A fact check held by CNN post debate took Trump to task for claiming that illegal immigrants are not vetted before coming to USA. CNN said that there were rigorous checks, some taking more than a year. What CNN misunderstood was the difference between a refugee and and someone who employs a pirate to get them smuggled into USA. Illegal immigrants are not vetted, even though CNN's fact check unit believes they are. Maybe it is worthwhile asking the CNN unit to tell us which state department vets illegal immigrants before they arrive in USA and why it is that that department is not communicating their discoveries with other departments of government.
Meanwhile, before the debate, Fox news had an article on people paid over a thousand dollars benefits from ObamaCare for procedures, but these people were dead and the procedures have never been done. We have been told that some $350k has been lost this way, but assured it isn't much. But it highlights something really disturbing for Hillary Clinton. Dead people are a sizeable minority, and she is denying them regular access to medical care. They vote for her, and she denies them, taking them for granted. It doesn't pass the sniff test. Just like the Clinton Foundation's use of Haiti as a source of profit. Exploiting the poorest for personal gain is a very bad low. ALP do it in Australia through their union arm for slush funds, but no one is accusing Clinton of that. Why would they? Only, if they were dead, they could still vote for her, and access health care too. And as the money leaves USA, it wouldn't increase the debt. So she says.
I suggest Red Gum ward vote for David Daniel Ball. And, after asking your local councillor about their views on Trump, Same Sex Marriage and Greyhounds, try and find out what it is they will do to make garbage collection cheaper and more efficient. Ask how they will make business more profitable. Ask what they will do to help address crime. Ask what they will do to improve public transport issues locally.
=== from 2015 ===
Australia’s education system is of a high standard. She has deserved her reputation for academic excellence. And she is flawed and needs reform. Both statements are true. But the case for effective reform is stymied by misrepresentations of issues. Cheating by students is a problem everywhere in the world. And new technology is making it very challenging for universities to preserve free and open inquiry while maintaining rigorous standards. Yet, without strong evidence to the contrary, that is being done. Also, it is historical and legendary that students are not competent but prone to alcoholic indulgence and partying. It is hardly likely that Chinese Students are alone in this. Also, the issue of assignments and group work is misunderstood by participants and sometimes the educators themselves. No student graduates based on group work.
Australia has a growth industry with international students which is independent of the mining boom or internal economic cycle. Their fees help subsidise Australians in higher education. Not all international students are wealthy. Some third world nations send their students to Australia to be educated, but leave it to the students to work and find accommodation, while the government denies those students basic amenities and tax relief. Many turn a blind eye as students are exploited. Maybe some turn to prostitution to fund their studies. Many also work above hours for cash in hand. Many international students can’t party and fraternise with local students, and that could fuel envy on both sides.
Australia’s higher education system needs reform. She is not biased, but partisan with the left, with senior academic boards over run with ALP favouring appointments that vote in blocks against independent academics. Which is partly why there are so few conservative think tanks in Australia, or conservative media journalists. Students are overly subsidised. No one seriously suggests not subsidising students, but the current levels are unsustainable. So that our children will not be able to enjoy a fair education our students do. Upper tier universities like UNSW, Sydney, Melbourne and a few others would like to do postgraduate duties which they do very well. While universities like UWS and Newcastle could do much better focusing on undergraduates. But the government won’t let them for equity reasons irrelevant to excellence in education.
Stories of students cheating dates back to the formation of schools in ancient Greece and Ancient China. But universities are resilient to cheating practice and there is no evidence of widespread rooting as is claimed by some. But there is evidence that universities aren’t producing students satisfactory to business. But the international students, anecdotally, are superior to local students in all areas except language. And sometimes they exceed there too. But group work is hell even where there is none of the celebrated diversity. When Joan Kirner was lauded for her second rate secondary education reforms, group work was all the rage. It took reforms introduced by my father, the late Professor Samuel Ball to address those issues, and I’m confident universities employ those techniques today. So that group work assignments get followed by related tests. And students who did not do the assignments would not know how to excel at those tests. The students are not aware of all the things universities do to spot cheating, nor should they know. It is their job to learn their courses, not how to cheat.
There is no history of most students satisfying with their skills gained through studies. The highest achieving students, however, are a good group to focus on student achievement over time. International students bring Australia credit.
Turnbull won't push for reform in this election cycle.
Canada has lost an extremely good PM for the son of an inept one.
For some, at the moment, the Sex Party has more credibility.
From 2014
Workers pay for union bosses
The ABC and Fairfax press have self censored over the issue, but it is widespread and substantial. The much maligned Work choices had checks in place to prevent union corruption, but Gillard removed those when she put Fair Work in place of Work Choices. Even so, historical corruption regarding slush funds was clearly prevalent in union culture. Slush funds are not harmless. They involve unionists losing money for union chiefs to spend as they will. They also involve unions standing over businesses and extorting money, which is illegal. Some will say it is wrong to do that, and it should be illegal. But the fact is it is illegal to do that according to the statute books, and only legal if the courts choose to ignore the law, which they have no right to do. The very structure of the ALP is called into question over this. Maybe the ALP needs to reform by adopting a Liberal Party structure?
Ukraine has to answer questions over MH17
Findings of the inquiry into MH17 have suggested the bomb used to take down the aircraft was Ukrainian made, while the device used to fire it was Russian made. It looks like the Russian separatists fired the bomb at the aircraft, but only after Ukraine had presented the aircraft as enemy hostile. Precisely how has not been examined yet and the salient questions have not been asked of Ukraine. It would be good for Mr Abbott or Miss Bishop to discuss this matter with Ukraine. It might excite ABC interest if Mr Abbott says he will shirtfront the Ukrainian leader.
Green alarmism costs money
Australia under ALP shed some six hundred billion dollars with nothing to show for it. Left behind are costly and inefficient green projects, like desalination camps which aren't used because they aren't needed, house insulation poorly installed, wind farms and solar installations which don't reduce base load as well as crumbling coal power stations needing to be modernised. But had the money been spent wisely, flagship infrastructure which allows substantial growth could have been put in place. At about 1% of the cost of the waste, the Bradfield Scheme could have been realised. A wireless NBN could have been implemented. An NDIS could have been implemented and change sufficient to power innovation in industry would have been left over with surplus budgets. Instead, people have drowned for compassion, no animal has been saved and no forest is safe from environmental dangers. In fact forest fires have reputedly been caused by a failure to prudently back burn.
Plibersek plays lethal game re Ebola
Shorten has no policy on any thing. Plibersek is filling the vacuum by being stupid and risking the lives of Australian Health workers tasked to go to Africa to fight Ebola by an Australian government without infrastructure to evacuate if that is needed. Thing is there is sufficient aid from those who have the infrastructure and regional responsibility to deliver it. Plibersek's position is partisan and foolish. She is hostile to the action of the defence force tasked to face ISIL and has said so. If Plibersek were compassionate for the suffering of others, she would not try to drown desperate people wanting to come to Australia.
Poet short changed
Going by headlines this column condemned the poet Barry Spurr and it was wrong. The poet has had comments of his that were personal released out of context. Were they public utterances, they would and should be condemned. However, what has happened is an injustice which seems to have been wilfully perpetrated by a bad journal called New Matilda. New Matilda has form in illegally obtaining data and abusing it for sensational purposes. They appear to have done so here, and one hopes they are sued out of existence if they in fact have. Chillingly Sydney University have acted quickly to stand down the poet without apparent due process. Had the poet been left wing and given his thoughts in a writer's festival, publicly, one feels this entire issue may never have risen. Take as an example the graphic novelist Phillippe Squarzoni who has published an imagined, virtuous, assault with an assault rifle on a shopping mall.
The ABC and Fairfax press have self censored over the issue, but it is widespread and substantial. The much maligned Work choices had checks in place to prevent union corruption, but Gillard removed those when she put Fair Work in place of Work Choices. Even so, historical corruption regarding slush funds was clearly prevalent in union culture. Slush funds are not harmless. They involve unionists losing money for union chiefs to spend as they will. They also involve unions standing over businesses and extorting money, which is illegal. Some will say it is wrong to do that, and it should be illegal. But the fact is it is illegal to do that according to the statute books, and only legal if the courts choose to ignore the law, which they have no right to do. The very structure of the ALP is called into question over this. Maybe the ALP needs to reform by adopting a Liberal Party structure?
Ukraine has to answer questions over MH17
Findings of the inquiry into MH17 have suggested the bomb used to take down the aircraft was Ukrainian made, while the device used to fire it was Russian made. It looks like the Russian separatists fired the bomb at the aircraft, but only after Ukraine had presented the aircraft as enemy hostile. Precisely how has not been examined yet and the salient questions have not been asked of Ukraine. It would be good for Mr Abbott or Miss Bishop to discuss this matter with Ukraine. It might excite ABC interest if Mr Abbott says he will shirtfront the Ukrainian leader.
Green alarmism costs money
Australia under ALP shed some six hundred billion dollars with nothing to show for it. Left behind are costly and inefficient green projects, like desalination camps which aren't used because they aren't needed, house insulation poorly installed, wind farms and solar installations which don't reduce base load as well as crumbling coal power stations needing to be modernised. But had the money been spent wisely, flagship infrastructure which allows substantial growth could have been put in place. At about 1% of the cost of the waste, the Bradfield Scheme could have been realised. A wireless NBN could have been implemented. An NDIS could have been implemented and change sufficient to power innovation in industry would have been left over with surplus budgets. Instead, people have drowned for compassion, no animal has been saved and no forest is safe from environmental dangers. In fact forest fires have reputedly been caused by a failure to prudently back burn.
Plibersek plays lethal game re Ebola
Shorten has no policy on any thing. Plibersek is filling the vacuum by being stupid and risking the lives of Australian Health workers tasked to go to Africa to fight Ebola by an Australian government without infrastructure to evacuate if that is needed. Thing is there is sufficient aid from those who have the infrastructure and regional responsibility to deliver it. Plibersek's position is partisan and foolish. She is hostile to the action of the defence force tasked to face ISIL and has said so. If Plibersek were compassionate for the suffering of others, she would not try to drown desperate people wanting to come to Australia.
Poet short changed
Going by headlines this column condemned the poet Barry Spurr and it was wrong. The poet has had comments of his that were personal released out of context. Were they public utterances, they would and should be condemned. However, what has happened is an injustice which seems to have been wilfully perpetrated by a bad journal called New Matilda. New Matilda has form in illegally obtaining data and abusing it for sensational purposes. They appear to have done so here, and one hopes they are sued out of existence if they in fact have. Chillingly Sydney University have acted quickly to stand down the poet without apparent due process. Had the poet been left wing and given his thoughts in a writer's festival, publicly, one feels this entire issue may never have risen. Take as an example the graphic novelist Phillippe Squarzoni who has published an imagined, virtuous, assault with an assault rifle on a shopping mall.
