===
In NSW the inept Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) has been told her pursuit of a magistrate was corrupt, and so the commission is asking for a change in law to allow it to continue the corrupt pursuit. The ICAC is begging to be wound up before it is forced to investigate corruption from the ALP that happened on its' watch. The judiciary in the ICAC is so biased it may never achieve that modest end. It is not dissimilar as to the corruption in the ALP in Queensland, where the Heiner enquiry was stymied not because the ALP was not corrupt, but because judges decided they weren't up to investigating it. The result is it becomes impossible to believe that anyone in the ALP is not corrupt, or the validity of any claims that a conservative is. It is a cancer at the heart of democracy in Australia. Former NSW Premier Barry O'Farrell has resigned as premier without being guilty of anything. Former Premier Nick Greiner was forced to go and he never even got the wine.
Another similar appalling situation involves jihadism and Islam. It is clear that the jihadis of ISIL have nothing to do with Islam, but impotent Islamic leadership are giving endorsement to jihadis, confusing western media. So that a jihadis assault on Charlie Hebdo which is a terrorist assault without foundation of reason is legitimised by Islamic preachers who claim that Allah is so weak as to have been hurt by images. According to modern preachers of Islam, Allah is pathetic, thin skinned, vengeful and perpetually angry and disappointed with his followers unless they cross dress, commit sodomy, kill innocent people. rape, drink alcohol, view porn and bring Islam into disrepute. Impotent Islamic leaders endorse lying about their faith. They don't believe in youth, but dismiss serious crimes as youthful excess. They have as much right to claim their pale jihadist philosophy as a religion as Scientologists. Which isn't to say that there aren't faithful Scientologists.
Disaster from floods across the NSW Coast. So far three people have died inland at Dungog, which has fame for having raised Australian batting great Doug Walters. Some are behaving really silly. Some children were playing in flood waters at Manly Beach. Some trucks and cars drive through flooded roads. Cabramatta is hardly beach side, but local creeks and roads have flooded. And more rain is predicted to be coming. It is frustrating that the infrastructure to correctly deal with the flood water isn't available. ALP refuse to build it. Instead we have a multi billion dollar desalination plant in mothballs. And still the outback is starved of fresh water.
On this day in 238, the Roman Senate outlawed emperor Maximinus for his resemblance to Kevin Rudd. Maximinus was useless, except as a parasite, corruptly stealing from all of Rome, including the very rich. He showed no judgement, but if a person was accused, they were condemned. It began the year of six emperors for Rome. Maximinus had not been killed. An elderly senator, Gordian I (80 yo) was picked by the senate to be emperor. He insisted his son join him jointly. His son (Gordian II) died fighting in Carthage, and so Gordian I suicided. A desperate senate wanting to prevent Maximinus from seizing the throne again appointed Pupienus and Balbinus, but they were dysfunctional, expecting the other to poison for sole authority. Pupienus marched to face Maximinus. Maximinus was killed by his personal guard who were immediately pardoned. Meanwhile Rome had an uprising which Balbinus failed to put down. Balbinus and Pupienus bickered among each other and were killed by their personal guards, and Gordian III was made emperor at 13 years of age, governing through advisors from the senate.
On this day in 1836, in the Texas Revolution, after Sam Houston's forces were successful against Santa Anna at the Battle of San Jacinto, Santa Anna was identified by one of his own men. The battle had been one sided. Houston was shot through the ankle and lost two horses in the fighting, but he had won a victory killing about 700 men, wounding 208 and imprisoning 730. Houston lost 9 men and thirty were wounded. They hadn't known they had captured Santa Anna until the prisoners began saluting him, calling him "El Presidente." In 1864, US Congress passed a coinage act, placing the words "In God We Trust" on their coins. In 1889, at high noon, thousands rushed to stake their claims in The Land Rush of 1889, founding the cities of Guthrie and Oklahoma overnight. In 1912, Pravda, the voice of the Soviet Party was founded in St Petersburg. It became a template for the Age and Sydney Morning Herald. In 1944, the 1st Commando Group first used Sikorsky Helicopters in combat in a Burma-India-China theatre. In 1945, Hitler stated there was nothing left for him to do but suicide. That had been true for decades. In 1954, McCarthy's interviews with communists was televised. In 1977, Optical Fibre was first used in telephone traffic. In 2000, Bill Clinton's goons seized a young boy and gave him to Cuba.
2014
Forty eight hours before challenging Rudd for leadership, Gillard wrote to him an email. It doesn't matter how she couched the words, but the issues she raised are salient. She titled the email to do with Climate change. She acknowledge the government was seen as being incompetent and out of control. She highlighted asylum seeker policy, a proposed internet filter and climate change. Soon after, on campaign, she promised there would be no Carbon tax. However, in government with independents, Gillard's leadership ensured no one was in control of government policy. It is hard to credit that what she did was not what she wanted to do, but through finesse rather than direct assertion. So that Carbon tax was implemented with her support, but against her expressed wishes. So that an anti semitic bigot was placed in charge of foreign policy. She claims she supports Israel. Press freedoms a free nation takes for granted were under assault. None of her proposed solutions to the appalling deaths from drowning of asylum seekers worked. The truth is, she never had a plan or policy that was worthwhile. Medicare Gold was a dud. A promise that would never have delivered benefits but which was very expensive. What people still fail to realise is that the bad policy of the six years of ALP government was not solely Rudd's or Gillards but the collective leadership of the ALP. That furniture has been retained. The empty promises, just like the ones delivered by Gillard regarding the Pacific Solution in '01, remain.
Empty promises of the ALP still threaten good government when they are not in government. Pru Goward has made a good policy protecting the welfare of many children by allowing adoption to be cheaper and more possible. She is now being savagely attacked for that with the use of empty promises made by the ALP based on useless policy which they put forward to get support. Children die and are hurt by neglect, and good people do nothing. There is opposition to migration as a result of the injustice of the previous government policy. Again, empty promises have created a greater expectation than good policy delivers. The truth is that the Pacific Solution, including turning back boats, is the best policy that government has.
One policy which needs to be addressed involves freedom of speech. The ALP promise of no one being offended is impossible, but the reality of, speech being limited, is real. There is no middle ground. The friends of the ALP will fight it (free speech), and use bad words. We cannot blink in our support of free speech.
Empty promises of the ALP still threaten good government when they are not in government. Pru Goward has made a good policy protecting the welfare of many children by allowing adoption to be cheaper and more possible. She is now being savagely attacked for that with the use of empty promises made by the ALP based on useless policy which they put forward to get support. Children die and are hurt by neglect, and good people do nothing. There is opposition to migration as a result of the injustice of the previous government policy. Again, empty promises have created a greater expectation than good policy delivers. The truth is that the Pacific Solution, including turning back boats, is the best policy that government has.
One policy which needs to be addressed involves freedom of speech. The ALP promise of no one being offended is impossible, but the reality of, speech being limited, is real. There is no middle ground. The friends of the ALP will fight it (free speech), and use bad words. We cannot blink in our support of free speech.
Historical perspectives on this day
In 1809, the second day of the Battle of Eckmühl: The Austrian army was defeated by the First French Empire army led by Napoleon I of France and driven over the Danube in Regensburg. 1836, Texas Revolution: A day after the Battle of San Jacinto, forces under Texas General Sam Houston identified Mexican General Antonio López de Santa Anna among the captives of the battle when one of his fellow captives mistakenly gave away his identity. 1864, the U.S. Congress passed the Coinage Act of 1864 that mandated that the inscription In God We Trust be placed on all coins minted as United States currency. 1876, the first ever National League baseball game was played in Philadelphia. 1889, at high noon, thousands rushed to claim land in the Land Rush of 1889. Within hours the cities of Oklahoma City and Guthrie were formed with populations of at least 10,000. 1898, Spanish–American War: The USS Nashville captured a Spanish merchant ship.
