I was privileged to go to an IPA and Menzies Research Centre event in Melbourne tonight. A panel discussed a speech by Frank Furedi. The panel included Calum Thwaites and Bella d’Abrera. The issue discussed was the curtailing of thought at university by identity politics. Bella, an IPA researcher, was able to give validation to Frank's broad brush strokes, and Calum could speak as a victim of an HRC abuse of power which had him classed as a racist for commenting on a thread on FB in 2013. Frank's initial thought was that the to and fro of robust debate in the 60's and 70's was now entirely dominated by the left. My question was "When did conservative leaders become so timid that such abuse of power is now left unanswered?" I knew the answer, but found their response telling.
Seated in front of me was Senator James Paterson, whom I'd asked for help earlier in the year, and he unfriended me on FB. To be fair, James has played a leading role in fixing the abuse of power of the HRC in Calum's case, and my issue is above his pay grade. The correct answer regarding the left's abuse of power is that it is historic and ever present. One can point at lots of things from the French Revolution onwards (and before then too, but it is acknowledged that is when modern history began). However, conservative leadership failing to address abuse of power like that committed by the HRC on Andrew Bolt and those university students is recent and directly attributable to Malcolm Turnbull. Turnbull could speak out as a conservative leader on the issue of free speech, except he is compromised and also resorts to power abuse as he has done curtailing debate on same sex marriage during the campaign.
The left wing run universities because conservative leaders let them. They abuse their powers for the same reason. But there will be a reckoning for the abuse of power. One day, universities in Australia will have their public funding cut, and better bodies will be found which accredit students for the work force. But by then, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull will be a bad memory of the worst Liberal Prime Minister since Malcolm Fraser.
Caroline Glick, Israeli writer, wrote movingly of an arab journalist friend of hers whose life is threatened. At issue is a Jordanian opposition leader she had hoped would put a strong case for Jordan being part of a two state solution. The UN stance on Israel is appallingly bad, and highlights a lack of conservative leadership too, But in reply to her accusation, the opposition leader gave a Turnbull like response, which almost said Caroline was right, but so what? Caroline could not prove anything. But she doesn't need to prove anything, when she has been given a confession.
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 Heaven can wait
Heaven Can Wait - The Best Ballads of Meat Loaf Vol. 1 is a 1996 compilation album by Meat Loaf. It features 12 ballads from his albums.
It was released on Smm Records in January 1996 and re-released in 2003 on EMI Gold.
=== from 2016 ===
My preferences for Redgum Ward. I have placed sitting councillors last. It won't mean much. There are about thirteen thousand voters in this ward spread across Keysborough, South Dandenong and the CBD and I'm not letter dropping or handing out how to vote cards. Media are waiting until the last week to run articles on the election and may be restricting candidate letters to the editor. At the end of the day, it is about spending too much money, fetters on local business and garbage collection. The left dominated council are very bad on these fronts. But I'm playing a long game. I want a coherent platform this election so in four years time I will be known. And maybe I can get important issues addressed in the mean time. Car parks. Cheaper, more efficient waste disposal. Better public transport bussing vectors. Less red tape on business. Better youth employment. Better planning so that there are facilities for places of worship and recreation. Better infrastructure for internet. Council aren't responsible for all of that, but they have input in all of that.
Hillary was slippery and offered nothing beyond confusion and excuses. It was made all about Trump. He did not make a gaff. He made valid points Hillary danced around. Sky News in Australia gave it to Hillary too. But Trump did not fail. Did not try to be something he wasn't. Did not appear as Hillary portrays him. In my view, Hillary lost because she failed to slam him shut. The public had low expectations of Trump. He exceeded that. He did not joke as Reagan did about exploiting his opponents youth and innocence. He did not hurt Hillary. He let her shriek, and took the high ground.
Hillary's reply to Trump's claim the budget could be $5 trillion better off was telling. "I was confused by what you offered. I have considered that. It would not offer those savings." She has no hope for America. No plan. Hillary was belled placing a lie on Trump several times. The moderator rushed to prevent Trump from addressing them. But he calmly replied. Hillary's track record is that of failure and murderous incompetence. She stands on her record.
The left wing media pieces were written before the debate. They knew they needed to have to have something to promote Hillary. Hillary gave them nothing in the debate to endorse her. Making up a meme about Trump not shaking a hand when he clearly did just shows they are using the same play sheet.
Hillary has tremendous stamina. Her sustained poor judgement spans decades. Trump could never hope to rival it. Ordinary people would be sacked and jailed had they done merely one thing Hillary has done every year of her public career. Beginning with almost imploding the case against Nixon on Watergate through corruption.
Kevin Rudd has a lot of experience with this. He tried very hard to turn Australia into a toilet.
Did it happen to mention what she said? I am not disputing the assertion that Emma Watson has left wing values. I just would like to judge what she has said by what she has said. I tire of journalists reporting only their opinion.
The Vote Compass question was so bad, so engineered for a result, I refused to use it. Naturally Penny relies on this six year old device of the left.
All Turnbull offers as leader of the Liberals is further humiliation before his resignation. He seems keen to leave a lodestone memory.
Ken Henry has no credibility. He would only oppose spending if the government was conservative. It is not the principle, but the tribe. In fact, Australia spends too much and needed to cut spending when Rudd was PM too.
It is not the first time Obama has promoted a policy that runs counter to reality or the interests of the United States. Hillary wants to continue that work.
Trigger warnings are part and parcel with Safe Schooling. It would be better to raise them with wolves.
Hockey was underrated as treasurer, I believe because he was a stumbling block to Turnbull. Turnbull promised crossbenchers things would be different when he was PM. Not entirely a lie. Now that Turnbull is PM, the only similarity with Abbott's government is Abbott's policies are rebadged and made worse so as to promote Turnbull. What Australia really needs is work choices.
Birmingham has no idea about schooling, based on what he has said, quoted here. Private schools are subsidised by the taxpayer, but if they were to be closed, and students shifted to the public purse, the government could not afford the cost. We need private schools, and they need some public money. Parents using private schools are subsidising public school children too. They should. They do. Safe Schools is evil. Children do not benefit from the program but are exploited by it. They are not safe with it operating. But some adults get sexual pleasure from exploiting all children with Safe Schools. Those adults made choices as adults and are now forcing students to make choices about things they are not equipped through nature to deal with. However, if the Liberals support it, then the program will have bipartisan support because the ALP are corrupt and venal and care nothing for Australia or her children
I don't agree with what Pauline Hanson says, or Lambie, very often. I don't mind them saying it, I can debate their points. But I wish there was someone who could be an advocate for me. For economic conservative favouring Libertarian values (except on religion or drugs). Yet so many so called Christian Conservatives are all over the place. Abbott spoke sense but was undermined by Turnbull and had to do some defensive things so as to not get rolled. Turnbull just takes me for granted. Turnbull is a classic tax and spend left winger. He is big government favouring, and he has contempt for basic freedoms required for a free democratic state to prosper. And then we have Shorten campaigning for corruption. And if Shorten gets rolled it will be by another who feels they can better wield slush funds and exploit. It is telling that a whistleblower like Kathy Jackson is being persecuted by those who accepted her predecessor doing worse.
Clinton has stamina and staying power. Few people could have such sustained bad decision making. Most would have been sacked after their first error. The doormat can set up a slush fund and avoid scrutiny through an illegally established email server that was a security risk. And when she was found out, she had her people smash the phones with hammers. But she can say 'personal income tax because when she was secretary of state, voters personal income tax were vetted by the IRS if they were conservative.
Hillary was slippery and offered nothing beyond confusion and excuses. It was made all about Trump. He did not make a gaff. He made valid points Hillary danced around. Sky News in Australia gave it to Hillary too. But Trump did not fail. Did not try to be something he wasn't. Did not appear as Hillary portrays him. In my view, Hillary lost because she failed to slam him shut. The public had low expectations of Trump. He exceeded that. He did not joke as Reagan did about exploiting his opponents youth and innocence. He did not hurt Hillary. He let her shriek, and took the high ground.
Hillary's reply to Trump's claim the budget could be $5 trillion better off was telling. "I was confused by what you offered. I have considered that. It would not offer those savings." She has no hope for America. No plan. Hillary was belled placing a lie on Trump several times. The moderator rushed to prevent Trump from addressing them. But he calmly replied. Hillary's track record is that of failure and murderous incompetence. She stands on her record.
The left wing media pieces were written before the debate. They knew they needed to have to have something to promote Hillary. Hillary gave them nothing in the debate to endorse her. Making up a meme about Trump not shaking a hand when he clearly did just shows they are using the same play sheet.
Hillary has tremendous stamina. Her sustained poor judgement spans decades. Trump could never hope to rival it. Ordinary people would be sacked and jailed had they done merely one thing Hillary has done every year of her public career. Beginning with almost imploding the case against Nixon on Watergate through corruption.
Kevin Rudd has a lot of experience with this. He tried very hard to turn Australia into a toilet.
Did it happen to mention what she said? I am not disputing the assertion that Emma Watson has left wing values. I just would like to judge what she has said by what she has said. I tire of journalists reporting only their opinion.
The Vote Compass question was so bad, so engineered for a result, I refused to use it. Naturally Penny relies on this six year old device of the left.
All Turnbull offers as leader of the Liberals is further humiliation before his resignation. He seems keen to leave a lodestone memory.
Ken Henry has no credibility. He would only oppose spending if the government was conservative. It is not the principle, but the tribe. In fact, Australia spends too much and needed to cut spending when Rudd was PM too.
It is not the first time Obama has promoted a policy that runs counter to reality or the interests of the United States. Hillary wants to continue that work.
Trigger warnings are part and parcel with Safe Schooling. It would be better to raise them with wolves.
Hockey was underrated as treasurer, I believe because he was a stumbling block to Turnbull. Turnbull promised crossbenchers things would be different when he was PM. Not entirely a lie. Now that Turnbull is PM, the only similarity with Abbott's government is Abbott's policies are rebadged and made worse so as to promote Turnbull. What Australia really needs is work choices.
Birmingham has no idea about schooling, based on what he has said, quoted here. Private schools are subsidised by the taxpayer, but if they were to be closed, and students shifted to the public purse, the government could not afford the cost. We need private schools, and they need some public money. Parents using private schools are subsidising public school children too. They should. They do. Safe Schools is evil. Children do not benefit from the program but are exploited by it. They are not safe with it operating. But some adults get sexual pleasure from exploiting all children with Safe Schools. Those adults made choices as adults and are now forcing students to make choices about things they are not equipped through nature to deal with. However, if the Liberals support it, then the program will have bipartisan support because the ALP are corrupt and venal and care nothing for Australia or her children
I don't agree with what Pauline Hanson says, or Lambie, very often. I don't mind them saying it, I can debate their points. But I wish there was someone who could be an advocate for me. For economic conservative favouring Libertarian values (except on religion or drugs). Yet so many so called Christian Conservatives are all over the place. Abbott spoke sense but was undermined by Turnbull and had to do some defensive things so as to not get rolled. Turnbull just takes me for granted. Turnbull is a classic tax and spend left winger. He is big government favouring, and he has contempt for basic freedoms required for a free democratic state to prosper. And then we have Shorten campaigning for corruption. And if Shorten gets rolled it will be by another who feels they can better wield slush funds and exploit. It is telling that a whistleblower like Kathy Jackson is being persecuted by those who accepted her predecessor doing worse.
Clinton has stamina and staying power. Few people could have such sustained bad decision making. Most would have been sacked after their first error. The doormat can set up a slush fund and avoid scrutiny through an illegally established email server that was a security risk. And when she was found out, she had her people smash the phones with hammers. But she can say 'personal income tax because when she was secretary of state, voters personal income tax were vetted by the IRS if they were conservative.
=== from 2015 ===
Some wonder about Malcolm Turnbull being good enough to lead the Liberal Party. At the moment, the party is so compromised any individual might have more virtue. However, the Liberal Party is older than Malcolm and will outlast him. Already, there are members whose actions will be defined under Turnbull's stewardship in ways they never could have under Abbott, who had had to fend off Turnbull. The sad truth is the ALP has no one competent to lead it. And no one to replace the incompetent leading it. An aloof capitalist leading the Liberal party is par for the course. A corrupt bastard boss leading the ALP, having exploited workers for money, is a joke. Some are resigning from the Liberal Party on principle. None would do that from the ALP.
For some, at the moment, the Sex Party has more credibility.
For some, at the moment, the Sex Party has more credibility.
From 2014
Terrorists are violent and capable of planning, but not tending to smart. A wise person cautions a young person to prudence, to considering their actions, because escalating an action is always possible so long one allows the opportunity. It is to do with restraint. Had Hawthorn played the AFL Grand Final with weapons instead of athletic skill, they would not have won so handsomely, but Hawthorn played with skill, aggression and restraint. They humbled Swans, who in previous eleven matches had not conceded a total of more than 65 points each match. The leagues most attacking side humbled the leagues best defensive unit 137 to 74, that 74 being one less than the halftime total of the Hawks. But terrorists don't show restraint. And so what else is there to do but oppose them and stop them? Obama has dithered over a year over Syria, but terrorism has galvanised him to action against those he would have supported last year. And so when terrorists demand us to stop attacking ISIS, there is no 'or else' they can go to. No reason they can give us to do so. Every ISIS supporter must face justice for what they do. There is no alternative.
The media coverage related to terrorism is irrational. A man who is converting to Islam beheads a female colleague and the media report is as a workplace accident as opposed to a terrorist event. The difference is stark. Who beheads a colleague over a workplace dispute? It is beyond normal understanding. But a beheading soon after an international call for just that is perfectly explicable. Media are not protecting the public. They are protecting their narrative of events which is dangerously exposed. Media would have it widely believed that terrorists were Islamics seeking justice over perceived faults in culture wars. They point to mythic divides and engage in cultural relativism which suggests that terrorists are just like soldiers of a different cause. But in fact terrorists are just like anarchists of times gone by. They offer nothing other than a hazy vision of something that will never happen and probably shouldn't. It is exactly like a terrorist shouting 'Allahu Akbar' before gunning down a large number of mostly unarmed colleagues while Obama is claiming terrorism has been ended by his compassion and appeasement. That wasn't a mere workplace accident either. And so it becomes disturbing, but explicable, when the ABC present their dangerously unbalanced narrative suggesting terrorism is excusable. Terrorists may not watch the ABC, but they are fed the lines the ABC present to them that there are myths that support and endorse terrorism. Meanwhile the Taliban in Afghanistan feed into the narrative, having watched ISIS behead others and claim success, they do too, and the narrative becomes that is what Islamic people do. But the narrative is wrong. It is what terrorists do, and those that disagree with the truth believe the ADL, ABC and Fairfax press at the expense of those addressing the issue. And a man is arrested for walking with a knife into an Islamic primary school. No doubt he was looking for terrorists. What would he have done had he found a terrorist? What would he have done had he found a lone Islamic child? Not all terrorists claim to be Islamic.
Gillard's whining is beneath the behaviour expected of a former Prime Minister. But not beneath what is expected of a corrupt incompetent lawyer. Palmer is embarrassed by a lack of due diligence regarding $12 million he was supposed to have spent on a port but apparently siphoned for an election. He must be in very deep trouble with China and the Australian justice system. Meanwhile the ABC complain about a champagne deal struck with Cambodia involving the settling of illegal migrants. The ABC would rather drown the migrants. Also there are allegations of apparent voter fraud which gave an upset win over Liberal Sophie Mirabella. The electoral system could be made fraud proof, were the electoral system to allow electronic voting and forget the secrecy provision, but make it verifiable. It could be a cheaper system too.
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. The biggest sporting event of the day, from the AFL, and Sydney Swans were present for a historic victory. They played with skill and aggression, or rather, they were outplayed by it. No other Minor Premier has ever been beaten by so much in a grand final. They are that good. If there had been four more quarters, there wold have been further humiliation. Swans played well .. but Hawks were magnificent.