From 2013
ALP divided, will never be united. Blame games keep dreams alive. Latham can say *anything* at *anytime* which may contradict *something* at *sometime* but will be published regardless without fact checking. Plibersek to make play for leadership? ALP win NSW by-election, but still need reform.
Green policy ignites flames.
Illegal immigrants are not clients. Europeans move to stop murderous folly.
Crying children need parents.
Australian child brides.
Wikileaks movie bombs despite top actors.
Education reform needs good educators.
Green policy ignites flames.
Illegal immigrants are not clients. Europeans move to stop murderous folly.
Crying children need parents.
Australian child brides.
Wikileaks movie bombs despite top actors.
Education reform needs good educators.
Historical perspective on this day
Not done
=== Publishing News ===
This column welcomes feedback and criticism. The column is not made up but based on the days events and articles which are then placed in the feed. So they may not have an apparent cohesion they would have had were they made up.
===
Thanks to Warren for this advice on watching Bolt
Warren Catton Get this for your PC or MAC https://www.foxtel.com.au/foxtelplay/how-it-works/pc-mac.html Once you have installed it start it up and press Live TV you don't need a login to watch Sky News!
===
I am publishing a book called Bread of Life: January.
Bread of Life is a daily bible quote with a layman's understanding of the meaning. I give one quote for each day, and also a series of personal stories illustrating key concepts eg Who is God? What is a miracle? Why is there tragedy?
January is the first of the anticipated year-long work of thirteen books. One for each month and the whole year. It costs to publish. It (Kindle version) should retail at about $2US online, but the paperback version would cost more, according to production cost.If you have a heart for giving, I fundraise at gofund.me/27tkwuc
Bread of Life is a daily bible quote with a layman's understanding of the meaning. I give one quote for each day, and also a series of personal stories illustrating key concepts eg Who is God? What is a miracle? Why is there tragedy?
January is the first of the anticipated year-long work of thirteen books. One for each month and the whole year. It costs to publish. It (Kindle version) should retail at about $2US online, but the paperback version would cost more, according to production cost.If you have a heart for giving, I fundraise at gofund.me/27tkwuc
===
Editorials will appear in the "History in a Year by the Conservative Voice" series, starting with August, September, October, or at Amazon http://www.amazon.com/dp/1482020262/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_dp_dVHPub0MQKDZ4 The kindle version is cheaper, but the soft back version allows a free kindle version.
List of available items at Create Space
The Amazon Author Page for David Ball
UK .. http://www.amazon.co.uk/-/e/B01683ZOWGFrench .. http://www.amazon.fr/-/e/B01683ZOWG
Japan .. http://www.amazon.co.jp/-/e/B01683ZOWG
German .. http://www.amazon.de/-/e/B01683ZOWG
Happy birthday and many happy returns Kirsten Katz, Johnson Nguyen and Peter Trinh. Born on the same day, across the years as 1463 – Alessandro Achillini, Italian philosopher (d. 1512) 1632 – Christopher Wren, English architect, designed St Paul's Cathedral (d. 1723) 1780 – Pauline Bonaparte, French sister of Napoleon (d. 1825) 1882 – Bela Lugosi, Hungarian-American actor (d. 1956) 1931 – Mickey Mantle, American baseball player (d. 1995) 1950 – Tom Petty, American singer-songwriter and musician (Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Mudcrutch, and Traveling Wilburys) 1970 – Michelle Malkin, American blogger and author 1995 – Zhenwei Wang, Chinese actor and martial artist
Deaths
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Tim Blair
Andrew Bolt
BABY BOOMERS
Tim Blair – Tuesday, October 20, 2015 (5:24pm)
“Vans, Nike, Chelsea FC, beheading Kafirs.” Those are a few of the favourite things listed by a 16-year-old British schoolgirl now with Islamic State in Syria. As Mary Wakefield notes, however, Syria is so yesterday for trend-conscious jihadi teens:
Our girls are being lured not to Syria but to Libya now …Libya is the dream for Isis, the real promised land. There’s oil to be sold and untold zillions to be extorted from migrants hoping to cross the Med, but more importantly, it’s the perfect launch pad for attacks on Europe. One Isis supporter, quoted by the Telegraph’s Ruth Sherlock, put it like this: ‘Libya has a long coast and looks upon the southern crusader states which can be reached with ease by even a rudimentary boat.’And here’s where our schoolgirls might really make their mark. They’ll get in those rudimentary boats with the refugees, and with their children perhaps for added innocence. They’ll be rescued, make contact with comrades on the ground, then pick their moment to detonate off to paradise, taking the kafir with them. This is Isis’s plan, openly discussed online, to take terror to infidel Europe. The stowaway schoolgirl jihadis of today are tomorrow’s homing missiles.
No wonder Europe envies Australia’s boat-stopping abilities.
ESSENTIAL UNCHANGED
Tim Blair – Tuesday, October 20, 2015 (5:02pm)
The Essential Report’s poll two weeks ago had the Coalition leading Labor by 52 per cent to 48 per cent. One week ago it was 51-49. And today the numbers haven’t shifted: 51-49. The unstoppable Malmentum in Fairfax polling isn’t turning up anywhere else.
Pedophillia claims
Andrew Bolt October 20 2015 (7:03pm)
Bill Heffernan has made false accusations of this nature before for which he has had to apologise, but we should be wary of automatically dismissing his new claims after all we’ve learned from the royal commission into child sexual abuse:
===A former Australian prime minister is on a list of “alleged paedophiles” that Liberal senator Bill Heffernan claims forms part of a police document.I am sceptical, but wish to know more. But no names should be made public until we do know these claims have real substance.
Senator Heffernan used a Senate estimates committee hearing on Tuesday to discuss the list of 28 people, which he said formed part of police documents that had been “signed off” by Gary Crooke, QC, the former senior counsel assisting NSW’s Wood royal commission into police corruption in the 1990s. Many of the people on the list and otherwise named in the documents were “prominent”, including a former prime minister, he said: “They were delivered to me by a police agency some time ago because no one seems to want to deal with them.”
The Mal-bounce exaggerated
Andrew Bolt October 20 2015 (6:21pm)
Fairfax has a problem, tying itself to the Ipsos polling company. It must spruik the polls it’s paid for, but that often leaves it talking up implausible results.
For instance, Ipsos in May recorded a 50-50 result, better for the Abbott Government than any other poll, leaving Abbott-hater Mark Kenny having to write this:
Enter Mark Kenny again:
I don’t blame Kenny so much. It’s the failing of newspapers feeling obliged to talk up their own polls.
===For instance, Ipsos in May recorded a 50-50 result, better for the Abbott Government than any other poll, leaving Abbott-hater Mark Kenny having to write this:
In a stunning reversal of fortunes, the government has now pulled even with the Labor opposition, answering internal critics and increasing the prospect of an early election in the second half of 2015, should Tony Abbott decide to capitalise on the electoral recovery.I said at the time that Ipsos had probably exaggerated Abbott’s recovery (later sabotaged), and I now think Ipsos has exaggerated Malcolm Turnbull’s bounce:
Enter Mark Kenny again:
Labor’s primary vote has plunged to just 30 per cent as voters flood back to a rejuvenated Coalition government under Malcolm Turnbull’s new leadership style one month after he replaced the unpopular Tony Abbott as Prime Minister.But Essential Report’s survey today has the margin at 51 to 49 per cent for the second consecutive week, while Newspoll last week had it 50-50.
In what appears to be a clear vindication of that bruising leadership switch, ... [t]he October Fairfax-Ipsos poll has found the Coalition has surged ahead of Labor at 53-47 according to the flow of second preferences as allocated at the 2013 election.
I don’t blame Kenny so much. It’s the failing of newspapers feeling obliged to talk up their own polls.
Conquest - how truth outlived Stalin’s apologists
Andrew Bolt October 20 2015 (6:15pm)
Glenn Garvin on the death last month of Robert Conquest, the former communist who became the foremost historian of communism’s crimes:
===To understand the moral and literary power with which Robert Conquest wrote, consider the second sentence in his book Harvest of Sorrow: Soviet Collectivization and the Terror-Famine, a study of the 14.5 million deaths that resulted from Joseph Stalin’s murderous takeover of his nation’s agricultural sector: “We may perhaps put this in perspective in the present case by saying that in the actions here recorded about twenty human lives were lost for, not every word, but every letter, in this book."…
He wrote of a town in Byelorussia where a group of peasants stumbled into what may have been the perpetually depressed Soviet economy’s single growth industry: professional informing. They routinely partied after trials with the 15 rubles a head they were paid to denounce neighbors as spies, hoarders, and “wreckers,” as saboteurs were known. They even wrote an epic ballad about some of their most successful denunciations.
He wrote of the urkas, the labor-camp gangs of common criminals so violent and depraved that even the guards feared them and refused to make them work. The hideously tattooed members, sporting names like Hitler or The Louse, instead spent their days plotting mass rapes of female inmates and gambling for the clothing of newly arrived political prisoners; the losers had to strip it from the victims and deliver it to the winners.
He wrote of Stalin’s workdays, which usually began by leafing through hundreds of secret-police-recommended death sentences left in his morning inbox, perhaps with the help of his sycophantic adviser Vyacheslav Molotov. December 12, 1937, was a typical day, Conquest reported: “Stalin and Molotov sanctioned 3,167 death sentences, and then went to the cinema.”
Not that being a bloodthirsty dictator was all work and no play. Conquest described Stalin laughing until he cried as an executioner acted out the final, sobbing moments of his former crony Grigory Zinoviev. “Stalin was overcome with merriment and had to sign to [the performer] to stop,” Conquest wrote....
As skeptics of the Cold War gained the upper hand in American academia, Conquest’s work was dismissed as reactionary fantasy and criminal libel. But in the years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, as Moscow’s archives began dribbling out to the public, his reporting was confirmed and judged by some even a bit too mild. Conquest was, of course, gratified. Martin Amis reported that, when a publisher asked for a new title for a revised edition of The Great Terror, Conquest suggested: “How about I Told You So, You F...ing Fools?”
SBS: paid activists
Andrew Bolt October 20 2015 (3:46pm)
How can we trust SBS to report impartially on this issue (he asks, as if we ever could):
===SBS has been accused of abusing its position as a public broadcaster by joining a corporate campaign in favour of same-sex marriage.
During Senate estimates hearings on Tuesday, Liberal National Party senator Matt Canavan said SBS had taken sides on an issue of “political contention” by joining companies such as Google, Qantas, Optus and the big banks by supporting same-sex marriage.
Yet another of those dirty deals made by Shorten’s union
Andrew Bolt October 20 2015 (11:30am)
Bill Shorten is probably finished after this astonishing evidence:
He will be hoping the media does that for him.
