Berg then misrepresents Trump’s success by claiming it will be ameliorated by GOP ascendancy. Berg mischaracterises Trump’s trade diplomacy of tariffs on China, and tearing up NAFTA and TPP. There are bad deals for the US. Trump wants to institute good deals. A good deal for a TPP is much better than the thing Obama has strangled. Not to diminish the Abbott government’s work on free trade, free trade is important. Too important to leave a bad deal when a better one is achievable. Tariffs are counter productive, but then so is Chinese intransigence and poor ethics as a global citizen. A strong President can get China to behave, and then all will profit. And Tariffs are a starting negotiating point. If China wants to hurt herself, she can.
Berg is also wrong to say Australia is at a stalemate since the Coalition narrowly won the last federal election. Turnbull squandered a strong lead. Abbott had lined up a strong possibility of a conservative senate, the first since 2007. But Abbott had strong policy goals, while Turnbull offers inertia. Turnbull can only humiliate himself until he resigns in disgrace. Or, Turnbull can damage conservative government with his bed wetting accomplices.
=== from 2015 ===
Foolish independent Senator Lambie says Greens are like ISIS. But the facts don't stack up. Greens don't throw gays off rooftops or crucify Christians. And the behaviours of the Greens, what is similar to ISIS? Greens have their own diet. Greens collect in enclaves and don't assimilate well. Greens demand others be like them. Greens dismiss secular authority and claim to serve a higher purpose than any court. Greens want to raise their children their way. Greens want other children raised their way. Greens are extremely violent, particularly youthful ones and prone to damaging property while openly despising Western values. Green politicians don't follow a Green agenda but seem to follow the secret agenda that violent youthful Greens follow. Green leaders are impotent in the face of their followers violent expression. They say Greens are peaceful but don't reject Green violence. Impotent Green leaders blame the West for Green violence. Greens want to lower the age of consent. Greens are lenient on sexual deviants. Where more than 5% of the population turns Green then they try to institute their own laws. Green refugees are said to include violent Green radicals trying to sponge off welfare states. Greens support no border policies which are responsible for the deaths of many and have many poor people exploited by piracy. Greens have invaded Europe and ruined it. Greens take over a billion dollars a day from the world's poorest and spend it on supporting their own billionaires. Greens are mainly atheist but claim they are profoundly religious. I have Green friends that are just like you or me and nothing like the above, most Greens aren't violent. Greens seem inspired by Communism and Socialism. Nothing like ISIS or jihadis. Meanwhile Australian PM Malcolm Turnbull is sad that Japan is legally allowed to hunt whales and wants to stop it, even if it means breaking the law? It is said Prince Charles favours Greens over Christians.
For some, at the moment, the Sex Party has more credibility.
For some, at the moment, the Sex Party has more credibility.
From 2014
Security in a modern nation is partly built on the illusion that things are impossible and unthinkable. As with killing 148 school children or holding a cafe with staff and customers hostage. There is no way such a thing should happen because it doesn't achieve anything worthwhile. The response to such activity would be firm and final by any decent person aware of it. But since Palestinian terrorists in the late '60s began committing such atrocities the illusion of security has evaporated in places. US has prided itself that domestic terrorism was too hard to commit because somebody would speak up. And yet the World Trade Centre was hit twice, and Oklahoma and the Boston marathon bombing occurred catching authorities by surprise when people had not spoken loudly enough to be heard. The US has been exposed to terrorism domestically.
There is a myth in medical research that more money will solve any problem. There is an element of truth to that, but sometimes it isn't the case. Aids research in the mid '80s had many laboratories around the world duplicating research. In that instance research was slowed because duplication does not promote diversity in research. The successful Western world has had a technological advantage for several hundred years because brilliant scholars weren't chained to old ideas, as duplication does. In the United States duplication and not diversification has promoted terrorism. It isn't that people have not spoken out as they were supposed to. It is that authorities could not hear them because of the chaff that claimed other similar or worse threats elsewhere. Consider the pilot trainer who warned authorities of a suspicious character who did not need to learn how to land a plane? Or of those who led authorities to the jihadist who couldn't suicide on 9/11 because he had been arrested? Israel has successfully combated terrorism since before she was a state, but she has had failures to. But successful methods preventing terror are actually opposed by some very influential people who lie to get people killed. Should Israel build a defensive wall? Should Israel security forces racially profile? Should Israel defend herself with disproportionate force? The same questions get asked in the US with the same effect, making it easier for terrorists to strike.
At the moment, the champion of politics of division is President Obama. Obama has funded terrorists directly through aid programs (e.g. Hamas), indirectly through negligent failure to appropriately use security forces (e.g. Benghazi), through rhetoric which divides the nation (e.g. black deaths from resisting arrest) and through abuse of power which employs people to abuse tax office investigative powers or legal privilege. The result is terrorism is easier now than it was before. Australia has a similar brigade of people who undermine the nation to make terrorism easier. Weakening border protection to make people smuggling profitable meant deaths from drowning and exploitation of some desperate people. Meanwhile, refugees in camps around the world are left in a limbo, having years of their lives placed on hold. Police and media restrict themselves from appropriately describing offenders. It makes policing more difficult which makes it more dangerous for others.
The competing theory, much as there are competing parties in democracy, places promotion of minorities at odds with promotion of cultural assets. If one promotes a cultural asset everyone benefits. If one promotes a minority, most people lose. Minorities do better too, when cultural assets are supported and the whole of society grows. And so, while there is no reason to kill 148 schoolchildren, one was given, and it scans for those who promote division. But for those who promote cultural assets, it makes no sense. It is worth looking at recent cases to see if there is a promotion of minorities which harms society, or a promotion of cultural assets which promotes cultural growth and benefits everyone:
There is a myth in medical research that more money will solve any problem. There is an element of truth to that, but sometimes it isn't the case. Aids research in the mid '80s had many laboratories around the world duplicating research. In that instance research was slowed because duplication does not promote diversity in research. The successful Western world has had a technological advantage for several hundred years because brilliant scholars weren't chained to old ideas, as duplication does. In the United States duplication and not diversification has promoted terrorism. It isn't that people have not spoken out as they were supposed to. It is that authorities could not hear them because of the chaff that claimed other similar or worse threats elsewhere. Consider the pilot trainer who warned authorities of a suspicious character who did not need to learn how to land a plane? Or of those who led authorities to the jihadist who couldn't suicide on 9/11 because he had been arrested? Israel has successfully combated terrorism since before she was a state, but she has had failures to. But successful methods preventing terror are actually opposed by some very influential people who lie to get people killed. Should Israel build a defensive wall? Should Israel security forces racially profile? Should Israel defend herself with disproportionate force? The same questions get asked in the US with the same effect, making it easier for terrorists to strike.
At the moment, the champion of politics of division is President Obama. Obama has funded terrorists directly through aid programs (e.g. Hamas), indirectly through negligent failure to appropriately use security forces (e.g. Benghazi), through rhetoric which divides the nation (e.g. black deaths from resisting arrest) and through abuse of power which employs people to abuse tax office investigative powers or legal privilege. The result is terrorism is easier now than it was before. Australia has a similar brigade of people who undermine the nation to make terrorism easier. Weakening border protection to make people smuggling profitable meant deaths from drowning and exploitation of some desperate people. Meanwhile, refugees in camps around the world are left in a limbo, having years of their lives placed on hold. Police and media restrict themselves from appropriately describing offenders. It makes policing more difficult which makes it more dangerous for others.
The competing theory, much as there are competing parties in democracy, places promotion of minorities at odds with promotion of cultural assets. If one promotes a cultural asset everyone benefits. If one promotes a minority, most people lose. Minorities do better too, when cultural assets are supported and the whole of society grows. And so, while there is no reason to kill 148 schoolchildren, one was given, and it scans for those who promote division. But for those who promote cultural assets, it makes no sense. It is worth looking at recent cases to see if there is a promotion of minorities which harms society, or a promotion of cultural assets which promotes cultural growth and benefits everyone:
- Bludjahideen .. refugee program rorted and exposing Australia to danger
- Child killers in Afghanistan
- 8 children dead .. siblings in Cairns, 34 yo mother, eldest child is 20.
- Fairfax blames Abbott for not saving Australia from Monis.
- Sinodinos quits allowing a reshuffle of cabinet in Australia. Sinodinos has not been shown to do anything wrong, but the ICAC have tried to get themselves dismantled before they completely tear apart the ALP for corruption. They will report in March in a cynical attempt to influence the electoral cycle, as it is near the state election.
- Royal commission .. Gillard lied .. now demands apology. Gillard is upset she was called a liar when she had lied.
- Clive Palmer's senior media advisor arrested in Indonesia. Palmer calls it a political stunt. The charges are serious and not connected to government but police investigating a crime.
- Lambie wants to be talked to. She has declared she will oppose everything, but is now expressing hurt that people aren't discussing things with her.
Sport India V Aus in Cricket
India tribute to Phil Hughes in second test with 408 eclipsed by lusty hitting from the Australian tail. Then Vijay's defence penetrated by Starc, leaving Indian honour bruised.
From 2013
Left wing argue using abuse. Often, they will lay down a few false statements and then build on them. So, a lefty arguing about politics in Australia, with the recent change of government, might say they hate Tony Abbott and are disgusted by him. They will say he isn't popular and he hates poor people. They will say he wants to make workers get paid less and rich people to get paid more. But the reality is very different to what they claim initially, and so an attempt to dispute any of their false assertions results in them back tracking to "You can't trust any of them." In fact Mr Abbott is a compassionate, friendly man. He is trying to improve the economy so that all prosper through honest work. It is pragmatic to encourage savings and investment because that drives growth. On the other hand, ALP politics is driven by hate and envy with a touch of cynicism. The ALP agenda is to tax poor working people and reward rich union leaders. So it is worth reading Blair's column on Van Badham's tweets. I ask my self the question "So how do others feel about a left wing party like the ALP moving to make anti semitism legal? Does that ever turn out well?"