The media coverage related to terrorism is irrational. A man who is converting to Islam beheads a female colleague and the media report is as a workplace accident as opposed to a terrorist event. The difference is stark. Who beheads a colleague over a workplace dispute? It is beyond normal understanding. But a beheading soon after an international call for just that is perfectly explicable. Media are not protecting the public. They are protecting their narrative of events which is dangerously exposed. Media would have it widely believed that terrorists were Islamics seeking justice over perceived faults in culture wars. They point to mythic divides and engage in cultural relativism which suggests that terrorists are just like soldiers of a different cause. But in fact terrorists are just like anarchists of times gone by. They offer nothing other than a hazy vision of something that will never happen and probably shouldn't. It is exactly like a terrorist shouting 'Allahu Akbar' before gunning down a large number of mostly unarmed colleagues while Obama is claiming terrorism has been ended by his compassion and appeasement. That wasn't a mere workplace accident either. And so it becomes disturbing, but explicable, when the ABC present their dangerously unbalanced narrative suggesting terrorism is excusable. Terrorists may not watch the ABC, but they are fed the lines the ABC present to them that there are myths that support and endorse terrorism. Meanwhile the Taliban in Afghanistan feed into the narrative, having watched ISIS behead others and claim success, they do too, and the narrative becomes that is what Islamic people do. But the narrative is wrong. It is what terrorists do, and those that disagree with the truth believe the ADL, ABC and Fairfax press at the expense of those addressing the issue. And a man is arrested for walking with a knife into an Islamic primary school. No doubt he was looking for terrorists. What would he have done had he found a terrorist? What would he have done had he found a lone Islamic child? Not all terrorists claim to be Islamic.
Gillard's whining is beneath the behaviour expected of a former Prime Minister. But not beneath what is expected of a corrupt incompetent lawyer. Palmer is embarrassed by a lack of due diligence regarding $12 million he was supposed to have spent on a port but apparently siphoned for an election. He must be in very deep trouble with China and the Australian justice system. Meanwhile the ABC complain about a champagne deal struck with Cambodia involving the settling of illegal migrants. The ABC would rather drown the migrants. Also there are allegations of apparent voter fraud which gave an upset win over Liberal Sophie Mirabella. The electoral system could be made fraud proof, were the electoral system to allow electronic voting and forget the secrecy provision, but make it verifiable. It could be a cheaper system too.
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. The biggest sporting event of the day, from the AFL, and Sydney Swans were present for a historic victory. They played with skill and aggression, or rather, they were outplayed by it. No other Minor Premier has ever been beaten by so much in a grand final. They are that good. If there had been four more quarters, there wold have been further humiliation. Swans played well .. but Hawks were magnificent.
From 2013
ALP say they couldn't do it. ABC says it technically isn't the same. But a boat with 44 asylum seekers leaving the safety of Indonesia after the asylum seekers spent over $10k each has been returned to Indonesia .. no loss of life. It wouldn't have happened without Indonesian cooperation. Bad news for the ALP whose murderous but compassionate policy has claimed some 2000 lives drowned at the cost of many billions of dollars siphoned from aid, schools, hospitals, defence, roads .. taxpayers, the poor and dispossessed. More boats will follow, but it is certain that they will stop, as they had before under the Pacific Solution. I prefer the conservative policy to the left wing compassion.
ALP are still in denial regarding their bad policy in all areas. While they were in government, able to siphon and divert money to mates, the world seemed ok to them. Political enemies were smeared. An economic problem, McGurk, was assassinated, a bogus training mine was established, pedophiles and rapists were given free passes. Prisoners given parole. And what has changed? A budget analysis by Hockey shows how inept the ALP have been .. they weren't hampered by falling tax receipts, the ALP had spent too big. Too big on desalination plants they can't use. Too much on dying industry props. Too much on ruining functioning industry. Too much on empty symbols. Meanwhile the ALP devalued family, the family home, the cradle. In 2008, the ALP legal advisers sought to end the NT intervention. Not for compassion .. for money and control. Meanwhile, new ALP leaders are promising to change nothing.
Global warming believers struggle with the inconvenient truth the world hasn't warmed for 15 years. Obama struggles domestically with spending and internationally with decision making. Meanwhile it turns out that the only safe haven for Islamic peoples, Israel, was shortchanged by Australian ALP government keen to bow to anti semitic bigots that claim to represent Australian Islamic peoples.
ALP are still in denial regarding their bad policy in all areas. While they were in government, able to siphon and divert money to mates, the world seemed ok to them. Political enemies were smeared. An economic problem, McGurk, was assassinated, a bogus training mine was established, pedophiles and rapists were given free passes. Prisoners given parole. And what has changed? A budget analysis by Hockey shows how inept the ALP have been .. they weren't hampered by falling tax receipts, the ALP had spent too big. Too big on desalination plants they can't use. Too much on dying industry props. Too much on ruining functioning industry. Too much on empty symbols. Meanwhile the ALP devalued family, the family home, the cradle. In 2008, the ALP legal advisers sought to end the NT intervention. Not for compassion .. for money and control. Meanwhile, new ALP leaders are promising to change nothing.
Global warming believers struggle with the inconvenient truth the world hasn't warmed for 15 years. Obama struggles domestically with spending and internationally with decision making. Meanwhile it turns out that the only safe haven for Islamic peoples, Israel, was shortchanged by Australian ALP government keen to bow to anti semitic bigots that claim to represent Australian Islamic peoples.
Historical perspective on this day
1066 – William the Conqueror and his army set sail from the mouth of the River Somme, beginning the Norman conquest of England.
1331 – The Battle of Płowce between the Kingdom of Poland and the Teutonic Order is fought.
1422 – After the brief Gollub War the Teutonic Knightssign the Treaty of Melno with the Kingdom of Polandand Grand Duchy of Lithuania
1529 – The Siege of Vienna begins when Suleiman I attacks the city.
1540 – The Society of Jesus (Jesuits) receives its charter from Pope Paul III.
1590 – Pope Urban VII dies 13 days after being chosen as the Pope, making his reign the shortest papacy in history.
1331 – The Battle of Płowce between the Kingdom of Poland and the Teutonic Order is fought.
1422 – After the brief Gollub War the Teutonic Knightssign the Treaty of Melno with the Kingdom of Polandand Grand Duchy of Lithuania
1529 – The Siege of Vienna begins when Suleiman I attacks the city.
1540 – The Society of Jesus (Jesuits) receives its charter from Pope Paul III.
1590 – Pope Urban VII dies 13 days after being chosen as the Pope, making his reign the shortest papacy in history.
1605 – The armies of Sweden are defeated by the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in the Battle of Kircholm.
1669 – The Venetians surrender the fortress of Candia to the Ottomans, thus ending the 21-year-long Siege of Candia.
1777 – American Revolutionary War: Lancaster, Pennsylvania becomes the capital of the United States, for one day after the Second Continental Congress evacuates Philadelphia to avoid invading British forces.
1822 – Jean-François Champollion announces that he has deciphered the Rosetta Stone.
1825 – The world's first public railway to use steam locomotives, the Stockton and Darlington Railway, is ceremonially opened.
1854 – The steamship SS Arctic sinks with 300 people on board. This marks the first great disaster in the Atlantic Ocean.
1875 – The merchant sailing ship Ellen Southard is wrecked in a storm at Liverpool.
1903 – The Wreck of the Old 97, an American rail disaster that became the subject of a popular ballad.
1905 – The physics journal Annalen der Physik received Albert Einstein's paper, "Does the Inertia of a Body Depend Upon Its Energy Content?", introducing the equation E=mc².
1908 – The first production of the Ford Model T automobile was built at the Ford Piquette Avenue Plant in Detroit, Michigan.
1916 – Iyasu V is proclaimed deposed as ruler of Ethiopia in a palace coup in favor of his aunt Zewditu.
1922 – King Constantine I of Greece abdicates his throne in favor of his eldest son, George II.
1928 – The Republic of China is recognized by the United States.
1930 – Bobby Jones wins the U.S. Amateur Championship to complete the Grand Slamof golf. The old structure of the grand slam was the U.S. Open, British Open, U.S. Amateur, and British Amateur.
1938 – Ocean liner Queen Elizabeth launched in Glasgow.
1940 – World War II: The Tripartite Pact is signed in Berlin by Germany, Japan and Italy.
1941 – The National Liberation Front (Greece) is established and Georgios Siantos is appointed acting leader.
1941 – The SS Patrick Henry is launched becoming the first of more than 2,700 Liberty ships.
1942 – Last day of the September Matanikau action on Guadalcanal as United States Marine Corps troops barely escape after being surrounded by Japanese forces near the Matanikau River.
1944 – The Kassel Mission results in the largest loss by a USAAF group on any mission in World War II.
1949 – The first Plenary Session of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference approves the design of the Flag of the People's Republic of China.
1954 – The nationwide debut of Tonight Starring Steve Allen (The Tonight Show) hosted by Steve Allen on NBC.
1956 – USAF Captain Milburn G. Apt becomes the first man to exceed Mach 3 while flying the Bell X-2. Shortly thereafter, the craft goes out of control and Captain Apt is killed.
1959 – Typhoon Vera kills nearly 5,000 people in Japan.
1962 – The Yemen Arab Republic is established.
1962 – Rachel Carson's book Silent Spring is published, inspiring an environmental movement and the creation of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
1964 – The British TSR-2 aircraft XR219 makes its maiden flight from Boscombe Downin Wiltshire.
1968 – The stage musical Hair opens at the Shaftesbury Theatre in London, where it played 1,998 performances until its closure was forced by the roof collapsing in July 1973.
1975 – The last use of capital punishment in Spain sees the executions of five members of militant organisations, sparking worldwide protests against the Spanish government and the withdrawal of numerous ambassadors.
1979 – The United States Department of Education receives final approval from the U.S. Congress to become the 13th US Cabinet agency.
1983 – Richard Stallman announces the GNU Project to develop a free Unix-likeoperating system.
1988 – National League for Democracy is formed by Aung San Suu Kyi and various others to help fight against dictatorship in Myanmar.
1993 – The Sukhumi massacre takes place in Abkhazia.
1996 – In Afghanistan, the Taliban capture the capital city Kabul after driving out President Burhanuddin Rabbani and executing former leader Mohammad Najibullah.
1996 – The Julie N., a tanker ship, spills thousands of gallons of oil after crashing into the Million Dollar Bridge in Portland, Maine.
1998 – The Google internet search engine retroactively claims this date as its birthday.
2001 – Zug massacre: In Zug, Switzerland, Friedrich Leibacher shoots 18 citizens, killing 14 and then himself.
2003 – SMART-1 satellite is launched.
2007 – NASA launches the Dawn probe.
2008 – CNSA astronaut Zhai Zhigang becomes the first Chinese person to perform a spacewalk while flying on Shenzhou 7.
2012 – A mass shooting takes place at Accent Signage Systems, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, killing six people, including the gunman who committed suicide, and wounding two others.
2014 – Eruption of Mount Ontake in Japan occurs.
=== 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
823 – Ermentrude of Orléans (d. 869)
1271 – Wenceslaus II of Bohemia (d. 1305)
1601 – Louis XIII of France (d. 1643)
1677 – Giovanni Carlo Maria Clari, Italian composer (d. 1754)
1894 – Lothar von Richthofen German pilot (d. 1922)
1954 – Ray Hadley, Australian broadcaster
1958 – Shaun Cassidy, American actor, singer, screenwriter, and producer
1961 – Andy Lau, Hong Kong singer, actor, and producer
1984 – Avril Lavigne, Canadian singer-songwriter, actress, and fashion designer
- 1605 Polish–Swedish War: The Battle of Kircholm ended in the decisive victory of Polish–Lithuanian forces, and is remembered as one of the greatest triumphs of Commonwealth cavalry.
- 1825 – Locomotion No. 1 hauled the train on the opening day of the Stockton and Darlington Railway, the first public railway to use steam locomotives.
- 1916 – Lij Iyasu, the emperor-designate of Ethiopia, was deposed in favor of his aunt, Zewditu.
- 1964 – The British Aircraft Corporation TSR-2, an advanced Cold War strike and reconnaissance aircraft that was later cancelled, made its first flight.
- 2007 – NASA launched the Dawn probe (mission patchpictured), its first purely exploratory mission to use ion propulsion, from Cape Canaveral, Florida.
- 823 – Ermentrude of Orléans (d. 869)
- 1271 – Wenceslaus II of Bohemia (d. 1305)
- 1275 – John II, Duke of Brabant (d. 1312)
- 1389 – Cosimo de' Medici, Italian ruler (d. 1464)
- 1544 – Takenaka Shigeharu, Japanese samurai (d. 1579)
- 1601 – Louis XIII of France (d. 1643)
- 1627 – Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet, French bishop and theologian (d. 1704)
- 1643 – Solomon Stoddard, American pastor (d. 1729)
- 1657 – Sophia Alekseyevna of Russia (d. 1704)
- 1677 – Giovanni Carlo Maria Clari, Italian violinist and composer (d. 1754)
- 1696 – Alphonsus Maria de' Liguori, Italian bishop and saint (d. 1787)
- 1719 – Abraham Gotthelf Kästner, German mathematician and epigrammatist (d. 1800)
- 1722 – Samuel Adams, American politician, 4th Governor of Massachusetts (d. 1803)
- 1772 – Martha Jefferson Randolph, American wife of Thomas Mann Randolph, Jr. (d. 1836)
- 1840 – Thomas Nast, German-American cartoonist (d. 1902)
- 1843 – Gaston Tarry, French mathematician (d. 1913)
- 1861 – Corinne Roosevelt Robinson, American poet (d. 1933)
- 1879 – Hans Hahn, Austrian mathematician and philosopher (d. 1934)
- 1911 – John Harvey, English actor (d. 1982)
- 1924 – Fred Singer, Austrian-American physicist
- 1933 – Rodney Cotterill, Danish-English physicist and neuroscientist (d. 2007)
- 1943 – Randy Bachman, Canadian singer-songwriter and guitarist (The Guess Who, Ironhorse, Bachman–Turner Overdrive, Bachman & Turner, and Brave Belt)
- 1945 – Max Boyce, Welsh comedian and singer
- 1947 – Barbara Dickson, Scottish singer-songwriter and actress
- 1947 – Meat Loaf, American singer-songwriter, producer, and actor
- 1949 – Graham Richardson, Australian politician
- 1954 – Ray Hadley, Australian radio and television host
- 1958 – Shaun Cassidy, American actor, singer, producer, and screenwriter
- 1961 – Andy Lau, Hong Kong singer, actor, and producer
- 1965 – Ricky Fuji, Japanese wrestler
- 1972 – Gwyneth Paltrow, American actress and singer
- 1981 – Brendon McCullum, New Zealand cricketer
- 1982 – Lil Wayne, American rapper, producer, and actor (The B.G.'z, Hot Boys, and Cash Money Millionaires)
- 1982 – Darrent Williams, American football player (d. 2007)
- 1983 – Jeon Hye-bin, South Korean actress and singer (LUV)
- 1983 – Shermon Tang, Hong Kong actress
- 1984 – Avril Lavigne, Canadian singer-songwriter, actress, and fashion designer
- 1989 – Park Tae-hwan, South Korean swimmer
- 1996 – Princess Iman bint Abdullah of Jordan
- 2011 – Giorgi Bagrationi, Georgian son of David Bagration of Mukhrani
Deaths
- 1249 – Raymond VII, Count of Toulouse (b. 1197)
- 1557 – Emperor Go-Nara of Japan (b. 1497)
- 1615 – Lady Arbella Stuart, English wife of William Seymour, 2nd Duke of Somerset (b. 1575)
- 1660 – Vincent de Paul, French priest and saint (b. 1581)
- 1674 – Thomas Traherne, English clergyman, poet, and theologian (b. 1637)
- 1783 – Étienne Bézout, French mathematician (b. 1730)
- 1832 – Karl Christian Friedrich Krause, German philosopher (b. 1781)
- 1917 – Edgar Degas, French painter (b. 1834)
- 1921 – Engelbert Humperdinck, German composer (b. 1854)
- 1944 – Aimee Semple McPherson, Canadian-American evangelist, founded the International Church of the Foursquare Gospel (b. 1890)
- 1960 – Sylvia Pankhurst, English activist (b. 1882)
- 1965 – Clara Bow, American actress and singer (b. 1905)
- 1972 – S. R. Ranganathan, Indian mathematician (b. 1892)
- 1975 – Jack Lang, Australian politician, 23rd Premier of New South Wales (b. 1876)
- 1979 – Gracie Fields, English-Italian actress and singer (b. 1898)
- 1979 – Jimmy McCulloch, Scottish singer-songwriter and guitarist (One in a Million, Small Faces, Wings, Thunderclap Newman, andThe Dukes) (b. 1953)
- 1991 – Oona O'Neill, English-Swiss wife of Charlie Chaplin, daughter of playwright Eugene O'Neill and writer Agnes Boulton (b. 1926)
- 1993 – Jimmy Doolittle, American general, Medal of Honor recipient (b. 1896)
- 2003 – Donald O'Connor, American actor, singer, and dancer (b. 1925)
- 2011 – David Croft, English director, producer, and screenwriter (b. 1922)
- 2011 – Johnny "Country" Mathis, American singer-songwriter (Jimmy & Johnny) (b. 1933)
- 2012 – Herbert Lom, Czech-English actor (b. 1917)
- 2013 – A. C. Lyles, American screenwriter and producer (b. 1918)
- 2013 – Albert Naughton, English rugby player (b. 1929)
Tim Blair 2017
IMAGINE ALL THOSE PEOPLE, NOT LIVING ON YOUR TAXES
Imagine, for a moment, there was no ABC and never had been an ABC.
