First published in Column 8, on the 4th August, 1993
Newspapers are a great source of education. I had time to
read a newspaper more thoroughly last week and discovered informative facts,
and fictions, on nearly every page.
That day, the Russians had troubles with roubles. The Central
Russian Bank decided to dabble with the money bubble and gobble up pre-1993
roubles. This nobbled people’s savings, causing a scrabble for new money. The banks
quibblingly closed for ‘technical reasons.’
Many elderly wound up with barely a nibble; they hobbled to
the banks to exchange their old roubles – paid out the previous week in their
pensions – for a maximum sum amounting to the equivalent of NZ$64. This reduced
them to quivering blobbles.
Why the rabble didn’t reduce the banks – or better still,
the government – to rubble, I don’t know.
This time the West didn’t get the blame. A couple of years
ago, when a similar thing happened, the cause was a ‘Western financial plot.’
(I thought, at first, that was the part of a cemetery where you bury a paid-up
corpse.)
Plainly the Russian government still has a blind spot when
it comes to the people – a bit like one or two of our own parliamentarians –
but I’ve vowed not to give parliamentarians any more free publicity this month.
Talking of blind spots, I discovered that a blind electric ray can give you a nasty shock if you meet each other in the sea.
I quote: ‘The ray’s ‘electric organs are composed of
specialised cells called electrocytes.’ (Not electrolytes – those hang from the
ceiling.) ‘These are wafer thin, hexagonal and arranged in stacks of 450
plates.’ (These fish would make good waiters.) ‘There can be several thousand
of these columns, each composed of 450 electrocytes.’(Reminds me of Steve Parr’s dishwashing ad.)
In spite of its blindness the ray electro-sights its prey
with ease. What I want to know is why when the ray lights up in water it doesn’t
electrocute itself.
Talking of blind spots, I noted the continuing saga of the
Christchurch Polytechnic nursing course, and its cultural problems. I like what
one local nurse said, ‘We’ve bred a bit of a monster. It’s cultural fascism
creeping in where you can’t afford to have different views. It’s almost like because
of the wrong in the past we have to try and make up for it. Where has our
freedom of speech gone?’
Where indeed?
The answer to her last question is that free speech has
drowned in the sea of political correctness. Yes, we Caucasians have done a lot
wrong, and yes, we have a lot of ground to make up. But the cultural content of
this nursing course has the bad breath of indoctrination in its mouth.
Perhaps we need to park the Treaty of Waitangi back in the
history books where it belongs. Then, in accordance with our current
marketplace-type thinking, we could negotiate a new, contemporary contract.
A contract that doesn’t squabble over different interpretations,
and one which, in raising the status of the minority, doesn’t have to put down
the majority. Or cause them to doublespeak.
My son has been investigating cultures for school. We have
icecream tubs perched around the house containing moulding of bread. Seeing the
process of culture at home I hope, if I’m in hospital, that the nurse will
treat me as a human being first, and a culture second.
Finally, I learned a new word from my newspaper reading: vexillologist
(requires careful spelling – and pronouncing!). A vexillologist is a flag fan.
I’ve been indulging in some vexillology – flag waving – in the
above paragraphs.
I guess you shouldn’t get vexed when vexillating.
Electric ray
Narke capensis Photo courtesy of Peter Southwood |
See
more about Steve Parr here. Unfortunately I can’t find the particular ad I mentioned.
For ‘political correctness’ read ‘woke,’ a word easier to
remember than a phrase, and with so little real meaning that it can take hold
of anything and make a problem out of.







