I am a decent man and don't care for the abuse given me. I created a video raising awareness of anti police feeling among western communities. I chose the senseless killing of Nicola Cotton, a Louisiana policewoman who joined post Katrina, to highlight the issue. I did this in order to get an income after having been illegally blacklisted from work in NSW for being a whistleblower. I have not done anything wrong. Local council appointees refused to endorse my work, so I did it for free. Youtube's Adsence refused to allow me to profit from their marketing it. Meanwhile, I am hostage to abysmal political leadership and hopeless journalists. My shopfront has opened on Facebook.
Here is a video I made Hooked on a Feeling
"Hooked on a Feeling" is a 1968 pop song written by Mark James originally performed by B. J. Thomas. Featuring the sound of the electric sitar, the song reached number five in 1969 on the Billboard Hot 100.
=== from 2016 ===
Sydney University has not stopped falling for awhile. Since they lost their senior staff in a train accident they have suffered. Dame Kramer had been heroic as Chancellor, but the ALP had corrupted the board during the Dawkins revolution and they just vandalised the joint. That letter saying Howard was a war criminal should have been a resignation from each who signed it. While they are at Sydney University, there is no safe space.
Mike Baird made the correct decision to close greyhound racing. It is hurting ALP mates and the media are keen to mischaracterize it in similar terms as they did the Kings Cross service of alcohol issue. Had Baird not closed the industry then he would have endorsed the corruption which the industry claimed they could not police. Who stands for corruption? Bill Shorten, the ALP and many labour unions.
For my gay friends who feel this is an issue, I am sorry. Activists want to use it to hit churches more than they want you to have gay marriage.
Turnbull offers the Liberals no future, no hope. He can only be further humiliated before he resigns. Turnbull's reliance on renewal is as risky as South Australia's on renewables. And as doomed.
It isn't climate change that led to South Australia choosing not to have sufficient base load. It wasn't climate change that led to Bligh not insuring against flood and not maintaining the dams responsibly. It wasn't climate change which led to ALP leaving too much fuel in bushfire areas in Victoria and South Australia which killed hundreds of people.
Reality hits an ALP state. As South Australia approached zero emissions their people turned to burning wood for heat and light. Welcome to the Green's future.
I use a CPAP machine to sleep. Not going to South Australia so long as they have ALP government.
Clinton lost the debate. The proof will not be polls on the debate, but the polls on her campaign. She is shedding support faster than Trump is growing.
Backpackers are good for Australia and bring in money. Why kill a once in a lifetime experience for back packers which Australia benefits from so as to make Centrelink people work part time? Unemployed need regular full time work, which they would have with work choices and less red tape.
Mike Baird made the correct decision to close greyhound racing. It is hurting ALP mates and the media are keen to mischaracterize it in similar terms as they did the Kings Cross service of alcohol issue. Had Baird not closed the industry then he would have endorsed the corruption which the industry claimed they could not police. Who stands for corruption? Bill Shorten, the ALP and many labour unions.
For my gay friends who feel this is an issue, I am sorry. Activists want to use it to hit churches more than they want you to have gay marriage.
Turnbull offers the Liberals no future, no hope. He can only be further humiliated before he resigns. Turnbull's reliance on renewal is as risky as South Australia's on renewables. And as doomed.
It isn't climate change that led to South Australia choosing not to have sufficient base load. It wasn't climate change that led to Bligh not insuring against flood and not maintaining the dams responsibly. It wasn't climate change which led to ALP leaving too much fuel in bushfire areas in Victoria and South Australia which killed hundreds of people.
Reality hits an ALP state. As South Australia approached zero emissions their people turned to burning wood for heat and light. Welcome to the Green's future.
I use a CPAP machine to sleep. Not going to South Australia so long as they have ALP government.
Clinton lost the debate. The proof will not be polls on the debate, but the polls on her campaign. She is shedding support faster than Trump is growing.
Backpackers are good for Australia and bring in money. Why kill a once in a lifetime experience for back packers which Australia benefits from so as to make Centrelink people work part time? Unemployed need regular full time work, which they would have with work choices and less red tape.
=== from 2015 ===
Mr Abbott graciously endorses his party for the next election. He is bruised. But he doesn't want to see the corruption and loss which follows an ALP win. And there again, Abbott is different to Turnbull, who had no problems undermining the Liberals until he became leader.
Water suggests life exists on Mars. It was known that Mars had had water previously. Now we know Mars has water. Will there be intelligent life on Earth? Scientists can't say, and perhaps we will never know. Global warming belief suggests there isn't.
For some, at the moment, the Sex Party has more credibility.
Water suggests life exists on Mars. It was known that Mars had had water previously. Now we know Mars has water. Will there be intelligent life on Earth? Scientists can't say, and perhaps we will never know. Global warming belief suggests there isn't.
For some, at the moment, the Sex Party has more credibility.
From 2014
A children's program in the seventies featured a super hero called Shazam. The character was based on Captain Marvel and got a strong response from the audience in a boy demographic. Producers wanted to have a similar program for girls. They found an Egyptian Goddess that had no obvious drawbacks or bad associations, Isis. Today, an eight year old girl, Isis, is utterly heartbroken by the response her name inspires. It is all right, Isis, just keep your head, and don't take others. In the tv program, the character was summonsed by the lead turning around and calling out her name. Best not to do that outdoors these days. One person who is brave enough to attempt such is Cate Blanchet. But don't let Cate sign a sick certificate for your employer. On this slow news day we found out that Dracula was misunderstood, and his terrorist activity overstated. A good samaritan on a train who went to the aid of a woman being monster-ed by two 'men' got beaten up. Coroner criticises police investigation nineteen years ago and declares the missing man murdered. Police corner a man in Brisbane and shoot him dead as he raised a weapon. A Simpson's character has died, but no one remembered ever seeing him.
In more serious news, Clive Palmer has claimed to have won 90% of court cases he fights. He has actually won 6% of court cases in the last eighteen months. He should fight more of them. Sophie Mirabella may have lost her seat to an electoral fraud. Australia records another big deficit, thanks to the ALP. Senator Wong had lost over one hundred billion dollars in preceding budgets, it may have reached over $140 billion unaccounted for.
The ALP are involved with corruption and bad management, but they had supporters who helped, and they help terrorists too. ABC has claimed Australia's need for a strong defence force is a myth. 'Q and A' provides excuses from terrorist apologists delivered straight to media who want to tell terrorists. Some of the excuses put Australia in danger of being hit. It looks like an Afghan expat was killed for being Australian. Crikey expresses concern for those demonising others. Yet Crikey demonises conservatives as editorial policy. Steyn comments on a workplace accident involving an Islamic convert decapitating a colleague. Obama admits an intelligence failure regarding ISIS in Syria going back two years. Only those two years involved an election he was so desperate for that he lied about Benghazi. Tim Blair provides a guide to avoiding terrorists. They say justice is blind, but she appears to be racist. Going back in time in Afghanistan, one sees women living free lives. Once upon a time Islam celebrated wine and women in poetry and lifestyle. Amanda Vanstone drew on myth to denounce Christians so as to reconcile with Islam through Ataturk. Ataturk was successful in opposing radical clerics so that Turkish women today are unaccustomed to wearing 'traditional' robes. But the pathetic truth is exposed with an Islamic conference where terrorists are welcome, but journalists are not.
In more serious news, Clive Palmer has claimed to have won 90% of court cases he fights. He has actually won 6% of court cases in the last eighteen months. He should fight more of them. Sophie Mirabella may have lost her seat to an electoral fraud. Australia records another big deficit, thanks to the ALP. Senator Wong had lost over one hundred billion dollars in preceding budgets, it may have reached over $140 billion unaccounted for.
The ALP are involved with corruption and bad management, but they had supporters who helped, and they help terrorists too. ABC has claimed Australia's need for a strong defence force is a myth. 'Q and A' provides excuses from terrorist apologists delivered straight to media who want to tell terrorists. Some of the excuses put Australia in danger of being hit. It looks like an Afghan expat was killed for being Australian. Crikey expresses concern for those demonising others. Yet Crikey demonises conservatives as editorial policy. Steyn comments on a workplace accident involving an Islamic convert decapitating a colleague. Obama admits an intelligence failure regarding ISIS in Syria going back two years. Only those two years involved an election he was so desperate for that he lied about Benghazi. Tim Blair provides a guide to avoiding terrorists. They say justice is blind, but she appears to be racist. Going back in time in Afghanistan, one sees women living free lives. Once upon a time Islam celebrated wine and women in poetry and lifestyle. Amanda Vanstone drew on myth to denounce Christians so as to reconcile with Islam through Ataturk. Ataturk was successful in opposing radical clerics so that Turkish women today are unaccustomed to wearing 'traditional' robes. But the pathetic truth is exposed with an Islamic conference where terrorists are welcome, but journalists are not.
From 2013
Bob Hawke tells an off colour joke. It reminds people of ALP glory days. Only those days weren't very good, and today it is worse. In the glory days of Hawke/Keating, changes were made to the economy which benefited Australia which had bipartisan support. The preceding Liberal PM, Fraser, had been small 'L' liberal and had resisted necessary change. Kudos go to the ALP in floating the dollar and deregulating the financial system. To this day, Fraser still supports the ALP over conservative party policy. Hawke, addressing the UN, told a joke about Mother Teresa and India. His humour crosses boundaries. However, Hawke had no substance to his narrative. Speaking to the Chinese Premier in the wake of the slaughter of democracy protesting students at Tiananmen Square Hawke asked the Premier if he might allow some dissidents to leave China rather than punitively treating them. Whereupon the Premier asked "How many millions do you want?" Hawke later said he hadn't realised the problem was so bad. But the truth is socialist/communist governments degenerate into tyranny.
A recent example of how bad a leftist government can be to hang onto power, is the ALP's attempt to control the media. It was a laughable attempt, as the media are largely theirs anyway. But other sinister examples can be found in Italy and Thailand where billionaire conservative leaders have apparently been stitched up by corruption. That isn't to oppose the rule of law, Greek Fascists should be jailed for their crimes. Having an opinion does not endorse corruption or murder.
Fascism has a way of crossing boundaries. The way fascism has corrupted science under the guise of environmentalism is appalling. Similarly, Islam looks really ugly because of the supremacy of its' fascist elements. In Australia, minor parties like the Democrats and the Greens have been vaporised after they surrendered their independence to the ALP. But the far right parties like One Nation never achieve anything worthwhile.
A recent example of how bad a leftist government can be to hang onto power, is the ALP's attempt to control the media. It was a laughable attempt, as the media are largely theirs anyway. But other sinister examples can be found in Italy and Thailand where billionaire conservative leaders have apparently been stitched up by corruption. That isn't to oppose the rule of law, Greek Fascists should be jailed for their crimes. Having an opinion does not endorse corruption or murder.
Fascism has a way of crossing boundaries. The way fascism has corrupted science under the guise of environmentalism is appalling. Similarly, Islam looks really ugly because of the supremacy of its' fascist elements. In Australia, minor parties like the Democrats and the Greens have been vaporised after they surrendered their independence to the ALP. But the far right parties like One Nation never achieve anything worthwhile.
Historical perspective on this day
522 BC – Darius I of Persia kills the Magian usurper Gaumata, securing his hold as king of the Persian Empire.
61 BC – Pompey the Great celebrates his third triumphfor victories over the pirates and the end of the Mithridatic Wars on his 45th birthday.
1227 – Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor, is excommunicated by Pope Gregory IX for his failure to participate in the Crusades.
1364 – Battle of Auray: English forces defeat the French in Brittany; end of the War of the Breton Succession.
61 BC – Pompey the Great celebrates his third triumphfor victories over the pirates and the end of the Mithridatic Wars on his 45th birthday.
1227 – Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor, is excommunicated by Pope Gregory IX for his failure to participate in the Crusades.
1364 – Battle of Auray: English forces defeat the French in Brittany; end of the War of the Breton Succession.
1578 – Tegucigalpa, capital city of Honduras, is claimed by the Spaniards.
1650 – Henry Robinson opens his Office of Addresses and Encounters in Threadneedle Street, London.
1717 – An earthquake strikes Antigua Guatemala, destroying much of the city's architecture and making authorities consider moving the capital to a different city.
1789 – The United States Department of War first establishes a regular army with a strength of several hundred men.
1789 – The 1st United States Congress adjourns.
1829 – The Metropolitan Police of London, later also known as the Met, is founded.
1848 – Battle of Pákozd: Stalemate between Hungarian and Croatian forces at Pákozd; the first battle of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848.
1850 – The papal bull Universalis Ecclesiae restores the Roman Catholic hierarchy in England and Wales.
1855 – Iloilo was opened to world trade by Queen Isabella II of Spain.[1][2]
1864 – American Civil War: The Battle of Chaffin's Farm is fought.
1864 – The Treaty of Lisbon defines the boundaries between Spain and Portugal and abolishes the Couto Misto microstate.
1885 – The first practical public electric tramway in the world is opened in Blackpool, England.
1899 – The Malolos Congress ratified the Philippine Declaration of Independence from Spain.
1907 – The cornerstone is laid at Washington National Cathedral in the U.S. capital.
1911 – Italy declares war on the Ottoman Empire.
1918 – World War I: Bulgaria signs the Armistice of Salonica. The Hindenburg Line is broken by an Allied attack. Germany's Supreme Army Command tells the Kaiser and the Chancellor to open negotiations for an armistice.
1923 – The British Mandate for Palestine takes effect, creating Mandatory Palestine.
1923 – The French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon takes effect.
1932 – Chaco War: Last day of the Battle of Boquerón between Paraguay and Bolivia.
1938 – The Munich Agreement between Germany, the United Kingdom, France and Italy settles the Sudetenland dispute in Germany's favor. The Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia are not invited.
1940 – Two Avro Ansons of No. 2 Service Flying Training School RAAF collide in mid-airover Brocklesby, New South Wales, Australia, remain locked together after colliding, and then land safely.
1941 – World War II: Holocaust in Kiev, Soviet Union: German Einsatzgruppe C begins the Babi Yar massacre, according to the Einsatzgruppen operational situation report.
1949 – The Communist Party of China writes the Common Programme for the future People's Republic of China.
1954 – The convention establishing CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research) is signed.
1957 – Twenty MCi (740 petabecquerels) of radioactive material is released in an explosion at the Soviet Mayak nuclear plant at Chelyabinsk.
1960 – Nikita Khrushchev, leader of Soviet Union, disrupts a meeting of the United Nations General Assembly with a number of angry outbursts.
1971 – Oman joins the Arab League.
1972 – China–Japan relations: Japan establishes diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China after breaking official ties with the Republic of China.
1975 – WGPR in Detroit, Michigan, becomes the world's first black-owned-and-operated television station.
1988 – Space Shuttle: NASA launches STS-26, the return to flight mission, after the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster.
1990 – Construction of the Washington National Cathedral is completed.
1990 – The YF-22, which would later become the F-22 Raptor, flies for the first time.
1991 – Haitian coup d'état.