ALL ROADS LEAD TO TONE
Last December I was scheduled to join a bunch of politicians and journalists in Jerusalem on an evening tour of ancient tunnels beneath the Old City.
ANTI-COAL TROLL’S OWN GOAL
“Coal is dead. It’s dead,” according to Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young, whose recent Q&A appearance was largely brought to bored Australian homes by coal-produced electricity.
ONE PLUS ONE EQUALS SNOWFLAKE PANIC
Ever so gradually, the madness that began in university humanities departments is spreading to departments previously immune to social justice disease.
AND THE WINNER IS … NOT ME
“No-one really wants to win an Ernie Award,” the ABC claims. This is a lie. I’m absolutely desperate to win one. I would rather win an Ernie than a Walkley. In fact, I'd happily volunteer as MC if it would improve my chances.
Andrew Bolt 2017
Tim Blair
TRAINED OBSERVER
LADY AND THE TRUMP
KEVNI CARRIES THE CAN
THIS IS NEWS, APPARENTLY
PENNY DREADFUL
TUESDAY NOTICEBOARD
Andrew Bolt
Clinton wins, but does Trump gain?
On my show tonight - debate, debate, debate!
Book in the Holy City
Trigger warning proves this uni is shot
Turnbull plummets; Labor's largest lead
Malcolm Turnbull’s a pampered princeling, so can he control his own urges?
Piers Akerman – Sunday, September 27, 2015 (12:45am)
THE last time Malcolm Turnbull led the Liberal Party, he was brought down by his obsession with climate change.
Continue reading 'Malcolm Turnbull’s a pampered princeling, so can he control his own urges?'Demonising men won’t stop domestic violence
Miranda Devine – Sunday, September 27, 2015 (12:44am)
IT IS a grim portent that Malcolm Turnbull’s first policy announcement as Prime Minister was a $100 million gimmick blaming domestic violence on gender inequality.
“Women must be respected,” thundered Turnbull. “Disrespecting women is unacceptable.”
He has drunk the feminist Kool-Aid. But, somehow, I don’t think Turnbull’s commanding the nation to respect women will stop endemic violence in dysfunctional remote indigenous communities and public housing estates.
Poverty is the cause of domestic violence, the desperate chaos of the underclass, played out in welfare dependency, mental illness, alcohol and drug abuse, especially psychosis-inducing ice.
Demonising men, and pouring taxpayer money into permanent meddling bureaucracies, will do nothing to alleviate domestic tragedy.
It just increases government’s role in our lives, and further disempowers vulnerable men.
It just increases government’s role in our lives, and further disempowers vulnerable men.
Of course, Turnbull, a few days in the job, was simply announcing a plan that Tony Abbott and his chief of staff Peta Credlin had cooked up to try to improve his vote with women.
Beginning as a diversion from the knighthood fiasco of January, it involved Australian of the Year, Rosie Batty, who has become the untouchable expert on domestic violence.
Batty was front and centre of last week’s announcement: “This is a gender issue … we need to respect and value women as equals.”
No one could fail to be moved by her tragedy, the loss of her only son, 11-year-old Luke, murdered by his father.
But how did the murder of a little boy by his mentally ill, drug-taking father become all about “respecting women”?
But how did the murder of a little boy by his mentally ill, drug-taking father become all about “respecting women”?
Drug and alcohol abuse and mental illness are specific problems which properly targeted government policy might help alleviate. “Respecting women” is not.
The excitable minister for women Michaelia Cash stood alongside Turnbull and Batty, talking a lot of gobbledygook which shows only that she has a touching faith in bureaucracy, as in “an action item under the Second Action Plan of the National Action Plan to Reduce Violence Against Women and Children.”
Honestly. That National Action Plan, anyway, is a hangover from Julia Gillard, another hotchpotch of bureaucracies which exist for reports and awards and meetings and conferences and which soak up millions of dollars while doing nothing to help people trapped in chaotic lives break the welfare cycle.
Worse, the underlying narrative is about disrespecting men.
Turnbull claimed: “one in four young men think it’s OK to slap a girl when you’ve been drinking”.
That just doesn’t pass the sniff test. Anyone with a passing acquaintance with young men knows it’s absurd.
Cash repeated the claim, based on statistics from market research company Hall & Partners Open Mind, which conducted an online survey last year, answered by 3000 teenagers, young adults and parents. Plus some focus groups.
The report is full of gross generalisations with no evidence. It’s not exactly peer-reviewed scientific research, yet it’s blithely parroted by the PM and his minister for women.
How does slandering young men encourage “respect for women”? That market research was commissioned by the taxpayer-funded domestic violence lobbying group “Our Watch”.
“Our Watch” is chaired by feminist former Democrats Senator Natasha Stott Despoja, curiously appointed by Abbott as Australia’s Ambassador for Women and Girls. She claims: “Violence against women does not discriminate, regardless of ethnicity, social status and geography.”
But the actual statistics show a different reality.
Violence against women does discriminate, starkly. It is concentrated in communities with a high indigenous population, in the Northern Territory, in impoverished rural towns, in the urban fringes where the underclass lives, where welfare has emasculated men, where unemployment is high and education poor, and where drug and alcohol abuse is rife. These are the obvious preconditions for violence.
If you want to break the cycle of violence, end the welfare incentive for unsuitable women to keep having children to a string of feckless men.
Some facts, from the NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics: Domestic violence is worst in the small remote town of Bourke. With its high indigenous population, it has a rate of 4195.6 offences per 100,000 population (in fact, Bourke’s crime rate makes it more dangerous per capita than any country on earth).
Second place goes to Walgett with a rate of 2,692, then Moree Plains (1824), Glenn Innes (1103.5), Coonamble, Lachlan, Broken Hill, Cobar, Bogan, Dubbo.
When you get to the welfare-centred outer suburbs of Sydney, you find Campbelltown has a domestic violence crime rate of 628.4 per 100,000, followed by Blacktown at 610.2, Penrith (588.4) and so on. You get the picture.
Compare those rates to the affluent areas of Sydney; Kuringai has the lowest domestic violence in NSW with 66.1 crimes per 100,000, followed by Hunters Hill, Lane Cove, Hornsby, Manly, Willoughby, and so on.
It’s clear. Welfare traps create the conditions for domestic violence.
That announcement last week wasn’t about helping people in Bourke and Campbelltown. It was about making the prime minister, whoever he is this week, win approval from feminists.
HAVE YOU QUIT THE LIBERAL PARTY?
Tim Blair – Sunday, September 27, 2015 (1:42am)
If so, please tell your story in comments. No need for full names, but please mention your branch and years of membership.
UPDATE. Liberal Party strategist Mark Textor believes “the loss of disgruntled conservatives will be outweighed by the appeal of a more moderate party to swinging voters”:
“The qualitative evidence is they don’t matter,” Mr Textor said. “The sum of a more centrist approach outweighs any alleged marginal loss of so-called base voters.”
“They don’t matter.” Remember that line.
FAIRFAX FEELS THE CHARM
Tim Blair – Sunday, September 27, 2015 (12:23am)
The ABC has already declared its love for Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull. Fairfax – usually, like the ABC, reflexively hostile to rich Liberals and rich people in general – has also put aside its standard concerns about wealth inequality. For example, here’s national political reporter Judith Ireland:
The fact that Turnbull is fabulously wealthy is no secret … Indeed, his success in business and contacts with the ritzy end of town is part of his charm …The fact that Turnbull had another, fully formed life away from Canberra rounded him out and made him more interesting. For some, dare we say it, he puts the aspiration in aspirational voting …Judging Turnbull for his money bags is reverse snobbish and boring … even $200 million men deserve a fair go.
Further on the Turnbull love media from Chris Kenny. Incidentally, Chris coined the “love media” line in 2011 in response to then-Greens leader Bob Brown’s description of News Corp papers as the hate media. More than four years later, Wil Anderson has finally got the joke:
Anderson, believe it or not, is a professional comedian.
Anderson, believe it or not, is a professional comedian.
Me and Ray
Andrew Bolt September 27 2015 (10:49am)
I had a chat with Ray Hadley about where I’m from and what drives me. Yes, I know it sounds self-indulgent. but if you’re interested have a listen here to part one and part two.
===On The Bolt Report today, September 27
Andrew Bolt September 27 2015 (6:30am)
The ABC loves even Malcolm Turnbull’s waffle:
In NewsWatch, Rowan Dean, editor of the Spectator Australia and columnist for the Courier Mail, will join me in an attack on waffling. And on Turnbull stealing Abbott’s credit:
Plus my guests - new Energy and Resources Minister Josh Frydenberg, an Abbott loyalist promoted by Turnbull; former Labor campaign strategist Bruce Hawker; and John Roskam, head of the Institute of Public Affairs.
We’ll talk about Tony Abbott’s first print interviews since the coup, the future of coal under warmist Turnbull, the Liberals at war, and Scott Morrison’s good start. Plus what Bill Shorten said to the skeleton:
===Well, there will be no waffles on The Bolt Report today on Channel 10 at 10am and 3pm.
In NewsWatch, Rowan Dean, editor of the Spectator Australia and columnist for the Courier Mail, will join me in an attack on waffling. And on Turnbull stealing Abbott’s credit:
Plus my guests - new Energy and Resources Minister Josh Frydenberg, an Abbott loyalist promoted by Turnbull; former Labor campaign strategist Bruce Hawker; and John Roskam, head of the Institute of Public Affairs.
We’ll talk about Tony Abbott’s first print interviews since the coup, the future of coal under warmist Turnbull, the Liberals at war, and Scott Morrison’s good start. Plus what Bill Shorten said to the skeleton:
The videos of the shows appear here.
China ticks off Turnbull. But media doesn’t care because he’s not Abbott
Andrew Bolt September 27 2015 (6:09am)
Had Tony Abbott already offended a super-power, the word “gaffe” would have been used:
===China has ticked off Malcolm Turnbull over his comments on the South China Sea, saying Australia should maintain a neutral position over the contested area.Reader Peter of Bellevue Hill:
“We hope that Australia will stay committed to not taking sides on issues concerning disputes over sovereignty,” foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters in Beijing. On Monday the new prime minister said island-building in the disputed area was “pushing the envelope” of acceptable behaviour.
AB, strange that China’s response to Turnbull’s remarks has received so little coverage. Recall that in November 2013 - when it assumed Julie Bishop to be supportive of the Abbott Government - the love media hammered her with China’s rebuke over her East China Sea remarks:
Australia risks becoming embroiled in another diplomatic spat in Asia, with China warning there will be consequences if Foreign Minister Julie Bishop does not withdraw criticism of a new air defence zone in the East China Sea… The latest diplomatic incident comes as the Federal Government tries to mend ties over the Indonesian spying scandal, and faces further claims of espionage from East Timor. It also comes ahead of Ms Bishop’s planned trip to China, and may hamper the Abbott Government’s attempts to finalise a free trade deal with Australia’s largest trading partner.
I really like Sam Newman
Andrew Bolt September 27 2015 (5:53am)
===A Ruddy light streams on this government
Andrew Bolt September 27 2015 (5:38am)
Who would have leaked this huge spin?
===The Australian delegation to the United Nations General Assembly in New York appears to be receiving a different welcome than it might have had Tony Abbott still been in office.If the UN welcomes you, time to check your bearings.
Doors that were recently firmly closed have mysteriously swung open.
It is understood that senior diplomats, including United States ambassador to the UN, Samantha Power, have expressed enthusiasm at the prospect of working with a government led by Malcolm Turnbull, who forced Mr Abbott from office earlier this month, and who was unable to attend the Assembly.
Advertisement Foreign Affairs Minister Julie Bishop has received a last minute invitation to attend a Sunday lunch being hosted by United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon for the leaders of about 20 nations to discuss climate change.
Conservatives should not sell themselves so cheaply to Turnbull
Andrew Bolt September 27 2015 (5:09am)
James Allan on the bizarre demands for loyalty to Turnbull from those once disloyal to Abbott:
Conservatives particularly don’t need to sell their support so cheaply. To let themselves be taken for granted. They should put a price on their support, much as the Nationals have, demanding no changes to policies on global warming and same-sex marriage. Let Turnbull offer many more assurances and promises before pledging loyally.
But that goes to a second consideration, especially for commentators. I actually don’t swing in loyally behind any leader or party. I fight for my own ideas, not theirs. If Turnbull does the right thing, I will praise him. If he does the wrong thing, I will criticise him. That’s what I did with Tony Abbott, and there’s no reason to change for Malcolm Turnbull.
True, come the crunch, closer to the election, we must inevitably decide between various options. Then, for conservatives, there is undoubted power in the argument that it’s better to have a Liberal government than Labor.
But even then there are counter-considerations. If you are a conservative are you better off with Turnbull in power, but without a mainstream party advocating your views or legitimising them? Or is it better to put up with Labor in power if it means the Liberal Opposition switches to a more conservative leader who will at least give a voice to your principles? A Turnbull who takes the Liberals to the Left will marginalise many Liberal voters and leave them unrepresented.
Much then depends on Turnbull showing he does represents conservatives, too. So why swing behind him before he does?
Or let me sum it all up with an example. Do Greens voters feel more empowered now that they have their own party, or do they regret not loyally falling in behind Labor?
UPDATE
Roger Franklin:
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
===Within the larger right-of-centre family of voters there is something of a vociferous argument going on right now about how to treat the new Turnbull government… But when the [54] Liberal MPs who knifed Mr. Abbott (and I DO include Morrison here) beg for unity, forget it. Same goes for when a commentator such as Niki [Savva] demands loyalty to Turnbull. Give me a break! This woman spent over half a year putting the knife into Mr. Abbott in virtually every column she wrote… And then there is the editorial writers of The Australian. Their argument is that Turnbull is better than Shorten and that should be enough to quell dissenters from wreaking havoc ...My own view?
Yet I am not convinced, and won’t be until I see Turnbull start doing things that aren’t left-leaning (and a lot of them)… So stop with all the bleating and preaching about how everyone in the family has to be good little team players. We don’t and many won’t. This “family” prizes individuality. We don’t give a fig for centralised diktats about how we must respond to events. Worse, when we can smell hypocrisy and ‘do as I say, not as I do’ thinking, it simply makes many determined to do the opposite. If those who have now wiped the blood from their knives really want the unity they worked so assiduously to destroy when promoting the inevitability of [Turnbull], there is only one course of action. Shut up already.
Conservatives particularly don’t need to sell their support so cheaply. To let themselves be taken for granted. They should put a price on their support, much as the Nationals have, demanding no changes to policies on global warming and same-sex marriage. Let Turnbull offer many more assurances and promises before pledging loyally.
But that goes to a second consideration, especially for commentators. I actually don’t swing in loyally behind any leader or party. I fight for my own ideas, not theirs. If Turnbull does the right thing, I will praise him. If he does the wrong thing, I will criticise him. That’s what I did with Tony Abbott, and there’s no reason to change for Malcolm Turnbull.
True, come the crunch, closer to the election, we must inevitably decide between various options. Then, for conservatives, there is undoubted power in the argument that it’s better to have a Liberal government than Labor.
But even then there are counter-considerations. If you are a conservative are you better off with Turnbull in power, but without a mainstream party advocating your views or legitimising them? Or is it better to put up with Labor in power if it means the Liberal Opposition switches to a more conservative leader who will at least give a voice to your principles? A Turnbull who takes the Liberals to the Left will marginalise many Liberal voters and leave them unrepresented.
Much then depends on Turnbull showing he does represents conservatives, too. So why swing behind him before he does?
Or let me sum it all up with an example. Do Greens voters feel more empowered now that they have their own party, or do they regret not loyally falling in behind Labor?
UPDATE
Roger Franklin:
The voice on the line to Liberal Party HQ was asking for a sheaf of membership forms, explaining that Malcolm Turnbull’s ascension had inspired him to sign up, along with a number of his circle. “Sorry to burden you with this request,” said the caller, who wondered in passing if the Member for Wentworth had inspired a spate of fellow recruits.One Liberal MP tells me a couple of hundred Victorian Liberals have quit the party. How many have signed up, I don’t know.
