Humans, animals, and love Internet game


This video is called Female praying mantis eats male after mating.

As Valentine’s Day approaches; from eNature:

While we humans like to think of ourselves as more complex than other members of the animal kingdom, the truth is that we’re not so unique when it comes to things like sex and courtship. Even our strangest behaviors can seem tame next to those of other creatures. Aphrodisiacs? Chastity belts? Sex changes? Animals can match us quirk for quirk. Take a quick quiz and find out which species you most resemble in love.

Play the Mating Game here.

Graphic novel on Iraqi oil


This video from Britain is called Ewa Jasiewicz, Hands off Iraqi Oil campaign.

From British daily The Morning Star:

Illustrative nuggets about oil

(Sunday 10 February 2008)

Iraqi Oil for Beginners by Jon Sack
(Voices, £4)

WITH Joe Sacco’s Palestine and Marjane Satrapi‘s Persepolis, the graphic novel has become one of the most accessible mediums for gaining an understanding of the Middle East today.

Up to date and with a pleasing DIY feel to it, Iraqi Oil for Beginners is a welcome addition to the genre, giving the reader – in 30 pages – a better understanding of the role of “black gold” in the recent invasion and occupation than a lifetime of mainstream media news broadcasts.

US citizen Jon Sack is particularly good at finding parallels between the British occupation of Iraq in the first half of the 20th century and the current conflict.

So, while Tony Blair argued in 2003 that “the oil conspiracy theory” was “absurd,” it is instructive to remember that, 80 years earlier, the British foreign secretary was denying that “the attitude of the British government to Mosul is affected by the question of oil.”

Another historical nugget that Sack has uncovered is a 1920 Times newspaper editorial asking of the British presence of Iraq: “How much longer are valuable lives to be sacrificed … to impose upon the Arab population an expensive administration that they did not ask for and do not want?

Throughout, there are some excellent illustrations, such as the portrait of Ayatollah Khomeini.

However, towards the end, Sack relies heavily on textual explanation to discuss the intricacies of the proposed oil law that will give Western oil companies favourable access to Iraqi oil for years to come.

Ending on a positive note, Sack highlights the indigenous trade union resistance to the proposed law, despite the risk of arrest and imprisonment.

Tellingly, the only Saddam Hussein-era law retained by the US is the law banning trade unions.

With proceeds going to groups who oppose the oil law and those working for social justice in Iraq, Iraqi Oil for Beginners is a must read.

Iraqi Oil for Beginners is available from Voices UK, 5 Caledonian Road, London N1 9DX, priced £4.

IAN SINCLAIR