After Trump's announcement, journalists from News.com.au spring into action trying to oppose it. One article claims that Space Force One is a threat to future peace. An argument being that China has twice blown up satellites in space, and if the US does that then it may get dangerous in orbit. Not to be out done, they also release an article saying settling a base on Mars is not possible. The reasoning opposing a Mars base is that Mars has not sufficient atmosphere. Mars may not be able to maintain air pressure because of her volcano, Olympus Mons, which reaches into space. That is true. Probably the best that can happen on Mars is an advanced base dug into the ground. Powered by nuclear reactors. With an extensive dome cover for a greenhouse. Similarly, a moon base must be dug in. but may never be extensive.
The beauty of a moon, or Mars base is to overcome the gravity well. But the next living space for a large population is probably the Saturn moon of Titan, which is bigger than Mars and has an atmosphere and is shielded by Saturn's magnetic shield. Providing heat to Titan and growing plants there would change the atmosphere and make it liveable. The second most desirable planet for terraforming is Venus. Venus needs to be cooled and her atmospheric pressure reduced. Cooling Venus could be achieved by reflecting sunlight away and locking heat into rocks on the surface. The atmosphere pressure could be reduced by siphoning Hydrogen from Jupiter's atmosphere and ferrying it to Venus. Hydrogen in Venus's atmosphere would mix with its' atmosphere to produce water and reduce air pressure. It could take thousands of years to terraform Venus. Probably Trump won't be President, then.
A daily column on what the ALP have as a policy, supported by a local member, and how it has 'helped' the local community. I'll stop if I cannot identify a policy. Feel free to make suggestions. Contact me on FB, not twitter. I have twitter, but never look at it.
Gabrielle Williams was appointed Parliamentary Secretary for Carers and Volunteers, working with the Minister for Housing, Disability and Ageing and the Minister for Families and Children. Seventeen have been arrested by police who are probing the Red Shirt fraud that cost the taxpayer $388k prior to the 2014 Victorian State election. The ALP have spent over a million dollars of tax money resisting inquiry into the corruption. Then the ALP returned the $388k but denied it was corrupt. Then the ALP declared the Liberals had done something similar which the ALP declared was corrupt, but they could not detail what it was, or how it was different to what the ALP had done. Now seventeen have been arrested, but none of the six members of parliament, including the attorney general or police minister. The Libs are demanding the six stand aside. Where Williams stands on this is not known. However, Neil Mitchell on 3AW announced this morning there are plans for a day devoted to removing the pronouns 'he' and 'she.'
As part of the November 24th Vic election campaign I have a petition I want to bring before the Opposition Leader Matthew Guy. I believe Matthew will be the next premier of Victoria and so I am petitioning him as I raise the issues of Employment, Crime and Education in Dandenong. I am also seeking money for my campaign. I don't have party resources, and so my campaign is on foot, and on the internet. Any money I receive that is not spent on the campaign will go to Grow 4 Life. I am asking questions like "What do you love about Dandenong?" and "If you could change something in Dandenong to make it better, what would it be?" I'm not limiting the questions to state issues. I'm happy to discuss anything, and get things done.
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 One Bottle of Beer
An extension of the work of other, better artists .. cf
by Bass2x
By My Quest Miles
Barretok
Audio is at http://www.icompositions.com/music/song.php?sid=68852
This is part of the larger project
=== from 2017 ===
Some things should not happen, but they do. Bullying is unacceptable. But some claims from different quarters seem overstated. Trump is called a bully for the firing of many in the West Wing recently. Only technically, none were fired, but all resigned. One who resigned, Mooch, seemed to have nailed his brief of getting others to resign, and then left. Is bullying entertainment? It was like several seasons of the Apprentice. But, what would the White House have to do with a tv show? A Boston College psychology professor has claimed bullying is rife due to powerlessness related to children in public schools, who cannot avoid bullying. But the Libertarian report seems overstated, in my experience dysfunctional schools have more bullying than well disciplined ones. But children have reputedly less power in well disciplined schools. The Australian Human Rights Council has claimed sexual bullying is rife with a flawed report which suggests nothing as the standard is too low to assess. It is like the AHRC are trying to bully the government. A video of police tasing a restrained teenager who is allegedly a drug dealer is part of a US law suit. It looks inexcusable. But as with Dylan Voller, there may be an explanation.
For some, at the moment, the Sex Party has more credibility.
1203 – Isaac II Angelos, restored Eastern Roman Emperor, declares his son Alexios IV Angelos co-emperor after pressure from the forces of the Fourth Crusade.
1291 – The Old Swiss Confederacy is formed with the signature of the Federal Charter.
1469 – Louis XI of France founds the chivalric order called the Order of Saint Michael in Amboise.
1498 – Christopher Columbus becomes the first European to visit what is now Venezuela.
1620 – Speedwell leaves Delfshaven to bring pilgrims to America by way of England.
1664 – Ottoman forces are defeated in the battle of Saint Gotthard by an Austrianarmy led by Raimondo Montecuccoli, resulting in the Peace of Vasvár.
1714 – George, Elector of Hanover, becomes King George I of Great Britain, marking the beginning of the Georgian era of British history.
1759 – Seven Years' War: The Battle of Minden, an allied Anglo-German army victory over the French. In Britain this was one of a number of events that constituted the Annus Mirabilis of 1759 and is celebrated as Minden Day by certain British Army regiments.
1774 – British scientist Joseph Priestley discovers oxygen gas, corroborating the prior discovery of this element by German-Swedish chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele.
1798 – French Revolutionary Wars: Battle of the Nile (Battle of Aboukir Bay): Battle begins when a British fleet engages the French Revolutionary Navy fleet in an unusual night action.
1907 – The start of the first Scout camp on Brownsea Island, the origin of the worldwide Scouting movement.
1911 – Harriet Quimby takes her pilot's test and becomes the first U.S. woman to earn an Aero Club of America aviator's certificate.
1914 – The German Empire declares war on the Russian Empire at the opening of World War I. The Swiss Army mobilizes because of World War I.
1927 – The Nanchang Uprising marks the first significant battle in the Chinese Civil Warbetween the Kuomintang and Chinese Communist Party. This day is commemorated as the anniversary of the founding of the People's Liberation Army.
1936 – The Olympics opened in Berlin with a ceremony presided over by Adolf Hitler.
1937 – Josip Broz Tito reads the resolution "Manifesto of constitutional congress of KPH" to the constitutive congress of KPH (Croatian Communist Party) in woods near Samobor.
1943 – World War II: Operation Tidal Wave also known as "Black Sunday", was a failed American attempt to destroy Romanian oil fields.
1944 – World War II: The Warsaw Uprising against the Nazi German occupation breaks out in Warsaw, Poland.
1946 – Leaders of the Russian Liberation Army, a force of Russian prisoners of war that collaborated with Nazi Germany, are executed in Moscow, Soviet Union for treason.
1957 – The United States and Canada form the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD).
1960 – Dahomey (later renamed Benin) declares independence from France.
1960 – Islamabad is declared the federal capital of the Government of Pakistan.
1961 – U.S. Defense Secretary Robert McNamara orders the creation of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), the nation's first centralized military espionage organization.
1964 – The former Belgian Congo is renamed the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
1966 – Charles Whitman kills 16 people at the University of Texas at Austin before being killed by the police.
1966 – Purges of intellectuals and imperialists becomes official China policy at the beginning of the Cultural Revolution.
1968 – The coronation is held of Hassanal Bolkiah, the 29th Sultan of Brunei.
1974 – Cyprus dispute: The United Nations Security Council authorizes the UNFICYP to create the "Green Line", dividing Cyprus into two zones.
1980 – Vigdís Finnbogadóttir is elected President of Iceland and becomes the world's first democratically elected female head of state.
1980 – A train crash kills 18 people in County Cork, Ireland.
1981 – MTV begins broadcasting in the United States and airs its first video, "Video Killed the Radio Star" by The Buggles.
1984 – Commercial peat-cutters discover the preserved bog body of a man, called Lindow Man, at Lindow Moss, Cheshire, England.
1993 – The Great Mississippi and Missouri Rivers Flood of 1993 comes to a peak.
2004 – A supermarket fire kills 396 people and injures 500 others in Asunción, Paraguay.
2007 – The I-35W Mississippi River bridge spanning the Mississippi River in Minneapolis, Minnesota, collapses during the evening rush hour.
2008 – The Beijing–Tianjin Intercity Railway begins operation as the fastest commuter rail system in the world.
2008 – Eleven mountaineers from international expeditions died on K2, the second-highest mountain on Earth in the worst single accident in the history of K2 mountaineering.
=== from 2016 ===
Keep in mind historical parallels. What has happened in the NT is terrible, but mainly the fault of ALP policy. Shortly after Rudd won government in '07, he hired lawyers to see if he could overthrow the intervention. He couldn't, but he did water it down. Not because it wasn't effective, but because it was a political look he needed to address, symbolically the conservatives had made the right call. The issue of child protection and detention predates Heiner. Anyway, long story short, the issue was not run now to expose the NT Country Liberals, but to immunise the ALP when they win the election next month. And Turnbull has fumbled badly and panicked. The parallel goes back to President Hoover and US blacks exploited by Democrats during the Louisiana hurricane that left many hungry in the 1920's. Before Hoover was President, he was a civil engineer contracted to feed everyone in Louisiana. But Democrats stole aid packages from black peoples at gun point. Hoover was appalled, but was convinced by local authorities to not blow up the issue. So when he was President, huckster FDR pinned Hoover with the blame and won the black lobbies and the Democrats hold them to this day. The ALP are responsible for the bad governance of prisons in NT, but they are going to blame the country Liberals with ABC bias helping. And the election pitch for the ALP "Vote for us, we take Aborigines for granted and hurt them."
For some, at the moment, the Sex Party has more credibility.
=== from 2015 ===
On this day in 1991, US President George H. W. Bush delivered a speech in the parliament of the Ukrainian SSR in which he warned against Ukrainian independence. The elder President George Bush is not as respected as Reagan or his son. Republicans did not support him for a second term over a flake like Clinton. George Bush sr had attempted to more secularise his party and the religious right, who are not capable of making someone President, are capable of denying it to someone. Clinton benefited from the religious right, even as he despised it. But Reagan's success had done something dangerous and it needed to be corrected. The Democrat Party had lost the Presidency while it was their turn. The result was they became even worse, more corrupt, more inept. The US is often called a headless bird with two right wings. But the weakened Democrat policy only makes it one right wing. Democrats are still corrupt and inept, but they have a possibility of building which the GOP can't do for them. Ukraine is like the Dems. They are a post Soviet government and have to learn how to be responsible. But they aren't. Yet.
From 2014
Mark Antony had won the naval battle off Alexandria in 30 BC, but he had lost the ability to flee the superior force of Octavian. Probably Octavian wanted Antony to surrender to him so he could unify Rome, but Antony took the other option and suicided so as to allow the survival of his men and family who would have been eliminated in the persecution which would have followed. Antony suicided on this day, and Octavian entered Alexandria, bringing it into the Roman Republic and ending the line of Pharaoh rule. But Antony was to get revenge on Rome for his death at fifty three years of age. His grandson was Nero.
It was ninety nine years later that Antony had his revenge. Nero had suicided and a tribe of Gauls in Netherlands on Batavia had a leader who sided with Vespasian who had eventually succeeded Nero. Gaius Julius Civilis is a stranger to written history. We do not know of his birth or death, but clearly he was able to claim some Roman citizenry through his name. He led the Batavians in revolt and almost got France to declare itself an independent kingdom. But in betraying Vespasian and with divided followers, Civilis lost and sued for peace. Nothing is known of him after. But he probably changed the world. Vespasian tasked his son Titus to crush Jerusalem, which he did in 70 and Masada in 73.
Today is Minden Day, the Battle being part of the series of fortuitous events of Annus Mirabllis of 1759. It happened in pre unification Germany and the belligerents were Great Britain with Hanover fighting France with Saxony. The miraculous win happened when there was a mistake in orders, leading to a single column of infantry taking on the triple line of cavalry .. and surviving to win. One British General Sackville had been in charge of British cavalry and begged to be court martial-ed over the allegation he had delayed their going to infantry support until it didn't matter. Sackville would later be a failure in the US Revolutionary war. The result of the battle was that France was unable to launch assaults for another year.
Horatio Nelson was born in the Annus Mirabilis of 1759. On this evening in 1798, he had one of his three stunning successes, this one at Aboukir Bay against France in Egypt. France had thirteen ships of the line anchored and ready to broadside any who sailed on the seaward side. Nelson attacked at night from the undefended shore side. The results are telling. Of thirteen ships of the line for Britain, Nelson lost none but 218 killed and 677 wounded. The french lost two ships of the line destroyed, and nine captured, as well as 5000 casualties and 3900 captured. Napoleon was forced to flee Egypt on a small pinnace. Napoleon had intended to colonise Egypt. He decided to invade England. Seven years later Nelson would have his greatest victory over Napoleon at Trafalgar. But until then, Nelson would be given great gifts from the King of two Italies and meet Emma Hamilton and her husband.
There is a difference between inventing and discovering. On this day in 1774, Joseph Priestly discovered Oxygen Gas. In 1800, Britain unified with Ireland. In 1834, Slavery was abolished in the British empire. In 1894 began the first Japanese vs Chinese wars. In 1914, Germany declared war on Russia and the Swiss Army mobilised. In 1927, the Nanchang uprising saw the communists square off against the nationalists, creating the communist Peoples Liberation Army (PLA). In 1946, Stalin had executed Soviet POW officers who had been co-opted to fight with Germans. In 1957 US and Canada form NORAD. In 1961 US forms DIA to coordinate military espionage. In 1966, Charles Whitman went on a shooting spree in the University of Texas. In 1991, US President George H. W. Bush delivered a speech in the parliament of the Ukrainian SSR in which he warned against Ukrainian independence.
It was ninety nine years later that Antony had his revenge. Nero had suicided and a tribe of Gauls in Netherlands on Batavia had a leader who sided with Vespasian who had eventually succeeded Nero. Gaius Julius Civilis is a stranger to written history. We do not know of his birth or death, but clearly he was able to claim some Roman citizenry through his name. He led the Batavians in revolt and almost got France to declare itself an independent kingdom. But in betraying Vespasian and with divided followers, Civilis lost and sued for peace. Nothing is known of him after. But he probably changed the world. Vespasian tasked his son Titus to crush Jerusalem, which he did in 70 and Masada in 73.