UPDATE
I note that Howes doesn’t defend the deal:
===Cleaners working in low-paid jobs were not told of an agreement between a union and their employer that inflated the union’s membership numbers but cut their wages, the trade unions royal commission has heard.But this presents a dilemma for the Turnbull Government, which has so far said almost nothing about the evidence unfolding against Shorten. Turnbull wants to project niceness and optimism. But here is a valid and important reason to put in the boot and hold Shorten to account.
The Australian Workers’ Union (AWU) struck a deal with major cleaning contractor Cleanevent in 2010 to keep casual cleaners on lower rates of pay and save the company $1.5 million in salary costs, the commission heard on Monday. In return, Cleanevent would pay the AWU $25,000 a year as membership fees for casual cleaners.
The Cleanevent senior executive who gave final sign-off on the agreement, Julianne Page, at first told the commission she could not explain why an email from the company’s head of HR said the union would not agree to having a trade-off for lower wages listed in the same document as a payment for membership.
In a May, 2010 email to Ms Page, HR executive Michael Robinson wrote: ‘It would be crazy for the union to put that down on a page and to be honest I wouldn’t feel happy with it being on the same document either.’
Ms Page told the court she supposed it ‘would look bad for the union’.
‘It would look like it was some sort of payoff,’ she said…
Cleanevent employees were not told of the arrangement, the court heard, and it was not explained in a 2010 Memorandum of Understanding that bound workers to the lower rates of pay of a 2006 agreement. They were also not told they had been signed up as union members, the court heard…
Internal Cleanevent emails tendered to the commission also show Mr Robinson discussing structuring pay rises to ‘make the AWU look fantastic to their members’.
‘If we agree to a 0% increase for these casuals and then give them a hit in year 2 and 3 the union can claim that because of their membership they went into bat for them and got them an increase, which will make the AWU look fantastic to their members and won’t hurt your bottom line,’ Mr Robinson wrote to colleagues including Ms Page during discussion of the agreement. The commission has heard previously that increased membership is an indicator of a successful union and can give it greater influence within the Australian Labor Party.
He will be hoping the media does that for him.
UPDATE
I note that Howes doesn’t defend the deal:
Former Australian Workers Union boss Paul Howes has claimed he can’t remember signing a 2010 agreement between the union and a cleaning company that failed to pay penalty rates for low-paid workers, adding it was not his “role to personally analyse” the “adequacy” of the deal.
Mr Howes, who succeeded Bill Shorten as National Secretary of the AWU in 2007, gave written testimony to the trade union royal commission today but does not explain why he signed off on the now infamous memorandum of understanding that left Cleanevent cleaners with below-award wages.
The 2010 deal extended a WorkChoices era industrial agreement. Unbenownst to the cleaners under the agreement the AWU also struck a secret side-deal with Cleanevent, who would pay the union $25,000 a year for three years for union membership for its casual workforce.
In his statement, Mr Howes testified he also had no knowledge of the side-deal until it was exposed by the trade union royal commission in May.
Who let in these refugees? Why?
Andrew Bolt October 20 2015 (10:20am)
Farhad Jabour, an Iranian “refugee”, killed police accountant Curtis Cheng while shouting “Allah is the greatest”.
Man Monis, an Iranian “refugee” and Islamist, staged the deadly Lindt cafe siege while professing support for the Islamic State..
Numan Haider, an Afghan “refugee” and IS recruit, stabbed two police in Melbourne.
Mohammad Ali Baryalei, an Afghan “refugee”, became a recruiter and fighter for IS.
Saney Edow Aweys, a Somalian “refugee”, plotted to attack the Holsworthy Army base.
Now the ABC interviews another refugee, this one from Afghanistan:
How did his family get admitted here?
===Man Monis, an Iranian “refugee” and Islamist, staged the deadly Lindt cafe siege while professing support for the Islamic State..
Numan Haider, an Afghan “refugee” and IS recruit, stabbed two police in Melbourne.
Mohammad Ali Baryalei, an Afghan “refugee”, became a recruiter and fighter for IS.
Saney Edow Aweys, a Somalian “refugee”, plotted to attack the Holsworthy Army base.
Now the ABC interviews another refugee, this one from Afghanistan:
The 19-year-old, who knew Parramatta police HQ killer Farhad Jabar, has been a member of a small group of young Islamic State supporters in western Sydney under the scopes of anti-terrorist officers.
“Everyone wants to die for Allah, we all want to live the best life in the hereafter and want to make it to the top of the seven levels of jannah (paradise),” Hamza told the ABC last night…
In the ABC’s 7.30 program last night, it was also revealed he is close friends with Raban Alou whom police allege gave the gun to teen killer Jabar and who is charged with helping commission the shooting murder of NSW police accountant Curtis Cheng.
Hamza also knew Jabar and the pair studied the Koran together at the mosque, the program revealed…
Hamza says while he supports radical Islam, he does not want to cause harm in Australia.
When asked if he supported Islamic State, he replied: “I’m not going to answer that, because if I say yes, I’ll get in trouble, and if I say no, I’ll be a liar. I accept some of their opinions and I disagree with other opinions.”
Hamza supports beheadings in Syria and Iraq and believes strict sharia law should be implemented across the world.
“What’s happening overseas? Sharia is expanding: people that steal get their hand chopped off; people that kill, they need four witnesses and they die; people that smoke drugs, there’s no cigarette, there’s no alcohol, there’s no brothels.”
How did his family get admitted here?
This Western Sydney teenager came to Australia as a 10-year-old Afghan refugee and soon after, his brothers became involved in crime gangs. One brother is serving 24 years in Australia’s highest-security jail, the SuperMax, for a brutal gang murder.Then there’s this, from this same “refugee”:
SEAN RUBINSZTEIN-DUNLOP: Why are you finding it so hard to say that the murder of Curtis Cheng was a tragedy for him and his family?Which reckless politicians have supervised the “refugee” programs which have admitted such danger to this country? They congratulate themselves on their superior morality and compassion, no doubt, but observe the consequences.
ANONYMOUS ISLAMIC STATE SUPPORTER: Because they don’t say anything about the Muslims, so why should I say - why should I please them, you know? Why should I please the kafir - the disbelievers? Why should I show that, oh, yeah, I care about them? Which I don’t.
Why is the foul-mouthed Lawler still on the bench?
Andrew Bolt October 20 2015 (7:01am)
There are many reasons I don’t want Michael Lawler to be a vice-president of our Fair Work Commission, determining the fates of bosses and workers with the power of a judge.
There’s the company he keeps - a partner charged with fraud.
There’s the nine months of paid sick leave he’s taken to defend that partner.
There’s the strange relationship with a rich and senile man who’s now rewritten his willin favour of Lawler’s partner.
There’s the attempt to transfer assets on the eve of a court case.
There’s his admission that he secretly recorded his boss, FWA president Iain Ross, probably illegally.
And here’s another reason:
===There’s the company he keeps - a partner charged with fraud.
There’s the nine months of paid sick leave he’s taken to defend that partner.
There’s the strange relationship with a rich and senile man who’s now rewritten his willin favour of Lawler’s partner.
There’s the attempt to transfer assets on the eve of a court case.
There’s his admission that he secretly recorded his boss, FWA president Iain Ross, probably illegally.
And here’s another reason:
The term “c--t-struck” left the lips of the embattled Vice President of the Fair Work Commission Michael Lawler - a man on a $430,000 taxpayer-funded salary.Why is this man on the bench?
Lawler used the phrase to describe how he feared he would be portrayed when his relationship with former head of the Health Services Union, Jackson, was made public. Jackson was found guilty in a civil case that ended in August of misusing her position as head of the union to fraudulently gain financial advantage and was ordered to pay about $1.4 million.
“I’ll be characterised as that scumbag, crook, fraudster, and, at the very best, somebody who’s been bewitched by an evil harridan, namely Kathy [Jackson],” Lawler told ABC journalist Caro Meldrum-Hanna. “That I’m c-nt-struck and that I have been utterly taken in by somebody who’s a serious crook,” he said.
ABC gets its friends to check its bias
Andrew Bolt October 20 2015 (6:41am)
Tony Thomas documents how the ABC has stacked the latest two inquiries into its outrageous bias:
===Two inquiries into the ABC’s professionalism are due for release shortly: the Ray Martin report on Q&A and Fiona Stanley’s long-overdue examination of science coverage…Meanwhile, the ABC’s green bias continues. Former Labor minister Gary Johns:
The report on Q&A ... is led by one-time Q&A panellist and current ABC fan Ray Martin, who has been teamed with former SBS managing director Shaun Brown. It was prompted by the June 22 grandstanding on Q&A by ABC-invited questioner Zaky Mallah, who had earlier been convicted and done hard time for threatening to kill security officers....
Barely one week after Martin’s appointment, he ... said host Tony Jones was as tough on the previous Labor government as on the Coalition. Some of the “rants and raves” about Q&A had been “crazy”, Martin continued, saying that he hoped his audit would bring some balance to the debate.
Capping off what many will see as a remarkable display of bias, he further suggested the Coalition had been beating up its criticism of Zaky Mallah and Q&A as a pre-election ploy. Any ethical organisation would have replaced Martin to preserve the inquiry’s credibility. Not the ABC, but....
Let’s turn now to Fiona Stanley’s pending report on ABC science, especially climate coverage....People just assumed the inquiry would be independent, but the ABC speedily appointed one of its own board members, Fiona Stanley, to head the inquiry.
What are the chances of Stanley giving the ABC a stern report sheet?… Two of her inquiry panel members – we kid you not – are ex-Media Watch compere and climate alarmist Jonathan Holmes and ex-ABC Triple J comedian Adam Spencer....
Stanley, who has a distinguished background in epidemiology, paediatrics and Aboriginal health, has a new career as a climate doomster and public speaker, for which she charges as much as $15,000 per appearance....
In April last year, mid-way in the ABC inquiry into the impartiality and accuracy of the ABC’s climate coverage, she actually compared climate sceptics with child abusers! “The way we are living on this planet is unsustainable, and that’s why I’m worried for my children, and my grandchildren and their children,” she said. By analogy, our own great-grandparents circa 1900 should have been worrying about threats to you and me in 2015..”.
ABC national television news last week reported that the Adani-owned Carmichael coalmine, rail and port project in the Galilee Basin, central Queensland, had received environmental clearance from the federal government.
It used visual footage of the site supplied by Greenpeace, including of a most unlikely lily pond. It gave a greenie activist from Mackay a free run to bag the project for its impact on climate change, and it interviewed a “financial analyst” who was an avowed greenie. The news was a sham.
The national broadcaster should have provided viewers with context, perspective and balance. Instead, it framed the story as: big bruising coal versus little defenceless environment…
Using Greenpeace footage shows how far the ABC’s moral compass has strayed.. I wonder whether the ABC actually verified that the lily pond was in the vicinity of the Carmichael mine and proposed rail line… A map of the region also would be essential for perspective to enable the viewer to gain an idea of the immense distance from centres of population. There is a reason; the region is virtually uninhabitable....
