An Indian politician is channeling Al Gore with the claim India had invented the internet in Ancient times. They forgot that Egypt invented worshipping cats and writing on walls. A Sydney University staff member was discovered filming up a woman's skirt with a mobile phone. Israel has released images of Iranian army bases in Syria. Is there a transfer of WMD through these bases?
Modern Israel has turned 70. Happy independence day. Ancient Israel is about 3500 years old. It is good to celebrate such milestones. The more birthdays you have, the longer you live. 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 For two friends
This is for a young couple. This is part of a vision of Pat's. A translated version may be available. It comes from an old file I did, a few years ago.
===
Poetry from Lem's Cyberiad
Klapaucius thought, and thought some more. Finally he nodded and said:
"Very well. Let's have a love poem, lyrical, pastoral, and expressed in the language of pure mathematics. Tensor algebra mainly, with a little topology and higher calculus, if need be. But with feeling, you understand, and in the cybernetic spirit."
"Love and tensor algebra? Have you taken leave of your senses?" Trurl began, but stopped, for his electronic bard was already declaiming
Come, let us hasten to a higher plane, Where dyads tread the fairy fields of Venn, Their indices bedecked from one to n, Commingled in an endless Markov chain!! Come, every frustum longs to be a cone, And every vector dreams of matrices. Hark to the gentle gradient of the breeze: It whispers of a more ergodic zone. In Riemann, Hilbert or in Banach space Let superscripts and subscripts go their ways. Our asymptotes no longer out of phase, We shall encounter, counting, face to face. I'll grant thee random access to my heart, Thou'lt tell me all the constants of thy love; And so we two shall all love's lemmas prove, And in our bound partition never part. For what did Cauchy know, or Christoffel, Or Fourier, or any Boole or Euler, Wielding their compasses, their pens and rulers, Of thy supernal sinusoidal spell? Cancel me not---for what then shall remain? Abscissas, some mantissas, modules, modes, A root or two, a torus and a node: The inverse of my verse, a null domain. Ellipse of bliss, converge, O lips divine! The product of our scalars is defined! Cyberiad draws nigh, and the skew mind Cuts capers like a happy haversine. I see the eigenvalue in thine eye, I hear the tender tensor in thy sigh. Bernoulli would have been content to die, Had he but known such a^2 cos(2 phi)!===
The video is a gift for a newly engaged couple
=== from 2017 ===
Some things should not happen, but they do. Some people in Australia have to pay to see a doctor. Medicare does not cover everything, nor should it. But the exposure of Medicare often does not support the poorest and it greatly inconveniences those who have paid well for service. So that a person who contributes much does not get some services without securing much more at inopportune times. And people who are very poor are asked to contribute at critical times too. As when a disability pensioner needs to get a certificate of incapacity monthly, and that must come from a doctor at a cost of $70 a month, for which they are reimbursed $58. At least the cost is affordable. However, it is the case that everyone should pay a price signal to see a doctor, not just the incapacitated who cannot earn. But there are many areas where people do pay, and those areas are not fairly allocated.
Centrelink provides an awful service. Job agent Maleficent thought she wold twist a knife in me and said she felt I'd been referred to incapacity in 2014 for obesity. But she was wrong. In 2012, I risked losing everything, and corruption was preventing me from working, and poverty was preventing me from leading a good life. I had wanted to lead a family life, but I'd never dated, was over forty years old and was losing my home. I felt suicidal and told Centrelink. They respected my privacy and did nothing worthwhile to address the corruption I faced. Their ridiculous program ended in 2014. Maleficent could see that, but could not see why it was there. And so she guessed. And I am obese. So I lodged a complaint with Centrelink. And documented everything. Centrelink finally told me that I would never know the result of my complaint.
Centrelink provides an awful service. Job agent Maleficent thought she wold twist a knife in me and said she felt I'd been referred to incapacity in 2014 for obesity. But she was wrong. In 2012, I risked losing everything, and corruption was preventing me from working, and poverty was preventing me from leading a good life. I had wanted to lead a family life, but I'd never dated, was over forty years old and was losing my home. I felt suicidal and told Centrelink. They respected my privacy and did nothing worthwhile to address the corruption I faced. Their ridiculous program ended in 2014. Maleficent could see that, but could not see why it was there. And so she guessed. And I am obese. So I lodged a complaint with Centrelink. And documented everything. Centrelink finally told me that I would never know the result of my complaint.
=== from 2016 ===
I got a letter today from my local state member, Luke Donnellan, who is also a Minister in Victoria and a member of the ALP. He offers me help with Centrelink Payments, Community Grants, Consumer Affairs, Police and many other matters besides. He wants me to call him if he can assist. I have been in Hallam almost a month and a half and I now have to move for my safety because of Luke's enlightened view on drugs. My life is not worth anything to Luke, so long as an Ice addict is free to go on rages. The addict is homeless, but at least his harm has been minimised. An intervention safety order could give me some peace, but police seem unwilling to serve the papers. My child is not biological, or a teenager, and so there is no need to protect them. I don't know where Stiffler lives, but I know his car and his phone number. Police have no excuse not to serve the papers. I understand he is a registered sex offender. I don't wish to move and have him discover my new address through court papers. Stiffler has stolen ID documents from me. He is not bright enough to use them, but his drug dealer probably knows someone. I won't call Luke. He has already failed to help with the bad choices he has made representing me in parliament.
For some, at the moment, the Sex Party has more credibility.
For some, at the moment, the Sex Party has more credibility.
=== from 2015 ===
Hilary Clinton lies badly and often. Possibly because it helps her flow to disconnect verisimilitude from her words. Articles follow.
Left praising jihadis .. Melbourne raids. There is a connection between terror and jihadis, but often the left wing play down that role and blame others, including victims. Articles follow.
ESPN reporter lords it over low paid workers. On video. Now suspended.
Teaching sex education to children, or promoting child sex? One outraged tweeter mother has gone to the classroom of her child and heard the teacher discuss abstinence. The parent is outraged, claiming that children cannot abstain from sex and needed to be taught about other things, like family planning involving condoms etc. Perhaps the grandmother at age thirty is at a loss as to how to raise the issue of abstinence with her children, but that does not mean children cannot abstain from sex. Kids are aware of much detail these days, but sadly abstinence is not something they see modelled in popular tv or advertising. Many children will not have sex before becoming adult, and it doesn't hurt them to have abstained. Further, everything is a choice. But in making a choice, like having sex, children find their lives proscribed by that choice in deleterious ways. One shudders to think if the child wants to suicide if the mum takes a Kevorkian view. Children have had sex without their lives being ruined. That is not a good argument for promoting it. The outraged mother is wrong to not accept abstinence as being a good choice in the lives of children.
Left praising jihadis .. Melbourne raids. There is a connection between terror and jihadis, but often the left wing play down that role and blame others, including victims. Articles follow.
ESPN reporter lords it over low paid workers. On video. Now suspended.
Teaching sex education to children, or promoting child sex? One outraged tweeter mother has gone to the classroom of her child and heard the teacher discuss abstinence. The parent is outraged, claiming that children cannot abstain from sex and needed to be taught about other things, like family planning involving condoms etc. Perhaps the grandmother at age thirty is at a loss as to how to raise the issue of abstinence with her children, but that does not mean children cannot abstain from sex. Kids are aware of much detail these days, but sadly abstinence is not something they see modelled in popular tv or advertising. Many children will not have sex before becoming adult, and it doesn't hurt them to have abstained. Further, everything is a choice. But in making a choice, like having sex, children find their lives proscribed by that choice in deleterious ways. One shudders to think if the child wants to suicide if the mum takes a Kevorkian view. Children have had sex without their lives being ruined. That is not a good argument for promoting it. The outraged mother is wrong to not accept abstinence as being a good choice in the lives of children.
On this day in 1521, the second day of the trial of Martin Luther at the Diet of Worms.
In 1689, Bostonians rebelled against Edmund Andros who was a fan of the Anglican Church while the Pilgrims were puritans. In 1775 Paul Revere rode to warn of attack by sea by the British. In 1915, French pilot Roland Garros was shot down and landed behind German lines. He failed to destroy his plane and so Germany got vital technology from it. Three years later Roland escaped and flew against Germans again, but was killed in action three days after returning to action. And a month before the war ended. In 1942, the Doolittle Raid hit targets on Japanese mainland. In 1949, the keel of a US Navy ship had been laid, but the project cancelled. US Admirals revolted against President Truman's plans to weaken the navy in favour of nuclear bombs. Truman won. Ezra Pound was a great poet and friend to many writers. However, his view of WW2 blamed the war on commercialism. So he became a fascist and supported Mussolini in WW2. Afterwards incarcerated, he was freed on this day in 1958, by the Federal Court. In 1981, a Saturday, the longest ever professional game of Baseball was played, going into 4am then next morning in the 32nd innings. It was interrupted and finally played for the final inning on the following Tuesday. The crowd at 4am had numbered 19 and they received season or lifetime passes to McCoy Stadium. Played on Rhode Island between Pawtucket Red Sox and the Rochester Red Wings. The losing pitcher had joined Rochester in the interim. One batter had been congratulated by his dad for his four hits had then explained he had had twelve at bats. The score was 3-2. One of the players was Cal Ripken Jr.
On 17 April, the Imperial Herald Sturm and Pappenheim came for Luther. Pappenheim reminded Luther that he should speak only in answer to direct questions from the presiding officer, Johann von Eck. Eck asked if a collection of books was Luther’s and if he was ready to revoke their heresies. Dr. Schurff said, "Please have the titles read." There were 25 of them, probably including The 95 Theses, Resolutions Concerning the 95 Theses, On the Papacy at Rome, Address to the Christian Nobility, The Babylonian Captivity of the Church, and On the Freedom of a Christian, all of which had been written prior to the Diet of Worms. Luther requested more time for a proper answer, so he was given until the next day at 4 p.m.From Wikipedia. Note, Eck had said to Luther that the heresies had been derived from the Word, and so dangerously suggests orthodoxy trumps the scriptures.
On 18 April, Luther, stating he'd prayed for long hours, consulted with friends and mediators, and presented himself before the Diet. When the counselor put the same questions to him, Luther first apologized that he lacked the etiquette of the court. Then he answered, "They are all mine, but as for the second question, they are not all of one sort." Luther went on to place the writings into three categories: (1) Works which were well received by even his enemies: those he would not reject. (2) Books which attacked the abuses, lies and desolation of the Christian world and the papacy: those, Luther believed, could not safely be rejected without encouraging abuses to continue. To retract them would be to open the door to further oppression.[1] "If I now recant these, then, I would be doing nothing but strengthening tyranny".[1] (3) Attacks on individuals: he apologized for the harsh tone of these writings but did not reject the substance of what he taught in them; if he could be shown from the Scriptures that he was in error, Luther continued, he would reject them. Luther concluded by saying
Unless I am convinced by the testimony of the Scriptures or by clear reason (for I do not trust either in the pope or in councils alone, since it is well known that they have often erred and contradicted themselves), I am bound by the Scriptures I have quoted and my conscience is captive to the Word of God. I cannot and will not recant anything, since it is neither safe nor right to go against conscience. May God help me. Amen.[2]According to tradition, Luther is said to have declared, "Here I stand, I can do no other," before concluding with "God help me. Amen."[3] However, there is no indication in the transcripts of the Diet or in eyewitness accounts that he ever said this, and most scholars now doubt these words were spoken.
Eck informed Luther that he was acting like a heretic:
"'Martin,' said he, 'there is no one of the heresies which have torn the bosom of the church, which has not derived its origin from the various interpretation of the Scripture. The Bible itself is the arsenal whence each innovator has drawn his deceptive arguments. It was with biblical texts that Pelagius and Arius maintained their doctrines. Arius, for instance, found the negation of the eternity of the Word—an eternity which you admit, in this verse of the New Testament—Joseph knew not his wife till she had brought forth her first-born son; and he said, in the same way that you say, that this passage enchained him. When the fathers of the council of Constance condemned this proposition of John Huss— The church of Jesus Christ is only the community of the elect, they condemned an error; for the church, like a good mother, embraces within her arms all who bear the name of Christian, all who are called to enjoy the celestial beatitude.'" Private conferences were held to determine Luther's fate. Before a decision was reached, Luther fled. During his return to Wittenberg, he disappeared.
In 1689, Bostonians rebelled against Edmund Andros who was a fan of the Anglican Church while the Pilgrims were puritans. In 1775 Paul Revere rode to warn of attack by sea by the British. In 1915, French pilot Roland Garros was shot down and landed behind German lines. He failed to destroy his plane and so Germany got vital technology from it. Three years later Roland escaped and flew against Germans again, but was killed in action three days after returning to action. And a month before the war ended. In 1942, the Doolittle Raid hit targets on Japanese mainland. In 1949, the keel of a US Navy ship had been laid, but the project cancelled. US Admirals revolted against President Truman's plans to weaken the navy in favour of nuclear bombs. Truman won. Ezra Pound was a great poet and friend to many writers. However, his view of WW2 blamed the war on commercialism. So he became a fascist and supported Mussolini in WW2. Afterwards incarcerated, he was freed on this day in 1958, by the Federal Court. In 1981, a Saturday, the longest ever professional game of Baseball was played, going into 4am then next morning in the 32nd innings. It was interrupted and finally played for the final inning on the following Tuesday. The crowd at 4am had numbered 19 and they received season or lifetime passes to McCoy Stadium. Played on Rhode Island between Pawtucket Red Sox and the Rochester Red Wings. The losing pitcher had joined Rochester in the interim. One batter had been congratulated by his dad for his four hits had then explained he had had twelve at bats. The score was 3-2. One of the players was Cal Ripken Jr.
From 2014
It is Good Friday and so appropriate to look at what that means to others. To Anglican bishops around Australia it means they raise their voice demanding that Mr Abbott pursue an ALP policy of drowning people desperate to come to Australia and facilitating the activity of pirates. According to these people who care a lot about such things, Mr Abbott should listen to them because of his religion. But it calls into question their faith. About 1500 known drownings since 2008, the policy of the ALP was by far their most deadly, but not their most expensive. So in some ways, maybe, we see the Anglican Church's call as fiscally prudent as any of Judas'. By way of contrast, Hillsong, Orthodox and Catholics are focusing on the event known as the Crucifixion of Jesus and its' meaning to Christians. When asked about the day's meaning, the Anglican Archbishop replied it was about children behind razor wire. Maybe he felt it was better they were crucified? Note, 2014, Easter falls on the same dates for Western and Orthodox churches. Rumour has it Seventh Day Adventist Churches begin their observance on a Saturday (my apologies for the bad humour, Seventh Day Adventists are correct to have the Sabbath celebrated on Saturday, but Christians worship on Sunday due to Easter).
Bolesław Chrobry became King of Poland on this day in 1025. He was not uniquely named, also having the title Boleslav IV, Duke of Bohemia. Born on this day, 1480, Lucrezia Borgia, Italian daughter of Pope Alexander VI. The observant might note this answers the chicken and egg question. 1518, Bona Sforza was crowned as queen consort of Poland. She is important for a recently discovered Leonardo portrait. 1521, Trial of Martin Luther began its second day during the assembly of the Diet of Worms. He refused to recant his teachings despite the risk of excommunication. In 1740 was the birthday of Sir Francis Baring, 1st Baronet, English banker. 1775, American Revolution: The British advancement by sea begins; Paul Revere and other riders warned the countryside of the troop movements. 1857, "The Spirits Book" by Allan Kardec was published, marking the birth of Spiritualism in France, note the book, like the recent movie Noah, is based on the Bible. In 1909, Joan of Arc was beatified in Rome, thus correcting what might have been an embarrassing mistake were it noticed.
Bolesław Chrobry became King of Poland on this day in 1025. He was not uniquely named, also having the title Boleslav IV, Duke of Bohemia. Born on this day, 1480, Lucrezia Borgia, Italian daughter of Pope Alexander VI. The observant might note this answers the chicken and egg question. 1518, Bona Sforza was crowned as queen consort of Poland. She is important for a recently discovered Leonardo portrait. 1521, Trial of Martin Luther began its second day during the assembly of the Diet of Worms. He refused to recant his teachings despite the risk of excommunication. In 1740 was the birthday of Sir Francis Baring, 1st Baronet, English banker. 1775, American Revolution: The British advancement by sea begins; Paul Revere and other riders warned the countryside of the troop movements. 1857, "The Spirits Book" by Allan Kardec was published, marking the birth of Spiritualism in France, note the book, like the recent movie Noah, is based on the Bible. In 1909, Joan of Arc was beatified in Rome, thus correcting what might have been an embarrassing mistake were it noticed.
Historical perspective on this day
In 796, King Æthelred I of Northumbria was murdered in Corbridge by a group led by his ealdormen, Ealdred and Wada. The patrician Osbald was placed on the throne, but was within 27 days abdicated. 1025, Bolesław Chrobry was crowned in Gniezno, becoming the first King of Poland. 1506, the cornerstone of the current St. Peter's Basilica was laid. 1518, Bona Sforza was crowned as queen consort of Poland. 1521, trial of Martin Lutherbegan its second day during the assembly of the Diet of Worms. He refused to recant his teachings despite the risk of excommunication. 1689, Bostonians rose up in rebellion against Sir Edmund Andros.
In 1738, Real Academia de la Historia ("Royal Academy of History") was founded in Madrid. 1775, American Revolution: The British advancement by sea began; Paul Revere and other riders warned the countryside of the troop movements. 1797, the Battle of Neuwied: Frenchvictory against the Austrians. 1807, the Harwich ferry disaster occurred near the North Sea port of Harwich on the Essex coast (England) in which 60-90 people drowned during the capsizing of a small ferry boat. 1831, the University of Alabama was founded. 1848, American victory at the battle of Cerro Gordo opened the way for invasion of Mexico. 1857, "The Spirits Book" by Allan Kardec was published, marking the birth of Spiritualism in France. 1864, Battle of Dybbøl: A Prussian-Austrian army defeated Denmark and gained control of Schleswig. Denmark surrendered the province in the following peace settlement. 1880, an F4 tornado struck Marshfield, Missouri, killing 99 people and injuring 100. 1881, Billy the Kid escaped from the Lincoln County jail in Mesilla, New Mexico. 1897, the Greco-Turkish War was declared between Greece and the Ottoman Empire. 1899, the St. Andrew's Ambulance Association was granted a Royal Charter by Queen Victoria.