Today is Minden Day, the Battle being part of the series of fortuitous events of Annus Mirabllis of 1759. It happened in pre unification Germany and the belligerents were Great Britain with Hanover fighting France with Saxony. The miraculous win happened when there was a mistake in orders, leading to a single column of infantry taking on the triple line of cavalry .. and surviving to win. One British General Sackville had been in charge of British cavalry and begged to be court martial-ed over the allegation he had delayed their going to infantry support until it didn't matter. Sackville would later be a failure in the US Revolutionary war. The result of the battle was that France was unable to launch assaults for another year.
Horatio Nelson was born in the Annus Mirabilis of 1759. On this evening in 1798, he had one of his three stunning successes, this one at Aboukir Bay against France in Egypt. France had thirteen ships of the line anchored and ready to broadside any who sailed on the seaward side. Nelson attacked at night from the undefended shore side. The results are telling. Of thirteen ships of the line for Britain, Nelson lost none but 218 killed and 677 wounded. The french lost two ships of the line destroyed, and nine captured, as well as 5000 casualties and 3900 captured. Napoleon was forced to flee Egypt on a small pinnace. Napoleon had intended to colonise Egypt. He decided to invade England. Seven years later Nelson would have his greatest victory over Napoleon at Trafalgar. But until then, Nelson would be given great gifts from the King of two Italies and meet Emma Hamilton and her husband.
There is a difference between inventing and discovering. On this day in 1774, Joseph Priestly discovered Oxygen Gas. In 1800, Britain unified with Ireland. In 1834, Slavery was abolished in the British empire. In 1894 began the first Japanese vs Chinese wars. In 1914, Germany declared war on Russia and the Swiss Army mobilised. In 1927, the Nanchang uprising saw the communists square off against the nationalists, creating the communist Peoples Liberation Army (PLA). In 1946, Stalin had executed Soviet POW officers who had been co-opted to fight with Germans. In 1957 US and Canada form NORAD. In 1961 US forms DIA to coordinate military espionage. In 1966, Charles Whitman went on a shooting spree in the University of Texas. In 1991, US President George H. W. Bush delivered a speech in the parliament of the Ukrainian SSR in which he warned against Ukrainian independence.
Historical perspective on this day
30 BC – Octavian (later known as Augustus) enters Alexandria, Egypt, bringing it under the control of the Roman Republic.
AD 69 – Batavian rebellion: The Batavians in Germania Inferior (Netherlands) revolt under the leadership of Gaius Julius Civilis.
527 – Justinian I becomes the sole ruler of the Byzantine Empire.
607 – Ono no Imoko is dispatched as envoy to the Suicourt in China (Traditional Japanese date: July 3, 607).
902 – Taormina, the last Byzantine stronghold in Sicily, is captured by the Aghlabidsarmy, concluding the Muslim conquest of Sicily.
AD 69 – Batavian rebellion: The Batavians in Germania Inferior (Netherlands) revolt under the leadership of Gaius Julius Civilis.
527 – Justinian I becomes the sole ruler of the Byzantine Empire.
607 – Ono no Imoko is dispatched as envoy to the Suicourt in China (Traditional Japanese date: July 3, 607).
902 – Taormina, the last Byzantine stronghold in Sicily, is captured by the Aghlabidsarmy, concluding the Muslim conquest of Sicily.
1203 – Isaac II Angelos, restored Eastern Roman Emperor, declares his son Alexios IV Angelos co-emperor after pressure from the forces of the Fourth Crusade.
1291 – The Old Swiss Confederacy is formed with the signature of the Federal Charter.
1469 – Louis XI of France founds the chivalric order called the Order of Saint Michael in Amboise.
1498 – Christopher Columbus becomes the first European to visit what is now Venezuela.
1620 – Speedwell leaves Delfshaven to bring pilgrims to America by way of England.
1664 – Ottoman forces are defeated in the battle of Saint Gotthard by an Austrianarmy led by Raimondo Montecuccoli, resulting in the Peace of Vasvár.
1714 – George, Elector of Hanover, becomes King George I of Great Britain, marking the beginning of the Georgian era of British history.
1759 – Seven Years' War: The Battle of Minden, an allied Anglo-German army victory over the French. In Britain this was one of a number of events that constituted the Annus Mirabilis of 1759 and is celebrated as Minden Day by certain British Army regiments.
1774 – British scientist Joseph Priestley discovers oxygen gas, corroborating the prior discovery of this element by German-Swedish chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele.
1798 – French Revolutionary Wars: Battle of the Nile (Battle of Aboukir Bay): Battle begins when a British fleet engages the French Revolutionary Navy fleet in an unusual night action.
1800 – The Acts of Union 1800 are passed which merge the Kingdom of Great Britainand the Kingdom of Ireland into the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
1801 – First Barbary War: The American schooner USS Enterprise captures the Tripolitanpolacca Tripoli in a single-ship action off the coast of modern-day Libya.
1834 – Slavery is abolished in the British Empire as the Slavery Abolition Act 1833comes into force.
1842 – The Lombard Street riot erupts in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.
1855 – The first ascent of Monte Rosa, the second highest summit in the Alps.
1876 – Colorado is admitted as the 38th U.S. state.
1893 – Henry Perky patents shredded wheat.
1894 – The First Sino-Japanese War erupts between Japan and China over Korea.
1801 – First Barbary War: The American schooner USS Enterprise captures the Tripolitanpolacca Tripoli in a single-ship action off the coast of modern-day Libya.
1834 – Slavery is abolished in the British Empire as the Slavery Abolition Act 1833comes into force.
1842 – The Lombard Street riot erupts in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.
1855 – The first ascent of Monte Rosa, the second highest summit in the Alps.
1876 – Colorado is admitted as the 38th U.S. state.
1893 – Henry Perky patents shredded wheat.
1894 – The First Sino-Japanese War erupts between Japan and China over Korea.
1907 – The start of the first Scout camp on Brownsea Island, the origin of the worldwide Scouting movement.
1911 – Harriet Quimby takes her pilot's test and becomes the first U.S. woman to earn an Aero Club of America aviator's certificate.
1914 – The German Empire declares war on the Russian Empire at the opening of World War I. The Swiss Army mobilizes because of World War I.
1927 – The Nanchang Uprising marks the first significant battle in the Chinese Civil Warbetween the Kuomintang and Chinese Communist Party. This day is commemorated as the anniversary of the founding of the People's Liberation Army.
1936 – The Olympics opened in Berlin with a ceremony presided over by Adolf Hitler.
1937 – Josip Broz Tito reads the resolution "Manifesto of constitutional congress of KPH" to the constitutive congress of KPH (Croatian Communist Party) in woods near Samobor.
1943 – World War II: Operation Tidal Wave also known as "Black Sunday", was a failed American attempt to destroy Romanian oil fields.
1944 – World War II: The Warsaw Uprising against the Nazi German occupation breaks out in Warsaw, Poland.
1946 – Leaders of the Russian Liberation Army, a force of Russian prisoners of war that collaborated with Nazi Germany, are executed in Moscow, Soviet Union for treason.
1957 – The United States and Canada form the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD).
1960 – Dahomey (later renamed Benin) declares independence from France.
1960 – Islamabad is declared the federal capital of the Government of Pakistan.
1961 – U.S. Defense Secretary Robert McNamara orders the creation of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), the nation's first centralized military espionage organization.
1964 – The former Belgian Congo is renamed the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
1966 – Charles Whitman kills 16 people at the University of Texas at Austin before being killed by the police.
1966 – Purges of intellectuals and imperialists becomes official China policy at the beginning of the Cultural Revolution.
1968 – The coronation is held of Hassanal Bolkiah, the 29th Sultan of Brunei.
1974 – Cyprus dispute: The United Nations Security Council authorizes the UNFICYP to create the "Green Line", dividing Cyprus into two zones.
1980 – Vigdís Finnbogadóttir is elected President of Iceland and becomes the world's first democratically elected female head of state.
1980 – A train crash kills 18 people in County Cork, Ireland.
1981 – MTV begins broadcasting in the United States and airs its first video, "Video Killed the Radio Star" by The Buggles.
1984 – Commercial peat-cutters discover the preserved bog body of a man, called Lindow Man, at Lindow Moss, Cheshire, England.
1993 – The Great Mississippi and Missouri Rivers Flood of 1993 comes to a peak.
2004 – A supermarket fire kills 396 people and injures 500 others in Asunción, Paraguay.
2007 – The I-35W Mississippi River bridge spanning the Mississippi River in Minneapolis, Minnesota, collapses during the evening rush hour.
2008 – The Beijing–Tianjin Intercity Railway begins operation as the fastest commuter rail system in the world.
2008 – Eleven mountaineers from international expeditions died on K2, the second-highest mountain on Earth in the worst single accident in the history of K2 mountaineering.
=== 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 Leila Khiev and PureMacquarie Liverpool. Born on the same day, across the years, along with Claudius (10BC), Francis Scott Key (1779), Herman Melville (1819), Yves Saint Laurent (1936) and Boz Burrell (1946). On your day Lughnasadh (Northern Hemisphere); Imbolc (Southern Hemisphere); Lammas in England and Scotland. 1798 – French Revolutionary Wars: The Battle of the Nile started between a British fleet commanded by Rear-Admiral Horatio Nelson and a French fleet under Vice-Admiral François-Paul Brueys d'Aigalliers.
1842 – A parade in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US, celebrating the end of slavery in the West Indies was attacked by a mob, leading to three days of riots.
1907 – Robert Baden-Powell held the first scout camp at Brownsea Island in Dorset, England, beginning the Scouting movement.
1944 – World War II: The Polish Home Army began the Warsaw Uprising in Warsaw against the Nazi occupation of Poland, a rebellion that lasted 63 days until it was quelled by the Germans.
1991 – US President George H. W. Bush delivered a speech in the parliament of the Ukrainian SSR in which he warned against Ukrainian independence. You were warned about your independence. It is ok to rise against tyranny .. but be prepared!. Celebrate the end of slavery. And victory on the Nile.
1842 – A parade in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US, celebrating the end of slavery in the West Indies was attacked by a mob, leading to three days of riots.
1907 – Robert Baden-Powell held the first scout camp at Brownsea Island in Dorset, England, beginning the Scouting movement.
1944 – World War II: The Polish Home Army began the Warsaw Uprising in Warsaw against the Nazi occupation of Poland, a rebellion that lasted 63 days until it was quelled by the Germans.
1991 – US President George H. W. Bush delivered a speech in the parliament of the Ukrainian SSR in which he warned against Ukrainian independence. You were warned about your independence. It is ok to rise against tyranny .. but be prepared!. Celebrate the end of slavery. And victory on the Nile.
- 10 BC – Claudius, Roman emperor (d. 54)
- 126 – Pertinax, Roman emperor (d. 193)
- 1068 – Emperor Taizu of Jin (d. 1123)
- 1313 – Emperor Kōgon of Japan (d. 1364)
- 1377 – Emperor Go-Komatsu of Japan (d. 1433)
- 1545 – Andrew Melville, Scottish theologian and scholar (d. 1622)
- 1626 – Sabbatai Zevi, Montenegrin rabbi (d. 1676)
- 1659 – Sebastiano Ricci, Italian painter (d. 1734)
- 1714 – Richard Wilson, Welsh painter (d. 1782)
- 1744 – Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, French soldier, biologist, and academic (d. 1829)
- 1779 – Francis Scott Key, American lawyer, author, and poet (d. 1843)
- 1819 – Herman Melville, American author (d. 1891)
- 1881 – Otto Toeplitz, German mathematician (d. 1940)
- 1889 – Walter Gerlach, German physicist (d. 1979)
- 1900 – Otto Nothling, Australian cricketer and rugby player (d. 1965)
- 1911 – Jackie Ormes, American cartoonist (d. 1985)
- 1921 – Jack Kramer, American tennis player (d. 2009)
- 1924 – Frank Worrell, Barbadian cricketer (d. 1967)
- 1931 – Ramblin' Jack Elliott, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1932 – Meir Kahane, American rabbi and activist, founded the Jewish Defense League (d. 1990)
- 1933 – Dom DeLuise, American actor, singer, director, and producer (d. 2009)
- 1936 – Yves Saint Laurent, French fashion designer, co-founded Yves Saint Laurent (d. 2008)
- 1941 – Étienne Roda-Gil, French songwriter and screenwriter (d. 2004)
- 1942 – Jerry Garcia, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (Grateful Dead, Legion of Mary, Reconstruction, Old and in the Way, and New Riders of the Purple Sage) (d. 1995)
- 1946 – Boz Burrell, English singer-songwriter and guitarist (King Crimson and Bad Company) (d. 2006)
- 1948 – Avi Arad, Israeli-American businessman and film producer, founded Marvel Studios
- 1953 – Robert Cray, American singer and guitarist
- 1959 – Yoshihide Ōtomo, Japanese guitarist and songwriter (Ground Zero and Filament)
- 1965 – Sam Mendes, English director and producer
- 1975 – Teresa Mak, Hong Kong actress
- 1975 – Ane Dahl Torp, Norwegian actress
- 1982 – Ai Tominaga, Japanese model and actress
- 1989 – Tiffany, American-South Korean singer, dancer, and actress (Girls' Generation and Girls' Generation-TTS)
- 1998 – Khamani Griffin, American actor
Deaths
- 30 BC – Mark Antony, Roman general and politician (b. 83 BC)
- 371 – Eusebius of Vercelli, Italian bishop and saint (b. 283)
- 527 – Justin I, Byzantine emperor (b. 450)
- 1589 – Jacques Clément, French assassin of Henry III of France (b. 1567)
- 1714 – Anne, Queen of Great Britain (b. 1665)
- 1807 – John Walker, English actor, philologist, and lexicographer (b. 1732)
- 1903 – Calamity Jane, American frontierswoman and scout (b. 1853)
- 1996 – Mohamed Farrah Aidid, Somalian general and politician, 5th President of Somalia (b. 1934)
- 2004 – Alexandra Scott, American cancer patient, founded Alex's Lemonade Stand (b. 1996)
- 2009 – Corazon Aquino, Filipino politician, 11th President of the Philippines (b. 1933)
Tim Blair
TRUMP FOE BECOMES TRUMP FAN
UPDATED US newspaper cartoonist Gary Varvel wasn’t a Donald Trump supporter during the property magnate’s run for the White House, frequently depicting the candidate as a clown. But something has changed since Trump won the election.
MORE IMPORTANTLY, DID THE OWNER EVER FIND HIS DOG?
UPDATED A dog owner’s desperate search for his lost pup leads to an unanticipated encounter with police.
Andrew Bolt
JUNK THIS UN PACT NOW, PM
Seriously? When there's already little trust in government to tell the truth about immigration?: "A major UN pact on migration commits governments to introduce programs aimed at 'sensitising and educating' the media and withholding public funding from publications that 'promote intolerance' of migrants." And the Turnbull Government will sign this?