Historical perspective on this day
In 211, Publius Septimius Geta, co-emperor of Rome, was lured to come without his bodyguards to meet his brother Marcus Aurelius Antoninus (Caracalla), to discuss a possible reconciliation. When he arrived, the Praetorian Guard murdered him and he died in the arms of his mother, Julia Domna. 1154, Henry II of England was crowned at Westminster Abbey. 1490, Anne, Duchess of Brittany, was married to Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor by proxy. 1562, the Battle of Dreux took place during the French Wars of Religion. 1606, the Susan Constant, the Godspeed, and the Discovery departed England carrying settlers who founded, at Jamestown, Virginia, the first of the thirteen colonies that became the United States. 1675, the Great Swamp Fight, a pivotal battle in King Philip's War, gave the English settlers a bitterly won victory. 1776, Thomas Paine published one of a series of pamphlets in The Pennsylvania Journal entitled "The American Crisis". 1777, American Revolutionary War: George Washington's Continental Army went into winter quarters at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania. 1796, French Revolutionary Wars: Two British frigates under Commodore Horatio Nelson and two Spanish frigates under Commodore Don Jacobo Stuart engaged in battle off the coast of Murcia.
In 1828, Nullification Crisis: Vice President of the United States John C. Calhoun penned the South Carolina Exposition and Protest, protesting the Tariff of 1828. 1900, Hopetoun Blunder: The first Governor-General of Australia John Hope, 7th Earl of Hopetoun, appointed Sir William Lyne premier of the new state of New South Wales, but he was unable to persuade other colonial politicians to join his government and was forced to resign. 1907, 239 coal miners died in a mine explosion in Jacobs Creek, Pennsylvania. 1912, William Van Schaick, captain of the steamship General Slocum which caught fire and killed over 1,000 people, was pardoned by U.S. President William Howard Taft after three-and-a-half-years in Sing Singprison. 1916, World War I: Battle of Verdun – On the Western Front, the French Armysuccessfully held off the German Army and drove it back to its starting position.
In 1920, King Constantine I was restored as King of the Hellenes after the death of his son Alexander of Greece and a plebiscite. 1924, the last Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost was sold in London, England. 1927, three Indian revolutionaries, Ram Prasad Bismil, Roshan Singh and Ashfaqulla Khan were executed by the British Empire. 1932, BBC World Service began broadcasting as the BBC Empire Service. 1941, World War II: Adolf Hitler became Supreme Commander-in-chief of the German Army. Also 1941, World War II: Limpet mines placed by Italian divers heavily damaged the HMS Valiant and HMS Queen Elizabeth in Alexandria harbour. 1946, start of the First Indochina War. 1956, Irish-born physician John Bodkin Adams was arrested in connection with the suspicious deaths of more than 160 patients. Eventually he was convicted only of minor charges. 1961, India annexed Daman and Diu, part of Portuguese India. 1964, the South Vietnamese military junta of Nguyễn Khánh dissolved the High National Council and arrested some of the members. 1967, Harold Holt, the Prime Minister of Australia, was officially presumed dead.
In 1972, Apollo program: The last manned lunar flight, Apollo 17, crewed by Eugene Cernan, Ron Evans and Harrison Schmitt, returned to Earth. 1974, Nelson Rockefeller was sworn in as Vice President of the United States under President Gerald Ford under the provisions of the twenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. 1975, John Paul Stevens was appointed a justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. 1979, Geoffrey Boycottbecame the first cricketer to be stranded at 99 not out against Australia at Perth. 1981, sixteen lives were lost when the Penlee lifeboat went to the aid of the stricken coaster Union Star in heavy seas. 1983, the original FIFA World Cup trophy, the Jules Rimet Trophy, was stolen from the headquarters of the Brazilian Football Confederation in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. 1984, the Sino-British Joint Declaration, stating that China would resume the exercise of sovereignty over Hong Kong and the United Kingdom would restore Hong Kong to China with effect from July 1, 1997 was signed in Beijing, China by Deng Xiaoping and Margaret Thatcher. 1986, Mikhail Gorbachev, leader of the Soviet Union, released Andrei Sakharov and his wife from exile in Gorky.
In 1995, the United States Government restored federal recognition to the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of Potawatomi Indian tribe. 1997, SilkAir Flight 185 crashed into the Musi River, near Palembang in Indonesia, killing 104. 1998, president Bill Clinton was impeached by the United States House of Representatives, becoming the second President of the United States to be impeached. 2000, the Leninist Guerrilla Units wing of the Communist Labour Party of Turkey/Leninist attacked a Nationalist Movement Party office in Istanbul, Turkey, killing one person and injuring three. 2001, a record high barometric pressure of 1085.6 hPa(32.06 inHg) was recorded at Tosontsengel, Khövsgöl, Mongolia. Also in 2001, Argentine economic crisis: December 2001 riots – Riots erupted in Buenos Aires, Argentina. 2010, Sachin Tendulkar scored a record-breaking 50th Century in Test cricket against South Africa at the SuperSport Park in Centurion, Gauteng. Also 2010, Rahul Dravid crossed the 12000 runs milestone in Test cricket against South Africa at the SuperSport Park in Centurion, Gauteng. 2012, Park Geun-hye was elected the first female president of South Korea.
=== 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.
===
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 Gerald Ě Grech, EtaBeta Scs, Eris Wittmann, Lam Nguyen , Tony Pham , Peter Au and Kevin Smith. Born on the same day, across the years, along with
Deaths
|
Tim Blair
PEACE IN THE MIDDLE EAST
===
Andrew Bolt
Minerals windfall cannot stop another $10b budget blowout
===
FUNNY PEOPLE
Tim Blair – Saturday, December 19, 2015 (5:17pm)
A group of “progressive, left-leaning, uni-educated men” who became “five of the most successful young comedians in Australia” are accused of covering up repeated domestic assaults committed by a colleague: “They must have known, and they still stood by him.”
(Via Rita Panahi.)
CAN’T MAKE AN OMELETTE WITHOUT RAZING A FOREST
Tim Blair – Saturday, December 19, 2015 (5:12pm)
Climate change is happening right now. Take that, deniers! Meanwhile, in France:
A French chef hired to work at the Paris climate change talks has been fined for razing 7,000 sq metres of protected forest near his restaurant.Marc Veyrat illegally destroyed the trees near the La Maison des Bois (House of the Trees) in the Alps …
The choppy chef copped a $150,000 fine for his little harvesting hobby. At that rate per square metre, my grandfather’s farmland tree clearing in the 1930s – he used traditional methods on a truly magnificent scale – would have bankrupted us for generations.
(Via Tom.)
RICH OLD WHITE GUY WITH A SIGN
Tim Blair – Saturday, December 19, 2015 (4:49pm)
Millionaire leftist Michael Moore – lately assisting Stephen Colbert on his path to ratings oblivion – attempts to make some sort of political point:
Er, OK. Jim Treacher and others quickly provided improved versions:
Er, OK. Jim Treacher and others quickly provided improved versions:
THEN THE CULLING BEGAN
Tim Blair – Saturday, December 19, 2015 (3:06pm)
Back in 1966, when Australia’s population was just barely more than 11 million, Sydney had “so many people that there’s nowhere to go”:
WHAT TED HAD TO GO THROUGH
Tim Blair – Saturday, December 19, 2015 (2:43pm)
A promo line for a forthcoming film about Ted Kennedy:
On the eve of the moon landing, Senator Kennedy becomes entangled in a tragic car accident that results in the death of former Robert Kennedy campaign worker Mary Jo Kopechne.
Mark Steyn’s response:
He didn’t “become entangled in a tragic car accident”. He caused it. He drove the car into the pond. And then he left her down there while he swam free. And even then she would have survived had he gone to the nearest house and asked for help. Instead, he played it the Kennedy way, prioritized damage control, and walked back to his hotel room to begin building his alibi and ordering up his prop neck brace. They found Mary Jo pressed up in the corner of the car in a shrinking air pocket where she’d waited for hours for the rescue that never came. Because, while she knew that Kennedys booze it up, drive fast, screw around, it never occurred to her that they also leave women to die.
We should not forget, of course, that if Kopechne had lived, Kennedy “would have brought comfort to her in her old age.” The film’s producer, Mark Ciardi:
“I’ve done a lot of true life stories, many sports stories, but this one had a deep impact on this country,” said Ciardi. “Everyone has an idea of what happened on Chappaquiddick, and this strings together the events in a compelling and emotional way. You’ll see what [Senator Ted Kennedy] had to go through.”
Jim Treacher’s response:
Well, he had to go through the car window while Mary Jo Kopechne was trapped inside. And he had to go through the indignity of never becoming President of the United States. Poor, poor Ted.
ADVANTAGE UGANDA
Tim Blair – Saturday, December 19, 2015 (1:31pm)
Uber is now legal in NSW. Elsewhere, similar apps are making a big difference:
On a cool Saturday morning in one of the Ugandan capital’s many hilly suburbs, Gloria is unfazed by her pile of dirty clothes.“It’s amazing, even with a hangover, I don’t have to worry about it,” Gloria says, looking over her shoulder to the beckoning comfort of her living room …Yoza, a locally developed android app, helps users find laundry services.Yoza means “to wash” in Uganda’s major language, Luganda.
Cool. Even cooler is another Ugandan app: Pig+.
(Via Jill.)
BEATING THE BLUDJAHIDEEN
Tim Blair – Friday, December 19, 2014 (1:47pm)
“If we can stop the boats and the drownings, we can stop the undeserved free lunches, as well as the lawfare waged on civil society and our safety,” writes Alan R.M. Jones:
More than that, we can stop heeding the excuses and rationalisations on behalf of those who would harm innocents and coarsen our civil soul. If we have the will, if the collective outrage of right now declines to flag, we can say loudly that we refuse to live any longer in the rotten edifice of a social-experiment freak-out ginned up at a bong party in the sociology department common room.We must first overcome the absurd protests that Monis’ villainy was a one-off, an isolated case, which had nothing to do with his sinister religious beliefs. Likewise, we must recognise the dysfunctional welfare-industrial complex for what it is — a support scheme available to help manifest and advance social pathologies. Have we not recognised that Monis was a walking Venn diagram of victim handouts, subsidised weirdness and extremist hatred? To be the quintessential welfare queen and a psychopathic, parasitic criminal are not mutually exclusive. Indeed, in this case they were symbiotic.
Read on.
SUPER SMITH
Tim Blair – Friday, December 19, 2014 (1:40pm)
An excellent century to Steve Smith in his first Test as Australian captain. Smith joins a remarkable list of first-up captaincy centurions: William Murdoch, Harry Trott, Monty Noble, Clem Hill, Warwick Armstrong, Lindsay Hassett, Greg Chappell and Graham Yallop. Not bad for a bloke who looks as though he’s trying to bat left- and right-handed at the same time.
EAT THEM SQUIRRELS, TENNESSEE BOY
Tim Blair – Friday, December 19, 2014 (12:33pm)
Al Gore isn’t fat. He’s just storing carbon:
Do you know where your body fat goes when you lose weight?Neither do most doctors, a study has found.The correct answer is that 84 per cent is breathed out as carbon dioxide.