“Well, we’ve had a few applications,” said the lass at the other end, “but a lot more have been ringing to cancel their memberships."…
(C)oups and conspiracies bequeath resentments that, in this instance, cannot be dispelled by the mantra that Turnbull, like him or loathe him, is a more appealing prospect than Bill Shorten. So is Humphrey B. Bear, for that matter, but few would regard that as an adequate qualification for a turn in The Lodge.
“Well that is why I want the membership forms,” the caller explained. “I figure — my mates do, too — that we won’t get rid of Turnbull unless we join and start causing some trouble.” Those membership forms are in the mail.
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
Obama challenges the ideological thugs of the Left
Andrew Bolt September 27 2015 (5:02am)
All credit to Barack Obama for speaking out, although if it’s too much for him, then there really is a problem with professional offence-taking:
(Thanks to reader WaG311.)
===President Obama is weighing in on the discussion over political dialogue on college campuses, saying students shouldn’t be “coddled” from opposing views.It would be even more impressive if Obama actually nominated the opinions he would like to be given a fair hearing. But this is a good start.
“It’s not just sometimes folks who are mad that colleges are too liberal that have a problem. Sometimes there are folks on college campuses who are liberal and maybe even agree with me on a bunch of issues who sometimes aren’t listening to the other side. And that’s a problem, too,” Obama said during a town hall on Monday in Des Moines, Iowa.
“I’ve heard of some college campuses where they don’t want to have a guest speaker who is too conservative.Or they don’t want to read a book if it has language that is offensive to African-Americans, or somehow sends a demeaning signal towards women,” Obama continued.
“I’ve got to tell you, I don’t agree with that either. I don’t agree that you, when you become students at colleges, have to be coddled and protected from different points of views,” he said....
“The way to do that is to create a space where a lot of ideas are presented and collide, and people are having arguments, and people are testing each other’s theories, and over time, people learn from each other,” Obama said.
(Thanks to reader WaG311.)
WORKPLACE-RELATED INCIDENT
Tim Blair – Saturday, September 27, 2014 (3:09am)
A beheading in small-town Oklahoma:
The state medical examiner’s office has released the name of a woman killed in a Moore warehouse attack Thursday night.Colleen Hufford, 54, was killed when she was beheaded in the attack.He also tried to kill another woman, officials said. She is in stable condition at a local hospital, according to police.The incident happened at a Vaughan Foods processing plant in Moore.A sheriff’s deputy shot the suspect, identified by officials as 30-year-old Alton Alexander Nolen. He was taken to a hospital and is expected to survive.Jeremy Lewis with the Moore Police Department said in a news conference Friday that Nolen was in the process of converting to the Muslim religion.
According to the American ABC network:
The incident appears to be workplace-related.
(Via bingbing and Brat)
UPDATE. Some background on the killer, which may partly explain his motivation.
SWANS BY FIVE GOALS
Tim Blair – Saturday, September 27, 2014 (3:00am)
This would be so much easier if Bob Ellis had offered a prediction, but what the hell: the Sydney Swans today by 29 points. And in lesser football news, the Bunnies have made it to the NRL Grand Final for the first time since 1971. A number of friends are South Sydney supporters. They are presently in a state of metaphysical delirium.
On The Bolt Report tomorrow
Andrew Bolt September 27 2014 (11:35am)
On The Bolt Report on Channel 10 tomorrow at 10am and 4pm.
Editorial: This is no time for the Left to remind Muslim radicals why they should hate Australia
My guest: Labor’s Anthony Albanese, on dealing with cities growing too big for comfort. Nice, to see one Labor spokesman giving policy.
The panel: Australian columnist Judith Sloan and former Gillard Minister Craig Emerson.
NewsWatch: Gerard Henderson on the ABC programs promoting Muslim radicals and sneering at anti-terrorism raids.
And lots more.. like, should the former Governor-General really be launching Julia Gillard’s memoirs and fawning over her?
The videos of the shows appear here.
===Editorial: This is no time for the Left to remind Muslim radicals why they should hate Australia
My guest: Labor’s Anthony Albanese, on dealing with cities growing too big for comfort. Nice, to see one Labor spokesman giving policy.
The panel: Australian columnist Judith Sloan and former Gillard Minister Craig Emerson.
NewsWatch: Gerard Henderson on the ABC programs promoting Muslim radicals and sneering at anti-terrorism raids.
And lots more.. like, should the former Governor-General really be launching Julia Gillard’s memoirs and fawning over her?
The videos of the shows appear here.
So we must stop attacking Islamic State … or else?
Andrew Bolt September 27 2014 (9:15am)
Tiny, unrepresentative minority:
A dangerous moral relativism, likening the humiliationg of some prisoners at Abu Ghraib to the beheading of unarmed civilians and journalists:
===AN Islamic preacher at the prayer group being investigated for its role in radicalising teenage terrorist Numan Haider posted inflammatory comments about attacks the day after his death.These people are serious morons:
Police revealed yesterday they would investigate the al-Furqan Islamic Centre in Springvale…The next day a preacher at al-Furqan retweeted; ”You fear terror attacks back home? Your government should stop destroying other people’s homes then. It’s not rocket science now is it?”
ONE day before Numan Haider was shot dead, as he tried to murder two counter-terrorism police officers, the al-Furqan Islamic Centre posted on its website three articles and videos in support of Islamic State.UPDATE
In one, a commentator on a Middle-Eastern TV talk show praised the cold-blooded execution of hundreds of captured Syrian soldiers saying they deserved to be executed “1000 times over”.
A dangerous moral relativism, likening the humiliationg of some prisoners at Abu Ghraib to the beheading of unarmed civilians and journalists:
Mustafa Abu Yusuf, a spokesman for the Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jama’ah Association of Australia (ASWJ), claimed the actions of Islamic State [also known as ISIL] were being “rammed down our throats” in a bid to paint fundamentalist Muslims as potential terrorists and curb civil freedoms…It disturbs me that the media is treating this outfit’s “emir”, Sheikh Abu Ayyman, as a moderate. They should remember his defence of Osama bin Laden.
Mr Abu Yusuf said he had not seen videos of the ISIL beheadings posted on social media - although he called the act abhorrent - but said the group’s actions was “no more horrific” than those of Western armies during war.
He questioned why the Abbott government did not react with equally fierce rhetoric when chemical warfare was used and human rights abuses were committed in the Syrian civil war. “The beheadings, it’s an abhorrent act, don’t misunderstand me. But what about the British in Malaya in the 1950s? They used to have soldiers decapitate Malayan heads ... or what about the torture and prisoner abuse by the Americans at Abu Ghraib prison?” he said.
Gillard’s whining is beneath a former PM
Andrew Bolt September 27 2014 (9:01am)
Joe Aston is right to loathe this self-pity and whining:
UPDATE
Yes, Quentin Bryce is no longer Governor-General. Even so, this partisanship in launching Julia Gillard’s memoirs diminishes the office:
And the former Governer-General indulges in the partisanship she occasionally let slip in office:
(Thanks to readers Peter of Bellevue Hill and John.)
===The former prime minister’s new memoir stoops to settling scores, illustrates her pettiness and ... again cynically uses gender politics to argue away her profound failings.Yes.
She bemoans the sexist coverage of her physical appearance and the negative press about the First Bloke, Tim Mathieson. “Why would the Howards be treated differently to Tim and me?” she wonders aloud.
Hello? From opposition to government, John Howard was roundly bagged for his teeth, his glasses, his eyebrows, his height, his deafness and his voice. Janette Howard was mocked as “Mrs Bucket” and demonised for the influence she wielded as her husband’s close political counsellor.
The fat jibes never stopped for Kim Beazley and even Mark Latham’s man boobs weren’t spared in their day. It comes with the territory. Tony Abbott’s protuberant ears, like Gillard’s, are constantly embellished by cartoonists.
Gillard complains that Mathieson was “parodied as dumb”. Let me tell you, sometimes it was hard not to. Small, female Asian doctor anyone? Free footy and cricket tickets and memorabilia for him and his mates?
(I)s this really the memoir of a former PM?… Could you imagine Howard devoting so much of his autobiography to how unfair it was that, as leader of the country, he was teased for his appearance or that his wife was sneered at (by plenty of so-called feminists, too)? Of course not… Gillard has utterly failed to “soar above the mundane” ... , instead crawling into the literary septic tank. If only she had waited five years to write this, it might have been more statesmanlike. Or would that be too much to hope for?
UPDATE
Yes, Quentin Bryce is no longer Governor-General. Even so, this partisanship in launching Julia Gillard’s memoirs diminishes the office:
Before a 150-strong crowd of Labor luminaries and family members, Ms Bryce said many Australians were intrigued with how Gillard managed to run the country while being a woman, often asking her “How do you do it?"…The choice of journalists as guests tells us plenty - plenty we knew already, that is:
“Were they really asking, how do you turn a blind eye to the sexism, cruelty and overt abuse and get on with running the country? Perhaps it was a way of saying I’m appalled, shocked and even embarrassed by what is thrown at you but you seem to just keep moving forward."… .
Political attendees included former Prime Minister Bob Hawke, Wayne Swan, Greg Combet, Craig Emerson, Tanya Plibersek, Kate Ellis, Tony Burke, Warren Snowden, former premiers, Anna Bligh, John Brumby and Kristina Keneally and the Independents who awarded Gillard Government in 2010, Rob Oakeshott and Tony Windsor.
With Gillard’s less than favourable description of the Canberra press gallery in her book, the only journalists invited to the launch, other than those covering the event, were the ABC’s Sarah Ferguson and Ray Martin, who interviewed her on Channel Nine this week.
And the former Governer-General indulges in the partisanship she occasionally let slip in office:
While she has never spoken ill of Mr Rudd, Dame Quentin’s speech praised Gillard for the way she handled herself as leader, admiring her “characteristic efficiency and attention to detail”.The East Timor detention centre deal that wasn’t? The live cattle trade that was killed overnight? The spending that blew out?
(Thanks to readers Peter of Bellevue Hill and John.)
No invoices or budget for Clive Palmer’s $12 million of “expenses”
Andrew Bolt September 27 2014 (8:57am)
This doesn’t sound good news for Clive Palmer’s reputation:
===CONFIDENTIAL documents reveal Clive Palmer’s top port executive saw no invoices and prepared no budget for $12.167 million in Chinese funds that were siphoned by the politician from a bank account only meant to fund a port.
The documents reveal two cheques, provided under subpoena by National Australia Bank, for $10m and $2.167m in August and September last year shortly before the federal election were signed by Mr Palmer, after he had become the sole signatory of the account into which the Chinese funds were deposited.
Mr Palmer, who has strenuously denied any wrongdoing, is challenging allegations by Chinese company Citic Pacific’s subsidiary Sino Iron in the Queensland Supreme Court that he dishonestly procured the $12.167m and funnelled an unknown amount into the electoral campaign of his Palmer United Party, which secured the balance of power in the Senate.
Mr Palmer’s company, Mineralogy, told Citic Pacific that the money had been spent on “port management services” for an iron ore port in Western Australia. However, the documents show that $2.167m went to a Brisbane agency, Media Circus Network, which managed the saturation advertising by PUP last year. The $10m that was siphoned into the account of a company controlled by Mr Palmer, Cosmo Developments, has not yet been traced in the litigation.
Following the lifting of a suppression order by Supreme Court judge David Jackson, The Weekend Australian yesterday reviewed evidence given in confidential arbitration proceedings four months ago by Mr Palmer’s chief executive at the port, Paul Robinson.
Mr Robinson said he prepared budgets for 2011, 2012 and 2013, and he routinely signed hundreds of cheques for the account that held the Chinese funds, but last year he was removed as a signatory by Mr Palmer.
During questioning in the closed-door proceedings, Andrew Bell, SC, a lawyer for Citic Pacific, asked Mr Robinson: “Plainly enough, if there was a legitimate expense for $10m in relation to the port, you would know about it, wouldn’t you?” He replied: “Yes."… Mr Robinson agreed that “no invoice passed (his) desk” for $10m or $2m, and that he did not know why he was never consulted about purported expenditure on “port management services” of the money siphoned by Mr Palmer from the account.
Cambodia has a great exchange rate
Andrew Bolt September 27 2014 (7:46am)
This won’t empty our detention centres in a hurry:
Hmm. Champagne, protests, a poor fisher boy… Am I right to conclude from her Twitter feed that the ABC’s South East Asia correspondent is personally against this deal?
UPDATE
Answer: no. Her interview with Morrison on AM was astonishing, repeatedly attacking him for accepting champagne from his hosts.
Reader Clayton:
===In a joint statement, the Australian and Cambodian governments announced a bilateral memorandum of understanding that provides “settlement and integration support” in Cambodia for refugees.A good deal, then - for Cambodia, unless this ramps up significantly:
The agreement will offer settlement of refugees on a voluntary basis, with the number of refugees accepted to be determined by Cambodia… Cambodia’s interior minister earlier said the government only wanted to take four or five refugees to begin with.
Australia will pay Cambodia $40 million in additional aid and also “bear the direct costs of the arrangement, including initial support to refugees, and relevant capacity building for Cambodia”.UPDATE
Hmm. Champagne, protests, a poor fisher boy… Am I right to conclude from her Twitter feed that the ABC’s South East Asia correspondent is personally against this deal?
Still, I’m sure she’ll give Scott Morrison a fair and balanced interview, right?
UPDATE
Answer: no. Her interview with Morrison on AM was astonishing, repeatedly attacking him for accepting champagne from his hosts.
Reader Clayton:
I just heard Samantha Hawley’s interview on AM. What a dreadfully biased piece of work that was. Her biggest issue appeared to be that Cambodia had control over what happened in Cambodia and that they had a glass of champagne (as the request of the host country). Nothing about how Labor signed a similar deal in PNG. Nothing about how the boats have stopped. Nothing about how the deaths at sea have been prevented. Sounds like someone who should be taught how to re-interview in the private market subject of ABC cuts…Reader Lisle:
No! Heard it on ABCNews24 this morning. Her voice told the whole story. I wouldn’t invite her to my place for dinner. She would undoubtedly make a big fuss if we had a glass of champagne to celebrate friendship.The question is why is an ABC reporter using twitter in this manner?Reader Jack:
She repeated the question [about drinking champagne] 3 times. Apparently the ABC are the only ones allowed champagne. Socialism and champagne, such a heady mix but both full of air.
The ABC is not just unbalanced. It is now a public safety hazard
Andrew Bolt September 27 2014 (7:36am)
Gerard Henderson:
The ABC is becoming lethally stupid in its imbalance. Its AM program today gives the platform to British Muslim convert Yvonne Ridleyto speak unchallenged about Islamic radicals and promote her speaking tour here.
It sells her merely as a “journalist” and a Muslim and gives nothing of her background, other than that she was converted by the Taliban. It does note that she’s been accused of being a Muslim “firebrand” and lets Ridley herself explain this is just because some men can’t accept that she wears a “scarf”.
Here is the critical background AM omitted in presenting her as the voice of reason rather than exactly the kind of radical it should not be promoting:
This is not just dangerous to non Muslims but grossly unfair on moderate Muslims.
What the hell is it up to?
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
===In the climate of genuine security threat, it is reasonable to expect the taxpayer-funded public broadcaster would act responsibly. This, at the very least, requires a proper balance in the ABC’s presentation of security issues. So far, Mark Scott, the ABC’s managing director and editor-in-chief, has failed to exercise proper editorial control over his employees…UPDATE
Monday’s Q & A ... was a travesty in so far as fair and balanced coverage is concerned ... (A)fter the police raids in Sydney and Brisbane on September 18, the topic was ... “Be alert but not alarmed"…
For this crucial program, Q & A put together a panel that was grossly unbalanced. Justice Minister Michael Keenan ... with some help from [Labor’s shadow attorney-general Mark] Dreyfus, maintained that the police raids were a response to a genuine security threat. But the rest of the panel, cheered on by a large section of the audience and not discouraged by presenter Tony Jones, was having none of this.
[Greens senator Scott] Ludlam suggested the raids were an “amazing coincidence” in view of the planned changes to national security legislation.
Paul Barry presented the Media Watch program before Q & A went to air. Barry cited with approval a comment in The Guardian Online by Richard Ackland (a former Media Watch presenter) that the media had become “willing pawns in the politics of terror drama”. To Ackland, the raids were but a splash of “commando bombast”.
On September 19, in the wake of the Sydney and Brisbane raids, Lateline ran a “Friday Forum” segment on national security. There was scant debate as defence commentator Allan Behm essentially agreed with human rights barrister Greg Barns. There was a near common view the raids had been exaggerated by the police (Barns) and overegged by the media (Behm). No view supporting the need for such raids was heard.