In 1906, the 1906 Summer Olympics, not now recognised as part of the official Olympic Games, opened in Athens. 1911, Tsinghua University, one of mainland China's leading universities, was founded. 1912, Pravda, the "voice" of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, began publication in Saint Petersburg. 1915, the use of poison gas in World War I escalated when chlorine gas was released as a chemical weapon in the Second Battle of Ypres. 1930, the United Kingdom, Japan and the United States signed the London Naval Treaty regulating submarine warfare and limiting shipbuilding.
In 1944, the 1st Air Commando Group using Sikorsky R-4 helicopters staged the first use of helicopters in combat with combat search and rescue operations in the China-Burma-India theater. 1944, World War II: Operation Persecution was initiated: Allied forces landed in the Hollandia (currently known as Jayapura) area of New Guinea. 1945, World War II: Prisoners at the Jasenovac concentration camp revolted. Five hundred twenty were killed and 80 escaped. Also 1945, World War II: Führerbunker: After learning that Soviet forces had taken Eberswalde without a fight, Adolf Hitler admitted defeat in his underground bunker and stated that suicide was his only recourse. 1948, Arab–Israeli War: Haifa, a major port of Israel, was captured from Arab forces.
In 1951, Korean War: The Chinese People's Volunteer Army began assaulting positions defended by the Royal Australian Regiment and the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry at the Battle of Kapyong. 1954, Red Scare: Witnesses began testifying and live television coverage of the Army–McCarthy hearings began. 1964, the 1964-1965 New York World's Fair opened for its first season. 1969, British yachtsman Sir Robin Knox-Johnston won the Sunday Times Golden Globe Race and completed the first solo non-stop circumnavigation of the world.
In 1970, the first Earth Day was celebrated. 1972, Vietnam War: Increased American bombing in Vietnam prompted anti-war protests in Los Angeles, New York City, and San Francisco. 1977, Optical fiber was first used to carry live telephone traffic. 1983, the German magazine Stern claimed that the "Hitler Diaries" had been found in wreckage in East Germany; the diaries were subsequently revealed to be forgeries. 1992, in an explosion in Guadalajara, Mexico, 206 people were killed, nearly 500 injured and 15,000 left homeless. 1993, Version 1.0 of the Mosaic web browser was released. 1997, Haouch Khemisti massacre in Algeria where 93 villagers were killed. Also 1997, the Japanese embassy hostage crisis ended in Lima, Peru. 1998, Disney's Animal Kingdom opens at Walt Disney World near Orlando, Florida, United States.
In 2000, in a pre-dawn raid, federal agents seize six-year-old Elián González from his relatives' home in Miami. Also 2000, the Big Number Change took place in the United Kingdom. 2004, two fuel trains collided in Ryongchon, North Korea, killing up to 150 people. 2005, Japan's Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi apologised for Japan's war record. 2008, the United States Air Force retired the remaining F-117 Nighthawk aircraft in service. 2013, six people died in a shooting in Belgorod, Russia. Also 2013, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police arrested and charged two men with plotting to disrupt a Toronto area train service in a plot claimed to be backed by Al-Qaeda elements. 2014, more than 60 people were killed and 80 were seriously injured in a train crash in the Democratic Republic of the Congo's Katanga Province.
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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.
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Editorials will appear in the "History in a Year by the Conservative Voice" series, starting with August https://www.createspace.com/4124406, September https://www.createspace.com/5106914, October https://www.createspace.com/5106951, 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 the purchase of a kindle version for just $3.99 more.
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For twenty two years I have been responsibly addressing an issue, and I cannot carry on. I am petitioning the Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott to remedy my distress. I leave it up to him if he chooses to address the issue. Regardless of your opinion of conservative government, the issue is pressing. Please sign my petition at https://www.change.org/en-AU/petitions/tony-abbott-remedy-the-persecution-of-dd-ball
Or the US President at
https://www.change.org/p/barack-obama-change-this-injustice#
or
https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/change-injustice-faced-david-daniel-ball-after-he-reported-bungled-pedophile-investigation-and/b8mxPWtJ or http://wh.gov/ilXYR
Mr Ball, I will not sign your petition as it will do no good, but I will share your message and ask as many of friends who read it, to share it also. Let us see if we cannot use the power of the internet to spread the word of these infamous killings. As a father and a former soldier, I cannot, could not, justify ignoring this appalling action by the perpetrators, whoever they may; I thank you Douglas. You are wrong about the petition. Signing it is as worthless and meaningless an act as voting. A stand up guy would know that. - ed
Lorraine Allen Hider I signed the petition ages ago David, with pleasure, nobody knows what it's like until they've been there. Keep heart David take care.
I have begun a bulletin board (http://theconservativevoice.freeforums.net) which will allow greater latitude for members to post and interact. It is not subject to FB policy and so greater range is allowed in posts. Also there are private members rooms in which nothing is censored, except abuse. All welcome, registration is free.
For twenty two years I have been responsibly addressing an issue, and I cannot carry on. I am petitioning the Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott to remedy my distress. I leave it up to him if he chooses to address the issue. Regardless of your opinion of conservative government, the issue is pressing. Please sign my petition at https://www.change.org/en-AU/petitions/tony-abbott-remedy-the-persecution-of-dd-ball
Or the US President at
https://www.change.org/p/barack-obama-change-this-injustice#
or
https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/change-injustice-faced-david-daniel-ball-after-he-reported-bungled-pedophile-investigation-and/b8mxPWtJ or http://wh.gov/ilXYR
Mr Ball, I will not sign your petition as it will do no good, but I will share your message and ask as many of friends who read it, to share it also. Let us see if we cannot use the power of the internet to spread the word of these infamous killings. As a father and a former soldier, I cannot, could not, justify ignoring this appalling action by the perpetrators, whoever they may; I thank you Douglas. You are wrong about the petition. Signing it is as worthless and meaningless an act as voting. A stand up guy would know that. - ed
Lorraine Allen Hider I signed the petition ages ago David, with pleasure, nobody knows what it's like until they've been there. Keep heart David take care.
===
Happy birthday and many happy returns Andreas Herrmann, Leane Stitzinger, Melody Wu and Karina Sy. Born on the same day, across the years, when Pedro Cabral landed in Brazil and claimed the land for portugal. Commemorated with delicious chicken.
- 1451 – Isabella I of Castile (d. 1504)
- 1592 – Wilhelm Schickard, German mathematician (d. 1635)
- 1658 – Giuseppe Torelli, Italian violinist and composer (d. 1709)
- 1724 – Immanuel Kant, German philosopher (d. 1804)
- 1757 – Alessandro Rolla, Italian violinist and composer (d. 1841)
- 1870 – Vladimir Lenin, Russian politician (d. 1924)
- 1891 – Harold Jeffreys, English mathematician, geophysicist, and astronomer (d. 1989)
- 1899 – Vladimir Nabokov, Russian-American author (d. 1977)
- 1904 – J. Robert Oppenheimer, American physicist (d. 1967)
- 1923 – Bettie Page, American model and actress (d. 2008)
- 1936 – Glen Campbell, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and actor
- 1943 – Louise Glück, American poet
- 1950 – Peter Frampton, English singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer (The Herd and Humble Pie)
- 1995 – Victoria Rodríguez, Mexican tennis player
- 296 – Pope Caius
- 1616 – Miguel de Cervantes, Spanish author, poet, and playwright (b. 1547)
- 1833 – Richard Trevithick, English engineer (b. 1771)
- 1519 – Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés (pictured) established a settlement in Mexico, naming it "Villa Rica de la Vera Cruz" ("Rich village of the True Cross").