In 1902, Quetzaltenango, the second largest city of Guatemala, was destroyed by an earthquake. 1906, an earthquake and fire destroyed much of San Francisco, California. 1909, Joan of Arc was beatified in Rome. 1912, the Cunard liner RMS Carpathia brought 705 survivors from the RMS Titanic to New York City. 1915, French pilot Roland Garros was shot down and glided to a landing on the German side of the lines during World War I. 1923, Yankee Stadium, "The House that Ruth Built", opened. 1924, Simon & Schusterpublished the first crossword puzzle book. 1930, BBC reported there was no news, then played out with piano music. 1936, the first Champions Day was celebrated in Detroit, Michigan.
In 1942, World War II: The Doolittle Raid on Japan. Tokyo, Yokohama, Kobe and Nagoya were bombed. Also 1942, Pierre Laval became Prime Minister of Vichy France. 1943, World War II: Operation Vengeance, Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto was killed when his aircraft was shot down by U.S. fighters over Bougainville Island. 1945, Over 1,000 bombers attacked the small island of Heligoland, Germany. 1946, the International Court of Justice held its inaugural meeting in The Hague, Netherlands. 1949, the keel for the aircraft carrier USS United States was laid down at Newport News Drydock and Shipbuilding. However, construction was canceled five days later, resulting in the Revolt of the Admirals. 1954, Gamal Abdal Nasser seized power in Egypt. 1955, twenty-nine nations met at Bandung, Indonesia, for the first Asian-African Conference. 1958, a United States federal court ruled that poet Ezra Pound be released from an insane asylum. 1961, the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, a cornerstone of modern international relations, was adopted. Also 1961, CONCP was founded in Casablancaas a united front of African movements opposing Portuguese colonial rule. 1974, the Prime Minister of Pakistan Zulfikar Ali Bhutto inaugurated Lahore's dry port.
In 1980, the Republic of Zimbabwe (formerly Rhodesia) came into being, with Canaan Banana as the country's first President. The Zimbabwe Dollar replaced the Rhodesian Dollaras the official currency. 1981, the longest professional baseball game was begun in Pawtucket, Rhode Island. The game was suspended at 4:00 the next morning and finally completed on June 23. 1983, a suicide bomber destroyed the United States embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, killing 63 people. 1988, the United States launched Operation Praying Mantis against Iranian naval forces in the largest naval battle since World War II. 1992, General Abdul Rashid Dostum revolted against President Mohammad Najibullah of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan and allied with Ahmed Shah Massoud to capture Kabul. 1996, in Lebanon, at least 106 civilians were killed when the Israel Defense Forces shelled the United Nations compound at Quana where more than 800 civilians had taken refuge. 2007, the Supreme Court of the United States upheld the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act in a 5–4 decision. Also 2007, a series of bombings, two of them being suicides, occurred in Baghdad, killing 198 and injuring 251. 2013, a suicide bombing in a Baghdad cafe killed 27 people and injured another 65. 2014, Sixteen people were killed in an avalanche on Mount Everest.
In 1738, Real Academia de la Historia ("Royal Academy of History") was founded in Madrid. 1775, American Revolution: The British advancement by sea began; Paul Revere and other riders warned the countryside of the troop movements. 1797, the Battle of Neuwied: Frenchvictory against the Austrians. 1807, the Harwich ferry disaster occurred near the North Sea port of Harwich on the Essex coast (England) in which 60-90 people drowned during the capsizing of a small ferry boat. 1831, the University of Alabama was founded. 1848, American victory at the battle of Cerro Gordo opened the way for invasion of Mexico. 1857, "The Spirits Book" by Allan Kardec was published, marking the birth of Spiritualism in France. 1864, Battle of Dybbøl: A Prussian-Austrian army defeated Denmark and gained control of Schleswig. Denmark surrendered the province in the following peace settlement. 1880, an F4 tornado struck Marshfield, Missouri, killing 99 people and injuring 100. 1881, Billy the Kid escaped from the Lincoln County jail in Mesilla, New Mexico. 1897, the Greco-Turkish War was declared between Greece and the Ottoman Empire. 1899, the St. Andrew's Ambulance Association was granted a Royal Charter by Queen Victoria.
In 1902, Quetzaltenango, the second largest city of Guatemala, was destroyed by an earthquake. 1906, an earthquake and fire destroyed much of San Francisco, California. 1909, Joan of Arc was beatified in Rome. 1912, the Cunard liner RMS Carpathia brought 705 survivors from the RMS Titanic to New York City. 1915, French pilot Roland Garros was shot down and glided to a landing on the German side of the lines during World War I. 1923, Yankee Stadium, "The House that Ruth Built", opened. 1924, Simon & Schusterpublished the first crossword puzzle book. 1930, BBC reported there was no news, then played out with piano music. 1936, the first Champions Day was celebrated in Detroit, Michigan.
In 1942, World War II: The Doolittle Raid on Japan. Tokyo, Yokohama, Kobe and Nagoya were bombed. Also 1942, Pierre Laval became Prime Minister of Vichy France. 1943, World War II: Operation Vengeance, Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto was killed when his aircraft was shot down by U.S. fighters over Bougainville Island. 1945, Over 1,000 bombers attacked the small island of Heligoland, Germany. 1946, the International Court of Justice held its inaugural meeting in The Hague, Netherlands. 1949, the keel for the aircraft carrier USS United States was laid down at Newport News Drydock and Shipbuilding. However, construction was canceled five days later, resulting in the Revolt of the Admirals. 1954, Gamal Abdal Nasser seized power in Egypt. 1955, twenty-nine nations met at Bandung, Indonesia, for the first Asian-African Conference. 1958, a United States federal court ruled that poet Ezra Pound be released from an insane asylum. 1961, the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, a cornerstone of modern international relations, was adopted. Also 1961, CONCP was founded in Casablancaas a united front of African movements opposing Portuguese colonial rule. 1974, the Prime Minister of Pakistan Zulfikar Ali Bhutto inaugurated Lahore's dry port.
In 1980, the Republic of Zimbabwe (formerly Rhodesia) came into being, with Canaan Banana as the country's first President. The Zimbabwe Dollar replaced the Rhodesian Dollaras the official currency. 1981, the longest professional baseball game was begun in Pawtucket, Rhode Island. The game was suspended at 4:00 the next morning and finally completed on June 23. 1983, a suicide bomber destroyed the United States embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, killing 63 people. 1988, the United States launched Operation Praying Mantis against Iranian naval forces in the largest naval battle since World War II. 1992, General Abdul Rashid Dostum revolted against President Mohammad Najibullah of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan and allied with Ahmed Shah Massoud to capture Kabul. 1996, in Lebanon, at least 106 civilians were killed when the Israel Defense Forces shelled the United Nations compound at Quana where more than 800 civilians had taken refuge. 2007, the Supreme Court of the United States upheld the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act in a 5–4 decision. Also 2007, a series of bombings, two of them being suicides, occurred in Baghdad, killing 198 and injuring 251. 2013, a suicide bombing in a Baghdad cafe killed 27 people and injured another 65. 2014, Sixteen people were killed in an avalanche on Mount Everest.
=== Publishing News ===
This column welcomes feedback and criticism. The column is not made up but based on the days events and articles which are then placed in the feed. So they may not have an apparent cohesion they would have had were they made up.
===
I am publishing a book called Bread of Life: January.
Bread of Life is a daily bible quote with a layman's understanding of the meaning. I give one quote for each day, and also a series of personal stories illustrating key concepts eg Who is God? What is a miracle? Why is there tragedy?
January is the first of the anticipated year-long work of thirteen books. One for each month and the whole year. It costs to publish. It (Kindle version) should retail at about $2US online, but the paperback version would cost more, according to production cost.If you have a heart for giving, I fundraise at gofund.me/27tkwuc
Bread of Life is a daily bible quote with a layman's understanding of the meaning. I give one quote for each day, and also a series of personal stories illustrating key concepts eg Who is God? What is a miracle? Why is there tragedy?
January is the first of the anticipated year-long work of thirteen books. One for each month and the whole year. It costs to publish. It (Kindle version) should retail at about $2US online, but the paperback version would cost more, according to production cost.If you have a heart for giving, I fundraise at gofund.me/27tkwuc
===
Editorials will appear in the "History in a Year by the Conservative Voice" series, starting with August, September, October, or at Amazon http://www.amazon.com/dp/1482020262/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_dp_dVHPub0MQKDZ4 The kindle version is cheaper, but the soft back version allows a free kindle version.
List of available items at Create Space
The Amazon Author Page for David Ball
UK .. http://www.amazon.co.uk/-/e/B01683ZOWGFrench .. http://www.amazon.fr/-/e/B01683ZOWG
Japan .. http://www.amazon.co.jp/-/e/B01683ZOWG
German .. http://www.amazon.de/-/e/B01683ZOWG
Happy birthday and many happy returns Noodle Won Ton, Tri Tran and Vladimir Tochilkin. Born on the same day as David Tennant, across the years. He played Dr Who. And he could have been born on any day he chose. Be blessed.
- 1480 – Lucrezia Borgia, Italian daughter of Pope Alexander VI (d. 1519)
- 1605 – Giacomo Carissimi, Italian composer (d. 1674)
- 1666 – Jean-Féry Rebel, French violinist and composer (d. 1747)
- 1740 – Sir Francis Baring, 1st Baronet, English banker (d. 1810)
- 1759 – Jacques Widerkehr, French cellist and composer (d. 1823)
- 1772 – David Ricardo, English economist (d. 1823)
- 1857 – Clarence Darrow, American lawyer (d. 1938)
- 1882 – Leopold Stokowski, Polish-English conductor (d. 1977)
- 1901 – Al Lewis, American songwriter (d. 1967)
- 1904 – Pigmeat Markham, American actor, singer, and dancer (d. 1981)
- 1923 – Beryl Platt, Baroness Platt of Writtle, British engineer, politician and chair of the Equal Opportunities Commission
- 1944 – Robert Hanssen, American FBI agent and spy
- 1946 – Hayley Mills, English actress and singer
- 1946 – Skip Spence, Canadian-American singer-songwriter and guitarist (Jefferson Airplane and Moby Grape) (d. 1999)
- 1953 – Rick Moranis, Canadian-American actor, singer, and screenwriter
- 1958 – Malcolm Marshall, Barbadian cricketer (d. 1999)
- 1962 – Nick Farr-Jones, Australian rugby union footballer
- 1963 – Mike Mangini, American drummer (Dream Theater, Annihilator, Extreme, and Tribe of Judah)
- 1971 – David Tennant, Scottish actor
- 1976 – Melissa Joan Hart, American actress, director, and producer
- 1979 – Kourtney Kardashian, American model, actress, and businesswoman
- 2007 – Princess Haya bint Al Hamzah of Jordan
Deaths
- 1161 – Theobald of Bec, French-English archbishop (b. 1090)
- 1552 – John Leland, English poet (b. 1502)
- 1558 – Roxelana, wife of Suleiman the Magnificent (b. 1500)
- 1587 – John Foxe, English historian and author (b. 1516)
- 1636 – Julius Caesar, English judge and politician (b. 1557)
- 1943 – Isoroku Yamamoto, Japanese admiral (b. 1884)
- 1945 – John Ambrose Fleming, English physicist and engineer, invented the vacuum tube (b. 1849)
- 1955 – Albert Einstein, German-American physicist (b. 1879)
- 1506 – Construction of the current St. Peter's Basilica (interior pictured) in Vatican City, to replace the old basilica built in the 4th century, began.
- 1775 – American Revolutionary War: Colonists Paul Revere, William Dawes, and Samuel Prescott began a "midnight ride" from Boston to Lexington to warn residents about the impending arrival of British troops.
- 1847 – Mexican–American War: Winfield Scott's United States troops out-flanked and drove Santa Anna's larger Mexican army from a strong defensive position in the Battle of Cerro Gordo.
- 1938 – Superman, created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, made his debut in Action Comics #1, the first true superhero comic book.
- 1996 – Israeli forces shelled Qana, Lebanon, during Operation Grapes of Wrath, killing more than 100 civilians and injuring more than 110 others at a UN compound.
We built the gate. We revere the ride. We won. Superman debuted. We love grapes. Let's party.
Tim Blair 2018
FLAT-FOOTED AND LARGELY BEREFT
Melbourne academic John Simpson claims: “In the marketplace of ideas and advocacy, young people are winning hands down.”
FINEST INTRO EVER WRITTEN
Daily Telegraph colleague Miranda Devine makes several strong points in her latest terrific column. Let’s take a detailed look, starting from the top.
MANHUNT WITH A DIFFERENCE
It’s an old-fashioned womanhunt. US police are in pursuit of worm farm proprietor and suspected killer granny Lois Reiss, wanted following murders in Minnesota and Florida.
LATEST “NEW LOW” TRIGGERS BURNING RAGE
UPDATED My taxpayer-funded moral superior – a fellow who enjoys watching foxes be torn apart by dogs – has spoken.
SCIENCE WINS, SO FRACKING IS BACK IN THE NORTHERN TERRITORY
The Northern Territory government is lifting its ban on fracking following an independent scientific inquiry. This is brilliant news.
Andrew Bolt 2018
RUDD'S CIRCUS REMEMBERED
A decade on from his 2020 summit of "our best and brightest", there's Kevin Rudd - still unable to tell the difference between success and a circus. My editorial from The Bolt Report.
SANTA GETS CROSS
Not a happy team: "A furious Scott Morrison reprimanded Michael McCormack in a late night phone call after discovering the acting prime minister had used his first interview on the job to label the Treasurer Santa Claus with a big bag of Budget “goodies” to hand out."
GREEN DREAM: NO WORK, FREE MONEY, LEGAL DOPE
So now the Greens vision emerges: free money, easy dope and big taxes on mum and dad to pay for it all. My editorial from The Bolt Report.
LICK, LICK, LICK
Gerard Henderson is astonished to see former foreign minister Bob Carr licking the boots of Chinese dictator Xi Jinping. Watch.
IN DEFENCE OF PETA CREDLIN
Some of the attacks on Peta Credlin for what she said about Josh Frydenberg are astonishing. And spiteful. Let me tell you the real story.
OVER TO YOU, MALCOLM
Tim Blair – Monday, April 18, 2016 (7:29pm)
As expected, the Senate has rejected the Turnbull government’s two industrial reform bills. Stand by for confirmation of a July 2 election.
===
SLOW TRAIN COMING
Tim Blair – Monday, April 18, 2016 (1:10pm)
The federal government is talking about a fast rail line connecting Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne. Here’s a brief future history of exactly how this project will unfold:
May 15, 2025: Following nearly a decade of planning, a groundbreaking ceremony is held in Brisbane to mark the first day of construction for Australia’s multibillion-dollar fast rail line. “This mighty venture will unite the entire east coast as never before,” announces Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, 70, as he turns a symbolic shovel-load of soil.
Four minutes later: Work on the fast rail project is suspended following discovery during the ceremony of a rare burrowing dirt mite. Negotiations begin between government and 17 environmental groups on building a safety zone for the mites, which are listed as “heritage insects”.
(Continue reading Slow Train Coming.)
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ENTITLEMENT CREEPS
Tim Blair – Monday, April 18, 2016 (12:51pm)
Chris Kenny reviews an unusual episode of attempted media censorship:
Blair became the target of leftist journalists (again) last week. Through the journalists’ union, some of his colleagues tried to silence him. They demanded his employer (News Corp Australia, publisher of The Australian) distance itself from his views. So-called progressives publicly wished violence upon him.On most days the Left claim News Corp journalists do their master’s bidding; now they demand this master asserts control over its writers’ opinions! Pythonesque. If not so funny, it would be scary. We live in the age of thought police, and the censors are journalists themselves. Blair’s crime was to mock a push on behalf of ABC employees for domestic violence leave. In his typically blunt satire, Blair pointed out the absurdity of this exercise in what we might call virtue-signalling or entitlement creep. Provocatively, he wondered why the union thought ABC staff needed this provision. “What kind of carnage-strewn bloodhouse are they operating over there?” he blogged. “Is that why ABC staff work so few hours – because they’re always recovering from the previous night’s beatings? Why are staffers not pressing charges instead of seeking leave?”He could have noted ABC workers already have personal leave, sick leave, compassionate leave and parental leave, that separate leave categories for every social scourge are silly, and that one of the greatest problems with domestic violence is the unwillingness of victims to report attacks.But this was not a thesis, it was a pithy, satirical blog. Blair made his point, perhaps too well.Twitter, of course, reverted to its default mode of anti-conservative outrage. Leftist tweeps can be routinely offensive and profane – sometimes ABC actor Brendan Maclean even wondered on Twitter why Blair’s colleagues didn’t just “punch him in the back of the head” – but they are incandescent when a right-of-centre commentator mocks their sanctimony.The daily quandary for the morally vain is how to trumpet their greater sensitivity on issues that concern all fair-minded people. The answer is always the same: pretend someone else doesn’t care and denounce them. Hence they smear others as racists, homophobes, misogynists or in Blair’s case, of being unsympathetic about domestic violence.
Following the actor’s violent tweeting, I’m now petitioning the union to include a provision for Brendan leave.
===
POSSESSION IS EVERYTHING
Tim Blair – Monday, April 18, 2016 (12:36pm)
According to an old Chinese proverb: “Man who fake interest in Australian rules football deserve big kick in arse.”
They were a farsighted people, the ancient Chinese, able to predict not only the formation of football codes in distant lands but to also predict certain opportunistic types would feign affection for those codes.
Hats off to the Song dynasty for that one. Well played, chaps.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull last week revealed a long-concealed love of AFL during his brief visit to China, where the PM’s hosts may have been just as bewildered as Australian voters.
“I think as we all know, and I say this as a former mediocre rugby player, AFL is the most exciting football code,” Turnbull said.
“An enormous field. Extraordinary athleticism. It is the leaping, jumping, flying game, where the big men fly, as they say, and where possession is everything,” the PM continued, adding that “ it could be a great opportunity if we could get some of China’s 1.3 billion people interested in this sport.”