It was much the same on Radio National’s Late Night Live last Monday. Phillip Adams ... was in the presenter’s chair with academic lawyers Patrick Emerton and Kiernan Hardy as guests. Adams essentially agreed with the two that the proposed amendments to the security legislation were too tough. Emerton alleged that in 2007 ASIO officers had committed “serious crimes” of “kidnapping and false imprisonment”. He implied that the Abbott government was intent on making kidnapping “lawful when ASIO does it”. In fact, no ASIO officer was ever charged with, let alone found guilty of, kidnapping and false imprisonment in 2007. But neither Adams nor Kiernan clarified Emerton’s hyperbolic comment…
Channel 10’s left-of-centre Paul Bongiorno appears on RN and Radio 702 in Sydney. On 702 last Thursday, he declared the Abbott government “certainly is panicking the community” on security. No other view was heard.
The ABC remains a Conservative Free Zone, without a conservative in any prominent presenter, producer or editorial position. In his role as editor-in-chief, it is up to Scott to ensure a diversity of views is heard during a time of national emergency. If he fails to do so, it is the responsibility of the ABC board to ensure that the ABC managing director does what he is paid to do. It’s called governance.
The ABC is becoming lethally stupid in its imbalance. Its AM program today gives the platform to British Muslim convert Yvonne Ridleyto speak unchallenged about Islamic radicals and promote her speaking tour here.
It sells her merely as a “journalist” and a Muslim and gives nothing of her background, other than that she was converted by the Taliban. It does note that she’s been accused of being a Muslim “firebrand” and lets Ridley herself explain this is just because some men can’t accept that she wears a “scarf”.
Here is the critical background AM omitted in presenting her as the voice of reason rather than exactly the kind of radical it should not be promoting:
Where to begin? With her ... assertion that the Chechen terrorist leader and architect of the Beslan school massacre, Shamil Basayev, was a ‘shaheed’ or martyr? After the Amman bombings in 2005, Ridley appeared to be reluctant to condemn the late Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the leader of Al-Qaeda in Iraq and Jordan. When Al-Zarqawi was denounced by his own family, she thought this ‘cowardly’ and said she would ‘rather put up with a brother like Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi any day than have a traitor or a sell-out for a father, son or grandfather’.On previous tours here she should have proved to the ABC that having her tour here would be like inspecting fuel drums by the light of a match:
Firebrand Islamic convert Yvonne Ridley has accused Australians of being among the worst Muslim haters in the world.And:
Ridley reportedly told a Belfast meeting of the Islamic Students Association in January there was no innocent Israeli when it came to suicide bombings. Not even children.No, she’s not called a firebrand because she wears a scarf. Here is some more of Ridley’s hate-preaching which the ABC failed to include in its promotion of her and her speaking tour:
“There are no innocents in this war,” she raged, because children could grow up to be Israeli soldiers. And talk of “suicide bombers” was “insulting”.
”Let’s call suicide bombers by their proper name, which is martyrs.”
[Israel is] that disgusting little watchdog of America that is festering in the Middle East…Why is the ABC promoting this kind of person at this dangerous time?
Israel is a vile little state. It’s propped up by America. It cannot survive without American money…
Anyone who knows me and why work know I loathe the Zionist State and what it stands for…
Drinking Coca Cola is like drinking the blood of Palestinian children…
The Zionists have tentacles everywhere. We’ve seen with the disgraceful behaviour from the BBC that this interference goes right to the very top of the media, into the very heart of our homes…
We have to end the Zionist state. We’ve got to charge the war criminals. We have to boycott Israeli goods…
During our brief time in Gaza, I did have the privilege to join a few of us together to meet Ismail Haniyeh [leader of the Hamas terrorist group which wants Israel destroyed]… If I could use my Palestinian citizenship, it would be to vote Ismail Haniyeh and Hamas back in again in Gaza. Victory to intifada 3! Victory to Hamas!…
[al Qaeda head] Osama [bin Laden] was, after all, no Hitler, Pol Pot, Idi Amin, Stalin or Caligula – he headed no country nor ruled over a state; and in fact the last few years of his life have proven to be extremely reclusive, secluded and isolated… That the most powerful man in the world [Barack Obama] can stare straight into the cameras and say: “Justice was done” over Bin Laden’s murder borders on absurdity…
The true Barack Obama is an out of control psychopathic killer with a loaded God complex, and he’s running America. This makes him the most dangerous man in the world as well as the most powerful…
The ABC is the first to criticise people who claim that all Muslims are extremists. So why does it go out of its way to promote Muslims who are extremists?
This is not just dangerous to non Muslims but grossly unfair on moderate Muslims.
What the hell is it up to?
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
Claims of voter fraud in Cathy McGowan’s win
Andrew Bolt September 27 2014 (7:25am)
It is remarkable how the morally superior so often feel entitled to act immorally:
===A SPATE of allegedly false voter enrolments in a key seat in last year’s federal election contributed to the surprise defeat of the Liberal Party’s Sophie Mirabella.As Bertrand Russell once said:
Independent Cathy McGowan’s 439-vote winning margin in the Victorian rural seat of Indi came after a number of her dedicated younger backers allegedly engaged in electoral fraud.
They switched voter enrolments to Indi in the weeks before the September 7 election, despite living and working in other seats, including those in metropolitan Melbourne, about 300km away, an investigation by The Weekend Australian has found. More than 20 dodgy enrolments of McGowan backers that have come to light so far are at the centre of a high-priority probe by the Australian Electoral Commission’s new integrity unit.
Much that passes as idealism is disguised hatred or disguised love of power.Or put it this way:
(Thanks to reader Gab.)
Women and children reported beheaded
Andrew Bolt September 27 2014 (7:04am)
Beheadings seem awfully popular in a certain part of the world:
Nothing to do with Islam. Most Muslims are peace-loving. The real worry is the white backlash etc etc etc:
(Thanks to readers The Evil Right, Judo Chop and hazza.)
===The Taliban militants have beheaded 15 civilians, including women and childrenin eastern Ghazni province of Afghanistan.UPDATE
Nothing to do with Islam. Most Muslims are peace-loving. The real worry is the white backlash etc etc etc:
A man who had just been sacked at an Oklahoma food plant decapitated one female worker and stabbed another before he was shot and wounded by the boss…Incidentally, the US right to bear arms can be useful.
Police spokesman Jeremy Lewis told a press conference that Nolen’s colleagues had said “he recently started trying to convert several employees to the Muslim religion”. However, it is not clear if his beliefs had any link to the attack.
(Thanks to readers The Evil Right, Judo Chop and hazza.)
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Nahuatl word of the day: chincal, "irritating."
Example: Niquihuītequi in chincal oquichpilli, "I smacked the irritating young man."
Die erste Konzeption ist immer die natürlichste und beste. Der Verstand irrt, das Gefühl nicht. Robert Schumann
trans "The first concept is always the most natural and best. The mind wanders, feel not."
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"Obama and Kerry insisted nothing the US would do would have any impact on the outcome of the Syrian civil war. This was supposed to be the strikes' selling point. But by launching worthless strikes, Obama was poised to wreck America's deterrent posture, transforming the world's superpower into an international joke.http://www.jpost.com/
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Last week, Glenn purchased the microphone of Iva Toguri – aka Tokyo Rose – used during her World War II radio broadcasts. And this morning on radio, Glenn decided to broadcast with the mic, which had not been used in nearly 70 years.
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Holly Sarah Nguyen
My faith, my heart, my marriage, my home, my family, my friends, my life...are ALL under the watchful eye of my protective God!
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It comes down to choice. I made the choice to stand up for the dead school child Hamidur Rahman when no one else would. Maybe I really am a southpaw .. but my powers of caring only extend to one thing, and not the other. I thank God that not every choice I make matters. And I beg God to strengthen me to make the ones that do. - ed
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http://www.news.com.au/national-news/treasurer-joe-hockey-and-finance-minister-matthias-cormann-release-budget-update/story-fncynjr2-1226728387873
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And yes, the irony of me writing this is not lost on me.>
http://www.smh.com.au/comment/smh-letters/meet-the-letter-writers-con-vaitsas-20130925-2ue20.html
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Abbott is being too diplomatic, understandably. I'd put it more bluntly as Alexander Downer so aptly did:
Mr Downer said the Indonesian government needed to accept some responsibility for the people-smuggling problem.
''They do have to understand that it's their boats with their crews, their flagged boats, which are breaking our sovereignty and are breaking our law by transgressing our national borders, our maritime borders,'' Mr Downer told Fairfax Radio.
''When we say we'd like to turn back the boats, they need to understand, and they need to understand very clearly, that it is ... their people who are breaking our law and I think they have to be told this very directly.
''There's no point in allowing ourselves to be bullied by the Indonesians in this way. I mean, we have to stand up for ourselves and stand up for our national interest and be prepared to call it as it is. I can understand the [Australian] government not doing that, but since I'm not part of the government, I'm quite happy to.''>
http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/tony-abbott-says-boats-issue-with-indonesia-a-passing-irritant-20130927-2uhzs.html
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Iranian news agency Fars on Wednesday accused CNN of "fabricating" comments made by Iranian President Hassan Rouhani about the Holocaust in an interview with Christiane Amanpour that was aired on Tuesday.
Rouhani who was speaking in Farsi was quoted by CNN as saying: "Whatever criminality they committed against the Jews we condemn," and he added according to CNN, "The taking of human life is contemptible. It makes no difference if that life is Jewish life, Christian or Muslim. For us it is the same."
Fars, who provided its own translation of Rouhani's remarks claimed that the above quotes were fabrications of the American news network.
According to Fars, CNN either added, completely altered, executed a "conceptual" or not a precise translation or completely changed what Rouhani said.
Former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad often made inflammatory remarks denying the Holocaust. In Fars's translation of Rouhani's remarks to CNN there was an unequivocal condemnation of the Nazis' crimes both against Jews and non-Jews.
The Iranian news agency provided the Fars and the CNN translations side-by-side in order to demonstrate the alleged fabrications. The italicized words in the CNN text below are the remarks that Fars claimed were fabricated.
CNN translation of Rouhani remarks:
"I've said before that I am not a historian and then, when it comes to speaking of the dimensions of the Holocaust, it is the historians that should reflect on it. But in general I can tell you that any crime that happens in history against humanity, including the crime that Nazis committed towards the Jews as well as non-Jews is reprehensible and condemnable.Whatever criminality they committed against the Jews, we condemn, the taking of human life is contemptible, it makes no difference whether that life is Jewish life, Christian or Muslim, for us it is the same, but taking the human life is something our religion rejects but this doesn’t mean that on the other hand you can say Nazis committed crime against a group now therefore, they must usurp the land of another group and occupy it. This too is an act that should be condemned. There should be an even-handed discussion".
Fars translation of Rouhani remarks:
"I have said before that I am not a historian and historians should specify, state and explain the aspects of historical events, but generally we fully condemn any kind of crime committed against humanity throughout the history, including the crime committed by the Nazis both against the Jews and non-Jews, the same way that if today any crime is committed against any nation or any religion or any people or any belief, we condemn that crime and genocide. Therefore, what the Nazis did is condemned, (but) the aspects that you talk about, clarification of these aspects is a duty of the historians and researchers, I am not a history scholar."
Amanpour replied to the accusations on her Twitter feed, insisting that "CNN reported exactly what Rouhani said" and providing a link to a video of the full unedited interview.
She also responded to a report on The Wall Street Journal on the controversy, saying she was "stunned by willingness of @WSJ ed page and others to jump into bed with Iranian extremist mouthpiece like Fars."
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Although Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and some of his aides have been telling Israelis, Americans and Europeans that they are opposed to violence and terror attacks against Israel, they continue to incite Palestinians against Israel on an almost daily basis
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Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas will be allowed to sit in the UN General Assembly's heads-of-state chair, Bloomberg reported on Thursday.
Abbas, who is scheduled to speak at the UN on Thursday at noon EST, will be the first Palestinian leader to use the chair, reserved for heads of state waiting to take the podium to address the General Assembly.
In the past, Palestinian leaders, who were considered representatives of a stateless people, had to stand while waiting to address the meeting.
The new diplomatic honor bestowed on Abbas comes after the Palestinians' upgrade to an "observer state" at the UN last November.
The UN has a lot of ways of insulting those it harms - ed
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26 Sept 2013 Tehran’s Nuclear Cooperation? : Tehran calls IAEA Iranian Inspections & Findings "unfair, illegal" in 20-page condemnation document
http://www.reuters.com/
the logic which produces those statements .. beggars belief - ed
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Data shows global temperatures aren't rising the way climate scientists have predicted. Now the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change faces a problem: publicize these findings and encourage skeptics -- or hush up the figures.
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Glenn began the radio this show this morning in a bit of a bad mood. Since Senator Ted Cruz wrapped up his marathon anti-Obamacare speech yesterday around noon after 21 hours, the media wasted no time mocking the Senator. Considering how recently the media lionized Democratic Texas State Legislator Wendy Davis in the wake of her 11-hour filibuster against stricter abortion laws, Glenn found himself especially frustrated.
“Here’s my problem. My problem is I have no problem living in a world where we all have different opinions. I have no problem coexisting with people. I have no problem if I can’t convince you to come my way. I have no problem with your religion, I have no problem with whom you voted for,” Glenn said. “But there is something called the freedom of conscience. And what I believe is what I believe. What you believe is what you believe. And that’s good. That’s really good. That’s what makes the world go around. Here’s what I can’t take anymore. I can’t take people who won’t treat people and conditions the same.”
Consistency of opinion is an admirable trait in any person, but it should be seen as a necessary trait for the media. In theory, it is the job of the media to present both sides of a situation and let the audience decide. Or, in the case of cable news, be up front about the angle you are taking. But the media coverage of Sen. Cruz has proven that such a standard simply does not exist in the American media today.
“Now [Wendy Davis is] a woman who stood up for what she believed in and she made a cogent case. I disagree with her, but she made a cogent case and people heard her. And all of the newspapers reported it,” Glenn said. “Ted Cruz gets up and he makes a cogent case for 20 hours and nobody reports on what he’s really saying. They make it all into Green Eggs and Ham – like all he did for 20 hours was talk about Green Eggs and Ham, that all he did was talk about White Castle.”
One of the more egregious offenders was CNN
===Dai Le
DAWN - creating our brand:Top Tips For Creating a Recognisable Brand | LinkedIn http://t.co/pNPSxmIR0E
=Tried to post this great quote on LinkedIn but it cut it short! So here is the amazing quote. To my DAWNs....
The Social Synapse
From: The Neuroscience of Human Relationships
“If you would like to establish a connection with people from another culture is it always good to offer a few gifts as a gesture of friendship. But, an even better way to forge a lasting bond is by creating something together. Whether it’s a meal, an art project, or just a spontaneous dance party, when you create with others, you build a connection that lasts a lifetime.”
From the social synapse by Nona Epinephrine and Sarah Tonin
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Bette Midler accuses Ted Cruz of not being a real Christian, beclowns herself in the process ==> http://twitchy.com/2013/09/25/
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http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/opinion/experts-right-to-give-suzuki-a-hard-time/story-fni0ffxg-1226727156895
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Denis Napthine
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A KENYAN doctor has told of finding eyes, ears and noses torn from the bodies of hostages recovered from Nairobi's Westgate Mall.
The doctor told Kenya's The Star newspaper that the hostages had been tortured before being killed.
"Those are not allegations. Those are f****ng truths," the emotional doctor is reported as saying.
"They removed (testicles), eyes, ears, nose. They get your hand and sharpen it like a pencil then they tell you to write your name with the blood. They drive knives inside a child's body. Actually if you look at all the bodies, unless those ones that were escaping, fingers are cut by pliers, the noses are ripped by pliers."
The doctor, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the condition of the bodies was worse than those he had seen after a 2009 oil tanker explosion in Sachangwan claimed 139 lives.
Read more: http://www.news.com.au/world-news/nairobi-westgate-mall-survivor-tells-i-used-dead-teens-blood-to-fool-terrorists/story-fndir2ev-1226727931521#ixzz2g4H9z5UX
Further testimony at the link - ed
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THE new Government today used a $20 billion blowout revealed in final Budget figures for 2012-13 to accuse Labor of a “Budget mess” only the Coalition could fix.
Treasurer Joe Hockey accused the Labor government of “over-promising and underdelivering” and falsely claiming there had been a fall in revenue caused by the easing of the mining boom which required spending cuts.
“The fact is it is a litany of failures and political promises,” Mr Hockey told reporters.