- 1864 – The U.S. Congress passed the Coinage Act, authorizing the minting of a two-cent coin, the first U.S. coin to bear the phrase "In God we trust".
- 1930 – France, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States signed the London Naval Treaty, regulating submarine warfare and limiting military ship building.
- 1951 – Korean War: The People's Volunteer Army of China attacked positions occupied mainly by Australian and Canadian forces, starting the Battle of Kapyong.
- 1983 – The West German news magazine Sternpublished excerpts from what purported to be the diaries of Adolf Hitler, which were subsequently revealed to be forgeries.
Matches
- 238 – Year of the Six Emperors: The Roman Senate outlaws emperor Maximinus Thrax for his bloodthirsty proscriptions in Rome and nominates two of its members, Pupienus and Balbinus, to the throne.
- 1500 – Portuguese navigator Pedro Álvares Cabral lands in Brazil.
- 1519 – Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés establishes a settlement at Veracruz, Mexico.
- 1529 – Treaty of Zaragoza divides the eastern hemisphere between Spain and Portugal along a line 297.5 leagues or 17° east of the Moluccas.
- 1622 – The Capture of Ormuz by the East India Company ends Portuguese control of Hormuz Island.
- 1809 – The second day of the Battle of Eckmühl: The Austrian army is defeated by the First French Empire army led by Napoleon I of France and driven over the Danube in Regensburg.
- 1836 – Texas Revolution: A day after the Battle of San Jacinto, forces under Texas General Sam Houston identify Mexican General Antonio López de Santa Anna among the captives of the battle when one of his fellow captives mistakenly gives away his identity.
- 1864 – The U.S. Congress passes the Coinage Act of 1864 that mandates that the inscription In God We Trust be placed on all coins minted as United States currency.
- 1876 – The first ever National League baseball game is played in Philadelphia.
- 1889 – At high noon, thousands rush to claim land in the Land Rush of 1889. Within hours the cities of Oklahoma City and Guthrie are formed with populations of at least 10,000.
- 1898 – Spanish–American War: The USS Nashville captures a Spanish merchant ship.
- 1906 – The 1906 Summer Olympics, not now recognized as part of the official Olympic Games, open in Athens.
- 1911 – Tsinghua University, one of mainland China's leading universities, is founded.
- 1912 – Pravda, the "voice" of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, begins publication in Saint Petersburg.
- 1915 – The use of poison gas in World War I escalates when chlorine gas is released as a chemical weapon in the Second Battle of Ypres.
- 1930 – The United Kingdom, Japan and the United States sign the London Naval Treaty regulating submarine warfare and limiting shipbuilding.
- 1944 – The 1st Air Commando Group using Sikorsky R-4 helicopters stage the first use of helicopters in combat with combat search and rescue operations in the China-Burma-India theater.
- 1944 – World War II: Operation Persecution is initiated: Allied forces land in the Hollandia (currently known as Jayapura) area of New Guinea.
- 1945 – World War II: Prisoners at the Jasenovac concentration camp revolt. Five hundred twenty are killed and 80 escape.
- 1945 – World War II: Führerbunker: After learning that Soviet forces have taken Eberswalde without a fight, Adolf Hitler admits defeat in his underground bunker and states that suicide is his only recourse.
- 1948 – Arab–Israeli War: Haifa, a major port of Israel, is captured from Arab forces.
- 1951 – Korean War: The Chinese People's Volunteer Army begin assaulting positions defended by the Royal Australian Regiment and the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry at the Battle of Kapyong.
- 1954 – Red Scare: Witnesses begin testifying and live television coverage of the Army–McCarthy hearings begins.
- 1964 – The 1964-1965 New York World's Fair opens for its first season.
- 1969 – British yachtsman Sir Robin Knox-Johnston wins the Sunday Times Golden Globe Race and completes the first solo non-stop circumnavigation of the world.
- 1970 – The first Earth Day is celebrated.
- 1972 – Vietnam War: Increased American bombing in Vietnam prompts anti-war protests in Los Angeles, New York City, and San Francisco.
- 1977 – Optical fiber is first used to carry live telephone traffic.
- 1983 – The German magazine Stern claims that the "Hitler Diaries" had been found in wreckage in East Germany; the diaries are subsequently revealed to be forgeries.
- 1992 – In an explosion in Guadalajara, Mexico, 206 people are killed, nearly 500 injured and 15,000 left homeless.
- 1993 – Version 1.0 of the Mosaic web browser is released.
- 1997 – Haouch Khemisti massacre in Algeria where 93 villagers are killed.
- 1997 – The Japanese embassy hostage crisis ends in Lima, Peru.
- 1998 – Disney's Animal Kingdom opens at Walt Disney World near Orlando, Florida, United States.
- 2000 – In a pre-dawn raid, federal agents seize six-year-old Elián González from his relatives' home in Miami.
- 2000 – The Big Number Change takes place in the United Kingdom.
- 2004 – Two fuel trains collide in Ryongchon, North Korea, killing up to 150 people.
- 2005 – Japan's Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi apologizes for Japan's war record.
- 2008 – The United States Air Force retires the remaining F-117 Nighthawk aircraft in service.
- 2013 – Six people die in a shooting in Belgorod, Russia.
- 2013 – The Royal Canadian Mounted Police arrest and charge two men with plotting to disrupt a Toronto area train service in a plot claimed to be backed by Al-Qaeda elements.
- 2014 – More than 60 people are killed and 80 are seriously injured in a train crash in the Democratic Republic of the Congo's Katanga Province.