Via David T., who asks: “Does this mean The Biggest Loser is a carbon criminal?” In another crucial climate development:
Arctic ground squirrels could play a greater role in climate change than was previously thought.Scientists have found that the animals are hastening the release of greenhouse gases from the permafrost – a vast, frozen store of carbon.
Easy solution. Al Gore should eat them. Here are some tasty recipes from the Missouri Department of Conservation.
(Via J.F. Beck)
CONFESSION TIME
Tim Blair – Friday, December 19, 2014 (12:00pm)
The former Greens candidate whose touching tale of multicultural compassion inspired the #illridewithyou movement has now changed her story.
SHELF OF SHAME
Tim Blair – Friday, December 19, 2014 (11:53am)
Michelle Obama describes a recent “racist experience”:
“I tell this story – I mean, even as the first lady – during that wonderfully publicized trip I took to Target, not highly disguised, the only person who came up to me in the store was a woman who asked me to help her take something off a shelf. Because she didn’t see me as the first lady, she saw me as someone who could help her. Those kinds of things happen in life. So it isn’t anything new,” Michelle Obama, who is 5’11”, said.
As it happens, last week I too was asked to help retrieve an item from a high supermarket shelf. This obviously occurred because I am a tall black woman.
HOLLYWIMPS
Tim Blair – Friday, December 19, 2014 (10:56am)
Mark Steyn on Sony’s cancellation of The Interview following North Korean threats:
Kim Jong-Un has just vaporized a Hollywood blockbuster as totally as if one of his No Dong missiles had taken out the studio. As it is, the fellows with no dong turned out to be the executives of Sony Pictures.I wouldn’t mind but this is the same industry that congratulates itself endlessly – not least in its annual six-hour awards ceremony – on its artists’ courage and bravery. Called on to show some for the first time in their lives, they folded like a cheap suit …American pop culture – supposedly the most powerful and influential force on the planet – has just surrendered to a one-man psycho-state economic basket-case that starves its own population.
Kim Jong-won.
Further from Zev Chafets.
Sinodinos quits. Reshuffle starts
Andrew Bolt December 19 2014 (5:55pm)
More on the big reset for 2015:
===TONY Abbott will refresh his economic team within days after accepting the resignation of Assistant Treasurer Arthur Sinodinos, who has stepped down to clear the way for the change.
The Prime Minister said he would name a new Assistant Treasurer “in the next few days” after Senator Sinodinos announced he would move to the backbench.
Hollywood kneels before North Korea
Andrew Bolt December 19 2014 (5:51pm)
North Korean threats are all it takes for Sony to cancel The Interview. Mark Steyn on the gutlessness:
===Kim Jong-Un has just vaporized a Hollywood blockbuster as totally as if one of his No Dong missiles had taken out the studio. As it is, the fellows with no dong turned out to be the executives of Sony Pictures.
I wouldn’t mind but this is the same industry that congratulates itself endlessly – not least in its annual six-hour awards ceremony – on its artists’ courage and bravery. Called on to show some for the first time in their lives, they folded like a cheap suit … American pop culture – supposedly the most powerful and influential force on the planet – has just surrendered to a one-man psycho-state economic basket-case that starves its own population.
Kim Jong-won.
Royal commission: Gillard told untruths; boyfriend paid for renovations with “illegitimate” cash
Andrew Bolt December 19 2014 (5:11pm)
The interim report of the royal commission into union corruption is devastating to former Labor leader Julia Gillard and damaging to the current leader, Bill Shorten.
Royal commissioner Dyson Heydon says Julia Gillard did not tell the truth, and her renovations were paid for by her then boyfriend, corrupt AWU union official Bruce Wilson, using money she should have realised was “illegitimate”:
But Gillard escapes serious criticism for her legal work, and no charges are recommended against her, as Hedley Thomas reports:
And this is a story the ABC and many Canberra press gallery journalists refused for years to cover or take seriously.
Some of the other findings damage senior Labor figures Sam Dastyari and Tony Sheldon, as well as Kimberley Kitching.
UPDATE
Incredibly, ABC radio news bulletins throughout the day kept asserting Julia Gillard had been “cleared”.
Just as incredibly, Gillard demands an apology:
===Royal commissioner Dyson Heydon says Julia Gillard did not tell the truth, and her renovations were paid for by her then boyfriend, corrupt AWU union official Bruce Wilson, using money she should have realised was “illegitimate”:
…the manner in which she uttered these words denying what [builder] Athol James said [about Gillard telling him the renovations were paid for by Wilson] seemed to be excessive, forced, and asseverated. There was an element of acting in her demeanour. She delivered those words in a dramatic and angry way, but the delivery fell flat. She protested too much. She chose to fight him. It was a fight in which there could be only one winner. Unfortunately, she lost that fight.’Heydon is rightly scathing of what I called Gillard’s do-you-know-who-I-am defence:
There is a benign explanation for Julia Gillard’s testimony and there is a less benign explanation. Behind each explanation lies the fact that, unlike Athol James, she had a strong motive to see her version of events accepted.’
The benign explanation is that the testimony proceeded from vellity. She wanted it to be the case that she had paid for all the renovation work. Over 20 years, subconsciously, she convinced herself that it was the case. So dearly cherished an outcome became inexpugnably part of her mentality.’
The less benign explanation is that she knew her testimony was false. It might have been knowingly false in the sense that she remembered the key events happening, but chose to deny them. Or it might have been knowingly false in the sense that she could not remember one way or the other whether the key events happened, but chose to deny them. In each case she was telling a knowing untruth about her mental state…
Julia Gillard was the recipient of certain funds from Bruce Wilson as described in the evidence of Athol James and [former AWU official] Wayne Hem. The skimpy nature of the evidence does not make it possible to infer on the balance of probabilities that Julia Gillard was aware that she had received the $5,000 which Wayne Hem put into her bank account on Bruce Wilson’s instructions. That is event truer of the events which Wayne Hem observed at her house…
The position is different in relation to the wads of bank notes observed by Athol James. Julia Gillard was at least aware of facts, had she turned her mind to them, which would have indicated that the source of those bank notes cannot have been the low union salary of Bruce Wilson of about $50,000...she must have been aware of facts, which, had she turned her mind to them, would have revealed that Bruce Wilson was making payments to her in the presence of Athol James using money which he had no right to use for that purpose because his duty was to repay it to Thiess … It is quite improbable that the source was legitimate, i.e. the salary’
Senior counsel for Julia Gillard put the following submission:And this goes without saying: there was a ‘lapse in professional judgment on Julia Gillard’s part’ in acting for Mr Wilson, with whom she had a personal relationship.
The Commission should give significant weight to Ms Gillard’s good character and reputation. The Commission has little or no evidence before it of the character or reputation of Messrs James and Hem. In the context of these proceedings there is no reason to prefer their evidence over that of Ms Gillard.’This is a mystifying submission. It is a dangerous submission. And, if it were correct, it would be a troubling submission…
A further problem raised by the submission is that though there is virtually no evidence of Julia Gillard’s good reputation and character beyond that which is to be inferred from her status as a former Prime Minister and from the other aspects of her career which are notorious, she is given the accolade of having a ‘good’ reputation and character.’
There is no reason to adopt some presumption in favour of her and against them (James and Hem). If some such presumption were adopted, it would always be the case that the powerful, the celebrated and the successful will have undue advantages over the weak, the obscure and those of moderate achievement. Then would be the time to ask the question: ‘Little man, what now?’ It is a strange submission to be advanced on behalf of a former politician belonging to the Australian Labor Party tradition – a tradition of social democracy.’
But Gillard escapes serious criticism for her legal work, and no charges are recommended against her, as Hedley Thomas reports:
JULIA Gillard faces no criminal action for her legal work on a slush fund for her allegedly corrupt union boss boyfriend, Bruce Wilson.As for Bill Shorten:
But her two former AWU clients, Mr Wilson and his sidekick Ralph Blewitt, are likely to be charged with offences as a result of findings released today by former High Court judge Dyson Heydon’s Royal Commission into Union Corruption…
“The skimpy nature of the available evidence does not make it possible to infer on the balance of probabilities that Julia Gillard was aware that she had received the $5,000 which Wayne Hem put into her bank account on Bruce Wilson’s instructions.
Heydon also ruled that “It is no criticism of Julia Gillard to conclude that payments of that kind were being made if she was ignorant of them — any more than it is a criticism of her that Bruce Wilson arranged for Wayne Hem to pay $5,000 into her bank account if she was ignorant of it”.
He said the evidence was “ insufficient to justify rejection of her claim that she had no relevant knowledge”.
In relation to Ms Gillard’s role as a solicitor at Slater & Gordon, Commissioner Heydon found that if she “had interrogated Bruce Wilson and Ralph Blewitt closely about whether the (slush fund) Association existed, who its members were and how they had given authority to make the Application, a central pillar of Bruce Wilson’s plan would have begun crumbling"… “However, that failure to interrogate Ralph Blewitt and Bruce Wilson was not itself a breach of the duties created by the retainer.”
The royal commissioner accepts that former AWU state president Bob Kernohan told then AWU official Bill Shorten that ‘it was a bloody disgrace that they (Wilson and Blewitt) received redundancy payments whilst they were internally investigated for fraud.’Kernohan claimed:
‘SHORTEN cut me off, not in a nasty way, and he said words like, “Bob, think of your future. There’s been a payout, we are all just moving on.“‘Heydon rules:
‘SHORTEN put his hand on my shoulder and responded, “Bob think of your future.” He said, “If you pursue this, a lot of good people will get hurt and you will be on your own. Look Bob, you’ve been lined up to take a safe labor (sic) seat of Milton (sic) in the Victorian parliament.”
William Shorten’s position is that while he does not remember what he says, and while he does not believe he said what is alleged, he does not deny saying it.’So one former Labor prime minister had her renovations paid for with stolen money and did not tell the truth about it, and the man wanting to be the next Labor Prime Minister in all probability wanted it hushed up. So finds the royal commissioner.
Over the last two decades William Shorten has had many cares, borne many burdens and performed many different roles while ascending the greasy pole. It is accordingly not surprising that his position is as stated above.’
On the probabilities it is likely that the incident took place as Robert Kernohan narrates it.
And this is a story the ABC and many Canberra press gallery journalists refused for years to cover or take seriously.
Some of the other findings damage senior Labor figures Sam Dastyari and Tony Sheldon, as well as Kimberley Kitching.
