This was an excellent run. Long up, long down, long up, long down. Great, tough morning with friends.
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This was an excellent run. Long up, long down, long up, long down. Great, tough morning with friends.
Thredbo, Australia
Home again.
This was an amazing run. Mt Saint-Hilaire, QC, Canada
Running with friends is sooooo good. Makes me happy. 😃😃
It rained during my run. A lot.
Start of the cold season in Montreal.
Autumn is making its way to Montreal. Much happy.
Really, in a lot of ways, cosmology has made extraordinary strides in understanding what we already understood, in greater detail. But there’s a lot that we haven’t made much progress on, in the last 30 or 40 years. I’m hoping that some fresh young minds will make some contributions to it, and that maybe I’ll have the opportunity to make some contributions to those questions. But again, I think our culture of homogeneity in physics is maybe starting to harm the mission.
Chanda Prescod-Weinstein (via hermionejg)
You don't normally get this kind of content from me, but it's 100% worth reading and learning from.
dude I totally don't remember following you, nor are you anything like my usual sort of blog to follow, but you are a cutie so I guess I'll keep following you and thought you ought to know ~ 😘
Thanks random stranger.
Running in the Gatineau Hills, near Ottawa, Canada.
Running in the Gatineau Hills, near Ottawa, Canada.
How to Help Your Family and Save Lives
It’s very safe here: we’re in Tennessee, in a perfect little house we are borrowing from a midwife who has gone out west to her son’s wedding. We are cooking, eating,  catching up on our sleep. Amanda’s due in a week and her Nesting Instinct seems to be manifesting chiefly in trying to clean out her email inbox. She’s also cleaning, washing and folding baby clothes and clean towels. I’m writing a lot, enjoying the lack of cell-phone connection, and the lack of internet connection, and getting things written without distraction. (I wrapped the first draft of a script on Thursday, wrote a preface to SANDMAN:OVERTURE on Friday.) We’ve felt like a couple for a long time. We’re starting to feel like a family.
And the safety feels very fragile, and like something to be treasured.
There’s a photo I’m not going to post. You’ve probably seen it already: it shows Aylan Kurdi, a three year old Syrian refugee, dead on a beach in Turkey after his family tried to get to Greece. It made me cry, but I know I’m overly sensitive to bad things happening to small children right now. I’m reacting as if he’s family.
In May of last year I was in a refugee camp in Jordan. I was talking to a 26 year old woman who had miscarried her babies in Syria when the bombs started falling. She had made it out of Syria, but her husband had left her for another woman he hoped would give him babies. We spoke to women eight months’ pregnant who had just walked through the desert for days, past the dead and dismembered bodies of people fleeing the war, like themselves, who had been betrayed by the smugglers who had promised them a way to freedom.
I gained a new appreciation for the civilisation I usually take for granted. The idea that you could wake in the morning to a world in which nobody was trying to hurt you or kill you, in which there would be food for your children and a safe place for your baby to be born became something unusual.
I wrote about my time in the Syrian refugee camps here, in the Guardian. (You can read it here: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/may/21/many-ways-die-syria-neil-gaiman-refugee-camp-syria and you should, if you have time. I’ll be here when you get back. And here are some photos from my time there: http://www.theguardian.com/world/gallery/2014/may/21/neil-gaiman-syria-refugees-jordan-in-pictures)
Jordan, Turkey, Lebanon have, between them, taken in millions of Syrian refugees. People who fled, as you or I would flee, when remaining in the places they loved was no longer possible or safe.