“An enormous field. Extraordinary athleticism. It is the leaping, jumping, flying game, where the big men fly, as they say, and where possession is everything,” the PM continued, adding that “ it could be a great opportunity if we could get some of China’s 1.3 billion people interested in this sport.”
It might be an idea to get Turnbull interested first.
(Continue reading Possession is Everything.)
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Holding Depp hostage
Andrew Bolt April 18 2016 (6:25pm)
Tres awkward. Embarrassing. Barnaby Joyce is avenged, but I feel rather sorry for the losers:
Tristan Rayner is right:
Tristan Rayner is right:
Australia’s deputy Prime Minister, Barnaby Joyce, appears to have made a deal with Johnny Depp and Amber Heard for the weird dog thing that overtook the world for a few days.
You remember that? Their two dogs, Boo and Pistol, were brought into Australia and basically, our biosecurity laws are super tough and old mate Barnaby, the loose unit,literally threatened to kill them unless they went home. Which they did.
Ms Heard pleaded guilty to charges laid at them at a Gold Coast Court… In a ruling, Heard was given a $1000 good behaviour bond for one-month.
And just to really, really make sure they got it, it appears that as part of the deal with the Australian Government/Barnaby, the pair were forced at dog-point to film an apology, noting how great Australia is and why it Really Matters to do the right thing.
Which of course is true, but just like the terrible hostage videos that are released by various terrible people around the world, it’s super obvious to everyone else that the person reading from a script would not be reading from the script unless being forced into some shitty deal.
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Turnbull’s early election could be confirmed tonight. UPDATE: Is confirmed
Andrew Bolt April 18 2016 (6:09pm)
This defeat was inevitable from more than a month ago and the Turnbull Government has made no genuine effort to avoid the early election it will excuse:
Most election campaigns now are just five weeks long. And they don’t include a Budget in the middle, and especially one that’s got not money to play with.
UPDATE
The bill to create the ABCC has been rejected for a second time by the Senate. Malcolm Turnbull now has his formal trigger for a double dissolution election on July 2, which he has promised and cannot now back out of.
Here we go.
This has happened faster than Turnbull wanted, giving him a de facto election campaign longer than he wanted with him starting further behind than he wanted.
UPDATE
Of course, Turnbull could tomorrow call an election for May 21 - four and half weeks from now.
That would cut the risk of a long (11 week) election campaign, sure to bore and anger voters. It would also let the Government dodge delivering a Budget that is going to be terrible, with no money in the till and a still-huge deficit. Turnbull would think he’s being decisive. And is the news really going to get any better for Turnbull over the next 11 weeks?
Of course, the negatives are that it will seem just what it is - a panicky move.
With just five speakers left to speak in the debate about the ABCC and debate due to resume after Senate question time, multiple government sources told Fairfax Media the vote could take place as soon as 6.30pm.This will be a terrible day for Turnbull to effectively declare his early election - actually his 11-week crawl to an election. It would come on the day the polls say he’s behind or just even.
The five speakers left are independents Nick Xenophon, Dio Wang, Bob Day, Greens senator Scott Ludlam and Employment Minister Michaelia Cash.
Crossbench senators Jacqui Lambie, Ricky Muir and John Madigan have all already spoken in the debate and indicated they will oppose, or are likely to oppose, the passage of the bill. If three senators on the eight member crossbench vote against the bill, it will be defeated. Senator Glenn Lazarus has also indicated he does not support the restoration of the ABCC.
Most election campaigns now are just five weeks long. And they don’t include a Budget in the middle, and especially one that’s got not money to play with.
UPDATE
The bill to create the ABCC has been rejected for a second time by the Senate. Malcolm Turnbull now has his formal trigger for a double dissolution election on July 2, which he has promised and cannot now back out of.
Here we go.
This has happened faster than Turnbull wanted, giving him a de facto election campaign longer than he wanted with him starting further behind than he wanted.
UPDATE
Of course, Turnbull could tomorrow call an election for May 21 - four and half weeks from now.
That would cut the risk of a long (11 week) election campaign, sure to bore and anger voters. It would also let the Government dodge delivering a Budget that is going to be terrible, with no money in the till and a still-huge deficit. Turnbull would think he’s being decisive. And is the news really going to get any better for Turnbull over the next 11 weeks?
Of course, the negatives are that it will seem just what it is - a panicky move.
===
Aston vs the collective again
Andrew Bolt April 18 2016 (5:47pm)
Joe Aston for the second time runs against the media collective, so often deployed to defend what’s wrong:
We wrote last week about consumer advocate Michael Fraser, who played a crucial and noble role uncovering wage fraud at 7-Eleven with Fairfax investigative journalist Adele Ferguson, but whom the Supreme Court of NSW recently found to be a homophobic stalker, after a sinister and personal two-year campaign against Commonwealth Bank customer relations head Brendan French.Aston proceeds to expose the unrighteous.
Fraser spoke at the Melbourne Press Club on Thursday, saying of our coverage that “there was a couple of things that probably weren’t too true in that article,” and adding that “my lawyers said I really shouldn’t say too much about that, and we’re looking at contesting various things further.”
I challenge Fraser or any of his supporters to identify a single factual error in my article… Further, we were gobsmacked by the lack of circumspection displayed by The Age’s new editor in chief, Mark Forbes, who stood during the Q&A and said: “I think if Joe Aston spent a bit more time listening to whistleblowers rather than corporate flaks he’d have a more interesting column,” as the panel, including Fraser, Ferguson and former competition tsar Allan Fels, guffawed approvingly.
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Drowning in greed, and not just the bankers’
Andrew Bolt April 18 2016 (5:20pm)
WANT to see the greedy bastards who really are stuffing up our country, taking money that’s not theirs? No, it’s not the bankers.
Not just them, anyway.
No, get yourselves a mirror. And buy two more for Malcolm Turnbull and Bill Shorten.
Look at yourselves, still demanding even more handouts your children will have to pay for, as the federal government’s gross debt soars to $500 billion next year.
Look: 44 per cent of you are now living completely off government salaries, pensions and handouts, as calculated by The Australian. All supplied by other taxpayers.
Look at you, vilifying the rich as parasites even though one in three of you get more in handouts than you pay in taxes.
Have you thanked the rest of us?
See, it’s not corporate greed that’s drowning us in debt.
(Read full article here.)
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Parliament recalled: Governor General first target
Andrew Bolt April 18 2016 (4:02pm)
The recall of Parliament has not started well:
Labor attacks, and while savaging Cosgrove is poor form the public always blames governments for an atmosphere of crisis:
Bill Shorten reprimands his deputy Senate leader for remarks Conroy must surely have cleared with his leader first:
Labor has a vested interest in turning this recall into a farce, and the Governor General is collateral damage:
At the recall of parliament the GG normally shakes the hands of the Prime Minister, Opposition Leader and Speaker only, according to a source aware of the handshake protocol. It seems Barnaby Joyce was so excited by the moment that he stuck his hand out, and the GG obliged.UPDATE
Bill Shorten should have come up to the head of the table to receive his handshake but stayed in position on the other side of the table. We’re told the GG didn’t see Tanya Plibersek put out her hand after he’d greeted Shorten, leading to the apparent snub. At least one Labor senator has called out in the chamber for the GG to apologise to Plibersek.
Labor attacks, and while savaging Cosgrove is poor form the public always blames governments for an atmosphere of crisis:
Labor senator Stephen Conroy has launched an extraordinary attack on Governor-General Sir Peter Cosgrove, accusing him of “demeaning his office” by agreeing to recall Parliament…UPDATE
“A strong Governor-General would never have agreed to this,” he told the chamber.
“If the Queen had been asked to interfere in the British Parliament in this way, there is no way on this Earth this would have happened.”
Senator Conroy described the move as a “tawdry political stunt” and accused the Governor-General of interfering in the democratic process.
“What we’ve had today is the ghost of 1975 revisit upon us,” he said.
“The long, dead arm of Sir John Kerr crawled out of his grave to participate in a travesty of democracy in this country.”
Bill Shorten reprimands his deputy Senate leader for remarks Conroy must surely have cleared with his leader first:
Bill Shorten has reprimanded senior Victorian Labor Senator, Stephen Conroy, saying his attack on Peter Cosgrove was “intemperate and unnecessary.”
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Travelling patrol boat show
Andrew Bolt April 18 2016 (2:30pm)
This doesn’t seem a very efficient way of building a bunch of boats - moving the construction between two cities half-way through. Is this a way to share the work between electorates or to save taxpayers money?
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has confirmed Adelaide will be home to the early construction of 12 offshore patrol vessels…
Construction of the vessels will begin in Adelaide in 2018, before shifting to Western Australia in 2020 when the future frigate construction begins in the South Australian capital.
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Where’s the train?
Andrew Bolt April 18 2016 (2:12pm)
What happened to the Turnbull Government’s big announcement of last week - that we could get a very fast train? No follow up at all?
UPDATE
Related: Turnbull at his press conference dodges a question about how many of the eight crossbenchers he’s personally lobbied to get through his bill for an Australian Building and Construction Commission, said to be so vital an issue that we might need an early election to get it resolved. Turnbull says he’s talked to them all at various times, but cites not a single personal contact since his call to Bob Day three weeks ago.
UPDATE
Related: Turnbull at his press conference dodges a question about how many of the eight crossbenchers he’s personally lobbied to get through his bill for an Australian Building and Construction Commission, said to be so vital an issue that we might need an early election to get it resolved. Turnbull says he’s talked to them all at various times, but cites not a single personal contact since his call to Bob Day three weeks ago.
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The Fairfax mantra: socialists good, Republicans axe murderers
Andrew Bolt April 18 2016 (8:40am)
Why doesn’t Fairfax correspondent Paul McGeough simply say that he loathes and despises any candidates not as far to the Left as him and Bernie Sanders?:
McGeough meanwhile lavishes the love on the one socialist in the race, the Democrats’ Bernie Sanders:
McGeough is so eager to peddle his wild stereotypes - and so careless in rewriting copy from other sources - that he makes a howler:
This Republican race is like a very cheap B-grade thriller – the innocents who are desperate to escape the clutches of a ghastly axe murderer [Trump], don’t seem to realise that they are rushing into the embrace of another axe murderer [Cruz], who is just as murderous and only slightly less ghastly than the other crazy guy.This abuse is analysis?
McGeough meanwhile lavishes the love on the one socialist in the race, the Democrats’ Bernie Sanders:
And downtown, a bedazzled crowd estimated by the Sanders campaign to be 27,000, waited for hours on a chilly April afternoon to hear the rock band Vampire Weekend and actor Tim Robbins introduce Sanders in an iconic protest setting…UPDATE
Facing downtown, in the direction of Wall Street and into a sea of protesters whose placards were mostly home-made, Sanders railed against the source of funding for Clinton’s campaign and its associated super PACs, thundering: “This campaign is sending a message to corporate America: You cannot have it all.”
Like other Sanders rallies, it reminded some of the Occupy protests of 2011 and 2012. There were echoes too of the 1960s – shades of the Woodstock music festival; and more deeply, a reflection of opposition to the Vietnam War…
Sanders is a voice for millions of younger voters who sense they are being cut out of the American dream… older Americans are driven more by their fears… At Washington Square, Sanders reminded his audience of his impossible race against the Clinton machine… Observing Wednesday’s crowd in Washington Square revealed the excitement of being on the cusp of change.
McGeough is so eager to peddle his wild stereotypes - and so careless in rewriting copy from other sources - that he makes a howler:
An anti-immigration extremist, Trump provocatively took his rhetoric to Patchogue, on Long Island. On Thursday evening he attended a fundraiser at a night club just blocks from where an Ecuadorian immigrant was knifed to death eight years ago by a gang of white teenagers.Roger Franklin notes the apparent source of McGeough’s paragraph - and notes, too, the mistake McGeough made by adding his own “white”.
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Peeking in their pants
Andrew Bolt April 18 2016 (8:31am)
Isn’t this just the progression - or decline - you’d expect from a society whose citizens are obsessively absorbed with themselves and particularly their own genitalia?
Are you trying to tell us something, Aunty? ABC News website, April 7:There is a childishness afoot that promises nothing good.
Australian culture is becoming increasingly queer friendly, but sometimes progress doesn’t feel fast enough … It’s important to acknowledge that respect and understanding of the LGBTQIA community involves continuous learning. So buckle in for a lesson in language. Below are definitions for each of the letters of the LGBTQIA acronym, along with some other common sexuality and gender terms…Confused? Here’s an explanation from one writer. Jonno Revanche, Fairfax Daily Life, April 13:
I identify as neither solely man nor solely woman at this point in my life. I’m non-binary — a term used to describe someone who does not fit within either the realms of man or woman. My experience departs from the western narrative that we often follow about manhood and womanhood ... Non-binary is a term that, instead of focusing on shifting from one side of the scale to the other, focuses on breaking out of that mould altogether. Non-binary is a constant question mark, a continual challenge of gender in itself. To challenge one’s assigned gender identity is radical in a society obsessed with only two options. For me, I feel like I might as well find solace in that murky space and acknowledge that ... Non-binary is an excellent descriptor for me because it accurately describes the sum of my life experiences within the world of gender. It recognises my past, present and my future. It acknowledges the pain I’ve felt from a colonised, Australian view of gender and how that has impacted me throughout my life. It ... allows me to sit inside those uncomfortable questions, not necessarily looking for answers.
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Green seeming
Andrew Bolt April 18 2016 (8:13am)
The IPA"s Chris Berg has a new book coming out, The Libertarian Alternative, which has this lovely illustration of the Left’s craze for seeming, rather than doing:
(Thanks to reader Harrison.)
Click on the link to pre-order.
(Thanks to reader Harrison.)
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This will cost Channel Nine plenty
Andrew Bolt April 18 2016 (8:07am)
Channel Nine may now have to pay both sides of this ugly family dispute:
ADAM Whittington, the chief planner of the failed snatch of Sally Faulkner’s children, is poised to present documentary evidence to Beirut prosecuting judge Rami Abdullah at tonight’s hearing at the Baabda court, directly linking two payments from Channel Nine to himself.
In an explosive revelation, Whittington has told News Corp he has the receipt of two payments coming straight from the Channel Nine accounts department…
The money was for the planning and recovery of three-year-old Noah and five year old Lahela from their southern Beirut home so they could be returned to Faulkner…
Whittington’s claims come as relationships between all of those involved in the botched operation at a southern Beirut bus stop on the morning of April 6 have begun to disintegrate .... with Faulkner’s lawyer Ghassan Moghabghab suggesting that any new deal making was not between Faulkner and Channel Nine, but between the children’s father Ali Elamine and Channel Nine… Moghabghab said Faulkner had agreed to relinquish custody but was told by Elamine’s lawyer: “We are not in a hurry to talk about this’’…
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Who let them in?
Andrew Bolt April 18 2016 (8:05am)
How could our politicians have exposed us to this?
GANGS of thugs, including suspected Apex members, are preying on Chinese students in a crime wave that has sparked high-level consular alarm.
Groups of up to 20 teens and young men have for months been terrorising students around the University of Melbourne precinct and other parts of the inner-city in after-dark ambushes…
The mayhem led to Deputy Commissioner Andrew Crisp meeting with the Chinese Consulate to “reinforce our commitment to the safety of Chinese nationals”, a Victoria Police statement said.
Some parents in China have expressed deep concern about the incidents and Chinese consular officials have warned students not to go out alone after dark.
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HEROIC HITTERS
Tim Blair – Saturday, April 18, 2015 (6:13am)
The New York Times reports:
Italian police on Thursday charged 15 Muslim men with homicide aggravated by religious hatred after survivors of a migrant boat rescued in the Mediterranean told investigators that the men had menaced Christians on board and thrown a dozen Christians overboard to their deaths …The victims came from Ghana and Nigeria, the police said, while the accused are from Ivory Coast, Mali and Senegal.
The crucial issue here – particularly if you’re Doonesbury cartoonist Garry Trudeau – is whether throwing Christians to their deaths is an example of punching down or punching up. I suspect he’d go with up, on account of Muslims being “non-privileged” and “a powerless, disenfranchised minority”, as Trudeau whined in his recent, pathetic attack on slaughtered Charlie Hebdo staffers:
Traditionally, satire has comforted the afflicted while afflicting the comfortable. Satire punches up, against authority of all kinds, the little guy against the powerful. Great French satirists like Molière and Daumier always punched up, holding up the self-satisfied and hypocritical to ridicule. Ridiculing the non-privileged is almost never funny – it’s just mean.By punching downward, by attacking a powerless, disenfranchised minority with crude, vulgar drawings closer to graffiti than cartoons, Charlie wandered into the realm of hate speech …
Charlie Hebdo attacked with drawings. Their killers attacked with AK-47s. Trudeau is more upset about the former, as is New York artist Melanie West, a co-resident in Trudeau’s obscene moral abyss:
Christianity is a religion that features a lot of people with a lot of global dominance, while on the other side, Islam is a faith that has been bludgeoned in order to justify the pillaging and imperial slaughter of the East. Within that context, a Western body blatantly disrespecting Islam (like when drawing the Prophet Muhammad) is dropping arrows from the top. They are driving salt into the wound. They’re punching down, and they shouldn’t be surprised when people get desperate and punch back.
Or, presumably, when Muslims throw Christians into the Mediterranean, possibly due to the massive global dominance of Nigerians and Ghanaians. Mark Steyn has far more to say on the topic of Trudeau and his disgusting kind, expressed far more eloquently than I ever could, but for now let me add this:
The likes of Trudeau and West are too fantastically, rigidly stupid to understand that “comfortable” and “afflicted” are not permanent conditions. For example, if “comfortable” millionaire crap cartoonist Trudeau were to have been visiting friends in the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001, he may have found himself rapidly converted to “afflicted”, what with all the burning jet fuel pouring over him.
Likewise, the “afflicted” Islamic terrorists aboard those 9/11 jets, who were already “comfortable” enough in terms of upbringing, education and careers, became more “comfortable” still as they carried out their martyrdom missions. One supposes, too, that the “afflicted” Muslims floating off the Italian coast were more than “comfortable” tossing Christians to their deaths.