UPDATE
Incredibly, ABC radio news bulletins throughout the day kept asserting Julia Gillard had been “cleared”.
Just as incredibly, Gillard demands an apology:
FORMER prime minister Julia Gillard says she is pleased a royal commission had made no findings against her…
“Decency would require those who falsely accused me to apologise,” she said. Ms Gillard rejected the report’s suggestion that anyone other than herself paid for work done on her Abbotsford property.
Clive Palmer’s senior media advisor arrested
Andrew Bolt December 19 2014 (1:16pm)
Yet more scandal for the Palmer United Party:
===CLIVE Palmer’s senior media adviser, Andrew Crook, has been arrested by Queensland Police for his alleged role in an “elaborate scheme” to kidnap a National Australia Bank executive, the ABC reports…
Mr Palmer claimed the investigation was “orchestrated” by the Queensland government to discredit his party and obtain documents related to its state election strategy.
“I think it’s an effort to undermine my political support in Queensland and try to get Campbell Newman re-elected as premier, that’s how I see it politically,” the Palmer United Party leader told the ABC…
The ABC reports Queensland Police will allege Mr Crook and multi-millionaire property developer Tony Smith, were involved in a January 2013 attempt to coerce a witness in a $70 million civil case involving Mr Smith to recant his evidence, using subterfuge and threats of violence.
The pair allegedly lured the NAB employee to Singapore and on to Batam Island in Indonesia using the pretence of a possible job offer from Clive Palmer.
It will be alleged that once on Batam Island, the witness was stripsearched, threatened and forced to make a statement recanting his evidence, the ABC reports.
Mr Palmer is not thought to have had any involvement in, or knowledge of the plot, the ABC reports. Mr Crook has been Mr Palmer’s media adviser and spokesman since before the tycoon entered politics
Is #illridewithyou just #illfibtoyou?
Andrew Bolt December 19 2014 (9:56am)
The #Illridewithyou hashtag already seemed yet another Twitter outburst of narcissism. After all, how many of the hundreds of thousands who tweeted their support actually rode with a Muslim to work as a result? None? One?
But now it seems like just another typical Leftist myth, told to seem good rather than do it:
This was not a manifestation of tolerance but its reverse, as demonstrated by an earlier posting by Tessa Kum, the woman who created the hashtag:
===But now it seems like just another typical Leftist myth, told to seem good rather than do it:
GAPS have appeared in the story that inspired the #illridewithyou Twitter phenomenon.Almost nothing in Jacobs’ story can be taken for granted, given the profound encounter she described with a supposed Muslim ended with an almost wordless ”conversation”:
University lecturer [and former Greens candidate] Rachael Jacobs had originally posted a status on Facebook, explaining how she offered to protect a woman who felt uncomfortable wearing her hijab.
According to her story, Ms Jacobs had seen the woman beginning to remove her scarf, and ran after her, saying “Put it back on. I’ll walk with you.”
The exchange took place on a Brisbane train, while the Sydney siege was taking place in Sydney’s Martin Place.
However Rachael Jacobs has admitted that she “editorialised’’ parts of her story.
“Confession time. In my Facebook status, I editorialised. She wasn’t sitting next to me. She was a bit away, towards the other end of the carriage,” she wrote. Detailing her thought process, Ms Jacobs now says she wondered if she even needed to help."She might not even be Muslim or she could have just been warm!,” she wrote.
By sheer fluke, we got off at the same station, and some part of me decided saying something would be a good thing. Rather than quiz her about her choice of clothing, I thought if I simply offered to walk her to her destination, it might help.What made this #illridewithyou so offensive is that it deflected sympathy from the hostages - still in captivity - to those who shared the jihadists’ faith, and that it presumed Australians were so racist that they’d go on a pogrom (which, yet again, they did not).
It’s hard to describe the moment when humans, and complete strangers, have a conversation with no words. I wanted to tell her I was sorry for so many things – for overstepping the mark, for making assumptions about a complete stranger and for belonging to a culture where racism was part of her everyday experience. But none of those words came out, and our near silent encounter was over in a moment.
This was not a manifestation of tolerance but its reverse, as demonstrated by an earlier posting by Tessa Kum, the woman who created the hashtag:
I’m learning about hate because I am coming to hate you, white person. You have all the control, all the power, all the privilege, and there is nothing holding you accountable. I hate the double standards and hypocrisy you display, the rank dishonesty of your conduct. I hate that you can harm us, when we cannot harm you.(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
Reshuffle coming, but a communications shakeup is also needed
Andrew Bolt December 19 2014 (9:36am)
A reshuffle is coming, and new aggressive strategy that avoids the Senate where possible, targets Labor for its economic recklessness and focuses the debate on the economy.
Simon Benson:
James Massola:
Replacing him with Morrison would not much help the Government. Defence is not a portfolio that wins elections for governments - and won’t unless Defence becomes part of a mega national security portfolio. Otherwise it requires an administrator, not the Government’s most potent attack dog.
More important is that the Government fix its communications weakness. That should include appointing a very senior and trusted media advisor with the Prime Minister’s willing ear. Even better would be to also appoint a key MP to head the communications strategy, and give him or her a title - perhaps Minister Assisting the Prime Minister on Government Co-ordination - which would also give them the right to answer questions in Question Time over a range of topics. Such a figure would then take heat of Peta Credlin, the chief of staff, and make Abbott look less isolated.
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
===Simon Benson:
TONY Abbott is considering a Cabinet reshuffle as early as this weekend with Defence Minister David Johnston tipped to be a casualty.I’d suggest Sinodinos is damaged goods, and must wait until after the next election to return to the front bench - should the Liberals win it. Right now the Government cannot afford to give Labor any free kicks.
A senior Cabinet Minister confirmed that discussions had taken place this week over what to do about filling the vacant position of Assistant Treasurer.
It has not been decided whether Arthur Sinodinos will return to the role, after he stood aside when he became a witness in an ICAC investigation.
James Massola:
Prime Minister Tony Abbott will consider a frontbench reshuffle over the weekend… Fairfax Media has learnt the fate of Senator Sinodinos is foremost in Mr Abbott’s mind…I feel sorry for Johnston. He was absolutely right to blast ASC as not deserving of trust to build even a canoe. He should have been backed, not cut loose - another sign of the Government’s timidity in debate. He will be proved absolutely right if the blowout in the destroyer project turns out to be the rumoured $1 billion.
A key factor in Mr Abbott’s thinking will be whether or not to wait for the ICAC’s findings into an inquiry involving Senator Sinodinos, which were due to be handed down in January but have now been delayed pending a March High Court case over the ICAC’s pursuit of NSW Crown prosecutor Margaret Cunneen SC. That delay has thrown into question whether to move now or risk going through a second budget without an assistant treasurer....
[A] well-connected source predicted that if Mr Abbott moved to resolve Senator Sinodinos’ status before the end of the year that could open the door to a broader reshuffle. In that scenario, Defence Minister David Johnston’s fate would also be under a cloud, while Immigration Minister Scott Morrison could be given a bigger role… Mr Abbott is said to prefer a “one in, one out” reshuffle that would see a rising star such as Josh Frydenberg or Steve Ciobo moved up from the ranks of parliamentary secretaries to fill Senator Sinodinos’ position.
Replacing him with Morrison would not much help the Government. Defence is not a portfolio that wins elections for governments - and won’t unless Defence becomes part of a mega national security portfolio. Otherwise it requires an administrator, not the Government’s most potent attack dog.
More important is that the Government fix its communications weakness. That should include appointing a very senior and trusted media advisor with the Prime Minister’s willing ear. Even better would be to also appoint a key MP to head the communications strategy, and give him or her a title - perhaps Minister Assisting the Prime Minister on Government Co-ordination - which would also give them the right to answer questions in Question Time over a range of topics. Such a figure would then take heat of Peta Credlin, the chief of staff, and make Abbott look less isolated.
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
Our refugee program shouldn’t leave us in this danger
Andrew Bolt December 19 2014 (9:01am)
Paul Sheehan is right - our refugee program was rorted and leaves us less safe:
===Now for the cover-up. Australians are entitled to know, but are highly unlikely to be told, who were the lawyers and officials who advocated that Man Haron Monis be allowed to live in Australia, and then granted citizenship, despite red flag after red flag that he was trouble…(Thanks to reader Me 2.)
Right at the start, in 1996, when Monis claimed political asylum, the Iranian authorities made it clear that he had been charged with multiple counts of theft that had nothing to do with either political persecution or capital crimes. The Iranian foreign ministry reiterated this week that his psychological instability and criminal charges were known to Australian officials when they granted him asylum status.
Within months, Monis had chained himself to the front gate of state Parliament in Macquarie Street in a political protest. He was later given citizenship.
Monis is a classic case study of why Australia needs to have probationary conditions applied to the residence status and then citizenship granted to immigrants, refugees and asylum-seekers… With instability growing in the Muslim world, the tacit policy of open borders, advocated by the Greens and the churches, would have seen the 50,000 people who bypassed Australian immigration under Labor grow exponentially. Noone in the Greens or the churches offers structures setting limits, not 100,000 undocumented arrivals, or 200,000, or 500,000. Only compassion without limits. This has been sensibly and emphatically rejected by the electorate.
Isolated Lambie is angry the Government takes her at her word
Andrew Bolt December 19 2014 (8:50am)
Jacqui Lambie needs to grow up. She announces she will vote against every single piece of legislation the Abbott Government suggests yet still complains when the Prime Minister concludes there’s then no point in negotiating with her:
Action, meet consequences.
===Jacqui Lambie’s threat to vote down all government legislation unless the Defence Force is offered a better pay rise appears to have backfired with the firebrand Senator revealing the Prime Minister is now refusing to negotiate with her.What’s there to negotiate about, Senator? You said no. The Government took you at your word.
Senator Lambie revealed on Friday Mr Abbott has refused to meet her on three occasions since she made her threat and declared him a “coward"… “At least open up the negotiation lines, I would hope that the PM being a prime minister would be at least big enough to do that,” she told the ABC.
Action, meet consequences.
What creed demanded these children be killed?
Andrew Bolt December 19 2014 (8:40am)
The Sydney chocolate shop murders were in no way the worst atrocities committed by Islamists this week:
HEARTBREAKING images show the innocent victims gunned down by in a Taliban raid on a Pakistani school that left 148 children dead as grief-stricken families bury their dead and spoke of their dreams.The child killers:
A claim:
A military source told NBC News that the attackers were wearing police uniforms and suicide vests.UPDATE
“They burnt a teacher in front of the students in a classroom,” he said. “They literally set the teacher on fire with gasoline and made the kids watch.”