1992 – Brazilian President Fernando Collor de Mello is impeached.
2004 – The asteroid 4179 Toutatis passes within four lunar distances of Earth.
2004 – The Burt Rutan Ansari X Prize entry SpaceShipOne performs a successful spaceflight, the first of two required to win the prize.
2006 – Gol Transportes Aéreos Flight 1907 collides in mid-air with an Embraer Legacy 600 business jet near Peixoto de Azevedo, Mato Grosso, Brazil, killing 154 people, and triggering a Brazilian aviation crisis.
2007 – Calder Hall, the world's first commercial nuclear power station, is demolished in a controlled explosion.
2008 – Following the bankruptcies of Lehman Brothers and Washington Mutual, The Dow Jones Industrial Average falls 777.68 points, the largest single-day point loss in its history.
2009 – The 8.1 Mw Samoa earthquake strikes with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VI (Strong). A destructive tsunami follows, leaving 189 dead and hundreds injured.
2013 – Over 42 people are killed by members of Boko Haram at the College of Agriculture in Gujba, Nigeria.
=== 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
106 BCE – Pompey, Roman general and politician (d. 48 BC)
1842 – Louis J. Weichmann, American clerk, witness in the trial of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln (d. 1902)
- 1774 – The publication of The Sorrows of Young Werther raised the 24-year-old Johann Wolfgang von Goethe(pictured) to international fame.
- 1923 – The British Mandate for Palestine came into effect, officially creating the protectorates of Palestine (to include a Jewish homeland) under British administration and Transjordan as a separate emirate under Abdullah I.
- 1941 – The Holocaust: German Nazis aided by their collaborators began the Babi Yar massacre in Kiev, Ukraine, killing over 30,000 Jewish civilians in two days and thousands more in the months that followed.
- 1962 – Alouette 1, Canada's first satellite, and the first satellite constructed by a country other than the Soviet Union or the United States, was launched.
- 2006 – Gol Transportes Aéreos Flight 1907 collided in mid-air with an Embraer Legacy business jet near Peixoto de Azevedo, Mato Grosso, Brazil, killing 154 people, and triggering a Brazilian aviation crisis.
You have overcome the sorrows. Your mandate has arrived. We do not joke about '41. Canada has entered the game. Pilot your jet with care. And enjoy the party.
- 106 BC – Pompey, Roman general and politician (d. 48 BC)
- 1240 – Margaret of England (d. 1275)
- 1321 – John of Artois, Count of Eu (d. 1387)
- 1328 – Joan of Kent (d. 1385)
- 1511 – Michael Servetus, Spanish physician, cartographer, and theologian (d. 1553)
- 1538 – Joan Terès i Borrull, Spanish archbishop (d. 1603)
- 1547 – Miguel de Cervantes, Spanish author, poet, and playwright (d. 1616)
- 1548 – William V, Duke of Bavaria (d. 1626)
- 1561 – Adriaan van Roomen, Flemish mathematician (d. 1615)
- 1571 – Caravaggio, Italian painter (d. 1610)
- 1636 – Thomas Tenison, English archbishop (d. 1715)
- 1639 – William Russell, Lord Russell, English politician (d. 1683)
- 1640 – Antoine Coysevox, French sculptor (d. 1720)
- 1674 – Jacques-Martin Hotteterre, French flute player and composer (d. 1763)
- 1725 – Robert Clive, English general and politician (d. 1774)
- 1758 – Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson, English admiral (d. 1805)
- 1803 – Jacques Charles François Sturm, French mathematician (d. 1850)
- 1864 – Alexandra Kitchin, English model (d. 1925)
- 1895 – Joseph Banks Rhine, American botanist and parapsychologist (d. 1980)
- 1899 – László Bíró, Hungarian-Argentinian inventor, invented the ballpoint pen (d. 1985)
- 1901 – Enrico Fermi, Italian-American physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1954)
- 1904 – Greer Garson, English-American actress and singer (d. 1996)
- 1907 – Gene Autry, American singer and actor (d. 1998)
- 1907 – George W. Jenkins, American businessman, founded Publix (d. 1996)
- 1913 – Trevor Howard, English actor (d. 1988)
- 1915 – Oscar Handlin, American historian and academic (d. 2011)
- 1931 – Anita Ekberg, Swedish model and actress
- 1935 – Jerry Lee Lewis, American singer-songwriter and pianist
- 1936 – Silvio Berlusconi, Italian businessman and politician, 50th Prime Minister of Italy
- 1941 – Fred West, English serial killer (d. 1995)
- 1942 – Madeline Kahn, American actress and singer (d. 1999)
- 1943 – Lech Wałęsa, Polish politician, 2nd President of Poland, Nobel Prize laureate
- 1944 – Mike Post, American composer
- 1946 – Ian Wallace, English drummer (King Crimson and Crimson Jazz Trio) (d. 2007)
- 1947 – Gary Wetzel, American soldier, Medal of Honor recipient
- 1948 – Mark Farner, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (Grand Funk Railroad and Terry Knight and the Pack)
- 1948 – Bryant Gumbel, American journalist and sportscaster
- 1948 – Theo Jörgensmann, German clarinet player and composer (German Clarinet Duo, Clarinet Contrast, and Klarinettenquartett Cl-4)
- 1948 – Yelena Drapeko, Kazakhstani-Russian actress
- 1948 – Mike Pinera, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer (Blues Image, Iron Butterfly, Cactus, and Ramatam)
- 1952 – Takanosato Toshihide, Japanese sumo wrestler, the 59th Yokozuna (d. 2011)
- 1954 – Uwe Jahn, German footballer and manager
- 1955 – Ann Bancroft, American explorer and author
- 1956 – Sebastian Coe, English sprinter and politician
- 1956 – Suzzy Roche, American singer-songwriter, producer, and actress (The Roches)
- 1957 – Chris Broad, English cricketer and referee
- 1961 – Julia Gillard, Welsh-Australian politician, 27th Prime Minister of Australia
- 1963 – Les Claypool, American bass player, songwriter, and producer (Primus, Blind Illusion, Oysterhead, and Sausage)
- 1967 – Brett Anderson, English singer-songwriter (Suede and The Tears)
- 1968 – Patrick Burns, American paranormal investigator
- 1968 – Luke Goss, English singer, producer, and actor (Bros)
- 1968 – Matt Goss, English singer-songwriter (Bros)
- 1968 – Alex Skolnick, American guitarist (Alex Skolnick Trio, Testament, Savatage, and Stratospheerius)
- 1968 – Samir Soni, Indian actor
- 1969 – Jon Auer, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (The Posies, Big Star, Sky Cries Mary and The Squirrels)
- 1970 – Russell Peters, Canadian comedian and actor
- 1970 – Yoshihiro Tajiri, Japanese wrestler
- 1972 – Togi Makabe, Japanese wrestler
- 1972 – Robert Webb, English comedian, actor, and screenwriter
- 1973 – Shannon Larratt, Canadian publisher, founded BMEzine (d. 2013)
- 1973 – Scout Niblett, English singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1978 – Gunner McGrath, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (Much the Same)
- 1978 – Kurt Nilsen, Norwegian singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1980 – Dallas Green, Canadian singer-songwriter and guitarist (Alexisonfire and City and Colour)
- 1982 – Matt Giteau, Australian rugby player
- 1993 – Viktor Romanenkov, Estonian figure skater
- 1995 – Alice Matteucci, Italian tennis player
- 1999 – Juan Urdangarín y de Borbón, Spanish son of Infanta Cristina, Duchess of Palma de Mallorca
Deaths
- 722 – Leudwinus, Frankish bishop (b. 660)
- 855 – Lothair I, Roman emperor (b. 795)
- 1304 – John de Warenne, 6th Earl of Surrey, English commander (b. 1231)
- 1364 – Charles I, Duke of Brittany (b. 1319)
- 1560 – Gustav I of Sweden (b. 1496)
- 1637 – Lorenzo Ruiz, Filipino saint (b. 1600)
- 1642 – René Goupil, French missionary and saint (b. 1608)
- 1642 – William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby, English politician (b. 1561)
- 1703 – Charles de Saint-Évremond, French-English soldier (b. 1610)
- 1800 – Michael Denis, Austrian poet and author (b. 1729)
- 1902 – William McGonagall, Scottish poet and actor (b. 1825)
- 1902 – Émile Zola, French journalist, author, and playwright (b. 1840)
- 1908 – Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis, Brazilian author, poet, and playwright (b. 1839)
- 1913 – Rudolf Diesel, German engineer, invented the Diesel Engine (b. 1858)
- 1927 – Arthur Achleitner, German journalist and author (b. 1858)
- 1952 – John Cobb, English race car driver (b. 1899)
- 1970 – Edward Everett Horton, American actor and singer (b. 1886)
- 1973 – W. H. Auden, English-American poet (b. 1907)
- 1975 – Casey Stengel, American baseball player and manager (b. 1890)
- 1988 – Charles Addams, American cartoonist (b. 1912)
- 1996 – Leslie Crowther, English comedian, actor, and game show host (b. 1933)
- 1997 – Roy Lichtenstein, American painter and sculptor (b. 1923)
- 2006 – Walter Hadlee, New Zealand cricketer and manager (b. 1915)
- 2010 – Tony Curtis, American actor, singer, and producer (b. 1925)
- 2013 – Toyoko Yamasaki, Japanese journalist and author (b. 1924)
Tim Blair 2017
KEEP IT CLASSY, ROD
Father Rod Bower, the tilty Anglican from Gosford, bestows his gentle healing powers upon a divided and angry nation.
SANDRA REQUESTS AN EXPLANATION
Not since the great Furkan Derya fiasco of 2015 has there been a finer demonstration of leftist humour deficiency.
THE DOOKMARRIOT VERDICT – AND MACKLEMORE
This whole “taking a knee” thing. Hmmm.
JUNE ONE, COSMO NOUGHT
YouTube supergal June takes a look at Cosmo, which is more than almost anyone else has done for the past 20 years.
Tim Blair
STATE OF DESPAIR
Andrew Bolt
If Turnbull is selling, voters aren't buying
HAVE YOU JOINED THE LIBERAL PARTY?
Tim Blair – Tuesday, September 29, 2015 (1:51pm)
We’ve already heard from all the Liberal members, volunteers and voters who have abandoned the party following Tony Abbott’s removal. It’s only fair that we now hear from the thousands of new Liberal supporters who have been caught up in the tsunami of enthusiasm for Malcolm Turnbull and pledged their time, money and devotion to the Liberal cause.
(Via Gregoryno6, who emails: “I look forward to the flood of responses that this invitation will draw.")
WHAT COULD POSSIBLY GO WRONG?
Tim Blair – Tuesday, September 29, 2015 (1:27pm)
Pat Condell on recent demographic shifts occurring abroad:
ARTWARMING
Tim Blair – Tuesday, September 29, 2015 (3:15am)
A press release from the Sydney College of the Arts announces an artistic and literary climate change celebration:
Fans of JG Ballard’s cult sci-fi novel The Drowned World can experience its post-apocalyptic themes in visual form at a new exhibition, Mapping the Drowned World, opening at SCA Galleries next week.Six Australian artists including Bulgari award-winning painter Jon Cattapan have joined forces to give vision to the dystopic opus, penned in 1962 against the backdrop of the Cold War’s end-of-the-world fears.Set in the distant future, at a time when global warming has submerged London into a tropical wasteland overrun by carnivorous reptiles, The Drowned World reads as an eerily prescient warning of our current climate crisis, said exhibition coordinator Tracey Clement.“Despite being published more than 50 years ago, in an uncanny way The Drowned World seems to have predicted climate change,” said Ms Clement ...
No, it hasn’t. At most, it predicted the absurd predictions of climate change – cities underwater, tropical temperatures in the UK, chompy lizards everywhere and so on. But back to Ms Clement:
“Thanks to the book, I’ve known my entire adult life that humanity may indeed self-destruct, but with patient omnipotence the rest of the natural world will somehow survive.”
I wonder if Clement has ever seen Sea Patrol, the famous coastline documentary.
Ms Clement’s own contribution to the show is a starkly beautiful sculptural installation, which allows to audiences walk through a surreal ruined city landscape of steep mountain peaks made from salt and rusted steel …“By having the peaks at eye level, it stares you straight in the face. It reminds you that this catastrophe didn’t just happen by itself,” said Ms Clement.
Tracey Clement (left) and global warming.
“Many people are overwhelmed by climate change; we’re bombarded with these facts and figures and it all points to disaster. It’s a bit too much to take in.”
Helpfully, Clement provides an artistic antidote:
“What art can do – in the same way as novels – is bring you to those same conclusions but by a different method, in more engaging and accessible ways. Science fictions can be just as educational and inspirational as science facts.”
(Via Quadrant‘s Roger Franklin.)
WARMY DEPRESSED
Tim Blair – Tuesday, September 29, 2015 (2:46am)
The Sydney Morning Herald‘s Tim Elliott, who believes global warming is “going to wipe us out”, suffers sales sadness:
How’s this for depressing. I was up in Crescent Head last week, and got talking to the local newsagent. She told me that The Sydney Morning Herald sells about 60 copies on a weekend, The Australian sells about 40 copies, and the Telegraph sells…. 120. Yep, 120 copies each weekend of that steaming pile of hateful dog vomit masquerading as journalism. The Telegraph is a nasty little rag that treats its readers like morons, that communicates exclusively in hyperventilating 40-point headlines, and never misses a chance to do some cheesy cartoon graphic, preferably based on Hogan’s Heroes or The Adams Family. How anyone could choose to spend their $2.50, or whatever it costs, on this paper is beyond me. The idea that there are actually that many Australians who prefer to be screamed at by the Tele is truly scary.
The SMH is second, so they cry harder.
Bishop too matey at the UN
Andrew Bolt September 29 2015 (7:43pm)
Seriously?
===Labor is accusing Julie Bishop of not taking her job as chief diplomat seriously enough, after her boyfriend was photographed sitting next to her in the official Australian section at the UN General Assembly in New York.Altogether too chummy at and with the UN.
But the Foreign Minister defended her decision, saying it was within her discretion to allow her partner, David Panton, to attend the UN session alongside her. Ms Bishop also said, through a spokeswoman, that she regularly invites “friends” and constituents onto the floor of the United Nations.
Abbott defends his legacy, but gives Turnbull and Morrison space
Andrew Bolt September 29 2015 (2:32pm)
Tony Abbott is gracious in his interview with Ray Hadley this morning. Here are some highlights.
In contrast, here is Turnbull’s spray in 2009 after Abbott replaced him as Opposition Leader:
A word of advice to the Turnbull camp. It will be critical that you treat Abbott with honor and give him his full due.
UPDATE
Senator Bob Day is right:
You can read for yourself what Abbott actually said on radio today. I’ve posted the most newsworthy above. You can see there is no sniping. You can see there is a call for people to rally around Turnbull, even if they don’t like what was done. There is praise for Morrison, rather than a getting even.
But the Fairfax media maintains its astonishing record of trashing and misrepresenting a man for whom it’s had an almost insane hatred.