Among many others, Trudeau, West and Australian Guardian illo-pullet Andrew Marlton probably dreamed for their entire lives of the moment when they would bravely stand up to confront a democracy-opposing, women-hating, homophobic, theocratic fascist power. But when that moment came, through extremist Islam, they licked power’s boots. They caved. They ran.
They not only punched down, they fell down, pleading, on their knees.
===
SUPERVAN III
Tim Blair – Saturday, April 18, 2015 (2:43am)
Timely solar news from CNN:
The Solar Impulse 2, the experimental plane attempting to fly around the world without using a drop of fuel, has been grounded by the weather in China.What was supposed to be an overnight pit stop in the southwestern city of Chongqing has now stretched into a two-and-a-half week stay …The aircraft needs near perfect weather conditions, including cross winds of less than 4 knots, or about 7 kilometers an hour, in order to fly.
This is nonsense. Nearly four decades ago solar technology was so advanced that it could reliably propel a large van across the United States, as Supervan clearly documented:
In tonight’s barnstorming instalment:
In tonight’s barnstorming instalment:
Van enthusiasts cavort to impeccably grotesque post-hippie music ("Baby, why don’t you do what you’re told?")
Karen reveals her shameful family secret.
Behold the slowest stunt driving ever recorded.
T.B. Trenton exposes his connection to Big Oil.
The other-worldly sound of solar-powered Supervan is heard for the first time.
At 5.05, Karen transforms into a large white male.
At 6.05, the lamest bicycle accident in history occurs.
And finally, a future Seinfeld star appears ("Uncle Leo, is that you?")
Karen reveals her shameful family secret.
Behold the slowest stunt driving ever recorded.
T.B. Trenton exposes his connection to Big Oil.
The other-worldly sound of solar-powered Supervan is heard for the first time.
At 5.05, Karen transforms into a large white male.
At 6.05, the lamest bicycle accident in history occurs.
And finally, a future Seinfeld star appears ("Uncle Leo, is that you?")
===
SPRAYGATE STOPPED
Tim Blair – Saturday, April 18, 2015 (12:01am)
Following Lewis Hamilton’s champagne controversy at the Chinese Grand Prix, the woman involved speaks out:
Liu Siying, the 22-year-old Grid Girl who Hamilton sprayed with champagne on Sunday, said she was surprised by the backlash surrounding the incident and claims that it was sexist.“I think some foreign media are more sensitive about the topic than local media. I was just told by my employer to stand on the podium, and that’s what I did,” she told the Shanghai Daily. “It lasted for only one or two seconds, and I didn’t think too much about it.”
Nothing is more sensitive than certain elements of the western media. By comparison, a scanning probe microscope has all the delicate reactive finesse of a rooting boar. Notably, however, there was little international uproar over this liquid attack.
===
SHE’S ON TELEVISION
Tim Blair – Friday, April 17, 2015 (11:25pm)
One benefit of being even a minor media figure is that it forces you to consider the consequences of impolite behaviour in public. Given the ubiquity of security cameras and mobile phones, any obnoxious antics will inevitably surface online. ESPN’s Britt McHenry forgot that rule:
A video surfaced Thursday of the ESPN reporter dressing down a parking-lot attendant in brutally ugly fashion.
“I’m in the news sweetheart, I will f—–g sue this place,” McHenry, a Washington-based reporter, says as the video opens.The rant somehow gets more personal as the edited video closes.“Maybe if I was missing some teeth they would hire me, huh?” McHenry says. “ ‘Cause they look so stunning … ‘Cause I’m on television and you’re in a f—–g trailer, honey.”
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A LIE FOR EVERY CAMERA
Tim Blair – Friday, April 17, 2015 (10:45pm)
“Everywhere Hillary Clinton goes, a thousand cameras follow,” wrote the Atlantic‘s Molly Ball last September. “Then she opens her mouth, and nothing happens.”
This is not entirely the case. Plenty of lying happens. Clinton seems compelled to lie about every little thing, all the time. Sometimes – as with her latest lie, about her foreign background – Clinton’s lies are both easily revealed and of absolutely no advantage to her at all. All they do is provide smart critics with the chance to write terrific headlines:
Dead Broke Hillary Dodged Sniper Fire With Her Immigrant Parents In Tuzla
Clinton’s inaccuracy addiction also gives Mark Steyn the chance to rifle through his archives:
The defining fiction arose back in the mid-Nineties when she visited New Zealand and met Sir Edmund Hillary, the conqueror of Everest, and for some reason decided to tell him he was the guy her parents had named her after.Hmm. Edmund Hillary reached the top of Everest in 1953. Hillary Rodham was born in 1947, when Sir Edmund was an obscure New Zealand beekeeper and a somewhat unlikely inspiration for two young parents in the Chicago suburbs. If any of the bigshot U.S. newspaper correspondents on the trip noticed this inconsistency, they kept it to themselves. I mentioned it in Britain’s Sunday Telegraph at the time, but like so many other improbabilities in the Clinton record it sailed on indestructibly for years. By 2004 it was preserved for the ages in Bill Clinton’s autobiography, on page (gulp) 870: “Sir Edmund Hillary, who had explored the South Pole in the 1950s, was the first man to reach the top of Mount Everest and, most important, was the man Chelsea’s mother had been named for.”Eventually, when it was noticed that Hillary was born six years before the ascent of Everest, Clinton aides tried assuring skeptics that her parents had seen a press interview with Sir Edmund in his beekeeping days, Mr. and Mrs. Rodham apparently being the only Illinois subscribers to The New Zealand Apiarist.
Spare a thought for Clinton’s staffers, eternally forced to explain their employer’s dishonesty. Here’s the most recent excuse:
“Her grandparents always spoke about the immigrant experience and, as a result she has always thought of them as immigrants,” a Clinton campaign spokesperson said on Thursday.
That makes sense. My grandparents always spoke about horse racing and the royal family. As a result I always thought of them as imperial ponies.
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Anzac Day plot
Andrew Bolt April 18 2015 (10:01am)
Julian Burnside’s inflammatory fantasy:
Police claim two of the arrested men were plotting an “ISIS inspired” attack on an Anzac Day “activities”, using edged weapons. They were from an unidentified “community”.
Police confirm that some are “associates” of Numan Haider, an Afghan-born Islamic State supporter who last year attacked two Victorian police with knives before he was shot dead.
But warning: the arrested men must be presumed innocent.
UPDATE
Note where the arrests occurred - near the “multicultural” hub of Dandenong, where police have reported extensive trouble with ethnic gangs:
UPDATE
None of the three police chiefs in two press conferences today mentions the words “Muslim” or “Islam”.
UPDATE
Indirectly related, and a frightening harbinger of Turkey’s future:
The Islamophobia stirred up by Abbott and Bolt is a bigger threat to us than terrorismToday’s hard reality:
Police have swooped in counterterrorism raids across Melbourne this morning, arresting five young men so far.UPDATE
At least two of the arrests relate to allegations the men were preparing to launch a terrorist attack on Australian soil, with police officers believed to be possible targets.
Police claim two of the arrested men were plotting an “ISIS inspired” attack on an Anzac Day “activities”, using edged weapons. They were from an unidentified “community”.
Police confirm that some are “associates” of Numan Haider, an Afghan-born Islamic State supporter who last year attacked two Victorian police with knives before he was shot dead.
But warning: the arrested men must be presumed innocent.
UPDATE
Note where the arrests occurred - near the “multicultural” hub of Dandenong, where police have reported extensive trouble with ethnic gangs:
Remember the claim of Labor frontbencher Mark Dreyfus, member for Isaacs, which includes Dandenong South and borders Hallam:
“One third of Australians were born overseas and Greater Dandenong is home to citizens representing 150 different nationalities,” he said. ”Our community is a wonderful example to others of a modern, diverse and harmonious society.”Blind. Just blind.
UPDATE
None of the three police chiefs in two press conferences today mentions the words “Muslim” or “Islam”.
UPDATE
Indirectly related, and a frightening harbinger of Turkey’s future:
The Turkish government has been paying Gallipoli tour guides to give tourists a more faith-based interpretation of the conflict which celebrates a victory for Allah over the Western infidels.
The move has divided tour guides and historians, who fear it undermines the legacy of Turkey Gallipoli hero Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, who later helped to found a secular Turkish republic. The tensions reflect a broader push by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to make Turkey a more religious Islamist nation, a move that has seen him take a softer line than the West against Islamic State… The names of non-Muslim Turkish soldiers at Gallipoli have also reportedly been removed from the List of Martyrs of the Gallipoli campaign issued by Turkey’s Ministry of National Defence.
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Why are taxpayers paying a dud SBS comic to vilify conservatives?
Andrew Bolt April 18 2015 (9:43am)
Not for the first time I have to ask: why is SBS paying someone to write utterly unfunny “satire” relentless attacking Liberals, conservatives, Tony Abbott, climate sceptics and any other deviants from Left-wing dogma?
This has been going of for ages. Here’s The Backburner menu the last time I wrote about it:
SBS even pays people to look up funny YouTube clips and repost a few on the SBS site:
(Thanks to readers mem and SM.)
How does this possibly conform with the SBS charter to service the multicultural community and represent all sectors of the community?
This has been going of for ages. Here’s The Backburner menu the last time I wrote about it:
UPDATE
SBS even pays people to look up funny YouTube clips and repost a few on the SBS site:
Stuff We Found, the best comedy ‘stuff’ on the internet. We find it so you don’t have to, every day, twice a day so you can get your much needed comedy fix.Why must taxpayers fund this stuff, when SBS viewers could look up YouTube themselves for free? SBS is wildly overfunded if it can afford this utterly frivilous waste.
(Thanks to readers mem and SM.)
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Is Julie Bishop’s submission appropriate?
Andrew Bolt April 18 2015 (9:19am)
Yes, wear a headscarf in visiting a mosque, but should she grant the mullahs this victory?
Bishop is right to feel embarrassed, and her excuses don’t convince:
Julie Bishop takes on her sternest task as Foreign Minister today as she uses a historic visit to Iran to gain information about the fight against Islamic State and build a relationship with a nation in the process of shaking off its pariah status… Ms Bishop, who will wear a headscarf during the visit...UPDATE
Bishop is right to feel embarrassed, and her excuses don’t convince:
Julie Bishop elected to don a headscarf arriving in Tehran early on Saturday morning - a covering the local morality police force on all Iranian women.
To avoid any awkward moments, protocol also dictates Ms Bishop not extend a hand to shake when meeting Iran’s president Hassan Rouhani or other male dignitaries…
An exile[d] Iranian journalist - who kick-started a popular Facebook page for Iranian women to post photographs of themselves bareheaded - had in recent weeks called for Ms Bishop to refuse to wear the covering.
But Ms Bishop said wearing the scarf, which she also covered with a hat, was not an imposition.
“As a matter of fact I wear scarves and hats and headgear quite often as part of my everyday wear,” she said. Asked why she had pulled the scarf back to her shoulders for an early hours media conference shortly after arriving, she said it was more comfortable.
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ABC frames Liberal Premier Colin Barnett. Protects Labor Premier Dan Andrews
Andrew Bolt April 18 2015 (9:13am)
Had enough of the ABC’s cheap “gotchas” of conservatives?
Gerard Henderson’s Media Watch Dog:
On the other hand, when Victorian Labor Premier Dan Andrews wastes a scandalous $600 million dollars by cancelling a contract to build a much needed East West road link the ABC goes out of its way to pretend nothing happened, or, if it did, that it was nothing to worry about.
The ABC’s 7.30 failed to ask Andrews a single question about that colossal waste of taxpayers’ money , and Lateline couldn’t be bothered mentioning it, either. On The Drum online, presenter Barrie Cassidy reserves most of his criticism for the Liberals and ignores Andrews’ campaign lies that the contract was not valid and no compensation would be paid. AM on the morning after also ignored the scandal.
True, The Drum at least did cover it on April 15, (6:42 to 13:28), but mostly to damn the Liberals and even praise Labor, with Chris Evans blithely declaring (at 6:43)
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
Gerard Henderson’s Media Watch Dog:
Some confusion surely on 7.30 [on Thursday] night. First up presenter Leigh Sales declared that Western Australian premier Colin Barnett has hinted that unless WA gets a greater share of the GST it “might be a bit slower to help with things like bush-fire and flood relief”. The Premier said no such thing.Reader Peter of Bellevue Hill:
Later in the program 7.30’s political correspondent Sabra Lane also said that Colin Barnett had suggested that Western Australia “won’t be so willing to help other states in their hour of need” if WA doesn’t get a better deal on the GST. Once again, the Premier said no such thing.
In fact both Ms Sales and Ms Lane would have been aware of this had they watched the clip of what 7.30 ran concerning what Mr Barnett had really said – which was this:
Colin Barnett : When Victoria had those tragic fires a few years back, Western Australia was the first state and the most generous state to provide financial assistance, so perhaps the new Treasurer’s got a short memory or perhaps he’s not aware of that. Same when Queensland was in trouble, Western Australia was the first state to provide assistance on the Queensland floods. Now we’d do that and we’d do it again.Perhaps it’s time that ABC managing director Mark Scott directed his Fact-Checking Unit to first check the so-called facts which are cited on the ABC before it fact-checks others.
Alternatively Mark Scott might consider sending Lane for a hearing test. She appears to have form in the area of hearing things that weren’t actually said.UPDATE
On the other hand, when Victorian Labor Premier Dan Andrews wastes a scandalous $600 million dollars by cancelling a contract to build a much needed East West road link the ABC goes out of its way to pretend nothing happened, or, if it did, that it was nothing to worry about.
The ABC’s 7.30 failed to ask Andrews a single question about that colossal waste of taxpayers’ money , and Lateline couldn’t be bothered mentioning it, either. On The Drum online, presenter Barrie Cassidy reserves most of his criticism for the Liberals and ignores Andrews’ campaign lies that the contract was not valid and no compensation would be paid. AM on the morning after also ignored the scandal.
True, The Drum at least did cover it on April 15, (6:42 to 13:28), but mostly to damn the Liberals and even praise Labor, with Chris Evans blithely declaring (at 6:43)
“They elected the Labor Party who said, as a key platform in their election campaign, that they were going to end the contract. Today they ... honoured their promise and their commitment. So ... there was always going to be a cost to that.”Given the ABC is the country’s biggest media organisation, it is a miracle that the Liberals still manage to win the occasional election.
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
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On The Bolt Report tomorrow, April 19
Andrew Bolt April 18 2015 (8:55am)
On the The Bolt Report on Channel 10 tomorrow at 10am and 3pm.
Editorial: Mad moves to divide us by race.
Guest: Employment Minister Eric Abetz.
The panel: IPA boss John Roskam and Sean Kelly, former media adviser to Julia Gillard.
NewsWatch: Australian media editor Sharri Markson. Which idiot chose Dr Karl?
On taxes, halal certification, dangerous Dan Andrews, “peace” journalists, Abbott’s surprising friends and more.
The videos of the shows appear here.
Editorial: Mad moves to divide us by race.
Guest: Employment Minister Eric Abetz.
The panel: IPA boss John Roskam and Sean Kelly, former media adviser to Julia Gillard.
NewsWatch: Australian media editor Sharri Markson. Which idiot chose Dr Karl?
On taxes, halal certification, dangerous Dan Andrews, “peace” journalists, Abbott’s surprising friends and more.
The videos of the shows appear here.
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Get a degree in warming propaganda and denial
Andrew Bolt April 18 2015 (8:52am)
Astonishing and shocking. The University of Queensland now offers a course to teach students not to doubt. In fact, it teaches students how to attack any sceptics - including leading climate scientists - who point out flaws in the theory than man is heating the world dangerously:
In fact, there have been very many good reasons to doubt Hoegh-Guldberg’s warming claims and predictions.
(Thanks to reader Anthony.)
This is not science. This is not in the Western tradition of academia - based on always testing claims and “truths”. This is represents the closing of the Western mind:
What you’ll learnI see that the video and the course promotes Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, preaching against doubt of the warming faith.
How to recognise the social and psychological drivers of climate science denial
How to better understand climate change: the evidence that it is happening, that humans are causing it and the potential impacts
How to identify the techniques and fallacies that climate myths employ to distort climate science
How to effectively debunk climate misinformation
In fact, there have been very many good reasons to doubt Hoegh-Guldberg’s warming claims and predictions.
(Thanks to reader Anthony.)
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Bill Shorten’s nuclear test
Andrew Bolt April 18 2015 (8:45am)
The ultimate example of Bill Shorten’s surrender to populism and green scares - irrational scares of the kind that cost jobs and wealth:
In November, former Rudd and Gillard government minister Martin Ferguson highlighted the opportunities China’s embrace of nuclear power offered Australia:
The People’s Republic of China has 22 nuclear power reactors operating and a further 26 under construction. Additional reactors — enough to triple nuclear capacity ... are planned. This will raise the percentage of China’s electricity produced by nuclear power from the current 2 per cent to more than 7 per cent by 2020. Thereafter, another threefold increase in nuclear capacity is planned by 2030; and then more again by 2040. Not only does nuclear power offer an enormous opportunity to Australia’s uranium exporters, it clearly has a central role to play in China’s decarbonisation.South Australia, with one of the world’s richest uranium deposits, launched a royal commission in February examining what role the state could play in the nuclear industry. As [Labor] Premier Jay Weatherill said:
The truth is we are already in the nuclear fuel cycle. I mean we are selling uranium to the world ... We believe South Australians should be given the opportunity to explore the practical, financial and ethical issues raised by a deeper involvement in the nuclear industries…South Australian Greens senator Penny Wright was unimpressed:
The Australian Greens are unequivocal. We do not support nuclear power in any circumstances.Bill Shorten also opposed the inquiry. The Opposition Leader’s spokesman said the ALP had:
… a longstanding position on nuclear power based on the best available expert advice.Former prime minister Bob Hawke believes Australia should enrich uranium and dispose of nuclear waste. He told a Perth conference last year:
If Australia has — as we do — the safest remote locations for storing the world’s nuclear waste, we have a responsibility to make those sites available for this purpose … in doing good for the rest of the world, we can, in the process, do enormously well for the Australian economy.The International Energy Agency argues nuclear power is critical in limiting greenhouse gas emissions:
A mature, low-carbon technology, nuclear power is available today for wider deployment, subject to safety and security conditions ... The scale of nuclear is such (an average nuclear plant has the production of 4000 windmills) that it is difficult to imagine nuclear being fully replaced by low-carbon renewables in the foreseeable future.