Then the ABC allowed a greenie from Mackay to slip into the conversation a dig at greenhouse gas emissions as reason alone to stop the mine. The trouble is there is no legal basis on which to do so, and the ABC should know it.... It was not possible to prove, for example, that stopping a mine would reduce greenhouse gas emissions. In fact, depending on the replacement coal sourced, such replacement coal could increase the level of emissions.
As for balance, the ABC wheeled out its preferred “financial analyst” to inform viewers that coal was a bad investment. Tim Buckley once worked for Citigroup. He converted some years ago to the green cause, which is his business, literally.
Abbott shows table manners
Andrew Bolt October 19 2015 (9:56pm)
Whoever actually broke it should pay, but a decent and appropriate offer is made:
===Tony Abbott says he will pay for the cost of an Italian marble table that was seriously damaged during a party in the prime ministerial suite on the night he lost the Liberal leadership.Can this ludicrous and vindictive witch-hunt of Abbott now end?
“On the night of the leadership change I hosted drinks in the cabinet ante-room for staff and colleagues. During this event, a coffee table was damaged,” Mr Abbott said in a statement tonight.
“I have asked my office to have the Department of Parliamentary Services invoice me for the value of the table.” “It was my event so I take responsibility for it.”
Senior federal bureaucrats have been accused of behaving like characters in the TV comedy Utopia for refusing to reveal what brands of wine and beer former prime minister Tony Abbott selected to supply whilst entertaining guests at personal functions.
During heated exchanges during a Senate estimates hearing, Labor’s Penny Wong became exasperated with members of the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet, claiming it was “one of the worst standards I have ever seen” from public officials in her 10 years in Parliament.
Why is Lawler still on the bench?
Andrew Bolt October 19 2015 (9:55pm)
I have no idea why this bloke is still a Fair Work commissioner or even why he thinks he’s entitled to be:
===Michael Lawler, the Fair Work Commission vice president and partner of former HSU union boss Kathy Jackson, secretly and potentially illegally recorded his own boss to protect his “name” against future accusations of wrongdoing.About time:
ABC’s Four Corners tonight revealed Mr Lawler recorded Iain Ross, the Fair Work Commission president, discussing Ms Jackson’s wellbeing… They also discuss Mr Lawler’s extended sick leave [of nine months in less than two years], during which he was paid.
“I think, um, your health is the first priority and there’s no, um, I mean I’ll take responsibility for any amounts of sick leave you, you seek, there’s no cap or anything like that.” It is illegal to record a person without their knowledge in NSW, according to the Surveillance Devices Act.
Employment Minister Michaelia Cash has appointed former Federal Court Judge Peter Heerey to investigate complaints against Fair Work Commission Vice President, Michael Lawler.
The official investigation follows a months-long investigation by The Australian that revealed in June that Mr Lawler had taken almost a year of sick leave while on full pay of $435,000 a year. The formal investigation is a first step in a process that ultimately could see Mr Lawler removed from his position on the basis of incapacity or misconduct…
Mr Lawler is the subject of investigation following alleged misconduct and allegations he inappropriately conducted demanding work for his partner and disgraced Health Services Union leader, Kathy Jackson, while he took the nine months paid sick leave. In August, the Federal Court ruled that Ms Jackson pay to the HSU the $1.4 million she misappropriated over a decade.
SHOOTING SANTA
Tim Blair – Monday, October 20, 2014 (1:28pm)
Tony Thomas reviews the latest example of warmy bloodlust:
If you have ever doubted that warmism endorses a preening, totalitarian disdain for the lives and rights of others, take up a copy of “Climate Change” by graphic novelist Philippe Squarzoni, who imagines how virtuous it would be to go berserk with an assault rifle in a shopping mall. And yes, he’s not joking.
It’s all part of a continuing theme.
Dickhead insult
Andrew Bolt October 20 2014 (5:46pm)
Brendan O’Connor’s pretence at being offended by a gendered insult is exposed by his own gendered insult, and a far more offensive one:
===Labor frontbenchers have attacked Finance Minister Mathias Cormann over his use of the insult “economic girly man” against Opposition Leader Bill Shorten, with one accusing him of ”sounding like a dickhead”.
Opposition employment spokesman Brendan O’Connor said the joke was on Senator Cormann, who had been left looking like a “bit of a dill” in his attempt to get a headline.
Clive Palmer to go to court over missing $10 billion
Andrew Bolt October 20 2014 (5:14pm)
Clive Palmer’s run of legal reverses continues - and this is one of the most serious:
===CLIVE Palmer has lost his bid to have Chinese-owned Sino Iron’s $10m fraud lawsuit against him tossed out of court.
Queensland Supreme Court judge David Jackson this morning announced he was dismissing the Palmer United Party’s leader’s strike-out application, meaning the high-profile matter will go to trial.
Disgruntled business partner Sino is suing Mr Palmer over the alleged dishonest payment of more than $10m in Chinese funds to Media Circus, an advertising company, and Cosmo Developments, a company associated with Mr Palmer. The resources businessman has denied all wrongdoing.
Thanks to The Book Searchers
Andrew Bolt October 20 2014 (9:19am)
I want to give The Book Searchers, an on-line bookseller in Sydney, a big rap.
I ordered two books on artist John Peter Russell through Abebooks, and The Book Searchers popped them in the mail. They never arrived.
I offered to pay half the cost of finding replacements, since I didn’t want to rip off a small business. Instead, The Book Searchers tracked down two other copies and mailed them out without charge or complaint Thanks very much indeed.
And the books? Great reads on a truly remarkable Australian, a friend of Van Gogh and many other great artists.
===I ordered two books on artist John Peter Russell through Abebooks, and The Book Searchers popped them in the mail. They never arrived.
I offered to pay half the cost of finding replacements, since I didn’t want to rip off a small business. Instead, The Book Searchers tracked down two other copies and mailed them out without charge or complaint Thanks very much indeed.
And the books? Great reads on a truly remarkable Australian, a friend of Van Gogh and many other great artists.
Claim: MH17 shot down by pro-Russian militias with Ukrainian missile
Andrew Bolt October 20 2014 (7:13am)
Russia supplied the military support but did it actually supply the missile?
===Germany’s BND foreign intelligence agency has concluded that pro-Russian rebels are to blame for the downing of Malaysia Airline MH17 in Ukraine in July, Der Spiegel weekly reported on Sunday, the first European agency to say so…
Gerhard Schindler, president of the BND, told a secret parliamentary committee on security affairs earlier this month that separatists had used a Russian Buk missile defense system from a Ukrainian base to fire a rocket that exploded directly next to the Malyasia Air plane, Der Spiegel reported.
“It was pro-Russian separatists,” the magazine quoted him as saying. The BND concluded the rebels were to blame after a detailed analysis based on satellite and other photos, Der Spiegel said.
The high price of green alarmism
Andrew Bolt October 20 2014 (6:12am)
HEAR that rain on the roof last week? That’s nature telling us our politicians have been idiots. I’m talking about the politicians who let themselves be fooled into thinking it never would rain like this again.
I’m talking about politicians who listened to the likes of Tim Flannery, the 2007 Australian of the Year and then head of the Climate Commission.
From 2005 to 2008, Flannery, the global warming guru, made a string of outlandish claims like these:
“So even the rain that falls isn’t actually going to fill our dams and our river systems ...
“In Adelaide, Sydney and Brisbane, water supplies are so low they need desalinated water urgently, possibly in as little as 18 months ...
“There is a fair chance Perth will be the 21st century’s first ghost metropolis.”
Flannery wasn’t alone, of course.
(Read full article here.)
===I’m talking about politicians who listened to the likes of Tim Flannery, the 2007 Australian of the Year and then head of the Climate Commission.
From 2005 to 2008, Flannery, the global warming guru, made a string of outlandish claims like these:
“So even the rain that falls isn’t actually going to fill our dams and our river systems ...
“In Adelaide, Sydney and Brisbane, water supplies are so low they need desalinated water urgently, possibly in as little as 18 months ...
“There is a fair chance Perth will be the 21st century’s first ghost metropolis.”
Flannery wasn’t alone, of course.
(Read full article here.)
Plibersek plays lethal politics with ebola
Andrew Bolt October 20 2014 (6:04am)
EBOLA is ghastly enough. But must we also suffer the moral posturing of politicians such as Tanya Plibersek?
Plibersek, Labor’s deputy leader, has fallen sick to the disease of the modern Left, wanting to seem good by demanding fine-sounding things that, oops, won’t actually work.
Or in this case could kill.
Plibersek is berating the Abbott Government for not doing even more to help fight the latest Ebola outbreak and contain it to the three African countries — Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone — where most of the 4500 deaths have occurred.
“Australia must significantly increase its efforts, immediately,” she insisted.
If Plibersek just meant increasing the $18 million offered so far by the Government, she’d probably be right.
But she wants doctors, nurses and paramedics sent, too.
“We’ve got skilled Australians, who’ve trained for many years to provide exactly the kind of assistance that West Africa is crying out for and our government is saying they won’t assist them to go there.”
In fact, 20 to 30 Australian volunteers are already in Africa, courageously fighting Ebola, and non-government organisations would welcome more.
But there’s a risk. Doctors Without Borders, for instance, say nine of its staff are already dead from Ebola. More than 230 health workers, in all, have died.
(Read full article here.)
===Plibersek, Labor’s deputy leader, has fallen sick to the disease of the modern Left, wanting to seem good by demanding fine-sounding things that, oops, won’t actually work.
Or in this case could kill.
Plibersek is berating the Abbott Government for not doing even more to help fight the latest Ebola outbreak and contain it to the three African countries — Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone — where most of the 4500 deaths have occurred.
“Australia must significantly increase its efforts, immediately,” she insisted.
If Plibersek just meant increasing the $18 million offered so far by the Government, she’d probably be right.
But she wants doctors, nurses and paramedics sent, too.
“We’ve got skilled Australians, who’ve trained for many years to provide exactly the kind of assistance that West Africa is crying out for and our government is saying they won’t assist them to go there.”
In fact, 20 to 30 Australian volunteers are already in Africa, courageously fighting Ebola, and non-government organisations would welcome more.
But there’s a risk. Doctors Without Borders, for instance, say nine of its staff are already dead from Ebola. More than 230 health workers, in all, have died.
(Read full article here.)
The workers, united, will pay for their bosses
Andrew Bolt October 20 2014 (6:03am)
More from the union whose members just paid and paid for perks:
===WHISTLEBLOWER Kathy Jackson made a secret deal with the now jailed fraudster Michael Williamson to pay $240,000 over two years to one of her union allies — with a requirement that the recipient of the money do no work.
Under the confidential arrangement, Jackson ally and friend Jamie Martorana agreed to resign from his position as assistant divisional secretary of the Health Services Union in October 2010. For the next two years, however, he remained on the union’s payroll, with pay-as-you-go tax deducted from his gross weekly “wages” of $2307.69 as though he was still a regular full-time employee turning up for work.