Mark Kenny does it again:
Sky News also misreports and misrepresents Abbott at its 2:45pm bulletin:
===On three-word slogansMalcolm Turnbull is very lucky in his choice of rivals - much luckier than Abbott was.
“I think they’re resonant phrases. We do have a spending problem, rather than a revenue problem. We do want lower simpler fairer taxes, we are building for the future.On Scott Morrison and Julie Bishop
“If you listen to the Prime Minister and the Treasurer, they’re even using exactly the same phrases that Joe Hockey and I were using just a fortnight ago…
“You’ve got to rely on the people close to you. You just have to.On whether Morrison warned him
“All I can say of both Julie and of Scott, they were extremely effective ministers in my government, very effective ministers in my government and I’d expect them to continue to be very effective ministers in the new government. “In the end, I suppose all of us have got to answer to our god and our consciences, I’m just not going to get into who might have said what, who should have said what, to whom and when, I’m just not going to get into that.”
“Certainly there was a conversation as I understand it between Scott and (my chief of staff) Peta Credlin. He’s obviously put one construction on the conversation, my office put a different construction on the conversation.On the next election
“It’s probably a bit counter-productive to revisit all of this now; the last thing I want, Ray, to come out of this interview is a headline ‘Abbott slams Morrison’ because I really would rather focus on the good work that Scott did...”
“I can appreciate that there are a lot of people out there who dismayed by what happened but, as I said, it would be even worse if we were to end up with a sixth prime minister in six years.On Bill Shorten and Labor
“It would be even worse if we were to end up with a CFMEU-dominated government, which we could well at the next election if people do not stay in and even if they have to do it through gritted teeth, support the Coalition.”
“I have some respect – considerable respect – for Bill Shorten, who at least on national security issues has been a very steady collaborator, I’ve got to say, almost a partner when it comes to national security issues. “The Labor Party, I’m afraid, it hasn’t changed, it can’t learn. If anything, the union influence is getting stronger, not weaker, the unions take a lowest common denominator approach to everything, not a highest common factor approach, and the last thing we want is to shackle our economy to the past.”On Malcolm Turnbull as opposition leader
“Back in 2009 the Coalition was in diabolical difficulty – absolutely diabolical difficulty – because we were making weak compromises with a bad government and I said that the job of the then leader of the opposition … was to stand for things , was to establish some clear policy positions on which to run and fight an election.On Malcolm Turnbull’s hunger for power
“It’s always true in government or in opposition, you’ve got to stand for things, you’ve got to fight for things, you’ve got to be building a better Australia every day and that means knowing exactly what you want to change, why you want to change it, and then getting on with it.”
“This is a real myth; the idea that people who were hungry for advancement would somehow be mollified if Joe (Hockey) went or if my chief of staff (Peta Credlin) went is just nonsense.On Joe Hockey
“When someone is absolutely focussed on a particular objective, they’re not going to be put off if they’re thrown a few human sacrifices as it were and, frankly, it’s wrong to feed this particular beast. It’s absolutely wrong.”“Joe and I were absolute blood brothers when it comes to economic policy and the idea that I could have just casually sacrificed Joe to save myself is dead wrong.”On Peta Credlin“No one worked longer and harder for our success in opposition and in government than she did and no one’s perfect – no one’s perfect - I suppose occasionally she may have spoken brusquely to one or two people who wanted more respect, but the job of the prime minister’s chief of staff is to be strong, to be tough, to be focused and she did an absolutely marvellous job.”On the Canning by-election“The Liberal Party’s internal polling the weekend before the Canning by-election was that we were going to end up with 57 per cent of the two-party preferred vote (and it ended up) roughly there.On fire-fighting and budgie smugglers
“One of the reasons why the ballot had to be brought on the week it was brought on by the proponents of a ballot was because a strong result in Canning, which is what we were going to get, would have put paid to this notion that somehow I was unelectable because of the polls.”“I did get out and spend a day with the local brigade, my brigade, the Davidson Rural Fire Brigade on Sunday. It was great to be with the boys. I haven’t spent nearly enough time with them over the last six years.
“I suspect I might do surf patrol this coming long weekend. If the club swim is on, I’m afraid boardies are just a drag, mate. The idea of going in a surf race, a surf swim in board shorts is just silly. “Sure, put the boardies on for sun protection purposes as well as for aesthetics once you’re back on the beach, but when you’re in the water it’s the Speedos.”
In contrast, here is Turnbull’s spray in 2009 after Abbott replaced him as Opposition Leader:
While a shadow minister, Tony Abbott, was never afraid of speaking bluntly in a manner that was at odds with Coalition policy. So as I am a humble backbencher I am sure he won’t complain if I tell a few home truths about the farce that the Coalition’s policy, of lack of policy, on climate change has descended into.When Turnbull boosters insist Abbott supporters get behind Turnbull, they should reflect on the hypocrisy. When they attack Abbott for his alleged lack of grace, they should compare and contrast.
First, lets get this straight. ....any suggestion that you can dramatically cut emissions without any cost is, to use a favourite term of Mr Abbott, “bullshit.” Moreover he knows it....
It is not possible to criticise the new Coalition policy on climate change because it does not exist. Mr Abbott apparently knows what he is against, but not what he is for… The Liberal Party is currently led by people whose conviction on climate change is that it is “crap” and you don’t need to do anything about it. Any policy that is announced will simply be a con…
[Abbott’s] only redeeming virtue in this remarkable lack of conviction is that every time he announced a new position to me he would preface it with “Mate, mate, I know I am a bit of a weather vane on this, but.....” ...
We have given our opponents the irrefutable, undeniable evidence that we cannot be trusted… I will be voting for the ETS legislation when it returns in February and if my colleagues have any sense they will do so as well
A word of advice to the Turnbull camp. It will be critical that you treat Abbott with honor and give him his full due.
UPDATE
Senator Bob Day is right:
Family First senator Bob Day became friends with Mr Abbott ... [and] cautioned Coalition MPs against speaking badly of Mr Abbott.UPDATE
“Honour Tony Abbott. Talk up his contribution. Put him up there with Robert Menzies and John Howard in the pantheon of great Liberal leaders,” Senator Day said.
“I think that would help them. The last thing they should do is criticise, they should really put him on a pedestal and that will go down well with the public.”
You can read for yourself what Abbott actually said on radio today. I’ve posted the most newsworthy above. You can see there is no sniping. You can see there is a call for people to rally around Turnbull, even if they don’t like what was done. There is praise for Morrison, rather than a getting even.
But the Fairfax media maintains its astonishing record of trashing and misrepresenting a man for whom it’s had an almost insane hatred.
Mark Kenny does it again:
The prime minister who in office spoke predominantly to docile media such as Sydney’s The Daily Telegraph, and radio barrackers such as Ray Hadley and Alan Jones, has become the disgruntled reject - dumped by his own colleagues against whose collective judgments he now rails.And this:
Still clueless as to what went wrong, Abbott now uses the above outlets exclusively to undertake the sniping and wrecking he initially forswore.
UPDATE
Sky News also misreports and misrepresents Abbott at its 2:45pm bulletin:
Through gritted teeth the former Prime Minister also called on Coalition supporters to back Malcolm Turnbull.False. Here’s what Abbott actually said through non-gritted teeth:
It would be even worse if we were to end up with a CFMEU-dominated government, which we could well at the next election if people do not stay in and even if they have to do it through gritted teeth, support the Coalition.It’s like it doesn’t matter at all what Abbott says or does, certain journalists will just write their own click-bait “facts”.
Turnbull’s best poll yet - 52 per cent to 48
Andrew Bolt September 29 2015 (2:12pm)
Newspoll, Galaxy and ReachTEL have so far had Malcolm Turnbull lift the Liberals to just 50/50 or a bare 51/49 lead against Labor. Essential Research today says it’s actually 52 to 48.
===Is that really warming, or did you just adjust?
Andrew Bolt September 29 2015 (1:53pm)
Jennifer Marohasy cannot understand why it’s a scandal to want to check the figures of the Australian Bureau of Meteorology:
===For the true believer, it is too awful to even consider that the Australian Bureau of Meteorology could be exaggerating global warming by adjusting figures. This doesn’t mean, though, that it’s not true.
In fact, under prime minister Tony Abbott, a panel of eminent statisticians was formed to investigate these claims detailed in The Australian newspaper in August and September last year.
The panel did acknowledge in its first report that the bureau homogenised the temperature data: that it adjusted figures. The same report also concluded it was unclear whether these adjustments resulted in an overall increase or decrease in the warming trend.
No conclusions could be drawn because the panel did not work through a single example of homogenisation, not even for Rutherglen. Rutherglen, in northeastern Victoria, is an agricultural research station with a continuous minimum temperature record unaffected by equipment changes or documented site moves but where the bureau nevertheless adjusted the temperatures.
This had the effect of turning a temperature time series without a statistically significant trend into global warming of almost 2C a century.
According to media reports last week, a thorough investigation of the bureau’s methodology was prevented because of intervention by Environment Minister Greg Hunt. He apparently argued in cabinet that the credibility of the institution was paramount ... Because most journalists and politicians desperately want to believe the bureau knows best, they turn away from the truth and ignore the facts.
News Corp Australia journalist Anthony Sharwood got it completely wrong in his weekend article defending the bureau’s homogenisation of the temperature record… Sharwood incorrectly wrote in his article: “Most weather stations have moved to cooler areas (ie, areas away from the urban heat island effect). ...”
In fact, many (not most) weather stations have moved from post offices to airports, which have hotter, not cooler, daytime temperatures. Furthermore, the urban heat island creeps into the official temperature record for Australia not because of site moves but because the record at places such as Cape Otway lighthouse is adjusted to make it similar to the record in built-up areas such as Melbourne, which clearly are affected by the urban heat island.
I know this sounds absurd. It is absurd, and it is also true. Indeed, a core problem with the methodology the bureau uses is its reliance on “comparative sites” to make adjustments to data at other places. I detail the Cape Otway lighthouse example in a recent paper published in the journal Atmospheric Research, volume 166. It is so obvious that there is an urgent need for a proper, thorough and independent review of operations at the bureau.
Putin mocks Obama’s Arab Spring dreams
Andrew Bolt September 29 2015 (1:05pm)
Russian president Vladimir Putin attacks Barack Obama’s disastrous record in the Middle East - and does it to Obama’s face:
===And so the export of revolutions, this time of so-called democratic ones, continues. It was enough to look at the situation in the Middle East and North Africa, as was mentioned by a previous speaker. Certainly political and social problems in this region have been piling up for a long time and people there wish for changes, naturally.On Syria, Putin so far holds most of the cards:
But how did it actually turn out?
Rather than bringing about reforms and addressing foreign interference, it resulted in a brazen destruction of national institutions and lifestyles.
Instead of the triumph of democracy and progress, we got violence, poverty and social division.
And nobody cares about about human rights, including the rights to life.
To the people that have caused this commotion, do you realise what you have done?
U.S. President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin sharply disagreed Monday over the chaos in Syria, with Obama urging a political transition to replace the Syrian president but Putin warning it would be a mistake to abandon the current government.
After dueling speeches at the United Nations General Assembly, Obama and Putin also met privately for 90 minutes — their first face-to-face encounter in nearly a year. At the heart of their dispute over Syria is the fate of embattled Syrian leader Bashar Assad, a Russian ally. The U.S. has long called for Assad to leave power, while Russia has cast the Syrian government as the only viable option for confronting the Islamic State, a militant group that has taken advantage of the vacuum created by the civil war.
Morrison was right the first time about tax. So why now think of super taxes?
Andrew Bolt September 29 2015 (9:56am)
Scott Morrison last week:
Morrison is contradicting not just Tony Abbott, but himself.
===We have a spending problem, not a revenue problem.Scott Morrison this week:
The Federal Government has softened its stance on superannuation tax concessions, after previously ruling out any changes to the system.Bad move. Pull up. The Abbott Government ruled out cuts to super tax concessions, not least to sharpen the difference with tax-tax-tax Labor.
Treasurer Scott Morrison has flagged a new approach to the issue, saying all taxes, including those on superannuation, should be reviewed.
“Anything that is going to help Australians work, save and invest is what I am interested in,” Mr Morrison told Radio 3AW in Melbourne.
Morrison is contradicting not just Tony Abbott, but himself.
Turnbull has “bold” idea. Frydenberg blamed.
Andrew Bolt September 29 2015 (9:40am)
First they give Malcolm Turnbull credit for what Tony Abbott actually did. Now they attack Josh Frydenberg for doing no more than repeat what Turnbull himself first suggested.
Fairfax’s Latika Bourke::
UPDATE
Morrison is also ignoring the views of a number of colleagues, as expressed last year:
Labor dusts off its tired and intellectually bankrupt class war rhetoric:
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
===Fairfax’s Latika Bourke::
Treasurer Scott Morrison has poured cold water on the idea of the government trying to cut Sunday penalty ratesBut, wait. Frydenberg had been responding to my question on The Bolt Report about Turnbull’s own comments, calling for a review of Sunday penalty rates. And Latika Bourke had herself noted in an earlier story - before the unions arced up - that this was indeed first raised by Turnbull, not Frydenberg:
Josh Frydenberg [has said] the government should look at cutting Sunday top-ups because doing so could be good for the economy and jobs… [Morrison] appeared to take aim at Mr Frydenberg for floating such a politically sensitive topic that was not a cabinet policy. “There’s a Productivity Commission review process on those issues, and under this government we’re not going to allow ... decisions to tumble out of the sky,”
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull says the government will consider reducing Sunday penalty rates in a bold move”>Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull says the government will consider reducing Sunday penalty rates in a bold move…So was Morrison in fact slapping down Turnbull? Or Bourke protecting Turnbull from the consequences of his “bold move”?
Asked whether he would consider the “low-hanging fruit” of reducing Sunday penalty rates, which can be as high as $40 per hour for hospitality workers, Mr Turnbull said the issue would be considered.
“All of these matters are under consideration but it is very important that we proceed in an orderly way,” he said.
UPDATE
Morrison is also ignoring the views of a number of colleagues, as expressed last year:
Tony Abbott is under pressure from his backbench to do something about ‘’job killing’’ weekend and holiday penalty rates, with 10 Coalition MPs telling Fairfax Media the controversial issue could not be ignored.UPDATE
But the cabinet, which in private still talks bitterly about the damage caused by the Howard government’s WorkChoices policy, is determined to keep its pre-election promise not to touch penalty rates in its first term…
Several Liberal MPs, particularly those who represent electorates with large numbers of tourism and hospitality businesses, believe small businesses need to be ‘’liberated’’ from having to pay higher weekend and holiday rates, which can lead to businesses deciding not to open on certain days or to employ fewer staff. Coalition MPs Warren Entsch, Dan Tehan, Russell Broadbent, Wyatt Roy, Sean Edwards, Craig Laundy, Alex Hawke, George Christensen, Dennis Jensen and Zed Seselja, all said on Friday that penalty rates needed to be reviewed.