- 1451 – Isabella I of Castile (d. 1504)
- 1592 – Wilhelm Schickard, German astronomer and mathematician (d. 1635)
- 1610 – Pope Alexander VIII (d. 1691)
- 1658 – Giuseppe Torelli, Italian violinist and composer (d. 1709)
- 1690 – John Carteret, 2nd Earl Granville, English politician, Lord President of the Council (d. 1763)
- 1707 – Henry Fielding, English author and playwright (d. 1754)
- 1711 – Paul II Anton, Prince Esterházy, Austrian soldier (d. 1762)
- 1724 – Immanuel Kant, German philosopher (d. 1804)
- 1744 – James Sullivan, American lawyer and politician, 7th Governor of Massachusetts (d. 1808)
- 1757 – Alessandro Rolla, Italian violinist and composer (d. 1841)
- 1766 – Germaine de Staël, French author (d. 1817)
- 1812 – Solomon Caesar Malan, Swiss-English orientalist (d. 1894)
- 1816 – Charles-Denis Bourbaki, French general (d. 1897)
- 1832 – Julius Sterling Morton, American journalist and politician, founded Arbor Day (d. 1902)
- 1844 – Lewis Powell, American attempted assassin of William H. Seward (d. 1865)
- 1852 – William IV, Grand Duke of Luxembourg (d. 1912)
- 1854 – Henri La Fontaine, Belgian lawyer, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1943)
- 1860 – Ada Rehan, American actress (d. 1916)
- 1868 – Archduchess Marie Valerie of Austria (d. 1924)
- 1870 – Vladimir Lenin, Russian politician (d. 1924)
- 1872 – Princess Margaret of Prussia (d. 1954)
- 1873 – Ellen Glasgow, American author (d. 1945)
- 1876 – Róbert Bárány, Austrian physician, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1936)
- 1876 – Georg Lurich, Estonian wrestler and strongman (d. 1920)
- 1879 – Bernhard Gregory, Estonian-German chess player (d. 1939)
- 1881 – Alexander Kerensky, Russian politician, 10th Prime Minister of Russia (d. 1970)
- 1884 – Otto Rank, Austrian psychologist (d. 1939)
- 1886 – Izidor Cankar, Slovenian historian, author, and diplomat (d. 1958)
- 1889 – Richard Glücks, German SS officer (d. 1945)
- 1891 – Laura Gilpin, American photographer (d. 1979)
- 1891 – Vittorio Jano, Italian engineer (d. 1965)
- 1891 – Harold Jeffreys, English mathematician, geophysicist, and astronomer (d. 1989)
- 1891 – Nicola Sacco, Italian-American criminal (d. 1927)
- 1892 – Vernon Johns, American minister and activist (d. 1965)
- 1899 – Vladimir Nabokov, Russian-American author (d. 1977)
- 1904 – J. Robert Oppenheimer, American physicist (d. 1967)
- 1905 – Robert Choquette, American-Canadian author, poet, and diplomat (d. 1991)
- 1906 – Eddie Albert, American actor (d. 2005)
- 1906 – Eric Fenby, English composer and educator (d. 1997)
- 1906 – Prince Gustaf Adolf, Duke of Västerbotten (d. 1947)
- 1907 – Ivan Yefremov, Russian paleontologist and author (d. 1972)
- 1909 – Rita Levi-Montalcini, Italian neurologist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2012)
- 1909 – Indro Montanelli, Italian journalist and historian (d. 2001)
- 1910 – Norman Steenrod, American mathematician (d. 1971)
- 1912 – Kathleen Ferrier, English singer (d. 1953)
- 1912 – Kaneto Shindo, Japanese director, producer, and screenwriter (d. 2012)
- 1914 – Baldev Raj Chopra, Indian director and producer (d. 2008)
- 1914 – Jan de Hartog, Dutch-American author and playwright (d. 2002)
- 1914 – José Quiñones Gonzales, Peruvian soldier and pilot (d. 1941)
- 1914 – Michael Wittmann, German SS officer (d. 1944)
- 1916 – Kanan Devi, Indian actress and singer (d. 1992)
- 1916 – Hanfried Lenz, German mathematician and educator (d. 2013)
- 1916 – Yehudi Menuhin, American-Swiss violinist and conductor (d. 1999)
- 1917 – Yvette Chauviré, French ballerina
- 1918 – William Jay Smith, American poet and academic
- 1918 – Mickey Vernon, American baseball player and coach (d. 2008)
- 1919 – Donald J. Cram, American chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2001)
- 1919 – Carl Lindner, Jr., American businessman and philanthropist (d. 2011)
- 1922 – Richard Diebenkorn, American painter (d. 1993)
- 1922 – Charles Mingus, American bassist, composer, and bandleader (d. 1979)
- 1922 – Wolf V. Vishniac, American microbiologist (d. 1973)
- 1923 – Avis Bunnage, English actress (d. 1990)
- 1923 – Peter Kane Dufault, American poet (d. 2013)
- 1923 – Bettie Page, American model and actress (d. 2008)
- 1923 – Aaron Spelling, American actor, producer, and screenwriter (d. 2006)
- 1924 – Nam Duck-woo, South Korean politician, 12th Prime Minister of South Korea (d. 2013)
- 1925 – George Cole, English actor
- 1926 – Charlotte Rae, American actress and singer
- 1926 – James Stirling, Scottish architect, designed the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart and Seeley Historical Library (d. 1992)
- 1927 – Laurel Aitken, Cuban-Jamaican singer (d. 2005)
- 1929 – Michael Atiyah, English-Lebanese mathematician and academic
- 1929 – Robert Wade-Gery, English diplomat
- 1930 – Enno Penno, Estonian politician, Prime Minister of Estonia in exile
- 1931 – John Buchanan, Canadian lawyer and politician, 20th Premier of Nova Scotia
- 1931 – Ronald Hynd, English dancer and choreographer
- 1933 – Mark Damon, American film actor and producer
- 1933 – Anthony Llewellyn, Welsh-American astronaut (d. 2013)
- 1934 – Nico Ladenis, Tanzanian-English chef
- 1935 – Christopher Ball, English linguist and academic
- 1935 – Paul Chambers, American bassist and composer (Miles Davis Quintet) (d. 1969)
- 1935 – Mario Machado, Chinese-American journalist and actor (d. 2013)
- 1936 – Glen Campbell, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and actor
- 1936 – Pierre Hétu, Canadian pianist and conductor (d. 1998)
- 1937 – Jack Nicholson, American actor, director, producer, and screenwriter
- 1937 – Jack Nitzsche, American singer-songwriter, pianist, and conductor (Crazy Horse) (d. 2000)
- 1938 – Gani Fawehinmi, Nigerian lawyer and activist (d. 2009)
- 1938 – Issey Miyake, Japanese fashion designer
- 1938 – Adam Raphael, English journalist and author
- 1939 – Mel Carter, American singer and actor
- 1939 – John Chilcot, English civil servant
- 1939 – John Foley, English general and politician, Lieutenant Governor of Guernsey
- 1939 – Ray Guy, Canadian journalist (d. 2013)
- 1939 – Jason Miller, American actor and playwright (d. 2001)
- 1939 – Ann Mitchell, English actress
- 1939 – Theodor Waigel, German lawyer and politician, German Federal Minister of Finance
- 1941 – Greville Howard, Baron Howard of Rising, English politician
- 1940 – Marie-José Nat, French actress
- 1942 – Giorgio Agamben, Italian philosopher and academic
- 1942 – Denis Lill, New Zealand-English actor
- 1942 – Mary Prior, English politician, Lord Lieutenant of Bristol
- 1943 – Keith Crisco, American businessman and politician (d. 2014)
- 1943 – Janet Evanovich, American author
- 1943 – Louise Glück, American poet
- 1943 – John Maples, Baron Maples, English lawyer and politician (d. 2012)
- 1944 – Steve Fossett, American businessman, pilot, and sailor (d. 2007)
- 1944 – Doug Jarrett, Canadian ice hockey player (d. 2014)
- 1944 – Joshua Rifkin, American conductor and musicologist
- 1945 – William Arthur Brown, English academic
- 1945 – Gopalkrishna Gandhi, Indian civil servant and diplomat, 22nd Governor of West Bengal
- 1945 – Demetrio Stratos, Egyptian-Italian singer-songwriter (Area) (d. 1979)
- 1946 – Steven L. Bennett, American captain and pilot, Medal of Honor recipient (d. 1972)