The figures had no substantial surprises and closely matched the estimates presented by Treasury just before the September 7 election.
And Treasurer Hockey denied he had promised a surplus in his first year in office, saying he was now dealing with “an entirely different set of numbers”.
Mr Hockey said there had been “a further deterioration’’ in the figures projected for subsequent years, and he was testing Labor’s forecasts to see how “robust” they were.
“But what Australia needed was an injection of confidence. And we have done that,” said Mr Hockey, declining to speculate on further forecasts.
He said the $1.8 billion Labor had claimed was being dodged on fringe benefits tax on vehicles had already been found to be untrue.
The Coalition in Opposition had argued the government was spending too much, not bringing in too little in tax returns.
“There has been no ‘fall in revenue and receipts’ as often asserted by Labor,” Mr Hockey and Finance Minister Mathias Corman said in a statement.
“Receipts for 2012-13 alone increased by 6.4 per cent, or $21 billion, over the previous year, 2011-12.”
The final figures for the year showed that forecasts made in May 2012 for the 12 months to the end of June this year were well off the mark:
* GDP growth estimated to be five per cent came in at 2.5 per cent;
* The expected $1.5 billion Budget surplus became an $18.8 billion deficit — a $20.4 billion deterioration;
* Net debt estimated to be $143.3 billion ended at $153 billion;
* Interest payments on debt were expected to reach $7 billion but ended up at $8.3 billion
Read more: http://www.news.com.au/national-news/hockey-exposes-8220litany-of-failures8221-in-labor8217s-forecasts-but-stops-short-of-promising-a-surplus-in-its-first-year/story-fncynjr2-1226728442460#ixzz2g4KOjiPt
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THE Mars rover Curiosity has had a major breakthrough: It has found water after scraping the dusty surface of the red planet.
The fine-grained soil has revealed a water content of about 2 per cent - a level which could be useful for future human missions.
The water is not free flowing, but is bound to other molecules contained in the dirt.
The Curiosity rover has been scouring the surface of mars since August 2012.
NASA scientists formally published a series of papers last night detailing the results of experiments carried out by the robot's various scientific instruments.
"We tend to think of Mars as this dry place to find water fairly easy to get out of the soil at the surface was exciting to me," said Laurie Leshin, lead author on the Science paper which confirmed the presence of water.
Read more: http://www.news.com.au/technology/mars-rove-curiosity-finds-water-contained-in-soil-on-the-surface-of-the-red-planet/story-e6frfro0-1226728319860#ixzz2g4LIbrId
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A GOLD Coast police officer shot in the face by an armed robbery suspect is being lauded for his bravery after returning fire to help capture his attackers.
On the same day Gold Coast detective Damian Leeding's killers were due to be sentenced, which also happened to be Police Remembrance Day, Sergeant Gary Hamrey could very well have been another fallen officer.
Read more: http://www.news.com.au/breaking-news/national/police-officer-shot-on-gold-coast/story-e6frfku9-1226728178860#ixzz2g4M5CNh9
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WASHINGTON – Secretary of State John Kerry signed an international treaty on arms regulation Wednesday, angering conservative lawmakers and rattling the National Rifle Association despite claims that the treaty won't infringe on gun rights.
If it doesn't do anything, why sign it? - ed
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Bill Gates has confessed that it was a mistake to set "Control-Alt-Delete" as a way to log in to Windows.
During a talk at Harvard, Gates said that there was an option to make a single button for such a command, but the IBM keyboard designer didn’t want to give Microsoft one.
"You want to have something you do with the keyboard that is signaling to a very low level of the software -- actually hard-coded in the hardware -- that it really is bringing in the operating system you expect, instead of just a funny piece of software that puts up a screen that looks like a log-in screen, and then it listens to your password and then it’s able to do that," Gates said. "It was a mistake."
David Bradley, a designer of the original IBM PC, invented the "Control-Alt-Delete" combo.
"I may have invented it, but Bill made it famous," Bradley said.
The command also effectively restarts the computer, but Bradley said "Why they used it for the log-in also, I don’t know."
They made lots of mistakes - ed
===
A last-ditch effort to refute climate “skeptics”—people unconvinced that we need to spend trillions to reshape our economies to halt or slow “climate change”-- has failed.
Last week, the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) published a study by 13 prestigious atmospheric scientists that supposedly provides “clear evidence for a discernible human influence on the thermal structure of the atmosphere.”
The NAS researchers pointedly echo the famous declaration by the United Nation-sponsored Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC, that the “balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate.” With this new study, the authors claim to clinch the case. The IPCC, we’re supposed to believe, has been right all along.
With the IPCC now issuing the first segment of its latest mammoth study on the same topic, readers should take the NAS pronouncement with a large grain of salt—and the IPCC report too. This is an attempt to change the subject and ignore the elephant in the room: the crisis in “consensus” climate science arising from the growing mismatch between model-predicted warming and observed warming.
===
Just days after dozens of innocent victims were massacred and hundreds more injured during Al-Shabaab’s attack on a shopping mall in Nairobi, Kenya, handmade flags resembling the black flag of Islamic jihad were spotted flying around New York City.
TheBlaze commissioned numerous translations of the flags. One could not make it out. Three others said they weren’t positive, but that the flags appeared to show the “shehadah,” one of the five pillars of Islam that’s also said by those converting to Islam and a staple on so called “black flags of jihad.” Similar looking flags have been used for numerous reasons, but more recently they have become to be associated with both Al Qaeda and Al-Shebaab — the group claiming responsibility for the massacre at the Kenyan shopping mall.
The event where these flags were spotted? The annual Muslim Day Parade in New York City.
Both black and white versions of the flags were spotted:
===
When Jestin Anthony Joseph walked into a McDonald’s and asked for a cup of water, that’s not all he was after.
Witnesses say the 24-year-old soon pulled out a gun and pointed it at employees and customers — who were with children — demanding their possessions.
Prayer works - ed===
- 1066 – William the Conqueror and his army set sail from the mouth of the River Somme, beginning the Norman conquest of England.
- 1331 – The Battle of Płowce between the Kingdom of Poland and the Teutonic Order is fought.
- 1422 – After the brief Gollub War the Teutonic Knightssign the Treaty of Melno with the Kingdom of Polandand Grand Duchy of Lithuania
- 1529 – The Siege of Vienna begins when Suleiman I attacks the city.
- 1540 – The Society of Jesus (Jesuits) receives its charter from Pope Paul III.
- 1590 – Pope Urban VII dies 13 days after being chosen as the Pope, making his reign the shortest papacy in history.
- 1605 – The armies of Sweden are defeated by the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in the Battle of Kircholm.
- 1669 – The Venetians surrender the fortress of Candia to the Ottomans, thus ending the 21-year-long Siege of Candia.
- 1777 – American Revolutionary War: Lancaster, Pennsylvania becomes the capital of the United States, for one day after the Second Continental Congress evacuates Philadelphia to avoid invading British forces.
- 1822 – Jean-François Champollion announces that he has deciphered the Rosetta Stone.
- 1825 – The world's first public railway to use steam locomotives, the Stockton and Darlington Railway, is ceremonially opened.
- 1854 – The steamship SS Arctic sinks with 300 people on board. This marks the first great disaster in the Atlantic Ocean.
- 1875 – The merchant sailing ship Ellen Southard is wrecked in a storm at Liverpool.
- 1903 – The Wreck of the Old 97, an American rail disaster that became the subject of a popular ballad.
- 1905 – The physics journal Annalen der Physik received Albert Einstein's paper, "Does the Inertia of a Body Depend Upon Its Energy Content?", introducing the equation E=mc².
- 1908 – The first production of the Ford Model T automobile was built at the Ford Piquette Avenue Plant in Detroit, Michigan.
- 1916 – Iyasu V is proclaimed deposed as ruler of Ethiopia in a palace coup in favor of his aunt Zewditu.
- 1922 – King Constantine I of Greece abdicates his throne in favor of his eldest son, George II.
- 1928 – The Republic of China is recognized by the United States.
- 1930 – Bobby Jones wins the U.S. Amateur Championship to complete the Grand Slamof golf. The old structure of the grand slam was the U.S. Open, British Open, U.S. Amateur, and British Amateur.
- 1938 – Ocean liner Queen Elizabeth launched in Glasgow.
- 1940 – World War II: The Tripartite Pact is signed in Berlin by Germany, Japan and Italy.
- 1941 – The National Liberation Front (Greece) is established and Georgios Siantos is appointed acting leader.
- 1941 – The SS Patrick Henry is launched becoming the first of more than 2,700 Liberty ships.
- 1942 – Last day of the September Matanikau action on Guadalcanal as United States Marine Corps troops barely escape after being surrounded by Japanese forces near the Matanikau River.
- 1944 – The Kassel Mission results in the largest loss by a USAAF group on any mission in World War II.
- 1949 – The first Plenary Session of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference approves the design of the Flag of the People's Republic of China.
- 1954 – The nationwide debut of Tonight Starring Steve Allen (The Tonight Show) hosted by Steve Allen on NBC.
- 1956 – USAF Captain Milburn G. Apt becomes the first man to exceed Mach 3 while flying the Bell X-2. Shortly thereafter, the craft goes out of control and Captain Apt is killed.
- 1959 – Typhoon Vera kills nearly 5,000 people in Japan.
- 1962 – The Yemen Arab Republic is established.
- 1962 – Rachel Carson's book Silent Spring is published, inspiring an environmental movement and the creation of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
- 1964 – The British TSR-2 aircraft XR219 makes its maiden flight from Boscombe Downin Wiltshire.
- 1968 – The stage musical Hair opens at the Shaftesbury Theatre in London, where it played 1,998 performances until its closure was forced by the roof collapsing in July 1973.
- 1975 – The last use of capital punishment in Spain sees the executions of five members of militant organisations, sparking worldwide protests against the Spanish government and the withdrawal of numerous ambassadors.
- 1979 – The United States Department of Education receives final approval from the U.S. Congress to become the 13th US Cabinet agency.
- 1983 – Richard Stallman announces the GNU Project to develop a free Unix-likeoperating system.
- 1988 – National League for Democracy is formed by Aung San Suu Kyi and various others to help fight against dictatorship in Myanmar.
- 1993 – The Sukhumi massacre takes place in Abkhazia.
- 1996 – In Afghanistan, the Taliban capture the capital city Kabul after driving out President Burhanuddin Rabbani and executing former leader Mohammad Najibullah.
- 1996 – The Julie N., a tanker ship, spills thousands of gallons of oil after crashing into the Million Dollar Bridge in Portland, Maine.
- 1998 – The Google internet search engine retroactively claims this date as its birthday.
- 2001 – Zug massacre: In Zug, Switzerland, Friedrich Leibacher shoots 18 citizens, killing 14 and then himself.
- 2003 – SMART-1 satellite is launched.
- 2007 – NASA launches the Dawn probe.
- 2008 – CNSA astronaut Zhai Zhigang becomes the first Chinese person to perform a spacewalk while flying on Shenzhou 7.
- 2012 – A mass shooting takes place at Accent Signage Systems, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, killing six people, including the gunman who committed suicide, and wounding two others.
- 2014 – Eruption of Mount Ontake in Japan occurs.
- 808 – Ninmyō, Japanese emperor (d. 850)
- 823 – Ermentrude of Orléans (d. 869)
- 1271 – Wenceslaus II of Bohemia (d. 1305)
- 1275 – John II, Duke of Brabant (d. 1312)
- 1300 – Adolf, Count Palatine of the Rhine (d. 1327)
- 1389 – Cosimo de' Medici, ruler of Florence (d. 1464)
- 1433 – Stanisław Kazimierczyk, Polish canon regular and saint (d. 1489)
- 1442 – John de la Pole, 2nd Duke of Suffolk (d. 1491)
- 1496 – Hieronymus Łaski, Polish diplomat (d. 1542)
- 1507 – Guillaume Rondelet, French physician (d. 1566)
- 1533 – Stefan Batory, King of Poland (d. 1586)
- 1544 – Takenaka Shigeharu, Japanese samurai (d. 1579)
- 1552 – Flaminio Scala, Italian playwright and stage actor (d. 1624)
- 1598 – Robert Blake, English admiral (d. 1657)
- 1601 – Louis XIII of France (d. 1643)
- 1627 – Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet, French bishop and theologian (d. 1704)
- 1643 – Solomon Stoddard, American pastor and librarian (d. 1729)
- 1657 – Sofia Alekseyevna of Russia (d. 1704)
- 1677 – Giovanni Carlo Maria Clari, Italian violinist and composer (d. 1754)
- 1696 – Alphonsus Maria de' Liguori, Italian bishop and saint (d. 1787)
- 1719 – Abraham Gotthelf Kästner, German mathematician and epigrammatist (d. 1800)
- 1722 – Samuel Adams, American philosopher and politician, 4th Governor of Massachusetts (d. 1803)
- 1729 – Michael Denis, Austrian lepidopterist, author, and poet (d. 1800)
- 1739 – Francis Russell, Marquess of Tavistock, Irish politician (d. 1767)
- 1765 – Antoine Philippe de La Trémoille, French general (d. 1794)
- 1783 – Agustín de Iturbide, Mexican royalist turned insurgent; first emperor of Mexico (d. 1824)
- 1803 – Samuel Francis Du Pont, American admiral (d. 1865)
- 1805 – George Müller, German-English evangelist and missionary, founded the Ashley Down Orphanage (d. 1898)
- 1818 – Hermann Kolbe, German chemist and academic (d. 1884)
- 1821 – Henri-Frédéric Amiel, Swiss philosopher, poet, and critic (d. 1881)
- 1824 – William "Bull" Nelson, American general (d. 1862)
- 1830 – William Babcock Hazen, American general (d. 1887)
- 1838 – Lawrence Sullivan Ross, American general and politician, 19th Governor of Texas (d. 1898)
- 1840 – Alfred Thayer Mahan, American captain and historian (d. 1914)
- 1840 – Thomas Nast, German-American cartoonist (d. 1902)
- 1842 – Alphonse François Renard, Belgian geologist and petrographer (d. 1903)
- 1843 – Gaston Tarry, French mathematician and academic (d. 1913)
- 1861 – Corinne Roosevelt Robinson, American poet and author (d. 1933)
- 1864 – Andrej Hlinka, Slovak priest and politician (d. 1938)
- 1866 – Eurosia Fabris, Italian saint (d. 1932)
- 1871 – Grazia Deledda, Italian novelist and poet, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1936)
- 1879 – Hans Hahn, Austrian mathematician and philosopher (d. 1934)
- 1879 – Frederick Schule, American hurdler and coach (d. 1962)
- 1879 – Cyril Scott, English poet and composer (d. 1970)
- 1882 – Dorothy Greenhough-Smith, English figure skater and tennis player (d. 1965)
- 1885 – Harry Blackstone, Sr., American magician (d. 1965)
- 1885 – Charles Benjamin Howard, Canadian businessman and politician (d. 1964)
- 1892 – George Bambridge, English diplomat (d. 1943)
- 1894 – Lothar von Richthofen, German lieutenant and pilot (d. 1922)
- 1895 – Woolf Barnato, English race car driver and financier (d. 1948)
- 1896 – Gilbert Ashton, English cricketer (d. 1981)
- 1896 – Sam Ervin, American soldier and politician (d. 1985)
- 1898 – Vincent Youmans, American composer and producer (d. 1946)
- 1904 – Edvard Kocbek, Slovenian poet and politician (d. 1981)
- 1905 – Conrad Heidkamp, German footballer and manager (d. 1994)
- 1906 – William Empson, English poet and critic (d. 1984)
- 1906 – Jim Thompson, American author and screenwriter (d. 1977)
- 1906 – Sergei Varshavsky, Russian art collector and author (d. 1980)
- 1907 – Maurice Blanchot, French philosopher and theorist (d. 2003)
- 1907 – Bernard Miles, English actor, director, producer, and screenwriter (d. 1991)
- 1911 – Marcey Jacobson, American-Mexican photographer (d. 2009)
- 1913 – Albert Ellis, American psychologist and author (d. 2007)
- 1916 – S. Yizhar, Israeli academic and politician (d. 2006)
- 1917 – Louis Auchincloss, American novelist and essayist (d. 2010)