Labor dusts off its tired and intellectually bankrupt class war rhetoric:
The federal opposition on Monday revived it’s class-war tactics by accusing Mr Turnbull of being out of touch because of his wealth.Strange, how Labor believes that success disqualifies anyone from offering ideas on how others can thrive, too. Pathetic.
“It’s been a long time since he’s had difficulties paying a bill,” Labor workplace spokesman Brendan O’Connor said.
“He should talk to people that are having difficulty making ends meet,” Mr O’Connor told reporters in Brisbane.
“What we’ve seen in the last week is Malcolm Turnbull, current Prime Minister, former merchant banker, friend of big business, unilaterally make a comment to cut penalty rates for retail and hospitality workers in this country,” he said.
“Isn’t it so typical of the Liberal Party to consider whacking millions of Australian workers, stealing money from those workers in order to find solutions to employment opportunities for people?”
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
Obama’s war is a farce
Andrew Bolt September 29 2015 (9:18am)
Barack Obama’s war against the Islamic State and other jihadists is a sick joke.
Russian president Vladimir Putin mocks:
===U.S. defense officials have confirmed that military equipment issued by the United States to Syrian rebel fighters has been funneled to an al Qaeda offshoot, raising new questions about the ways in which the Obama administration is safeguarding U.S. arms in the war-torn Middle Eastern country.And:
A commander in the New Syrian Forces (NSF), a group being trained and equipped by the United States, was found to have distributed at least 25 percent of the force’s U.S.-provided hardware to the Nusra Front, a terrorist organization affiliated with al Qaeda.
By any measure, President Obama’s effort to train a Syrian opposition army to fight the Islamic State on the ground has been an abysmal failure. The military acknowledged [two weeks ago] that just four or five American-trained fighters are actually fighting.And:
Taliban insurgents seized control of key facilities across a major city in northern Afghanistan on Monday, driving back stunned security forces in a multi-pronged attack that also sent Afghan officials and U.N. personnel fleeing for safety.UPDATE
The fall of Kunduz would be a huge blow to the Western-backed government in Kabul and give Taliban insurgents a critical base of operations beyond their traditional strongholds in Afghanistan’s south…
Col. Brian Tribus, a coalition spokesman, said the coalition has not conducted any recent airstrikes in Kunduz… Since the withdrawal U.S. and NATO combat troops by the end of 2014, the mission of American and other foreign forces in Afghanistan has changed to largely a training and advisory role.
Russian president Vladimir Putin mocks:
Putin says Damascus should be included in international efforts to fight (IS), a demand the United States rejects, and he criticized U.S. plans to train up to 5,400 Syrian rebels to fight Islamic State.
“It turns out that only 60 of these fighters have been properly trained, and as few as four or five people actually carry weapons,” he said. “The rest of them have deserted with the American weapons to join ISIS,” he said referring to Islamic State.
Tips for Turnbull on public speaking
Andrew Bolt September 29 2015 (9:12am)
This is not criticism of Malcolm Turnbull but advice.
He is not what he has sold himself - a great communicator. He is in fact awkward, a waffler, and sometimes too eager to seem the smartest guy in the room. Yes, Turnbull initially commands interest because he is new and can show considerable charm. He can be fluent, suggesting intelligence and command of his brief.
Some tips. Reduce your message to the slogans you say you despise. You don’t have to repeat those slogans, but at least you’ll know the key point you want to make. (Learn from Scott Morrison.)
Use self deprecation and defer to the wisdom of others when you feel out of your depth. You’re clearly smart, so people will credit your as modest rather than stupid, and more consultative.
Don’t give lectures but repeatable grabs. TV can’t use 15 minutes but loves 15 seconds. The human memory is much the same.
Don’t qualify each sentence as you speak. That leads to rambling and gives an impression of fogginess.
Some of this advice might have helped to avoid this embarrassment:
(Thanks to readers Peter of Bellevue Hill, John, and RightWingNuclearArmedDeathRabbit.)
===He is not what he has sold himself - a great communicator. He is in fact awkward, a waffler, and sometimes too eager to seem the smartest guy in the room. Yes, Turnbull initially commands interest because he is new and can show considerable charm. He can be fluent, suggesting intelligence and command of his brief.
Some tips. Reduce your message to the slogans you say you despise. You don’t have to repeat those slogans, but at least you’ll know the key point you want to make. (Learn from Scott Morrison.)
Use self deprecation and defer to the wisdom of others when you feel out of your depth. You’re clearly smart, so people will credit your as modest rather than stupid, and more consultative.
Don’t give lectures but repeatable grabs. TV can’t use 15 minutes but loves 15 seconds. The human memory is much the same.
Don’t qualify each sentence as you speak. That leads to rambling and gives an impression of fogginess.
Some of this advice might have helped to avoid this embarrassment:
Not sure the speech was quite as embarrassing as described, but there was indeed an element of trying to seem better informed than he really was, and in the process offending some people he actually wanted to please.
IN what would be his first address to the majority of the rugby league community, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull delivered a speech that managed to leave the crowd speechless, however not for the reasons he may have intended.
Following Jack Bird’s acceptance of the Dally M Rookie of the year, host Tony Squires got the ball rolling when he asked the PM what he thought of the Sydney Roosters’ semi-final loss to the Brisbane Broncos — by the looks of it, a question a number of the players were wishing he hadn’t asked.
“The Roosters had very bad luck,” Turnbull said.
“I thought that was a very good pass Shaun Kenny-Dowall’s pass, it just went to the wrong person.
“There’s a lot of luck in rugby league and there’s a lot of luck in politics. Shaun Kenny-Dowall’s pass was intercepted by Darius Boyd and then Ben Hunt did not (throw) quite so long a pass and of course set up a try. It’s the result of course that matters.”
Turnbull, an avid Roosters fan, may have been trying to express his sympathy for the Sydney playmaker for his role in the defeat, however his cringeworthy speech gave the impression he had been given a run-down of the match’s biggest blunders minutes before taking the stage.
The look on the faces of Rooster Mitchell Pearce and the Broncos’ Ben Hunt said it all.
(Thanks to readers Peter of Bellevue Hill, John, and RightWingNuclearArmedDeathRabbit.)
Turnbull and the politics of holding a summit
Andrew Bolt September 29 2015 (9:04am)
Not sure what two hours of talks between so many people with fairly understood agendas will achieve:
They can also be theatrical events to show and justify a change of policy from a new “consultative” and less “confrontational” government, in a way that just holding a press conference can’t match.
===The Prime Minister has invited business, union and community leaders for two hours of direct talks at Parliament House on Thursday.But as Labor leaders Bob Hawke and Kevin Rudd demonstrated well, summits give the impression of being consultative - and help to marginalise critics. Journalists also find it much more convenient and flattering to have all the people who apparently count in one place at the one time, with the journalists themselves among their number.
Invitations have been extended to Business Council of Australia president Catherine Livingstone and BCA chief executive Jennifer Westacott, Australian Council of Trade Unions secretary Dave Oliver............
Mr Turnbull is expected to be accompanied by.... Treasurer Scott Morrison, Finance Minister Mathias Cormann, Assistant Treasurer Kelly O’Dwyer and Cabinet Secretary Arthur Sinodinos.
....the Prime Minister said: “Australia is a prosperous country with high wages, a high standard of living and a generous social welfare safety net. To secure and enhance our prosperity we must be more productive, competitive and innovative.’’ Mr Turnbull said he was looking forward to meeting the summit’s leaders “to hear the shared reform priorities of business, unions and the wider community’’.
They can also be theatrical events to show and justify a change of policy from a new “consultative” and less “confrontational” government, in a way that just holding a press conference can’t match.
China warns this free trade deal could slip through our fingers
Andrew Bolt September 29 2015 (8:15am)
It is scandalous that Labor - coached by the unions - is still pretending this free trade deal is bad for workers:
===China will tonight issue its strongest statement yet about the political impasse blocking Australia’s ratification of a free-trade agreement between the two nations, with ambassador Ma Zhaoxu warning the deal on offer “should not be allowed to slip through our fingers”.
Mr Ma will tell a meeting of business and political leaders in Melbourne that the free-trade agreement, which the Labor Party and unions oppose in its current form, represents a “hard-won and historic opportunity’’ and a high-water mark in political trust and practical co-operation between the two countries.
AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CENTURIONS
Tim Blair – Monday, September 29, 2014 (12:43pm)
The ABC’s Peter Lloyd offers a bizarre defence of the billion-dollar broadcaster:
The mythmakers and self servers tell us that a strong defence force keeps us safe.
An interesting opening gambit; insult our armed forces. Then again, this is something of an ABC tradition. Lloyd continues:
A strong ABC is the centurion that guards this country too.
Yes. Mainly from Australians who don’t vote for Labor or the Greens.
I’ve spent too many years living in, working in and reporting on broken and rorted countries not to learn this: the common denominator is a weak media sector.
Which is caused in Australia by the ABC’s obscene public funding advantage.
All of us keep the bastards honest, and beware the politician. Every one of them benefits when we lose a second on air, or a soldier in the trench.
So a dead Australian soldier equals one second of ABC airtime. According to Lloyd, then, our total losses in Vietnam are equal to less than a single episode of Media Watch. World War II works out at three-and-a-half episodes of Q & A, and the 60,000 killed in World War I are still eight hours short of a full day’s ABC programming.
This is not (a) career. It is a vocation; and it’s time the army spoke out.
You want the army’s support? Wow. Good luck with that.
This prospective diminishment in our ranks is a surrender of terrain. It’s an attack on the places where craft skill is honed, and the ethics and values are put to the first test, and applied. But most of all, it’s just f---ing dumb. And Australia can’t afford that, anymore than it can a less educated population. Or a smaller army.
A moment ago Lloyd claimed that only “mythmakers and self servers” believed in a strong military. Now he says a strong military is essential. This bloke displays all the logical application of a rooting pig.
ABC NSW newsreader Juanita Phillips replied: “Thank you Peter for your passionate defence of the ABC. It brought tears to my eyes.”
Looking forward to tonight’s ABC news broadcast, Juanita, which as usual will be 1800 dead soldiers long.
(Via Monsterdome)
YOUR E-Z GUIDE TO TERRORISM AVOIDANCE
Tim Blair – Monday, September 29, 2014 (4:24am)
Everybody always talks about how terrorism is so dreadfully complicated. The causes of terrorism are complicated. The solution to terrorism is complicated. Our responses to terrorism locally and abroad are complicated.
All of this is true, but at the same time there are a range of very simple steps you can take that will help you avoid becoming involved with terrorism in the first place.
Continue reading 'YOUR E-Z GUIDE TO TERRORISM AVOIDANCE'COMMUNITY CALM
Tim Blair – Monday, September 29, 2014 (4:22am)
Crikey is concerned:
There’s a growing risk that the constant attention, harassment and demonisation of a single community will alienate, isolate and enrage people.
Don’t worry, Crikey. We harassed and demonised conservatives won’t hurt anybody.
CUT THE MENTIONS
Tim Blair – Monday, September 29, 2014 (4:19am)
Mark Steyn considers the latest Islamic decapitation in the US:
Colleen Hufford was born in 1960. Life is full of grim twists and cruel vicissitudes, but in mid-20th century America it would not have occurred to anyone that one needed to worry about going to work and being beheaded by a colleague. Yet that’s what happened to Ms Hufford on Thursday: She turned up for her job at at the Vaughan Foods food processing plant in Moore, and Alton Alexander Nolen decapitated her …Many commenters at KOCO-TV seem more outraged by the mentioning of Mr Nolen’s religion than by the beheading:• Truth is, Islam has nothing to do with it. And Christians are far from innocent.
• What does his religion have to do with this tragedy???
• What does his religious faith have to do with this story?
• Why would you even through in anything about terrorism in this story? The writer of this story is a true DUMBASS!
• I can cite plenty of instances where religion was used to justify the bombing of abortion clinics and the murder of abortion doctors.
• I’ve read plenty of Christians calling for the indiscriminate murder of Muslims.
• Inquisition anyone?
• If he was converting to Christianity would you say that??
Steyn’s very reasonable conclusion: “It seems many western heads have too little up there to be worth chopping off.”
THE POWER OF ARTS
Tim Blair – Monday, September 29, 2014 (3:51am)
I abandoned my arts degree after just one year when I realised it could result in a career serving food. Or, worse, in Labor politics. Or, worse still, as an academic.
This was a mistake, according to actress and anti-carbon dioxide activist Cate Blanchett, who last week revealed the almost mystical power of an arts degree.
Continue reading 'THE POWER OF ARTS'
NO WINE, NO WOMEN
Tim Blair – Monday, September 29, 2014 (2:33am)
Roger Scruton on Islamic rage:
The Middle East is, as we are discovering, not one thing: on the contrary, it is a patchwork of communities whose peaceful coexistence depended on conditions that no longer exist. And many of those communities are in the habit of producing the two greatest scourges of the human race: young men without women, and puritanical rage …Thanks to Ataturk polygamy was abolished in Turkey and women were encouraged to enter public life. Their status as the unspeakable ‘secret’ was removed, their faces were revealed, their soothing presence was everywhere perceivable. Thanks also to Ataturk the other great solvent of social tension – alcohol – was permitted and, while drunkenness is rightly viewed with anger all across the Middle East, the example of Turkey has helped many of those ancient communities to let their hair down and relax together over a bottle.Remove wine and women, however, and the tension quickly escalates.
It sure does:
Mohammad Ali Baryalei is believed to be the most senior Australian member of the terrorist group Islamic State, having travelled to Syria in April last year …Former Street Dawah friend Abdul Salam Mahmoud, who is now in Syria undertaking humanitarian work, said Mr Baryalei was someone he looked to as a leader.“He was outspoken and wouldn’t shy from speaking the truth regardless,” he told Fairfax Media. “He wasn’t pleased with living in Australian society and wanted to live in an Islamic society away from open alcoholism, homosexuality, fornication, drugs and capitalism.”
Instead, he wanted no alcohol, same-sex barriers, no sex at all outside of marriage, no drugs and yay for communism. Sounds just dandy. Plus beheadings.
(Via Jonah Goldberg)
WHEN WOMEN WERE ALLOWED TO READ
Tim Blair – Monday, September 29, 2014 (1:57am)
Afghanistan before the Taliban:
Amanda Vanstone cites Ataturk to argue Islam is fine. Big mistake
Andrew Bolt September 29 2014 (2:25pm)
Former Howard Government Minister Amanda Vanstone is very keen to makes Islam seem as benign - or as threatening - as Christianity in her column for The Age. Trouble is, to do so she must torture history in a way that is astonishing - and sad:
What Ataturk did for Turkey would today be denounced as Islamophobic by the Left if attempted even in, say, Australia. As Ian Buruma explains:
That’s why I have an Ataturk poster in my study. A great Turk. A great man.
===The Muslim and Christian religions have much in common.The reason is for that is simple, of course, even if Vanstone’s conclusion is misleading: Mohammed cobbled bits from Christianity to create his new faith but then, as a warrior himself, added the war-like twist that makes the two faiths profoundly different.