- 1946 – Paul Davies, English physicist and author
- 1946 – Nicole Garcia, French actress and director
- 1946 – Louise Harel, Canadian politician
- 1946 – Archy Kirkwood, Baron Kirkwood of Kirkhope, Scottish politician
- 1946 – Nicholas Stern, Baron Stern of Brentford, English economist and academic
- 1946 – John Waters, American actor, director, producer, and screenwriter
- 1948 – Larry Groce, American singer-songwriter and radio host
- 1948 – John Pritchard, English bishop
- 1950 – Peter Frampton, English singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer (The Herd and Humble Pie)
- 1950 – Jancis Robinson, English journalist and critic
- 1950 – Zygi Wilf, German-American businessman
- 1951 – Paul Carrack, English singer-songwriter and guitarist (Ace, Squeeze, Mike + The Mechanics, and Roxy Music)
- 1951 – Ana María Shua, Argentinian author and poet
- 1952 – François Berléand, French actor
- 1952 – Marilyn Chambers, American porn actress (d. 2009)
- 1952 – Phil Smith, American basketball player (d. 2002)
- 1953 – Valeri Bondarenko, Estonian footballer and coach
- 1953 – Richard Broadbent, English businessman
- 1953 – Tom Griswold, American radio host
- 1953 – Juhani Komulainen, Finnish composer
- 1954 – Jōji Nakata, Japanese voice actor
- 1955 – David Collier, English businessman
- 1955 – Johnnie To, Hong Kong director and producer
- 1957 – Donald Tusk, Polish politician, 14th Prime Minister of Poland
- 1958 – Ken Olandt, American actor and producer
- 1959 – Keith Boanas, English footballer and manager
- 1959 – Terry Francona, American baseball player, coach, and manager
- 1959 – Catherine Mary Stewart, Canadian actress
- 1959 – Ryan Stiles, American-Canadian actor and producer
- 1960 – Lloyd Honeyghan, Jamaican-English boxer
- 1960 – Mart Laar, Estonian politician, 9th Prime Minister of Estonia
- 1960 – Gary Rhodes, English chef and author
- 1960 – Randall L. Stephenson, American businessman
- 1960 – Tatiana Thumbtzen, American actress, model, and dancer
- 1961 – Alo Mattiisen, Estonian composer (d. 1996)
- 1961 – Ann McKechin, Scottish politician, Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland
- 1961 – Dewey Nicks, American photographer and director
- 1962 – Jeff Minter, English video game designer
- 1962 – Danièle Sauvageau, Canadian ice hockey player and coach
- 1963 – Rosalind Gill, British feminist, and media commentator
- 1963 – Sean Lock, English comedian and actor
- 1963 – Magnús Ver Magnússon, Icelandic weightlifter and strongman
- 1964 – Estelle Asmodelle, Australian model and actress
- 1964 – Chris Makepeace, Canadian actor and director
- 1965 – Lauri Hendler, American actress
- 1965 – Miguel Leal, Portuguese football manager
- 1965 – Peter Zezel, Canadian ice hockey and soccer player (d. 2009)
- 1966 – Dana Barron, American actress
- 1966 – Kimberley Dahme, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (Boston)
- 1966 – Fletcher Dragge, American guitarist and producer (Pennywise)
- 1966 – Mariana Levy, Mexican actress and singer (d. 2005)
- 1966 – Mickey Morandini, American baseball player and manager
- 1966 – Jeffrey Dean Morgan, American actor
- 1967 – Sheryl Lee, American actress
- 1967 – David J. C. MacKay, Scientist
- 1967 – Sherri Shepherd, American comedian, actress, and talk show host
- 1967 – Harvey Williams, American football player
- 1968 – Bimbo Coles, American basketball player
- 1968 – Zarley Zalapski, Canadian-Swiss ice hockey player
- 1969 – Dion Dublin, English footballer and sportscaster
- 1970 – Erkki Bahovski, Estonian journalist
- 1970 – Andrea Giani, Italian volleyball player and coach
- 1970 – Regine Velasquez, Filipino singer, actress, and producer
- 1971 – Daisuke Enomoto, Japanese businessman
- 1971 – Ingo Rademacher, German-Australian actor
- 1972 – Sabine Appelmans, Belgian tennis player
- 1972 – Owen Finegan, Australian rugby player
- 1972 – Milka Duno, Venezuelan race car driver
- 1972 – Sergei Hohlov-Simson, Estonian footballer
- 1972 – Willie Robertson, American hunter and businessman
- 1973 – Adem Poric, English-Australian footballer
- 1973 – Christopher Sabat, American voice actor, director, and producer
- 1973 – Ofer Talker, Israeli footballer
- 1974 – Opio, American rapper (Souls of Mischief and Hieroglyphics)
- 1974 – Shavo Odadjian, Armenian-American bass player, songwriter, and producer (System of a Down and Achozen)
- 1975 – Greg Moore, Canadian race car driver (d. 1999)
- 1975 – Carlos Sastre, Spanish cyclist
- 1975 – Anders Nyström, Swedish guitarist (Katatonia, Bewitched, Bloodbath, Diabolical Masquerade)
- 1976 – Dan Cloutier, Canadian ice hockey player and coach
- 1976 – Paul Henderson, Australian footballer
- 1976 – Michał Żewłakow, Polish footballer
- 1977 – Ambra Angiolini, Italian actress and singer
- 1977 – Anna Eriksson, Finnish singer
- 1977 – Aaron Fincke, American guitarist (Breaking Benjamin, Lifer, and Stardog Champion)
- 1977 – Mark van Bommel, Dutch footballer
- 1978 – Ezekiel Jackson, Guyanese-American wrestler
- 1978 – Paul Malakwen Kosgei, Kenyan runner
- 1978 – Matt Orford, Australian rugby player
- 1978 – Jason Stollsteimer, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (The Von Bondies and Hounds Below)
- 1978 – Esteban Tuero, Argentinian race car driver
- 1979 – Zoltán Gera, Hungarian footballer
- 1979 – Daniel Johns, Australian singer-songwriter and guitarist (Silverchair and The Dissociatives)
- 1980 – Igor Budan, Croatian footballer
- 1980 – Clarke Dermody, New Zealand rugby player
- 1980 – Nicolas Douchez, French footballer
- 1980 – Courtney Friel, American journalist
- 1980 – Carlos Hernández, Venezuelan baseball player
- 1980 – Kora Karvouni, Greek actress
- 1980 – Aaron Michael Metchik, American actor
- 1980 – Quincy Timberlake, Kenyan-Australian activist and politician
- 1981 – Ken Dorsey, American football player
- 1981 – Daniel Ghiță, Romanian kick-boxer
- 1981 – Madis Kallas, Estonian decathlete and activist
- 1981 – Rafael Sperafico, Brazilian race car driver (d. 2007)
- 1981 – Jonathan Trott, South African-English cricketer
- 1981 – Eglantina Zingg, Venezuelan model and actress
- 1982 – Kaká, Brazilian footballer
- 1982 – Cassidy Freeman, American actress, singer, and pianist
- 1982 – Joel Monaghan, Australian rugby player
- 1982 – David Purcey, American baseball player
- 1982 – Aidas Reklys, Lithuanian figure skater
- 1982 – Aleksander Saharov, Estonian footballer
- 1982 – Noriko Shitaya, Japanese voice actress
- 1983 – Remi Ayodele, American football player
- 1983 – Francis Capra, American actor
- 1983 – Elliott Jordan, English actor
- 1983 – Sam W. Heads, English-American entomologist and palaeontologist
- 1983 – Jos Hooiveld, Dutch footballer
- 1983 – Matt Jones, American football player
- 1983 – Vangelis Mantzios, Greek footballer
- 1984 – Breanne Benson, Albanian-American porn actress
- 1984 – Amelle Berrabah, English singer-songwriter (Sugababes)
- 1984 – Michelle Ryan, English actress
- 1985 – Matt Ballinger, American singer and actor (Dream Street)
- 1985 – Blake Fitzpatrick, American director and screenwriter
- 1985 – Pablo Cáceres Rodríguez, Uruguayan footballer
- 1985 – Kseniya Simonova, Ukrainian painter and sculptor
- 1986 – Amber Heard, American actress
- 1986 – Marshawn Lynch, American football player
- 1986 – Dušan Šakota, Serbian-Greek basketball player