This just in:
More than 185 people, including women and children, have been kidnapped by Boko Haram fighters in northeast Nigeria.UPDATE
Gunmen killed 32 people during the attack in the remote village of Gumsuri in Borno state - the latest in a string of abductions by the Islamist group.
In April, Boko Haram, whose name means ‘Western education is sinful’, abducted more than 200 girls from a school in Chibok, only 15 miles from Gumsuri.
Alan Johnson has had enough of the pathetic excuses Western leaders make for Islam:
“There is nothing in Islam that justifies acts of terror.” (Prime Minister David Cameron reacting to the beheading of British soldier Lee Rigby by two Islamists who shouted “Allahu Akbar” and quoted 22 verses from the Koran.)
“They don’t represent Islam or Muslims in Britain or anywhere else in the world.” (David Cameron’s reaction to the massacre by Islamists in Nairobis’s Westgate shopping centre of anyone who failed to name the mother of the founder of Islam or recite verses from the Koran.)
“This hateful ideology has nothing to do with Islam… Let the message go out that we know Islam is a religion of peace.” (Theresa May’s speech to Conservative Party Conference, 2014.)
Islamic State has “nothing to do with the great religion of Islam, a religion of peace.” (David Cameron, denying any connection between the creation of an Islamic caliphate and Islam.)
“[The massacre in Pakistan] is nothing to do with one of the world’s great religions - Islam, which is a religion of peace.” (Prime Minister David Cameron speaking after a group of Taliban gunmen murdered 141, including 132 children at a school in northern Pakistan.)
Please. Enough.
The mantra that Islamism “has nothing to do with Islam” is well-intentioned. It aims to delegitimise the terrorists and strengthen the vast majority of Muslims who oppose terror. It is no doubt what the “comms” experts are telling the Prime Minister to say. But they are wrong. The unthinking, kneejerk, pro-forma and near-Orwellian denial of the deep and manifold connections between Islam and Islamism has to stop…
Listen instead to Perry Anderson, writing in the flagship journal of the Western left, New Left Review: “Since Muhammad clearly enjoins jihad against infidels in Holy Places, latterday Salafism – notwithstanding every effort of Western, or proWestern, commentators to euphemise the Prophet’s words – is on sound scriptural grounds, embarrassing though this undoubtedly is to the moderate majority of Muslims.”
Here is what we can’t ignore any longer: religious reform is essential if Islam is to overcome what the great Muslim scholar Bassam Tibi calls its “predicament with modernity”. Until we admit that Islam has such a predicament, admit that the Islamists exploit that predicament to radicalise, and admit that when they do they can point to canonical sources (even if it is also true that moderates can point to other sources, and more of them) then we are not going to win.
Fairfax’s Mark Kenny slimes Abbott for not saving us from Monis
Andrew Bolt December 19 2014 (7:45am)
Mark Kenny, the Sydney Morning Herald’s chief political correspondent, does not let even this moment go by without indulging his pathological hatred of Tony Abbott:
Mark Kenny’s wife, Virginia Haussegger, seems to share Kenny’s patently obvious political sympathies:
===Like prime ministers before him, Tony Abbott believes the first responsibility of government is national security – protecting the citizenry from those who would do us harm.Back in September, Kenny couldn’t resist starting another column with the same snark, but this time hinting that Abbott could be overreacting to terror threats:
Being a remote island nation, historically regarded as a strategic advantage in itself, counts for little when the most immediate threat to public security now comes from a self-precipitating enemy within. Yet judged against this criterion, it is arguable his government is failing.
Tony Abbott faces a unique challenge. The unpopular leader must unite a country around an idea that is inherently divisive. People will inevitably question his motives, and his judgment.Kenny is the kind of Abbott hater who even attacks Abbott for wearing boots of the kind Kenny didn’t think exceptional when worn by Kevin Rudd.
He is helped by the unflinching support of the Opposition, but many voters remain suspicious, fearing he is talking up the national security threat because it helps the government or, conversely, he is leading the country into a war that will render it less safe.
Mark Kenny’s wife, Virginia Haussegger, seems to share Kenny’s patently obvious political sympathies:
KATY Gallagher will resign as ACT Chief Minister to pursue a seat in federal parliament… Bill Shorten yesterday endorsed Ms Gallagher as his “star recruit” in the preselection contest to replace senator Kate Lundy, who is retiring… Two other mooted candidates, CFMEU ACT secretary Dean Hall and ABC newsreader Virginia Haussegger, also ruled themselves out yesterday.The great Labor/Fairfax/ABC nexus illustrated - and that AbbottAbbottAbbott streak common to all.
===
DESCENT OF VAN
Tim Blair – Thursday, December 19, 2013 (1:07pm)
Normal people don’t worry much about appointees to the Human Rights Commission. In fact, normal people can’t evenname any HRC appointees.
And then there is the Guardian‘s Van Badham, for whom the HRC appointment of Tim Wilson is an event equal to Princess Di shooting JFK during 9/11. Let’s follow Miss Badham’s desperate emotional journey as she struggles to cope with the terrible news:
In other words, if he isn’t a veteran of the whining industry he has no business on one of the left’s precious little worry lobbies.
These are universal rights. They apply to everybody.
A leftist hears the words “freedom of speech” and understands them to mean “unfettered hatred”. Interesting.
Tell it to your leftist mates in the anti-Jew club, Van.
You just know where this is heading.
Yep. Van’s gone the full Hitler.
Now she’s hit the grieving phase.
The “white space” of rage? RACIST. Apparently all of this distress led to a great crying fit:
If the term wasn’t associated with masculine gender constructs that diminish the oppression of women, you’d almost think Van was hysterical.
More grief. Van’s in turmoil. But next she discovers a smoking - or dripping, in this case - gun. Wilson once tweeted the quite reasonable view that water cannons be turned on Occupy deadbeats:
This actually shows up Wilson as a weak moderate. A genuine conservative would have called for the deployment ofChewplosive™ acre-clearance detonation mints.
In other words, if he isn’t a veteran of the whining industry he has no business on one of the left’s precious little worry lobbies.
These are universal rights. They apply to everybody.
A leftist hears the words “freedom of speech” and understands them to mean “unfettered hatred”. Interesting.
Tell it to your leftist mates in the anti-Jew club, Van.
You just know where this is heading.
Yep. Van’s gone the full Hitler.
Now she’s hit the grieving phase.
The “white space” of rage? RACIST. Apparently all of this distress led to a great crying fit:
If the term wasn’t associated with masculine gender constructs that diminish the oppression of women, you’d almost think Van was hysterical.
More grief. Van’s in turmoil. But next she discovers a smoking - or dripping, in this case - gun. Wilson once tweeted the quite reasonable view that water cannons be turned on Occupy deadbeats:
This actually shows up Wilson as a weak moderate. A genuine conservative would have called for the deployment ofChewplosive™ acre-clearance detonation mints.
HAWTHORN FOLDS
Tim Blair – Thursday, December 19, 2013 (5:58am)
Please enjoy Bernie’s Magic Moment. Some notes:
• The presence of Brad Rowe and Saverio Rocca indicates to AFL experts that this short film was made in 1994. Then again, the film’s credits also indicate this.
• Clearly, the broadcast game is at Victoria Park and not at the MCG. Artistic licence.
• The pizza boy is future Kevin Rudd advisor Rhys Muldoon.
• It is true that we Collingwood supporters can influence results by ironing. It’s just that we don’t iron very often.
• Why wasn’t he actually at the game?
TEACHER TAUGHT
Tim Blair – Thursday, December 19, 2013 (5:45am)
(Via Rafe)
ANGRY KITTY
Tim Blair – Thursday, December 19, 2013 (5:41am)
Suppose you’re a baby Sumatran tiger, born in a fancy zoo. Everything is sweet for the first 12 weeks. You’re the centre of attention. Cuddles galore! And then your handler decides – in freezy November – that it’s time for a swimming test:
Someone isn’t happy. And that zoo might not be so fancy after all.
Someone isn’t happy. And that zoo might not be so fancy after all.
(Via fearless reporter Leafy, floating at the scene)
TRAPPED IN A MADHOUSE
Tim Blair – Thursday, December 19, 2013 (5:32am)
Energy companies, among many others, have long been spooked by climate alarmism. Now, as Tony Thomasobserves, those companies might be wising up:
It must be a tipping point in the climate debate when a senior Shell executive notices something odd about the green activists with whom he has been consorting.David Hone, Shell UK’s Melbourne-born “senior climate change adviser”, went to an academic conference on “radical emission reduction strategies” in London on December 10-11.He concluded that he had fallen among eco-idiots wanting to remould society from the ground up.
Do read on.
SOAK SHOCK
Tim Blair – Thursday, December 19, 2013 (5:30am)
Mark Steyn sends a prayer:
God save us from the bedwetter Left.
Amen to that, especially when the dampeners are hitting Steyn and the National Review Online with vile lawsuits. Donate here to join the fight.
PULLING WOOL
Tim Blair – Thursday, December 19, 2013 (3:30am)
David Thompson reviews the colossal scope and profundity of Australian performance art.
The Left exposed: enemies of free speech, inciters of hate
Andrew Bolt December 19 2013 (7:12am)
Tim Wilson is a gay man who supports a form of gay marriage and should be a darling of the Left.
But here’s the problem. He also supports free speech.
Cue the vicious hate.
And cue a signature of the modern Left - a collective effort to abuse and cow him with a Hate Tim Wilson Day:
(Via Catallaxy Files.)
===But here’s the problem. He also supports free speech.
Cue the vicious hate.
And cue a signature of the modern Left - a collective effort to abuse and cow him with a Hate Tim Wilson Day:
A day to denounce, fling hate at, and generally express our contempt for Tim Wilson, the new freedom commissioner at the Australian Human Rights Commission.Note another hallmark of the Left - the hypocrisy. This mass hatred is organised by someone whose job is to promote tolerance:
Timothy James ScrivensNo honour. No shame.
Vice President, chair of education committee and Disability equity officer. at Sydney University Postgraduate Representative Association
(Via Catallaxy Files.)
That’s the trouble right there: Human Rights Commission denies freedom commissioner freedom to speak
Andrew Bolt December 18 2013 (8:07pm)
The president of the Human Rights Commission says new freedom commissioner Tim Wilson, who plans to campaign for free speech, is actually not permitted to speak out unless she and her fellow commissioners agree.
