Confused ([info]confuseddave) wrote,
@ 2009-06-01 14:42:00
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Just finished my third attempt at expanding-food-lunches - this time substituting risotto rice for the lentils. The recipe was roughly: fry peppers until skin starts to blacken, add a little garlic and then douse with 2xTins tomatoes to stop 'em burning; add spices (this time Ras el Hanout - have to use it for something) and risotto rice. As the rice sucks up the liquid from the sauce, add in white wine (bought a box of vin de table just for this - it actually works a treat) and a healthy slug of vinegar and keep going until the rice goes soft. Finally, add a few handfuls of chopped baby spinach (don't hold off - it will look like you've added the same volume spinach as sauce, but it wilts down pretty quick). As a final measure, I added a few slugs of Olive Oil, which loosened it up a bit.

Verdict - I added the spinach a bit late, I think - which made it sometimes a little disappointing, although probably better for me. Also, the dish tastes slightly unpleasantly of rice-flour. Not sure what to do about this, short of washing the risotto rice before starting. Also, have turned my nose up at pitta breads, and gone for the slightly more awkward but much for satisfying tortilla wraps (removing the need to fuck about with cling film - better for environment, yay!) A few dashes of tabasco made a passable dinner. It seems that stewing overnight (or possibly nuking it for a few minutes at work) improved it somewhat.

No mustard this time, and still no experimenting with worcestershire sauce ('cos I haven't bought any), and I'm left with a slightly obnoxious aftertaste that seems to haunt most of my meals made with garlic and tinned toms. Will need to think of a way of altering (or at least covering) that taste.

Synecdoche, New York:

Went to see the new Charlie Kaufman flick tonight, with some trepidation. It has wandered across my mind over the last few weeks that the main reason Kaufman is the only writer people can nail a style to is that he wrote himself into Adaptation - a move which only narrowly escapes being arrogantly narcisstic by gratuitous use of self-deprecation and observational humour.

I also had to wonder whether Kaufman's directorial debut would owe more to Spike Jonze or Michel Gondry, and personally I think he came down on the Gondry side (although the film reminded me more of Science of Sleep than Eternal Sunshine) - which is a pity, because I'm not really Gondry's greatest fan. Of course, while I detect both Gondry and Jonze in this film, I do have to credit Kaufman with heading solidly off in his own direction. In fact, if I had to compare him to a single director, it'd probably be David Lynch - in terms of my gut reaction to this film, it reminded me most of Mulholland Drive. Again, this is a pity. I didn't like Mulholland Drive.

I really wanted to like this film, and the fact that I didn't makes me sad because I think it says something unflattering about me. It sounds shallow, but really I wanted this to be a funny film. And it's not - it's definitely absurd, dizzylingly so - but the introverted, relentless misery of the entirely unlikeable main character, punctuated as it is by moments of sweetness leaves it devoid of real humour. It is a film I suspect one could come to love, if one watched it several times. Much like Mulholland Drive. Alas, I don't have much time for films like that. Sorry Charlie.

Not that I hated it. It had moments of brilliance, that almost - almost made it all worthwhile - but it seemed to be surrounded by so much fluff that I couldn't penetrate or discern any meaning through. Perhaps I'm just stupid, and like my allegories a little more straightforward. Perhaps he was deliberately sowing the film with allegories that made no sense.

It almost seems to me that this film his character tried to write in Adaptation, only without intervention (interference?) from his fictional twin brother and Bob McKee - or, from a few exchanges in the film, the pressure to produce another Being John Malkovitch. It feels a little bit like he's desperately trying to escape the mould of being "the guy who makes those funny films" (an impulse he gently lampooned in Adaptation). It makes me a little sad to think that the role that I love him for is a role that he hates to play out.

A glimmer of hope on the horizon. I felt more or less the same way about No Country for Old Men, and the Coen Brothers followed it up with imo probably their best since Miller's Crossing, so I shall go to his next film with great expectation.

George Tiller is Dead:

George Tiller, a Doctor who practises late-term abortions (sometimes on post-viable foetuses - i.e. on babies which could potentially have survived if born). I'm not sure what to make of this (beyond the obvious; whichever side of the abortion debate you're on, murder is not an appropriate way forward). I strongly support the right to have abortions (as well as the right to have detailed, accurate family planning information and freely available contraception); but it does open up the issue of where the line should be drawn on when abortion is ethically acceptable. I'm not sure I agree that Tillers practise was ethically sound.

Blah. Can't form coherent argument. Must go work. Blah.



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[info]haggis
2009-06-01 06:32 pm UTC (link)
I believe, in the US, as here, late-term abortions are only performed when there is a serious risk to the mother's life and when the fetus has very severe disabilities. This is not a medical procedure that is undertaken lightly and using terrorism to deny women medical care they are legally entitled to is despicable.

(Yeah, pro-choice here too.)

(Do you realise being pro-life is something we get from Mum and Dad? At least, I do not remember being told that abortion is teh evil until I was 13 and that was by another woman at church, not Mum or Dad.)