- 1987 – BC Jean, American singer-songwriter and actress
- 1987 – David Luiz, Brazilian footballer
- 1987 – David Mateos, Spanish footballer
- 1987 – John Obi Mikel, Nigerian footballer
- 1988 – Cherise Donovan, Australian actress
- 1988 – James Ross, American drag queen performer
- 1988 – Amadou Samb, Senegalese footballer
- 1989 – DeJuan Blair, American basketball player
- 1989 – Jasper Cillessen, Dutch footballer
- 1989 – Thomas James Longley, English actor and model
- 1990 – Óscar González, Mexican boxer (d. 2014)
- 1990 – Machine Gun Kelly, American rapper
- 1990 – Eve Muirhead, Scottish curler
- 1990 – Jade Windley, English tennis player
- 1991 – Braydon Smith, Australian boxer (d. 2015)
- 1992 – Joc Pederson, American baseball player
- 1992 – Kenny Stills, American football player
- 1992 – Rolene Strauss, South African model, Miss World 2014
- 1992 – Joonas Vaino, Estonian basketball player
- 1992 – Robin van Helsum, Dutch criminal
- 1993 – Ryu Hwayoung, South Korean rapper, dancer, and actress (T-ara)
- 1995 – Victoria Rodríguez, Mexican tennis player
- 296 – Pope Caius
- 536 – Pope Agapetus I
- 591 – Peter III of Raqqa
- 613 – Saint Theodore of Sykeon
- 1616 – Miguel de Cervantes, Spanish author, poet, and playwright (b. 1547)
- 1672 – Georg Stiernhielm, Swedish linguist and poet (b. 1598)
- 1699 – Hans Erasmus Aßmann, German poet (b. 1646)
- 1758 – Antoine de Jussieu, French biologist (b. 1686)
- 1806 – Pierre-Charles Villeneuve, French admiral (b. 1763)
- 1821 – Gregory V of Constantinople, Greek patriarch and saint (b. 1746)
- 1833 – Richard Trevithick, English engineer (b. 1771)
- 1850 – Friedrich Robert Faehlmann, Estonian philologist and physician (b. 1798)
- 1854 – Nicolás Bravo, Mexican general and politician, 11th President of Mexico (b. 1786)
- 1877 – James P. Kirkwood, Scottish-American engineer (b. 1807)
- 1892 – Édouard Lalo, French composer (b. 1823)
- 1893 – Chaim Aronson, Lithuanian businessman and author (b. 1825)
- 1894 – Kostas Krystallis, Greek author and poet (b. 1868)
- 1896 – Thomas Meik, English engineer, founded Halcrow Group (b. 1812)
- 1908 – Henry Campbell-Bannerman, Scottish-English politician, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (b. 1836)
- 1925 – André Caplet, French composer and conductor (b. 1878)
- 1929 – Henry Lerolle, French painter (b. 1848)
- 1932 – Ferenc Oslay, Hungarian-Slovene historian and author (b. 1883)
- 1933 – Henry Royce, English engineer and businessman, co-founded Rolls-Royce Limited (b. 1863)
- 1944 – Nikolaos Roussen, Greek captain (b. 1913)
- 1945 – Wilhelm Cauer, German mathematician (b. 1900)
- 1945 – Käthe Kollwitz, German painter and sculptor (b. 1867)
- 1946 – Lionel Atwill, English-American actor (b. 1885)
- 1946 – Harlan F. Stone, American lawyer and jurist, 12th Chief Justice of the United States (b. 1872)
- 1949 – Charles Middleton, American actor (b. 1874)
- 1950 – Charles Hamilton Houston, American lawyer (b. 1895)
- 1951 – Horace Donisthorpe, English entomologist (b. 1870)
- 1968 – Stephen H. Sholes, American record producer (b. 1911)
- 1978 – Will Geer, American actor (b. 1902)
- 1980 – Jane Froman, American actress and singer (b. 1907)
- 1980 – Fritz Strassmann, German chemist (b. 1902)
- 1983 – John Louis Evans, American murderer (b. 1950)
- 1983 – Earl Hines, American pianist (b. 1903)
- 1984 – Ansel Adams, American photographer (b. 1902)
- 1985 – Paul Hugh Emmett, American chemist and educator (b. 1900)
- 1985 – Jacques Ferron, Canadian physician and author (b. 1921)
- 1986 – Mircea Eliade, Romanian historian and author (b. 1907)
- 1987 – Erika Nõva, Estonian architect (b. 1905)
- 1988 – Grigori Kuzmin, Russian-Estonian astronomer (b. 1917)
- 1988 – Irene Rich, American actress (b. 1891)
- 1989 – Emilio G. Segrè, Italian-American physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1905)
- 1990 – Albert Salmi, American actor (b. 1928)
- 1994 – Richard Nixon, American lieutenant, lawyer, and politician, 37th President of the United States (b. 1913)
- 1995 – Jane Kenyon, American poet and author (b. 1947)
- 1995 – Maggie Kuhn, American activist, founded the Gray Panthers (b. 1905)
- 1996 – Erma Bombeck, American journalist and author (b. 1927)
- 1996 – Jug McSpaden, American golfer (b. 1908)
- 1998 – Kitch Christie, South African rugby player and coach (b. 1940)
- 1999 – Chan Canasta, Polish-English magician (b. 1920)
- 1999 – Munir Ahmad Khan, Pakistani-Austrian physicist and engineer (b. 1926)
- 1999 – Apostolos Nikolaidis, Greek-American singer (b. 1938)
- 2002 – Linda Lovelace, American porn actress (b. 1949)
- 2003 – Felice Bryant, American songwriter (b. 1925)
- 2003 – James H. Critchfield, American CIA officer (b. 1917)
- 2003 – Martha Griffiths, American lawyer, judge, and politician, 58th Lieutenant Governor of Michigan (b. 1912)
- 2003 – Mike Larrabee, American runner (b. 1933)
- 2004 – Jason Dunham, American soldier, Medal of Honor recipient (b. 1981)
- 2004 – Pat Tillman, American football player and soldier (b. 1976)
- 2004 – Michael Christie, American PGA tour golfer (b.1969)
- 2005 – Norman Bird, English actor (b. 1920)
- 2005 – Erika Fuchs, German translator (b. 1906)
- 2005 – Philip Morrison, American physicist and academic (b. 1915)
- 2006 – Henriette Avram, American computer scientist (b. 1919)
- 2006 – D'Iberville Fortier, Canadian diplomat (b. 1926)
- 2006 – Alida Valli, Italian actress (b. 1921)
- 2007 – Juanita Millender-McDonald, American educator and politician (b. 1938)
- 2008 – Cameron Argetsinger, American racing driver, lawyer and auto racing executive (b. 1921)
- 2008 – Ed Chynoweth, Canadian businessman (b. 1941)
- 2008 – Paul Davis, American singer-songwriter (b. 1948)
- 2010 – Richard Barrett, American lawyer and activist (b. 1943)
- 2011 – Moin Akhter, Pakistani actor (b. 1950)
- 2012 – John Amabile, American football player and coach (b. 1939)
- 2012 – Bill Granger, American author (b. 1941)
- 2012 – Buzz Potamkin, American director and producer (b. 1945)
- 2012 – George Rathmann, American chemist, biologist, and businessman (b. 1927)
- 2013 – Dave Gold, American businessman, founded 99 Cents Only Stores (b. 1932)
- 2013 – George Stanley Gordon, American businessman (b. 1926)
- 2013 – Richie Havens, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (b. 1941)
- 2013 – Lalgudi Jayaraman, Indian violinist and composer (b. 1930)
- 2013 – Mike Smith, English footballer (b. 1935)
- 2013 – Robert Suderburg, American pianist, composer, and conductor (b. 1936)
- 2013 – J. S. Verma, Indian judge and politician, 27th Chief Justice of India (b. 1933)
- 2014 – George H. Heilmeier, American engineer (b. 1936)
- 2014 – Allen Jacobs, American football player and coach (b. 1941)
- 2014 – Jovan Krkobabić, Serbian politician, Deputy Prime Minister of Serbia (b. 1930)
- 2014 – Mohammad Naseem, Pakistani-English activist (b. 1924)
- 2014 – Werner Potzernheim, German cyclist (b. 1927)
- 2014 – Oswaldo Vigas, Venezuelan painter (b. 1926)
2015
- Christian feast day:
- Discovery Day (Brazil)
- Earth Day and its related observances:
The real humanity is that these boats went to sea on the first place
Miranda Devine – Wednesday, April 22, 2015 (12:47am)
THERE is a sickening familiarity in the tragedy off the coast of Italy in which as many as 900 refugees drowned.