LET THEM SUFFER FOR THE PLANET
No wonder Fairfax is about to be no more, when doom-preaching journalists blithely argue for higher power prices for no measurable climate gain: "Of course Australia badly needs to end the time-wasting climate policy wars. Yes, power bills are hurting households... But the stakes are unthinkably high in the world’s big gamble with climate change."
COLES DROPS BAG BAN INDEFINITELY
What Coles claimed: "We committed to phasing out single-use plastic carry bags... Our announcement... followed several months of consultation with our customers." Coles didn't consult enough: "Coles revealed it was doing yet another backflip on its decision to dump bags... revealing they will continue to offer...[reusable] bags... for free."
BRING BACK BARNABY
Time to forgive Barnaby Joyce, because his good sense is needed at the top. He knows voters have had it with costly global warming gestures: "They’ve all just got their power bill. There are mums sitting there going, ‘How do I pay this?’ And they do not want to hear about the Paris Agreement. Unless you focus on it, you’re going to get smacked."
MEMO LIBS: PICK YOUR POLICIES AND THEN THE LEADER TO SELL THEM
My message tonight to the Liberal MPs wondering how the hell to react to the byelection disasters: first figure what policies you now need before you decide which leader would be best to sell them. That leader must fight for those new policies as if he believed them - and they can't be policies Turnbull likes. My editorial from The Bolt Report.
LAUREN SOUTHERN ON OUR POLICE
Lauren Southern sums up the policing on her tour of Australia. it's not pretty: charged for protection money in Victoria, warned she could be charged with a public offence if she walked to a mosque in NSW, and warned she could be charged for any police injuries if she dared to interview protesters outside her Queensland event. How embarrassing.
MYSTERY SYSTEM
Tim Blair – Monday, August 01, 2016 (2:48pm)
One of the more remarkable moments in SBS’s Pauline Hanson documentary occurs at the one hour mark, after archival footage shows Hanson predicting between 12 and 15 lower house victories for One Nation in the 1998 federal election.
This didn’t happen. Hanson explains why, with particular reference to her own electoral failure:
I didn’t understand the preferences.
By that time Hanson had been a member of parliament for two years and been eligible to vote in the previous 11 elections. How is it possible for someone to go through all of that and still not know how the preferential voting system works?
THE CONTENTS ARE KIND OF IMPLIED
Tim Blair – Monday, August 01, 2016 (2:39pm)
A consumer crisis in the UK:
German discounter Lidl is removing its brand of fruit yoghurts and honey peanuts from the shelves because it fails to tell customers they might contain milk and peanuts.
(Via Dr Greg.)
IF ONLY HE’D BEEN MORE DIPLOMATIC
Tim Blair – Monday, August 01, 2016 (2:47am)
Back when Malcolm Turnbull was proving himself to be an incompetent opposition leader, then-prime minister Kevin Rudd used to bait him from across the dispatch box. “Just resign, Malcolm,” he’d hiss, eyes lowered, as he pretended to flick through some paperwork. “Just resign.”
Times change. Over recent months Rudd has desperately sought Turnbull’s approval as a candidate to lead the United Nations.
When it comes to government documentation that would endorse Rudd, the ex-PM’s request was slightly altered: “Just sign, Malcolm. Just sign.”
According to Rudd, who now appears to write letters for the sole purpose of leaking them, Turnbull gave every indication he supported Rudd’s UN bid.
“You had always said to me that the Australian government would be ‘mad’ not to support my candidature!” Rudd claimed in one of his letters to the Prime Minister. “You will recall saying the same in person to me when we met at my place in New York last year!”
Interestingly, Turnbull appears to have been more supportive of Rudd during that period than he was to former Coalition prime minister Tony Abbott – although, in the end, both Rudd and Abbott received the same dose of Turnbull loyalty.
Rudd’s last letter to Turnbull, sent on Friday, probably reached newsrooms before it reached the PM. “You will understand how shocked I was to receive your telephone call within the last couple of hours, just prior to your taking the matter to Cabinet in Canberra,” Rudd fumed.
“In your telephone call you said that neither you nor the Cabinet would be supporting my nomination. When I asked the reasons for this, you said that neither you nor the Cabinet has the view that ‘I had the qualifications for the position’.
“You will appreciate that you have never expressed that view to me in the multiple conversations we have had on this matter on the past.”
The vindictiveness displayed in releasing those letters – Rudd’s spokeswoman admitted Turnbull had “asked Mr Rudd to keep the confidentiality of their conversations on this matter” – reveals precisely why Rudd should never have been in consideration to run the UN, unless the aim was to run it into the ground.
As Liberal senator James McGrath put it last week, “I wouldn’t trust Kevin Rudd to operate a toaster.” A nice line, although a little insensitive, given the outcome of Rudd’s infamous insulation program. The man doesn’t need any toasters. He can simply turn suburban homes into them.
This debacle also exposes, yet again, Turnbull’s abysmally wayward political intuition. Rudd was a known factor throughout his run towards UN nomination. So why was Turnbull cosying up to him (assuming Rudd’s versions of those chats in New York and elsewhere are accurate)? Why did Turnbull allow a man who has already poisoned two governments – his own and Julia Gillard’s – a chance to poison yet another?
Turnbull was vague in his reasons for declining to support Rudd. “This is a judgment about Mr Rudd’s suitability for that particular role,” he said, without offering anything specific. Turnbull gave the impression, without saying as much, that he’d come around to former NSW Labor premier Kristina Keneally’s view of Rudd as “a psychopathic narcissist” less suited to a UN role than a person selected at random from the street or, indeed, Keneally’s pet labrador.
Those who believe Rudd’s domestic antics should not disqualify him from an international role should consider one telling encounter during Rudd’s prime ministership. It occurred when Rudd attended a G20 meeting in the US seven years ago.
(Continue reading If Only He’d Been More Diplomatic.)
MONDAY NOTICEBOARD
Tim Blair – Monday, August 01, 2016 (2:40am)
Society reviewed. Language warning:
NOTHING STRIKES AGAIN
Tim Blair – Monday, August 01, 2016 (2:35am)
Various French media outlets last week announced they will stop publishing the names and images of Islamic terrorists.
“The decisions come after the truck attack on a Nice fireworks display and the killing of a French priest in a church in Normandy, events in a spate of attacks France has seen since last year,” Associated Press reported.
“On Wednesday, leading newspaper Le Monde pledged to stop publishing photographs of attackers … BFM-TV said it will no longer broadcast images of attackers’ faces.”
The excuse for this is that they don’t want to turn terrorists into heroes. More likely, however, is that these outlets simply don’t want to face the reality of Islamic terror. Presumably this self-imposed censorship will only become worse. Let’s imagine a typical future report out of France:
PARIS, May 15, 2018 – Seven people were killed yesterday and dozens injured when nothing happened at Paris’s Gare du Nord railway station.
French officials said nobody detonated anything in particular near the station’s crowded entrance on the Rue de Dunkerque. Witnesses said loud cries of “Nothing! Nothing at all!” were heard seconds before the simultaneous non-occurrences.
It is the third time in as many weeks that nothing has happened in Paris, which is now under full military curfew as police struggle to contain the city’s insurgent unidentified community.
“The French people are united in their war against an unknowable and featureless void,” declared French President Francois Hollande, who vowed to “track down and bring to justice all of those who were not involved in anything.”
To indicate international solidarity with the besieged French capital, landmarks worldwide last night displayed brightly-lit blank white spaces. A passionate Twitter campaign, #itdidnthappen, was launched in the immediate wake of whatever took place.
“The world stands as one with [insert nation here],” Australian Prime Minister Julie Bishop said in her now-standard statement issued following all episodes of inactivity. “Australians send our deepest condolences to [insert foreign leader here] and his/her nation after this grievous act of [redacted].”
In a completely unrelated development, German chancellor Angela Merkel today sent a message of optimism and hope to Berlin’s three surviving families. “Food will arrive soon,” Merkel promised in a video authorised by her captors.
On The Bolt Report and radio tonight: Milo Yiannopoulos, plus Turnbull’s fresh disaster
Andrew Bolt August 01 2016 (1:46pm)
On The Bolt Report on Sky News Live at 7pm tonight:
===Editorial - Turnbull stuffed up the Rudd bid. Now his royal commission is an even bigger disaster.On 2GB, 3AW and 4BC with Steve Price from 8pm.
My guests:
Gay conservative icon Milo Yiannopouloson being banned by Twitter. Is it biased?Podcasts of the show here. Facebook page here.
Former Howard Government Minister Peter Reith on Our Nation: how much longer can the Liberals afford Turnbull’s kind of leadership?.
The panel: former Queensland Premier Campbell Newman and former NSW Treasurer Michael Costa. Turnbull’s royal commission vs the new racism. And Ewen Jones is kidding when he suggests the Liberals are in shape to call for a new election in the lost seat of Herbert.
Turnbull goes from blunder to disaster.
Listen live here. Talkback: 131 873. Listen to all past shows here.
Turnbull’s kneejerk royal commission in chaos: commissioner quits
Andrew Bolt August 01 2016 (1:05pm)
Malcolm Turnbull made a kneejerk decision to call a royal commission after the ABC screened a biased program falsely presenting the restraint of a boy in detention in the Northern Territory as torture.
What a disaster that is quickly turning out to be.
The latest:
How much longer can Liberals possibly afford this kind of leadership?
===What a disaster that is quickly turning out to be.
The latest:
THE judge named to lead the Royal Commission into youths in detention in the NT has resigned from his role, disappointing the Prime Minister.Then there’s the race debate Turnbull prompted in the grievance industry and its Labor ally:
Justice Brian Martin AO announced his resignation today, after a conflict of interest was raised. Brian Martin’s daughter Joanna Martin worked for a previous NT Labor government’s Attorney General in 2010, during the period that the Royal Commission will examine.
Special Minister of State Scott Ryan says the Coalition has ruled out appointing two Indigenous Australian co-commissioners to the royal commission into the Northern Territory’s juvenile justice system…Turnbull also helped to destroy the NT Country Liberal Party Government just weeks before an election:
[Labor leader Bill] Shorten made his call for two Indigenous co-commissioners during a visit to Darwin yesterday....
“I believe it would be appropriate for the royal commission to have two co-commissioners who are Aboriginal Australians, strong people, men and women, who can make sure the voices and the experiences of Aboriginal Australians are given full justice in this royal commission… “To have an inquiry into the treatment of Aboriginal children in the criminal, in the justice system in the Northern Territory and not have Aboriginal co-commissioners will be seen as a con job, seen as a political manipulation.”
Northern Territory Chief Minister Adam Giles has welcomed the Royal Commission into the juvenile detention system and the child protection system in the state.... Facing calls to be removed from his position, Mr Giles is upholds that his government has provided and will continue to provide a range of improvements to the system, citing 16 recommendations that were successfully put in place at the former Don Dale centre.Still to come, potential in-fighting if Giles loses and looks for another job:
Coalition MPs and Senators have privately speculated for some time that Mr Giles may replace Senator Scullion in the Senate after the NT election… Coalition MPs believe Mr Giles’s chances of replacing Senator Scullion have been weakened, with the NT Government expected to be defeated at next month’s election.Turnbull has dealt with just two political issues of note in the month since the election. One was Kevin Rudd’s tilt for the United Nations’ top job and the other was this. Both essentially peripheral issues and both comprehensively bungled by Turnbull, who is bringing the house down. The Liberal house.
How much longer can Liberals possibly afford this kind of leadership?
Peris sets another bad example
Andrew Bolt August 01 2016 (11:03am)
Former Labor Senator Nova Peris should watch her language, especially in front of children. She seems to have a problem with manners as well with commitment and with history:
===Peris grips the steering wheel of her four-wheel-drive as we barrel down the Arnhem Highway, heading south from Darwin for some final election campaigning in the sparsely populated environs of east Arnhem Land. Along for the journey are her 26-year-old daughter Jessica and five-year-old grandson Isaac, whose impish presence in the back seat does little to inhibit his grandmother’s robust language. “What the f..k is it with Andrew Bolt?” Peris exclaims at one point. “The way he used the word ‘walkabout’ - what the f..k did he mean by that? How dare he use that word in such a totally patronising manner! I left politics on my terms, for family reasons. He doesn’t know me; he doesn’t know what I contributed to the Labor Party. So why should I give a shit about what f..kin’ Andrew Bolt has to say?”Grandmothers should set a better example.
Next step: Australian apartheid
Andrew Bolt August 01 2016 (10:48am)
“Reconciliation” is a fraud. It is pushed by a race-based grievance industry whose interests and power depend on never being reconciled:
That is why these demands must also be called out and resisted, based as they are on the unstated assumption that Australia’s legal system does not and cannot represent all Australians regardless of race:
===Bill Shorten has imperilled the indigenous referendum by breaking bipartisanship on the issue to support a radical form of reconciliation aimed at pushing a treaty-like process designed to resolve grievances dating back to European settlement.I’ll say it again: the planned referendum to recognise people with Aboriginal ancestors as the First Australians, with different rights, will not be the end. Logically, this apartheid will be followed with treaties and then with some form of self government or autonomy. And already you are hearing those very demands. There is simply no compromise with this racism.
The Opposition Leader yesterday backed plans unveiled by Cape York leader Noel Pearson at the weekend for constitutional reform to insert a “hook” into the nation’s birth certificate, off which could then be hung a settlement process likely to see individual First Nations bodies strike a network of deals covering large parts of the continent.
That is why these demands must also be called out and resisted, based as they are on the unstated assumption that Australia’s legal system does not and cannot represent all Australians regardless of race:
Aboriginal leaders, senior legal figures and welfare agencies have joined a call for two indigenous co-commissioners to be appointed alongside former Northern Territory chief justice Brian Martin on the royal commission into juvenile detention.Say no to racism. No to the division of Australians by race.
Speaking at the Garma Festival in Arnhem Land, Bill Shorten said community leaders were unequivocal that the inquiry would not be taken seriously otherwise, although he cautioned against ignoring it altogether.
The ABC’s week of shame
Andrew Bolt August 01 2016 (10:19am)
TWO explosive ABC reports last week proved this biased state broadcaster is now a public menace.
First, the ABC falsely presented the restraint by detention staff of a violent youth as the torture of a near-innocent boy.
Next, it presented Australia’s top Catholic, Cardinal George Pell, as a sexual predator of children, based on the highly unreliable memories of people recalling ambiguous events more than 30 years old.
The consequences have been devastating.
In a knee-jerk response to the first report, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull called a royal commission into the Northern Territory’s juvenile justice system.
