Sunday, December 02, 2007

Exciting Things

The evil that is Legal Research has been laid to rest, for now. Its monstrous hunger sated, it returns to the submarine chasm where it has dwelt in darkness since the world was made. There it shall lie, its thoughts turning to the humanity which was taken from it so long ago, awakening in its place a hunger which can never be truly satisfied. It waits, fearing and despising those creatures who walk above in the sunlight, biding its time until the day comes for it to rise from the depths and feast again on the souls of the helpless.

Which means that on Friday it was time to celebrate by going back to wander the halls of Selwyn as a ghost from distant times, who remembers his life and yearns for it to come again, yet enjoys the sensations as his fondly-remembered home comes, for but one night, to life again.

This is great stuff. I never realised that I was so poetic.

But yes, the Snowball. 'Twas good. The decision to build a paper temple around the Hall steps was inspired. Slightly demented, but suitably awesome. And apart from the bizarre wall of sound which was emanating from the Hall and causing my spleen to vibrate alarmingly, all was well.

Thanks go to Jack for the use of his extremely comfortable airbed (from which I fell only once) and to him, Clare and Gordon for putting up with me for an entire evening. No thanks at all go to the bastards at the Met Office, who saw fit to send us torrential rain and howling gales while we were queuing outside. Don't think you've heard the last of it, Fish.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

An Ode to Legal Research

The idea of writing here has always been simple - it is based on the hallowed principle of work-avoidance. For months I haven't really had call for it, and this blog has thus remained fallow and infertile. Now, however, I have the mother and father of all work which needs avoiding, and so the Duck rises, quietly quacking to itself, from the ashes.

Allow me to describe in brief the joy of Legal Research. Note the capital letters - I'm not talking generally about research of a legal nature. That's useful, and necessary. Probably. Although frankly, we've had a person talking at us for an hour about just how useful and necessary it is, which always makes me wonder.

Instead, I speak of the module that the Bar Council apparently decrees that we must undertake in our BVC, entitled Legal Research. This essentially involves taking a legal problem, and then copying and pasting half of the Internet into Microsoft Word. It is then necessary to highlight sentences at complete random, and then to enclose a few miscellaneous comments in little boxes.

The end result, when printed, is the size of a small moon, and contributes to 17% of total global deforestation. Suffice it to say that Al Gore has the BVC providers listed as the first people to be forcibly buried when he rules the world.

Thursday, June 07, 2007

End of exams, soon, so soon....

I have just narrowly survived 5 hours of exam-related badness. Joyously, I now have only one exam left, although unfortunately it is in about 3 years' time. To mark the occasion, I think I'm entitled to vent my spleen on here. And now you have to read it. Sorry.

So. The Olympic logo, eh?

A real coup, this one. Not only is it the closest thing to a swastika since someone decided to build that strange symbol into Selwyn's arch, but it also seems to be the first logo ever which actually kills people just by being looked at. Even the Nazis didn't manage that one.

It's also been sending people into other varieties of fit, as well as the twitching type. Fits of RAGE.

Personally, I couldn't have been less surprised. Alarm bells always start to ring when people use words like "relevant" and "inclusive". They act as a kind of cipher for a specific chain of thought which is always gone through whenever anyone wants to appeal to what they imagine is the youth of today (I'm just thankful they didn't put a baseball cap on top of it).

(1) We want to appeal to Young People.
(2) To do this we must be hip and/or cool.
(3) Therefore our logo must be psychadelic, spiky, and 'edgy'.
(4) And look, it even flashes. This appeals to the Digital Generation - all those people wandering around with their iCassetteRecorders, or something. Word up.

The obvious flaw in the logic is that there is no magic formula for making Young People interested in things. It's not like smearing jam onto someone's face and waiting for the wasps to come. Young People are, generally, sentient beings (obviously, there are some exceptions - but unless Skateboarding, Injecting Heroin, and Mugging People become Olympic events, they're probably not going to be interested whatever happens) and so can see straight through the marketing.

The best advice I can give to the Olympic organisers (and I know you're reading this, Coe) is that if you want to make it attractive to Young People, just MAKE IT GOOD. It's that simple.

Saturday, March 10, 2007

Technology will kill us all

Two items on the news today worried me. Neither on their own would be much to blog home about, but together, I think they spell doom for the human race. That's doom with a capital DOO.