Islam holds no monopoly on the production of radical fanatics. Hitler is a good example.Pardon? Is Vanstone suggesting here that Christianity produced Hitler? In fact, Hitler was at war with Christianity, as he himself explained: “National Socialism and religion cannot exist together.... The heaviest blow that ever struck humanity was the coming of Christianity. Bolshevism is Christianity’s illegitimate child. Both are inventions of the Jew… Christianity is a rebellion against natural law, a protest against nature. Taken to its logical extreme, Christianity would mean the systematic cultivation of the human failure.”
Muslim troops fought with the Allies in World War II, and Muslims in many capacities heroically stepped in and saved the lives of thousands of Jewish people.Vanstone falis to add that the Mufti of Palestine was an ally of Hitler who recruited thousands of volunteers for the SS, that many Muslim terrorist groups such as Hamas today still say Jews are evil and their land must be destroyed.
All of this is worth reflecting on now because of the heightened tension surrounding the so-called Islamic State and its recruitment of young Australians to fight its so-called holy war. Perhaps we need to be reminded of Ataturk’s common sense and goodwill.Er, does Vanstone, our former Ambassador to Rome, understand why Ataturk - a hero of mine - is actually loathed by many Islamic leaders today?
What Ataturk did for Turkey would today be denounced as Islamophobic by the Left if attempted even in, say, Australia. As Ian Buruma explains:
Ataturk said in 1917 that he would change Turkish social life in one blow. And that, in 1923, is what he proceeded to do. Women were stripped of their veils, Islamic schools were closed and dervish brotherhoods were banned. Even wearing the Turkish fez was forbidden in the new society ruled by ‘’science, knowledge and civilization.’’You see, Ataturk knew what Vanstone pretends not to- that Islam as was practised was the enemy of a liberal society:
[Under Ataturk] the 1924 education monopoly law allowed only the state employees to teach, preach and interpret Islam… Atatürk ordered that the call to prayer, ezan, had to be called in Turkish instead of Arabic. Imams were ordered to preach in Turkish. The Qur’an was translated into Turkish and printed in the Latin alphabet… Atatürk needed a nationalized religion, an altered Turkish Islam, to protect secularism… He asked Rûseni Barkur, a deputy from Samsun, to write a book on nationalization of Islam. Barkur titled his book, Din Yok Millet Var, There is No Religion but Nation.,, Article 163 of the Turkish penal code was the backbone of state control over religion. According to Article 163, any movement or person that aimed to change social, economical and political and judicial system of the state even partially based on religious principles and beliefs would be imprisoned up to fifteen years. Appealing to religion, religious books and sentiments for personal power would be punishable as well.32 Until it was abandoned in 1991, Article 163 was used to make sure no Islamic movement outside the state apparatus emerged to challenge the secular state. No civil Islamic group was legally allowed to provide religious education. The Turkish state did not want anyone other than state employees to teach, preach and even interpret Islam.Memo to all readers of Vanstone’s column: no, Ataturk isn’t a reminder that Islam isn’t really a problem. He’s a reminder that it is, and brave steps must be taken to make it more compatible with a progressive, intellectually curious and diverse society.
That’s why I have an Ataturk poster in my study. A great Turk. A great man.
I’d believe it if the ABC showed any sign of wanting to fight for Australia
Andrew Bolt September 29 2014 (2:14pm)
ABC reporter Peter Lloyd’s defence of the ABC tells us so much about the country’s biggest media empire:
===The mythmakers and self servers tell us that a strong defence force keeps us safe.Is that why the ABC seems determined to weaken our defence force?
Radicals welcome, journalists not
Andrew Bolt September 29 2014 (8:52am)
Bottom line: they won’t ban radical hate-preachers but will ban journalists:
===ORGANISERS of an Islamic conference attended by radical preachers Junaid Thorne and Musa Cerantonio have accused the Abbott government of using Numan Haider’s attack on police to instil an anti-Muslim “culture of fear and division"…Merv Bendle is right:
“It’s an ugly, criminal incident that occurred for whatever reason, but to use it to instil fear in the hearts and minds of people — why is the leadership of this country, why is our leader Tony Abbott and the Liberal Party doing this to divide our community?” said Mr Abu Yusuf, spokesman for the Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jamah conference held at an Islamic centre in Melbourne’s northern suburbs yesterday…
Scores of people, including women, teenage boys and young children, attended the annual conference yesterday to hear lectures, including one from British journalist Yvonne Ridley, an outspoken anti-Israeli activist since she was captured by the Taliban and converted to Islam.
Mr Thorne — who reacted to Haider’s death by accusing law-enforcement officials of being “the only source of danger to our community” — told his Facebook followers he had been invited to the conference, although Mr Abu Yusuf said that Mr Thorne was not a recognised speaker and had not been officially invited.
Mr Abu Yusuf said Mr Cerantonio — who has called for Muslims to join Islamic State jihadists in Syria and Iraq — was similarly welcome to attend and listen to the Islamic scholars. “We’re not ashamed and afraid of who comes to our events,” he said…
The Australian was refused permission to attend the lectures or interview any of the speakers. Mr Abu Yusuf said Islamic State’s acts were “abhorrent, but it’s no more abhorrent than any other of the horrible things that have been committed in the name of whatever”.
Any proposal to shower attention on potential or actual jihadists in deradicalisation programs should be rejected for the expensive, cumbersome and ineffective academic and social welfare con-job that it is. A campaign to ridicule and anathematise jihadists as gutless wannabes will be far cheaper and much more effective.
Er, another near-record deficit. Hello? Anyone home?
Andrew Bolt September 29 2014 (8:37am)
WE are frogs in billions of dollars of hot water. How could last week’s massive deficit figure — our second biggest ever — create so little fuss?
The story lasted barely a day. The deficit Labor last year predicted would be $18 billion blew out to $48.5 billion.
This should have shocked us out of this growing complacency about our debt, a complacency increasingly in the interests of both major parties.
True, some of the blowout was caused by the Abbott Government restoring honesty to the figures, giving $8.8 billion to the Reserve Bank for its reserves.
Some was due to government spending decisions, but most came from falls in government revenue.
As Treasurer Joe Hockey said: “Labor continually over-estimated the amount of tax they’d collect.”
But what went wrong? And here’s where we should worry.
(Read full article here.)
===The story lasted barely a day. The deficit Labor last year predicted would be $18 billion blew out to $48.5 billion.
This should have shocked us out of this growing complacency about our debt, a complacency increasingly in the interests of both major parties.
True, some of the blowout was caused by the Abbott Government restoring honesty to the figures, giving $8.8 billion to the Reserve Bank for its reserves.
Some was due to government spending decisions, but most came from falls in government revenue.
As Treasurer Joe Hockey said: “Labor continually over-estimated the amount of tax they’d collect.”
But what went wrong? And here’s where we should worry.
(Read full article here.)
ABC shock jocks put us in danger
Andrew Bolt September 29 2014 (8:15am)
I DO a daily show with Steve Price on Sydney’s 2GB, which ABC presenters sneer is a “shock jock” station demonising Muslims.
But which outlet truly demonises — 2GB or the ABC?
Which most menaces our safety — not least of Muslim Australians?
Let me contrast. Almost every night for the past couple of weeks I have been rung on air by Muslim listeners.
With only one or two exceptions they have backed my complaints about Muslim “leaders” who refuse to fight extremism or speak with forked tongues.
(Read full article here.)
===But which outlet truly demonises — 2GB or the ABC?
Which most menaces our safety — not least of Muslim Australians?
Let me contrast. Almost every night for the past couple of weeks I have been rung on air by Muslim listeners.
With only one or two exceptions they have backed my complaints about Muslim “leaders” who refuse to fight extremism or speak with forked tongues.
(Read full article here.)
Courts clobber Clive
Andrew Bolt September 29 2014 (8:10am)
The Village Idiot (Reformed) fact checks Clive Palmer’s claims to be a lion in court:
===Clive Palmer constantly states that he wins 90% of his court cases. With nothing better to do, I thought I’d check out his claim, given that #theirABC and FauxFacts Meeja fact checkers certainly won’t. Here’s a list of the judgements of various courts in the last year and a half, with the results:
Federal Court of Australia:
[2014] FCA 879 – August 20, 2014 – LOST
Supreme Court of Western Australia:
[2014] WASC 358 – September 26, 2014 – LOST
Unreported – September 26, 2014 – LOST
[2014] WASC 282 – August 5, 2014 - LOST
[2013] WASC 434 (S) – February 12, 2014 - LOST
[2013] WASC 434 – December 4, 2013 - LOST
[2013] WASC 375 – October 14, 2013 - LOST
[2013] WASC 285 – August 2, 2013 - LOST
[2013] WASC 194 (S) – June 25, 2013 – DRAW
[2013] WASC 194 – May 21, 2013 – MOSTLY WIN
Supreme Court of Queensland:
[2014] QSC 226 – September 17, 2014 – LOST
[2014] QSC 174 – August 5, 2014 – MOSTLY LOST
[2014] QSC 036 – March 13, 2014 - LOST
[2014] QSC 024 – February 20, 2014 - LOST
[2013] QSC 352 – December 20, 2013 - LOST
[2013] QSC 209 – August 19, 2013 - LOST
[2013] QCA 160 – June 21, 2013 - LOST
Supreme Court of New South Wales:
[2013] NSWSC 546 - 14 May 2013 – LOST
[2013] NSWSC 466 - 30 April 2013 - LOST
So to summarise – constant litigant Secretary-General Palmer – has at most, a success rate of approximately 1.3 decided cases out of 19 which have been decided in the last 18 months – or a win rate of 6.8%.
Add wine and women and the Middle East may become safer
Andrew Bolt September 29 2014 (7:55am)
Roger Scruton:
All this helps to explain why arguably the most reassuring and attractive example of Muslim literature has been the poetry of Omar Khayyam:
===The Middle East is, as we are discovering, not one thing: on the contrary, it is a patchwork of communities whose peaceful coexistence depended on conditions that no longer exist. And many of those communities are in the habit of producing the two greatest scourges of the human race: young men without women, and puritanical rage …Tim Blair has further observations on this theme.
Thanks to Ataturk polygamy was abolished in Turkey and women were encouraged to enter public life. Their status as the unspeakable ‘secret’ was removed, their faces were revealed, their soothing presence was everywhere perceivable. Thanks also to Ataturk the other great solvent of social tension – alcohol – was permitted and, while drunkenness is rightly viewed with anger all across the Middle East, the example of Turkey has helped many of those ancient communities to let their hair down and relax together over a bottle. Remove wine and women, however, and the tension quickly escalates.
All this helps to explain why arguably the most reassuring and attractive example of Muslim literature has been the poetry of Omar Khayyam:
IIran’s clerical leaders have done their best to suppress the humanity:
Awake! for Morning in the Bowl of Night
Has flung the Stone that puts the Stars to Flight :
And Lo! the Hunter of the East has caught
The Sultán’s Turret in a Noose of Light.
2
Dreaming when Dawn’s Left Hand was in the Sky
I heard a Voice within the Tavern cry,
“Awake, my Little ones, and fill the Cup
Before Life’s Liquor in its Cup be dry.”
3
And, as the Cock crew, those who stood before
The Tavern shouted - “Open then the Door!
You know how little while we have to stay,
And, once departed, may return no more.”
4
Now the New Year reviving old Desires,
The thoughtful Soul to Solitude retires,
Where the WHITE HAND OF MOSES on the Bough
Puts out, and Jesus from the Ground suspires.
5
Iram indeed is gone with all its Rose
And Jamshýd’s Sev’n-ring’d Cup where no one knows;
But still the Vine her ancient Ruby yields,
And still a Garden by the Water blows.
6
And David’s Lips are lock’t; but in divine
High piping Pehleví, with “Wine! Wine! Wine!
Red Wine!” - the Nightingale cries to the Rose
That yellow Cheek of hers to incarnadine.
7
Come, fill the Cup, and in the Fire of Spring
The Winter Garment of Repentance fling :
The Bird of Time has but a little way
To fly - and Lo! the Bird is on the Wing.
The name of this south-central Iranian city is known around the world for a red grape that gave the name to a fruity, dark wine - Shiraz.
But since the Islamic revolution in 1979, wine and all other alcholic drinks have been banned in Iran, and that ban has extended to references to wine in the works of some of Iran’s most famous poets - though tellingly the poems of Shamseddine Mohammad Hafez and Omar Khayyam themselves have not been banned altogether. Rather, these specific poems have been officially reinterpreted
The 10th-century poet and scientist Khayyam’s tomb and gardens in Neishabur, west of Mashhad in eastern Iran, equally attracts thousands of admirers every year.
Ultimately, Hafez and Khayyam are too popular and too entrenched historically and in modern times, to face the full force of the censor’s pen - despite some of their religiously satirical material.
In both poets’ work, Hafez and Khayyam extol the virtues of wine, often in a way meant to mock the orthodox clergy…
Khayyam writes in his “Rubaiyat” ("Quatrains"): “My life-long practice is to praise the Vine, And round me have the instruments of wine; Zealot! If Reason guide thee here, be glad, Thy master is a pupil apt of mine!"… Aside from the poets’ popularity ensuring their continued availability, the official line appears to be that Khayyam and Hafez did not actually drink alcoholic wine… and in the case of Khayyam, focusing on his nonpoetic work.
Reckless Q&A gives microphone to some Muslim woman who - surprise! - welcomes the Islamic State
Andrew Bolt September 29 2014 (7:09am)
I was surprised that Q&A last week not only stacked its panel with two Muslim firebrands, but had more dotted throughout the audience, including radical Rebecca Kay, presented as just some Muslim woman:
The NewsWatch take is here.
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
===The ABC’s Q&A on Monday threw petrol onto the fire by getting together Muslim firebrands and others to portray Australia as a country run by war criminals and xenophobes, helping to kill Muslims abroad and persecute them at home with politically motivated police raids.Miranda Devine:
One of the most savage indictments of Australia and its institutions came from an unnamed woman in the audience. Note how the Greens and Labor MPs tended to believe and endorse her incendiary claims, and host Tony Jones even assumed the woman was being persecuted by ASIO:
AUDIENCE MEMBER: [The Australian Defence League] make threats to myself and my family, telling them that they want to behead me. So everything you’re saying right now is very insulting.
MICHAEL KEENAN [Justice Minister]: Well, if that is the case, then you need to alert the authorities.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: I have reported it to police numerous times, thank you.
MICHAEL KEENAN: Well, let me assure you, we don’t police in a way in this country that targets one group over another.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Yes, you do.
MICHAEL KEENAN: I can assure you that that is the case.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Yes, you do.
