly), the illustrations actually help the stories flow (even those which don't make any sense, or are just listings of birth records - the "begats"), and that helped me to actually get through all 50 chapters! So, thanks Mr. Crumb! I won't ask you to bother with any of the other books, though.
Of course, some Christians are mad at him for drawing pictures of the things the authors of Genesis described.
Skin Of His Teeth
via Boing Boing
