November 27, 2008

A Thanksgiving Prayer, by William S. Burroughs

A Thanksgiving Prayer, by William S. Burroughs


For John Dillinger In hope he is still alive Thanksgiving Day, November 28, 1986
Thanks for the wild turkey and the Passenger Pigeons, destined to be shit out through wholesome American guts thanks for a Continent to despoil and poison —
thanks for Indians to provide a modicum of challenge and danger —
thanks for vast herds of bison to kill and skin, leaving the carcass to rot —
thanks for bounties on wolves and coyotes —
thanks for the AMERICAN DREAM to vulgarize and falsify until the bare lies shine through —
thanks for the KKK, for nigger-killing lawmen feeling their notches, for decent church-going women with their mean, pinched, bitter, evil faces —
thanks for "Kill a Queer for Christ" stickers —
thanks for laboratory AIDS — thanks for Prohibition and the War Against Drugs —
thanks for a country where nobody is allowed to mind his own business —
thanks for a nation of finks —
yes, thanks for all the memories... all right, let's see your arms... you always were a headache and you always were a bore —
thanks for the last and greatest betrayal of the last and greatest of human dreams.

November 26, 2008

Why Not to Be the Richest Man in China

Wong Kwong Yu poses in a Gome store in Beijing in 2006

Wong Kwong Yu poses in a Gome store in Beijing in 2006

 

By Austin Ramzy / Beijing

There's no better way to say you've arrived in China than to be named on one of the country's rich lists. Of course, such an honor can also be an indicator that you will soon disappear for a long, long time. In recent years the rankings of China's wealthiest have included several prominent tycoons who have later been jailed on fraud and corruption charges.

The latest candidate for such a fall is Wong Kwong Yu, 39, the chairman of mainland electronics retailing giant Gome. Wong, named by the Hurun Report last month as China's richest man with an estimated net worth of $6.3 billion, was detained last week on suspicion of fraud, Chinese media reported. According to a report in the financial magazine Caijing, Wong (his name is also spelled Huang Guangyu) is being investigated for manipulating the share prices of Shanghai-listed Shandong Jintai Group, a medical company controlled by his brother, Wong Chung-yam. (See pictures of what money can buy.)

Shares of the Hong Kong-listed Gome Electrical Appliances Holding were suspended Monday, after the company announced that it was unable to verify the reports of Wong's detention. The company announced Gome "is making necessary enquires for the purpose of verifying the allegations." Shandong Jintai shares were also suspended.

In 2006, the government launched an investigation into loan fraud charges brough against Wong. A year later, Gome announced that the investigation was completed, and its founder was never charged. His recent troubles make him the latest high-profile tycoon to run afoul of authorities. The ranks of recent years' rich lists read like a police blotter. In 2003 Yang Bin, an agribusiness and real estate tycoon once named the mainland's second-richest man, was convicted of tax evasion and sentenced to 18 years in prison. Gu Chujun, once head of a leading appliance company, was ranked China's 20th richest businessperson by Forbes in 2001. In January, he was convicted of falsifying corporate reports and sentenced to a 12-year prison term. And Zhou Zhengyi, a Shanghai-based real estate developer named China's 11th richest person by Forbes in 2002, was arrested the following year on corruption charges. He served three years in prison, and was then sentenced to an additional 16-year term for bribery and fraud. (See pictures of China on the wild side.)

The high-profile convictions indicate that China is still struggling to move beyond its unruly early days of privatization. The prosecutions are "a reflection of the cowboy capitalism, the relatively unregulated capitalism that exists in China," says David Zweig, a China scholar at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. "Many capitalist in China made their money either through their relationship with government officials or in somewhat shady deals." For those wealthy few, staying on top can prove more difficult than getting there.

