'Twas the headline that caught my eye here - it's not often you hear of cattle raids these days! But in times past, they were far more common, as cattle were the basis of all wealth. And for some of us, they still are. By far the biggest single asset I own is my herd of Highland cattle.
Our modern English was 'fee' comes from Old English 'feoh' - cattle. It's speculated that our modern word 'feud' meaning 'skirmish' or 'continuing fight', especially between neighboring families, is related to the same root - would that imply that the root cause of human conflict is cattle? Hmmm...
'Feoh' is ultimately derived from the Indo-European root word *peku-, which came more or less directly into Latin as 'pecunia' and from there to English as 'pecuniary' - of or relating to money or wealth.
The most famous epic of the Celts is known as Táin Bó Cúalnge - the Cattle Raid of Cooley, about the efforts to steal a prize bull from the province of Ulster.
Our own, more recent history is fraught with rustlers and one incident of more or less open warfare: the Johnson County Cattle War.
It's still going on here, too, although few folks are killed in the US today over cattle.
At least 38 people are killed in northern Kenya, after cross-border cattle raids from Ethiopia and Sudan, police say.
(link) [BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition]
00:00 /Agriculture | 0 comments | permanent link
It's happening - film cameras will soon be gone altogether. On the plus side, you don't need a camera to view your old photo's. On the downside, this will only accelerate the onset of a potential Digital Dark Age. And that could play some serious havoc with history and historians.
Konica-Minolta today revealed it is to quit the photography business after more than 103 years.
(link) [The Register]
00:00 /Technology | 0 comments | permanent link
Actually, it's just begun. We've not switched time yet - that won't happen until just after the primary election here in April. And we'll switch back just before the generals in November.
There are a dozen bills in the legislature this session that seek to modify/reverse this idiocy. There's a movement afoot locally to just ignore DST and stay on standard time: government offices and banks can't follow it, but lot's of other folks will be.
I predict that by the next gubernatorial election, most of the state will be back on Eastern Standard Time, where it belongs. And if not by then, at some point we'll go back to it, and breathe a collective sigh of relief.
The federal government Wednesday granted the requests of eight Indiana counties to switch from the Eastern to the Central time zone, ending a long battle involving daylight-saving time.
00:00 /Politics | 3 comments | permanent link