MICHAEL KEENAN: Well…
SCOTT LUDLAM [Greens Senator]: I’m not sure the message is getting through, whether you sense the reaction of the room when you said that for the first time. I’m not sure, if that is the strategy, that it’s getting through to people…
MICHAEL KEENAN: Well, I mean, I can assure you that threats of that nature would be followed up.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: I am trolled 24 hours a day on Facebook and social media because of these right-wing Nazis, okay. My life is not pleasant right now living in this country and no-one seems to care because I am Muslim and they’re not. It’s all right for the non-Muslims to give me a hard time… TONY JONES: I’m just confirming you’re not saying that was security officials… I thought you said ASIO. Okay, no, I thank you...
Just an average Q&A guest pic.twitter.com/YkyP89xtpJ
Will Media Watch tonight tackle Q&A’s dangerous promotion of radical Muslims - and apologise for its own uninformed conspiracy mongering?
The NewsWatch take is here.
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
China faces pro-democracy uprising in Hong Kong
Andrew Bolt September 29 2014 (7:00am)
China could never really be trusted to protect even the limited democracy in Hong Kong, and this confrontation with protesters could become serious:
===HONG KONG’S leader has appealed for calm and sought to quell fears that the army would be brought in to quash the pro-democracy protests that have brought chaos to the city.
As tens of thousands of demonstrators were blasted with tear gas in an ultimately vain effort to disperse them, Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying went on television in the early hours of today to urge the crowds to go home…
When China took control of the former British colony in 1997 it agreed to a policy of “one country, two systems” that allowed the city a high degree of control over its own affairs and keep civil liberties unseen on the mainland. It also promised the city’s leader would eventually be chosen through “universal suffrage.”
Beijing now says that time has not yet come. China’s insistence on using a committee to screen candidates on the basis of their patriotism to China — similar to the one that currently hand-picks Hong Kong’s leaders — has stoked fears among pro-democracy groups that Hong Kong will never get genuine democracy… University and college students say they will continue to boycott classes until officials meet their demands, which include reform of Hong Kong’s legislature and withdrawing the proposal to screen the election candidates.
“Go, Sophie!”
Andrew Bolt September 29 2014 (6:59am)
Some supporters of Independent MP Cathy McGowan seems unusually nervous:
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
===VOTERS at the centre of a probe into enrolment fraud have deleted potentially incriminating tweets and other details from social-media profiles since weekend revelations of alleged wrongdoing in a close federal election contest.Grace Collier shows one series of tweets - since deleted - which seem to receive a curious endorsement:
Staunch supporters of Cathy McGowan, the independent who won the seat of Indi a year ago, have erased material showing they were living and working in Melbourne and elsewhere at the time they were voting in Indi…
Heavy editing at the weekend of social-media profiles and deletions of numerous tweets will not affect the Australian Electoral Commission’s probe, as screen shots were taken prior to the deletions… Deletions include tweets by several of Ms McGowan’s closest supporters, who admitted to friends on social media that they lived in Melbourne, despite enrolment records obtained by The Australian showing they had switched to Indi.
No doubt there’s a perfectly reasonable explanation, and I’d sure like to hear it from all involved.
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
Justice must not be racist
Andrew Bolt September 29 2014 (6:46am)
Kieran Loveridge attacked five men in one night, killing one, Thomas Kelly, with a punch to the head. He was sentenced to five years and now appeals:
What an insult to Aborigines who choose instead to be, say, police officers or prison guards.
(Thanks to reader Geoff.)
===Loveridge’s lawyers have now filed an application for special leave to appeal in the High Court on a number of grounds, including the appeal court’s failure to properly take into account that he was an Aboriginal offender from a deprived background.He may be from a disadvantaged background, although I am not sure why that should entitle him to a lesser sentence. But of what possible relevance is his Aboriginality in a non-racist justice system?
What an insult to Aborigines who choose instead to be, say, police officers or prison guards.
(Thanks to reader Geoff.)
Police rule out “hate crime” in Brisbane shootings at Muslim homes
Andrew Bolt September 29 2014 (6:30am)
What blessings mass immigration from the Middle East have visited upon us:
===POLICE have ruled out a hate-crime motive for drive-by shootings on the homes of a former Iraqi army general and a nearby Lebanese Palestinian family who attend the same Brisbane mosque.Sky News:
Local Islamic leaders fear they may have been targeted for taking a stand against extremists.But let’s get that victim narrative another whirl:
Brisbane Islamic community leader Ali Kadri said the events were culturally motivated.(Thanks to reader RacerX).
‘For all we know it could be a hate crime, but we would like to wait until the police complete their investigation,’ he told The Courier Mail.
Obama admits to another US intelligence failure
Andrew Bolt September 29 2014 (5:48am)
I suspect they were blind to what the president didn’t want to see, either:
===President Barack Obama said US intelligence officials failed to appreciate the gains made by Islamic State extremists in Syria during the last few years of that country’s civil war.
“I think they underestimated what had been taking place in Syria,” Mr Obama said in an interview with CBS’s 60 Minutes program.
Post by Andy Trieu.
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http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-09-29/the-silent-treatment---tony-abbotts-new-media/4987566
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UN High Commissioner for Refugees....is doing what, and...where?
“All of the international community is working against us. Are we all wild animals?” asked a middle-aged Syrian man.
More than 200 Syrians, most of them families with young children, live in a trash-infested lot across from the refugee camp. Their names cannot be disclosed because of fear of retribution against family members still in Syria.
Converted shipping containers, enough to hold up to 12,000 refugees, provide crammed living quarters.
The real number of refugees in the camp, which is run by the Turkish government and the UN high commissioner for refugees, is thought to be between 15,000 and 17,000." - Benjamin Weinthal
===
"For in the past two decades, the hard Left has managed to convert what was up until the early 1990s a completely marginalized – indeed, borderline treasonous – political doctrine into a respectable, arguably majority mainstream position.
What is required is not to establish an “alternative” discourse, but to take control of the existing mainstream one.
To do this it is essential to be able to “reach across the political divide” and acquire the attention of adversarial target audiences
It is imperative not only to realize – but accept – that the message to be conveyed is not intended primarily to find favor in their own constituencies.
Therefore, what is likely to be appealing to themselves – both in style and substance – and to be persuasive with like-minded publics – may well be totally ineffective with important – indeed, crucial – target audiences on the other side of the political divide." - Martin Sherman
As Dr. Sherman also referred to and included in the article, a 2010 published study:
"When Corrections Fail: The persistence of political misperceptions”
"Affirming people’s self-worth can buffer the threat to their self integrity posed by counter-attitudinal information and thereby make them more open-minded.” - Political Behavior - Brendan Nyhan, Jason Reifler
===
Aprille Love.
===
CENTRE-RIGHT ministers have resigned from Italy's fragile coalition government, unleashing a fresh political crisis after what Prime Minister Enrico Letta called a "crazy act" of encouragement by their leader Silvio Berlusconi.
All five ministers of the People of Freedom (PDL) party took the decision on Saturday at Berlusconi's urging, said Angelino Alfano, Italy's deputy premier and PDL party secretary.
The flamboyant former prime minister had dismissed as "unacceptable" a demand by Letta on Friday for parliament to express support for the government next week, in a bid to end a crisis that has driven the bickering ruling coalition to the brink of collapse.
Read more: http://www.news.com.au/breaking-news/world/berlusconi-ministers-say-they-will-resign/story-e6frfkui-1226729285739#ixzz2gH2LS4DR
Italy is divided as a corrupt left inflates allegations against the centre right leader - ed
===
Labor leadership candidate Bill Shorten wants to introduce quotas to boost the number of gay and lesbian politicians in Parliament.
Mr Shorten is continuing his pitch to the party membership, sending out a manifesto that calls for the introduction of quotas for politicians representing minority groups.
He says the party should consider quotas for Indigenous Australians and the lesbian, gay, bixsexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) community.
Neil Fharaoh, the national convenor of Rainbow Labor, which represents the party's LGBTI members, says it is a step forward.
"The LGBTI community has been underrepresented, particularly in political seats, both at a state and federal level in Australia," he said.
"There's probably only 12 gay and lesbian identifying politicians across the country and probably not too much more in the history and its definitely underrepresentative.
He is a little man .. nominative determinism? The idea might go down as one of his legacy of major party reform .. but not for political party. - ed===
- 522 BC – Darius I of Persia kills the Magian usurper Gaumata, securing his hold as king of the Persian Empire.
- 61 BC – Pompey the Great celebrates his third triumphfor victories over the pirates and the end of the Mithridatic Wars on his 45th birthday.
- 1227 – Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor, is excommunicated by Pope Gregory IX for his failure to participate in the Crusades.
- 1364 – Battle of Auray: English forces defeat the French in Brittany; end of the War of the Breton Succession.
- 1578 – Tegucigalpa, capital city of Honduras, is claimed by the Spaniards.
- 1650 – Henry Robinson opens his Office of Addresses and Encounters in Threadneedle Street, London.
- 1717 – An earthquake strikes Antigua Guatemala, destroying much of the city's architecture and making authorities consider moving the capital to a different city.
- 1789 – The United States Department of War first establishes a regular army with a strength of several hundred men.
- 1789 – The 1st United States Congress adjourns.
- 1829 – The Metropolitan Police of London, later also known as the Met, is founded.
- 1848 – Battle of Pákozd: Stalemate between Hungarian and Croatian forces at Pákozd; the first battle of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848.
- 1850 – The papal bull Universalis Ecclesiae restores the Roman Catholic hierarchy in England and Wales.
- 1855 – Iloilo was opened to world trade by Queen Isabella II of Spain.[1][2]
- 1864 – American Civil War: The Battle of Chaffin's Farm is fought.
- 1864 – The Treaty of Lisbon defines the boundaries between Spain and Portugal and abolishes the Couto Misto microstate.
- 1885 – The first practical public electric tramway in the world is opened in Blackpool, England.
- 1899 – The Malolos Congress ratified the Philippine Declaration of Independence from Spain.
- 1907 – The cornerstone is laid at Washington National Cathedral in the U.S. capital.
- 1911 – Italy declares war on the Ottoman Empire.
- 1918 – World War I: Bulgaria signs the Armistice of Salonica. The Hindenburg Line is broken by an Allied attack. Germany's Supreme Army Command tells the Kaiser and the Chancellor to open negotiations for an armistice.
- 1923 – The British Mandate for Palestine takes effect, creating Mandatory Palestine.
- 1923 – The French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon takes effect.
- 1932 – Chaco War: Last day of the Battle of Boquerón between Paraguay and Bolivia.
- 1938 – The Munich Agreement between Germany, the United Kingdom, France and Italy settles the Sudetenland dispute in Germany's favor. The Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia are not invited.
- 1940 – Two Avro Ansons of No. 2 Service Flying Training School RAAF collide in mid-airover Brocklesby, New South Wales, Australia, remain locked together after colliding, and then land safely.
- 1941 – World War II: Holocaust in Kiev, Soviet Union: German Einsatzgruppe C begins the Babi Yar massacre, according to the Einsatzgruppen operational situation report.
- 1949 – The Communist Party of China writes the Common Programme for the future People's Republic of China.
- 1954 – The convention establishing CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research) is signed.
- 1957 – Twenty MCi (740 petabecquerels) of radioactive material is released in an explosion at the Soviet Mayak nuclear plant at Chelyabinsk.
- 1960 – Nikita Khrushchev, leader of Soviet Union, disrupts a meeting of the United Nations General Assembly with a number of angry outbursts.
- 1971 – Oman joins the Arab League.
- 1972 – China–Japan relations: Japan establishes diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China after breaking official ties with the Republic of China.
- 1975 – WGPR in Detroit, Michigan, becomes the world's first black-owned-and-operated television station.
- 1988 – Space Shuttle: NASA launches STS-26, the return to flight mission, after the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster.
- 1990 – Construction of the Washington National Cathedral is completed.
- 1990 – The YF-22, which would later become the F-22 Raptor, flies for the first time.
- 1991 – Haitian coup d'état.
- 1992 – Brazilian President Fernando Collor de Mello is impeached.
- 2004 – The asteroid 4179 Toutatis passes within four lunar distances of Earth.
- 2004 – The Burt Rutan Ansari X Prize entry SpaceShipOne performs a successful spaceflight, the first of two required to win the prize.
- 2006 – Gol Transportes Aéreos Flight 1907 collides in mid-air with an Embraer Legacy 600 business jet near Peixoto de Azevedo, Mato Grosso, Brazil, killing 154 people, and triggering a Brazilian aviation crisis.
- 2007 – Calder Hall, the world's first commercial nuclear power station, is demolished in a controlled explosion.
- 2008 – Following the bankruptcies of Lehman Brothers and Washington Mutual, The Dow Jones Industrial Average falls 777.68 points, the largest single-day point loss in its history.
- 2009 – The 8.1 Mw Samoa earthquake strikes with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VI (Strong). A destructive tsunami follows, leaving 189 dead and hundreds injured.
- 2013 – Over 42 people are killed by members of Boko Haram at the College of Agriculture in Gujba, Nigeria.
