Posts by James Butler
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Hard News: Irony Deficient, in reply to
not setting the bar far from the ground
Under-promise and over-deliver?
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OnPoint: Re: Education, in reply to
So not only is the y axis full of shit but so is the x axis?!?!?
More spatter than scatter.
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Hard News: Reviews: #NZGT and the Herald, in reply to
In the old days in Herald features there was a sub – now, mercifully, not among us – who had to be physically restrained from changing “missed by a mile” to “missed by 1.6km”. I am not making this up.
I’d like to see said sub dealing to the word “milestone”.
ETA: Yes I know, it's "10.2 kilometre kilograms" before anyone gets smart.
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Hard News: We ... WHAT!?, in reply to
That was, however, his own doing. No suggestion that pressure was applied on him by those who are acutely sensitive to the raised eyebrows of Foggy Bottom’s residents.
That's just more evidence of their stupendous power!
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Hard News: We ... WHAT!?, in reply to
I suspect by now the Mandarins of Foggy Bottom would have extracted grovelling corrections and apologies from both McCully and Grosser with a blunt butter knife and a pair of eyebrow tweezers.
You kidding? It took nary more than a raised eyebrow to get rid of Judge Harvey.
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Hard News: We ... WHAT!?, in reply to
It raises another issue: is the English language in danger of splintering like Latin did centuries ago?
My (limited) understanding is that Latin splintered with the disintegration of the Roman empire and the closing of the lines of communications that had kept far-flung provinces in touch with each other. I have no doubt that after the west falls, satellites re-enter and undersea cables rot, English will splinter like Latin.
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Legal Beagle: MMP Review - The Proposals, in reply to
It's the Goldilocks number! Not too high, not too low, and supported by just the right number of people!!
Goldilocks was still ejected from the house by a bear majority.
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Hard News: The Music for Occasions, in reply to
In the UK at both my Brothers and my Mothers funerals, a week apart FFS, we had to request and source the music through the Funeral Directors, copyright law don’t cha know, so the selection was limited. This just added to the sadness and anger.
That's one advantage to a live-music funeral that I hadn't thought of. At least then even if you do end up paying, you're paying musicians.
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For comparison, my Dad went out to most of the Orpheus Choir singing this in Wellington Cathedral. And sometimes I wonder why I find it hard to let go of the whole church funeral thing.
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I've been thinking about this one a bit recently (although I don't plan on dying anytime in the next 50 years). I was brought up in the Anglican church music tradition, and I always assumed that I would have an Anglican funeral, perhaps with Thomas Tomkins' Funeral Sentences:
Even having left the church, choral music is important enough to me that I think I still want a choir; but the very plain statements of faith offered by Tomkins wouldn't sit well I think. Of course the range of secular choral music is a bit limited, but maybe I could cope with church music if it were in a different language?
But whatever happens, I want my pall borne out to something very different: