Not Better Off Dead

I really think everyone should watch this documentary about assisted suicide, which aired last night on the Beeb. To be honest I have been thinking about what to say about it all day, but ultimately I can only agree with it’s conclusions: legalising assisted dying in any capacity would open a very dangerous doorway, and sooner or later we risk people being coerced into ending their lives for more and more tenuous reasons. Ultimately there is a danger that non-terminally ill disabled people might be given the ‘option’ of ending their lives simply because they feel like a burden to the people around them. The presenter, Liz Carr, does a good job of presenting both sides of the debate, but when all is said and done the idea that people like me might be better off dead just because we have a disability is truly sickening.

I relish my life. Every morning I wake up knowing that the potential for something incredible to happen is infinite. I also wake up remembering all my friends who aren’t here any more, who lived their lives to the full in spite of profound disabilities. They taught me that life isn’t something to be thrown away, or opted out of just because you might no longer be able to do all the things you once did. That’s why I find the idea of assisted suicide so repugnant, and those who advocate it no more than self pitying cowards.

Yammerrawanne

It’s fairly long, but if anyone, like me, is interested in the early history of the contact between aboriginal Australians and Europeans, I think this documentary is worth a watch. I came across it two or three weeks ago: while I must admit that it strikes me as a tad anti-European and anti-British, and overtly plays into an ‘Aboriginals are victims’ narrative, on the whole I feel it’s fairly well balanced. However, what caught my attention the most was the story of Yammerrawanne, one of the very first native Australians to be brought (some say kidnaped) back to Britain with Captain James Cook. Of course, I’ve been interested in Cook and his voyages for ages, but the detail I want to flag up this evening is that, when he died in 1794, Yammerrawanne was buried at Eltham Parish Church, a church about ten minutes away from my flat and which I pass every time I go shopping, to the pub or to get cash.

Peter Jackson Is Returning To Middle-Earth

You may have been slightly surprised that I didn’t say anything here about the big Tolkien-related news which broke over the weekend. The word is that Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh and Phillipa Boyens are returning to the franchise in some capacity. That is indeed pretty massive news: I regard Jackson’s adaptations of Tolkien’s novels as absolute masterpieces, and the news that they could now be added to is very exciting indeed. Yet, to tell the truth, part of me is concerned. I don’t see where they can go from what they have already without effing it all up. Tolkien’s two main texts, The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, have been successfully converted into cinematic epics; what remains are much more fragmentary, scholarly texts which would be much harder to translate onto the big screen.

As pleased as I am to see Jackson back behind the camera, then, I still have grave concerns about where this is leading. As I wrote here last year, Tolkien’s work seems to be being reduced down to just another big, mainstream Hollywood franchise: as bold and epic as the initial adaptations were, the risk is that they will now just be rendered into generic pap as they are added to and added to in the hunt for money. While at least we can rest easy that Jackson knows what he’s doing (Andy Serkis is also apparently on board, which is awesome), for the most part I still wish that the first two trilogies had been left at that. What is left of Tolkien’s work won’t convert as easily into film, and the risk is that the result will be a generic, confused mess.

Why Eurovision Is Important

I must confess that I didn’t watch the entire Eurovision Song Contest last night. I needed to get to bed before it’s conclusion. There’s a Sainsbury’s nearby which sells Leffe, my favourite beer, and the two bottles of it I had went to my head. However, it seems to me that events like Eurovision are more important than ever before: such big, public events traverse borders and bring people together, at a time when humanity seems more divided than it has been in decades. There is a great deal of tension in the air, with horrific conflicts raging in both Israel and Ukraine. Of course, both were reflected last night, with Russia being excluded from the competition, and with many people feeling wary about whether Israel should have been allowed to participate too.

Yet, at the end of the day, such big international events are about bringing people together; they are about showing that we are just all one big community. Granted, there is an element of competition, and to a certain extent they allow communities to air their differences (booing one another, awarding points ‘strategically’ etc), but like the Olympics events like Eurovision are about coming together and having a great time. And at a point when we seem to be finding it harder than ever to trust our neighbours, both socially and internationally, I think that is more essential than ever, and why I think we need more events like it.