Whose private thoughts wouldn’t be a scandal? The real disgrace in the Barry Spurr affair
Andrew Bolt October 20 2014 (6:03am)
Henry Ergas on a gross invasion of privacy that exposes some hypocrites:
THE Barry Spurr affair is terrifying in the shoddy treatment of Spurr; in what it says about our universities; and in the lack of outrage that either has evoked.
What is certain is that there was a gross invasion of Spurr’s privacy. To that must be added the likelihood that his emails were obtained illegally and used when it was known, or should have been known, that that is how they had been obtained.
Moreover, that use was by a publication, New Matilda, that had only recently committed the same offence; and whose journalists hypocritically denounced the wrongdoing at the News of the World and, since then, have attacked the government’s metadata proposals, with all their checks and balances, as an assault on privacy.
Of course, one expects nothing better from Wendy Bacon, who demands a moral right to invade the private emails of others without providing public access to her own. But it is disappointing that Bill Shorten, who repeatedly invoked the presumption of innocence to shield Craig Thomson and Peter Slipper, failed to show the same concern for Spurr.
And it is a scandal that the University of Sydney has suspended Spurr despite there being no claim, much less evidence, that his teaching, supervision and research have been anything but exemplary. To make matters worse, the university has set aside Spurr’s explanation that the emails were parodies without according Spurr the prior opportunity to have that explanation tested.
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Cotton Candy SunriseAfter pulling an all nighter along the Marin Headlands, I was rewarded with this fantastic foggy sunrise over San Francisco and it's bridges. I was also rewarded by seeing so many of the awesome local photographers I have grown to know so well and who I delight in seeing and talking to. There was far too little time to socialize however with this pastel scene unfolding before us. It was good seeing you; John Louie, and his brother Andrew, Steve-Maxx Landeros, Toby Harriman, David Yu, Wilson Lam, Amy Heiden, and so many others! I look forward to seeing what you came away with on this beautiful morning.
Cheers!
~M@ — at Hawk Hill.
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http://www.theage.com.au/national/defence-all-at-sea-on-new-submarines-20131018-2vsd6.html
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Resettlement and Recompense Little notice has been paid to the fate of the 850,000 Jewish refugees from the Arab states, about 550,000 of whom were resettled in Israel. Similarly, the resettlement of most of the Palestinian refugees in the host Arab countries, creating a de facto population exchange, has been overlooked.
http://www.meforum.org/3643/palestinian-refugee-problem
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http://www.israpundit.com/archives/57990
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http://humansarefree.com/2013/10...
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Is Antisemitism Back in Europe? The rise of Muslim antisemitism in Europe is well documented—and widely ignored.
John Allen Gay | October 18, 2013
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Charles Krauthammer: Deal with an Iranian moderate? The search has been never-ending for good reason
http://www.JewishWorldReview.com | The search, now 30 years old, for Iranian “moderates” goes on. Amid the enthusiasm of the latest sighting, it’s worth remembering that the highlight of the Iran-contra arms-for-hostages debacle was thesecret trip to Tehran taken by Robert McFarlane, President Reagan’s former national security adviser. He brought a key-shaped cake symbolizing the new relations he was opening with the “moderates.”
We know how that ended.
Three decades later, the mirage reappears in the form of Hassan Rouhani. Strange résumé for a moderate: 35 years of unswervingly loyal service to the Islamic Republic as a close aide to Ayatollahs Khomeini and Khamenei. Moreover, Rouhani was one of only six presidential candidates, another 678 having been disqualified by the regime as ideologically unsound. That puts him in the 99th centile for fealty.
Rouhani is Khamenei’s agent but, with a smile and style, he’s now hailed as the face of Iranian moderation. Why? Because Rouhani wants better relations with the West.
Well, what leader would not want relief from Western sanctions that have sunk Iran’s economy, devalued its currency and caused widespread hardship? The test of moderation is not what you want but what you’re willing to give. After all, sanctions were not slapped on Iran for amusement. It was to enforce multiple U.N. Security Council resolutions demanding a halt to uranium enrichment.
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http://elderofziyon.blogspot.com.au/2013/09/the-rabbits-who-caused-all-trouble-and.html#.UmOmThZlpa8
By James Thurber, first published in The New Yorker on August 26, 1939:
Within the memory of the youngest child there was a family of rabbits who lived near a pack of wolves. The wolves announced that they did not like the way the rabbits were living. (The wolves were crazy about the way they themselves were living, because it was the only way to live.) One night several wolves were killed in an earthquake and this was blamed on the rabbits, for it is well known that rabbits pound on the ground with their hind legs and cause earthquakes. On another night one of the wolves was killed by a bolt of lightning and this was also blamed on the rabbits, for it is well known that lettuce-eaters cause lightning. The wolves threatened to civilize the rabbits if they didn't behave, and the rabbits decided to run away to a desert island. But the other animals, who lived at a great distance, shamed them saying, "You must stay where you are and be brave. This is no world for escapists. If the wolves attack you, we will come to your aid in all probability." So the rabbits continued to live near the wolves and one day there was a terrible flood which drowned a great many wolves. This was blamed on the rabbits, for it is well known that carrot-nibblers with long ears cause floods. The wolves descended on the rabbits, for their own good, and imprisoned them in a dark cave, for their own protection.
When nothing was heard about the rabbits for some weeks, the other animals demanded to know what had happened to them. The wolves replied that the rabbits had been eaten and since they had been eaten the affair was a purely internal matter. But the other animals warned that they might possibly unite against the wolves unless some reason was given for the destruction of the rabbits. So the wolves gave them one. "They were trying to escape," said the wolves, "and, as you know, this is no world for escapists."
Moral: Run, don't walk, to the nearest desert island.
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I oppose a Palestinian state that is not open to all peoples everywhere to live with standards of justice that are high and compassionate - ed===
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SEPTEMBER 29, 2013, , By Charles Abelsohn, TOI The following article was sent to the spokesman for Baroness Catherine Ashton. It was not acknowledged. BARONESS ASHTON: PLEASE ENLIGHTEN WHY, WHEN ISRAEL IS INVOLVED, THE EU CHANGES THE LEGAL TO ILLEGAL AND THE ILLEGAL TO LEGAL. Sometimes one wonders exactly what the European Union [EU] wants from and expects of …
===Pastor Rick Warren
The more I focus on me,
the more unhappy I'll be.
See Philippians 2:4
the more unhappy I'll be.
See Philippians 2:4
=
EVERY HOUR ONLINE I'm teaching "Happiness Can Be Learned" Phil.2:19-30. JOIN ME NOW. Notes and study app are online too: http://bit.ly/ZvjGI9
===Hold a baby .. great skill! - ed
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*bored (sp) .. I like to think that the shooters aren't Islamic .. but they claim to be, and those who know seem to agree.
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< Disappointment as Richmond brothel fails to arouse winning bid
When this Melbourne brothel opened on Saturday it was the first time in its long and colourful history that nobody came.
Well - some people came. To the auction. But not many. There was only one bid of a tickle over $1.4 million, but it was not nearly enough to sell the property, which until July was trading as Ladies For Gentlemen.>
http://theage.domain.com.au/real-estate-news/disappointment-as-richmond-brothel-fails-to-arouse-winning-bid-20131019-2vtxs.html
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Holly Sarah Nguyen
TRUTH for the day: Life is too short for dead in jobs, people, places and things. If there is no peace, fulfillment, appreciation, love, happiness, uplifting, laughter or passion then it needs to change or go. Have a fabulous day!
Harsh wisdom .. it is wise .. patience can sometimes be taken advantage of. But it is good not to give up on *everything* .. prioritise ;) ed
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<.. I just wish Carr would fcuk off and drop dead. He makes me more sick than all of the ALP put together. A do-nothing premier and still being paid for doing even less.>
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Eric Kalemen
Training time!! — at Scare-Ric Circuit Session
=== - 1548 – The city of Nuestra Señora de La Paz (Our Lady of Peace) is founded by Alonso de Mendoza by appointment of the king of Spain and Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V.
- 1572 – Relief of Goes: Cristóbal de Mondragón, with 3000 soldiers of the Spanish Tercios, relieves the siege of the city.
- 1720 – Caribbean pirate Calico Jack is captured by the Royal Navy.
- 1740 – Maria Theresa takes the throne of Austria. France, Prussia, Bavaria and Saxony refuse to honour the Pragmatic Sanction and the War of the Austrian Succession begins.
- 1781 – The Patent of Toleration, providing limited freedom of worship, is approved in Habsburg Monarchy.
- 1803 – The United States Senate ratifies the Louisiana Purchase.
- 1805 – General Mack's army surrenders to Napoleon at Ulm after a few skirmishes.
- 1818 – The Convention of 1818 is signed between the United States and the United Kingdom, which settles the Canada–United States border on the 49th parallel for most of its length.
- 1827 – In the Battle of Navarino, a combined Turkish and Egyptian fleet is defeated by British, French, and Russian naval forces in the last significant battle fought with wooden sailing ships.
- 1873 – Yale, Princeton, Columbia, and Rutgers universities draft the first code of American football rules.
- 1883 – Peru and Chile sign the Treaty of Ancón, by which the Tarapacá province is ceded to the latter, bringing an end to Peru's involvement in the War of the Pacific.
- 1904 – Chile and Bolivia sign the Treaty of Peace and Friendship, delimiting the border between the two countries.
- 1910 – The hull of the RMS Olympic, sister-ship to the ill-fated RMS Titanic, is launched from the Harland and Wolff shipyardin Belfast, Northern Ireland.
- 1935 – The Long March, a mammoth retreat undertaken by the armed forces of the Chinese Communist Party a year prior, ends.
- 1939 – Pope Pius XII publishes his first major encyclical, entitled Summi Pontificatus.
- 1941 – World War II: Thousands of civilians in Kragujevac in German-occupied Serbia are murdered in the Kragujevac massacre.
- 1944 – The Soviet Army and Yugoslav Partisans liberate Belgrade, the capital of Yugoslavia
- 1944 – Liquefied natural gas leaks from storage tanks in Cleveland and then explodes; the explosion and resulting fire level 30 blocks and kill 130.
- 1944 – American general Douglas MacArthur fulfills his promise to return to the Philippines when he commands an Allied assault on the islands, reclaiming them from the Japanese during the Second World War.
- 1946 – Government of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam decides that October 20 is Vietnam Women's Day.
- 1947 – The House Un-American Activities Committee begins its investigation into Communist infiltration of Hollywood, resulting in a blacklist that prevents some from working in the industry for years.
- 1947 – The United States of America and the Islamic Republic of Pakistan establish diplomatic relations for the first time.
