Planet Earth
Tape of John Lennon's Jesus comments to be auctioned next month
On auction block next month: a circa 1966 tape of a Beatles press conference in which John Lennon defends his controversial comments about Jesus. This is what he said: Christianity will go. It will vanish and shrink. I needn't argue with that; I'm right and I will be proved right. We're more popular than Jesus now; I don't know which will go first - rock 'n' roll or Christianity. Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. It's them twisting it that ruins it for me.The recording is expected to sell for about $25K. Beatles press conference tapes auctioned [BBC]
Irish sellers of "legal highs" face life in jail
Ireland's government approved tough new legislation on Tuesday to crack down on "legal highs" available at so-called 'head shops' by threatening operators of the popular stores with life imprisonment. Under the new legislation, the sale or supply of substances that do not specifically fall under existing drugs legislation, but which have "psychoactive effects" will land users with up to 7 years in prison and suppliers with a maximum life sentence.Head shops, which sell a variety of drugs paraphernalia, have thrived in recession-hit Ireland by selling substances often dubbed "legal" or "herbal" highs. With some other countries are mulling legalising certain drugs, critics of the new Irish legislation said it could drive users to try and get "legal high" drugs via the Internet or on the black market.
"That is a matter for the police," Prime Minister Brian Cowen said after announcing the new measures. Such drugs are common in Amsterdam's 'smart shops', as are marijuana and hash in the Dutch city's 'coffee shops' while other countries in Europe have sought to ban "legal highs."
Others are questioning how the group of substances with "psychoactive effects" would be defined. "The righteous fuming over these products is never applied in the same way to the products sold in the local pub which are just as lethal and dangerous when misused and abused," Irish Times journalist Jim Carroll said, referring to the consumption of alcohol in bars.
These eccentric structures, some breathtakingly weird, are worth a detour.
Also: Environmentalists cheered the March announcement that North Korea and South Korea would work together to create an ecological corridor out of the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). But few, if any, global conservationists have actually seen what kinds of natural habitats and wild animals the 155-mile-long and 2-mile-wide buffer zone contains. Photographer Choi Byung Kwan has.
Article continues: Rare Glimpse at the Wild Nature Inside Korea's DMZ
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