Activists are already exploiting this to turn attention from the deadly dysfunction of Aboriginal society — the most urgent problem — to the inflammatory excuse of white cruelty to black children.
In response to the second report, Pell’s church is being vilified just as it prepares to speak against the planned vote on same-sex marriage — the ABC’s great crusade.
Let me go through both reports to show how the ABC abused its power.
(Read full article here.)
===First, the ABC falsely presented the restraint by detention staff of a violent youth as the torture of a near-innocent boy.
Next, it presented Australia’s top Catholic, Cardinal George Pell, as a sexual predator of children, based on the highly unreliable memories of people recalling ambiguous events more than 30 years old.
The consequences have been devastating.
In a knee-jerk response to the first report, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull called a royal commission into the Northern Territory’s juvenile justice system.
Activists are already exploiting this to turn attention from the deadly dysfunction of Aboriginal society — the most urgent problem — to the inflammatory excuse of white cruelty to black children.
In response to the second report, Pell’s church is being vilified just as it prepares to speak against the planned vote on same-sex marriage — the ABC’s great crusade.
Let me go through both reports to show how the ABC abused its power.
(Read full article here.)
Training baby jihadists
Andrew Bolt August 01 2016 (10:12am)
Palestinian children trained to hate and to die:
Marvellous, how multiculturalism has enriched our dining experience:
===For nearly a decade, residents of the villages of Nilin and Bilin, located near the haredi town of Modiin Illit, have held fiery, often violent demonstrations against the construction of the security fence every Friday…UPDATE
[T]his Friday, one Arab participant ... [is filmed] carrying his young son towards several Border Police officers, setting him down, and shoving him off in the officers’ direction while waving a PLO flag.
The man then seemingly yells at the soldiers to shoot his son, ... [and] seems to scream at him to attack the soldiers with stones.
The child eventually attempted to comply with his father’s demands, but posed little threat as the soldiers watched him harmlessly toss stones aimlessly.
Marvellous, how multiculturalism has enriched our dining experience:
DOZENS of terrified diners fled a mass brawl which broke out between two groups of men at a western Sydney restaurant at the weekend.(Via John Hinderaker.)
Liverpool’s D’roost Lebanese restaurant was fully booked on Saturday night when the savage fight broke out forcing horrified family diners to flee into the street.
The Turnbull-Rudd admiration society is over
Andrew Bolt August 01 2016 (10:05am)
Remember four years ago, when these two characters were once on a unity ticket - united in admiring each other and disparaging Tony Abbott?
But now the two plotters have fallen out:
Katharine Murphy & Helen Davidson:
Turnbull has humiliated Bishop, who may repay.
Turnbull has show inept leadership to his Ministers, who will recalculate.
Oh, and by the way: it is now a month since the election. Any sign at all of Turnbull getting to work on our most pressing problem: the growing debt at a time of slow growth?
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
===MALCOLM TURNBULL: ... those people who say they’d rather I was the leader of my party or Kevin the leader of his and there are, apparently, a handful that do, those people know that if they vote Liberal and Tony Abbott becomes Prime Minister, I will be part of his team, influential at the cabinet table, involved, part of that collective leadership. Regrettably, if they are Kevin fanciers and they nonetheless vote Labor and Julia Gillard becomes Prime Minister, Kevin, to the loss of his party and I think to the loss of the country, will remain not so enigmatically on the backbench…UPDATE
KEVIN RUDD: How you get on with Tony is a separate question. I say that in all sincerity. These guys are chalk and cheese, they really are. I’ve known Tony longer than I’ve known this bloke. This bloke, you know, you’re more at home on our side of politics, mate…
MALCOLM TURNBULL: Your mob poleaxed you because you stood up to the factions. That’s why they got rid of you. The faceless men couldn’t put up with you anymore and that was a it was a shocking betrayal. And that is - you know, now, look, you’ve set out some great visions and so forth… The issue is competent management and, with great respect, that hasn’t been a strong suite either for you or Julia but the fundamental thing is you were poleaxed because you tried to stand up to those guys and they showed you and the nation, to its horror, who was really running the Labor Party…
KEVIN RUDD: Malcolm’s far too the left of me. I just couldn’t, you know… Malcolm has smart ideas for the country’s future. I’ve got a few as well…
MALCOLM TURNBULL: It remains a matter of complete bafflement to me why the Labor Party doesn’t put Kevin back…
KEVIN RUDD: Our central asset is Tony Abbott.
But now the two plotters have fallen out:
Katharine Murphy & Helen Davidson:
Senior government players are contesting a claim that Malcolm Turnbull gave Kevin Rudd an explicit undertaking of support during a meeting in December 2015 to discuss Rudd’s now thwarted ambition to be nominated by the Australian government for secretary-general of the United Nations…Jennifer Hewett:
But Rudd is standing firm, reiterating his record of the meeting. He says on 23 December the prime minister stated his support for his candidature, told him the issue would go to cabinet, but reassured him the cabinet process would not change the outcome.. In the lead-up to the cabinet consideration, which was a process initiated by Turnbull, Bishop argued publicly that Rudd was qualified for the post, in coordination with her own department and the prime minister’s office, apparently believing she had the support of the prime minister to make that case.
Kevin Rudd and Julie Bishop are right to feel aggrieved at being misled by the Prime Minister over a protracted period and then dropped from a great height in a humiliating and public way.Phillip Hudson:
Turnbull’s decision to take [Rudd’s nomination] to cabinet, instead of sticking with Tony Abbott’s already announced rejection, required Julie Bishop to present a formal submission…Turnbull has humiliated Rudd, who will repay.
Bishop was collateral damage and ministers are mixed in their views about her role.... Others believe she was too close to Rudd and being rolled by the PM will bring her down a peg… [She] has learned, as Scott Morrison did earlier this year on his advocacy for the GST, not to get too ahead of Turnbull on a hot issue.
The leaked letters provide only Rudd’s version of events but raise questions for Turnbull about his three secret meetings with Rudd last year and endorsements, including the claim he sent at least one message to Rudd through the PM’s “preferred” encrypted Wickr system where he said he was “as one” with Bishop in supporting Rudd.
Turnbull has humiliated Bishop, who may repay.
Turnbull has show inept leadership to his Ministers, who will recalculate.
Oh, and by the way: it is now a month since the election. Any sign at all of Turnbull getting to work on our most pressing problem: the growing debt at a time of slow growth?
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
Teach children about proof and justice instead
Andrew Bolt August 01 2016 (10:02am)
These parents should be embarrassed to be teaching their children to join a witch hunt:
===Parents at a Catholic primary school in Mentone are agitating to have a portrait of Cardinal George Pell removed from their school hall after allegations of sexual abuse emerged against the priest recently.Reader Philip Shehan puts it well:
[Claire Bilos] said the portrait sent a “wrong message” to children that Cardinal Pell was to be “revered” and was “above question”.
“My daughter in grade 6, clearly old enough, she watches the news, she knows what is going on,” Ms Bilos said.
Ms Bilos should be telling her kids that accusations can be made against anyone at anytime, including them, their siblings their mother or their father. She should teach them that should not join lynch mobs rushing to judgement, but await the outcome of investigations before approving of any action taken against anyone.
We have seen football clubs and codes criticised for not suspending players against whom allegations have been made before investigations and court cases have been finalised on the grounds of ‘sending a message.’ Again, it is the people who advocate such actions who re sending entirely the wrong message.
Tim Flannery flops again
Andrew Bolt August 01 2016 (9:48am)
Tim Flannery last year added to his astonishing record of dud predictions:
The ABC’s Landline yesterday:
===Professor Tim Flannery said there was no room for complacency in planning for our future food security.And remember his most spectacular prediction, from 2007:
“Large parts of Australia are currently in drought including a record 80 per cent of Queensland,” he said. “We are watching the realities of a warming world unfold before our eyes and the impacts on everyday Australian households as food prices and food availability become more volatile… We must urgently transition to a new low carbon economy if we are to adequately safeguard our food supply.”
So even the rain that falls isn’t actually going to fill our dams and our river systems, and that’s a real worry for the people in the bush.Here we go again.
The ABC’s Landline yesterday:
Presenter:(Thanks to reader Silent Majority.)
It may sound like a broken record but the world is awash with wheat…Nathan Cattle of Profarmer:
Pretty simply we’ve had pretty good conditions around the world… Production will outstrip consumption this year… We’ve had good conditions…Dr Andrew Watkins, senior climatologist from Bureau of Meteorology:
Since La Nino has ended we’ve seen significant rainfall across much of Australia… After a dry April, rainfall has been well above average over large parts of Australia… Lower layer soil moisture is now well above average across much of Australia… . Stream flows are now average to above average in 81% of the streams we (BoM) monitor, boosting water storages… the risk of flooding as increased…
Rio games: fire, explosion and theft
Andrew Bolt August 01 2016 (7:37am)
Not a reassuring lead-up:
===Brazilian police discovered a suspicious toolbox sparking a controlled explosion inside a Rio stadium that is holding the opening ceremony for the Olympic Games.
Authorities sent in a robot to investigate the small toolbox that was discovered on Sunday at the Maracanã Stadium while rehearsals were being carried out
When the robot touched the toolbox, it exploded. It is believed no one was injured.
The Australian Olympic team became targets of thieves, official facilities have collapsed and Rio’s last minute nature is a concern and overall creating a dark cloud hanging over the city.
A fire ignited in the basement of the Australian athletes village on Friday and 100 Australian officials and athletes were evacuated from their highly-secure residence and stood outside for about 30 minutes. Thieves then gained access during the evacuation and stole two laptops and team shirts from vacant rooms.
Repent at leisure
Andrew Bolt August 01 2016 (6:01am)
Malcolm Turnbull’s kneejerk call for a royal commission is looking worse:
===The former Northern Territory chief justice tasked with leading a royal commission into the Territory’s juvenile justice system has spent the past 24 hours seriously reconsidering taking up the position, according to Sky News.
Brian Ross Martin QC, who was appointed by Malcolm Turnbull last Thursday as the government’s pick to lead the inquiry, has reportedly been concerned about the intense scrutiny, particularly of his family, that will occur during the course of the six-month investigation.
Several conflicts of interest related to the chief justice have already been raised since his appointment last week. He was forced to issue a statement on Friday after it was revealed that his daughter, Joanna Martin, had been employed as a justice adviser to Territory Labor attorney-general Delia Lawrie from late 2009 to March 2011. Much of the footage shown in the ABC’s damning Four Corners program, which initiated the inquiry, was shot in 2010.
The book does Dubrovnik
Andrew Bolt July 31 2016 (10:25pm)
My book has been having a blast, visiting London, Lake Como, Ithaca, Scotland, the Bay of Naples, Fiji, Aileron and the Andes. In between, it’s done some work in Kalgoorlie and the coal seam gas fields of Condabri, Queensland,
Now reader Marcus has taken it to Dubrovnic, in Croatia:
The third edition of the Bolt Bulletin, available to on-line buyers, went out last week. The fourth will go out to on-line buyers some time in August.
===Now reader Marcus has taken it to Dubrovnic, in Croatia:
To buy a copy for the traveler in your life, go here. A second edition will be printed soon, so don’t wait if you want one of the remaining first editions.
The third edition of the Bolt Bulletin, available to on-line buyers, went out last week. The fourth will go out to on-line buyers some time in August.
WE ARE THE SANE
Tim Blair – Friday, August 01, 2014 (4:22pm)
Convicted terrorist, disability pensioner and bludjahideen warrior Khaled Sharrouf explains his cause:
They fight us and harm us we will retaliate we will dedicate our lives to your unrest. We r not mad men or dysfunctional as they portray us to be. By Allah, we are the sane. Anyone who sees what is happening to the muslims around the world ... and sits back and does nothing, he is insane.
What is happening to Muslims in Syria and Iraq is that Sharrouf and his mates are cutting their heads off. Nothing dysfunctional about that. As for his disability pension, which apparently followed depression and schizophrenia diagnoses, Sharrouf has this to say:
Let them know that I played the government there like ignorant children i was never mentally ill not then nor now. I seen them following me and I was working for Allah right underneath there noses.
And here comes the next generation.
DEPARTMENT OF NOTHING
Tim Blair – Friday, August 01, 2014 (2:24pm)
No agency? No problem:
A Labor-appointed bureaucrat is being paid $28,000 a month to head an agency that no longer exists.In what may well be the world’s best job, Louise Sylvan is earning more than $300,000 a year to be CEO of the Australian National Preventative Health Agency, which was closed down in June.
Sylvan was offered a $200,000 redundancy payout, but presumably checked her contract – which expires in September 2016 – and realised she’d pull down around $750,000 by remaining in her “job”. Even when the agency existed, it basically did nothing:
It wasted $200,000 of taxpayer money on a cookbook which taught people how to cook spaghetti bolognese.It also provided $130,000 in funding for the Summer Nationals street burnout competition in 2012 and 2013.
Of course, Sylvan was a Nicola Roxon appointment.
HAMTASTIC
Tim Blair – Friday, August 01, 2014 (2:16pm)
By God, this is beautiful.
(Via Instapundit)
THEY LOVE DEATH
Tim Blair – Friday, August 01, 2014 (2:40am)
Raised in Florida, 22-year-old Moner Mohammad Abu-Salha recently disassembled himself in a Syrian suicide bombing. Before strapping on his holy vestment of Mo-splosives, Moner recorded this threat to US President Barack Obama:
We are coming for you, mark my words. You think you’ve won? You have never won. You will never defeat Islam.You are nothing but a donkey. You’re just a pig.Know that Islam is coming and will dominate over you. We will come with AKs. We will come with our bombs. We have small weapons, but we will take you down. We have hearts of lions. You are scared of death, while we love death.
Their fondness for death is a frequent theme. It might not be a winning strategy.
FEAR OF WARMIES
Tim Blair – Friday, August 01, 2014 (2:06am)
Mark Steyn names and shames the climate cowards, including timid Nate Silver.
RECOVERY IS POSSIBLE
Tim Blair – Friday, August 01, 2014 (2:02am)
Bill Whittle discusses his struggle with mental illness:
COWS ATTACK
Tim Blair – Friday, August 01, 2014 (1:57am)
I blame global warming:
A 45-year-old German woman died when she was attacked by a herd of 20 cows and calves on Monday afternoon on an Alpine pasture in Tyrol’s Stubaital valley.
The Bolt Report on Sunday, August 3
Andrew Bolt August 01 2014 (5:04pm)
On Sunday on Channel 10 at 10am and 4pm…
Editorial: Gaza and the rise of the Jew haters
My guest: Environment Minister Greg Hunt on defying the greens trying to stop the biggest coal mine in the country
The panel: Tim Wilson and Kimberly Kitching.