A Future to Strive For

Ever since I first watched it, I have always dreamed that humanity was heading for the kind of future depicted on Star Trek: a humanity without borders, where we all worked together to advance humanity and explore space. I think this hits the nail on the head.

My First Jumperless Day Of The Year

I think I just ought to record that today was my first jumperless day of 2024 – ie, the first day since last year when it was so warm outside that I didn’t need to wear a jumper. I’m not sure whether to be hopeful that this is a sign that summer will be here soon, or worry that it is a symptom of climate change.

Cripples In Space

Needless to say, I find this very exciting indeed. It was just featured on the BBC Breakfast program: the European Space Agency is currently training the world’s first amputee astronaut. “Former Paralympian John McFall is working with the European Space Agency on a ground-breaking study to see if it’s feasible for someone with a physical disability to live and work in space.” While some cynics may dismiss this as some kind of publicity or inclusivity stunt, I have to say I find it very encouraging indeed. It sends out a clear message that those of us with physical disabilities have just as much to human progress as anyone else, and that we can participate in endeavours like the exploration of space. And who knows where this might lead: could we one day see someone with a condition like cerebral palsy go up into the final frontier? Now that would certainly be awesome, although I suspect their dribbling might cause a few issues.

HBD To Two Awesome Guyss

Today I think I ought to wish a happy birthday to two men who are, in very different ways, extremely dear to me. Firstly, when I got in this evening the internet reminded me that today is Sir David Attenborough’s 98th birthday. I think I’ve said here before that, as far as I’m concerned, Sir David is hands down the greatest broadcaster ever. There can’t be a single person in the UK who didn’t grow up watching the great man’s fascinating natural history documentaries, or hasn’t been utterly intrigued by the plethora of natural wonders he has revealed to us. We are all extremely lucky to have Attenborough as part of our mediascape, and should find the sheer body of work he has brought us over seventy years truly remarkable.

More personally but no less importantly, today is also Serkan’s birthday. Serkan is officially my Personal Assistant, but he is much more akin to a friend or even brother. Over the last four years he has come to my flat twice a day and washed, dressed and fed me; he has stood by me through thick and thin, including the darkness of the pandemic. I owe him a great, great deal, and hope he has the best of days.

My Ongoing Cap Saga

Coming by from my trundle today, I had one another of those ideas which I think needs noting. I have been wearing a baseball cap whenever I go out for years: whenever I’m heading out, it’s now just a force of habit to just pull my cap on. The thing is, they tend to wear out or get lost fairly often, so over the years I’ve got through quite a few. I used to simply buy them off the shelf, but a month or two ago I found a store at the O2 where they would write any message I requested on to the front of a cap. It was a little expensive, but I liked the idea.

The first cap I bought from that shop was a black one with the words “Get out of my way or I’ll eat you.” I thought it would be cool to tell people that I was coming through and I needed them to stand aside, albeit in a humorous way and without actually needing to say anything.

After a while of wearing that cap when I was out and about though, I had another, rather more satirical idea. Taking a cue from all the idiotic Trump supporters I see on TV, I decided to go back to the shop at the O2 and this time bought a red cap with the words “Don’t let America elect that idiot again!” (The guys at the shop wouldn’t let me go with anything stronger than ‘idiot’.) At first I assumed it would just be my joke and wondered whether anyone would actually see or get it, although strangers have come up to me a couple of times and complemented me on it.

This afternoon, however, an idea for a third cap hit me: I was once again on the tube, having to wait for lifts being used by people perfectly able to use the stairs. All of a sudden I found myself absolutely itching to get a cap with the words “Use the frikkin’ stairs you lazy sods!” Then again, if I had such a hat I’d only be able to put it on when I want to use a lift, which could certainly make things complicated.

A cap where I could change the words using my Ipad? Now there’s an Idea.

Challengers

While I don’t really feel like writing any kind of fulsome review of it right now, if you’re interested in watching films with interesting, innovative camera styles, go and watch Challengers. Essentially a romance about two guys and a woman who play tennis, what struck me the most when I was watching it in the cinema this afternoon was the way the film played around with conventional mainstream film: there were jump cuts, dolly zooms and shooting techniques I had never seen before. It really felt quite refreshing to see so many norms being broken, and mainstream film starting to adopt styles which it may once have regarded as too avante guarde.