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Not wanting our protection but our wealth
Andrew Bolt April 18 2015 (8:24am)
How the Greens characterise the boat people trying to crash our borders:
(Thanks to reader Gab.)
We need to take action immediately to save the lives of desperate people coming to us for protection.Contrast that with how members of one of the biggest groups of boat people characterise themselves:
According to the Immigration Department, 22.6 per cent of the 1848 detainees in mainland facilities are Iranians. They make up just more than 30 per cent of the 2512 arrivals now living in the community after being approved for residence determinations.Are the Greens lying to us, or are they simply gullible?
A fresh survey of 199 Iranians preparing to leave Iran, included in research conducted by global development start-up Farsight, has found ...26 Iranians (13 per cent) were focused on coming to Australia… Nearly half of this group said they were motivated by joining family members, underlining that small diasporas can generate momentum in shaping larger migration outcomes over time. The second most common response when people were asked why they were leaving was “I cannot find a job here”, providing further evidence that economic motivation and financial security play roles in driving irregular migration to Australia.
(Thanks to reader Gab.)
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Hillary Clinton lies again
Andrew Bolt April 18 2015 (7:44am)
Hillary Clinton campaigns for the immigrant vote in Iowa:
Only one of her grandparents was born overseas, although another was the child of immigrants, forcing Clinton’s staff to offer this cringing explanation:
”All my grandparents, you know, came over here [to America],” Hillary Clinton claimed, reinforcing her immigration reform bona fides.Except, of course, it’s another Hillary lie - one so astonishingly obvious that you can only conclude that she lies reflexively and habitually.
Only one of her grandparents was born overseas, although another was the child of immigrants, forcing Clinton’s staff to offer this cringing explanation:
“Her grandparents always spoke about the immigrant experience and, as a result she has always thought of them as immigrants,” a Clinton spokesman told BuzzFeed News.Remember this lie?:
The Clinton campaign says Senator Hillary Clinton may have “misspoke” recently when she said she had to evade sniper fire when she was visiting Bosnia in 1996as first lady…Roger Stone recounts more Hillary lies:
She has been using the episode as an example of her foreign policy bona fides.
“I certainly do remember that trip to Bosnia,” she said last week. “...I remember landing under sniper fire. There was supposed to be some kind of a greeting ceremony at the airport, but instead we just ran with our heads down to get into the vehicles to get to our base.”
But her account has been challenged, first by Sinbad, the comedian, who traveled with her, and then by news organizations, most notably the Washington Post, which awarded her four “Pinnochios” which it gives for major “whoppers.”
A number of videos have been posted to YouTube juxtaposing a CBS news report with Mrs. Clinton’s statements last week:
As Hillary’s now infamous email scandal demonstrates, in which Madam Secretary purposely used private email to conduct government business and escape disclosure requirements, telling the truth is outside her DNA. For instance, during the sole time Hillary publicly addressed this issue at the UN press conference, she claimed that some of the deleted emails were between Bill and her. Yet the Wall Street Journal reported only hours before the press conference that the impeached former president has “sent a grand total of two emails during his entire life.”Mona Charen on perhaps the most disgusting Hillary lie:
She also got busted lying about having one computer device when proof existed that she used two…
Whitewater was a failed real estate venture which lost money for all equity partners but siphoned $800,000 in campaign funds to Bill Clinton’s campaign and paid Hillary’s law firm handsomely. As First Lady, Hillary was caught criminally defying 1994 congressional and federal subpoenas. During the Whitewater investigation, a grand jury subpoena was issued for all of Rose Law Firm billing records. Rose Law Firm claimed that the documents were destroyed and the Clintons claimed that they did not have them. Yet two years later, the Rose billing records were discovered in the personal residence of the White House by a staffer. Hillary, of course, claimed no wrongdoing.
In January 2001, a scandal broke when Hillary was caught taking artwork and furniture from the White House. She claimed that these items were given to Bill and her as gifts during their years in the White House. However, less than a month later on February 8th, Hillary agreed to return $28,000 worth of gifts to the White House and pay in restitution $86,000 for china, flatware, rugs, televisions, sofas and other items which was only 50 percent of the value.
This brings up another issue. If Hillary was able to make an $86,000 vanity purchase in February 2008, then why did she describe herself as “dead broke” upon leaving the White House?…
Of course Hillary has often lied about her biography for convenience as well. Since at least 1995, Hillary claimed that her mother named her after Sir Edmund Hillary, the first climber to reach the summit of Mount Everest. Bill even mentioned this anecdote in his autobiography. The only problem, Hillary was born in 1947 and Sir Edmund did complete his historic feat until 1953.
...let’s not forget what it took for Mrs. Clinton to lie to the grieving father of an American hero…
A convoy of well-armed terrorists rolled into the complex housing the American consulate in Benghazi on September 11, 2012. The attackers sealed off streets leading to the consulate with trucks and then commenced the attack on the building using rocket-propelled grenades, AK-47s, mortars, and artillery mounted on trucks.... The terrorists killed Ambassador Stevens and another American and set the building ablaze. (Two more Americans would die later attempting to protect the annex.)… [N]o help arrived…
As soon as the next morning, Congressman Mike Rogers, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, described the attack as a “commando-style event” with “coordinated fire, direct fire, [and] indirect fire.” A few days later the Libyan president said that it was a planned terrorist attack…
Yet a well-orchestrated disinformation campaign by the Obama administration managed to put the press off the story and mislead the American people… At 10:32 on the night of the attack, Secretary Clinton issued a statement deploring violence in response to “inflammatory material posted on the Internet.” In the days that followed, the president and his spokesman repeatedly invoked the supposedly offensive video as the cause of the attack. The president and secretary of state even filmed commercials to play in Muslim countries denouncing the video ...
But as the State Department finally disclosed a month after the attack..., there was no protest outside the American consulate in Benghazi. Nothing. Not a peep. As the Rhodes memo makes clear, the president sent his U.N. ambassador to the Sunday shows to lie. Susan Rice was “to underscore that these protests are rooted in an Internet video, and not a broader failure of policy."…
When the Libyan ambassador to the U.S. apologized to [Clinton] on September 13 for the “terror attack,” she ignored this and burbled on about “The Innocence of Muslims.” The president, the vice president, and Mrs. Clinton welcomed the bodies of Chris Stevens, Tyrone Woods, Sean Smith, and Glen Doherty to Andrews Air Force base on September 14. According to Woods’s father,… Mrs. Clinton stayed on message. She greeted the man whose son who had bravely attempted to fight off far more numerous and better-armed terrorists on the roof of the CIA annex and who gave his life… Did she express regret that [his son] had been left nearly alone to fight off the Islamist terrorists? No… She told Mr. Woods that they would catch the guy who made the Internet film and make sure he was punished.
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On the traitors who think the Charlie Hebdo dead deserved it
Andrew Bolt April 18 2015 (7:14am)
Tim Blair, a gifted blogger and satirist, is rarely angry. Today, though, he discusses Western cartoonists who say of every Islamist slaughter of “Christians” - especially the slaughter of fellow cartoonists - that in some way we deserved it:
Among many others, Trudeau, West and Australian Guardian illo-pullet Andrew Marlton probably dreamed for their entire lives of the moment when they would bravely stand up to confront a democracy-opposing, women-hating, homophobic, theocratic fascist power. But when that moment came, through extremist Islam, they licked power’s boots. They caved. They ran.Cartoonist Gary Trudeau blames cartoonists for getting themselves killed for mocking Islam, accusing them of being merely bullies who “punch down”. Mark Steyn has words for the weasel and his excuses for mass murderers:
Charlie Hebdo dead, Vilks in hiding, Hedegaard shot, Rehman firebombed, Nekschot vanished, Molly Norris fled, Kurt Westergaard attacked by an Islamic axeman… But Garry Trudeau is on stage congratulating himself on “afflicting the comfortable”. You can’t “punch down” much lower than sneering at the dead and those no longer able to speak, can you?
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Glenn Lazarus the Sports Minister? Seriously?
Andrew Bolt April 18 2015 (7:10am)
I’d bet a small fortune that either Clive Palmer or Glenn Lazarus has a severe problem with the facts:
Palmer United Party defector Glenn Lazarus says Clive Palmer proposed folding his remaining two senators into the Liberal Party at a pre-lunch meeting on February 6 in exchange for ministerial positions for the pair, in a bizarre deal Mr Palmer is claimed to have hatched with senior Abbott government figures…Remember when the ABC regularly promoted Palmer and his party?
The now independent senator claims Mr Palmer urged him and fellow PUP senator Dio Wang (WA) to join the Liberal Party and vote with the Coalition in the Senate, giving the government another two guaranteed votes…
He told Fairfax Media that the proposed deal – in which it was even suggested he would be elevated to the outer ministry in the sports portfolio – was one of the main reasons he resigned from Mr Palmer’s party on March 12…
“But Clive said it would be a great thing. He said he wouldn’t be around in politics a lot longer, and he wanted to look after Dio and I.”
Mr Palmer has denied Senator Lazarus’s claims… Government figures scoffed at the claimed deal, describing it as fanciful… However, [Lazarus] admitted he “can’t remember” the names of the government ministers purportedly behind the deal.
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While some might be disappointed, the Australian Greens are never afraid of fighting on controversial issues.
Posted by Greens taking credit for things on Friday, 17 April 2015
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Exodus 14:21 "Then Christine stretched out her hand over the sea, and caused the sea to go back, and the waters were divided"
Posted by Greens taking credit for things on Friday, 17 April 2015
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Photo Friday forecast: Cloudy with a chance of … Half Dome!Thanks to Michael Evans for this captivating cloud time-lapse scene. Share your Yosemite moments with us on Flickr (bit.ly/yosemiteflickr).
Posted by Yosemite Conservancy on Friday, 17 April 2015
Photo Friday forecast: Cloudy with a chance of … Half Dome!Thanks to Michael Evans for this captivating cloud time-lapse scene. Share your Yosemite moments with us on Flickr (bit.ly/yosemiteflickr).
Posted by Yosemite Conservancy on Friday, 17 April 2015
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We believe all women are unique, but can a child find its mother among a group of women – only using its intuition?
Posted by PANDORA on Wednesday, 15 April 2015
We believe all women are unique, but can a child find its mother among a group of women – only using its intuition?
Posted by PANDORA on Wednesday, 15 April 2015
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(Y) Follow Sun Gazing
Posted by Sun Gazing on Sunday, 12 April 2015
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A Stormy Sunset at the Wind Farm
Posted by Matt Granz on Friday, 17 April 2015
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Posted by Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing on Friday, 17 April 2015
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Shadow men haunt Parliament
Piers Akerman – Friday, April 18, 2014 (6:23am)
FORGET for a moment the Grange, if you can, and concentrate on the underlying issue ICAC is wrestling with — the insidious power of unelected opportunistic lobbyists in both the NSW Labor and Liberal parties.
That’s the real importance of the parade of Obeid-related door-openers and gladhanders before the inquiry. And it hasn’t scratched the surface yet.
At the outset of this inquiry, counsel assisting, Geoffrey Watson, SC, warned the commission would be investigating corruption on a scale not seen since the days of the Rum Corps.
Not an exact parallel but certainly colourful and indicative of the gravity of the concern.
What we have seen so far is evidence certain individuals stood to make vast sums if political decisions were made in favour of companies they were associated with.
What has yet to be explored is the extent to which those who were lobbying for the decisions actually influenced the actual structure of the parties whose MPs and ministers they were begging for favours.
Michael Williamson, corrupt former Health Services Union boss, was also a national president of the ALP. That’s power.
Eddie Obeid, NSW Labor factional boss, pushed premiers around and usually got his way. That’s power.
Craig Thomson, former Labor MP and another corrupt HSU boss, had the backing of former prime minister Julia Gillard and the entire federal Labor Party because his vote was so critical to Labor’s survival. That’s power.
But the picture is just as unattractive from the perspective of the NSW division of the Liberal Party. Office bearers of the division are fighting long overdue reform because lobbyists still hold sway, despite Abbott’s own warning to them last October, a month after winning office.
With then premier Barry O’Farrell beside him, Tony Abbott declared: “I am determined to ensure that as far as the new Coalition government in Canberra is concerned that not only is it clean and fair, but it’s seen to be clean and fair. I’m determined to ensure you can either be a powerbroker or a lobbyist but you can’t be both.”
Conservative lobbyists Michael Photios and Joe Tannous resigned from roles on the state party executive within hours.
Photios never made any secret of his power within the Liberal Party, boasting to an interviewer in July, 2011: “We go from success in the morning to success in the afternoon when we roll out preselections.”
Insiders say the power of the lobbyists has not diminished and some estimate more than 60 per cent of state Liberal MPs owe their preselections to branches controlled by lobbyists’ agents.
Branch stacking is not solely the province of the ALP. Even now the Wentworthville Young Liberal branch is locked in legal action with the NSW division because head office suspended branch delegates.
Initially, the suspension meant delegates were prohibited from voting in the Parramatta federal electorate conference, the Granville state electorate conference and the Parramatta local government electoral conference.
That has now been modified but the action is still running and members of the branch are concerned head office is intent on preventing their voice from being heard when senate selectors and state council delegates are chosen — and most crucially — when the long overdue vote on party reform is held later this year.
The first test for Abbott will come when he receives the report on reform of the NSW division from the expert panel of eminent persons he moved to appoint under the chairmanship of former prime minister John Howard shortly after the last election.
Other members include Dr David Kemp, former cabinet colleague Philip Ruddock, along with former Liberal Party national president Chris McDiven.
The first test for the new Premier Michael Baird will be whether he reappoints O’Farrell nominee MLC Don Harwin to the state executive or whether he signals a fresh start and nominates a reform-driven candidate without any factional baggage.
Failure to do so would lead to the same disunity and instability which still dogs Labor.
GRANGE PROVES A FOLLY FOR POLLIES FROM BOTH SIDES
PENFOLDS Grange also features in Labor Party mythology.
Another former NSW Labor premier, Barry Unsworth, remembers accompanying Bob Hawke, then president of the ACTU, to South Australia in the late ‘70s during the days of the flamboyant Labor premier Don Dunstan and seeing a Port Adelaide publican get the better of the future Labor PM.
“We were on some sort of a worker participation tour and wound up in the Port pub favoured by Mick Young,” Unsworth relates.
Young, a former shearer and AWU boss, later secretary of the ALP, was credited with devising the successful “It’s Time” slogan for 1972 election.
According to Unsworth, Hawke was playing snooker with other delegates, including SA Labour Council secretary Bob Gregory when the publican opened a trapdoor in the barroom floor and descended to the cellar on a shaky ladder.
Hawke called out: “Any of that Grange down there?” The publican’s head reappeared, nodding. “How many are you after?” he asked, and clambered back up with a box filled with dusty bottles of various years.
Unsworth isn’t sure exactly how much the publican asked per bottle but he does say Gregory did the maths and reckoned that Hawke would have been able to buy the lot cheaper at the local bottle shop.
They flew back to Melbourne with Hawke taking both his snooker cue and the pricey case of red.
“That bloke stitched him up,” says Unsworth. Maybe Mick Young put him up to it.
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RATE THE GREENS
Tim Blair – Friday, April 18, 2014 (3:29pm)
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ANDRE JOHNSONLESS
Tim Blair – Friday, April 18, 2014 (3:19pm)
Think you’ve had a bad day? Think again.
UPDATE. For the unfortunate rapper mentioned above, life imitates art:
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THERE MAY BE ONE OR TWO MORE
Tim Blair – Friday, April 18, 2014 (12:44pm)
Today’s collection of typos from the Sydney Morning Herald‘s Richard Ackland:
hand delivered plonk
Should be: “hand-delivered plonk”.
the same old cast of stagers keeps turning-up
Should be: “the same old cast of stagers keeps turning up”.
the Liberal’s money raising machine
Should be: “the Liberals’ money-raising machine”.
grog merchants lobby group
Should be: “grog merchants’ lobby group,”
alcohol fuelled mayhem
Should be: “alcohol-fuelled mayhem”.
the Liberal’s money raising efforts
Should be: “the Liberals’ money-raising efforts”.
The fact, that he was reminded by the media about the Grange three weeks or so before he was questioned about it by Geoffrey Watson SC, opens a fresh line of inquiry.
Should be: “The fact that he was reminded by the media about the Grange three weeks or so before he was questioned about it by Geoffrey Watson SC opens a fresh line of inquiry.”
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MORE EQUAL THAN OTHERS
Tim Blair – Thursday, April 17, 2014 (11:46pm)
An already-rich leftist journalist is paid $25,000 per month … to talk about income inequality.
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Dyson Heydon on the new racism of the intellectuals
Andrew Bolt April 18 2014 (10:42am)
We’ve seen the disgraceful attacks - some from Labor - on Tony Abbott’s Catholicism. We’ve seen reporters only too eager to portray the Catholic Church as little more than a sanctuary for pedophiles. We’re seen the vicious baiting and heckling of Cardinal George Pell.
Former High Court judge Dyson Heydon, in a brilliant Acton Lecture on religion and freedom for the Centre for Independent Studies this week, notes this fashionable new intolerance:
Heydon quotes an amazingly prescient warning from the past:
Continue reading 'Dyson Heydon on the new racism of the intellectuals'
Former High Court judge Dyson Heydon, in a brilliant Acton Lecture on religion and freedom for the Centre for Independent Studies this week, notes this fashionable new intolerance:
Now there may be a new anti-Catholic movement, particularly among the intellectuals. To adapt Windhorst’s aphorism, anti-Catholicism in Australia now might be called the racism of the intellectuals.In some ways Heydon’s appeal is much like that of Maurice Samuel in The Great Hatred, written in 1940 to warn the US that the fight against the Nazis was their fight, too. Samuel warned that the Nazi’s anti-Semitic program was likewise more than an attack on Jews:
This new anti-Catholicism may backfire as much as Bismarck’s Kulturkampf. It is intolerant. It is hypocritical. It fails to recognise the extraordinary contribution of Australian Catholicism to education, to charitable relief, to the running of hospitals, to social progress of all kinds, to political life, and indeed to the life of the nation as a whole. Without that contribution, Australia would not be the Australia we know. The new anti-Catholicism may cause suffering, but it is suffering which may unify Catholics. It may bring other elements of society in behind Catholics, for its programme is more than anti-Catholic. Whether these desirable results flow depends on new Windhorsts and new von Galens. The hard question is: Where are they to be found?