NewsWatch: The Daily Telegraph’s Miranda Devine. Taking on some ABC spin and a particularly nasty SMH cartoon.
Plus the genocide the media ignores. And Abbott reaches for a deal while Palmer’s team starts to fray.
The videos of the shows appear here.
===Editorial: Gaza and the rise of the Jew haters
My guest: Environment Minister Greg Hunt on defying the greens trying to stop the biggest coal mine in the country
The panel: Tim Wilson and Kimberly Kitching.
NewsWatch: The Daily Telegraph’s Miranda Devine. Taking on some ABC spin and a particularly nasty SMH cartoon.
Plus the genocide the media ignores. And Abbott reaches for a deal while Palmer’s team starts to fray.
The videos of the shows appear here.
Ricky Muir sacks chief of staff
Andrew Bolt August 01 2014 (2:50pm)
I did wonder how long it would last before Ricky Muir got sick of seeming the puppet of his ambitious staffers:
UPDATE
Druery tells Sky News that Littler is manouvering to take Muir’s seat, hoping Muir will be so embarrassed by his cluelessness that he’ll quit, leaving Littler as the registered boss of the party to nominate himself as the replacement.
Ho ho.
===SENATOR Ricky Muir has parted ways with his controversial chief of staff, the so-called preference whisperer Glenn Druery.I’m not sure I trust the word of the equally ambitious Mr Littler:
Senator Muir’s senior adviser Keith Littler said ... “It is indeed the case,’’ Mr Littler, who founded the party, said.
“Ricky wanted his senior advisers to live in Melbourne and for family reasons Glenn prefers to live in Sydney, so that’s what’s happened...”
The decision to part ways with Mr Druery comes as the Victorian branch of Senator Muir’s party has been shut down, amid an ongoing dispute between its members.
Fairfax Media understands that a personality clash had emerged between Mr Druery and Motoring Enthusiast party founder Keith Littler...The nation’s future in their hands....
In an email to Mr Druery on Thursday night, Senator Muir said: ‘’You don’t get along with the staff.’’
Another member of staff, Susan Bloodworth, who works in the Melbourne office, has quit in protest. Canberra-based policy adviser to Senator Muir, Peter Breen, declined to comment on Friday, but he is understood to be considering his options.
UPDATE
Druery tells Sky News that Littler is manouvering to take Muir’s seat, hoping Muir will be so embarrassed by his cluelessness that he’ll quit, leaving Littler as the registered boss of the party to nominate himself as the replacement.
Ho ho.
A sisterhood of hypocrites: point out Spicer’s savagery and get a Bath-ing
Andrew Bolt August 01 2014 (1:25pm)
Oh, please. Such precious petals. Such hypocrites, demanding an immunity from the criticism they themselves dish out, but with added savagery:
And was I really out of line - just being sexist - by then pointing out Spicer was distributing an obviously photoshopped image to smear Abbott even further?
Should I now warn that men might be driven from the public debate because I’ve been Bath-ed?
UPDATE
Work with Bath, and risk a Bath-ing:
===Commercial television is still plagued by a male-dominated culture and an obsession with the physical appearance of its female stars, says Seven network presenter Chris Bath.Now read what I criticised Spicer for - her wild abuse of Tony Abbott for winking at Jon Faine about a caller claiming she was a phone sex worker on a pension:
.... the head of news at the ABC, Kate Torney, said ... when she set up ABC’s Insiders 12 years ago she spent weeks trying to get female panelists… Bath said she understood why women were reluctant: ”If you are on Insiders or anything political you risk the chance of being Bolt-ed. I know Tracey [Spicer] has been Andrew Bolt-ed. If you’re a woman and on a program that requires you to have an opinion – unless you are Michelle Grattan – you get savaged.”
Fairfax columnist Tracey Spicer outdoes even Hanson-Young for extravagantly sanctimonious abuse, calling Abbott “creepy” and perhaps “misogynist” for “disparaging” the choice of work of a granny on a sex line.Is Bath seriously suggesting my criticism was illegitimate? Worse than the criticism Spicer herself expressed?
Memo to Spicer: the wink could well have been just what Abbott says, a “don’t worry” signal to Faine that he can handle this startling call. Or it was a signal that, wow, this was out of left field…
This kind of abuse is not just way over the top but more offensive by far that the wink. And it sure compromises Tracey Spicer as a Sky News anchor:
And was I really out of line - just being sexist - by then pointing out Spicer was distributing an obviously photoshopped image to smear Abbott even further?
Is Jon Faine also a “total creep” and a “misogynist”, or will Sarah Hanson-Young and Tracey Spicer - among thousands of others - now apologise for their vicious over-reaction:It strikes me that Bath represents the worst of the modern feminist movement - a pathetic sense of victimhood and a demand to be excused from the norms of debate.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott ... batted his left eye at 774 talkback host Jon Faine when caller Gloria, 67, said she had to work on a sex hotline to make ends meet.How can Tracey Spicer be a Sky News anchor when she so savagely abuses the Prime Minister on such dodgy evidence - and then unapologetically peddles a photoshopped picture of Abbott allegedly leering at Fiona Scott?
“Look, I was looking at Jon Faine, he was smiling at me and I winked back at him,” Mr Abbott explained on the Today Show… Mr Faine admitted he raised his eyebrows...
When alerted of the fakery, Spicer eventually deletes it from her account without an apology. In fact, she praises it as clever:
What kind of morality does Spicer - and all the others who peddled this picture - represent?
Here, by the way, is the original picture:
Should I now warn that men might be driven from the public debate because I’ve been Bath-ed?
UPDATE
Work with Bath, and risk a Bath-ing:
I’ve been through 12 different news directors: some of them were fantastic, some of them were complete bloody psychopaths.Why does Bath think that defamation of her male colleagues is acceptable, but my criticisms of Spicer not?
Forget consistency. Fix real problems, one at a time, starting with the worst
Andrew Bolt August 01 2014 (1:12pm)
Mining billionaire Andrew Forrest explains why all working-age people on welfare - and not just Aborigines in dysfunctional communities - should be banned from spending their welfare on anything but essentials:
===I think we can’t have one policy for Indigenous Australians and another for non-Indigenous Australians.In his next breath:
NEW indigenous-run companies should be given tax-free status to create genuine jobs for Aboriginal Australians without subsidies, Andrew Forrest proposes in his report.Ralph Waldo Emerson:
A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines. With consistency a great soul has simply nothing to do.
New parenthood: parents take only healthy surrogate baby
Andrew Bolt August 01 2014 (12:45pm)
Weaken the traditional family structure and you weaken the sense of obligation those traditions reinforce:
===Gammy, a six-month-old baby abandoned by his Australian parents, could die because his impoverished Thai surrogate mother cannot pay for medical treatment for his congenital heart condition.
The child will never know his twin sister, who was born healthy with him in a Bangkok hospital and has been taken away by their parents, who are living anonymously in Australia. [The twins’ surrogate mother] says when she looks at Gammy, who has Down syndrome, she feels sorry for him and guilty.
How many Jews must die before Israel may defend itself?
Andrew Bolt August 01 2014 (7:36am)
Graham Richardson:
And how should Israel manage this, given its technological superiority - a vital edge granted to an open society? By handing over volunteers to Hamas for execution? By letting a few more Hamas rockets actually land in Tel Aviv?
Here’s another “disproportionate” response that don’t seem to have struck Israel’s critics as a crime:
===I don’t care what the rules of war might declare — proportionality does matter. With the Palestinian death toll at more than 1100 and the Israel losses at less than 50, even the hardest-line supporters of Israel begin to question.The European Union:
Israel has the right to protect its population from this kind of attacks. In doing so, it must act proportionately...Let’s get down to tin tacks. Exactly how many Jews do these people want to die for every 100 Palestinians? One for two, or an eye for an eye?
And how should Israel manage this, given its technological superiority - a vital edge granted to an open society? By handing over volunteers to Hamas for execution? By letting a few more Hamas rockets actually land in Tel Aviv?
Here’s another “disproportionate” response that don’t seem to have struck Israel’s critics as a crime:
Around 600,000 German civilians died during the allies’ wartime raids on Germany, including 76,000 German children…Against that toll of 600,000 Germans (or 430,000 according to other sources):
Number of American civilians who died in German bombings of the US: zero.Or how about this “disproportionate” response?
Number of British civilians who died in German bombings of Britain: 60,000.
Number of American civilians killed in Japanese bombings of the US: fewer than 70So: how many Jews do Israel’s critics want to die before Israel is allowed to defend itself? A figure would be useful. Is 6 million about right?
Number of Japanese civilians killed in American bombings of Japan: 337,000
There is no jail. Just a dysfunctional culture
Andrew Bolt August 01 2014 (7:26am)
This kind of language is poison:
We see this too often - that the blame for a general dysfunction in Aboriginal communities is put not on Aboriginal culture but non-Aborigines.
This is not merely false. It also encourages us to fix everything but the real problem.
The blunt truth is that the “stronger” the Aboriginal culture the poorer a community tends to be.
===Mining magnate Andrew Forrest ... told The Australian that indigenous people in remote communities were being “economically jailed” and suffering the “blight of disparity”.If there is a jail there is a jailer. If there is suffering there is a victim.
We see this too often - that the blame for a general dysfunction in Aboriginal communities is put not on Aboriginal culture but non-Aborigines.
This is not merely false. It also encourages us to fix everything but the real problem.
The blunt truth is that the “stronger” the Aboriginal culture the poorer a community tends to be.
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Has Phillip even read either Timothy? If both candidates are acceptable to be candidates, given that the decision will be made for secular reasons based on divine guidance, then Phillip would be better off giving a prayer of thanks and a reasoned opinion. This diatribe is painful and does nothing but show the author misses his own point. It is better to be an example, than to give them. - ed===
RUDD THE WRECKER – DESTROYS 20% OF LOCALLY MADE AUSTRALIAN CAR SALES
The Australia car industry has confirmed the significant damage of the Rudd Government’s recent changes to FBT arrangements, concluding that sales of locally manufactured cars will be slashed by close to 20 per cent.
Labor’s surprise spur of the moment decision – made without any consultation – to change the pre-existing FBT rules has caused devastation across the car industry since its announcement two weeks ago.
On the back of new analysis it has undertaken, the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries (FCAI) has today described Labor’s decision as “terrible news” for the industry and concluded it could have “a dire effect on Australian car production, including the manufacturing supply chain”.
The problem is, that Rudd has a complete inability to admit he makes any mistakes - therefore he will push ahead with this destructive policy regardless of the obvious damage he is doing.
If only Rudd the Wrecker was as effective in destroying the business model of the people smugglers, as he is with wrecking the business model of the Australian Car industry, we might be getting somewhere.
NB : If elected the Coalition the not proceed with this poorly thought through policy.
Further reading -
http:// www.caradvice.com.au/ 243976/ fringe-benefits-tax-changes -to-wipe-out-100000-new-ca r-sales-fcai/
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The Australia car industry has confirmed the significant damage of the Rudd Government’s recent changes to FBT arrangements, concluding that sales of locally manufactured cars will be slashed by close to 20 per cent.
Labor’s surprise spur of the moment decision – made without any consultation – to change the pre-existing FBT rules has caused devastation across the car industry since its announcement two weeks ago.
On the back of new analysis it has undertaken, the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries (FCAI) has today described Labor’s decision as “terrible news” for the industry and concluded it could have “a dire effect on Australian car production, including the manufacturing supply chain”.
The problem is, that Rudd has a complete inability to admit he makes any mistakes - therefore he will push ahead with this destructive policy regardless of the obvious damage he is doing.
If only Rudd the Wrecker was as effective in destroying the business model of the people smugglers, as he is with wrecking the business model of the Australian Car industry, we might be getting somewhere.
NB : If elected the Coalition the not proceed with this poorly thought through policy.
Further reading -
http://
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THIS DAY IN HOLOCAUST HISTORY, 1942: German industrialist Eduard Schulte, whose company has mines near Auschwitz, reveals to a Swiss colleague that Hitler and the German Reich have decided to round up the millions of Jews of Occupied Europe, concentrate them in the East, and murder them using prussic acid starting in the fall of 1942. The information is soon communicated to Swiss World Jewish Congress representative Gerhart Riegner.
This telegram from Gerhart Riegner, Secretary of the World Jewish Congress in Geneva, was received by the Foreign Office in August 1940. The telegram was among the first pieces of unambiguous evidence received by the Allies that the Nazi Government planned a 'final solution' to the "Jewish question".
Some comments within the file show officials suggested the telegram be used to influence the Vatican to condemn German atrocities more strenuously. Another civil servant dismisses Riegner's report as a "rather wild story".
Samuel Sydney Silverman, the telegram's intended recipient, was the Labour MP for the Lancashire constituency of Nelson and Colne. Silverman was a campaigner for Jewish rights, amongst other causes including opposition to capital punishment.
Date: August 10th 1942
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"the person who despises theirself, still respects their own opinion" Nietzche
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top leaders have taken a disturbing turn to political correctness
. They have ignored conventional wisdom to “know your enemy” and, even more alarming, have taken actions within the government and military to crush efforts to do so. Never having fought a religious war, strategic leaders don’t understand an enemy whose church and state is immersed. This essay discusses warnings our top leaders ignored, the dangers of political correctness, thwarted opportunities to “know our enemy,” and ideas on changing this deadly path. Unless this strategic myopia is turned around, at worst our nation may fall prey to the “boiled frog” syndrome. At best, we will suffer from future attacks from radical Islamic forces.>
This telegram from Gerhart Riegner, Secretary of the World Jewish Congress in Geneva, was received by the Foreign Office in August 1940. The telegram was among the first pieces of unambiguous evidence received by the Allies that the Nazi Government planned a 'final solution' to the "Jewish question".
Some comments within the file show officials suggested the telegram be used to influence the Vatican to condemn German atrocities more strenuously. Another civil servant dismisses Riegner's report as a "rather wild story".
Samuel Sydney Silverman, the telegram's intended recipient, was the Labour MP for the Lancashire constituency of Nelson and Colne. Silverman was a campaigner for Jewish rights, amongst other causes including opposition to capital punishment.
Date: August 10th 1942
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"the person who despises theirself, still respects their own opinion" Nietzche
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. They have ignored conventional wisdom to “know your enemy” and, even more alarming, have taken actions within the government and military to crush efforts to do so. Never having fought a religious war, strategic leaders don’t understand an enemy whose church and state is immersed. This essay discusses warnings our top leaders ignored, the dangers of political correctness, thwarted opportunities to “know our enemy,” and ideas on changing this deadly path. Unless this strategic myopia is turned around, at worst our nation may fall prey to the “boiled frog” syndrome. At best, we will suffer from future attacks from radical Islamic forces.>
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Where else in the Middle East could Arab school girls stand around so freely and safely?
