Monday 24 October 2011

No Christmas for Thomas!

The relatives of Thomas the Tank Engine’s author have accused a television company of political correctness against Christian beliefs after it removed references to Christmas in a recent episode.
Rev. W. Awdry’s daughter, Hilary Fortnam, said that her father would have been distressed after executives decided to rebrand Christmas using phrases such as “winter holidays” and “holiday tree”.
“He would feel very strongly about this politically correct age and that those who now write his stories should not have taken Christ out of Christmas. Political correctness against Christian beliefs offends,” Mrs Fortnam said.
She explained that her father, who worked as a vicar for nearly 30 years, “always impressed on reporters and publishers that he ‘was a priest first and a children’s author second.’”
In the episode called “Keeping up with James”, the trains compete to carry presents to children against a background with a fir tree decorated with baubles and a choir.
Mrs Fortnam added that she was worried people would think her father had dropped the idea of Christmas from his books.
“It’s frustrating to me because I don’t want people thinking my father wrote those words,” she said. “The television programmes say they are based on the books of Rev. W. Awdry and I don’t want people thinking a vicar would write that.
“A lot of children just receive presents at Christmas and don’t know why they do it,” she said. “Local councils won’t advertise Christmas carols and nativity plays in case they are sued for not being inclusive.”
Rev Awdry had three children. He wrote 26 books between 1945 and 1972, after which his son Christopher, for whom the original books were created, completed another 42.

Read The Daily Telegraph article Christmas removed from Thomas the Tank Engine to be politically correct

Friday 21 October 2011

Crisis of Flooding in South-East Asia


Over 700 people – over a quarter of them children – have been killed and at least eight million affected by the flooding that has hit Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos and the Philippines. 
Seasonal rains and back-to-back typhoons have devastated the region. They have destroyied homes, livelihoods and infrastructure. The flooding is already estimated to be the worst in 50 years, with more rain forecast over the coming week.
And in the mainly-Christian Chin Province in Burma (Myanmar), people still desperately need food and shelter after heavy rain caused a major landslide, which swept away homes and damaged bridges and roads, in June.  
A third of Thailand’s provinces have been inundated by floodwaters, forcing tens of thousands of people from the worst-affected areas to live in makeshift shelters for the last two months; they lack sufficient water, food and sanitary facilities. Damaged health amenities and water sources have raised concerns about an outbreak of waterborne diseases.
There is an urgent need for food, clean water and medical assistance in Cambodia, where more than 300,000 affected people are facing food shortages.

Wednesday 19 October 2011

New record on Space Invaders!


A New Jersey man has crushed the world record for the retro shoot ‘em up ‘Space Invaders’. It’s only 33 years since the game first swept the arcades, but well done sir!
Richie Knucklez hasn’t so much beaten the previous highscore as obliterated it. His new score, as verified by the record-keepers at Twingalaxies.com, is a whopping 115,510. That’s more than double the 55,160 set by Donald Hayes in 2003, so some respect is probably due.

Try it again:
http://thatvideogamesite.com/play.php?id=107

Friday 7 October 2011

Catholic Church adds to criticism of secular dating system.

The Catholic Church’s semi-official newspaper has labelled the BBC’s ‘religiously neutral’ terms for dating history as ‘senseless hypocrisy’. L’Osservatore Romano also described the BBC website’s suggestion that BCE and CE should be used instead of BC and AD as ‘enormous nonsense’. Last week, the broadcaster was attacked by religious figures and some of its leading presenters for adopting the terms in order to avoid offending non-Christians. The corporation says it is not enforcing the system but some programmes are already using it. However, a spokesman for the Department for Education said that BC and AD are not offensive, and recommended that teachers keep using them. Meanwhile, a Thomas the Tank Engine DVD has attracted criticism for omitting the word ‘Christmas’, referring instead to a ‘decorated tree’ and ‘winter holidays’.