===
www.abc.net.au
===
www.afr.com
===
CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY OF THE DEMOCRATIC PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF KOREA
Anti-Socialist Stooge David Ball Condemned
PYONGYANG (KCNA) — With the people clamoring for justice, the organizing committee of the Supreme People’s Assembly announced that David Ball will meet the serious punishment of history.
The era and history will eternally record and never forget the shuddering crimes committed by Ball, the enemy of the party, revolution and people and heinous betrayer of the nation.
These crimes will be admitted to, following which hurrahs for the Workers’ Party of Korea and socialism will reverberate far and wide.
Ball let the decadent capitalist lifestyle find its way to our society by distributing all sorts of pornographic pictures among personal confidants. Ball led a dissolute, depraved life, squandering money at every stop.
Ball is a traitor to the nation for all ages, who perpetrated anti-party, counter-revolutionary factional acts in a bid to overthrow the leadership of our party and state and the socialist system.
Ball is a hooligan bereft of any personality as a human being,does not know even elementary diplomatic etiquette and lacks diplomatic ability, and will find that their desperate moves will be smashed.
Ball systematically rallied ex-convicts, those problematic in their past careers and discontented elements around him, and ruled over them as sacred and inviolable being.
Ball worked hard to put all affairs of the country under control, massively increasing the staff of the department and organs under it, and stretch Ball’s tentacles to ministries and national institutions.
All facts go to clearly prove that Ball is a thrice-cursed traitor without an equal in the world, who had desperately worked for years to destabilize and bring down the DPRK. The hateful and despicable nature of these anti-party, anti-state and unpopular crimes will be fully disclosed in the course of the trial. No matter how much water flows under the bridge and no matter how frequently a generation is replaced by new one, the lineage of Paektu will remain unchanged and irreplaceable.
No one in the world can stand in the way of the army and people who are advancing single-mindedly united around supreme leader Kim Jong Un under the banner of great Kimilsungism-Kimjongilism.
Citizens may discuss the trials in the official committee forum or denounce a friend using the form below.
Read more at Boing Boing
news.nationalpost.com
===
www.buzzfeed.com
===After 30 hours of work, Mita Diran collapsed and died
energy drinks don't replace sleep - ed
===
- 211 – Publius Septimius Geta, co-emperor of Rome, is lured to come without his bodyguards to meet his brother Marcus Aurelius Antoninus (Caracalla), to discuss a possible reconciliation. When he arrives, the Praetorian Guard murders him and he dies in the arms of his mother, Julia Domna.
- 1154 – Henry II of England is crowned at Westminster Abbey.
- 1187 – Pope Clement III is elected.
- 1490 – Anne, Duchess of Brittany, is married to Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor by proxy.
- 1562 – The Battle of Dreux takes place during the French Wars of Religion.
- 1606 – The Susan Constant, the Godspeed, and the Discovery depart England carrying settlers who found, at Jamestown, Virginia, the first of the thirteen colonies that became the United States.
- 1675 – The Great Swamp Fight, a pivotal battle in King Philip's War, gives the English settlers a bitterly won victory.
- 1776 – Thomas Paine publishes one of a series of pamphlets in The Pennsylvania Journal entitled "The American Crisis".
- 1777 – American Revolutionary War: George Washington's Continental Army goes into winter quarters at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania.
- 1796 – French Revolutionary Wars: Two British frigates under Commodore Horatio Nelson and two Spanish frigates under Commodore Don Jacobo Stuart engage in battle off the coast of Murcia.
- 1828 – Nullification Crisis: Vice President of the United States John C. Calhoun pens the South Carolina Exposition and Protest, protesting the Tariff of 1828.
- 1900 – Hopetoun Blunder: The first Governor-General of Australia John Hope, 7th Earl of Hopetoun, appoints Sir William Lyne premier of the new state of New South Wales, but he is unable to persuade other colonial politicians to join his government and is forced to resign.
- 1907 – Two hundred thirty-nine coal miners die in the Darr Mine Disaster in Jacobs Creek, Pennsylvania.
- 1912 – William Van Schaick, captain of the steamship General Slocum which caught fire and killed over one thousand people, is pardoned by U.S. President William Howard Taft after three-and-a-half-years in Sing Sing prison.
- 1920 – King Constantine I is restored as King of the Hellenes after the death of his son Alexander of Greece and a plebiscite.
- 1924 – The last Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost is sold in London, England.
- 1927 – Three Indian revolutionaries, Ram Prasad Bismil, Roshan Singh and Ashfaqulla Khan are executed by the British Empire.
- 1932 – BBC World Service begins broadcasting as the BBC Empire Service.
- 1941 – World War II: Adolf Hitler appoints himself as head of the Oberkommando des Heeres.
- 1941 – World War II: Limpet mines placed by Italian divers heavily damage the HMS Valiant and HMS Queen Elizabeth in Alexandria harbour.
- 1946 – Start of the First Indochina War.
- 1956 – Irish-born physician John Bodkin Adams is arrested in connection with the suspicious deaths of more than 160 patients. Eventually he is convicted only of minor charges.
- 1961 – India annexes Daman and Diu, part of Portuguese India.
- 1967 – Harold Holt, the Prime Minister of Australia, is officially presumed dead.
- 1972 – Apollo program: The last manned lunar flight, Apollo 17, crewed by Eugene Cernan, Ronald Evans, and Harrison Schmitt, returns to Earth.
- 1974 – Nelson Rockefeller is sworn in as Vice President of the United States under President Gerald Ford under the provisions of the twenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
- 1981 – Sixteen lives are lost when the Penlee lifeboat goes to the aid of the stricken coaster Union Star in heavy seas.
- 1983 – The original FIFA World Cup trophy, the Jules Rimet Trophy, is stolen from the headquarters of the Brazilian Football Confederationin Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
- 1984 – The Sino-British Joint Declaration, stating that China would resume the exercise of sovereignty over Hong Kong and the United Kingdom would restore Hong Kong to China with effect from July 1, 1997 is signed in Beijing, China by Deng Xiaoping and Margaret Thatcher.
- 1986 – Mikhail Gorbachev, leader of the Soviet Union, releases Andrei Sakharov and his wife from exile in Gorky.
- 1995 – The United States Government restores federal recognition to the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of Potawatomi Native American tribe.
- 1997 – SilkAir Flight 185 crashes into the Musi River, near Palembang in Indonesia, killing 104.
- 1998 – President Bill Clinton is impeached by the United States House of Representatives, becoming the second President of the United States to be impeached.
- 2000 – The Leninist Guerrilla Units wing of the Communist Labour Party of Turkey/Leninist attack a Nationalist Movement Party office in Istanbul, Turkey, killing one person and injuring three.
- 2001 – A record high barometric pressure of 1085.6 hPa (32.06 inHg) is recorded at Tosontsengel, Khövsgöl, Mongolia.
- 2001 – Argentine economic crisis: December riots: Riots erupt in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
- 2012 – Park Geun-hye is elected the first female president of South Korea.
- 2013 – Spacecraft Gaia is launched by European Space Agency.
- 1554 – Philip William, Prince of Orange (d. 1618)
- 1587 – Dorothea Sophia, Abbess of Quedlinburg (d. 1645)
- 1683 – Philip V of Spain (d. 1746)
- 1699 – William Bowyer, English printer (d. 1777)
- 1714 – John Winthrop, American astronomer and educator (d. 1779)
- 1778 – Marie Thérèse of France (d. 1851)
- 1796 – Manuel Bretón de los Herreros, Spanish poet, playwright, and critic (d. 1873)
- 1797 – Antoine Louis Dugès, French obstetrician and naturalist (d. 1838)
- 1817 – James J. Archer, American lawyer and general (d. 1864)
- 1820 – Mary Livermore, American journalist and activist (d. 1905)
- 1825 – George Frederick Bristow, American violinist and composer (d. 1898)
- 1831 – Bernice Pauahi Bishop, American philanthropist (d. 1884)
- 1849 – Henry Clay Frick, American businessman and financier (d. 1919)
- 1852 – Albert Abraham Michelson, Prussian-American physicist, chemist, and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1931)
- 1853 – Charles Fitzpatrick, Canadian lawyer and politician, 12th Lieutenant-Governor of Quebec (d. 1942)
- 1861 – Italo Svevo, Italian author and playwright (d. 1928)
- 1863 – Wallace Bryant, American archer (d. 1953)
- 1865 – Minnie Maddern Fiske, American actress and playwright (d. 1932)
- 1873 – Alphonse Kirchhoffer, French fencer (d. 1913)
- 1875 – Carter G. Woodson, American historian and author, founded Black History Month (d. 1950)
- 1876 – Bernard Friedberg, Austrian-Israeli scholar and author (d. 1961)
- 1888 – Fritz Reiner, Hungarian-American conductor (d. 1963)
- 1891 – Edward Bernard Raczyński, Polish politician and diplomat, 4th President-in-exile of Poland (d. 1993)
- 1894 – Ford Frick, American journalist and businessman (d. 1978)
- 1895 – Ingeborg Refling Hagen, Norwegian author and educator (d. 1989)
- 1899 – Martin Luther King, Sr., American pastor, missionary, and activist (d. 1984)
- 1901 – Rudolf Hell, German engineer, invented the Hellschreiber (d. 2002)
- 1901 – Oliver La Farge, American anthropologist and author (d. 1963)
- 1901 – Fritz Mauruschat, German footballer and manager (d. 1974)
- 1902 – Ralph Richardson, English actor (d. 1983)
- 1903 – George Davis Snell, American geneticist and immunologist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1996)
- 1905 – Irving Kahn, American businessman (d. 2015)
- 1905 – Giovanni Lurani, Italian race car driver, engineer, and journalist (d. 1995)
- 1906 – Leonid Brezhnev, Ukrainian-Russian marshal, engineer, and politician, 4th Head of State of the Soviet Union (d. 1982)