- 106 BC – Pompey, Roman general and politician (d. 48 BC)
- 929 – Qian Chu, Chinese king (Ten Kingdoms) (d. 988)
- 1240 – Margaret of England, Queen consort of Scots (d. 1275)
- 1276 –Christopher II of Denmark (d. 1332)
- 1321 – John of Artois, Count of Eu (d. 1387)
- 1328 – Joan of Kent (d. 1385)
- 1373 – Margaret of Bohemia, Burgravine of Nuremberg (d. 1410)
- 1402 – Fernando, the Saint Prince, of Portugal (d. 1443)
- 1403 – Elisabeth of Brandenburg, Duchess of Brzeg-Legnica and Cieszyn, German princess (d. 1449)
- 1460 – Louis II de la Trémoille, French military leader (d. 1525)
- 1463 – Louis I, Count of Löwenstein, founder of the House of Löwenstein-Wertheim (d. 1523)
- 1511 – Michael Servetus, Spanish physician, cartographer, and theologian (d. 1553)
- 1527 – John Lesley, Scottish bishop (d. 1596)
- 1538 – Joan Terès i Borrull, Spanish archbishop and academic (d. 1603)
- 1547 – Miguel de Cervantes, Spanish novelist, poet, and playwright (d. 1616)
- 1548 – William V, Duke of Bavaria (d. 1626)
- 1561 – Adriaan van Roomen, Flemish priest and mathematician (d. 1615)
- 1571 – Caravaggio, Italian painter (d. 1610)
- 1574 – Ludovic Stewart, 2nd Duke of Lennox, Scottish nobleman and politician (d. 1624)
- 1602 – Algernon Percy, 10th Earl of Northumberland, English military leader (d. 1668)
- 1636 – Thomas Tenison, English archbishop (d. 1715)
- 1639 – William Russell, Lord Russell, English politician (d. 1683)
- 1640 – Antoine Coysevox, French sculptor and educator (d. 1720)
- 1674 – Jacques-Martin Hotteterre, French flute player and composer (d. 1763)
- 1678 – Adrien Maurice de Noailles, French soldier and politician, French Minister of Foreign Affairs (d. 1766)
- 1691 – Richard Challoner, English bishop (d. 1781)
- 1703 – François Boucher, French painter and set designer (d. 1770)
- 1718 – Nikita Ivanovich Panin, Russian soldier and politician, Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs (d. 1783)
- 1725 – Robert Clive, English general and politician, Lord Lieutenant of Montgomeryshire(d. 1774)
- 1758 – Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson, English admiral (d. 1805)
- 1766 – Charlotte, Princess Royal of England (d. 1828)
- 1786 – Guadalupe Victoria, Mexican general, lawyer, and politician, 1st President of Mexico (d. 1843)
- 1803 – Mercator Cooper, American captain and explorer (d. 1872)
- 1803 – Jacques Charles François Sturm, French mathematician and theorist (d. 1850)
- 1808 – Henry Bennett, American lawyer and politician (d. 1868)
- 1810 – Elizabeth Gaskell, English author (d. 1865)
- 1816 – Paul Féval, père, French author and playwright (d. 1887)
- 1832 – Joachim Oppenheim, rabbi and author (d. 1891)
- 1843 – Mikhail Skobelev, Russian general (d. 1882)
- 1844 – Miguel Ángel Juárez Celman, Argentinian lawyer and politician, 10th President of Argentina (d. 1909)
- 1853 – Luther D. Bradley, American cartoonist (d. 1917)
- 1863 – Hugo Haase, German lawyer, jurist, and politician (d. 1919)
- 1864 – Miguel de Unamuno, Spanish philosopher and author (d. 1936)
- 1866 – Mykhailo Hrushevskyi, Ukrainian historian, academic, and politician (d. 1934)
- 1876 – Charlie Llewellyn, South African cricketer (d. 1964)
- 1880 – Liberato Pinto, Portuguese colonel and politician, 79th Prime Minister of Portugal(d. 1949)
- 1881 – Ludwig von Mises, Austrian-American economist, sociologist, and philosopher (d. 1973)
- 1882 – Lilias Armstrong, English phonetician (d. 1937)
- 1885 – George Scott, English footballer (d. 1916)
- 1891 – Ian Fairweather, Scottish-Australian painter (d. 1974)
- 1895 – Clarence Ashley, American singer, guitarist, and banjo player (d. 1967)
- 1895 – Joseph Banks Rhine, American botanist and parapsychologist (d. 1980)
- 1895 – Roscoe Turner, American pilot (d. 1970)
- 1897 – Herbert Agar, American journalist and historian (d. 1980)
- 1898 – Trofim Lysenko, Ukrainian-Russian biologist and agronomist (d. 1976)
- 1899 – László Bíró, Hungarian-Argentinian journalist and inventor, invented the ballpoint pen (d. 1985)
- 1899 – Billy Butlin, South African-English businessman, founded Butlins (d. 1980)
- 1901 – Lanza del Vasto, Italian poet, philosopher, and activist (d. 1981)
- 1901 – Enrico Fermi, Italian-American physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1954)
- 1902 – Miguel Alemán Valdés, Mexican lawyer and politician, 46th President of Mexico(d. 1983)
- 1903 – Diana Vreeland, American journalist (d. 1989)
- 1904 – Greer Garson, English-American actress (d. 1996)
- 1907 – Gene Autry, American singer, actor, and businessman (d. 1998)
- 1907 – George W. Jenkins, American businessman, founded Publix (d. 1996)
- 1908 – Eddie Tolan, American sprinter and educator (d. 1967)
- 1910 – Bill Boyd, American singer and guitarist (d. 1977)
- 1910 – Virginia Bruce, American actress (d. 1982)
- 1911 – Charles Court, English-Australian politician, 21st Premier of Western Australia (d. 2007)
- 1912 – Michelangelo Antonioni, Italian director and screenwriter (d. 2007)
- 1913 – Trevor Howard, English actor (d. 1988)
- 1913 – Stanley Kramer, American director and producer (d. 2001)
- 1915 – Vincent DeDomenico, American businessman, founded the Napa Valley Wine Train (d. 2007)
- 1915 – Oscar Handlin, American historian and academic (d. 2011)
- 1915 – Brenda Marshall, American actress (d. 1992)
- 1916 – Carl Giles, English cartoonist (d. 1995)
- 1919 – Kira Zvorykina, Belarusian chess player (d. 2014)
- 1920 – Peter D. Mitchell, English biochemist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1992)
- 1920 – Václav Neumann, Czech violinist and conductor (d. 1995)
- 1921 – John Ritchie, New Zealand composer and educator (d. 2014)
- 1921 – Albie Roles, English footballer and manager (d. 2012)
- 1922 – Lizabeth Scott, American actress (d. 2015)
- 1923 – Stan Berenstain, American author and illustrator (d. 2005)
- 1923 – Bum Phillips, American football player and coach (d. 2013)
- 1925 – Steve Forrest, American actor (d. 2013)
- 1925 – Paul MacCready, American engineer, founded AeroVironment (d. 2007)
- 1926 – Pete Elliott, American football player and coach (d. 2013)
- 1927 – Adhemar da Silva, Brazilian triple jumper and actor (d. 2001)
- 1927 – Sherwood Johnston, American race car driver (d. 2000)
- 1927 – Pete McCloskey, American colonel and politician
- 1927 – Barbara Mertz, American historian and author (d. 2013)
- 1928 – Eric Lubbock, 4th Baron Avebury, English lieutenant, engineer, and politician (d. 2016)
- 1928 – Brajesh Mishra, Indian politician and diplomat, 1st Indian National Security Advisor (d. 2012)
- 1928 – Nathan Shamuyarira, Zimbabwean journalist and politician, Zimbabwean Minister of Foreign Affairs (d. 2014)
- 1930 – Richard Bonynge, Australian pianist and conductor
- 1930 – Colin Dexter, English author and educator (d. 2017)
- 1931 – James Cronin, American physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2016)
- 1931 – Anita Ekberg, Swedish-Italian model and actress (d. 2015)
- 1931 – Paul Oestreicher, German-English priest and theologian
- 1932 – Robert Benton, American director, producer, and screenwriter
- 1932 – Paul Giel, American baseball player and sportscaster (d. 2002)
- 1933 – Samora Machel, Mozambican commander and politician, 1st President of Mozambique (d. 1986)
- 1934 – Skandor Akbar, American wrestler and manager (d. 2010)
- 1934 – Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, Hungarian-American psychologist and academic
- 1934 – Lance Gibbs, Guyanese cricketer and manager
- 1934 – Stuart M. Kaminsky, American author and screenwriter (d. 2009)
- 1934 – Lindsay Kline, Australian cricketer (d. 2015)
- 1935 – Jerry Lee Lewis, American singer-songwriter and pianist
- 1936 – Silvio Berlusconi, Italian businessman and politician, 50th Prime Minister of Italy
- 1936 – James Fogle, American author (d. 2012)
- 1936 – Hal Trosky, Jr., American baseball player (d. 2012)
- 1938 – Dave Harper, English footballer (d. 2013)
- 1938 – Wim Kok, Dutch union leader and politician, Prime Minister of the Netherlands
- 1939 – Fikret Abdić, Bosnian economist and politician
- 1939 – Jim Baxter, Scottish footballer (d. 2001)
- 1939 – Larry Linville, American actor (d. 2000)
- 1939 – Rhodri Morgan, Welsh politician, 2nd First Minister of Wales
- 1940 – Brute Force, American singer-songwriter
- 1940 – Carlos Morales Troncoso, Dominican politician, 34th Vice President of the Dominican Republic (d. 2014)
- 1941 – David Steele, English cricketer
- 1942 – Felice Gimondi, Italian cyclist
- 1942 – Madeline Kahn, American actress and singer (d. 1999)
- 1942 – Ian McShane, English actor
- 1942 – Bill Nelson, American captain and politician
- 1942 – Jean-Luc Ponty, French violinist and composer
- 1942 – Janet Powell, Australian educator and politician (d. 2013)
- 1942 – Steve Tesich, Serbian-American screenwriter and playwright (d. 1996)
- 1943 – Mohammad Khatami, Iranian scholar and politician, 5th President of Iran
- 1943 – Wolfgang Overath, German footballer
- 1943 – Gary Boyd Roberts, American genealogist and author
- 1943 – Lech Wałęsa, Polish electrician and politician, 2nd President of Poland, Nobel Prize laureate
- 1944 – Mike Post, American composer and producer
- 1945 – Kyriakos Sfetsas, Greek composer and poet
- 1946 – Patricia Hodge, English actress
- 1947 – Ülo Kaevats, Estonian philosopher, academic, and politician (d. 2015)
- 1947 – S. H. Kapadia, Indian lawyer, judge, and politician, 38th Chief Justice of India (d. 2016)
- 1947 – Gary Wetzel, American soldier, Medal of Honor recipient
- 1948 – Mark Farner, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1948 – Bryant Gumbel, American journalist and sportscaster
- 1948 – Theo Jörgensmann, German clarinet player and composer
- 1948 – Mike Pinera, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer
- 1949 – George Dalaras, Greek singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1950 – Ken Macha, American baseball player and manager
- 1951 – Michelle Bachelet, Chilean physician and politician, 34th President of Chile
- 1951 – Pier Luigi Bersani, Italian educator and politician, 6th President of Emilia-Romagna
- 1951 – Andrés Caicedo, Colombian author, poet, and playwright (d. 1977)
- 1951 – Maureen Caird, Australian-New Zealand hurdler
- 1951 – Mike Enriquez, Filipino journalist and radio commentator
- 1952 – Roy Campbell, Jr., American trumpet player (d. 2014)
- 1952 – Gábor Csupó, Hungarian-American animator, director, and producer, co-founded Klasky Csupo
- 1952 – Richard Hodges, English archaeologist and academic
- 1952 – Max Sandlin, American lawyer, judge, and politician
- 1952 – Takanosato Toshihide, Japanese sumo wrestler, the 59th Yokozuna (d. 2011)
- 1953 – Warren Cromartie, American baseball player, coach, and radio host
- 1953 – Jean-Claude Lauzon, Canadian director and screenwriter (d. 1997)
- 1953 – Lawrence Reed, American economist and author
- 1954 – Uwe Jahn, German footballer and manager
- 1954 – Mark Mitchell, Australian actor
- 1955 – Ann Bancroft, American explorer and author
- 1955 – Gareth Davies, Welsh rugby player and academic
- 1955 – Benoît Ferreux, French actor and director
- 1955 – Gwen Ifill, American journalist (d. 2016)
- 1956 – Sebastian Coe, English sprinter and politician
- 1956 – Jenny Morris, New Zealand-Australian singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1957 – Chris Broad, English cricketer and referee
- 1957 – Sokratis Malamas, Greek singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1957 – Mark Nicholas, English cricketer and sportscaster
- 1960 – Julian Armour, American-Canadian cellist and educator
- 1960 – Kenneth Hansen, Swedish race car driver
- 1960 – Alan McGee, Scottish singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer
- 1960 – John Paxson, American basketball player and coach
- 1960 – David Sammartino, American wrestler and trainer
- 1960 – Andy Slaughter, English politician
- 1960 – Carol Welsman, Canadian singer-songwriter and pianist
- 1961 – Julia Gillard, Welsh-Australian lawyer and politician, 27th Prime Minister of Australia
- 1961 – Stephanie Miller, American comedian and radio host
- 1962 – Roger Bart, American actor
- 1963 – Dave Andreychuk, Canadian ice hockey player
- 1963 – Les Claypool, American bass player, singer, songwriter, and producer
- 1964 – Brad Lohaus, American basketball player
- 1966 – Hersey Hawkins, American basketball player and coach
- 1967 – Brett Anderson, English singer-songwriter
- 1968 – Patrick Burns, American paranormal investigator
- 1968 – Luke Goss, English actor
- 1968 – Matt Goss, English singer-songwriter
- 1969 – Erika Eleniak, American model and actress
- 1969 – DeVante Swing, American singer-songwriter, and producer
- 1969 – Aleks Syntek, Mexican singer-songwriter and producer
- 1970 – Russell Peters, Canadian comedian, actor, and producer
- 1970 – Yoshihiro Tajiri, Japanese wrestler and trainer
- 1970 – Natasha Gregson Wagner, American actress
- 1971 – Tanoka Beard, American basketball player
- 1971 – Mackenzie Crook, English actor and screenwriter
- 1971 – Theodore Shapiro, American composer
- 1972 – Oliver Gavin, English race car driver
- 1973 – Foivos Delivorias, Greek singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1973 – Shannon Larratt, Canadian publisher, founded BMEzine (d. 2013)
- 1973 – Scout Niblett, English singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1974 – Brian Ash, American screenwriter and producer
- 1974 – Matt Hullum, American actor, director, and producer, co-founded Rooster Teeth
- 1975 – Albert Celades, Spanish footballer and manager
- 1976 – Darren Byfield, English-Jamaican footballer
- 1976 – Kelvin Davis, English footballer
- 1976 – Óscar Sevilla, Spanish cyclist
- 1976 – Andriy Shevchenko, Ukrainian footballer and politician
- 1977 – Eric Barton, American football player
- 1977 – Wade Brookbank, Canadian ice hockey player and scout
- 1977 – Debelah Morgan, American singer-songwriter
- 1977 – Jake Westbrook, American baseball player
- 1978 – Mohini Bhardwaj, American gymnast and coach
- 1978 – Gunner McGrath, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1978 – Kurt Nilsen, Norwegian singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1979 – Orhan Ak, Turkish footballer
- 1979 – Takumi Beppu, Japanese cyclist and manager
- 1979 – Artika Sari Devi, Indonesian model and actress
- 1979 – Shelley Duncan, American baseball player and manager
- 1979 – Jaime Lozano, Mexican footballer
- 1980 – Patrick Agyemang, English footballer
- 1980 – Dallas Green, Canadian singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1980 – Zachary Levi, American actor and singer
- 1981 – Aris Galanopoulos, Greek footballer
- 1981 – Shane Smeltz, German-New Zealand footballer
- 1982 – Matt Giteau, Australian rugby player
- 1982 – Amy Williams, English skeleton racer
- 1983 – Lisette Oropesa, American soprano and actress
- 1984 – Per Mertesacker, German footballer
- 1985 – Calvin Johnson, American football player
- 1985 – Niklas Moisander, Finnish footballer
- 1985 – Dani Pedrosa, Spanish motorcycle racer
- 1985 – Magnus Gangstad Jørgensen, Norwegian music producer
- 1986 – Lisa Foiles, American actress and journalist
- 1986 – Mark Fraser, Canadian ice hockey player
- 1986 – Matt Lashoff, American ice hockey player
- 1986 – Isaac Makwala, Botswanan sprinter
- 1986 – Benoît Pouliot, Canadian ice hockey player
- 1987 – David Del Rio, American actor and director
- 1988 – Kevin Durant, American basketball player