- 1917 – Carl Ballantine, American magician and actor (d. 2009)
- 1917 – William T. Orr, American actor and producer (d. 2002)
- 1917 – Benjamin Rubin, American microbiologist (d. 2010)
- 1918 – Martin Ryle, English astronomer and author, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1984)
- 1918 - Malcolm Shepherd, 2nd Baron Shepherd (d. 2001)
- 1919 – Jayne Meadows, Chinese-American actress and author (d. 2015)
- 1919 – Charles H. Percy, American lieutenant and politician (d. 2011)
- 1919 – James H. Wilkinson, American mathematician and computer scientist (d. 1986)
- 1920 – William Conrad, American actor, director, and producer (d. 1994)
- 1921 – Miklós Jancsó, Hungarian director and screenwriter (d. 2014)
- 1921 – Milton Subotsky, American screenwriter and producer, co-founded Amicus Productions (d. 1991)
- 1921 – Bernard Waber, American author and illustrator (d. 2013)
- 1922 – Sammy Benskin, American pianist and bandleader (d. 1992)
- 1922 – Arthur Penn, American director and producer (d. 2010)
- 1924 – Ernest Becker, American-Canadian anthropologist, author, and academic (d. 1974)
- 1924 – Bud Powell, American pianist and composer (d. 1966)
- 1924 – Fred Singer, Austrian-American physicist and academic
- 1924 – Josef Škvorecký, Czech-Canadian author and publisher (d. 2012)
- 1925 – Robert Edwards, English physiologist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2013)
- 1925 – George Gladir, American author (d. 2013)
- 1927 – Chrysostomos I of Cyprus (d. 2007)
- 1927 – Red Rodney, American trumpet player (d. 1994)
- 1927 – Romano Scarpa, Italian author and illustrator (d. 2005)
- 1927 – Steve Stavro, Canadian businessman and philanthropist (d. 2006)
- 1927 – Sada Thompson, American actress (d. 2011)
- 1928 – Margaret Rule, English archaeologist and historian (d. 2015)
- 1929 – Calvin Jones, American pianist, composer, and educator (d. 2004)
- 1929 – Bruno Junk, Estonian race walker (d. 1995)
- 1929 – Barbara Murray, English actress (d. 2014)
- 1930 – Paul Reichmann, Austrian-Canadian businessman, founded Olympia and York(d. 2013)
- 1931 – Freddy Quinn, Austrian singer, guitarist, and actor
- 1932 – Geoff Bent, English footballer (d. 1958)
- 1932 – Michael Colvin, English captain and politician (d. 2000)
- 1932 – Gabriel Loubier, Canadian politician
- 1932 – Oliver E. Williamson, American economist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate
- 1932 – Marcia Neugebauer, American geophysicist
- 1933 – Rodney Cotterill, Danish-English physicist and neuroscientist (d. 2007)
- 1933 – Paul Goble, English-American author and illustrator
- 1933 – Greg Morris, American actor (d. 1996)
- 1934 – Wilford Brimley, American actor
- 1934 – Claude Jarman, Jr., American actor and producer
- 1934 – Dick Schaap, American sportscaster and author (d. 2001)
- 1935 – Al MacNeil, Canadian ice hockey player and coach
- 1936 – Don Cornelius, American television host and producer (Soul Train) (d. 2012)
- 1936 – Gordon Honeycombe, English actor, playwright, and author (d. 2015)
- 1937 – Vasyl Durdynets, Ukrainian politician and diplomat, 8th Prime Minister of Ukraine
- 1938 – Jean-Loup Dabadie, French journalist, songwriter, and screenwriter
- 1939 – Nicholas Haslam, English interior designer and author
- 1939 – Carol Lynn Pearson, American author, poet, and playwright
- 1939 – Kathy Whitworth, American golfer
- 1940 – Josephine Barstow, English soprano and actress
- 1940 – Benoni Beheyt, Belgian cyclist
- 1941 – Peter Bonetti, English footballer and coach
- 1941 – Serge Ménard, Canadian lawyer and politician
- 1941 – Don Nix, American saxophonist, songwriter, and producer
- 1942 – Dith Pran, Cambodian photographer and journalist (d. 2008)
- 1942 – Alvin Stardust, English singer and actor (d. 2014)
- 1943 – Prince Amedeo, Duke of Aosta
- 1943 – Randy Bachman, Canadian singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1944 – Ian Garnett, English admiral
- 1944 – Gary Sutherland, American baseball player and scout
- 1945 – Jack Goldstein, Canadian-American painter (d. 2003)
- 1945 – Bob Spiers, Scottish-English director and producer (d. 2008)
- 1946 – Nicos Anastasiades, Cypriot lawyer and politician, 7th President of Cyprus
- 1946 – T. C. Cannon, American painter and sculptor (d. 1978)
- 1947 – Richard Court, Australian politician, 26th Premier of Western Australia
- 1947 – Barbara Dickson, Scottish singer-songwriter and actress
- 1947 – Denis Lawson, Scottish actor, director, and screenwriter
- 1947 – Meat Loaf, American singer-songwriter, producer, and actor
- 1948 – Tom Braidwood, Canadian actor, director, and producer
- 1948 – Les Chapman, English footballer and manager
- 1948 – Duncan Fletcher, Rhodesian-Zimbabwean cricketer and coach
- 1949 – Graham Richardson, Australian journalist and politician, 39th Australian Minister for Health
- 1949 – Mike Schmidt, American baseball player and coach
- 1949 – Jahn Teigen, Norwegian singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1950 – Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, Japanese-American actor and martial artist
- 1951 – Paul Craig, English author and academic
- 1951 – Geoff Gallop, Australian politician, 27th Premier of Western Australia
- 1951 – Michel Rivard, Canadian singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1951 – Jim Shooter, American author and illustrator
- 1951 – David Starobin, American guitarist, producer, and director
- 1951 – Steve Soper, English race car driver
- 1952 – Katie Fforde, English author
- 1952 – Dumitru Prunariu, Romanian pilot, engineer, and astronaut
- 1953 – Diane Abbott, English journalist and politician, Shadow Secretary of State for International Development
- 1953 – Mata Amritanandamayi, Indian guru and saint
- 1953 – Claudio Gentile, Italian footballer and manager
- 1953 – Greg Ham, Australian keyboard player, saxophonist and songwriter (d. 2012)
- 1954 – Ray Hadley, Australian radio host and sportscaster
- 1954 – Dmitry Sitkovetsky, Russian violinist and conductor
- 1954 – Larry Wall, American computer programmer and author
- 1956 – Steve Archibald, Scottish footballer and manager
- 1957 – Bill Athey, English cricketer, footballer, and coach
- 1957 – Peter Sellars, American actor, director, and screenwriter
- 1958 – Shaun Cassidy, American actor, singer, producer, and screenwriter
- 1958 – Irvine Welsh, Scottish author and playwright
- 1959 – Beth Heiden, American speed skater and cyclist
- 1960 – Jean-Marc Barr, German-American actor, director, producer, and screenwriter
- 1962 – Gavin Larsen, New Zealand cricketer and sportscaster
- 1963 – Marc Maron, American comedian, actor, and radio host
- 1964 – Predrag Brzaković, Serbian footballer (d. 2012)
- 1964 – Tracy Camp, American computer scientist and academic
- 1964 – Johnny du Plooy, South African boxer (d. 2013)
- 1964 – Stephan Jenkins, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer
- 1965 – Steve Kerr, American basketball player and sportscaster
- 1965 – Bernard Lord, Canadian lawyer and politician, 30th Premier of New Brunswick
- 1965 – Peter MacKay, Canadian lawyer and politician, 50th Canadian Minister of Justice
- 1965 – Alexis Stewart, American radio and television host
- 1966 – Don Jamieson, American comedian and television host
- 1966 – Debbie Wasserman Schultz, American politician
- 1966 – Stephanie Wilson, American engineer and astronaut
- 1966 – Lorenzo Cherubini, Italian singer-songwriter and rapper
- 1967 – Uche Okechukwu, Nigerian footballer
- 1968 – Mari Kiviniemi, Finnish politician, 41st Prime Minister of Finland
- 1970 – Yoshiharu Habu, Japanese chess player and author
- 1970 – Tamara Taylor, Canadian actress
- 1971 – Horacio Sandoval, Mexican illustrator
- 1972 – Sylvia Crawley, American basketball player and coach
- 1972 – Clara Hughes, Canadian cyclist and speed skater
- 1972 – Gwyneth Paltrow, American actress, blogger, and businesswoman
- 1972 – Craig L. Rice, American politician
- 1974 – Carrie Brownstein, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and actress
- 1976 – Matt Harding, American video game designer and dancer
- 1976 – Jason Phillips, American baseball player and coach
- 1976 – Francesco Totti, Italian footballer
- 1977 – Andrus Värnik, Estonian javelin thrower
- 1978 – Brad Arnold, American rock singer-songwriter (3 Doors Down)
- 1978 – Jon Rauch, American baseball player
- 1978 – Mihaela Ursuleasa, Romanian pianist (d. 2012)
- 1979 – Jon Garland, American baseball player
- 1979 – Zita Görög, Hungarian actress and model
- 1979 – Christian Jones, Australian race car driver
- 1979 – Steve Simpson, Australian rugby league player
- 1980 – Asashōryū Akinori, Mongolian sumo wrestler, the 68th Yokozuna
- 1980 – Ehron VonAllen, American singer-songwriter and producer
- 1981 – Sophie Crumb, American author and illustrator
- 1981 – Brendon McCullum, New Zealand cricketer
- 1981 – Lakshmipathy Balaji, Indian cricketer
- 1982 – Jon McLaughlin, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer
- 1982 – Markus Rosenberg, Swedish footballer
- 1982 – Lil Wayne, American rapper, producer, and actor
- 1982 – Darrent Williams, American football player (d. 2007)
- 1983 – Jeon Hye-bin, South Korean actress and singer
- 1984 – Paul Bevan, Australian footballer
- 1984 – Davide Capello, Italian footballer
- 1984 – John Lannan, American baseball player
- 1984 – Avril Lavigne, Canadian singer-songwriter, actress, and fashion designer
- 1984 – Wouter Weylandt, Belgian cyclist (d. 2011)
- 1985 – Massimo Bertocchi, Canadian decathlete
- 1985 – Daniel Pudil, Czech footballer
- 1985 – Ibrahim Touré, Ivorian footballer (d. 2014)
- 1986 – Vin Mazzaro, American baseball player
- 1986 – Matt Shoemaker American baseball player
- 1986 – Ricardo Risatti, Argentinian race car driver
- 1987 – Ádám Bogdán, Hungarian footballer
- 1987 – Austin Carlile, American singer-songwriter
- 1987 – Vanessa James, French figure skater
- 1987 – Olga Puchkova, Russian tennis player
- 1988 – Lisa Ryzih, German pole vaulter
- 1989 – Park Tae-hwan, South Korean swimmer
- 1991 – Ousmane Barry, Guinean footballer
- 1991 – Simona Halep, Romanian tennis player
- 1991 – Anete Paulus, Estonian footballer
- 1991 – Rio Uchida, Japanese model and actress
- 1992 – Lachlan Burr, Australian rugby league player
- 1992 – Luc Castaignos, Dutch footballer
- 1992 – Pak Kwang-ryong, North Korean footballer
- 1992 – Ryan O'Shaughnessy, Irish singer-songwriter and actor
- 1992 – Gabriel Vasconcelos Ferreira, Brazilian footballer
- 1992 – Granit Xhaka, Swiss footballer
- 1993 – Lisandro Magallán, Argentinian footballer
- 1993 – Monica Puig, Puerto Rican-American tennis player
- 1993 – Vinnie Sunseri, American football player
- 1994 – Dylan Walker, Australian rugby league player
- 1998 – Ioana Mincă, Romanian tennis player
Births[edit]
- 765 – Pugu Huai'en, Chinese general during the Tang Dynasty
- 936 – Gyeon Hwon, king of Hubaekje (b. 867)
- 1111 – Vekenega, Croatian Benedictine abbess
- 1125 – Richeza of Berg, Duchess of Bohemia (b.c. 1095)
- 1194 – Renaud de Courtenay, Anglo-Norman nobleman (b. 1125)
- 1249 – Raymond VII, Count of Toulouse (b. 1197)
- 1404 – William of Wykeham, English bishop (b. 1320)
- 1536 – Felice della Rovere, illegitimate daughter of Pope Julius II (b. 1483)
- 1612 – Piotr Skarga, Polish Jesuit and polemicist (b. 1536)
- 1637 – Lorenzo Ruiz, Filipino saint (b. c.1600)
- 1657 – Olimpia Maidalchini, Roman noble (b. 1591)
- 1557 – Emperor Go-Nara of Japan (b. 1497)
- 1590 – Pope Urban VII (b. 1521)
- 1651 – Maximilian I, Elector of Bavaria (b. 1573)
- 1660 – Vincent de Paul, French priest and saint (b. 1581)
- 1674 – Robert Arnauld d'Andilly, French writer (b. 1589)
- 1700 – Pope Innocent XII (b. 1615)
- 1719 – George Smalridge, English bishop (b. 1662)
- 1730 – Laurence Eusden, English poet and author (b. 1688)
- 1735 – Peter Artedi, Swedish ichthyologist and zoologist (b. 1705)
- 1742 – Hugh Boulter, Irish archbishop (b. 1672)
- 1783 – Étienne Bézout, French mathematician and theorist (b. 1730)
- 1832 – Karl Christian Friedrich Krause, German philosopher and author (b. 1781)
- 1833 – Ram Mohan Roy, Indian humanitarian and reformer (b. 1772)
- 1838 – Bernard Courtois, French chemist and pharmacist (b. 1777)
- 1876 – Braxton Bragg, American general (b. 1817)
- 1886 – Charles Gordon Greene, American journalist and politician (b. 1804)
- 1891 – Ivan Goncharov, Russian author and critic (b. 1812)
- 1898 – Thomas Joseph Byrnes, Australian politician, 12th Premier of Queensland (b. 1860)
- 1911 – Auguste Michel-Lévy, French geologist and academic (b. 1844)
- 1915 – Remy de Gourmont, French novelist, poet, and critic (b. 1858)
- 1917 – Edgar Degas, French painter and sculptor (b. 1834)
- 1919 – Adelina Patti, Italian-French opera singer (b. 1843)
- 1921 – Engelbert Humperdinck, German composer and educator (b. 1854)
- 1935 – Alan Gray, English composer and organist (b. 1855)
- 1940 – Walter Benjamin, German philosopher and critic (b. 1892)
- 1940 – Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Austrian physician and neuroscientist, Nobel Prizelaureate (b. 1857)
- 1942 – Douglas Albert Munro, United States Coast Guard signalman, posthumously awarded Medal of Honor, (b. 1919)
- 1944 – Aimee Semple McPherson, Canadian-American evangelist, founded the International Church of the Foursquare Gospel (b. 1890)
- 1956 – Gerald Finzi, English composer and educator (b. 1901)
- 1956 – Babe Didrikson Zaharias, American basketball player and golfer (b. 1911)
- 1960 – Sylvia Pankhurst, English activist (b. 1882)
- 1960 – Hilda Doolittle. American poet, novelist, and memoirist (b. 1886)
- 1965 – Clara Bow, American actress (b. 1905)
- 1965 – William Stanier, English engineer, co-designed the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (b. 1876)
- 1967 – Felix Yusupov, Russian husband of Princess Irina Alexandrovna of Russia (b. 1887)
- 1972 – S. R. Ranganathan, Indian mathematician, librarian, and academic (b. 1892)
- 1974 – Silvio Frondizi, Argentinian lawyer and academic (b. 1907)
- 1975 – Jack Lang, Australian lawyer and politician, 23rd Premier of New South Wales(b. 1876)
- 1979 – Gracie Fields, English actress and singer (b. 1898)
- 1979 – Jimmy McCulloch, Scottish singer-songwriter and guitarist (b. 1953)
- 1981 – Robert Montgomery, American actor, singer, director, and producer (b. 1904)
- 1983 – Wilfred Burchett, Australian journalist and author (b. 1911)
- 1984 – Chronis Exarhakos, Greek actor (b. 1932)
- 1985 – Lloyd Nolan, American actor (b. 1902)
- 1986 – Cliff Burton, American bass player and songwriter (b. 1962)
- 1991 – Joe Hulme, English footballer and cricketer (b. 1904)
- 1993 – Jimmy Doolittle, American general, Medal of Honor recipient (b. 1896)
- 1993 – Fraser MacPherson, Canadian saxophonist and educator (b. 1928)
- 1996 – Mohammad Najibullah, Afghan physician and politician, 7th President of Afghanistan (b. 1947)
- 1997 – Walter Trampler, American viola player and educator (b. 1915)
- 1998 – Doak Walker, American football player (b. 1927)
- 2003 – Jean Lucas, French racing driver (b. 1927)
- 2003 – Donald O'Connor, American actor, singer, and dancer (b. 1925)
- 2004 – John E. Mack, American psychiatrist and author (b. 1929)
- 2005 – Ronald Golias, Brazilian comedian and actor (b. 1929)
- 2005 – Mary Lee Settle, American novelist, essayist, and memoirist (b. 1918)
- 2006 – Helmut Kallmeyer, German chemist and soldier (b. 1910)
- 2007 – Dale Houston, American singer-songwriter (b. 1940)
- 2007 – Kenji Nagai, Japanese photographer and journalist (b. 1957)
- 2008 – Henri Pachard, American director and producer (b. 1939)
- 2009 – Ivan Dykhovichny, Russian director and screenwriter (b. 1947)
- 2009 – Charles Houston, American physician and mountaineer (b. 1913)
- 2009 – William Safire, American author and journalist (b. 1929)
- 2010 – George Blanda, American football player (b. 1927)
- 2010 – Balaji Sadasivan, Singaporean neurosurgeon and politician, Minister of Foreign Affairs for Singapore (b. 1955)
- 2010 – Trevor Taylor, English race car driver (b. 1936)
- 2011 – David Croft, English director, producer, and screenwriter (b. 1922)
- 2011 – Imre Makovecz, Hungarian architect (b. 1935)
- 2011 – Johnny "Country" Mathis, American singer-songwriter (b. 1933)
- 2012 – Eddie Bert, American trombonist (b. 1922)
- 2012 – Herbert Lom, Czech-English actor (b. 1917)
- 2012 – John Silber, American academic and politician (b. 1926)
- 2012 – Sanjay Surkar, Indian director and screenwriter (b. 1959)
- 2012 – Frank Wilson, American songwriter and producer (b. 1940)
- 2013 – Gates Brown, American baseball player and coach (b. 1939)
- 2013 – Oscar Castro-Neves, Brazilian-American guitarist, composer, and conductor (b. 1940)
- 2013 – Elvin R. Heiberg III, American general and engineer (b. 1932)
- 2013 – Tuncel Kurtiz, Turkish actor, director, and screenwriter (b. 1936)
- 2013 – A. C. Lyles, American screenwriter and producer (b. 1918)
- 2013 – Albert Naughton, English rugby player (b. 1929)
- 2014 – Gaby Aghion, French fashion designer, founded Chloé (b. 1921)