- 1951 – The "Johnny Bright incident" occurs in Stillwater, Oklahoma
- 1952 – Governor Evelyn Baring declares a state of emergency in Kenya and begins arresting hundreds of suspected leaders of the Mau Mau Uprising, including Jomo Kenyatta, the future first President of Kenya.
- 1961 – The Soviet Union performs the first armed test of a submarine-launched ballistic missile, launching an R-13 from a Golf-class submarine.
- 1962 – People's Republic of China launches simultaneous offensives in Ladakh and across the McMahon Line, igniting the Sino-Indian War.
- 1968 – Former First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy marries Greek shipping tycoon Aristotle Onassis.
- 1970 – Siad Barre declares Somalia a socialist state.
- 1973 – "Saturday Night Massacre": United States President Richard Nixon fires U.S. Attorney General Elliot Richardson and Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus after they refuse to fire Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox, who is finally fired by Robert Bork.
- 1973 – The Sydney Opera House is opened by Elizabeth II after 14 years of construction work.
- 1976 – The ferry George Prince is struck by a ship while crossing the Mississippi River between Destrehan and Luling, Louisiana. Seventy-eight passengers and crew die, and only 18 people aboard the ferry survive.
- 1977 – Rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd's plane crashes.
- 1981 – Two police officers and an armored car guard are killed during an armed robbery in Rockland County, New York, carried out by members of the Black Liberation Army and Weather Underground.
- 1982 – During the UEFA Cup match between FC Spartak Moscow and HFC Haarlem, 66 people are crushed to death in the Luzhniki disaster.
- 1991 – The Oakland Hills firestorm kills 25 and destroys 3,469 homes and apartments, causing more than $2 billion in damage.
- 1991 – A 6.8 Mw earthquake strikes the Uttarkashi region of India, killing more than 1,000 people.
- 2011 – Libyan Civil War: National Transitional Council rebel forces capture ousted Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi in his hometown of Sirte and kill him shortly thereafter.
- 1475 – Giovanni di Bernardo Rucellai Italian poet and playwright (d. 1525)
- 1496 – Claude, Duke of Guise (d. 1550)
- 1616 – Thomas Bartholin, Danish physician, mathematician, and theologian (d. 1680)
- 1620 – Aelbert Cuyp, Dutch painter (d. 1691)
- 1632 – Christopher Wren, English physicist, mathematician, and architect, designed St Paul's Cathedral (d. 1723)
- 1660 – Robert Bertie, 1st Duke of Ancaster and Kesteven, English politician, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster (d. 1723)
- 1677 – Stanisław I of Poland (d. 1766)
- 1700 – Charlotte Aglaé d'Orléans, French wife of Francesco III d'Este, Duke of Modena (d. 1761)
- 1711 – Timothy Ruggles, American lawyer, jurist, and politician, (d. 1795)
- 1719 – Gottfried Achenwall, German historian, economist, and jurist (d. 1772)
- 1740 – Isabelle de Charrière, Dutch author and poet (d. 1805)
- 1759 – Chauncey Goodrich, American lawyer and politician, 8th Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut (d. 1815)
- 1780 – Pauline Bonaparte, French sister of Napoleon (d. 1825)
- 1784 – Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston, English academic and politician, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom(d. 1865)
- 1785 – George Ormerod, English historian and author (d. 1873)
- 1790 – Patrick Matthew. Scottish farmer and biologist (d. 1874)
- 1801 – Melchior Berri, Swiss architect and educator, designed the Natural History Museum of Basel (d. 1854)
- 1808 – Karl Andree, German geographer and journalist (d. 1875)
- 1819 – Báb, Iranian religious leader, founded Bábism (d. 1850)
- 1819 – Karol Mikuli, Ukrainian-Polish pianist, composer, and conductor (d. 1897)
- 1822 – Thomas Hughes, English lawyer and judge (d. 1896)
- 1832 – Constantin Lipsius, German architect and theorist (d. 1894)
- 1847 – Frits Thaulow, Norwegian painter (d. 1906)
- 1854 – Arthur Rimbaud, French soldier and poet (d. 1891)
- 1858 – John Burns, English union leader and politician, President of the Board of Trade (d. 1943)
- 1859 – John Dewey, American psychologist and philosopher (d. 1952)
- 1864 – James F. Hinkle, American banker and politician, 6th Governor of New Mexico (d. 1951)
- 1873 – Nellie McClung, Canadian politician and activist (d. 1951)
- 1874 – Charles Ives, American composer (d. 1954)
- 1882 – Margaret Dumont, American actress (d. 1965)
- 1882 – Bela Lugosi, Hungarian-American actor (d. 1956)
- 1885 – Jelly Roll Morton, American pianist, composer, and bandleader (Red Hot Peppers and New Orleans Rhythm Kings) (d. 1941)
- 1887 – Prince Yasuhiko Asaka of Japan (d. 1981)
- 1889 – Johann Gruber, Austrian priest and saint (d. 1944)
- 1890 – Aleksander Maaker, Estonian bagpipe player (d. 1968)
- 1891 – Samuel Flagg Bemis, American historian and author (d. 1973)
- 1891 – James Chadwick, English physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1974)
- 1893 – Charley Chase, American actor, director, and screenwriter (d. 1940)
- 1894 – Olive Thomas, American model and actress (d. 1920)
- 1895 – Rex Ingram, American actor (d. 1969)
- 1897 – Yi Un, South Korean general (d. 1970)
- 1900 – Wayne Morse, American lieutenant, lawyer, and politician (d. 1974)
- 1901 – Frank Churchill, American film composer (d. 1942)
- 1901 – Adelaide Hall, American-English singer, actress, and dancer (d. 1993)
- 1904 – Tommy Douglas, Scottish-Canadian minister and politician, 7th Premier of Saskatchewan (d. 1986)
- 1904 – Enolia McMillan, American educator and activist (d. 2006)
- 1904 – Anna Neagle, English actress, singer, and producer (d. 1986)
- 1907 – Arlene Francis, American actress and television personality (d. 2001)
- 1909 – Carla Laemmle, American actress and photographer (d. 2014)
- 1909 – Yasushi Sugiyama, Japanese painter (d. 1993)
- 1910 – Chen Liting, Chinese director and playwright (d. 2013)
- 1910 – Hopper Read, English cricketer (d. 2000)
- 1910 – Bob Sheppard, American sportscaster (d. 2010)
- 1912 – Ruhi Su, Turkish singer-songwriter (d. 1985)
- 1913 – Grandpa Jones, American singer-songwriter and banjo player (d. 1998)
- 1913 – J. Michael Hagopian, Turkish-American director and producer (d. 2010)
- 1914 – Fayard Nicholas, American actor, dancer, and choreographer (d. 2006)
- 1917 – Stéphane Hessel, German-French activist and diplomat (d. 2013)
- 1917 – Jean-Pierre Melville, French actor, director, producer, and screenwriter (d. 1973)
- 1918 – Martin Drewes, German soldier and pilot (d. 2013)
- 1918 – Robert Lochner, American-German soldier and journalist (d. 2003)
- 1919 – Tracy Hall, American chemist and academic (d. 2008)
- 1920 – Nick Cardy, American illustrator (d. 2013)
- 1920 – Fanny de Sivers, Estonian-French linguist and academic (d. 2011)
- 1920 – Siddhartha Shankar Ray, Indian lawyer and politician, Chief Minister of West Bengal (d. 2010)
- 1921 – Manny Ayulo, American racing driver (d. 1955)
- 1921 – Hans Warren, Dutch poet and author (d. 2001)
- 1922 – John Anderson, American actor (d. 1992)
- 1922 – Franco Ventriglia, American opera singer (d. 2012)
- 1923 – Robert Craft, American conductor and musicologist
- 1924 – Robert Peters, American poet, playwright, and critic (d. 2014)
- 1925 – Art Buchwald, American soldier and journalist (d. 2007)
- 1925 – Tom Dowd, American record producer and engineer (d. 2002)
- 1925 – Roger Hanin, Algerian-French actor, director, and screenwriter (d. 2015)
- 1926 – Edward Douglas-Scott-Montagu, 3rd Baron Montagu of Beaulieu, English lieutenant and politician, founded the National Motor Museum (d. 2015)
- 1927 – Joyce Brothers, American psychologist, author, and actress (d. 2013)
- 1927 – Gunturu Seshendra Sarma, Indian poet and critic (d. 2007)
- 1928 – Michael O'Donnell, English physician, author, and journalist
- 1931 – Richard Caliguiri, American lawyer and politician, 54th Mayor of Pittsburgh (d. 1988)
- 1931 – Mickey Mantle, American baseball player and sportscaster (d. 1995)
- 1931 – Ken Morrison, English businessman
- 1932 – Rosey Brown, American football player and coach (d. 2004)
- 1932 – William Christopher, American actor and singer
- 1932 – Rokurō Naya, Japanese voice actor (d. 2014)
- 1933 – Barrie Chase, American actress and dancer
- 1934 – Bill Chase, American trumpet player (d. 1974)
- 1934 – Eddie Harris, American saxophonist (d. 1996)
- 1935 – Jerry Orbach, American actor and singer (d. 2004)
- 1936 – Bobby Seale, American activist, co-founded the Black Panther Party
- 1937 – Cancio Garcia, Filipino lawyer and jurist (d. 2013)
- 1937 – Wanda Jackson, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1937 – Juan Marichal, Dominican baseball player and sportscaster
- 1937 – Emma Tennant, English author
- 1938 – Emidio Greco, Italian director and screenwriter (d. 2012)
- 1938 – Iain Macmillan, Scottish photographer and educator (d. 2006)
- 1939 – Patrick Hughes, English painter, illustrator, and photographer
- 1940 – Kathy Kirby, English singer (d. 2011)
- 1940 – Robert Pinsky, American poet and critic
- 1942 – Earl Hindman, American actor (d. 2003)
- 1942 – Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard, German biologist and geneticist, Nobel Prize laureate
- 1942 – Bart Zoet, Dutch cyclist (d. 1992)
- 1943 – Dunja Vejzović, Croatian soprano and actress
- 1944 – Nalin de Silva, Sri Lankan physicist and philosopher
- 1944 – David Mancuso, American party planner, created The Loft
- 1946 – Diana Gittins, American-English sociologist, author, and academic
- 1946 – Lewis Grizzard, American comedian and author (d. 1994)
- 1946 – Elfriede Jelinek, Austrian author and playwright, Nobel Prize laureate
- 1946 – Richard Loncraine, English director and screenwriter
- 1946 – Lucien Van Impe, Belgian cyclist
- 1946 – Chris Woodhead, English civil servant and academic (d. 2015)
- 1948 – Sandra Dickinson, American-English actress and composer
- 1948 – Piet Hein Donner, Dutch jurist and politician, Dutch Minister of Justice
- 1948 – Melih Gökçek, Turkish journalist and politician, Mayor of Ankara
- 1949 – Valeriy Borzov, Ukrainian-Russian sprinter
- 1950 – Tom Petty, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer
- 1950 – William Russ, American actor and director
- 1951 – Al Greenwood, American keyboard player
- 1951 – Patrick Hall, English lawyer and politician
- 1951 – Ken Ham, Australian-American evangelist
- 1951 – Leif Pagrotsky, Swedish businessman and politician
