Countries, Culture

Play nice on the Dublin-NY portal

They’re brothers by a different mother, sisters by a different mister, so come on just play nice on the Dublin-NY portal.

Because, guess what, you’ve only just gone and got this interactive twinning of two of the world’s great cities suspended.

By flashing body parts and images of the Twin Towers on it.

Now we all know the bonds and family links that tie the Fair City and the City that Never Sleeps.

Including our own, with all four of my Irish mum’s brothers making their way to America and swelling its population.

And that Dubliners and New Yorkers share the same edgy, anti-establishment view of their world.

Sign of the times

Window to the world: The portal

But there is a line that’s been crossed and spoiled the fun for all those stepping into each other’s worlds.

Whether looking out of O’Connell Street into Broadway or back the other way.

All of which brings up again the Holidos and Don’ts of proper responses at tourist sites and historic attractions.

Particularly following a trip last week to the Hollywood sign.

Or at least as close as you can get which is about 800m.

Getting a jump on it: Hollywood sign

Now it’s only 50 years since we could all, if we were fit enough, clamber up to the sign.

Before antisocial types forced the authorities’ hand through graffiti and desecration of the site.

Now if you try to get near the sign the LAPD will warn you off by loudspeaker that you will be fined $3,000 for your troubles.

Not that that seems to deter folk as we witnessed on our trek in the Hollywood Hills.

Please do not touch

Rock of ages: Uluru

The same has become true of Uluru, Ayer’s Rock to the old father-in-law when he lived out there and went walkabout.

Sometimes, of course, it’s mere overexcitement that causes people to go too far.

And mean that the guardians of the Pere Lachaise Cemetery have now had to put a glass screen over Oscar Wilde’s grave in Paris.

Or entitlement as pushy photographers try to capture a corner of a cherub on the Sistine Chapel.

Of course, alas, tourist desecration is nothing new with the original Vandals, a tribe from the East, sacking Rome.

And generations helping themselves to Classical infrastructure lying around for their own home.

We should be grateful then for what is left and how complete the centrepiece of that other Classical powerhouse, Athens’ Acropolis is.

No thanks, of course, to Britain, who hold on graspingly to the Elgin Marbles.

Reach out across the oceans

A little corner of NY: In Dublin

Now, coming back to the question of today and our cri de coeur…

Modern technology allows us to reach out across oceans to the descendants of those who left generations ago and could not come back.

So play nice on the Dublin-NY portal because remember they’re brothers by a different mother, sisters by a different mister.

 

 

Countries

On this Day – Athens sentenced Socrates to death

It’s the longest miscarriage of justice in history… Socrates’ execution this day in Athens in 399BC.

The wise old man was forced to drink hemlock for basically being a smart arse.

It is timely too with all that’s going on with democracy in the world that the oul’ beardie one had questioned the Athenian version.

The 70-year-old was found guilty by his peers for ‘impiety’ and ‘corrupting’ the young’.

Win or Bust in Athens

But were the city’s fathers right to convict him or were they just jealous of his popularity?

The beardie rebel

An unkempt figure in an age where image was everything (familiar?) he’d shuffle around the Acropolis in his bare feet.

He would openly expose the hypocrisy of self-serving the city leaders on the streets.

And he would arouse the youth and encourage them to think for themselves.

Tragedy: For Socrates

Throw in too his questioning of the theological orthodoxy of the day (uh-oh!)

And you could see the philosopher’s days were numbered though he did get offered exile and turned it down out of principle.

Footsteps of Socrates

You can walk in the footsteps of Socrates in today’s Athens where the Agora, the marketplace, once stood.

And there is now a museum.

Spoiled and ruined at the Acropolis in Athens

And visit the stone foundations where his pal Simon’s cobblers once stood and I guess he asked when his sandals would be ready.

The stone cells carved into the rock near the Agora look tempting as Socrates’ prison.

Socratologists

But Socratologists (OK, I made that up) suggest the remains of a villa off Apostolou Pavlou as a more likely candidate.

Particularly as vials have been discovered there which could have included hemlock.

In the footsteps of Socrates. www.ancientgreece.org

With democracy’s foundations shaking it is worth reflecting that its values are still being espoused 2,400 years after Socrates.

Because of dissenting voices.

MEET YOU AT THE ACROPOLIS