MAY 26 2018 LISTENER 5
(Chas to the family) Boswell.
He was my grandfather, and
he arrived in Moscow the day
before I was born.
Insight into the problems he
faced can be found in his per-
sonal diaries – these do much
to dispel the criticism levelled
at him from various quarters.
After many years in my pos-
session, these diaries are now
in the care of the Alexander
Turnbull Library. They chroni-
cle four years of frustration
with the constraints of his
position, and the impossibility
of meaningful dialogue with
the Soviet system.
Being referred to as “pedes-
trian” (“The cloak & dagger
novel”, May 12) is perhaps
partly appropriate – he was
sent to perform a service to the
country he loved and served
with all his heart – but with
both hands tied behind his
back and his feet shackled.
Peter Boswell
(Glen Eden, Auckland)
LETTER OF THE WEEK
CLIMATE COMPLICATIONS
“The cold war” (May 19)
pushes the usual alarmist
climate-change buttons. It
is true that the Australian
Antarctic Division reports that
ice coverage for the past two
seasons was at all-time lows.
But it goes on to say that it is
not clear what was driving the
reduction after several years of
record-high ice coverage.
The story quotes Victoria
University research as saying
“one clear climate change
signal ... is the warming of the
ocean at depth and under the
ice shelves”. Why, I wonder
does it not cite 2018 research
by the University of Otago on
the Ross Ice Shelf that found
sea water is actually freezing
onto the base of the ice instead
of melting? Perhaps because it
doesn’t fit the accepted media
narrative.
The truth is that the global
climate is an incredibly com-
plex, non-linear, chaotic – as
in the mathematical theory
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Entries must be received by noon, Tuesday, May 29.
THE PRIZE The winner of our weekly caption competition will receive
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journey that reveals nature’s power over the course of a day.
Caption Competition {[email protected]}
Melania: “Stormy told me he enjoys a surprise spanking.”
– Jeanette Waters, Auckland
Trump: “What do you call this tool?” Macron: “Mr
President.” – Rob Leetcher, Tauranga
Macron: “I’ll plant the tree, Donald ... you seem to be
digging your own hole.” – Marian Dowling, Wellington
Trump: “Typical. Someone else digs the dirt and I have to
do the cover up.” – Margaret Cannon, Palmerston North
Trump: “Forget the wall, we’ll dig a moat instead!”
– Alan Belcher, Christchurch
Trump: “A spot of Emmanuel labour looks good for the
cameras.” – Ann Love, Nelson
Trump: “Korea, Iran ... now I’ve fixed climate change.”
– Lynda Kelly, Palmerston North
WINNING CAPTION
Alice Tartt, Westmere, Auckland
- system that scientists struggle
to understand or predict. The
only honest scientific position
on man-made climate change
is an open mind and healthy
scepticism.
David Gibbs
(Beach Haven, Auckland)
BOTHERED ABOUT GOD
I don’t attend church, yet I
respect all religious denomina-
tions. I performed music for
the Dalai Lama in 1992. When
my brother was dying in 1992,
I attended his bedside in the
final hours. He was a passion-
ate atheist.
During his frustration with
pervading pain he was heard
to utter “Christ” several times.
I remember “Jesus” was in
there among the expletives,
too. Having your intellectual
potency gradually silenced is
a terrible predicament. He’s at
peace now, I believe. I didn’t
hear him call for Copernicus,
Galileo or Hawking once.
Funny that.
Andy Thompson
(Burwood, Christchurch)
Peter Chapman (Letters, May
19) wants to have his science-
and-religion cake and eat it.
No incompatibility here, folks.
This is a mantra we often
hear from clergy and others
desperate to hang on to belief
Caption
competition
THIS WEEK’S PICTURE
FINALISTS
Björn Ulvaeus, left,
and Benny Andersson
from Abba.
If anyone asks
where James
Comey is, admit
nothing.