- 1951 – Claudio Ranieri, Italian footballer and manager
- 1952 – Melanie Mayron, American actress and director
- 1952 – Derek Ridgers, English photographer and art director
- 1953 – Keith Hernandez, American baseball player and sportscaster
- 1953 – Richard McWilliam, American businessman and philanthropist, co-founded the Upper Deck Company (d. 2013)
- 1953 – Bill Nunn, American actor
- 1954 – Steve Orich, American composer and conductor
- 1955 – Thomas Newman, American composer and conductor
- 1955 – David Profumo, English author and academic
- 1955 – Aaron Pryor, American boxer
- 1955 – Robert ten Brink, Dutch television host and actor
- 1956 – Danny Boyle, English director, producer, and screenwriter
- 1956 – Martin Taylor, English guitarist
- 1957 – Jane Bonham-Carter, Baroness Bonham-Carter of Yarnbury, English politician
- 1957 – Chris Cowdrey, English cricketer and sportscaster
- 1957 – Hilda Solis, American academic and politician, 25th United States Secretary of Labor
- 1958 – Valerie Faris, American director and producer
- 1958 – Lynn Flewelling, American author and academic
- 1958 – Scott Hall, American wrestler
- 1958 – Mark King, English singer-songwriter and bass player
- 1958 – Dave Krieg, American football player
- 1958 – Viggo Mortensen, American actor and producer
- 1958 – Ivo Pogorelić, Croatian pianist
- 1958 – Eric Scott, American actor
- 1959 – Mark Little, Australian comedian, actor, and screenwriter
- 1959 – Ole Hamre, Norwegian drummer, composer, and producer
- 1959 – Koichi Kawanishi, Japanese drummer
- 1960 – Konstantin Aseev, Russian chess player and trainer (d. 2004)
- 1960 – Lepa Brena, Bosnian singer and actress
- 1961 – Audun Kleive, Norwegian drummer and composer
- 1961 – Kate Mosse, English author and playwright
- 1961 – Ian Rush, Welsh footballer and manager
- 1961 – Les Stroud, Canadian director, producer, and harmonica player
- 1961 – Michie Tomizawa, Japanese voice actress and singer
- 1962 – David M. Evans, American director and screenwriter
- 1962 – Dave Wong, Hong Kong-Taiwanese singer-songwriter and actor
- 1963 – Julie Payette, Canadian engineer and astronaut
- 1963 – Nikos Tsiantakis, Greek footballer
- 1963 – Stan Valckx, Dutch footballer and manager
- 1964 – Kamala Harris, American lawyer and politician, 32nd Attorney General of California
- 1964 – Jim Sonefeld, American drummer
- 1964 – Tomoko Yamaguchi, Japanese actress and singer
- 1965 – Norman Blake, Scottish singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1965 – Mikhail Shtalenkov, Russian ice hockey player
- 1965 – William Zabka, American actor and producer
- 1966 – Fred Coury, American drummer
- 1966 – Allan Donald, South African cricketer and coach
- 1966 – Stefan Raab, German comedian, singer-songwriter, producer, and television host
- 1966 – Patrick Volkerding, American computer scientist and engineer, founded Slackware
- 1967 – Elizabeth Carling, English actress and singer
- 1967 – Luck Mervil, Haitian-Canadian singer-songwriter and actor
- 1967 – Kerrod Walters, Australian rugby league player
- 1967 – Kevin Walters, Australian rugby league player and coach
- 1968 – Susan Tully, English actress, director, and producer
- 1969 – Laurie Daley, Australian rugby league player and coach
- 1969 – Juan González, Puerto Rican-American baseball player
- 1969 – Labros Papakostas, Greek high jumper
- 1970 – Sander Boschker, Dutch footballer
- 1970 – Neil Heywood, English-Chinese businessman (d. 2011)
- 1970 – Aapo Ilves, Estonian poet and illustrator
- 1970 – Michelle Malkin, American blogger and author
- 1971 – Snoop Dogg, American rapper, producer, and actor
- 1971 – Eddie Jones, American basketball player
- 1971 – Kamiel Maase, Dutch runner
- 1971 – Dannii Minogue, Australian singer-songwriter and actress
- 1972 – Pie Geelen, Dutch swimmer
- 1972 – Will Greenwood, English rugby player and sportscaster
- 1972 – Brian Schatz, American academic and politician, 11th Lieutenant Governor of Hawaii
- 1974 – Bashar Rahal, Emirati-American actor and producer
- 1976 – Nikolaos Bacharidis, Greek footballer
- 1976 – Dan Fogler, American actor, director, producer, and screenwriter
- 1976 – Nicola Legrottaglie, Italian footballer and manager
- 1977 – Matt Jansen, English footballer and manager
- 1977 – Leila Josefowicz, Canadian-American violinist
- 1977 – Erko Saviauk, Estonian footballer
- 1977 – Samuel Witwer, American actor and singer
- 1978 – Virender Sehwag, Indian cricketer
- 1978 – Paul Wilson, Scottish bass player and songwriter
- 1979 – Vasyl Baranov, Ukrainian footballer
- 1979 – Paul Ifill, English footballer
- 1979 – John Krasinski, American actor, director, and producer
- 1979 – Paul O'Connell, Irish rugby player
- 1979 – Paul Terek, American decathlete
- 1979 – Nargis Fakhri, American model and actress
- 1980 – Gary Jarman, English singer-songwriter and bass player
- 1980 – Niall Matter, Canadian actor
- 1980 – Chad Robinson, Australian rugby league player
- 1980 – José Veras, Dominican baseball player
- 1981 – Dimitris Papadopoulos, Greek footballer
- 1981 – Francisco Javier Rodríguez, Mexican footballer
- 1982 – Kristian Bak Nielsen, Danish footballer
- 1982 – Becky Brewerton, Welsh golfer
- 1982 – Katie Featherston, American actress
- 1983 – Flavio Cipolla, Italian tennis player
- 1983 – Luis Saritama, Ecuadorian footballer
- 1983 – Michel Vorm, Dutch footballer
- 1983 – Takayuki Yamada, Japanese actor and singer
- 1984 – Mitch Lucker, American singer-songwriter (d. 2012)
- 1984 – Florent Sinama Pongolle, French footballer
- 1984 – Andrew Trimble, Irish rugby player
- 1985 – Jennifer Freeman, American actress
- 1985 – Dominic McGuire, American basketball player
- 1985 – Alphonso Smith, American football player
- 1985 – James Sutton, English race car driver
- 1986 – Wanlop Saechio, Thai footballer
- 1986 – Elyse Taylor, Australian model
- 1987 – Raphael Hackl, German rugby player
- 1988 – Ma Long, Chinese table tennis player
- 1988 – Risa Niigaki, Japanese singer and actress
- 1988 – Candice Swanepoel, South African model
- 1989 – Jess Glynne, English singer-songwriter
- 1989 – Colin Wilson, Canadian-American ice hockey player
- 1990 – Sam Mataora, Cook Islands rugby league player
- 1992 – Mattia De Sciglio, Italian footballer
- 1992 – John Egan, Irish footballer
- 1992 – Kristian Ipsen, American diver
- 1992 – Liis Lemsalu, Estonian singer
- 1992 – Ksenia Semyonova, Russian gymnast
- 1992 – Ferhat Yazgan, Turkish footballer
- 1994 – Morgan Featherstone, Australian model
- 1994 – Corey Oates, Australian rugby league player
Births[edit]
- 460 – Aelia Eudocia, Byzantine wife of Theodosius II (b. 401)
- 1139 – Henry X, Duke of Bavaria (b. 1108)
- 1524 – Thomas Linacre, English physician and scholar (b. 1460)
- 1570 – João de Barros, Portuguese historian and author (b. 1496)
- 1631 – Michael Maestlin, German astronomer and mathematician (b. 1550)
- 1640 – John Ball, English clergyman and theologian (b. 1585)
- 1652 – Antonio Coello, Spanish poet and playwright (b. 1611)
- 1713 – Archibald Pitcairne, Scottish physician and academic (b. 1652)
- 1740 – Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor (b. 1685)
- 1842 – Grace Darling, English heroine (b. 1815)
- 1865 – Champ Ferguson, American guerrilla leader (b. 1821)
- 1870 – Michael William Balfe, Irish violinist and composer (b. 1808)
- 1871 – Karl Christian Ulmann, Latvian-German theologian and academic (b. 1793)
- 1890 – Richard Francis Burton, English-Italian geographer and explorer (b. 1821)
- 1900 – Naim Frashëri, Albanian poet and translator (b. 1846)
- 1910 – David B. Hill, American lawyer and politician, 29th Governor of New York (b. 1843)
- 1926 – Eugene V. Debs, American union leader and politician (b. 1855)
- 1935 – Arthur Henderson, Scottish-English politician, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1863)
- 1936 – Anne Sullivan, American educator (b. 1866)
- 1940 – Gunnar Asplund, Swedish architect and academic, co-designed Skogskyrkogården (b. 1885)
- 1941 – Ken Farnes, English cricketer and soldier (b. 1911)
- 1950 – Henry L. Stimson, American colonel, lawyer, and politician, 46th United States Secretary of State (b. 1867)
- 1953 – Werner Baumbach, German colonel and pilot (b. 1916)
- 1957 – Michalis Dorizas, Greek-American javelin thrower and football player (b. 1890)
- 1964 – Herbert Hoover, American engineer and politician, 31st President of the United States (b. 1874)
- 1967 – Shigeru Yoshida, Japanese politician and diplomat, 32nd Prime Minister of Japan (b. 1878)
- 1968 – Bud Flanagan, English actor, singer, and screenwriter (b. 1896)
- 1972 – Harlow Shapley, American astronomer and academic (b. 1885)
- 1977 – Cassie Gaines, American singer (b. 1948)
- 1977 – Steve Gaines, American guitarist (b. 1949)
- 1977 – Ronnie Van Zant, American singer-songwriter (b. 1948)
- 1978 – Gunnar Nilsson, Swedish race car driver (b. 1948)
- 1983 – Peter Dudley, English actor (b. 1935)
- 1983 – Yves Thériault, Canadian author (b. 1915)
- 1983 – Merle Travis, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (b. 1917)
- 1984 – Carl Ferdinand Cori, Czech-American biochemist and pharmacologist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1896)
- 1984 – Paul Dirac, English-American physicist and mathematician, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1902)
- 1987 – Andrey Kolmogorov, Russian mathematician and academic (b. 1903)
- 1988 – Sheila Scott, English pilot and author (b. 1922)
- 1989 – Anthony Quayle, English actor and director (b. 1913)
- 1990 – Joel McCrea, American actor and singer (b. 1905)
- 1992 – Werner Torkanowsky, German-American conductor (b. 1926)
- 1993 – Yasushi Sugiyama, Japanese painter (b. 1909)
- 1994 – Burt Lancaster, American actor (b. 1913)
- 1995 – Christopher Stone, American actor, director, and screenwriter (b. 1942)
- 1999 – Calvin Griffith, Canadian-American businessman (b. 1911)
- 1999 – Jack Lynch, Irish footballer, lawyer, and politician, 5th Taoiseach of Ireland (b. 1917)
- 2001 – Ted Ammon, American financier and banker (b. 1949)
- 2002 – Barbara Berjer, American actress (b. 1920)
- 2002 – Bernard Fresson, French actor (b. 1931)
- 2003 – Čkalja, Serbian actor and singer (b. 1924)
- 2003 – Jack Elam, American actor (b. 1918)
- 2004 – Anthony Hecht, American poet and educator (b. 1923)
- 2004 – Chuck Hiller, American baseball player, coach, and manager (b. 1934)
- 2005 – Shirley Horn, American singer and pianist (b. 1934)
- 2005 – Eva Švankmajerová, Czech painter and poet (b. 1940)