- 1907 – Jimmy McLarnin, Irish-American boxer, actor, and golfer (d. 2004)
- 1909 – W. A. Criswell, American pastor and author (d. 2002)
- 1910 – Jean Genet, French author, poet, and playwright (d. 1986)
- 1914 – Mel Shaw, American animator and screenwriter (d. 2012)
- 1915 – Édith Piaf, French singer-songwriter and actress (d. 1963)
- 1915 – Claudia Testoni, Italian hurdler, sprinter, and long jumper (d. 1998)
- 1916 – Roy Ward Baker, English director and producer (d. 2010)
- 1916 – Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann, German political scientist, journalist, and academic (d. 2010)
- 1918 – Professor Longhair, American singer-songwriter and pianist (d. 1980)
- 1918 – Lee Rich, American producer and production manager (d. 2012)
- 1920 – Little Jimmy Dickens, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (d. 2015)
- 1920 – David Susskind, American talk show host and producer (d. 1987)
- 1922 – Eamonn Andrews, Irish radio and television host (d. 1987)
- 1923 – Robert V. Bruce, American historian and author (d. 2008)
- 1923 – Gordon Jackson, Scottish-English actor and singer (d. 1990)
- 1924 – Carlo Chiti, Italian engineer (d. 1994)
- 1924 – Doug Harvey, Canadian ice hockey player and coach (d. 1989)
- 1924 – Gary Morton, American comedian, actor, and producer (d. 1999)
- 1924 – Edmund Purdom, British-Italian actor (d. 2009)
- 1924 – Michel Tournier, French journalist and author (d. 2016)
- 1925 – Tankred Dorst, German author and playwright
- 1925 – William Schutz, American psychologist and academic (d. 2002)
- 1925 – Robert B. Sherman, American songwriter and screenwriter (d. 2012)
- 1926 – Bobby Layne, American football player and coach (d. 1986)
- 1926 – Fikret Otyam, Turkish painter and journalist (d. 2015)
- 1927 – James Booth, English actor and screenwriter (d. 2005)
- 1928 – Eve Bunting, Irish-American author and academic
- 1928 – Nathan Oliveira, American painter and sculptor (d. 2010)
- 1929 – Bob Brookmeyer, American trombonist, pianist, and composer (d. 2011)
- 1929 – David Douglas, 12th Marquess of Queensberry, Scottish potter
- 1929 – Gregory Carroll, American singer-songwriter and producer (d. 2013)
- 1929 – Howard Sackler, American playwright and screenwriter (d. 1982)
- 1930 – Wally Olins, English businessman and academic (d. 2014)
- 1930 – Knut Helle, Norwegian historian and professor (d. 2015)
- 1932 – Salvador Elizondo, Mexican author, poet, playwright, and critic (d. 2006)
- 1932 – Wayne Tippit, American actor (d. 2009)
- 1933 – Kevan Gosper, Australian runner and politician
- 1933 – Christopher Smout, Scottish historian and academic
- 1934 – Al Kaline, American baseball player and sportscaster
- 1934 – Pratibha Patil, Indian lawyer and politician, 12th President of India
- 1934 – Casper R. Taylor, Jr., American lawyer and politician
- 1935 – Bobby Timmons, American pianist and composer (d. 1974)
- 1935 – Joanne Weaver, American baseball player (d. 2000)
- 1940 – Phil Ochs, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (d. 1976)
- 1941 – Lee Myung-bak, South Korean businessman and politician, 10th President of South Korea
- 1941 – Maurice White, American singer-songwriter and producer (d. 2016)
- 1942 – Cornell Dupree, American guitarist (d. 2011)
- 1942 – Dennis E. Fitch, American pilot (d. 2012)
- 1942 – "Mean Gene" Okerlund, American sports announcer
- 1943 – Ross M. Lence, American political scientist and academic (d. 2006)
- 1943 – James L. Jones, American general and politician, 22nd United States National Security Advisor
- 1944 – William Christie, American-French harpsichord player and conductor
- 1944 – Mitchell Feigenbaum, American physicist and mathematician
- 1944 – Martin Hume Johnson, English physiologist and academic
- 1944 – Richard Leakey, Kenyan paleontologist and politician
- 1944 – Alvin Lee, English singer-songwriter and guitarist (d. 2013)
- 1944 – Tim Reid, American actor and director
- 1944 – Steve Tyrell, American singer-songwriter and producer
- 1944 – Zal Yanovsky, Canadian singer-songwriter and guitarist (d. 2002)
- 1945 – Elaine Joyce, American actress, singer, and dancer
- 1945 – John McEuen, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1946 – Rosemary Conley, English businesswoman, author, and broadcaster
- 1946 – Robert Urich, American actor and producer (d. 2002)
- 1947 – Jimmy Bain, Scottish bass player and songwriter (d. 2016)
- 1948 – Ken Brown, Canadian ice hockey player and sportscaster
- 1949 – Sebastian, Danish singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1949 – Orna Berry, Israeli computer scientist and businesswoman
- 1950 – Eleanor J. Hill, American lawyer and diplomat
- 1951 – Mohammad Reza Aref, Iranian engineer and politician, 2nd Vice President of Iran
- 1951 – Alan Rouse, English mountaineer and author (d. 1986)
- 1952 – Walter Murphy, American pianist and composer
- 1954 – Jeff Allam, English race car driver
- 1954 – Tim Parks, English author and translator
- 1955 – Lincoln Hall, Australian mountaineer and author (d. 2012)
- 1955 – Rob Portman, American lawyer and politician
- 1956 – Phil Harris, American captain and fisherman (d. 2010)
- 1956 – Tom Lawless, American baseball player and manager
- 1956 – Shane McEntee, Irish farmer and politician, Minister of State for Food, Horticulture and Food Safety (d. 2012)
- 1957 – Cyril Collard, French actor, director, and composer (d. 1993)
- 1957 – Kevin McHale, American basketball player, coach, and manager
- 1958 – Steven Isserlis, English cellist and author
- 1958 – Limahl, English pop singer
- 1959 – Iván Vallejo, Ecuadorian mountaineer
- 1960 – Derrick Jensen, American author and activist
- 1960 – Michelangelo Signorile, American journalist and author
- 1961 – Eric Allin Cornell, American physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate
- 1961 – Matthew Waterhouse, English actor and author
- 1961 – Reggie White, American football player and wrestler (d. 2004)
- 1962 – Gary Fleder, American director, producer, and screenwriter
- 1963 – Jennifer Beals, American model and actress
- 1963 – Til Schweiger, German actor, director, and producer
- 1964 – Béatrice Dalle, French actress
- 1964 – Arvydas Sabonis, Lithuanian basketball player
- 1965 – Chito Martínez, Belizean-American baseball player
- 1966 – Chuckii Booker, American singer-songwriter and producer
- 1966 – Rajesh Chauhan, Indian cricketer
- 1966 – Alberto Tomba, Italian skier
- 1966 – Eric Weinrich, American ice hockey player and coach
- 1967 – Criss Angel, American magician
- 1967 – Charles Austin, American high jumper
- 1968 – Ken Marino, American actor, director, producer, and screenwriter
- 1969 – Michael Bates, American sprinter and football player
- 1969 – Tom Gugliotta, American basketball player
- 1969 – Richard Hammond, English journalist and producer
- 1969 – Nayan Mongia, Indian cricketer
- 1969 – Aziza Mustafa Zadeh, Azerbaijani composer, pianist, and singer
- 1970 – Tyson Beckford, American model and actor
- 1971 – Karen Pickering, English swimmer
- 1972 – Alyssa Milano, American actress and television personality
- 1972 – Warren Sapp, American football player and sportscaster
- 1973 – Michalis Grigoriou, Greek footballer and coach
- 1973 – Erick Wainaina, Kenyan runner
- 1973 – Zulfiya Zabirova, Russian cyclist
- 1974 – Eduard Ivakdalam, Indonesian footballer
- 1974 – Joe Jurevicius, American football player
- 1974 – Felipe Lopez, Dominican-American basketball player
- 1974 – Mikko Paananen, Finnish bass player
- 1974 – Jake Plummer, American football player and sportscaster
- 1974 – Ricky Ponting, Australian cricketer
- 1975 – Makis Belevonis, Greek footballer
- 1975 – Russell Branyan, American baseball player
- 1975 – Brandon Sanderson, American author and academic
- 1975 – Jon Smith, English journalist and author
- 1975 – Jeremy Soule, Canadian composer
- 1975 – Olivier Tébily, Ivorian-French footballer
- 1977 – Jorge Garbajosa, Spanish basketball player
- 1977 – LaTasha Jenkins, American sprinter
- 1977 – Irina Voronina, Russian model
- 1978 – Patrick Casey, American actor, producer, and screenwriter
- 1979 – Kevin Devine, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1979 – Rafael Soriano, Dominican baseball player
- 1980 – Jake Gyllenhaal, American actor and producer
- 1981 – Grégory Dufer, Belgian footballer
- 1982 – Mo Williams, American basketball player
- 1983 – Nektarios Alexandrou, Cypriot footballer
- 1983 – Casey Crescenzo, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1983 – Bridget Phillipson, English politician
- 1983 – Laura Pomeroy, Canadian swimmer
- 1983 – Matt Stajan, Canadian ice hockey player
- 1984 – Ian Kennedy, American baseball player
- 1985 – Gary Cahill, English footballer
- 1985 – Andrea Baldini, Italian fencer
- 1985 – Neil Kilkenny, English-Australian footballer
- 1985 – Sally Kipyego, Kenyan runner
- 1985 – Dan Logan, English bass player
- 1985 – Lady Sovereign, English rapper
- 1986 – Ryan Babel, Dutch footballer
- 1986 – Lazaros Christodoulopoulos, Greek footballer
- 1986 – Zuzana Hejnová, Czech hurdler
- 1986 – Miguel Lopes, Portuguese footballer
- 1986 – Calvin Andrew, English footballer
- 1987 – Cédric Baseya, French-Congolese footballer
- 1987 – Karim Benzema, French footballer
- 1987 – Ronan Farrow, American activist, journalist, lawyer, and former U.S. government advisor
- 1988 – Alexis Sánchez, Chilean footballer
- 1988 – Peter Winn, English footballer
- 1989 – Yong Jun-hyung, South Korean singer-songwriter, rapper and producer
- 1989 – Michał Masłowski, Polish footballer
- 1989 – Kousei Miura, Japanese jockey
- 1989 – Hamza Riazuddin, English cricketer
- 1990 – Greg Bretz, American snowboarder
- 1991 – Jorge Blanco, Mexican-Argentinian actor and singer
- 1991 – Declan Galbraith, English singer-songwriter
- 1992 – Iker Muniain, Spanish footballer
- 1992 – Raphael Spiegel, Swiss footballer
- 1993 – Isiah Koech, Kenyan runner
- 1994 – M'Baye Niang, French footballer
- 1994 – Maudy Ayunda, Indonesian actress and singer-songwriter
Births[edit]
- 211 – Publius Septimius Geta, Roman emperor (b. 189)
- 401 – Pope Anastasius I
- 1091 – Adelaide of Susa, margravine of Turin
- 1111 – Al-Ghazali, Iranian jurist, philosopher, and mystic (b. 1058)
- 1123 – Saint Berardo, Italian bishop and saint
- 1327 – Agnes of France, Duchess of Burgundy (b. 1260)
- 1370 – Pope Urban V (b. 1310)
- 1741 – Vitus Bering, Danish-Russian hydrographer and explorer (b. 1681)
- 1745 – Jean-Baptiste van Loo, French painter (b. 1684)