We shall never understand the maniacal, world-wide seizure of anti-Semitism unless we transpose the terms. It is of Christ that the Nazi-Fascists are afraid; it is in his omnipotence that they believe; it is he that they are determined madly to obliterate. But the names of Christ and Christianity are too overwhelming, and the habit of submission to them is too deeply ingrained after centuries and centuries of teaching. Therefore they must, I repeat, make their assault on those who were responsible for the birth and spread of Christianity. They must spit on the Jews as the ‘Christ-killers’ because they long to spit on the Jews as the Christ-givers.And what in Christianity so threatened the Nazis?:
And so, as Samuel says, the Nazis’ hatred of Jews was actually a rejection of the most important Judeo-Christian message – that no person is too humble to be precious to God, and that all of us are called to the brotherly love of even strangers.That remains the threat Catholicism poses to the merchants of new faiths that legitimise the totalitarian instinct. Christianity remains a defence against the enemies of freedom.
It was a rejection of the Judeo-Christian claim that the political machine exists for people, not people for the machine. Christianity was the enemy of totalitarians then, and is so still. Ask the Islamists. Ask the Greens. Ask our university Marxists and the International Socialists; and isn’t it natural that such folk also hate Israel?
Heydon quotes an amazingly prescient warning from the past:
In 1843 Heinrich Heine wrote: “A drama will be enacted in Germany compared to which the French Revolution will seem like a harmless idyll. Christianity restrained the martial ardour of the Germans for a time but it did not destroy it; once the restraining talisman is shattered, savagery will rise again … the mad fury of the berserk.”Heydon in his lecture below says how right Heine was:
Continue reading 'Dyson Heydon on the new racism of the intellectuals'
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The Bolt Report on Sunday
Andrew Bolt April 18 2014 (10:20am)
On the show on Sunday – Network 10 at 10am and 4pm....
It’s the cover-up, every time… Two urgent lessons from Barry O’Farrell’s fall.
Assistant Minister for Infrastructure Jamie Briggs on how to stop the usual cranks from blocking Sydney’s second airport.
The panel: Michael Kroger and Kimberley Kitching on scandals, Mike Baird, airports and Labor’s disgraceful hounding of Joe Bullock.
On NewsWatch - and to mark the weekend Marxism 2014 conference - my favourite Marxist, Brendan O’Neill:
The videos of the shows appear here.
It’s the cover-up, every time… Two urgent lessons from Barry O’Farrell’s fall.
Assistant Minister for Infrastructure Jamie Briggs on how to stop the usual cranks from blocking Sydney’s second airport.
The panel: Michael Kroger and Kimberley Kitching on scandals, Mike Baird, airports and Labor’s disgraceful hounding of Joe Bullock.
On NewsWatch - and to mark the weekend Marxism 2014 conference - my favourite Marxist, Brendan O’Neill:
Plus more, including Harrison Ford’s scary new God for Easter.
The videos of the shows appear here.
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Smear or fear? Jews targeted in eastern Ukraine
Andrew Bolt April 18 2014 (9:52am)
Deeply sinister:
Jews have reportedly been told to ‘register’ with pro-Russian forces in the east Ukrainian city of Donetsk.Denials - or not really:
They were also told they would need to provide a list of property they own as well as being ordered to pay a fee or face the threat of deportation… Jews leaving a synagogue in the city of Donetsk were reportedly told they had to ‘register’ with Ukranians trying to make the city part of Russia.
United States Secretary of State John Kerry ... described the leaflets as ‘grotesque and beyond unacceptable’ ... The State Department says it is looking into who is responsible but takes the threat seriously no matter who is behind the leaflets…
[The leaflet] goes on to explain that the reason for this is that leaders of the Jewish community of Ukraine supported Bendery Junta in reference to the leader of a nationalist group fighting for independence at the end of the Second World War. The letter features the flag of the so-called Donetsk Republic, a self-proclaimed state declared earlier this month by several hundred activists who occupied the Regional Administration Building and the City Hall buildings in the city.
Armed, masked men were waiting outside one synagogue, reports Ynet News, Israel’s largest news website, to hand worshipers the leaflets telling them to register with the forces who are trying to return the city to Russia....But the Times of Israel says Pushilin claims it’s just a set-up:
The signature of Denis Pushilin, chairman of Donetsk’s temporary government, was on the leaflets.... Pushilin admitted the flyers came from his organization but disavowed the contents, which said that Jews were being ordered to register because of their support for the Bendery Junta, a reference to Stepan Bandera, the leader of the Ukrainian nationalist movement that fought for Ukrainian independence at the end of World War II.
The flyers were official-looking documents that carried what was presented as Pushilin’s signature, but the news site tvrain.ru on Wednesday quoted Pushilin as denying any connection to the flyers, calling them a provocation.The letter translated:
Independent Donetsk Republic, General Staff(Thanks to readers PeterX and the Village Idiot (reformed).)
Dear citizens of Jewish nationality:
Taking into consideration the fact that the leaders of Jewish community of Ukraine has supported banderovtsy’s Junta in Kiev, and have been hostile to Orthodox Donetsk Republic and its citizens, the General Staff of Donetsk People’s Republic has decreed the following:
All citizens of Jewish nationality who are older than 16 years-old that have been living within the territory of Sovereign Donetsk Republic should attend acting Commissioner for nationalities affairs in Donetsk Regional Government Department, office 514 for registration before 03 May 2014. The registration fees are 50 USD.
You should bring the amount of 50 USD for registration fees, passports for marking the confession of faith, documents showing family members, entitling documents for title to real property and transport facilities.
In case of attempts to avoid the registration, the subject persons’ citizenship will be revoked with their subsequent enforced deportation outside Donetsk Republic including the forfeiture of their property.Yours People’s Governor – Denis Pushilin
..
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Selling the ABC’s global warming scare
Andrew Bolt April 18 2014 (9:42am)
The ABC gets a little help.
(Thanks to reader James. Via Jo Nova.)
(Thanks to reader James. Via Jo Nova.)
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Canada’s new race
Andrew Bolt April 18 2014 (9:16am)
It’s been ruled here that certain fair-complexioned Aborigines with ancestors of various ethnic or “racial” backgrounds had no choice but to identity with just one of those “races”.
In Canada, similar race-based thinking is leading to the kind of division - and public expense - I’d hoped we could be spared:
(Thanks to reader betapug.)
In Canada, similar race-based thinking is leading to the kind of division - and public expense - I’d hoped we could be spared:
The Federal Court of Appeal has largely upheld a landmark ruling that could extend Ottawa’s responsibilities to hundreds of thousands of aboriginal people who are not affiliated with specific reserves and have essentially no access to First Nations programs, services and rights...The “Metis Nation of Alberta” describes the people it claims to represent:
The Congress of Aboriginal Peoples and several Métis and non-status Indians took the federal government to court in 1999, alleging discrimination because they were not considered “Indians” under a section of the Constitution Act.
A Federal Court upheld a ruling declaring Métis should be considered ‘Indians’ under the Constitution. (CBC)
They argued they have been denied certain benefits, which included:
— access to the same health-care, education and other benefits made available to status Indians; — being allowed to hunt, trap, fish and gather on public lands; and,The Métis and non-status Indians scored a major victory last year when the Federal Court recognized them as “Indians” under the Constitution.
— the ability to negotiate and enter into treaties with the federal government.
The federal government appealed that ruling. On Thursday, the appeals court upheld part of the decision. It ruled that while Métis should remain Indians under the Constitution, extending that recognition to non-status Indians should be done on a case-by-case basis since it is a separate issue.
The Métis are one of three distinct Aboriginal peoples of Canada, recognized under the 1982 Constitution....For legal reasons it would be too risky for me to discuss the stupidity and danger of such “racial” divisions, which I believe are an insult to our common humanity and the Enlightenment tradition. It is ghastly that such a profound challenge to that tradition cannot be freely discussed.
The National definition of Metis ... states:
1.1 “Métis” means a person who self-identifies as
Métis, is distinct from other Aboriginal peoples, is of Historic Métis Nation ancestry, and isDefined Terms in National Definition of Métis
accepted by the Métis Nation.
1.2 “Historic Métis Nation” means the Aboriginal people then known as Métis or Half-breeds who resided in the Historic Métis Nation Homeland .
1.3 “Historic Métis Nation Homeland” means the area of land in west central North America used and occupied as the traditional territory of the Métis or Half-breeds as they were then known.
1.4 “Métis Nation” means the Aboriginal people descended from the Historic Métis Nation which is now comprised of all Métis Nation citizens and is one of the “aboriginal peoples of Canada” within the meaning of s.35 of the Constitution Act 1982.
1.5 “Distinct from other Aboriginal peoples” means distinct for cultural and nationhood purposes
The word Métis comes from the Latin “miscere”, to mix, and was used originally to describe the children of native women and French men. Other terms for these children were Country-born, Black Scots, and Half-breeds. The Métis quickly became intermediaries between European and Indian cultures, working as guides, interpreters, and provisionary to the new forts and new trading companies. Their villages sprang up from the Great Lakes to the Mackenzie Delta. The Métis Homeland encompasses parts of present-day Ontario, British Columbia, the Northwest Territories, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba.
(Thanks to reader betapug.)
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Blocked from Australia, refugees give Indonesia a miss. Not that persecuted, then
Andrew Bolt April 18 2014 (8:44am)
If they were real refugees they’d be glad to be safe in Indonesia:
(Thanks to readers Baden, Peter of Bellevue Hill and others.)
AUSTRALIA’S hard-line strategy against people smuggling has reduced asylum-seeker registrations in Indonesia by more than 80 per cent this year.So who are those tens of thousands of people our officials accepted as refugees, fleeing danger and persecution?
Between late December and the end of last month, the number of asylum-seekers registering had fallen from 100 people daily to about 100 people weekly, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees Indonesia representative, Manuel Jordao, said… Another key indicator of asylum-seekers’ diminished capability to board boats to Australia was the “no-show rate” at the Jakarta office falling from 50 per cent a year ago to 2 per cent now. This was the rate of people reporting for registration but failing to return to UNHCR — authorities assuming most no-shows had boarded boats.
(Thanks to readers Baden, Peter of Bellevue Hill and others.)
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Actually, there is a difference between Obeid’s Labor and O’Farrell’s Liberals
Andrew Bolt April 18 2014 (8:20am)
ABC presenter and university politics lecturer Waleed Aly demonstrates all the even-handedness for which both the ABC and academia are so famous.
The pocketing by a former union official (and then boyfriend of solicitor Julia Gillard#) ofhundreds of thousands of dollars from employers and the alleged use of pre-selection power to steer government contracts to mates? Nothing to see here, folks:
(# Julia Gillard insists she did nothing wrong. She advised her then boyfriend on the creation of his slush fund but says she did not know how he then used it.)
UPDATE
No difference?:
The pocketing by a former union official (and then boyfriend of solicitor Julia Gillard#) ofhundreds of thousands of dollars from employers and the alleged use of pre-selection power to steer government contracts to mates? Nothing to see here, folks:
...the complete non-scandal surrounding the Australian Workers Union and Julia Gillard’s time as a labour lawyer...And Labor - in which Obeid and his crooked mates served as government ministers and made and unmade premiers as they rorted taxpayers sideways - is really not much worse than the Liberals, which just had a Premier quit over a $3000 bottle of wine he failed to declare:
No Liberal has been found corrupt, but this episode reminds us that the Labor and Liberal parties do not represent two different worlds. There are shades of difference but they are both ultimately similar machines directed at similar goals and subject to the same power plays and moral compromises… Eddie Obeid might have been Labor’s heart of darkness, but he was only ever a step or two away from the nearest senior Liberal.True, this is not a contest between the evil and the pure. I suspect ICAC is about to expose more Liberals yet. But if we can’t make finer moral distinctions than this between Obeid’s Labor and O’Farrell’s Liberals then jaywalkers are no better than killers.
(# Julia Gillard insists she did nothing wrong. She advised her then boyfriend on the creation of his slush fund but says she did not know how he then used it.)
UPDATE
No difference?:
New South Wales Opposition Leader John Robertson has effectively admitted he should have reported a $3 million bribe offered to him when he was secretary of Unions NSW.Cut & Paste, 17 April:
Mr Robertson told Lateline if he had his time over again he would have reported the offer - made to him by murdered businessman Michael McGurk - to authorities.
“...Hindsight is a wonderful thing,” he told Lateline host Tony Jones.
“If I found myself in those circumstances again I’d report it,” he said. Mr Robertson is set to face a state parliamentary inquiry over his revelation to a newspaper last year that he was offered the bribe by Mr McGurk, who was later shot dead outside his home in Sydney’s Cremorne. Mr Robertson rejected the offer, which related to the sale of valuable union-owned land at Currawong in Sydney’s north.
Leo Shanahan, The Australian, July 12, 2011:(Thanks to readers Peter of Bellevue Hill and Geoff.)
THE former Labor government’s purchase of Currawong … took place less than two weeks before the election, the property was bought from a company with ALP associations, who sold it to the state for $1.2m more than they paid only a month earlier when they bought it from Unions NSW. Established by Unions NSW in 1947, the Currawong site formerly served as a subsidised holiday resort for union members and their families. In 2005 then Unions NSW chief John Robertson put Currawong on the market and in December 2006 an option on the property was granted to Eco-Villages, owned by … Labor affiliate Allen Linz. Eco paid a $1m deposit by November 2007, but the final sale to Eco wasn’t completed until January 28 this year for $11m, $4m less than initially agreed. The unions had previously rejected another offer of double the price offered by Sydney standover man Michael McGurk, who was shot dead outside his home two years later. Linz was a business partner of fellow developer David Tanevski, who had been hired by Robertson to advise on the sale. Both Linz and Tanevski were generous donors to the Labor Party, their company KWC Capital contributing $45,000 between 2003 and 2007.
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Baird has soft heart. Let’s see if he also has a hard head
Andrew Bolt April 18 2014 (8:05am)
There’s a lot to like about new NSW Premier Mike Baird, the more I like:
But that “if” is the one question still needing an answer:
Guiding Mr Baird through his career are three role models whose portraits hang on his office wall in NSW parliament. Attached to each is a small silver plaque for each of his guiding principles — integrity, passion, and results.If he also has a hard head, he should be good.
For integrity, Mr Baird has William Wilberforce, the deeply religious British politician who campaigned to end slavery in the early 1800s.
For passion, he has a picture of Martin Luther King making one of his fiery speeches.
And for results, he has Roden Cutler, the longest-serving governor of NSW, who won a Victoria Cross for courage fighting in Syria in 1941. However, there’s a living hero whose portrait is not on the wall that Mr Baird has spoken of privately. He has a brother who works with homeless people whom Mr Baird says is his real inspiration.
But that “if” is the one question still needing an answer:
Mr Baird admitted that in hindsight he had made a mistake appointing Mr Di Girolamo – a Liberal part fund-raiser who spoke twice a month to Mr O’Farrell – to the State Water Board in 2012. Mr Baird said he and Mr Di Girolamo were “not friends” but Mr Baird said he had held two meetings with him as Treasurer.And:
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Obeid deserves more than just bad headlines
Andrew Bolt April 18 2014 (7:04am)
Kate McClymont sure isn’t kidding:
The fact that Eddie Obeid is still tooling around town behind the wheel of his top-of-the-range Mercedes and enjoying the comforts of his $10 million palatial abode in Hunters Hill, is galling to many.
It is perhaps even more galling since the ashes of Barry O’Farrell’s leadership lie smouldering following his extraordinary self-immolation after he staked his premiership on the receipt of a $3000 bottle of wine. Mr Obeid, 70, possibly the most venal politician this state has ever known, has featured in an unprecedented seven corruption inquiries.
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Steyn on the great shut-up
Andrew Bolt April 18 2014 (12:16am)
In this week’s Spectator, always a must-read, the great Mark Steyn - fighting for a freedom too many Australians won’t defend:
And don’t miss this Speccie event:
These days, pretty much every story is really the same story:Read it all.
• In Galway, at the National University of Ireland, a speaker who attempts to argue against the BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions) programme against Israel is shouted down with cries of ‘F..king Zionist, f..king pricks… Get the f..k off our campus.’I heard a lot of that kind of talk during my battles with the Canadian ‘human rights’ commissions a few years ago: of course, we all believe in free speech, but it’s a question of how you ‘strike the balance’, where you ‘draw the line’… which all sounds terribly reasonable and Canadian, and apparently Australian, too. But in reality the point of free speech is for the stuff that’s over the line, and strikingly unbalanced. If free speech is only for polite persons of mild temperament within government-policed parameters, it isn’t free at all. So screw that.
• In California, Mozilla’s chief executive is forced to resign because he once made a political donation in support of the pre-revisionist definition of marriage.
• At Westminster, the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee declares that the BBC should seek ‘special clearance’ before it interviews climate sceptics, such as fringe wacko extremists like former Chancellor Nigel Lawson.
• In Massachusetts, Brandeis University withdraws its offer of an honorary degree to a black feminist atheist human rights campaigner from Somalia.
• In London, a multitude of liberal journalists and artists responsible for everything from Monty Python to Downton Abbey sign an open letter in favour of the first state restraints on the British press in three and a quarter centuries.
• And in Canberra the government is planning to repeal Section 18C — whoa, don’t worry, not all of it, just three or four adjectives; or maybe only two, or whatever it’s down to by now, after what Gay Alcorn in the Age described as the ongoing debate about ‘where to strike the balance between free speech in a democracy and protection against racial abuse in a multicultural society’.
But I don’t really think that many people these days are genuinely interested in ‘striking the balance’; they’ve drawn the line and they’re increasingly unashamed about which side of it they stand. What all the above stories have in common, whether nominally about Israel, gay marriage, climate change, Islam, or even freedom of the press, is that one side has cheerfully swapped that apocryphal Voltaire quote about disagreeing with what you say but defending to the death your right to say it for the pithier Ring Lardner line: ‘"Shut up,” he explained.’