- 2005 – André van der Louw, Dutch lawyer and politician, 16th Mayor of Rotterdam (b. 1933)
- 2006 – Arnold Viiding, Estonian shot putter and discus thrower (b. 1911)
- 2006 – Jane Wyatt, American actress (b. 1910)
- 2007 – Max McGee, American football player and sportscaster (b. 1932)
- 2007 – Paul Raven, English bass player (b. 1961)
- 2008 – Gene Hickerson, American football player (b. 1935)
- 2010 – Bob Guccione, American publisher, founded Penthouse magazine (b. 1930)
- 2010 – Eva Ibbotson, Austrian-English author (b. 1925)
- 2010 – Max Kohnstamm, Dutch historian and diplomat (b. 1914)
- 2010 – Farooq Leghari, Pakistani politician, 8th President of Pakistan (b. 1940)
- 2011 – Muammar Gaddafi, Libyan colonel and politician, Prime Minister of Libya (b. 1942)
- 2011 – Mutassim Gaddafi, Libyan colonel (b. 1977)
- 2011 – Abu-Bakr Yunis Jabr, Libyan politician (b. 1942)
- 2012 – Przemysław Gintrowski, Polish poet and composer (b. 1951)
- 2012 – Paul Kurtz, American philosopher and academic (b. 1925)
- 2012 – Dave May, American baseball player (b. 1943)
- 2012 – John McConnell, American activist, created Earth Day (b. 1915)
- 2012 – E. Donnall Thomas, American physician and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1920)
- 2012 – Raymond Watson, American businessman (b. 1926)
- 2013 – Leon Ashley, American singer-songwriter (b. 1936)
- 2013 – Jovanka Broz, Croatian-Serbian colonel (b. 1924)
- 2013 – Don James, American football player and coach (b. 1932)
- 2013 – Lawrence Klein, American economist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1920)
- 2013 – Joginder Singh, Kenyan race car driver (b. 1932)
- 2013 – Larri Thomas, American actress and dancer (b. 1932)
- 2013 – Sid Yudain, American journalist, founded Roll Call (b. 1923)
- 2014 – René Burri, Swiss photographer and journalist (b. 1933)
- 2014 – Oscar de la Renta, Dominican-American fashion designer (b. 1932)
- 2014 – Christophe de Margerie, French businessman (b. 1951)
- 2014 – Gary Plauche, American murderer (b. 1945)
- 2015 – Makis Dendrinos, Greek basketball player and coach (b. 1950)
- 2015 – Arno Gruen, German-Swiss psychologist and psychoanalyst (b. 1923)
- 2015 – Kazimierz Łaski, Polish-Austrian economist and academic (b. 1921)
- 2015 – Michael Meacher, English academic and politician, Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions (b. 1939)
- 2015 – Ian Steel, Scottish cyclist and manager (b. 1928)
Deaths[edit]
- Birth of the Báb (Bahá'í Faith)
- Christian feast days:
- Acca of Hexham
- Artemius
- Caprasius of Agen
- Hedwig (in Canada, moved from Oct. 16)
- Irene of Tomar
- Margaret Marie Alacoque (in Canada, moved from Oct. 16)
- October 20 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)
- Heroes' Day (Kenya)
- Revolution Day (Guatemala), one of the two Patriotic Days (Guatemala)
- Spirit Day (International)
- Vietnamese Women's Day (Vietnam)
- World Osteoporosis Day (international)
- World Statistics Day (international)
Holidays and observances[edit]
“Take delight in the LORD, and he will give you the desires of your heart.”Psalm 37:4NIV
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Morning and Evening by Charles Spurgeon
Morning
Are you mourning, believer, because you are so weak in the divine life: because your faith is so little, your love so feeble? Cheer up, for you have cause for gratitude. Remember that in some things you are equal to the greatest and most full-grown Christian. You are as much bought with blood as he is. You are as much an adopted child of God as any other believer. An infant is as truly a child of its parents as is the full-grown man. You are as completely justified, for your justification is not a thing of degrees: your little faith has made you clean every whit. You have as much right to the precious things of the covenant as the most advanced believers, for your right to covenant mercies lies not in your growth, but in the covenant itself; and your faith in Jesus is not the measure, but the token of your inheritance in him. You are as rich as the richest, if not in enjoyment, yet in real possession. The smallest star that gleams is set in heaven; the faintest ray of light has affinity with the great orb of day. In the family register of glory the small and the great are written with the same pen. You are as dear to your Father's heart as the greatest in the family. Jesus is very tender over you. You are like the smoking flax; a rougher spirit would say, "put out that smoking flax, it fills the room with an offensive odour!" but the smoking flax he will not quench. You are like a bruised reed; and any less tender hand than that of the Chief Musician would tread upon you or throw you away, but he will never break the bruised reed. Instead of being downcast by reason of what you are, you should triumph in Christ. Am I but little in Israel? Yet in Christ I am made to sit in heavenly places. Am I poor in faith? Still in Jesus I am heir of all things. Though "less than nothing I can boast, and vanity confess." Yet, if the root of the matter be in me I will rejoice in the Lord, and glory in the God of my salvation.
Evening
Any man can sing in the day. When the cup is full, man draws inspiration from it. When wealth rolls in abundance around him, any man can praise the God who gives a plenteous harvest or sends home a loaded argosy. It is easy enough for an Aeolian harp to whisper music when the winds blow--the difficulty is for music to swell forth when no wind is stirring. It is easy to sing when we can read the notes by daylight; but he is skilful who sings when there is not a ray of light to read by--who sings from his heart. No man can make a song in the night of himself; he may attempt it, but he will find that a song in the night must be divinely inspired. Let all things go well, I can weave songs, fashioning them wherever I go out of the flowers that grow upon my path; but put me in a desert, where no green thing grows, and wherewith shall I frame a hymn of praise to God? How shall a mortal man make a crown for the Lord where no jewels are? Let but this voice be clear, and this body full of health, and I can sing God's praise: silence my tongue, lay me upon the bed of languishing, and how shall I then chant God's high praises, unless he himself give me the song? No, it is not in man's power to sing when all is adverse, unless an altar-coal shall touch his lip. It was a divine song, which Habakkuk sang, when in the night he said, "Although the fig-tree shall not blossom, neither shall fruit be in the vines; the labour of the olive shall fail, and the fields shall yield no meat; the flock shall be cut off from the fold, and there shall be no herd in the stalls: yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation." Then, since our Maker gives songs in the night, let us wait upon him for the music. O thou chief musician, let us not remain songless because affliction is upon us, but tune thou our lips to the melody of thanksgiving.
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Today's reading: Isaiah 56-58, 2 Thessalonians 2 (NIV)
View today's reading on Bible GatewayToday's Old Testament reading: Isaiah 56-58
Salvation for Others
1 This is what the LORD says:
"Maintain justice
and do what is right,
for my salvation is close at hand
and my righteousness will soon be revealed.
2 Blessed is the one who does this-
the person who holds it fast,
who keeps the Sabbath without desecrating it,
and keeps their hands from doing any evil."
and do what is right,
for my salvation is close at hand
and my righteousness will soon be revealed.
2 Blessed is the one who does this-
the person who holds it fast,
who keeps the Sabbath without desecrating it,
and keeps their hands from doing any evil."
3 Let no foreigner who is bound to the LORD say,
"The LORD will surely exclude me from his people."
And let no eunuch complain,
"I am only a dry tree."
"The LORD will surely exclude me from his people."
And let no eunuch complain,
"I am only a dry tree."
4 For this is what the LORD says:
"To the eunuchs who keep my Sabbaths,who choose what pleases me
and hold fast to my covenant-
5 to them I will give within my temple and its walls
a memorial and a name
better than sons and daughters;
I will give them an everlasting name
that will endure forever....
Today's New Testament reading: 2 Thessalonians 2
The Man of Lawlessness
1 Concerning the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and our being gathered to him, we ask you, brothers and sisters, 2 not to become easily unsettled or alarmed by the teaching allegedly from us-whether by a prophecy or by word of mouth or by letter-asserting that the day of the Lord has already come. 3 Don't let anyone deceive you in any way, for that day will not come until the rebellion occurs and the man of lawlessness is revealed, the man doomed to destruction. 4 He will oppose and will exalt himself over everything that is called God or is worshiped, so that he sets himself up in God's temple, proclaiming himself to be God.
5 Don't you remember that when I was with you I used to tell you these things? 6 And now you know what is holding him back, so that he may be revealed at the proper time. 7 For the secret power of lawlessness is already at work; but the one who now holds it back will continue to do so till he is taken out of the way. 8 And then the lawless one will be revealed, whom the Lord Jesus will overthrow with the breath of his mouth and destroy by the splendor of his coming. 9The coming of the lawless one will be in accordance with how Satan works. He will use all sorts of displays of power through signs and wonders that serve the lie, 10 and all the ways that wickedness deceives those who are perishing. They perish because they refused to love the truth and so be saved. 11 For this reason God sends them a powerful delusion so that they will believe the lie 12 and so that all will be condemned who have not believed the truth but have delighted in wickedness....
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Potiphar
[Pŏt'ĭphar] - who is of the sun or a fat bull. The captain of Pharaoh's guardto whom Joseph was sold by the Midianites. It was his wife who tried to seduce Joseph (Gen. 37:36; 39:1).
[Pŏt'ĭphar] - who is of the sun or a fat bull. The captain of Pharaoh's guardto whom Joseph was sold by the Midianites. It was his wife who tried to seduce Joseph (Gen. 37:36; 39:1).
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