- 1749 – Francesco Antonio Bonporti, Italian priest and composer (b. 1672)
- 1807 – Friedrich Melchior, Baron von Grimm, German-French author and playwright (b. 1723)
- 1813 – James McGill, Scottish-Canadian businessman and philanthropist, founded McGill University (b. 1744)
- 1819 – Thomas Fremantle, English admiral and politician (b. 1765)
- 1848 – Emily Brontë, English novelist and poet (b. 1818)
- 1851 – Joseph Mallord William Turner, English painter (b. 1775)
- 1878 – Bayard Taylor, American author and poet (b. 1825)
- 1899 – Henry Ware Lawton, American general (b. 1843)
- 1904 – Lalla Zaynab, Algerian religious leader (b. ca. 1850)
- 1915 – Alois Alzheimer, German psychiatrist and neuropathologist (b. 1864)
- 1916 – Thibaw Min, Burmese king (b. 1859)
- 1927 – Ashfaqulla Khan, Indian activist (b. 1900)
- 1927 – Ram Prasad Bismil, Indian poet and activist (b. 1897)
- 1932 – Yun Bong-gil, South Korean activist (b. 1908)
- 1933 – George Jackson Churchward, English engineer and businessman (b. 1857)
- 1938 – Stephen Warfield Gambrill, American lawyer and politician (b. 1873)
- 1939 – Hans Langsdorff, German captain (b. 1894)
- 1944 – Abbas II of Egypt (b. 1874)
- 1944 – Rudolph Karstadt, German businessman (b. 1856)
- 1946 – Paul Langevin, French physicist and academic (b. 1872)
- 1953 – Robert Andrews Millikan, American physicist and eugenicist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1868)
- 1968 – Norman Thomas, American minister and politician (b. 1884)
- 1972 – Ahmet Emin Yalman, Turkish journalist, author, and academic (b. 1888)
- 1976 – Giuseppe Caselli, Italian painter (b. 1893)
- 1982 – Dwight Macdonald, American philosopher, author, and critic (b. 1906)
- 1984 – Joy Ridderhof, American missionary (b. 1903)
- 1986 – V. C. Andrews, American author (b. 1923)
- 1986 – Werner Dankwort, Russian-German colonel and diplomat (b. 1895)
- 1987 – August Mälk, Estonian author, playwright, and politician (b. 1900)
- 1988 – Robert Bernstein, American author and playwright (b. 1919)
- 1989 – Stella Gibbons, English journalist, author, and poet (b. 1902)
- 1991 – Joe Cole, American roadie and author (b. 1961)
- 1993 – Michael Clarke, American drummer (b. 1946)
- 1996 – Marcello Mastroianni, Italian-French actor and singer (b. 1924)
- 1997 – Masaru Ibuka, Japanese businessman, co-founded Sony (b. 1908)
- 1997 – Jimmy Rogers, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (b. 1924)
- 1998 – Mel Fisher, American treasure hunter (b. 1922)
- 1998 – Antonio Ordóñez, Spanish bullfighter (b. 1932)
- 1999 – Desmond Llewelyn, Welsh-English actor (b. 1914)
- 2000 – Rob Buck, American guitarist and songwriter (b. 1958)
- 2000 – Milt Hinton, American bassist and photographer (b. 1910)
- 2000 – John Lindsay, American lawyer and politician, 103rd Mayor of New York City (b. 1921)
- 2002 – Will Hoy, English race car driver (b. 1952)
- 2002 – Arthur Rowley, English footballer and manager (b. 1926)
- 2002 – George Weller, American author, playwright, and journalist (b. 1907)
- 2003 – Peter Carter-Ruck, English lawyer, founded Carter-Ruck (b. 1914)
- 2003 – Hope Lange, American model and actress (b. 1933)
- 2004 – Herbert C. Brown, English-American chemist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1912)
- 2004 – Renata Tebaldi, Italian soprano and actress (b. 1922)
- 2005 – Vincent Gigante, American mobster (b. 1927)
- 2008 – James Bevel, American minister and activist (b. 1936)
- 2008 – Carol Chomsky, American linguist and educator (b. 1930)
- 2008 – Michael Connell, American political consultant (b. 1963)
- 2008 – Dock Ellis, American baseball player and coach (b. 1945)
- 2009 – Giridharilal Kedia, Indian businessman (b. 1936)
- 2010 – Anthony Howard, English journalist and author (b. 1934)
- 2010 – Trudy Pitts, American singer and pianist (b. 1932)
- 2012 – Inez Andrews, American singer-songwriter (b. 1929)
- 2012 – Robert Bork, American lawyer, judge, and scholar, United States Attorney General (b. 1927)
- 2012 – Amnon Lipkin-Shahak, Israeli general and politician, 22nd Transportation Minister of Israel (b. 1944)
- 2012 – Larry Morris, American football player (b. 1933)
- 2012 – Peter Struck, German lawyer and politician, 13th German Federal Minister of Defence (b. 1943)
- 2013 – Winton Dean, English musicologist and author (b. 1916)
- 2013 – Al Goldstein, American publisher and pornographer (b. 1936)
- 2013 – Ned Vizzini, American author and screenwriter (b. 1981)
- 2014 – S. Balasubramanian, Indian journalist and director (b. 1936)
- 2014 – Philip Bradbourn, English lawyer and politician (b. 1951)
- 2014 – Arthur Gardner, American actor and producer (b. 1910)
- 2014 – Igor Rodionov, Russian general and politician, 3rd Russian Minister of Defence (b. 1936)
- 2014 – Dick Thornton, American-Canadian football player and coach (b. 1939)
- 2015 – Jimmy Hill, English footballer, manager, and sportscaster (b. 1928)
- 2015 – Greville Janner, Baron Janner of Braunstone, Welsh-English lawyer and politician (b. 1928)
- 2015 – Karin Söder, Swedish educator and politician, 33rd Swedish Minister for Foreign Affairs (b. 1928)
Deaths[edit]
- Christian feast day:
- Liberation day (Goa)
Holidays and observances[edit]
““Praise be to the Lord, the God of Israel, because he has come to his people and redeemed them. He has raised up a horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant David (as he said through his holy prophets of long ago),” Luke 1:68-70 NIV
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Morning and Evening by Charles Spurgeon
Morning
Garment-rending and other outward signs of religious emotion, are easily manifested and are frequently hypocritical; but to feel true repentance is far more difficult, and consequently far less common. Men will attend to the most multiplied and minute ceremonial regulations--for such things are pleasing to the flesh--but true religion is too humbling, too heart-searching, too thorough for the tastes of the carnal men; they prefer something more ostentatious, flimsy, and worldly. Outward observances are temporarily comfortable; eye and ear are pleased; self-conceit is fed, and self-righteousness is puffed up: but they are ultimately delusive, for in the article of death, and at the day of judgment, the soul needs something more substantial than ceremonies and rituals to lean upon. Apart from vital godliness all religion is utterly vain; offered without a sincere heart, every form of worship is a solemn sham and an impudent mockery of the majesty of heaven.
Heart-rending is divinely wrought and solemnly felt. It is a secret grief which is personally experienced, not in mere form, but as a deep, soul-moving work of the Holy Spirit upon the inmost heart of each believer. It is not a matter to be merely talked of and believed in, but keenly and sensitively felt in every living child of the living God. It is powerfully humiliating, and completely sin-purging; but then it is sweetly preparative for those gracious consolations which proud unhumbled spirits are unable to receive; and it is distinctly discriminating, for it belongs to the elect of God, and to them alone.
The text commands us to rend our hearts, but they are naturally hard as marble: how, then, can this be done? We must take them to Calvary: a dying Saviour's voice rent the rocks once, and it is as powerful now. O blessed Spirit, let us hear the death-cries of Jesus, and our hearts shall be rent even as men rend their vestures in the day of lamentation.
Evening
Every wise merchant will occasionally hold a stock-taking, when he will cast up his accounts, examine what he has on hand, and ascertain decisively whether his trade is prosperous or declining. Every man who is wise in the kingdom of heaven, will cry, "Search me, O God, and try me"; and he will frequently set apart special seasons for self-examination, to discover whether things are right between God and his soul. The God whom we worship is a great heart-searcher; and of old his servants knew him as "the Lord which searcheth the heart and trieth the reins of the children of men." Let me stir you up in his name to make diligent search and solemn trial of your state, lest you come short of the promised rest. That which every wise man does, that which God himself does with us all, I exhort you to do with yourself this evening. Let the oldest saint look well to the fundamentals of his piety, for grey heads may cover black hearts: and let not the young professor despise the word of warning, for the greenness of youth may be joined to the rottenness of hypocrisy. Every now and then a cedar falls into our midst. The enemy still continues to sow tares among the wheat. It is not my aim to introduce doubts and fears into your mind; nay, verily, but I shall hope the rather that the rough wind of self-examination may help to drive them away. It is not security, but carnal security, which we would kill; not confidence, but fleshly confidence, which we would overthrow; not peace, but false peace, which we would destroy. By the precious blood of Christ, which was not shed to make you a hypocrite, but that sincere souls might show forth his praise, I beseech you, search and look, lest at the last it be said of you, "Mene, Mene, Tekel: thou art weighed in the balances, and art found wanting."
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Today's reading: Obadiah 1, Revelation 9 (NIV)
View today's reading on Bible GatewayToday's Old Testament reading: Obadiah 1
Obadiah’s Vision
1 The vision of Obadiah.
This is what the Sovereign LORD says about Edom—
We have heard a message from the LORD:
An envoy was sent to the nations to say,
“Rise, let us go against her for battle”—
2 “See, I will make you small among the nations;An envoy was sent to the nations to say,
“Rise, let us go against her for battle”—
you will be utterly despised.
3 The pride of your heart has deceived you,
you who live in the clefts of the rocks
and make your home on the heights,
you who say to yourself,
‘Who can bring me down to the ground?’
4 Though you soar like the eagle
and make your nest among the stars,
from there I will bring you down,” declares the LORD.
5 “If thieves came to you,
if robbers in the night—
oh, what a disaster awaits you!—
would they not steal only as much as they wanted?
If grape pickers came to you,
would they not leave a few grapes?
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