Continue reading 'The real humanity is that these boats went to sea on the first place'
ICAC commissioner Megan Latham: A game of threats
Miranda Devine – Wednesday, April 22, 2015 (12:46am)
USUALLY people who wield enormous power are discreet about the pleasures of exercising it. Not ICAC commissioner Megan Latham. Just watch the video of her speaking at a NSW Bar Association seminar for young lawyers last year.
Continue reading 'ICAC commissioner Megan Latham: A game of threats'
BUSTED BELLE
Tim Blair – Wednesday, April 22, 2015 (5:06pm)
Belle Gibson, who launched a global “lifestyle and wellness” business on the back of claims that her brain tumour was cured by natural therapies, finally ‘fesses up:
In an interview with The Australian Women’s Weekly, Ms Gibson was asked if she had, or ever had cancer. “No. None of it’s true,” she told the magazine.
Next question: what happens to all the money?
PUMPING OUT THOSE AMPS
Tim Blair – Wednesday, April 22, 2015 (4:47pm)
Demonstrating the same thoughtfulness that brought Sydney a desalinisation plant we didn’t need, the Climate Council now dreams of massive solar panel arrays:
Given Sydney’s current weather, there may be one slight flaw in the Climate Council’s thinking. Incidentally, the rain here isn’t quite this bad:
Given Sydney’s current weather, there may be one slight flaw in the Climate Council’s thinking. Incidentally, the rain here isn’t quite this bad:
HAPPY EARTH DAY, EARTHICANS
Tim Blair – Wednesday, April 22, 2015 (1:20pm)
Harry Flowers is exempt from Earth Day:
On Earth Day I’ll leave lights on all over the house and burn truck tyres in my garden as much as I want and I’ll tell you why.
My township in New Hampshire is 95 per cent forested, but you can never have too many trees, so on Earth Day I always like to plant a couple more, get the tree cover round here up to 97, 98 per cent, whatever it takes to send climate change into reverse. Of course, it’s always a big pain in the neck the morning after Earth Day, when the holiday’s over, and it’s time to take down the trees. So these days I generally just plant artificial trees with the nice silvery tinselly branches, and then you can just take them down and put ‘em in the attic till next year’s Earth Day. Just a helpful ecological tip from yours truly.
Hybrid owners are celebrating Earth Day by ditching their embarrassing eco-buggies and buying SUVs. Personally, I’ll mark the great occasion with a delicious dish of dirt.
THEY LIKE TO PLAY WITH NUMBERS
Tim Blair – Wednesday, April 22, 2015 (12:10pm)
Our warmy pals at the ABC will never let go of their per capita security blankie:
Australia’s emissions are less than 1.5 per cent of global emissions, but per capita Australia is the biggest emitter of all developed nations.
As previously noted, two things are wrong with that per capita claim. One, it’s an irrelevant figure intended only to make Australia’s carbon dioxide contribution seem larger than it is. And two, it appears not to be true.
(Via J.F. Beck)
SUPERVAN VII
Tim Blair – Wednesday, April 22, 2015 (11:32am)
An apparent solar conflagration in Sussex, England:
George Dalmon, who was in Hove Town Hall at the time of the fire told the Brighton Argus: “There was big black smoke billowing out, it looks quite major. Everyone has been evacuated out of the building. Somebody said something about it being a solar panel.”
Hockey open to yet another Labor tax. But it’s all still just fiddling
Andrew Bolt April 22 2015 (6:09pm)
Not quite the ringing condemnation from the Treasurer that low-tax Liberals may have hoped for:
So the total tax to be raised by the only two tax policies Labor has released is less than $2 billion a year, when the deficit is roaring at around $40 billion a year.
Where’s the other $38 billion a year going to come from, Mr Shorten? What you’re offering so far is peanuts.
===Asked about Labor’s proposal to slap on a 15 per cent tax on super earnings Mr Hockey said: ”We will have a look at the details, but I am always sceptical about Labor coming up with a plan that increases taxes.”And note Labor’s pathetic trick of inflating the tax raised its super plan by giving a per-decade number, rather than the usual per-year:
Opposition leader Bill Shorten said the plan could save $14 billion over a decade.In fact, any Labor attempt to claw back super is almost certain to have significant leakage as the rich rearrange their tax affairs. But let’s pretend Labor’s costings are right. What it’s then saying is that its big hit-the-rich super changes will raise just $1.4 billion a year, to add to the equally improbable $500 million a year it hopes to raise from its proposed new tax on multinationals.
So the total tax to be raised by the only two tax policies Labor has released is less than $2 billion a year, when the deficit is roaring at around $40 billion a year.
Where’s the other $38 billion a year going to come from, Mr Shorten? What you’re offering so far is peanuts.
When will Tim Flannery say sorry?
Andrew Bolt April 22 2015 (8:31am)
A third day of heavy rain and floods in NSW:
Not - again - what we were told to expect.
Tim Flannery keeps being quoted by the ABC and Fairfax as a global warming guru. So it’s important that we keep confronting the Climate Council head with his spectacularly dud predictions.
In 2005:
In 2005:
UPDATE
Melbourne ABC presenter Jon Faine, a fervent warmist, has advertised he will later today discuss what the NSW rain says about changes to our climate. It is yet to be seen if he links global warming to this rain, but Melbourne readers might wish to ensure any scaremongering is challenged (1300 222 774). Here are some facts and admissions worth noting from the latest report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Some key passages:
On thunderstorms:
Remember, all these quotes come not from sceptics but from the IPCC, the United Nations body most responsible for spreading panic about global warming - and the body with a strong vested interest in keeping that panic alive.
===A second storm cell is developing off New South Wales and the Central Coast, with heavy rain and damaging winds expected along the coast from Illawarra to Hunter…Sydney’s water catchments today are 83.6 per cent full, and rising fast.
