Les Oeufs Pochés

8th July 2024

We’re currently looking at streamlining this newsletter, and one promising option we’re looking at is to move its creation to Wordpress, our current website CMS (Content Management System). The only obvious difference this would make to you would be that our newsletter emails would no longer contain the full text of our articles - instead there would be an excerpt, along with a link to the full article online. I’d love to hear from anyone for whom that would be an issue, where it might make it harder for you to access our newsletter (just email me at newsletter@skeptics.nz). Ideally I may be able to figure out a way to include the full text of our articles still, but so far a workable solution has eluded me.

On the weekend Bronwyn and I drove out to Eastbourne to meet with long-time member Gordon Hewitt. Gordon had hoped to join us recently in our visit to a Creationist talk, but this idea was scuppered when he caught a cold. So we decided to go to him instead, and we had a very enjoyable morning in a French cafe (I had poached eggs) chatting about the history of the Society, some of his skeptical exploits, and more. We’re hoping that there’ll be another event soon that Gordon can join us in visiting, and we wondered whether Share International might be a good group to join. Not only is the organisation fascinating to skeptics, with their UFOs, Ascended Masters, and whatnot, but they also seem to attract a lot of older members - and both Gordon and myself will fit right in!

Speaking of long-standing members, I received a sad but not unexpected call the other day informing me that member Jim Ring had died last year. You can read a little about his life, and the articles he wrote for us, below.

Craig has a busy personal life for the next few weeks, so we’re down a regular contributor to both the newsletter and podcast. Not only is this a good time to remind you all that articles from you would be warmly welcomed, but I’ve also used this as an opportunity to remind our committee members that they are also encouraged to submit articles for inclusion in the newsletter. And, thankfully, both Brad and Hamish have graciously stepped up and provided articles this week. First Brad tried to write an article about horses, but somehow it ended up being about the placebo effect - hopefully we’ll see the horse article soon. Hamish has been on two field trips recently, both visiting a Spiritual Expo and returning to a Spiritualist church. Hopefully we can get both of them to join Bronwyn and myself on the podcast this week.

I’ve added a small update about the YouTube video we had removed recently, and used the opportunity to rant about another Social Media Platform. Bronwyn has rounded off her three part series about the weird and captivating life of Colin Amery. And, finally, following Craig’s story of some unusual claims at a Matariki celebration, I’ve written about my own odd experience - a small, disappointing event in an otherwise enjoyable celebration.

Mark Honeychurch

Jim Ring, Nelson

Mark Honeychurch - 8 July 2024

I've been in contact with a lawyer on and off over the last couple of years regarding one of our old members - old both in terms of when they joined the society, and in terms of their age. Jim Ring was a frequent contributor to our Journal, the NZ Skeptic, writing both articles on a wide range of topics and many Letters to the Editor. Sadly Jim passed away last year, and the conversations with the lawyer, who was a friend of Jim's in his later life, were about a collection of books of skeptical interest that he had collected over his lifetime and wanted to donate to the NZ Skeptics.

Stop crediting the placebo effect, it doesn't make you better!

Brad MacClure - 8 July 2024

Stop crediting the placebo effect, it doesn't make you better!

Over a year ago my wife and I were on a cavalcade. Present on the same cavalcade was a woman who was an equine vet. While we were discussing various 'alternative' treatments and such she happened to say “but I'm a real believer in the power of placebo, though…”. I found that statement a little surprising, coming from (I assume) a qualified medical person, but perhaps in a way this is telling.

The Dunedin Spiritual Expo

Hamish Dickson - 8 July 2024

The Dunedin Spiritual Expo

I managed to attend the Spiritual Expo in Dunedin last month. A week later, I also went along to a two hour long medium session at the Dunedin Spiritualist Church. I will be talking about the medium experience later in this article but, first, the Expo.

YouTube Update

Mark Honeychurch - 8 July 2024

YouTube Update

I wrote a couple of weeks ago about how we had one of our YouTube videos removed from YouTube, due to Google mistakenly deciding that it was promoting medical misinformation - a rookie mistake, given that it was critiquing medical misinformation. I expressed my doubt that an appeal would change the outcome, but I was pleasantly surprised just after we recorded our last podcast episode to receive an email from Google letting us know that they had reversed their decision:

Tarotmancer: A brief biography of Colin Amery

Bronwyn Rideout - 8 July 2024

Tarotmancer: A brief biography of Colin Amery

At the end of part 2 of this series (which was published a month ago), it seemed that Colin Amery had started to settle down. He met his future wife, poet Yvonne Gatton, in 1986. Gatton seems to have been a stabilising influence for Amery; so much so that he would follow her spiritual practices, and be initiated into the Sant Mat spiritual movement. While the couple were mum about who their specific guru was to a Stuff reporter, he did tell Dominion Post reporter Kimberley Rothwell that he practised Surat Shabd Yoga.

Souls of the dead tracking across the sky

Mark Honeychurch - 8 July 2024

Souls of the dead tracking across the sky

Craig wrote a couple of weeks ago about a couple of strange ideas he was introduced to at a Matariki event he attended - the idea that Matariki's brightness can predict the future, and also an idea that the earth has apparently recently shifted on its axis by 20 degrees.