- 2014 – Eugie Foster, American journalist and author (b. 1971)
- 2014 – Taylor Hardwick, American architect and educator, designed Haydon Burns Library and Friendship Fountain Park (b. 1925)
- 2014 – Wally Hergesheimer, Canadian ice hockey player (b. 1927)
- 2014 – Abdelmajid Lakhal, Tunisian actor and director (b. 1939)
- 2014 – James Traficant, American lawyer and politician (b. 1941)
- 2015 – Syed Ahmed, Indian author and politician, 16th Governor of Manipur (b. 1945)
- 2015 – Wilton Felder, American saxophonist and bass player (b. 1940)
- 2015 – Pietro Ingrao, Italian journalist and politician (b. 1915)
- 2015 – Denise Lor, American singer and actress (b. 1929)
- 2015 – Kallen Pokkudan, Indian activist and author (b. 1937)
- 2015 – Frank Tyson, English-Australian cricketer, coach, and journalist (b. 1930)
- 2016 – David Hahn, American Boy Scout famous for attempting to build a nuclear reactor in a shed in his backyard (b. 1976)
Deaths[edit]
- Christian feast days:
- Consumación de la Independencia (Mexico)
- French Community Holiday (French community of Belgium)
- Google's official birthday[1]
- Meskel (Ethiopian and Eritrean Orthodox Church, following Julian calendar, September 28 on leap years)
- National Gay Men's HIV/AIDS Awareness Day (United States)
- Polish Underground State's Day (Poland)
- World Tourism Day (International)
Holidays and observances[edit]
“For we know him who said, “It is mine to avenge; I will repay,” and again, “The Lord will judge his people.” It is a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.” Hebrews 10:30-31 NIV
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Morning and Evening by Charles Spurgeon
Morning
The vision in this chapter describes the condition of Israel in Zechariah's day; but being interpreted in its aspect towards us, it describes the Church of God as we find it now in the world. The Church is compared to a myrtle grove flourishing in a valley. It is hidden, unobserved, secreted; courting no honour and attracting no observation from the careless gazer. The Church, like her head, has a glory, but it is concealed from carnal eyes, for the time of her breaking forth in all her splendour is not yet come. The idea of tranquil security is also suggested to us: for the myrtle grove in the valley is still and calm, while the storm sweeps over the mountain summits. Tempests spend their force upon the craggy peaks of the Alps, but down yonder where flows the stream which maketh glad the city of our God, the myrtles flourish by the still waters, all unshaken by the impetuous wind. How great is the inward tranquility of God's Church! Even when opposed and persecuted, she has a peace which the world gives not, and which, therefore, it cannot take away: the peace of God which passeth all understanding keeps the hearts and minds of God's people. Does not the metaphor forcibly picture the peaceful, perpetual growth of the saints? The myrtle sheds not her leaves, she is always green; and the Church in her worst time still hath a blessed verdure of grace about her; nay, she has sometimes exhibited most verdure when her winter has been sharpest. She has prospered most when her adversities have been most severe. Hence the text hints at victory. The myrtle is the emblem of peace, and a significant token of triumph. The brows of conquerors were bound with myrtle and with laurel; and is not the Church ever victorious? Is not every Christian more than a conqueror through him that loved him? Living in peace, do not the saints fall asleep in the arms of victory?
Evening
When in the forest there is heard the crash of a falling oak, it is a sign that the woodman is abroad, and every tree in the whole company may tremble lest to-morrow the sharp edge of the axe should find it out. We are all like trees marked for the axe, and the fall of one should remind us that for every one, whether great as the cedar, or humble as the fir, the appointed hour is stealing on apace. I trust we do not, by often hearing of death, become callous to it. May we never be like the birds in the steeple, which build their nests when the bells are tolling, and sleep quietly when the solemn funeral peals are startling the air. May we regard death as the most weighty of all events, and be sobered by its approach. It ill behoves us to sport while our eternal destiny hangs on a thread. The sword is out of its scabbard--let us not trifle; it is furbished, and the edge is sharp--let us not play with it. He who does not prepare for death is more than an ordinary fool, he is a madman. When the voice of God is heard among the trees of the garden, let fig tree and sycamore, and elm and cedar, alike hear the sound thereof.
Be ready, servant of Christ, for thy Master comes on a sudden, when an ungodly world least expects him. See to it that thou be faithful in his work, for the grave shall soon be digged for thee. Be ready, parents, see that your children are brought up in the fear of God, for they must soon be orphans; be ready, men of business, take care that your affairs are correct, and that you serve God with all your hearts, for the days of your terrestrial service will soon be ended, and you will be called to give account for the deeds done in the body, whether they be good or whether they be evil. May we all prepare for the tribunal of the great King with a care which shall be rewarded with the gracious commendation, "Well done, good and faithful servant"
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Today's reading: Isaiah 1-2, Galatians 5 (NIV)
View today's reading on Bible GatewayToday's Old Testament reading: Isaiah 1-2
1 The vision concerning Judah and Jerusalem that Isaiah son of Amoz saw during the reigns of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz and Hezekiah, kings of Judah.
A Rebellious Nation
2 Hear me, you heavens! Listen, earth!
For the LORD has spoken:
“I reared children and brought them up,
but they have rebelled against me.
3 The ox knows its master,
the donkey its owner’s manger,
but Israel does not know,
my people do not understand.”
For the LORD has spoken:
“I reared children and brought them up,
but they have rebelled against me.
3 The ox knows its master,
the donkey its owner’s manger,
but Israel does not know,
my people do not understand.”
4 Woe to the sinful nation,
a people whose guilt is great,
a brood of evildoers,
children given to corruption!
They have forsaken the LORD;
they have spurned the Holy One of Israel
and turned their backs on him.
a people whose guilt is great,
a brood of evildoers,
children given to corruption!
They have forsaken the LORD;
they have spurned the Holy One of Israel
and turned their backs on him.
Today's New Testament reading: Galatians 5
Freedom in Christ
1 It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery.
2 Mark my words! I, Paul, tell you that if you let yourselves be circumcised, Christ will be of no value to you at all. 3Again I declare to every man who lets himself be circumcised that he is obligated to obey the whole law. 4 You who are trying to be justified by the law have been alienated from Christ; you have fallen away from grace. 5 For through the Spirit we eagerly await by faith the righteousness for which we hope. 6 For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision nor uncircumcision has any value. The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love....
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Bathsheba
The Woman Whose Beauty Resulted in Adultery and Murder
Scripture References - 2 Samuel 11:2, 3; 12:24; 1 Kings 1:11-31; 2:13-19; 1 Chronicles 3:5
Name Meaning - The Seventh Daughter, or The Daughter of an Oath. "Bath" means "daughter." A kindred name is Bath Shua, a Canaanite name which implies, "the daughter of opulence." The wife of Judah is referred to as "Shua's daughter" (Genesis 38:2;1 Chronicles 2:3). Bath Shua was also the name of the daughter of Ammiel and wife of David (1 Chronicles 3:5).
Family Connections - Bathsheba came of a God-fearing family. She was the daughter of Eliam or Ammiah, who was the son of Ahithophel. Eliam, whose name means "God is gracious," was one of David's gallant officers. Bathsheba became the wife of Uriah, the most loyal of David's men. After the murder of Uriah, she became the wife of David, and mother of five sons by him. The first died in infancy. The others were Solomon, Shimea, Shobub and Nathan. She is mentioned in our Lord's genealogy as "her that had been the wife of Uriah" ( Matthew 1:6).
The sacred record informs us that David's association with Bathsheba was the only stain upon the escutcheon of David. "David did that which was right in the eyes of the Lord, and turned not aside from any thing that he commanded him all the days of his life, save only in the matter of Uriah" (1 Kings 15:5). If this was the only blot on his page, it was a heavily engrained one, and one that could not be erased, as far as the effects of his treatment of Uriah was concerned. While God freely pardons a sinner, often the effects of committed sin remain. The tragic lapse in the life of the man after God's own heart is built up with consummate art, from David's first sight of Bathsheba to the climax of his unutterable remorse when realizing the enormity of his most grievous sin, he flung himself upon the mercy of God.
The sad story begins with the significant phrase, "But David tarried still at Jerusalem" ( 2 Samuel 11:1 ). The Israelites were at war with the Ammonites, and the king who had shown himself brave and victorious in battle should have been with his army. But now a mature man, and veteran of many wars, and ruler over Israel for some twelve years now David had become somewhat soft and self-indulgent. He had had his day of hard campaigning and war weariness. Now it was time to leave the rigors and risks of battle to his officers, and sit back and take things easy. But no longer fighting the battle of the Lord, David was open to attack and so found himself involved in the triangle drama of passion, intrigue and murder.
Lazing around on the flat roof of his palace, David saw a woman on the roof of a nearby house undressing and bathing herself, and his passions were excited. Bathsheba, the woman exposing herself nudely, was "very beautiful to look upon," and David, ever attracted by lovely women, coveted her, and became guilty of an outrageous disgrace. Although David was to confess that his foul sin was his, and his alone, one wonders how far Bathsheba was the accomplice in such a sin, as well as its provocation. Had she been a careful, modest woman, surely she would have looked around the easily seen adjacent roofs, and if others had been looking her way, she would have been more appropriately modest in bathing herself.
Further, when sent for by David, had she been a true wife and a woman of principle she should have refused to obey the king's summons. As she saw David feasting his eyes upon her, did she have a presentiment of what would happen? If not, then, when before the king, she should have bravely refused to yield to adultery. Later on in the sacred record, a heathen woman - a queen - brave Vashti, stoutly refused to expose herself before wine-in-flamed men, and was expelled from court. Had Bathsheba shown the same determination to preserve her dignity, David, the anointed of Israel, would never have sinned as he did. After the adulterous act in the king's bedchamber, Bathsheba manifested no sense of guilt, but after her husband's murder almost immediately went to the palace to supplement David's many wives.
Bathsheba only added insult to the injury by indulging in her illicit affair with another man, while her lawful husband was risking his life in the service of her seducer. Learning of Bathsheba's pregnant condition, David hurried Uriah home to allay suspicion, but returning, the devoted soldier, a man of highest principle, refused any physical contact with his wife. David's clever plan failed, and the plot thickens. Uriah must be gotten rid of, so he was sent back to the battlefield with a letter to Joab to put Uriah in a foremost place where he was bound to be killed. Godly, gallant Uriah had no ideas that that sealed letter carried his death warrant. Thus, for David lust, adultery, deceit, treachery and murder followed in quick succession.
After the accustomed period of mourning Bathsheba became the wife of David, and their child of an adulterous union was born without disgrace, only to die within a week of his birth. "The Lord struck the child that Uriah's wife bare David." The deep grief of David over the sickness and death of the child, while not relieving the king of his murderous crime, gives us a glimpse of his better nature and of his faith in reunion beyond the grave. Perhaps no other passage of the Bible has been used to comfort sorrowing hearts in the hour of death as that in which David assures us of immortality. Mourning over his dead child he said, "Can I bring him back again?" No, he could not. Then came words binding up the cruel wound death causes, "I shall go to him, but he shall not return to me." Both David and Bathsheba must have had much agony of soul as they became deeply conscious that the death of their son, conceived out of wedlock, was a divine judgment upon their dark sin.
Divinely instructed, Nathan the prophet brought David to a realization of his terrible evil, and sincere in his confession of his iniquity, he received from Nathan the assuring word, "The Lord also hath put away thy sin." Much has been written about David's repentance preserved for us in Psalm 51 - a Psalm saturated with penitential tears - and of Psalm 32, expressing David's gratitude to God for His pardoning grace and mercy. But graciously forgiven, even God could not avert the natural consequences of David's transgression, and he came to prove its inevitable subsequent sorrow. Evil rose up against him in his own house ( 2 Samuel 12:11). David found himself disgraced by one son (13:4), banished by another (15:19), revolted against by a third (1 Kings 2), bearded by his servant, betrayed by his friends, deserted by his people, bereaved of his children.
What about Bathsheba? With David, was she made conscious of her share in the iniquitous transaction of the past? Coresponsible in David's sin, did her tears of repentance mingle with those of her husband's? It would seem so, because God blessed them with another son whom they called Solomon, meaning, "Beloved of the Lord." Why was not such a son given to one of David's other wives? Given to David and Bathsheba was not Solomon an evidence and expression of God's pardoning love for both? Then, is not Bathsheba's inclusion in the genealogy of Jesus (Matthew 1) another token that God had put her sins behind His back? Restored to divine favor, and now virtuous and wise as well as beautiful, Bathsheba brought up her son Solomon in all godly diligence and care. Solomon himself came to write, "Train up a child in the way he should go" (Proverbs 22:6), which counsel reflected his own godly upbringing. Tradition says that it was Bathsheba who composed Proverbs 31, as an admonition to Solomon on his marriage to Pharaoh's daughter. If this be so, we can understand all the warnings against the flatteries of strange women with which Proverbs abounds.
After her lapse, recovery and the birth of Solomon the rest of Bathsheba's life is veiled in silence. We can imagine how noble calmness, gentle dignity and queenly courage became hers. That she retained her influence over David until his death is proven by the way she reminded the king of his promise to make their son, Solomon, his successor. The veil of silence is lifted again when Solomon became king, and Bathsheba, whom Solomon revered, came into his presence to ask that Abishag, who cared for David in his last days, be given in marriage to Adonijah, the son of Haggith, one of David's other wives.
A lesson we can learn from Bathsheba is that being assured of God's forgiveness she did not let her one sin ruin her entire life. Repentant, she used her mistake as a guide to future, better conduct. When we brood over sins God has said He will remember no more against us, we actually doubt His mercy, and rob ourselves of spiritual power and progress. Read again Psalm 51 and then Psalm 32.
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Demetrius
[Dēmē'trĭŭs] - belonging to demeter. Demeter was the goddess of agriculture and rural life.
[Dēmē'trĭŭs] - belonging to demeter. Demeter was the goddess of agriculture and rural life.
- The silversmith at Ephesuswho made silver models of the celebrated Temple of Diana, and who opposed Paul and incited the mob against him (Acts 19:24, 38).
- A believer, well-commended by the Apostle John (3 John 12 ). This man of God had the testimony of all men of the truth and of John also. It is one of the finest recommendations of the Gospel when a Christian impresses and attracts those around him by the reality of his or her life.
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