Only in “Apartheid” Israel.
Travelling in Israel on a visit from the US, Audrey M was often shocked
seeing scenes that were so different than those she was familiar with in the media.
“Where are we now?” she kept asking herself.
We plan to share more of these photos,
real ones that you will not find on the evening news,
the ones that do not fit the “narrative.”
seeing scenes that were so different than those she was familiar with in the media.
“Where are we now?” she kept asking herself.
We plan to share more of these photos,
real ones that you will not find on the evening news,
the ones that do not fit the “narrative.”
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A few characters on the side of a 3,000-year-old earthenware jug dating back to the time of King David have stumped archaeologists until now -- and a fresh translation may have profound ramifications for our understanding of the Bible.
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<I presume that talks would fail, and after this explanation of what Kerry is doing, I feel even more strongly that this will happen. That’s why the Israeli government has accepted this bad deal, believing, I think accurately, that the PA will make the talks fail. I understand why this option was taken — also, because there might be American or European threats and promises; nobody can be as bad as Obama in the future — but this tactic is getting tired. >
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over who benefits from the law. Poor blacks who live in high crime urban areas are not only the most likely victims of crime, they are also the ones who benefit the most from Stand Your Ground laws. It makes it easier for them to protect themselves when the police can't be there fast enough. Rules that make self-defense more difficult would impact blacks the most.>===
Imagine if any political leader would say: "No blacks will be allowed to live in my state". He would be denounced correctly, as a racist, a bigot.
That does not seem to include Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian Arab leader of Ramallah, who on the verge of the new "peace talks" in Washington just declared: "In a final resolution, we would not see the presence of a single Israeli - civilian or soldier - on our lands".
This is not "peace", but pure Nazism, it is ethnic cleansing. And instead of the expression "final resolution", Abbas should have said what he really means, "final solution".
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Confronting Israel's Precarious Future: An Interview With Dr. Martin Sherman: Part One - The Inquisitr
Article 16 of the original version of the Palestinian National Covenant sets out the desire of the people of Palestine “who look forward to…restoring the legitimate situation to Palestine, establishing peace and security in its territory, and enabling its people to exercise national sovereignty..”
However, since the Covenant was adopted in 1964, well before Israel “occupied” a square inch of the “West Bank” or Gaza, the question is precisely what is meant by “its territory” in which the Palestinians were “looking forward… to exercise national sovereignty”.
Indeed in Article 24, they state specifically what this territory did not include, and where they were not seeking to exercise “national sovereignty”.
In it they explicitly proclaim that they do not desire to “exercise any territorial sovereignty over the West Bank in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, [or] on the Gaza Strip…” - Dr. Martin Sherman
However, since the Covenant was adopted in 1964, well before Israel “occupied” a square inch of the “West Bank” or Gaza, the question is precisely what is meant by “its territory” in which the Palestinians were “looking forward… to exercise national sovereignty”.
Indeed in Article 24, they state specifically what this territory did not include, and where they were not seeking to exercise “national sovereignty”.
In it they explicitly proclaim that they do not desire to “exercise any territorial sovereignty over the West Bank in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, [or] on the Gaza Strip…” - Dr. Martin Sherman
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Don't let her killer escape justice- ed
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How would Bangladesh treat such behaviour? Is that why he is a refugee? - ed
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Nobody thinks that he said it would be a good idea to adopt Nazi policy .. but .. they scent blood from an idiot.- ed
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What lengths will Weiner go to?
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August 1: Lughnasadh (Northern Hemisphere); Imbolc (Southern Hemisphere); Independence Day in Benin (1960); Lammas in England and Scotland
- 902 – Led by Ibrahim II of Ifriqiya, the Aghlabidscaptured the Byzantine stronghold of Taormina, concluding the Muslim conquest of Sicily.
- 1774 – British scientist Joseph Priestley liberatedoxygen gas, corroborating the discovery of this element by German-Swedish chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele.
- 1834 – The Slavery Abolition Act 1833 came into force, officially abolishing slavery in most of the British Empire.
- 1984 – Commercial peat-cutters discovered the preserved bog body of a man, called Lindow Man, at Lindow Moss, Cheshire,North West England.
- 2007 – Bridge 9340, carrying Interstate 35W across theMississippi River in Minneapolis, Minnesota, US, suffered acatastrophic failure and collapsed (pictured), killing 13 people and injuring 145.
- 30 BC – Octavian (later known as Augustus) enters Alexandria, Egypt, bringing it under the control of the Roman Republic.
- AD 69 – Batavian rebellion: The Batavians in Germania Inferior (Netherlands) revolt under the leadership of Gaius Julius Civilis.
- 527 – Justinian I becomes the sole ruler of the Byzantine Empire.
- 607 – Ono no Imoko is dispatched as envoy to the Sui court in China (Traditional Japanese date: July 3, 607).
- 902 – Taormina, the last Byzantine stronghold in Sicily, is captured by the Aghlabids army, concluding the Muslim conquest of Sicily.
- 1203 – Isaac II Angelos, restored Eastern Roman Emperor, declares his son Alexios IV Angelos co-emperor after pressure from the forces of the Fourth Crusade.
- 1291 – The Old Swiss Confederacy is formed with the signature of the Federal Charter.
- 1469 – Louis XI of France founds the chivalric order called the Order of Saint Michael in Amboise.
- 1498 – Christopher Columbus becomes the first European to visit what is now Venezuela.
- 1571 – The Ottoman conquest of Cyprus is concluded, by the surrender of Famagusta.
- 1620 – Speedwell leaves Delfshaven to bring pilgrims to America by way of England.
- 1664 – Ottoman forces are defeated in the battle of Saint Gotthard by an Austrian army led by Raimondo Montecuccoli, resulting in the Peace of Vasvár.
- 1714 – George, Elector of Hanover, becomes King George I of Great Britain, marking the beginning of the Georgian era of British history.
- 1759 – Seven Years' War: The Battle of Minden, an allied Anglo-German army victory over the French. In Britain this was one of a number of events that constituted the Annus Mirabilis of 1759 and is celebrated as Minden Day by certain British Army regiments.
- 1774 – British scientist Joseph Priestley discovers oxygen gas, corroborating the prior discovery of this element by German-Swedish chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele.
- 1798 – French Revolutionary Wars: Battle of the Nile (Battle of Aboukir Bay): Battle begins when a British fleet engages the French Revolutionary Navy fleet in an unusual night action.
- 1800 – The Acts of Union 1800 are passed which merge the Kingdom of Great Britain and the Kingdom of Ireland into the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
- 1801 – First Barbary War: The American schooner USS Enterprise captures the Tripolitan polacca Tripoli in a single-ship action off the coast of modern-day Libya.
- 1834 – Slavery is abolished in the British Empire as the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 comes into force.
- 1842 – The Lombard Street riot erupts in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.
- 1855 – The first ascent of Monte Rosa, the second highest summit in the Alps.
- 1876 – Colorado is admitted as the 38th U.S. state.
- 1893 – Henry Perky patents shredded wheat.
- 1894 – The First Sino-Japanese War erupts between Japan and China over Korea.
- 1907 – The start of the first Scout camp on Brownsea Island, the origin of the worldwide Scouting movement.
- 1911 – Harriet Quimby takes her pilot's test and becomes the first U.S. woman to earn an Aero Club of America aviator's certificate.
- 1914 – The German Empire declares war on the Russian Empire at the opening of World War I. The Swiss Armymobilizes because of World War I.
- 1927 – The Nanchang Uprising marks the first significant battle in the Chinese Civil War between the Kuomintang and Chinese Communist Party. This day is commemorated as the anniversary of the founding of the People's Liberation Army.
- 1933 – Anti-Fascist activists Bruno Tesch, Walter Möller, Karl Wolff and August Lütgens executed by the Nazi regime in Altona.
- 1936 – The Olympics opened in Berlin with a ceremony presided over by Adolf Hitler.
- 1937 – Josip Broz Tito reads the resolution "Manifesto of constitutional congress of KPH" to the constitutive congress of KPH (Croatian Communist Party) in woods near Samobor.
- 1943 – World War II: Operation Tidal Wave also known as "Black Sunday", was a failed American attempt to destroy Romanian oil fields.
- 1944 – World War II: The Warsaw Uprising against the Nazi German occupation breaks out in Warsaw, Poland.
- 1946 – Leaders of the Russian Liberation Army, a force of Russian prisoners of war that collaborated with Nazi Germany, are executed in Moscow, Soviet Union for treason.
- 1957 – The United States and Canada form the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD).
- 1960 – Dahomey (later renamed Benin) declares independence from France.
- 1960 – Islamabad is declared the federal capital of the Government of Pakistan.
- 1961 – U.S. Defense Secretary Robert McNamara orders the creation of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), the nation's first centralized military espionage organization.
- 1964 – The former Belgian Congo is renamed the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
- 1966 – Charles Whitman kills 16 people at the University of Texas at Austin before being killed by the police.
- 1966 – Purges of intellectuals and imperialists becomes official China policy at the beginning of the Cultural Revolution.
- 1968 – The coronation is held of Hassanal Bolkiah, the 29th Sultan of Brunei.
- 1971 – The Concert for Bangladesh, organized by former Beatle George Harrison, is held at Madison Square Garden in New York City.
- 1974 – Cyprus dispute: The United Nations Security Council authorizes the UNFICYP to create the "Green Line", dividing Cyprus into two zones.
- 1980 – Vigdís Finnbogadóttir is elected President of Iceland and becomes the world's first democratically elected female head of state.
- 1980 – A train crash kills 18 people in County Cork, Ireland.
- 1981 – MTV begins broadcasting in the United States and airs its first video, "Video Killed the Radio Star" by The Buggles.
- 1984 – Commercial peat-cutters discover the preserved bog body of a man, called Lindow Man, at Lindow Moss, Cheshire, England.
- 1988 – A British soldier was killed in the Inglis Barracks bombing in London, England.[1]
- 1993 – The Great Mississippi and Missouri Rivers Flood of 1993 comes to a peak.
- 1998 – The establishment of Muslim Medics, one of the largest student-led societies in Imperial College London that provides both academic and wellbeing support to medical students of all backgrounds.
- 2004 – A supermarket fire kills 396 people and injures 500 others in Asunción, Paraguay.
- 2007 – The I-35W Mississippi River bridge spanning the Mississippi River in Minneapolis, Minnesota, collapses during the evening rush hour, killing 13 people and injuring 145.
- 2008 – The Beijing–Tianjin Intercity Railway begins operation as the fastest commuter rail system in the world.
- 2008 – Eleven mountaineers from international expeditions died on K2, the second-highest mountain on Earth in the worst single accident in the history of K2 mountaineering.
- 2017 – A suicide attack on a mosque in Heart, Afghanistan kills 20 people.
