Pop superstar Lady Gaga doesn’t mind being a shoulder to cry on, it seems. The queen of odd rushed on stage to give a voted out X Factor contestant a big hug before inviting her out for a drink. Now that’s not a bad way to bow out.
Almost two thirds of net users shop online
Is that a surprising statistic? A survey of Internet using Australians (obviously not those living off the grid) by the Australian Communication and Media Authority (ACMA) has revealed about 62 per cent purchased goods or services online in the six months to April this year. That’s slightly above the preceding period. And the news has local retailers – particularly in the lead up to Christmas – a little concerned. How do you shop – and how has that changed over the past few years?
President Barack Obama arrives in Australia this afternoon
The President of the United State of America is flying into Australia today for a lightning fast tour, spent with the PM and Opposition Leader Tony Abbott in Canberra before heading to Darwin where he is expected to announce further details about basing US troops there. The Northern Territory Chief Minister has (jokingly, we can’t be sure) arrange for crocodile insurance for the President (worth $50,000). The travel plans for a 27-hour Presidential trip are phenomenal. Already the President’s two (one is a decoy) Cadillac limousines nicknamed The Beast are in town. They are explosion proof and come complete with tear gas canisters, reportedly vials of the President’s own blood and a mobile office. Up to 12 F/A-18 RAAF Hornets will patrol the skies above Canberra and Darwin. Obama travels with 200 Secret Service agents aboard Air Force One (and a second jumbo) with an array of support vehicles and helicopters arriving in two giant C17 Globemaster cargo planes. Phew. Oh and Michelle Obama is coming too and, because we can’t resist, here’s a gallery. Anyone else in love with her?
Top Comments
I worked in Africa assisting in the deliveries of babies in rural villages and towns to desperately poor women. Fair enough, I didn't work in the middle class suburbs of Jo'burg or Cape Town, but I did see many women in 11 countries through Central, East and Southern Africa. I don't believe that one of them, given the choice, would have chosen a home birth except in terms of when it was necessary - often they would have a number of children already that would need to care for on top of expectatation that they would be out ploughing the fields the day following birth. Perhaps a couple of days in hospital, recovering from the birth, was an indulgence they simply didn't have.
The reason our infant mortality rates are so low in the Western world is precisely because of medicalisation of child birth. That is why I disagree argument that child birth is a natural process, better done where the woman feels comfortable i.e. at home. Don't get me wrong - it is natural. I'm just not sure that one needs to go to the extent of avoiding medical intervention precisely for that reason. I have an ear infection now. I am dosing up on fruit and veges and rest, hoping that my bodies natural defence mechanisms will take care of it. If, in one or two weeks, it hasn't cleared up, I'll seek medical intervention, because I can. Because I can be reasonably sure that the doctor, who has studied medicine for a minimum of 10 years, will be able to treat it safely and routinely. After all, they know more about the mechanics of the human body than I do.
These women in Africa don't have the luxury of being able to consider where and how they would like to give birth - the birthing experience is something of necessity, not a moment that is about them, but that is ultimately about the safe delivery of their child.
Sure, things go wrong in hospitals from time to time. But in Australia there is one of the lowest infant mortality rates in the world. I say, why risk it for the sake of the mother's birthing experience being exactly as she wants it, rather than considering the empirical evidence supporting the safety outcomes seen in hospital.
I can only imagine how self-indulgent women in the third world may consider this to be.
Much the same as the anti-vax crowd (not surprisingly there's a huge overlap) - banging on about their rights (not so much about their kids' rights though) and how hard done by they are. On blogs and websites. From their warm, clean houses.
I have nothing against it, but I just don't understand the desire to give birth at home. The fact is contractions are uncomfortable wherever you are, and I wouldn't feel comfortable at home at all thinking about having to clean the mess up afterwards, and having to worry about who was watching the kids. I preferred to escape from my everyday life while in labor.
I can understand why lady Gaga ran out to hug her. Just seeing her standing there behind the presenters wiping away a tear - I wanted to hug her!