A generation ago, progressive opinion at least felt obliged to pay lip service to the Voltaire shtick. These days, nobody’s asking you to defend yourself to the death: a mildly supportive retweet would do. But even that’s further than most of those in the academy, the arts, the media are prepared to go. ... I’m opposed to the notion of official ideology — not just fascism, Communism and Baathism, but the fluffier ones, too, like ‘multiculturalism’ and ‘climate change’ and ‘marriage equality’. Because the more topics you rule out of discussion — immigration, Islam, ‘gender fluidity’ — the more you delegitimise the political system. As your cynical political consultant sees it, a commitment to abolish Section 18C is more trouble than it’s worth: you’ll just spends weeks getting damned as cobwebbed racists seeking to impose a bigots’ charter when you could be moving the meter with swing voters by announcing a federal programmne of transgendered bathroom construction. But, beyond the shrunken horizons of spinmeisters, the inability to roll back something like 18C says something profound about where we’re headed: a world where real, primal, universal rights — like freedom of expression — come a distant second to the new tribalism of identity-group rights.
And don’t miss this Speccie event:
Joe Hockey, with Spectator publisher Andrew NeilHit the link to book.
The ‘world’s greatest treasurer’ Wayne Swan bequeathed a whopping national debt and federal deficit. How will his successor tackle these challenges in his first budget on May 13? Join the federal Treasurer Joe Hockey and Andrew Neil, publisher of The Spectator and BBC politics host, on Wednesday 23 April at the Doltone House, Hyde Park , Level 3, 181 Elizabeth Street, Sydney
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TIMES, THEY ARE A CHANGIN’ Larry Pickering
Thought of a cartoon but it’s too hard to draw so I’ll just tell you about it:
About 20 Kiwi rams all crawling over each others’ backs trying to get to a peep-hole in the hedge to see two ewes getting it off in the next paddock. That’s the way it works doesn’t it?
Anyway, I’ve got a better idea and no hope of drawing it.
I reckon if we drag Tasmania and New Zealand into Bass Strait and moor them both up to South Australia, we could fence the three of them off and forget about them.
They could then secede as ‘The Great Southern Land of the Marxist Tree-Hugging Homosexual’.
They could develop their own tourist economy, saving us the problem of supporting them.
Imagine it, Christine Milne dawn tours to view the almost-extinct Southern Bell Frog, the Spotted Tailed Quoll and the Forestry Industry.
[We could agree to restock them with some extinct species they have killed off themselves, like small businesses and Tassie Aborigines.]
Then off for a spot of latte with Bob Brown and his mate, toasting your own wholemeal bread over a log fire. Followed by a trip to the Julia Gillard Hall of Fame with the ever-popular Andrew Wilkie.
After a luncheon hosted by Penny Wong, an exhilarating rainbow hunt before viewing same-sex group marriages over at the NZ sector, finally returning to the boutique Islington Hotel where a sumptuous vegetarian quiche spread awaits, followed by the ever-popular Clitlickin’ Cowgirl and Cocksuckin’ Cowboy complimentary drinks.
Then it’s time to retire with strict segregation arrangements... blokes on the first floor and sheilas on the second.
Oh well, I’m starting to feel a bit left out being normal.
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A BOAT packed with 66 asylum-seekers managed to evade detection by border patrols and made it to the West Australian port of Geraldton.
Locals were stunned as the crowded fishing boat approached.
It is thought it came from Sri Lanka and had been at sea for around six weeks.
The boat's passengers were holding up a sign saying, ''We want to get to New Zealand”.
Mmmm. New Zealand eh? - Larry Pickering
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You have embarrassed us in front of the world.
He, not only clearly hates the American way...he also hates our closest friends....the British.
"Obama’s absence meant he was upstaged by the presence of F. W. de Klerk,former President of South Africa, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Australian Prime Minister John Howard, Canada’s Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Italy’s Prime Minister, Mario Monti, and Poland’s Prime Minister, Donald Tusk, just to name a few state leaders who decided that Lady Thatcher was worth honoring.
The leading chief-of-state who attended today’s memorial was Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II. Today was the first time the Queen of Great Britain attended the funeral of a prime minister since Sir Winston Churchill passed away forty-eight years ago.
The Obama Administration did, however, send a formal delegation to the funeral of Socialist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who died last month."
(Jim)>
The leading chief-of-state who attended today’s memorial was Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II. Today was the first time the Queen of Great Britain attended the funeral of a prime minister since Sir Winston Churchill passed away forty-eight years ago.
The Obama Administration did, however, send a formal delegation to the funeral of Socialist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who died last month."
(Jim)>
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- 1689 – Provincial militia and citizens gathered inBoston, and arrested officials of the Dominion of New England.
- 1847 – Mexican–American War: Winfield Scott's United States troops out-flanked and drove Santa Anna's larger Mexican army from a strong defensive position in theBattle of Cerro Gordo.
- 1906 – A major earthquake and resulting fires devastated San Francisco (damage pictured), killing at least 3,000 people and leaving more than half of the city's population homeless.
- 1958 – Controversial American poet Ezra Pound was released fromSt. Elizabeths Hospital in Washington, D.C., where he had been incarcerated for twelve years.
- 1996 – Israeli forces shelled Qana, Lebanon, during Operation Grapes of Wrath, killing over 100 civilians and injuring over 110 others at a UN compound.
- 796 – King Æthelred I of Northumbria is murdered in Corbridge by a group led by his ealdormen, Ealdred and Wada. The patrician Osbald is crowned, but abdicates within 27 days.
- 1025 – Bolesław Chrobry is crowned in Gniezno, becoming the first King of Poland.
- 1506 – The cornerstone of the current St. Peter's Basilica is laid.
- 1518 – Bona Sforza is crowned as queen consort of Poland.
- 1521 – Trial of Martin Luther begins its second day during the assembly of the Diet of Worms. He refuses to recant his teachings despite the risk of excommunication.
- 1689 – Bostonians rise up in rebellion against Sir Edmund Andros.
- 1738 – Real Academia de la Historia ("Royal Academy of History") is founded in Madrid.
- 1775 – American Revolution: The British advancement by sea begins; Paul Revere and other riders warn the countryside of the troop movements.
- 1831 – The University of Alabama is founded in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.
- 1847 – American victory at the battle of Cerro Gordo opens the way for invasion of Mexico.
- 1857 – "The Spirits Book" by Allan Kardec is published, marking the birth of Spiritualism in France.
- 1864 – Battle of Dybbøl: A Prussian-Austrian army defeats Denmark and gains control of Schleswig. Denmark surrenders the province in the following peace settlement.
- 1897 – The Greco-Turkish War is declared between Greece and the Ottoman Empire.
- 1899 – The St. Andrew's Ambulance Association is granted a royal charter by Queen Victoria.
- 1902 – The 7.5 Mw Guatemala earthquake shakes Guatemala with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VIII (Severe), killing between 800–2,000.
- 1906 – An earthquake and fire destroy much of San Francisco, California.
- 1909 – Joan of Arc is beatified in Rome.
- 1912 – The Cunard liner RMS Carpathia brings 705 survivors from the RMS Titanic to New York City.
- 1915 – French pilot Roland Garros is shot down and glides to a landing on the German side of the lines during World War I.
- 1923 – Yankee Stadium: "The House that Ruth Built" opens.
- 1925 – The International Amateur Radio Union is formed in Paris.[1]
- 1930 – The British Broadcasting Corporation announced that "there is no news" in their evening report.
- 1942 – World War II: The Doolittle Raid on Japan: Tokyo, Yokohama, Kobe and Nagoya are bombed.
- 1942 – Pierre Laval becomes Prime Minister of Vichy France.
- 1943 – World War II: Operation Vengeance, Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto is killed when his aircraft is shot down by U.S. fighters over Bougainville Island.
- 1945 – Over 1,000 bombers attack the small island of Heligoland, Germany.
- 1946 – The International Court of Justice holds its inaugural meeting in The Hague, Netherlands.
- 1949 – The Republic of Ireland Act comes into effect.
- 1949 – The keel for the aircraft carrier USS United States is laid down at Newport News Drydock and Shipbuilding. However, construction is canceled five days later, resulting in the Revolt of the Admirals.
- 1954 – Gamal Abdel Nasser seizes power in Egypt.
- 1955 – Twenty-nine nations meet at Bandung, Indonesia, for the first Asian-African Conference.
- 1980 – The Republic of Zimbabwe (formerly Rhodesia) comes into being, with Canaan Banana as the country's first President. The Zimbabwean dollar replaces the Rhodesian dollar as the official currency.
- 1983 – A suicide bomber in Lebanon destroys the United States embassy in Beirut, killing 63 people.
- 1988 – The United States launches Operation Praying Mantis against Iranian naval forces in the largest naval battle since World War II.
- 1992 – General Abdul Rashid Dostum revolts against President Mohammad Najibullah of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan and allies with Ahmad Shah Massoud to capture Kabul.
- 1996 – In Lebanon, at least 106 civilians are killed when the Israel Defense Forces shell the United Nations compound at Quana where more than 800 civilians had taken refuge.
- 1997 – The 1997 Red River flood begins and soon overwhelms the city of Grand Forks, North Dakota. Fire breaks out and spreads in downtown Grand Forks, but high water levels hamper efforts to reach the fire, leading to the destruction of 11 buildings.[2]
- 2007 – A series of bombings, two of them being suicides, occur in Baghdad, killing 198 and injuring 251.
- 2013 – A suicide bombing in a Baghdad cafe kills 27 people and injures another 65.
- 359 – Gratian, Roman emperor (d. 383)
- 588 – K'an II, Mayan ruler (d. 658)
- 812 – Al-Wathiq, Abbasid caliph (d. 847)
- 1446 – Ippolita Maria Sforza, Italian noble (d. 1484)
- 1480 – Lucrezia Borgia, daughter of Pope Alexander VI
- 1503 – Henry II of Navarre, (d. 1555)
- 1534 – William Harrison, English clergyman (d. 1593)
- 1580 – Thomas Middleton, English Jacobean playwright and poet (d. 1627)
- 1590 – Ahmed I, Ottoman Emperor (d. 1617)
- 1605 – Giacomo Carissimi, Italian priest and composer (d. 1674)
- 1666 – Jean-Féry Rebel, French violinist and composer (d. 1747)
- 1740 – Sir Francis Baring, 1st Baronet, English banker and politician (d. 1810)
- 1759 – Jacques Widerkehr, French cellist and composer (d. 1823)
- 1771 – Karl Philipp, Prince of Schwarzenberg (d. 1820)
- 1772 – David Ricardo, British economist and politician (d. 1823)
- 1794 – William Debenham, English founder of Debenhams (d. 1863)
- 1797 – Adolphe Thiers, French historian and politician, 2nd President of France (d. 1877)
- 1813 – James McCune Smith, African-American physician, apothecary, abolitionist, and author (d. 1865)
- 1819 – Carlos Manuel de Céspedes, Cuban lawyer and activist (d. 1874)
- 1819 – Franz von Suppé, Austrian composer and conductor (d. 1895)
- 1838 – Paul-Émile Lecoq de Boisbaudran, French chemist and academic (d. 1912)
- 1854 – Ludwig Levy, German architect (d. 1907)
- 1857 – Clarence Darrow, American lawyer (d. 1938)
- 1858 – Dhondo Keshav Karve, Indian educator and activist, Bharat Ratna Awardee (d. 1962)
- 1858 – Alexander Shirvanzade, Armenian playwright and author (d. 1935)
- 1863 – Count Leopold Berchtold, Austrian-Hungarian politician and diplomat, Joint Foreign Minister of Austria-Hungary (d. 1942)
- 1863 – Linton Hope, English sailor and architect (d. 1920)
- 1864 – Richard Harding Davis, American journalist and author (d. 1916)
- 1874 – Ivana Brlić-Mažuranić, Croatian author and poet (d. 1938)
- 1877 – Vicente Sotto, Filipino lawyer and politician (d. 1950)
- 1879 – Korneli Kekelidze, Georgian philologist and scholar (d. 1962)
- 1880 – Sam Crawford, American baseball player, coach, and umpire (d. 1968)
- 1882 – Isaac Babalola Akinyele, Nigerian ruler (d. 1964)
- 1882 – Leopold Stokowski, English conductor (d. 1977)
- 1884 – Jaan Anvelt, Estonian educator and politician (d. 1937)
- 1888 – Duffy Lewis, American baseball player, coach, and manager (d. 1979)
- 1889 – Jessie Street, Australian activist (d. 1970)
- 1892 – Eugene Houdry, French-American mechanical engineer and inventor (d. 1962)
- 1893 – Violette Morris, French shot putter and discus thrower (d. 1944)
- 1897 – Ardito Desio, Italian geologist and cartographer (d. 2001)
- 1897 – Per-Erik Hedlund, Swedish skier (d. 1975)
- 1898 – Patrick Hennessy, Irish soldier and businessman (d. 1981)
- 1900 – Bertha Isaacs, Bahamian teacher, tennis player, politician and women's rights activist (d. 1997)[3]
- 1901 – Al Lewis, American songwriter (d. 1967)
- 1901 – László Németh, Hungarian dentist, author, and playwright (d. 1975)
- 1902 – Waldemar Hammenhög, Swedish author (d. 1972)
- 1902 – Giuseppe Pella, Italian politician, 32nd Prime Minister of Italy (d. 1981)
- 1904 – Pigmeat Markham, African-American comedian, singer, and dancer (d. 1981)
- 1905 – Sydney Halter, Canadian lawyer and businessman (d. 1990)
- 1905 – George H. Hitchings, American physician and pharmacologist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1998)
- 1907 – Miklós Rózsa, Hungarian-American composer and conductor (d. 1995)
- 1911 – Ilario Bandini, Italian businessman and race car driver (d. 1992)
- 1911 – Maurice Goldhaber, Ukrainian Jewish-American physicist and academic (d. 2011)
- 1914 – Claire Martin, Canadian author (d. 2014)
- 1915 – Joy Davidman, Polish-Ukrainian Jewish American poet and author (d. 1960)
- 1916 – Carl Burgos, American illustrator (d. 1984)
- 1916 – Doug Peden, Canadian basketball player (d. 2005)
- 1917 – Ty LaForest, Canadian-American baseball player (d. 1947)
- 1918 – Gabriel Axel, Danish-French actor, director, and producer (d. 2014)
- 1918 – André Bazin, French critic and theorist (d. 1958)
- 1918 – Shinobu Hashimoto, Japanese director, producer, and screenwriter
- 1918 – Clifton Hillegass, American publisher, founded CliffsNotes (d. 2001)
- 1918 – Tony Mottola, American guitarist and composer (d. 2004)
- 1919 – Virginia O'Brien, American actress and singer (d. 2001)
- 1919 – Esther Afua Ocloo, Ghanaian entrepreneur and pioneer of microlending (d. 2002)
- 1920 – John F. Wiley, American football player and coach (d. 2013)
- 1921 – Jean Richard, French actor and singer (d. 2001)
- 1922 – Barbara Hale, American actress (d. 2017)
- 1922 – Lord Kitchner, Trinidadian singer (d. 2000)
- 1923 – Alfred Bieler, Swiss ice hockey player (d. 2013)
- 1923 – Beryl Platt, Baroness Platt of Writtle, English engineer and politician (d. 2015)
- 1924 – Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (d. 2005)
- 1924 – Henry Hyde, American commander, lawyer, and politician (d. 2007)
- 1924 – Roy Mason, English miner and politician, Secretary of State for Defence (d. 2015)
- 1925 – Marcus Schmuck, Austrian mountaineer and author (d. 2005)
- 1926 – Doug Insole, English cricketer
- 1927 – Samuel P. Huntington, American political scientist, author, and academic (d. 2008)
- 1927 – Tadeusz Mazowiecki, Polish journalist and politician, Prime Minister of Poland (d. 2013)
- 1927 – Charles Pasqua, French businessman and politician, French Minister of the Interior (d. 2015)
- 1928 – Karl Josef Becker, German cardinal and theologian (d. 2015)
- 1928 – Otto Piene, German sculptor and academic (d. 2014)
- 1929 – Peter Hordern, English soldier and politician
- 1930 – Clive Revill, New Zealand actor and singer
- 1931 – Bill Miles, American director and producer (d. 2013)
- 1934 – James Drury, American actor
- 1934 – George Shirley, American tenor and educator
- 1935 – Brian Clay, Australian rugby league player (d. 1987)
- 1935 – Costas Ferris, Egyptian-Greek actor, director, producer, and screenwriter
- 1936 – Roger Graef, American-English criminologist, director, and producer
- 1936 – Vladimir Hütt, Estonian physicist and philosopher (d. 1997)
- 1937 – Jan Kaplický, Czech architect, designed the Selfridges Building (d. 2009)
- 1937 – Tatyana Shchelkanova, Russian long jumper and heptathlete (d. 2011)
- 1937 – Teddy Taylor, Scottish journalist and politician, Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland
- 1939 – Glen Hardin, American pianist and arranger
- 1939 – Thomas J. Moyer, American lawyer and judge (d. 2010)
- 1940 – Joseph L. Goldstein, American biochemist and geneticist, Nobel Prize laureate
- 1940 – Mike Vickers, English guitarist, saxophonist, and songwriter
- 1941 – Michael D. Higgins, Irish sociologist and politician, 9th President of Ireland
- 1942 – Michael Beloff, English lawyer and academic
- 1942 – Steve Blass, American baseball player and sportscaster
- 1942 – Robert Christgau, American journalist and critic
- 1942 – Jochen Rindt, German-Austrian race car driver (d. 1970)
- 1944 – Kathy Acker, American author and poet (d. 1997)
- 1944 – Frances D'Souza, Baroness D'Souza, English academic and politician