The UN High Commissioner for Refugees has made a plea to Europe that you should read (and insist that whoever represents you also read) Â at http://www.unhcr.org/55e9459f6.html
The only ones who benefit from the lack of a common European response are the smugglers and traffickers who are making profit from people’s desperation to reach safety. More effective international cooperation is required to crack down on smugglers, including those operating inside the EU, but in ways that allow for the victims to be protected. But none of these efforts will be effective without opening up more opportunities for people to come legally to Europe and find safety upon arrival. Thousands of refugee parents are risking the lives of their children on unsafe smuggling boats primarily because they have no other choice.Â
The UN Refugees Agency wrote about words, and how they matter. In this case, the word migrants and refugees: they don’t mean the same thing, and have very different meanings in terms of what a government’s obligations are to them.  http://www.unhcr.org/55df0e556.html
One of the most fundamental principles laid down in international law is that refugees should not be expelled or returned to situations where their life and freedom would be under threat… Politics has a way of intervening in such debates. Conflating refugees and migrants can have serious consequences for the lives and safety of refugees. Blurring the two terms takes attention away from the specific legal protections refugees require. It can undermine public support for refugees and the institution of asylum at a time when more refugees need such protection than ever before. We need to treat all human beings with respect and dignity. We need to ensure that the human rights of migrants are respected. At the same time, we also need to provide an appropriate legal response for refugees, because of their particular predicament.
It’s worth making sure that people are using the right words. A lot of the time they don’t realise there’s a difference between the two things, or that refugees have real rights – the rights you would want, if you were forced to leave home.
A lot of people have been asking me about ways that we as individuals can change things for the better for refugees: there’s an excellent article in the Independent about practical things you can do to help or make a difference.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/5-practical-ways-you-can-help-refugees-trying-to-find-safety-in-europe-10482902.html
UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, is feeding and housing and housing and helping literally millions of refugees around the world, always with the eventual goal of getting them safely home one day. Their funding comes from governments and private individuals all over the world. But this crisis has stretched them thin. You can help.
Donate to them at http://rfg.ee/RN3uy​ – and please, share the donation link:
With your support, UNHCR will provide assistance such as:
Deliver rescue kits containing a thermal blanket, towel, water, high nutrient energy bar, dry clothes and shoes, to every survivor;
Set up reception centres where refugees can be registered and receive vital medical care;
Provide temporary emergency shelter to especially vulnerable refugees;
Help children travelling alone by providing specialist support and care.
As I said on this blog when I came back from visiting the camps:
I came away from Jordan ashamed to be part of a race that treats its members so very badly, and simultaneously proud to be part of the same human race as it does its best to help the people who are hurt, who need refuge, safety and dignity. We are all part of a huge family, the family of humanity, and we look after our family. Â
(I’d love it you would reblog this, and spread the links inside it. People who know that I’m involved in Refugee issues have been asking me about places to donate and what to do and what to read, so I put this together for them, and now, for you. http://rfg.ee/RN3uy​ was the donation link.) - See more at: http://journal.neilgaiman.com/2015/09/how-to-help-your-family-and-save-lives.html#sthash.8BUetme0.dpuf
Any time someone points out a gender or racial imbalance in a field (or, most often, the combination of the two) a certain set of people ask: Who cares? The future belongs to all of us—or, ultimately, none of us—why does it matter if the vast majority of futurists are white men? It matters for the same reasons diversity drives market growth: because when only one type of person is engaged in asking key questions about a specialty—envisioning the future or otherwise—they miss a entire frameworks for identifying and solving problems. The relative absence of women at Apple is why the Apple Health kit didn’t have period tracking until a few months ago, and why a revolutionary artificial heart can be deemed a success even when it doesn’t fit 80 percent of women.
Why Aren’t There More Women Futurists? by Rose Eveleth (via hermionejg)
The best line from the article? "Who cares about your jetpack? How does technology enable us to keep loving each other?"
Any time someone points out a gender or racial imbalance in a field (or, most often, the combination of the two) a certain set of people ask: Who cares? The future belongs to all of us—or, ultimately, none of us—why does it matter if the vast majority of futurists are white men? It matters for the same reasons diversity drives market growth: because when only one type of person is engaged in asking key questions about a specialty—envisioning the future or otherwise—they miss a entire frameworks for identifying and solving problems. The relative absence of women at Apple is why the Apple Health kit didn’t have period tracking until a few months ago, and why a revolutionary artificial heart can be deemed a success even when it doesn’t fit 80 percent of women.
Why Aren’t There More Women Futurists? by Rose Eveleth (via hermionejg)
The best line from the article? "Who cares about your jetpack? How does technology enable us to keep loving each other?"
Went for a quick run after watching Shakespeare in the Park.Â
Thanks Montreal.
My face when I realised my head torch wasn't working halfway through my run.