- 10 BC – Claudius, Roman emperor (d. 54)
- 126 – Pertinax, Roman emperor (d. 193)
- 845 – Sugawara no Michizane, Japanese scholar and politician (d. 903)
- 992 – Hyeonjong, Korean king (d. 1031)
- 1068 – Taizu, Chinese emperor (d. 1123)
- 1313 – Kōgon, Japanese emperor (d. 1364)
- 1377 – Go-Komatsu, Japanese emperor (d. 1433)
- 1385 – John FitzAlan, 13th Earl of Arundel (d. 1421)
- 1410 – Jan IV, count of Nassau-Dillenburg (d. 1475)
- 1492 – Wolfgang, German prince (d. 1566)
- 1520 – Sigismund II, Polish king (d. 1572)
- 1545 – Andrew Melville, Scottish theologian and scholar (d. 1622)
- 1555 – Edward Kelley, English spirit medium (d. 1597)
- 1579 – Luis Vélez de Guevara, Spanish author and playwright (d. 1644)
- 1626 – Sabbatai Zevi, Montenegrin rabbi and theorist (d. 1676)
- 1630 – Thomas Clifford, 1st Baron Clifford of Chudleigh, English politician, Lord High Treasurer (d. 1673)
- 1659 – Sebastiano Ricci, Italian painter (d. 1734)
- 1713 – Charles I, German duke and prince (d. 1780)
- 1714 – Richard Wilson, Welsh painter and academic (d. 1782)
- 1738 – Jacques François Dugommier, French general (d. 1794)
- 1744 – Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, French soldier, biologist, and academic (d. 1829)
- 1770 – William Clark, American soldier, explorer, and politician, 4th Governor of Missouri Territory (d. 1838)
- 1778 – Mary Jefferson Eppes, daughter of Thomas Jefferson who died in childbirth (d. 1804)
- 1779 – Francis Scott Key, American lawyer, author, and poet (d. 1843)
- 1779 – Lorenz Oken, German-Swiss botanist, biologist, and ornithologist (d. 1851)
- 1809 – William B. Travis, American colonel and lawyer (d. 1836)
- 1815 – Richard Henry Dana, Jr., American lawyer and politician (d. 1882)
- 1818 – Maria Mitchell, American astronomer and academic (d. 1889)
- 1819 – Herman Melville, American novelist, short story writer, and poet (d. 1891)
- 1831 – Antonio Cotogni, Italian opera singer and educator (d. 1918)
- 1843 – Robert Todd Lincoln, American lawyer and politician, 35th United States Secretary of War (d. 1926)
- 1856 – George Coulthard, Australian footballer and cricketer (d. 1883)
- 1858 – Gaston Doumergue, French lawyer and politician, 13th President of France (d. 1937)
- 1858 – Hans Rott, Austrian organist and composer (d. 1884)
- 1861 – Sammy Jones, Australian cricketer (d. 1951)
- 1865 – Isobel Lilian Gloag, English painter (d. 1917)
- 1871 – John Lester, American cricketer and soccer player (d. 1969)
- 1877 – George Hackenschmidt, Estonian-English wrestler and strongman (d. 1968)
- 1878 – Konstantinos Logothetopoulos, Greek physician and politician, Prime Minister of Greece (d. 1961)
- 1881 – Otto Toeplitz, German mathematician and academic (d. 1940)
- 1885 – George de Hevesy, Hungarian-German chemist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1966)
- 1889 – Walter Gerlach, German physicist and academic (d. 1979)
- 1891 – Karl Kobelt, Swiss lawyer and politician, 52nd President of the Swiss Confederation (d. 1968)
- 1893 – Alexander of Greece (d. 1920)
- 1894 – Ottavio Bottecchia, Italian cyclist (d. 1927)
- 1898 – Morris Stoloff, American composer and musical director (d. 1980)
- 1899 – Raymond Mays, English race car driver and businessman (d. 1980)
- 1900 – Otto Nothling, Australian cricketer and rugby player (d. 1965)
- 1901 – Francisco Guilledo, Filipino boxer (d. 1925)
- 1903 – Paul Horgan, American historian, author, and academic (d. 1995)
- 1905 – Helen Sawyer Hogg, American-Canadian astronomer and academic (d. 1993)
- 1907 – Eric Shipton, Sri Lankan-English mountaineer and explorer (d. 1977)
- 1910 – James Henry Govier, English painter and illustrator (d. 1974)
- 1910 – Walter Scharf, American pianist and composer (d. 2003)
- 1911 – Jackie Ormes, American journalist and cartoonist (d. 1985)
- 1912 – David Brand, Australian politician, 19th Premier of Western Australia (d. 1979)
- 1912 – Gego, German-Venezuelan sculptor and academic (d. 1994)
- 1912 – Henry Jones, American actor (d. 1999)
- 1914 – Jack Delano, American photographer and composer (d. 1997)
- 1914 – Alan Moore, Australian painter and educator (d. 2015)
- 1914 – J. Lee Thompson, English-Canadian director, producer, and screenwriter (d. 2002)
- 1916 – Fiorenzo Angelini, Italian cardinal (d. 2014)
- 1916 – Anne Hébert, Canadian author and poet (d. 2000)
- 1918 – T. J. Jemison, American minister and activist (d. 2013)
- 1919 – Stanley Middleton, English author (d. 2009)
- 1920 – Raul Renter, Estonian economist and chess player (d. 1992)
- 1921 – Jack Kramer, American tennis player, sailor, and sportscaster (d. 2009)
- 1921 – Pat McDonald, Australian actress (d. 1990)
- 1922 – Arthur Hill, Canadian-American actor (d. 2006)
- 1923 – Val Bettin, American actor
- 1924 – Marcia Mae Jones, American actress and singer (d. 2007)
- 1924 – Abdullah of Saudi Arabia (d. 2015)
- 1924 – Frank Worrell, Barbadian cricketer (d. 1967)
- 1925 – Ernst Jandl, Austrian poet and author (d. 2000)
- 1926 – George Hauptfuhrer, American basketball player and lawyer (d. 2013)
- 1926 – Hannah Hauxwell, English TV personality (d. 2018)
- 1927 – María Teresa López Boegeholz, Chilean oceanographer (d. 2006)
- 1927 – Anthony G. Bosco, American bishop (d. 2013)
- 1928 – Jack Shea, American director, producer, and screenwriter (d. 2013)
- 1929 – Hafizullah Amin, Afghan educator and politician, Afghan Minister of Foreign Affairs (d. 1979)
- 1929 – Ann Calvello, American roller derby racer (d. 2006)
- 1929 – Leila Abashidze, Georgian actress (d. 2018)
- 1930 – Lionel Bart, English composer (d. 1999)
- 1930 – Pierre Bourdieu, French sociologist, anthropologist, and philosopher (d. 2002)
- 1930 – Julie Bovasso, American actress and writer (d. 1991)
- 1930 – Lawrence Eagleburger, American lieutenant and politician, 62nd United States Secretary of State (d. 2011)
- 1930 – Károly Grósz, Hungarian politician, 51st Prime Minister of Hungary (d. 1996)
- 1930 – Geoffrey Holder, Trinidadian-American actor, singer, dancer, and choreographer (d. 2014)
- 1931 – Ramblin' Jack Elliott, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1931 – Trevor Goddard, South African cricketer (d. 2016)
- 1932 – Meir Kahane, American-Israeli rabbi and activist, founded the Jewish Defense League (d. 1990)
- 1932 – Meena Kumari, Indian actress (d. 1972)
- 1933 – Dom DeLuise, American actor, singer, director, and producer (d. 2009)
- 1933 – Masaichi Kaneda, Japanese baseball player and manager
- 1933 – Teri Shields, American actress, producer, and agent (d. 2012)
- 1933 – Dušan Třeštík, Czech historian and author (d. 2007)
- 1934 – John Beck, New Zealand cricketer (d. 2000)
- 1934 – Derek Birdsall, English graphic designer
- 1935 – Geoff Pullar, English cricketer (d. 2014)
- 1936 – W. D. Hamilton, Egyptian born British biologist, psychologist, and academic (d. 2000)
- 1936 – Yves Saint Laurent, Algerian-French fashion designer, co-founded Yves Saint Laurent (d. 2008)
- 1936 – Laurie Taylor, English sociologist, radio host, and academic
- 1937 – Al D'Amato, American lawyer and politician
- 1939 – Bob Frankford, English-Canadian physician and politician (d. 2015)
- 1939 – Terry Kiser, American actor
- 1939 – Stephen Sykes, English bishop and theologian (d. 2014)
- 1939 – Robert James Waller, American author and photographer (d. 2017)
- 1940 – Mervyn Kitchen, English cricketer and umpire
- 1940 – Henry Silverman, American businessman, founded Cendant
- 1940 – Mahmoud Dowlatabadi, Iranian writer and actor
- 1941 – Ron Brown, American captain and politician, 30th United States Secretary of Commerce (d. 1996)
- 1941 – Étienne Roda-Gil, French songwriter and screenwriter (d. 2004)
- 1942 – Jerry Garcia, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (d. 1995)
- 1942 – Giancarlo Giannini, Italian actor, director, producer, and screenwriter
- 1944 – Dmitry Nikolayevich Filippov, Russian banker and politician (d. 1998)
- 1945 – Douglas Osheroff, American physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate
- 1946 – Boz Burrell, English singer-songwriter, bass player, and guitarist (d. 2006)
- 1946 – Rick Coonce, American drummer (The Grass Roots) (d. 2011)
- 1946 – Richard O. Covey, American colonel, pilot, and astronaut
- 1946 – Fiona Stanley, Australian epidemiologist and academic
- 1947 – Lorna Goodison, Jamaican poet and author
- 1948 – Avi Arad, Israeli-American screenwriter and producer, founded Marvel Studios
- 1948 – Cliff Branch, American football player
- 1948 – David Gemmell, English journalist and author (d. 2006)
- 1949 – Kurmanbek Bakiyev, Kyrgyzstani politician, 2nd President of Kyrgyzstan
- 1949 – Jim Carroll, American poet, author, and musician (d. 2009)
- 1949 – Ray Nettles, American football player (d. 2009)
- 1950 – Roy Williams, American basketball player and coach
- 1951 – Tim Bachman, Canadian singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1951 – Tommy Bolin, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (d. 1976)
- 1951 – Pete Mackanin, American baseball player, coach, and manager
- 1952 – Zoran Đinđić, Serbian philosopher and politician, 6th Prime Minister of Serbia (d. 2003)
- 1953 – Robert Cray, American blues singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1953 – Howard Kurtz, American journalist and author
- 1954 – Trevor Berbick, Jamaican-Canadian boxer (d. 2006)
- 1954 – James Gleick, American journalist and author
- 1954 – Benno Möhlmann, German footballer and manager
- 1957 – Taylor Negron, American actor and screenwriter (d. 2015)
- 1958 – Rob Buck, American guitarist and songwriter (d. 2000)
- 1958 – Michael Penn, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1958 – Kiki Vandeweghe, American basketball player and coach
- 1959 – Joe Elliott, English singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer
- 1960 – Chuck D, American rapper and songwriter (Public Enemy)
- 1960 – Suzi Gardner, American rock singer-songwriter and guitarist (L7)
- 1962 – Jacob Matlala, South African boxer (d. 2013)
- 1963 – Demián Bichir, Mexican-American actor and producer
- 1963 – Coolio, American rapper, producer, and actor
- 1963 – John Carroll Lynch, American actor
- 1963 – Koichi Wakata, Japanese astronaut and engineer
- 1963 – Dean Wareham, New Zealand singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1964 – Adam Duritz, American singer-songwriter and producer
- 1964 – Fiona Hyslop, Scottish businesswoman and politician
- 1964 – Augusta Read Thomas, American composer, conductor and educator
- 1965 – Brandt Jobe, American golfer
- 1965 – Sam Mendes, English director and producer
- 1966 – James St. James, American club promoter and author
- 1967 – Gregg Jefferies, American baseball player and coach
- 1967 – José Padilha, Brazilian director, producer and screenwriter
- 1968 – Stacey Augmon, American basketball player and coach
- 1968 – Dan Donegan, American heavy metal guitarist and songwriter (Disturbed)
- 1968 – Shigetoshi Hasegawa, Japanese baseball player and sportscaster
- 1969 – Andrei Borissov, Estonian footballer and manager
- 1969 – Kevin Jarvis, American baseball player and scout
- 1969 – Graham Thorpe, English cricketer and journalist
- 1970 – Quentin Coryatt, American football player
- 1970 – David James, English footballer and manager
- 1970 – Eugenie van Leeuwen, Dutch cricketer
- 1972 – Nicke Andersson, Swedish singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1972 – Christer Basma, Norwegian footballer and coach
- 1972 – Todd Bouman, American football player and coach
- 1972 – Thomas Woods, American historian, economist, and academic
- 1973 – Gregg Berhalter, American soccer player and coach
- 1973 – Veerle Dejaeghere, Belgian runner
- 1973 – Edurne Pasaban, Spanish mountaineer
- 1974 – Cher Calvin, American journalist
- 1974 – Marek Galiński, Polish cyclist (d. 2014)
- 1974 – Tyron Henderson, South African cricketer
- 1974 – Dennis Lawrence, Trinidadian footballer and coach
- 1974 – Beckie Scott, Canadian skier
- 1975 – Vhrsti, Czech author and illustrator
- 1976 – Don Hertzfeldt, American animator, producer, screenwriter, and voice actor
- 1976 – Søren Jochumsen, Danish footballer
- 1976 – Nwankwo Kanu, Nigerian footballer
- 1976 – David Nemirovsky, Canadian ice hockey player
- 1976 – Hasan Şaş, Turkish footballer and manager
- 1976 – Cristian Stoica, Romanian-Italian rugby player
- 1977 – Marc Denis, Canadian ice hockey player and sportscaster
- 1977 – Haspop, French-Moroccan dancer, choreographer, and actor
- 1977 – Darnerien McCants, American-Canadian football player
- 1977 – Damien Saez, French singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1977 – Yoshi Tatsu, Japanese wrestler and boxer
- 1978 – Andy Blignaut, Zimbabwean cricketer
- 1978 – Björn Ferry, Swedish biathlete
- 1978 – Dhani Harrison, English singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1978 – Chris Iwelumo, Scottish footballer
- 1978 – Edgerrin James, American football player
- 1979 – Junior Agogo, Ghanaian footballer
- 1979 – Nathan Fien, Australian-New Zealand rugby league player
- 1979 – Jason Momoa, American actor, director, and producer
- 1980 – Mancini, Brazilian footballer
- 1980 – Romain Barras, French decathlete
- 1980 – Esteban Paredes, Chilean footballer
- 1981 – Dean Cox, Australian footballer
- 1981 – Pia Haraldsen, Norwegian journalist and author
- 1981 – Christofer Heimeroth, German footballer
- 1981 – Stephen Hunt, Irish footballer
- 1981 – Jamie Jones-Buchanan, English rugby player
- 1982 – Basem Fathi, Jordanian footballer
- 1982 – Montserrat Lombard, English actress, director, and screenwriter
- 1983 – Bobby Carpenter, American football player
- 1983 – Craig Clarke, New Zealand rugby player
- 1983 – Julien Faubert, French footballer
- 1983 – David Gervasi, Swiss decathlete
- 1984 – Steve Feak, American game designer
- 1984 – Francesco Gavazzi, Italian cyclist
- 1984 – Brandon Kintzler, American baseball player
- 1984 – Bastian Schweinsteiger, German footballer
- 1985 – Stuart Holden, Scottish-American soccer player
- 1985 – Adam Jones, American baseball player
- 1985 – Cole Kimball, American baseball player
- 1985 – Tendai Mtawarira, South African rugby player
- 1985 – Kris Stadsgaard, Danish footballer
- 1985 – Dušan Švento, Slovak footballer
- 1986 – Damien Allen, English footballer
- 1986 – Anton Strålman, Swedish ice hockey player
- 1986 – Andrew Taylor, English footballer
- 1986 – Elena Vesnina, Russian tennis player
- 1986 – Mike Wallace, American football player
- 1987 – Iago Aspas, Spanish footballer
- 1987 – Karen Carney, English women's football winger
- 1987 – Sébastien Pocognoli, Belgian footballer
- 1987 – Lee Wallace, Scottish footballer
- 1988 – Mustafa Abdellaoue, Norwegian footballer
- 1988 – Patryk Małecki, Polish footballer
- 1988 – Bodene Thompson, New Zealand rugby league player
- 1989 – Madison Bumgarner, American baseball player
- 1989 – Tiffany Hwang, Korean American singer, songwriter, and actress (Girls' Generation)
- 1990 – Aledmys Díaz, Cuban baseball player
- 1990 – Jean Hugues Gregoire, Mauritian swimmer
- 1990 – Elton Jantjies, South African rugby player
- 1991 – Piotr Malarczyk, Polish footballer
- 1991 – Marco Puntoriere, Italian footballer
- 1992 – Austin Rivers, American basketball player
- 1993 – Álex Abrines, Spanish basketball player
- 1993 – Leon Thomas III, American actor and singer
- 1994 – Sergeal Petersen, South African rugby player
- 1994 – Ayaka Wada, Japanese singer
- 1996 – Katie Boulter, English tennis player
- 2001 – Park Si-eun, South Korean actress
- 30 BC – Mark Antony, Roman general and politician (b. 83 BC)
- 371 – Eusebius of Vercelli, Italian bishop and saint (b. 283)