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[info]confuseddave
2009-06-01 09:46 pm UTC (link)
I'm not entirely sure, the wording in most of the articles is mostly ambiguous, and you can never be a hundred percent sure where they're getting their information from. What exactly is meant by "late term" seems to vary also. It is, for example, stated that he performed abortions late enough that the foetus would be viable. It is also stated that not all of the terminations were cases where the foetus or mothers life was at risk - but not necessarily that any fulfilled both criteria.

Abortion is something I have very difficult views on, because I disagree with several pro-choice arguments. Okay, disagree is probably too strong a word; I think the standard pro-choice arguments make things black-and-white where in reality they are a lot more graded.

About Mom and Dad - Did you mean pro life or pro choice?

Actually, looking back, I don't think I've inherited many viewpoints from Mom and Dad at all. Maybe I was being clueless, but I don't remember them ever really telling me what to think on almost any issue - not without being asked, certainly. Same with politics (I still don't really know where Mom and Dad sit politically, although if I was more astute I could probably work it out from remarks they made in the past) and even religion - I mean, we went to Sunday school because we were too young to be left home alone of a Sunday Morning, and before getting into it of my own volition, I remember viewing bible stories as being equal to greek mythology (of which I had a book - or I think you had a book that I stole a lot) or Aesops Fables or something. It certainly wasn't given a priveleged position at home.

I mean, if asked, I'm sure they would have given their opinions on things, but my impression was that they were tolerant of different viewpoints and kind of wanted us to make up our own minds on that kind of thing.

This may be because I'm to oblivious to have noticed that they were trying to indoctrinate us. ^_^

I used to say I was pro-life, in a 12-year-old "omg think of t3h babbys" way, but that was before I was old enough to properly understand what it meant. When I was a child, I reasoned as a child and all that.

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[info]haggis
2009-06-01 09:58 pm UTC (link)
To be honest, I assume they are pro-choice due to an absence of discussion. I've always had a neutral definition of what abortion meant, rather than an OMGbabymurder definition, which presumably came from them at some point. I think you are right, they generally left us to figure out our own beliefs.

They rarely discuss politics but Dad generally votes Conservative and Mum generally votes Labour. Since they effectively cancel each other out, I don't think voting was a big thing.

Since I've been old enough to consider it, I think I've always been prochoice, initially in a 'it's not my business' way and then later, I realised how easy it is to get pregnant and how much it changes your life.

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[info]haggis
2009-06-01 09:59 pm UTC (link)
Damn, yeah, spotted my own typo. I meant prochoice in the last paragraph.

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[info]ethelfleda
2009-06-01 11:10 pm UTC (link)
I'm heavily, strongly pro-choice. I choose the simplest route - can it survive outside the womb (including medical help)? Then you can't abort it.

I'm ambivalent here. However, your comment is telling in that you make no mention of the women's lives; was the pregnancy threatening her life when the procedure was carrying out? It's a typical pro-life trope to ignore the women in favour of the fetus.

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[info]confuseddave
2009-06-02 10:42 am UTC (link)
your comment is telling in that you make no mention of the women's lives

You mistake the point of my comment. It wasn't meant to be a persuasive argument or didactic or even contribute to debate (although if my brain had been a little clearer, or I hadn't had to stop writing rubbish on work time, it might have been - but then I'd probably have covered the issue of risk to the mothers life). I didn't explain it or put it in context, so the mistake is probably mine.

My immediate response (being the kind to make trivial knee-jerk reactions) was to change my Facebook status to "RIP George Tiller". My decision to honour his passing was informed of the fact that he performed late term abortions. It was only after when I was reading a bit more and thinking about how I'd defend that (some of my facebook friends are pro-life). This was meant to be an examination of my feelings on the bits of his work I found unethical, but I never really got that far on account of brain-mush. I tried to dig in a little deeper in my response to Emily, but again, never got that far.

So my POV is:
- Terminations where a womans life are in danger is a no brainer. IMO Doctors should be legally free to euthanise a foetus right up to parturition if they're endangering the mother (compare with cases where conjoined twins must be separated to save one).
- Elective abortions early in pregnancy are a no brainer. I believe strongly in the right of a parent to choose when to become a parent; this is why I support abortion charities.

The problem comes with elective abortions late in pregnancy. Most of the reports have hinted that Tiller performed these, without actually out-and-out saying it. (They mostly say he did post-viability abortions and elective abortions, but without saying where any of the post-viability abortions were also elective).

The more I read, the less likely that seems; but that was the only source of ethical turmoil I had; hence the only part that seemed worthy of comment.

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[info]confuseddave
2009-06-02 10:45 am UTC (link)
Also, I use late-term and viability interchangably when I see that the thresholds (depending on your defintions) are a good few weeks apart; contributing to the mess in my head.

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[info]littlejenny123
2009-06-02 01:02 pm UTC (link)
A little black pepper might help?

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[info]confuseddave
2009-06-02 01:05 pm UTC (link)
ooh, yeah forgot to mention that - added a generous helping of black pepper. Mmm. :)

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