- 1988 – Justin Nozuka, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1989 – Theo Adams, English photographer and director
- 1989 – Aaron Martin, English footballer
- 1989 – Adore Delano, American drag queen and singer
- 1989 – Andrea Poli, Italian footballer
- 1989 – Fatima Lodhi, Pakistani social activist
- 1990 – Doug Brochu, American voice actor
- 1990 – Gerphil Flores, Filipina classical crossover singer and Asia's Got Talent finalist
- 1990 – Joosep Laiksoo, Estonian race car driver
- 1990 – Lena Wermelt, German footballer
- 1991 – Adem Ljajić, Serbian footballer
- 1991 – Martin Jensen, Danish musician
- 1993 – Lee Hong-bin, South Korean singer
- 1993 – Viktor Romanenkov, Estonian figure skater
- 1993 – Oleg Vernyayev, Ukrainian artistic gymnast
- 1994 – Britteny Cox, Australian skier
- 1994 – Halsey, American singer
- 1995 – Alice Matteucci, Italian tennis player
- 1998 – Vera Lapko, Belarusian tennis player
Births[edit]
- 722 – Leudwinus, Frankish archbishop and saint (b. 660)
- 855 – Lothair I, Roman emperor (b. 795)
- 1186 – William of Tyre, Archbishop of Tyre (b. c. 1130)
- 1225 – Arnaud Amalric, Papal legate who allegedly promoted mass murder
- 1298 – Guido I da Montefeltro, Italian military strategist (b. 1223)
- 1304 – John de Warenne, 6th Earl of Surrey, English general (b. 1231)
- 1360 – Joanna I of Auvergne, queen consort of France (b. 1326)
- 1364 – Charles I, Duke of Brittany (b. 1319)*1382 – 'Izz al-Din ibn Rukn al-Din Mahmud, malik of Sistan
- 1501 – Andrew Stewart, Scottish bishop (b. 1442)
- 1560 – Gustav I of Sweden (b. 1496)
- 1622 – Conrad Vorstius, German-Dutch Remonstrant theologian (b. 1569)
- 1634 – Henry Hyde, English politician and lawyer (b.c. 1563)
- 1637 – Lorenzo Ruiz, Filipino martyr and saint (b. 1600)
- 1642 – René Goupil, French missionary and saint (b. 1608)
- 1642 – William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby, English politician, Lord Lieutenant of Cheshire(b. 1561)
- 1703 – Charles de Saint-Évremond, French-English soldier, author, and critic (b. 1610)
- 1800 – Michael Denis, Austrian poet and author (b. 1729)
- 1804 – Michael Hillegas, American politician, 1st Treasurer of the United States (b. 1728)
- 1833 – Ferdinand VII of Spain (b. 1784)
- 1862 – William "Bull" Nelson, American general (b. 1824)
- 1887 – Bernhard von Langenbeck, German surgeon and academic (b. 1810)
- 1889 – Louis Faidherbe, French general and politician (b. 1818)
- 1900 – Samuel Fenton Cary, American lawyer and politician (b. 1814)
- 1902 – William McGonagall, Scottish poet and actor (b. 1825)
- 1902 – Émile Zola, French journalist, author, and playwright (b. 1840)
- 1908 – Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis, Brazilian author, poet, and playwright (b. 1839)
- 1910 – Winslow Homer, American painter, illustrator, and engraver (b. 1836)
- 1913 – Rudolf Diesel, German engineer, invented the diesel engine (b. 1858)
- 1925 – Léon Bourgeois, French police officer and politician, 64th Prime Minister of France, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1851)
- 1927 – Arthur Achleitner, German journalist and author (b. 1858)
- 1927 – Willem Einthoven, Indonesian-Dutch physiologist and physician, Nobel Prizelaureate (b. 1860)
- 1928 – John Devoy, Irish-American Fenian rebel leader (b. 1842)
- 1930 – Ilya Repin, Ukrainian-Russian painter and illustrator (b. 1844)
- 1937 – Ray Ewry, American triple jumper (b. 1873)
- 1937 – Ernst Hoppenberg, German swimmer and water polo player (b. 1878)
- 1951 – Thomas Cahill, American soccer player and coach (b. 1864)
- 1952 – John Cobb, English race car driver and pilot (b. 1899)
- 1967 – Carson McCullers, American novelist, playwright, essayist, and poet (b. 1917)
- 1970 – Edward Everett Horton, American actor (b. 1886)
- 1973 – W. H. Auden, English-American poet, playwright, and critic (b. 1907)
- 1975 – Casey Stengel, American baseball player and manager (b. 1890)
- 1981 – Bill Shankly, Scottish footballer and manager (b. 1913)
- 1982 – Monty Stratton, American baseball player and coach (b. 1912)
- 1986 – Prince George Valdemar of Denmark (b. 1920)
- 1987 – Henry Ford II, American businessman (b. 1917)
- 1988 – Charles Addams, American cartoonist (b. 1912)
- 1989 – Gussie Busch, American businessman (b. 1899)
- 1989 – Georges Ulmer, Danish-French singer-songwriter and actor (b. 1919)
- 1993 – Gordon Douglas, American actor, director, and screenwriter (b. 1907)
- 1997 – Roy Lichtenstein, American painter and sculptor (b. 1923)
- 1998 – Tom Bradley, American lieutenant and politician, 38th Mayor of Los Angeles (b. 1917)
- 1999 – Jean-Louis Millette, Canadian actor (b. 1935)
- 2000 – John Grant, English journalist and politician (b. 1932)
- 2001 – Mabel Fairbanks, American figure skater and coach (b. 1915)
- 2001 – Nguyễn Văn Thiệu, Vietnamese general and politician, 5th President of South Vietnam (b. 1923)
- 2004 – Richard Sainct, French motorcycle racer (b. 1970)
- 2004 – Patrick Wormald, English historian (b. 1947)
- 2005 – Patrick Caulfield, English painter and academic (b. 1936)
- 2005 – Austin Leslie, American chef and author (b. 1934)
- 2006 – Walter Hadlee, New Zealand cricketer and manager (b. 1915)
- 2006 – Michael A. Monsoor, American soldier, Medal of Honor recipient (b. 1981)
- 2006 – Louis-Albert Vachon, Canadian cardinal (b. 1912)
- 2007 – Lois Maxwell, Canadian actress (b. 1927)
- 2007 – Yıldırım Aktuna, Turkish psychiatrist and politician, Turkish Minister of Health (b. 1930)
- 2008 – Hayden Carruth, American poet and critic (b. 1921)
- 2009 – Pavel Popovich, Ukrainian general, pilot, and astronaut (b. 1930)
- 2010 – Tony Curtis, American actor (b. 1925)
- 2010 – Greg Giraldo, American comedian, actor, and screenwriter (b. 1965)
- 2011 – Sylvia Robinson, American singer-songwriter and producer (b. 1936)
- 2012 – Hathloul bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, Saudi Arabian prince (b. 1942)
- 2012 – Neil Smith, Scottish geographer and academic (b. 1954)
- 2012 – Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, American publisher (b. 1926)
- 2012 – Malcolm Wicks, English academic and politician (b. 1947)
- 2013 – Harold Agnew, American physicist and engineer (b. 1921)
- 2013 – Anton Benning, German lieutenant (b. 1918)
- 2013 – Pete T. Cenarrusa, American soldier, pilot, and politician, Secretary of State of Idaho (b. 1917)
- 2013 – Carl Joachim Classen, German scholar and academic (b. 1928)
- 2013 – L. C. Greenwood, American football player (b. 1946)
- 2013 – Bob Kurland, American basketball player and politician (b. 1924)
- 2014 – Miguel Boyer, Spanish economist and politician (b. 1939)
- 2014 – Andreas Fransson, Swedish skier (b. 1983)
- 2014 – Stan Monteith, American surgeon and author (b. 1929)
- 2014 – Luis Nishizawa, Mexican painter and educator (b. 1918)
- 2014 – John Ritchie, New Zealand composer and educator (b. 1921)
- 2014 – George Shuba, American baseball player (b. 1924)
- 2015 – Nawwaf bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, Saudi Arabian prince (b. 1932)
- 2015 – Hellmuth Karasek, Czech-German journalist, author, and critic (b. 1934)
- 2015 – William Kerslake, American wrestler and engineer (b. 1929)
- 2015 – Jean Ter-Merguerian, French-Armenian violinist (b. 1935)
- 2015 – Phil Woods, American saxophonist, composer, and bandleader (b. 1931)
- 2016 – Miriam Defensor Santiago, Filipina politician (b. 1945)
Deaths[edit]
- Christian feast day:
- Rhipsime
- September 29 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)
- the Archangels Michael, Gabriel, and Raphael. One of the four quarter days in the Irish calendar. (England and Ireland). Called Michaelmas in some western liturgical traditions
- Day of Machine-Building Industry Workers (Russia)
- Inventors' Day (Argentina)
- National Coffee Day (multiple countries, see article)
- Victory of Boquerón Day (Paraguay)
- World Heart Day
Holidays and observances[edit]
“The person without the Spirit does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God but considers them foolishness, and cannot understand them because they are discerned only through the Spirit.” 1 Corinthians 2:14 NIV
===
Morning and Evening by Charles Spurgeon
Morning
Perhaps no figure of speech represents God in a more gracious light than when he is spoken of as stooping from his throne, and coming down from heaven to attend to the wants and to behold the woes of mankind. We love him, who, when Sodom and Gomorrah were full of iniquity, would not destroy those cities until he had made a personal visitation of them. We cannot help pouring out our heart in affection for our Lord who inclines his ear from the highest glory, and puts it to the lip of the dying sinner, whose failing heart longs after reconciliation. How can we but love him when we know that he numbers the very hairs of our heads, marks our path, and orders our ways? Specially is this great truth brought near to our heart, when we recollect how attentive he is, not merely to the temporal interests of his creatures, but to their spiritual concerns. Though leagues of distance lie between the finite creature and the infinite Creator, yet there are links uniting both. When a tear is wept by thee, think not that God doth not behold; for, "Like as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear him." Thy sigh is able to move the heart of Jehovah; thy whisper can incline his ear unto thee; thy prayer can stay his hand; thy faith can move his arm. Think not that God sits on high taking no account of thee. Remember that however poor and needy thou art, yet the Lord thinketh upon thee. For the eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth, to show himself strong in the behalf of them whose heart is perfect towards him.
Oh! then repeat the truth that never tires;
No God is like the God my soul desires;
He at whose voice heaven trembles, even he,
Great as he is, knows how to stoop to me.
Evening
"Go again seven times."
1 Kings 18:43
1 Kings 18:43
Success is certain when the Lord has promised it. Although you may have pleaded month after month without evidence of answer, it is not possible that the Lord should be deaf when his people are earnest in a matter which concerns his glory. The prophet on the top of Carmel continued to wrestle with God, and never for a moment gave way to a fear that he should be non-suited in Jehovah's courts. Six times the servant returned, but on each occasion no word was spoken but "Go again." We must not dream of unbelief, but hold to our faith even to seventy times seven. Faith sends expectant hope to look from Carmel's brow, and if nothing is beheld, she sends again and again. So far from being crushed by repeated disappointment, faith is animated to plead more fervently with her God. She is humbled, but not abashed: her groans are deeper, and her sighings more vehement, but she never relaxes her hold or stays her hand. It would be more agreeable to flesh and blood to have a speedy answer, but believing souls have learned to be submissive, and to find it good to wait for as well as upon the Lord. Delayed answers often set the heart searching itself, and so lead to contrition and spiritual reformation: deadly blows are thus struck at our corruption, and the chambers of imagery are cleansed. The great danger is lest men should faint, and miss the blessing. Reader, do not fall into that sin, but continue in prayer and watching. At last the little cloud was seen, the sure forerunner of torrents of rain, and even so with you, the token for good shall surely be given, and you shall rise as a prevailing prince to enjoy the mercy you have sought. Elijah was a man of like passions with us: his power with God did not lie in his own merits. If his believing prayer availed so much, why not yours? Plead the precious blood with unceasing importunity, and it shall be with you according to your desire.
===
Today's reading: Isaiah 5-6, Ephesians 1 (NIV)
View today's reading on Bible GatewayToday's Old Testament reading: Isaiah 5-6
The Song of the Vineyard
1 I will sing for the one I love
a song about his vineyard:
My loved one had a vineyard
on a fertile hillside.
2 He dug it up and cleared it of stones
and planted it with the choicest vines.
He built a watchtower in it
and cut out a winepress as well.
Then he looked for a crop of good grapes,
but it yielded only bad fruit.
a song about his vineyard:
My loved one had a vineyard
on a fertile hillside.
2 He dug it up and cleared it of stones
and planted it with the choicest vines.
He built a watchtower in it
and cut out a winepress as well.
Then he looked for a crop of good grapes,
but it yielded only bad fruit.
3 “Now you dwellers in Jerusalem and people of Judah,
judge between me and my vineyard.
4 What more could have been done for my vineyard
than I have done for it?
When I looked for good grapes,
why did it yield only bad?
5 Now I will tell you
what I am going to do to my vineyard:
I will take away its hedge,
and it will be destroyed;
I will break down its wall,
and it will be trampled.
6 I will make it a wasteland,
neither pruned nor cultivated,
and briers and thorns will grow there.
I will command the clouds
not to rain on it.”
judge between me and my vineyard.
4 What more could have been done for my vineyard
than I have done for it?
When I looked for good grapes,
why did it yield only bad?
5 Now I will tell you
what I am going to do to my vineyard:
I will take away its hedge,
and it will be destroyed;
I will break down its wall,
and it will be trampled.
6 I will make it a wasteland,
neither pruned nor cultivated,
and briers and thorns will grow there.
I will command the clouds
not to rain on it.”
Today's New Testament reading: Ephesians 1
1 Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God,
To God’s holy people in Ephesus, the faithful in Christ Jesus:
2 Grace and peace to you from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
Praise for Spiritual Blessings in Christ
3 Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ. 4 For he chose us in him before the creation of the world to be holy and blameless in his sight. In love 5 he predestined us for adoption to sonship through Jesus Christ, in accordance with his pleasure and will— 6 to the praise of his glorious grace, which he has freely given us in the One he loves. 7 In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, in accordance with the riches of God’s grace 8 that he lavished on us. With all wisdom and understanding, 9 he made known to us the mystery of his will according to his good pleasure, which he purposed in Christ, 10to be put into effect when the times reach their fulfillment—to bring unity to all things in heaven and on earth under Christ.
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Hilkiah
[Hĭlkī'ah] - portion of jehovah orjehovah is protection.
[Hĭlkī'ah] - portion of jehovah orjehovah is protection.
- The father of Eliakim who was over Hezekiah's household (2 Kings 18:18, 26, 37; Isa. 22:20; 36:3, 22).
- High priest in king Josiah's reign (2 Kings 22:4-14; 23:4, 24).
- A descendant of Merari, son of Levi (1 Chron. 6:45).
- A son of Hosah , descendant of Merari, and a gatekeeper at the Tabernacle (1 Chron. 26:11).
- A priest who stood with Ezra as he read the law to the people (Neh. 8:4; 11:11; 12:7, 21).
- A priest of Anathoth and father of the prophet Jeremiah and contemporary of Gemariah (Jer. 1:1).
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