- 527 – Justin I, Byzantine emperor (b. 450)
- 873 – Thachulf, duke of Thuringia
- 919 – Dhuka al-Rumi, Abbasid governor of Egypt
- 946 – Ali ibn Isa al-Jarrah, Abbasid vizier (b. 859)
- 946 – Lady Xu Xinyue, Chinese queen (b. 902)
- 953 – Yingtian, Chinese Khitan empress (b. 879)
- 984 – Æthelwold, bishop of Winchester
- 1098 – Adhemar of Le Puy, French papal legate
- 1137 – Louis VI, king of France (b. 1081)
- 1146 – Vsevolod II of Kiev, Russian prince[2]
- 1227 – Shimazu Tadahisa, Japanese warlord (b. 1179)
- 1252 – Giovanni da Pian del Carpine, Italian archbishop and explorer (b. 1180)
- 1299 – Conrad de Lichtenberg, Bishop of Strasbourg (b. 1240)
- 1402 – Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York, English politician, Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports (b. 1341)
- 1457 – Lorenzo Valla, Italian author and educator (b. 1406)
- 1464 – Cosimo de' Medici, Italian ruler (b. 1386)
- 1494 – Giovanni Santi, artist and father of Raphael (b. c. 1435)
- 1541 – Simon Grynaeus, German theologian and scholar (b. 1493)
- 1543 – Magnus I, Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg (b. 1488)
- 1546 – Peter Faber, French Jesuit theologian (b. 1506)
- 1557 – Olaus Magnus, Swedish archbishop, historian, and cartographer (b. 1490)
- 1580 – Albrecht Giese, Polish-German politician and diplomat (b. 1524)
- 1589 – Jacques Clément, French assassin of Henry III of France (b. 1567)
- 1603 – Matthew Browne, English politician (b. 1563)
- 1714 – Anne, Queen of Great Britain (b. 1665)
- 1787 – Alphonsus Maria de' Liguori, Italian bishop and saint (b. 1696)
- 1795 – Clas Bjerkander, Swedish meteorologist, botanist, and entomologist (b. 1735)
- 1796 – Sir Robert Pigot, 2nd Baronet, English colonel and politician (b. 1720)
- 1798 – François-Paul Brueys d'Aigalliers, French admiral (b. 1753)
- 1807 – John Boorman, English cricketer (b. c. 1754)
- 1807 – John Walker, English actor, philologist, and lexicographer (b. 1732)
- 1808 – Lady Diana Beauclerk, English painter and illustrator (b. 1734)
- 1812 – Yakov Kulnev, Russian general (b. 1763)
- 1851 – William Joseph Behr, German publicist and academic (b. 1775)
- 1866 – John Ross, American tribal chief (b. 1790)
- 1869 – Richard Dry, Australian politician, 7th Premier of Tasmania (b. 1815)
- 1903 – Calamity Jane, American frontierswoman and scout (b. 1853)
- 1911 – Edwin Austin Abbey, American painter and illustrator (b. 1852)
- 1911 – Samuel Arza Davenport, American lawyer and politician (b. 1843)
- 1918 – John Riley Banister, American cowboy and police officer (b. 1854)
- 1920 – Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Indian lawyer and journalist (b. 1856)
- 1921 – T.J. Ryan, Australian politician, 19th Premier of Queensland (b. 1876)
- 1922 – Donát Bánki, Hungarian engineer (b. 1856)
- 1929 – Syd Gregory, Australian cricketer (b. 1870)
- 1938 – Edmund C. Tarbell, American painter and academic (b. 1862)
- 1943 – Lydia Litvyak, Russian lieutenant and pilot (b. 1921)
- 1944 – Manuel L. Quezon, Filipino soldier, lawyer, and politician, 2nd President of the Philippines (b. 1878)
- 1959 – Jean Behra, French race car driver (b. 1921)
- 1963 – Theodore Roethke, American poet (b. 1908)
- 1966 – Charles Whitman, American murderer (b. 1941)
- 1967 – Richard Kuhn, Austrian-German biochemist and academic, Nobel Prize Laureate (b. 1900)
- 1970 – Frances Farmer, American actress (b. 1913)
- 1970 – Doris Fleeson, American journalist (b. 1901)
- 1970 – Otto Heinrich Warburg, German physician and physiologist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1883)
- 1973 – Gian Francesco Malipiero, Italian composer and educator (b. 1882)
- 1973 – Walter Ulbricht, German soldier and politician (b. 1893)
- 1974 – Ildebrando Antoniutti, Italian cardinal (b. 1898)
- 1977 – Francis Gary Powers, American captain and pilot (b. 1929)
- 1980 – Patrick Depailler, French race car driver (b. 1944)
- 1980 – Strother Martin, American actor (b. 1919)
- 1981 – Paddy Chayefsky, American author, playwright, and screenwriter (b. 1923)
- 1982 – T. Thirunavukarasu, Sri Lankan lawyer and politician (b. 1933)
- 1989 – John Ogdon, English pianist and composer (b. 1937)
- 1990 – Norbert Elias, German-Dutch sociologist, author, and academic (b. 1897)
- 1996 – Tadeusz Reichstein, Polish-Swiss chemist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1897)
- 1996 – Lucille Teasdale-Corti, Canadian physician and surgeon (b. 1929)
- 1998 – Eva Bartok, Hungarian-British actress (b. 1927)
- 2001 – Korey Stringer, American football player (b. 1974)
- 2003 – Guy Thys, Belgian footballer, coach, and manager (b. 1922)
- 2003 – Marie Trintignant, French actress and screenwriter (b. 1962)
- 2004 – Philip Abelson, American physicist and author (b. 1913)
- 2005 – Al Aronowitz, American journalist (b. 1928)
- 2005 – Wim Boost, Dutch cartoonist and educator (b. 1918)
- 2005 – Constant Nieuwenhuys, Dutch painter and sculptor (b. 1920)
- 2005 – Fahd of Saudi Arabia (b. 1923)
- 2006 – Bob Thaves, American illustrator (b. 1924)
- 2006 – Iris Marion Young, American political scientist and activist (b. 1949)
- 2007 – Tommy Makem, Irish singer-songwriter and banjo player (b. 1932)
- 2008 – Gertan Klauber, Czech-English actor (b. 1932)
- 2008 – Harkishan Singh Surjeet, Indian lawyer and politician (b. 1916)
- 2009 – Corazon Aquino, Filipino politician, 11th President of the Philippines (b. 1933)
- 2010 – Lolita Lebrón, Puerto Rican-American activist (b. 1919)
- 2010 – Eric Tindill, New Zealand rugby player and cricketer (b. 1910)
- 2012 – Aldo Maldera, Italian footballer and agent (b. 1953)
- 2012 – Douglas Townsend, American composer and musicologist (b. 1921)
- 2012 – Barry Trapnell, English cricketer and academic (b. 1924)
- 2013 – John Amis, English journalist and critic (b. 1922)
- 2013 – Gail Kobe, American actress and producer (b. 1932)
- 2013 – Babe Martin, American baseball player (b. 1920)
- 2013 – Toby Saks, American cellist and educator (b. 1942)
- 2013 – Wilford White, American football player (b. 1928)
- 2014 – Valyantsin Byalkevich, Belarusian footballer and manager (b. 1973)
- 2014 – Jan Roar Leikvoll, Norwegian author (b. 1974)
- 2014 – Charles T. Payne, American soldier (b. 1925)
- 2014 – Mike Smith, English radio and television host (b. 1955)
- 2015 – Stephan Beckenbauer, German footballer and manager (b. 1968)
- 2015 – Cilla Black, English singer and actress (b. 1943)
- 2015 – Bernard d'Espagnat, French physicist, philosopher, and author (b. 1921)
- 2015 – Bob Frankford, English-Canadian physician and politician (b. 1939)
- 2015 – Hong Yuanshuo, Chinese footballer and manager (b. 1948)
- 2016 – Queen Anne of Romania (b. 1923)
- Armed Forces Day (Lebanon)
- Armed Forces Day (China) or Anniversary of the Founding of the People's Liberation Army (People's Republic of China)
- Azerbaijani Language and Alphabet Day (Azerbaijan)
- Celebration of the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 which ended the slavery in the British Empire, generally celebrated as a part of Carnival, as the Caribbean Carnival takes place at this time (British West Indies):
- Earliest day on which Caribana celebration can fall, celebrated on the first Weekend of August. (Toronto)
- Earliest day on which Emancipation Day can fall, celebrated on the first Monday of August. (Anguilla, the Bahamas, British Virgin Islands)
- Emancipation Day (Barbados, Bermuda, Guyana, Jamaica, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago)
- Christian feast day:
- Abgar V of Edessa (Syrian Church)
- Alphonsus Maria de' Liguori
- Æthelwold of Winchester
- Bernard Võ Văn Duệ (one of Vietnamese Martyrs)
- Blessed Gerhard Hirschfelder
- Eusebius of Vercelli
- Exuperius of Bayeux
- Felix of Girona
- Peter Apostle in Chains
- Procession of the Cross and the beginning of Dormition Fast (Eastern Orthodoxy)
- The Holy Maccabees
- August 1 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)
- Earliest day on which August Bank Holiday (Ireland) can fall, while August 7 is the latest; celebrated on the first Monday of August.
- Earliest day on which Civic Holiday can fall, while August 7 is the latest; celebrated on the first Monday of August. (Canada)
- Earliest day on which Commerce Day, or Frídagur verslunarmanna, can fall, while August 7 is the latest; celebrated on the first Monday of August. (Iceland)
- Earliest day on which Farmers' Day can fall, while August 7 is the latest; celebrated on the first Monday of August. (Zambia)
- Earliest day on which International Beer Day can fall, while August 7 is the latest; celebrated on the first Friday of August.
- Earliest day on which Friendship Day can fall, while August 7 is the latest; celebrated on the first Sunday of August. (United States)
- Earliest day on which Kadooment Day can fall, while August 7 is the latest; celebrated on the first Monday of August (Barbados)
- Earliest day on which Labor Day (Samoa) can fall, while August 7 is the latest; celebrated on the first Monday of August (Samoa)
- Minden Day (United Kingdom)
- National Day, celebrates the independence of Benin from France in 1960.
- National Day, commemorates Switzerland becoming a single unit in 1291.
- Official Birthday and Coronation Day of the King of Tonga (Tonga)
- Parents' Day (Democratic Republic of the Congo)
- Statehood Day (Colorado)
- The beginning of autumn observances in the Northern hemisphere and spring observances in the Southern hemisphere (Neopagan Wheel of the Year):
- The first day of Carnaval del Pueblo (Burgess Park, London, England)
- Victory Day (Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam)
- World Scout Scarf Day
- Yorkshire Day (Yorkshire, England)
“Yet to all who did receive him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God— children born not of natural descent, nor of human decision or a husband’s will, but born of God.” John 1:12-13 NIV
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Morning and Evening by Charles Spurgeon
Morning
"I in them."John 17:23
If such be the union which subsists between our souls and the person of our Lord, how deep and broad is the channel of our communion! This is no narrow pipe through which a thread-like stream may wind its way, it is a channel of amazing depth and breadth, along whose glorious length a ponderous volume of living water may roll its floods. Behold he hath set before us an open door, let us not be slow to enter. This city of communion hath many pearly gates, every several gate is of one pearl, and each gate is thrown open to the uttermost that we may enter, assured of welcome. If there were but one small loophole through which to talk with Jesus, it would be a high privilege to thrust a word of fellowship through the narrow door; how much we are blessed in having so large an entrance! Had the Lord Jesus been far away from us, with many a stormy sea between, we should have longed to send a messenger to him to carry him our loves, and bring us tidings from his Father's house; but see his kindness, he has built his house next door to ours, nay, more, he takes lodging with us, and tabernacles in poor humble hearts, that so he may have perpetual intercourse with us. O how foolish must we be, if we do not live in habitual communion with him. When the road is long, and dangerous, and difficult, we need not wonder that friends seldom meet each other, but when they live together, shall Jonathan forget his David? A wife may when her husband is upon a journey, abide many days without holding converse with him, but she could never endure to be separated from him if she knew him to be in one of the chambers of her own house. Why, believer, dost not thou sit at his banquet of wine? Seek thy Lord, for he is near; embrace him, for he is thy Brother. Hold Him fast, for he is thine Husband; and press him to thine heart, for he is of thine own flesh.
Evening
"And these are the singers ... they were employed in that work day and night."1 Chronicles 9:33
Well was it so ordered in the temple that the sacred chant never ceased: for evermore did the singers praise the Lord, whose mercy endureth forever. As mercy did not cease to rule either by day or by night, so neither did music hush its holy ministry. My heart, there is a lesson sweetly taught to thee in the ceaseless song of Zion's temple, thou too art a constant debtor, and see thou to it that thy gratitude, like charity, never faileth. God's praise is constant in heaven, which is to be thy final dwelling-place, learn thou to practise the eternal hallelujah. Around the earth as the sun scatters his light, his beams awaken grateful believers to tune their morning hymn, so that by the priesthood of the saints perpetual praise is kept up at all hours, they swathe our globe in a mantle of thanksgiving, and girdle it with a golden belt of song.
The Lord always deserves to be praised for what he is in himself, for his works of creation and providence, for his goodness towards his creatures, and especially for the transcendent act of redemption, and all the marvellous blessing flowing therefrom. It is always beneficial to praise the Lord; it cheers the day and brightens the night; it lightens toil and softens sorrow; and over earthly gladness it sheds a sanctifying radiance which makes it less liable to blind us with its glare. Have we not something to sing about at this moment? Can we not weave a song out of our present joys, or our past deliverances, or our future hopes? Earth yields her summer fruits: the hay is housed, the golden grain invites the sickle, and the sun tarrying long to shine upon a fruitful earth, shortens the interval of shade that we may lengthen the hours of devout worship. By the love of Jesus, let us be stirred up to close the day with a psalm of sanctified gladness.
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Today's reading: Psalm 54-56, Romans 3 (NIV)
View today's reading on Bible GatewayToday's Old Testament reading: Psalm 54-56
1 Save me, O God, by your name;
vindicate me by your might.
2 Hear my prayer, O God;
listen to the words of my mouth.
vindicate me by your might.
2 Hear my prayer, O God;
listen to the words of my mouth.
3 Arrogant foes are attacking me;
ruthless people are trying to kill me--
people without regard for God.
ruthless people are trying to kill me--
people without regard for God.
4 Surely God is my help;
the Lord is the one who sustains me.
the Lord is the one who sustains me.
5 Let evil recoil on those who slander me;
in your faithfulness destroy them....
in your faithfulness destroy them....
Today's New Testament reading: Romans 3
God's Faithfulness
1 What advantage, then, is there in being a Jew, or what value is there in circumcision? 2 Much in every way! First of all, the Jews have been entrusted with the very words of God.
3 What if some were unfaithful? Will their unfaithfulness nullify God's faithfulness? 4 Not at all! Let God be true, and every human being a liar. As it is written:
"So that you may be proved right when you speak
and prevail when you judge."
and prevail when you judge."
5 But if our unrighteousness brings out God's righteousness more clearly, what shall we say? That God is unjust in bringing his wrath on us? (I am using a human argument.) 6 Certainly not! If that were so, how could God judge the world? 7Someone might argue, "If my falsehood enhances God's truthfulness and so increases his glory, why am I still condemned as a sinner?" 8 Why not say-as some slanderously claim that we say-"Let us do evil that good may result"? Their condemnation is just!
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