Lie To Me on the news. Better believe what you say before you say it. It's called acting.

The Fox TV show Lie To Me is one of my favourite ways to while away an hour. Micro expressions are real.

They are momentary flashes of truth - hidden feelings which are suppressed except for that micro second that betrays hidden contempt, concealed fear and other emotions such as happiness. 

The TV show is loosely based on Dr Paul Ekman, a leading researcher on human emotions who spoke at the recent Happiness and Its Causes conference in Brisbane. I did a workshop his daughter gave on detecting micro expressions.

Fascinating. All those micro expressions of contempt that I think I detect are probably real. It's interesting that the same researcher who named micro expressions also wrote a book about compassion with the Dalai Lama called Emotional Awareness. I think emotional awareness lessons of sorts actually go by the title of media training these days. However, it appears that you need a lifetime of practice, not a few lessons, to be a really good liar.

I watch for micro expressions when I watch the news. How they focus doggedly on making statements that they can actually say without breaking into a snarl - they don't quite address the question but they sound convincing. Very interesting. I became interested over the years that I watched John Howard on TV. His micro expressions are easy to detect. His face just goes completely blank after he tells a lie. "Take that." "So there."

Well, that's my interpretation and I am not the only one if you watched the recent ABC documentary on the refugees, Leaky Boat. But the ABC is of course biased because it continues to take the blow torch to a Coalition Government years after the fact. What do you think? But then there was that pesky inquiry into the Oil for Food scandal. That was when I started paying attention to micro expressions as well as the tone of their voice.

I do put a lot of credibility in the tone of their voice. This is why Julia Gillard has problems. She doesn't use a natural tone of voice - even though she really believes what she's saying most of the time.

You can do an extensive free workshop on detecting micro expressions online if you please on Ekman's website

The workshop demonstrates the process featured in the TV show - they decrypt the truth using slow motion video that reveals micro expressions.

Give it a go. Makes the news more interesting. It's also a reason to say what you really mean because I know when you are lying. ;)

Hero's journey: making decisions in the face of terror.

This old John Wayne movie reminded me that Hollywood changed its mind (around the 1960s) about portraying "the Indians" as bad savages. 

So we got "Revisionist Westerns". Australia has no Hollywood. Australian stories are disappearing from our screens as we speak.

Frankly, our film & TV producers are girding their loins to battle for stronger Australian Content Standards and Quotas on subscriber, free-to-air and "somehow, some day, somewhere" online services.

It is the culture war! They will die with their boots on. It feels like an episode of Minscule in the big, wide world. 

So it is uncertain if revisions of our treatment of refugees will make it to the tickertape news that runs across the bottom of our screens - considering that in the political and social spectrum culture comes somewhere behind carbon pricing, refugee processing, jobs and the Australian dollar, not to mention the mining tax.

Still, Australians aren't taking to leaky boats yet.

This John Wayne movie made me think how times change but history doesn't.

I mean the systematic removal of the "redskin" (the now-outlawed Hollywood Western turn-of-phrase) from their homelands condemned them to live as refugees. 

Here's proof of prisoners (including the famous Geronimo) from the National Archives of the USA  - or maybe it was just staged, right?

Had "the Indians" fled, they would call themselves citizens of another land not "Native Americans" - do we think less of people who flee?

Today's decision to redraft refugee laws is a defining moment, just like 1975's dismissal - just like the Howard Government's decision to bring in off-shore processing in Naru or turn back the Tampa.

This is a blog. This is opinion. This is a democracy. Comprende?

 Heroes define us. I guess that's why Australians stick to sporting heroes - there's a scoreboard.

Leave it to elected representatives to define our character - just as long as they don't interfere with the real game.

Politics is history. You can't separate civilians from "party wars" - even civilians who switch off the TV, even citizens who cast a donkey vote or don't vote or can't vote.

Who is the hero of our story today, and who will be the hero tomorrow? 

Free Christmas e-Card with image resources.

 I took this image of a giant cobweb some time this year to use as a Christmas card design.

Feel free to download my design or use the images to create your own.

Merry Christmas. Love to see what you come up with too. 

And here's something beautiful to occupy anyone who loves animation on the State Library's Summer Reading Club websitehttp://if90.net/vsae/

da Scriff.

dascriffles@gmail.com