One article was babbling on about how, fairly soon, there's going to be a robot in every house. The other was excitedly screeching about the new series of communication satellites to be launched by the army:

The British military is set to take one of its most significant steps into the digital age with the launch of the first Skynet 5 satellite.

"What's wrong with this?", you might ask, as if you cared.

Well, the problem is that all of this is starting to bear a scary similarity to a certain series of films. We have robots, and now we have a revolutionary new military thingy which is designed to unify all military communications, or something. Does this not ring a bell among our military commanders? They've even given it the same bloody name. Does "Skynet" sound familiar?

I speak, of course, of the Terminator series, in which Skynet wages war on mankind (which is forgiveable) and builds Arnold Schwarzenegger (which isn't).

We haven't got to the stage of having humaniform robots yet, so presumably when Skynet decides to launch its attack we will be treated to the prospect of our robotic vacuum cleaners suddenly attempting to suck our feet off, and our microwaves opening their doors and blasting us with molten baked beans.

Doomed, I tells ye.

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

The fascists are coming!

...Or are they already here?

Deep thoughts. Cheap rhetorical questions. It's all good.

Alas, it's time for a broadly law-based rant. But, for once, it's important.

The Government plan on inventing a new order, called a VOO. The name sounds cute and harmless. But the order itself is, I would suggest, the most serious threat to our civil liberties that the Home Office has ever come up with. You have to admire John Reid - he's making his predecessors, Charles Clarke and David Blunkett, look like Ghandi.

"But surely you exaggerate!", I hear you cry. Surprisingly, and unusually, I do not. Here's an extract from the Home Office paper describing what these orders are all about:

"It would mean that, where an individual was known to be dangerous but had not committed a specific qualifying offence, restrictions could still be placed on their behaviour."

You could be a subject of a VOO if you have never committed a criminal offence. All it takes is for the police to decide that you're a troublemaker, and that's it - they can impose all sorts of restrictions such as banning you from a certain place, banning you from associating with certain people, forcing you to live in a hostel, and so on. Even though you have done absolutely nothing wrong.

And what kind of factors does the Home Office envisage might lead to a VOO being made?

"A person’s formative years and upbringing, cognitive deficiencies, a history of substance abuse, a person’s domestic situation or relationship with their partner or family, or possession of paraphernalia related to violent offending (eg, balaclava, baseball bat), or extremist material."

Marvellous. Applying these factors, this means that you could be labelled a potential violent offender, and therefore have your life controlled by the whims of the police, if:
  • You grew up on a council estate;
  • You enjoy playing rounders;
  • You smoked drugs at some time in your life (David Cameron's in for it);
  • You are divorced;
  • You go skiing in winter;
  • You are dyslexic.
Conceptually, this really isn't very far from genetically profiling people at birth, identifying who is, statistically, most likely to offend, and then locking them up before they can grow up into violent criminals. Both approaches involve punishing someone not for something they have done, but for something that they might do in the future.

The Daily Mail is going to love it.

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Rewards for doing... what?

Trawling through BBC News in search of something to do which wasn't related to equitable tracing rules (don't ask), I came across this news story. Turns out that a cabbie in New York, when he discovered that loads of diamond rings had been left in the back of his car, returned them to their owner.

Good man. A sensible reward would be, one would think, a handshake and a fair bit of gratitude. But instead, he's suddenly found himself with:
  • A huge collection of media interviews, from broadcasters both in the US and worldwide, all eager to interview what they describe as "the honest cabbie";
  • An Achievement Award from the New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission;
  • A citation from the City Council of New York City;
  • And potentially a reward from the New York City Mayor.
Even apart from the implied, and fairly offensive, suggestion that all taxi drivers are thieves, something just seems a bit odd about all this. Call me a Scrooge if you will (but nothing worse - this is a family blog), but in everyday life, people generally don't get rewarded for not committing crimes.

If I were in a jewellery shop, for example, and the assistant turned his back for a moment, I wouldn't expect a 76-trombone parade to be waiting outside for me as congratulations for not having stolen anything. George Bush does not, we presume, have a man whose job it is to congratulate him at the end of every afternoon for having the self-restraint not to have pushed the Big Red Button that day. (Actually, he probably does - but then when the Leader of the Free World (tm) has the mental age of a foetus, that's a price we're willing to pay to avoid nuclear armageddon.) Bank clerks rarely end the transaction by thanking you for not robbing them. And so on.

I'm now awaiting the next development - every employer being required to hand out regular small bonuses for all of their employees who haven't stabbed anyone that week. Remember - you read it here first.