November 12, 2008

Hua Hin expat gunned down on doorstep

Hua Hin News 28 Oct: A US citizen permanently residing in Hua Hin has been shot on his own doorstep in what appears to have been an attempt on his life. Donald Whiting opened his front door on the evening of Friday 24th to investigate a suspicious looking vehicle, later described as a bronze coloured Toyota Vigo, outside his house when the gunmen struck. He was hit twice in the chest, one bullet puncturing his lungs, the other going through his stomach into his spine.
He was rushed to hospital to undergo surgery and on Sunday moved to Bangkok where his situation was described as critical several days later. If he survives the surgery he is likely never to walk again.
Mr Whiting was very vocal about troubles he and his wife, also a US citizen, had endured with property developers and the construction of what was to be their dream home in Hua Hin. He often sought media attention to highlight some of the problems foreigners can have with developers in Hua Hin and in doing so attracted a lot of attention. Earlier this year he suffered a firebomb attack which gutted his Honda Jazz (as reported on Hua Hin Report).
A legal case with one well known Hua Hin developer was reported by the local Thai Rath newspaper to be approaching. Whether the incidents are connected remains to be seen however all of Hua Hin’s foreign community should be hoping that the authorities are doing all in their power to bring the perpetrators of this tragic incident to swift justice.

Source: Baht&Sold

November 02, 2008

Distant star's demise previews our sun's death

By Robert S. Boyd | McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — Astronomers at 25 observatories around the world began aiming their telescopes this week at a preview of our sun's eventual death.

Their target is a slowly cooling "white dwarf" star in the constellation Virgo that eventually will become a cold, black cinder.

A similar fate is forecast for the sun, but not to worry. That won't happen for at least 4 billion years.

"Someday the sun will be a white dwarf," said Judith Provencal, an astronomer at the University of Delaware in Newark. "It's forming the white dwarf in its core right now."

Most stars become white dwarfs after they exhaust their nuclear fuel. They aren't burning anymore, as the sun is, but glowing like embers in a dying fire. Dwarfs are extremely dense, holding as much material as the sun in a body the size of our planet. Astronomers say that a teaspoon of white dwarf material would weigh about a ton on Earth.

The series of white dwarf observations, scheduled to run until May 1, is a project of an international astronomical network known as the Whole Earth Telescope.

The viewings began Wednesday night at the Southern African Large Telescope, a 39-foot-wide mirror in Sutherland, South Africa. Observatories in Spain, Delaware, Texas, Arizona, Hawaii, New Zealand, Australia, China and so on around the globe will provide around-the-clock coverage, ending May 1 in Brazil.

"We like to have two telescopes at each longitude," said Provencal, the coordinator of the project. "That way, if one is cloudy, hopefully the other won't be." A trial run at four European observatories last November failed because Europe was socked in by snow and clouds the entire month.

The target, a white dwarf known as IU Vir, some 300 trillion miles from Earth, alternately brightens and dims as huge blobs of material in its interior rise and fall, rather like a lava lamp.

The goal of the observations is to determine the rate of changes in the star's brightness over time, which will let astronomers figure out how fast it's cooling. The rate slows slightly as the star cools.

"Once a white dwarf forms, all it does is sit there and cool," Provencal said. "So we can measure the temperature of a white dwarf, and we can figure out how long it took to cool to that temperature and hence determine how old it is."

Currently, the temperature of IU Vir is thought to be about 21,500 degrees Fahrenheit. The coolest known white dwarf is about 2,500 degrees.

Astronomers think that white dwarfs are the final stage in the evolution of a low- or medium-mass star, such as our sun. When the sun burns up all its hydrogen, it will swell into an enormous "red giant" that will swallow everything in the solar system as far out as Mars.

In time, the red giant will shed its outer layers, forming a ringlike object called a planetary nebula. Its core will be a white dwarf.

By the time that happens, the Earth will have been destroyed and mankind with it, unless our descendants have found a way to reach a planet circling another, younger star.

ON THE WEB

More information from the Delaware Asteroseismic Research Center.

An animation of a sunlike star becoming a white dwarf.