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Australia’s Foremost ValparaĆ­so-born Politicianāˆ

(Source: https://www.worldatlas.com/) If you ever take an international flight to South America and happen to stop over in Santiago, Chile with a spare day or two and find you are not much enamoured of what’s on offer in the less than pulsating capital, a trip to picturesque ValparaĆ­so would be just the tonic! To escape… keep reading →

Zhongyang Street: A Little Night Music, A Bit of an Arty Cosmopolitan Vibe, Residual Russianness and a Smokinā€™ Hutong

Zhongyangāœ½ Street (to insiders Z.Y. Street for short) proclaims itself in the elaborate, neon-lit arch that spans the start of the street. A small plaque hanging from the arch announces: äø­å¤®å¤§č”—å»ŗē­‘č‰ŗęœÆ博ē‰©é¦† -Architectural Arts Museum of Central Avenue, a tag that is a bit pretentious for what is Harbin’s high tourism pedestrian street. The commercial hub… keep reading →

Dandongā€™s Historic Bridge to North Korea: A Fleeting Peak into Kimā€™s Kingdom

Dandong in Chinaā€™s North-eastern Liaoning province is 541 miles from Beijing, but only some 105 miles from Pyongyang, North Koreaā€™s seldom seen capital. But Dandong is much, much closer to North Korean soil as a visit to the most eastern city in Chinaā€™s Dong-Bei will confirm. From Dandongā€™s shoreline on the Yalu River, the Peoples’… keep reading →

Two Antithetical Approaches to the COVID-19 Crisis: A Controversial Outlier Versus a Low-key Over-achiever

When a novel virus comes along, such as we are facing now, there is no medical vade mecum, no universal guidebook to follow, no one proven route to safely navigate the crisis. Governments weigh up the choices, then in consultation with medical experts, decide on a strategy and do modelling on how to chart the optimal course through the… keep reading →

Port Chicago 1944 – A Black and White Situation: The Naval Mutiny and its Ramifications

San Francisco Bay On 17th July 1944 a catastrophically massive explosion at the Port Chicago Naval Magazine in California resulted in the loss of 320 lives, the majority African-American sailors. Less than four weeks after the worst wartime disaster on American home soil, the Navy, without regard for the sensitivity of the situation, instructed the… keep reading →

Life on Planet Covid-19: Sometimes a Wacky Notion, a Glimpse into the Bizarre in the Time of Coronavirus

TheĀ Coronavirus outbreak has brought out both the good and bad in human nature, but as everyone tries with varying success to cope with the strange and new reality of lockdowns, closures, social distancing and restrictions on movement,Ā it has brought out the downright weird and bizarre as well.Ā Ā In 1929 when Wall Street collapsed, triggering the Great… keep reading →

Whatā€™s in a Text?: Intentional and Affective Fallacies and the Logical Fallacy of Arguments from Silence

Exegesis: Relegating the author In literary and artistic aesthetics the intentional fallacy occurs when readers or viewers use factors outside the text or visual work (such as biographical information) to evaluate its merits, rather than ignoring these ā€œexternalā€ factors and relying solely on the textual or visual evidence of the novel, play, poem, painting, etc…. keep reading →

International Conference on the Great Manchurian Plague: A Pioneering Blueprint for Public Health Advances and Safeguards

Once the authorities in Manchuria had secured a firm handle on the plague outbreak in Heilongjiang, Kirin and Fengtian provinces by February 1911, little time was wasted calling for a conference of international medical specialists to enquire into all aspects of the epidemic and promote the advancement of future disease control. Scientists including disease specialists… keep reading →

Thurn-und-Taxis Post, the Holy Roman Emperorā€™s Transnational Postmen

The background story of Thomas Pychonā€™s novel The Crying of Lot 49 involves a centuries-old conflict between two mail distribution companies, Thurn and Taxis and Trystero. In the novel Thurn and Taxis triumphs over its rival in the 18th century, forcing Trystero to go underground and operate incognito as a waste disposal business. Trystero (sometimes… keep reading →

Nancy Bird Trumps Badgery & Co: Sydneyā€™s Long and Tortuous Journey to a Second Airport and the Contest for Naming Rights

Sydneyā€™s long-debated second international airport is slated to be completedā€”in so far as anything can be asserted with any confidence in the post-coronavirus ageā€”by 31st December 2025ā‹. The site selected and given final approval by the Commonwealth government in 2014, Badgerys Creek, is on 1,780 hectares of land in greater western Sydney in indigenous Darug country…. keep reading →