- 1944 – Robert Hanssen, American FBI agent and double agent
- 1944 – Philip Jackson, Scottish sculptor and photographer
- 1945 – Bernard Arcand, Canadian anthropologist and author (d. 2009)
- 1945 – Richard Bausch, American novelist and short story writer
- 1945 – Robert Bausch, American novelist and short story writer
- 1946 – Hayley Mills, English actress
- 1946 – Tommy Shannon, American bass guitarist
- 1947 – Moses Blah, Liberian general and politician, 23rd President of Liberia (d. 2013)
- 1947 – Dorothy Lyman, American actress
- 1947 – Cindy Pickett, American actress
- 1947 – Jerzy Stuhr, Polish actor, director, and screenwriter
- 1947 – James Woods, American actor and producer
- 1948 – Régis Wargnier, French director, producer, and screenwriter
- 1949 – Geoff Bodine, American race car driver
- 1950 – Paul Callery, Australian footballer
- 1950 – Tina Chow, American model and jewelry designer (d. 1992)
- 1950 – Kenny Ortega, American director, producer, and choreographer
- 1950 – Grigory Sokolov, Russian pianist and composer
- 1951 – Ricardo Fortaleza, Australian-Filipino boxer and coach
- 1951 – Pierre Pettigrew, Canadian businessman and politician, 5th Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs
- 1953 – Rick Moranis, Canadian-American actor, comedian, singer and screenwriter
- 1954 – Robert Greenberg, American pianist and composer
- 1956 – Eric Roberts, American actor
- 1957 – Ian Campbell, Australian jumper
- 1958 – Lisa Edwards, Australian singer
- 1958 – Malcolm Marshall, Barbadian cricketer and coach (d. 1999)
- 1959 – Susan Faludi, American journalist and author
- 1959 – Frank Mulholland, Lord Mulholland, Scottish judge, former Solicitor General for Scotland and Lord Advocate
- 1960 – Yelena Zhupiyeva-Vyazova, Ukrainian runner
- 1961 – Kelly Hansen, American singer-songwriter
- 1961 – Jane Leeves, English actress and dancer
- 1961 – John Podhoretz, American journalist and author
- 1962 – Jeff Dunham, American comedian and ventriloquist
- 1962 – Nick Farr-Jones, Australian rugby player and sportscaster
- 1963 – Eric McCormack, Canadian-American actor and producer
- 1963 – Conan O'Brien, American actor, producer, screenwriter, and talk show host
- 1963 – Phil Simmons, Trinidadian cricketer
- 1963 – Peter Van Loan, Canadian lawyer and politician, 16th Canadian Minister of International Trade
- 1964 – Niall Ferguson, Scottish historian and academic
- 1964 – Rithy Panh, Cambodian director and screenwriter
- 1966 – Valeri Kamensky, Russian ice hockey player
- 1967 – Maria Bello, American actress and writer
- 1969 – Keith DeCandido, American author
- 1969 – Stefan Schwarz, Swedish footballer and manager
- 1969 – Robert Změlík, Czech decathlete
- 1970 – Rico Brogna, American baseball player and coach
- 1970 – Greg Eklund, American drummer and guitarist
- 1970 – Saad Hariri, Saudi Arabian-Lebanese businessman and politician, 33rd Prime Minister of Lebanon
- 1970 – François Leroux, Canadian ice hockey player and radio host
- 1970 – Tatiana Stefanidou, Greek journalist and talk show host
- 1971 – Oleg Petrov, Russian ice hockey player
- 1971 – Graham Rowntree, English rugby player
- 1971 – David Tennant, Scottish actor
- 1972 – Rosa Clemente, American journalist and activist
- 1972 – Eli Roth, American actor, director, producer, and screenwriter
- 1972 – Michael Rutter, English motorcycle racer
- 1973 – Derrick Brooks, American football player
- 1973 – Brady Clark, American baseball player
- 1973 – Haile Gebrselassie, Ethiopian runner
- 1974 – Millie Corretjer, Puerto Rican-American actress and singer
- 1974 – Mark Tremonti, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer
- 1976 – Gavin Creel, American actor and singer
- 1976 – Melissa Joan Hart, American actress, director, and producer
- 1976 – Andrew Ilie, Romanian-Australian tennis player
- 1976 – Justin Ross, American politician
- 1976 – Staffan Strand, Swedish high jumper
- 1977 – Dan LaCouture, American ice hockey player
- 1977 – Cindy Taylor, Paraguayan model and actress
- 1979 – Michael Bradley, American basketball player and coach
- 1979 – Ethan Cohn, American actor
- 1979 – Matt Cooper, Australian rugby league player
- 1979 – Anthony Davidson, English race car driver
- 1979 – Kourtney Kardashian, American model and businesswoman
- 1980 – Rabiu Afolabi, Nigerian footballer and manager
- 1980 – Justin Levens, American mixed martial artist (d. 2008)
- 1981 – Brian Buscher, American baseball player
- 1981 – Milan Jovanović, Serbian footballer
- 1981 – Aldo Ramírez, Colombian footballer
- 1981 – Audrey Tang, Taiwanese computer scientist and academic
- 1982 – Ibrahim al-Asiri, Saudi Arabian terrorist
- 1982 – Greg Camarillo, American football player
- 1982 – Ricardo Colclough, Canadian-American football player
- 1982 – Simone Farina, Italian footballer
- 1982 – Scott Hartnell, Canadian ice hockey player
- 1982 – Blair Late, American singer-songwriter and journalist
- 1982 – Darren Sutherland, Irish boxer (d. 2009)
- 1982 – Marie-Élaine Thibert, Canadian singer
- 1983 – Miguel Cabrera, Venezuelan baseball player
- 1983 – Reeve Carney, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and actor
- 1984 – Red Bryant, American football player
- 1984 – America Ferrera, American actress and producer
- 1985 – Łukasz Fabiański, Polish footballer
- 1986 – Billy Butler, American baseball player
- 1986 – Maurice Edu, American soccer player
- 1986 – Taylor Griffin, American basketball player
- 1986 – Conrad Logan, Irish footballer
- 1986 – Efraín Velarde, Mexican footballer
- 1987 – Brett Deledio, Australian footballer
- 1987 – Danny Guthrie, English footballer
- 1987 – Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, English model and actress
- 1987 – Samantha Jade, Australian singer-songwriter and actress
- 1987 – Ivan Tričkovski, Macedonian footballer
- 1988 – Andre Frolov, Estonian footballer
- 1988 – Alexander Hauck, South African-German rugby player
- 1989 – Simas Buterlevičius, Lithuanian basketball player
- 1989 – Jessica Jung, Korean American singer, songwriter, actress, and fashion designer
- 1990 – Henderson Álvarez, Venezuelan baseball player
- 1990 – Anna van der Breggen, Dutch cyclist
- 1990 – Jake Howells, English footballer
- 1990 – Wojciech Szczęsny, Polish footballer
- 1990 – Junior Torunarigha, Nigerian footballer
- 1993 – Matt Salisbury, English cricketer
- 1993 – Nathan Sykes, English singer-songwriter
- 1995 – Divock Origi, Belgian footballer
- 1996 – Mariah Bell, American figure skater
- 1996 – Ioana Ducu, Romanian tennis player
- 1997 – Matthias Blübaum, German chess grandmaster
- 727 – Agallianos Kontoskeles, Byzantine commander and rebel leader
- 796 – Æthelred I, king of Northumbria
- 850 – Perfectus, Spanish monk and martyr
- 909 – Dionysius II, Syriac Orthodox patriarch of Antioch
- 943 – Fujiwara no Atsutada, Japanese nobleman and poet (b. 906)
- 963 – Stephen Lekapenos, co-emperor of the Byzantine Empire
- 1161 – Theobald of Bec, French-English archbishop (b. 1090)
- 1176 – Galdino della Sala, Italian archdeacon and saint
- 1552 – John Leland, English poet and historian (b. 1502)
- 1555 – Polydore Vergil, English historian (b. 1470)
- 1556 – Luigi Alamanni, Italian poet and politician (b. 1495)
- 1567 – Wilhelm von Grumbach, German adventurer (b. 1503)
- 1587 – John Foxe, English historian and author (b. 1516)
- 1636 – Julius Caesar, English judge and politician (b. 1557)
- 1650 – Simonds d'Ewes, English lawyer and politician (b. 1602)
- 1674 – John Graunt, English demographer and statistician (b. 1620)
- 1689 – George Jeffreys, 1st Baron Jeffreys, Welsh judge and politician, Lord Chancellor of Great Britain (b. 1648)
- 1732 – Louis Feuillée, French astronomer, geographer, and botanist (b. 1660)
- 1763 – Marie-Josephte Corriveau, Canadian murderer (b. 1733)
- 1794 – Charles Pratt, 1st Earl Camden, English lawyer, judge, and politician, Lord Chancellor of Great Britain (b. 1714)
- 1796 – Johan Wilcke, Swedish physicist and academic (b. 1732)
- 1802 – Erasmus Darwin, English physician and botanist (b. 1731)
- 1832 – Jeanne-Elisabeth Chaudet, French painter (b. 1761)
- 1859 – Tatya Tope, Indian general (b. 1814)
- 1864 – Juris Alunāns, Latvian philologist and linguist (b. 1832)
- 1873 – Justus von Liebig, German chemist and academic (b. 1803)
- 1898 – Gustave Moreau, French painter and academic (b. 1826)
- 1906 – Luis Martín, Spanish religious leader, 24th Superior-General of the Society of Jesus (b. 1846)
- 1917 – Vladimir Serbsky, Russian psychiatrist and academic (b. 1858)
- 1936 – Milton Brown, American singer and bandleader (b. 1903)
- 1936 – Ottorino Respighi, Italian composer and conductor (b. 1879)
- 1938 – George Bryant, American archer (b. 1878)
- 1942 – Aleksander Mitt, Estonian speed skater (b. 1903)
- 1942 – Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, American heiress, sculptor and art collector, founded the Whitney Museum of American Art (b. 1875)
- 1943 – Isoroku Yamamoto, Japanese admiral (b. 1884)
- 1945 – John Ambrose Fleming, English physicist and engineer, invented the vacuum tube (b. 1849)
- 1945 – Ernie Pyle, American journalist and soldier (b. 1900)
- 1947 – Jozef Tiso, Slovak priest and politician, President of Slovakia (b. 1887)
- 1951 – Óscar Carmona, Portuguese field marshal and politician, 11th President of Portugal (b. 1869)
- 1955 – Albert Einstein, German-American physicist, engineer, and academic (b. 1879)
- 1958 – Maurice Gamelin, Belgian-French general (b. 1872)
- 1959 – Irving Cummings, American actor, director, and producer (b. 1888)
- 1959 – Percy Smith, English footballer and manager (b. 1880)
- 1963 – Meyer Jacobstein, American academic and politician (b. 1880)
- 1964 – Ben Hecht, American director, producer, and screenwriter (b. 1894)
- 1965 – Guillermo González Camarena, Mexican engineer (b. 1917)
- 1967 – Karl Miller, German footballer (b. 1913)
- 1974 – Marcel Pagnol, French author, playwright, and director (b. 1895)
- 1986 – Marcel Dassault, French businessman, founded Dassault Aviation (b. 1892)
- 1988 – Pierre Desproges, French journalist and actor (b. 1939)
- 1988 – Oktay Rıfat Horozcu, Turkish poet and playwright (b. 1914)
- 1995 – Arturo Frondizi, Argentinian lawyer and politician, 32nd President of Argentina (b. 1908)
- 1996 – Brook Berringer, American football player (b. 1973)
- 1996 – Bernard Edwards, American bass player and producer (b. 1952)
- 1997 – Edward Barker, English cartoonist (b. 1950)
- 1998 – Terry Sanford, American lieutenant and politician, 65th Governor of North Carolina (b. 1917)
- 2002 – Thor Heyerdahl, Norwegian ethnographer and explorer (b. 1914)
- 2002 – Wahoo McDaniel, American football player and wrestler (b. 1938)
- 2003 – Edgar F. Codd, English-American soldier, pilot, and computer scientist (b. 1923)
- 2004 – Kamisese Mara, Fijian politician, 2nd President of Fiji (b. 1920)
- 2005 – Sam Mills, American football player and coach (b. 1959)
- 2006 – Mercedes Palomino, Spanish-born Quebec actor and theatre director (b. 1913)
- 2007 – Iccho Itoh, Japanese politician (b. 1945)
- 2008 – Germaine Tillion, French ethnologist and anthropologist (b. 1907)
- 2012 – Dick Clark, American television host and producer, founded Dick Clark Productions (b. 1929)
- 2012 – René Lépine, Canadian businessman and philanthropist (b. 1929)
- 2012 – K. D. Wentworth, American author (b. 1951)
- 2013 – Cordell Mosson, American bass player (b. 1952)
- 2013 – Steuart Pringle, English general (b. 1928)
- 2013 – Goran Švob, Croatian philosopher and author (b. 1947)
- 2013 – Anne Williams, English activist (b. 1951)
- 2014 – Guru Dhanapal, Indian director and producer (b. 1959)
- 2014 – Sanford Jay Frank, American screenwriter and producer (b. 1954)
- 2014 – Eduard Kosolapov, Russian footballer (b. 1976)
- 2014 – David McClarty, Northern Irish politician (b. 1951)
- 2014 – Brian Priestman, English conductor and academic (b. 1927)
- 2014 – Dylan Tombides, Australian footballer (b. 1994)
- 2015 – Roger Lobo, Macanese-Hong Kong businessman and politician (b. 1923)
- 2015 – Erwin Waldner, German footballer (b. 1933)
- 2016 – Aleah Stanbridge, Swedish singer (b. 1977)
- 2017 – Vic Albury, Major League pitcher (b. 1947)
- Christian feast day:
- Army Day (Iran)
- Coma Patients' Day (Poland)
- Friend's Day (Brazil)
- Independence Day, celebrates the independence of Zimbabwe from the United Kingdom in 1980.
- International Day For Monuments and Sites
- Invention Day (Japan)
- Victory over the Teutonic Knights in the Battle of the Ice (Russia)
“For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.” - 1 Corinthians 1:18
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Morning and Evening by Charles Spurgeon
Morning
"Ye are come to the blood of sprinkling, that speaketh better things than that of Abel."
Hebrews 12:24
Hebrews 12:24
Reader, have you come to the blood of sprinkling? The question is not whether you have come to a knowledge of doctrine, or an observance of ceremonies, or to a certain form of experience, but have you come to the blood of Jesus? The blood of Jesus is the life of all vital godliness. If you have truly come to Jesus, we know how you came--the Holy Spirit sweetly brought you there. You came to the blood of sprinkling with no merits of your own. Guilty, lost, and helpless, you came to take that blood, and that blood alone, as your everlasting hope. You came to the cross of Christ, with a trembling and an aching heart; and oh! what a precious sound it was to you to hear the voice of the blood of Jesus! The dropping of his blood is as the music of heaven to the penitent sons of earth. We are full of sin, but the Saviour bids us lift our eyes to him, and as we gaze upon his streaming wounds, each drop of blood, as it falls, cries, "It is finished; I have made an end of sin; I have brought in everlasting righteousness." Oh! sweet language of the precious blood of Jesus! If you have come to that blood once, you will come to it constantly. Your life will be "Looking unto Jesus." Your whole conduct will be epitomized in this--"To whom coming." Not to whom I have come, but to whom I am always coming. If thou hast ever come to the blood of sprinkling, thou wilt feel thy need of coming to it every day. He who does not desire to wash in it every day, has never washed in it at all. The believer ever feels it to be his joy and privilege that there is still a fountain opened. Past experiences are doubtful food for Christians; a present coming to Christ alone can give us joy and comfort. This morning let us sprinkle our door-post fresh with blood, and then feast upon the Lamb, assured that the destroying angel must pass us by.
Evening
Evermore the worldling's cry is, "Who will show us any good?" He seeks satisfaction in earthly comforts, enjoyments, and riches. But the quickened sinner knows of only one good. "O that I knew where I might find Him !" When he is truly awakened to feel his guilt, if you could pour the gold of India at his feet, he would say, "Take it away: I want to find Him." It is a blessed thing for a man, when he has brought his desires into a focus, so that they all centre in one object. When he has fifty different desires, his heart resembles a mire of stagnant water, spread out into a marsh, breeding miasma and pestilence; but when all his desires are brought into one channel, his heart becomes like a river of pure water, running swiftly to fertilize the fields. Happy is he who hath one desire, if that one desire be set on Christ, though it may not yet have been realized. If Jesus be a soul's desire, it is a blessed sign of divine work within. Such a man will never be content with mere ordinances. He will say, "I want Christ; I must have him--mere ordinances are of no use to me; I want himself; do not offer me these; you offer me the empty pitcher, while I am dying of thirst; give me water, or I die. Jesus is my soul's desire. I would see Jesus!"
Is this thy condition, my reader, at this moment? Hast thou but one desire, and is that after Christ? Then thou art not far from the kingdom of heaven. Hast thou but one wish in thy heart, and that one wish that thou mayst be washed from all thy sins in Jesus' blood? Canst thou really say, "I would give all I have to be a Christian; I would give up everything I have and hope for, if I might but feel that I have an interest in Christ?" Then, despite all thy fears, be of good cheer, the Lord loveth thee, and thou shalt come out into daylight soon, and rejoice in the liberty wherewith Christ makes men free.
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Today's reading: 2 Samuel 1-2, Luke 14:1-24 (NIV)
View today's reading on Bible GatewayToday's Old Testament reading: 2 Samuel 1-2
David Hears of Saul's Death
1 After the death of Saul, David returned from striking down the Amalekites and stayed in Ziklag two days. 2 On the third day a man arrived from Saul's camp with his clothes torn and dust on his head. When he came to David, he fell to the ground to pay him honor.
3 "Where have you come from?" David asked him.
He answered, "I have escaped from the Israelite camp."
4 "What happened?" David asked. "Tell me."
"The men fled from the battle," he replied. "Many of them fell and died. And Saul and his son Jonathan are dead...."
Today's New Testament reading: Luke 14:1-24
Jesus at a Pharisee's House
1 One Sabbath, when Jesus went to eat in the house of a prominent Pharisee, he was being carefully watched. 2 There in front of him was a man suffering from abnormal swelling of his body. 3 Jesus asked the Pharisees and experts in the law, "Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath or not?" 4 But they remained silent. So taking hold of the man, he healed him and sent him on his way.
5 Then he asked them, "If one of you has a child or an ox that falls into a well on the Sabbath day, will you not immediately pull it out?" 6 And they had nothing to say....
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