In the Hunter town of Dungog families have been left without any belongings as whole homes were swept away…
Police have urged people on Sydney’s north shore to remain calm amid reports that Manly Dam is at risk of overflowing, as storms lash parts of NSW.
Not - again - what we were told to expect.
Tim Flannery keeps being quoted by the ABC and Fairfax as a global warming guru. So it’s important that we keep confronting the Climate Council head with his spectacularly dud predictions.
In 2005:
I’m afraid that the science around climate change is firming up fairly quickly . . . we’ve seen just drought, drought, drought, and particularly regions like Sydney and the Warragamba catchment—if you look at the Warragamba catchment figures, since 98 the water has been in virtual freefall, and they’ve got about two years of supply left . . .(UPDATE: HELP WANTED! THE VIDEO OF THE ABOVE INTERVIEW McKEW DID WITH FLANNERY NO LONGER APPEARS ON THE ABC SITE. DOES ANYONE HAVE A COPY OF IT FOR ME TO SHOW ON TV?)
Maxine McKew: But. . . we won’t see a return to more normal patterns?
Flannery: . . . they do seem to be of a permanent nature. I don’t think it’s just a cycle. I’d love to be wrong, but I think the science is pointing in the other direction.
McKew: So does that mean, really, we’re faced with—if that’s right—back-to-back droughts and continuing thirsty cities?
Flannery: That’s right.
In 2005:
Perth is facing the possibility of a catastrophic failure of the city’s water supply… I’m personally more worried about Sydney than Perth. Where does Sydney go for more water? At least Perth has a buffer of underground water sources. Sydney doesn’t have any backup. And while Perth is forging ahead with a desalination plant, Sydney doesn’t have any major scheme in place to bolster water. It also has nowhere to put the vast infrastructure of a desalination plant.,,In 2007:
There’s only two years’ water supply in Warragamba Dam… If the computer models are right then drought conditions will become permanent in eastern Australia.
So even the rain that falls isn’t actually going to fill our dams and our river systems...Since then, of course, there have been repeated floods with dams in Sydney, Brisbane and Canberra filled to overspilling.
UPDATE
Melbourne ABC presenter Jon Faine, a fervent warmist, has advertised he will later today discuss what the NSW rain says about changes to our climate. It is yet to be seen if he links global warming to this rain, but Melbourne readers might wish to ensure any scaremongering is challenged (1300 222 774). Here are some facts and admissions worth noting from the latest report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Some key passages:
On thunderstorms:
In summary, there is low confidence in observed trends in small-scale severe weather phenomena such as hail and thunderstorms because of historical data inhomogeneities and inadequacies in monitoring systems.On heavy rain events:
In summary, there continues to be a lack of evidence and thus low confidence regarding the sign of trend in the magnitude and/or frequency of floods on a global scale.On cyclones and storms:
Over periods of a century or more, evidence suggests slight decreases in the frequency of tropical cyclones making landfall in the North Atlantic and the South Pacific… Several studies suggest an increase in intensity, but data sampling issues hamper these assessments… Callaghan and Power (2011) find a statistically significant decrease in Eastern Australia land-falling tropical cyclones since the late 19th century although including 2010/2011 season data this trend becomes non-significant ...On extreme weather events:
For instance, evidence is most compelling for increases in heavy precipitation in North America, Central America and Europe, but in some other regions—such as southern Australia and western Asia—there is evidence of decreases.On the warming pause, now 17 years:
The discrepancy between simulated and observed GMST trends during 1998–2012 could be explained in part by a tendency for some CMIP5 models to simulate stronger warming in response to increases in greenhouse-gas concentration than is consistent with observations… Almost all CMIP5 historical simulations do not reproduce the observed recent warming hiatus.
Remember, all these quotes come not from sceptics but from the IPCC, the United Nations body most responsible for spreading panic about global warming - and the body with a strong vested interest in keeping that panic alive.
Censoring Greg Hunt’s correction: another reason never to trust Fairfax on global warming
Andrew Bolt April 22 2015 (8:14am)
Fairfax this week ran this complete beat-up as part of its campaign to force the Abbott Government to waste even more money on pointless global warming schemes:
The final - and neutered - version of Hunt’s correction which the Sydney Morning Herald published today:
===The world’s biggest greenhouse gas emitters, including China and the US, have questioned the credibility of Australia’s climate change targets and “direct action” policy in a list of queries to the Abbott government.Environment Minister Greg Hunt was astonished by the errors and blatant distortions in the article, and wrote a correction. But the Sydney Morning Herald flatly refused to publish anything that identified exactly how it had misled readers and removed all the lines in bold, leaving only an anodyne response:
In the latest sign of diplomatic pressure over Canberra’s stance on global warming, China accused Australia of doing less to cut emissions than it is demanding of other developed countries, and asked it to explain why this was fair.
Suggestions the credibility of Australia’s climate change policy is being questioned by other countries are blatantly false (‘China on offensive over climate’, 20 April).
Questions from China about our policies and plans are almost identical to the hundreds of questions China has asked other countries.
The Fairfax article completely airbrushes the fact that this is a standard United Nations consultation process.
We’ve always said we will consider action being taken by other countries in the setting of our own targets for the post-2020 period. We’ll be asking questions of other countries and understandably, other countries are doing the same.
This will be factored into the setting of our targets for the post-2020 period – which we’ll announce mid-year. We’re also currently undertaking consultation with the community on these targets.
But promises to cut emissions mean nothing if they can’t actually be met. In this regard, we can be proud of our track record.
Unlike many countries, Australia beat its target under the first Kyoto commitment period.
By contrast, the United States committed to reducing emissions by seven per cent, but in fact emissions actually went up by around eleven per cent. They overshot by 18 per cent.
And China recently announced its emissions will continue to rise over the coming decades, while Australia has committed to reducing our emissions.
For the period leading up to 2020, we will achieve our target of reducing emissions by five percent from 2000 levels. This is the equivalent of a 13 per cent reduction from 2005 levels, and we’ll achieve it with the Emissions Reduction Fund.
This policy commitment was passed by Parliament last year and will continue in perpetuity. In fact, later this week details will be released of projects to cut emissions through to 2025.
Therefore, claims by Fairfax that Australia does not have a post-2020 policy to combat climate change are completely false.
We want a strong global agreement in Paris. Australia will absolutely play its part.
We will continue to take strong action to combat climate change – but we’ll do it without hurting families and business with a carbon tax.
- Greg Hunt, Minister for the Environment
The final - and neutered - version of Hunt’s correction which the Sydney Morning Herald published today:
I refer to your article on questions lodged with the United Nations in the lead-up to December’s climate summit ("US, China question climate policy”, April 20). This is a standard UN consultation process. We’ll be asking questions of other countries and understandably, other countries are doing the same.Another reason not to trust a single unverified word the Sydney Morning Herald publishes on global warming.
This will be factored into setting our targets for the post-2020 period – which we’ll announce mid-year. We’re also consulting with the community on these targets.
For the period up to 2020, we will achieve our target of reducing emissions by 5 per cent from 2000 levels. This is the equivalent of a 13 per cent reduction from 2005 levels, and we’ll achieve it with the Emissions Reduction Fund.
This policy commitment was passed by Parliament last year and will continue in perpetuity. We want a strong global agreement in Paris. Australia will absolutely play its part. We will continue to take strong action to combat climate change – but we’ll do it without hurting families and business with a carbon tax.
Greg Hunt Minister for the Environment, Canberra (ACT)
Any bets?
Andrew Bolt April 22 2015 (8:11am)
File away this line from an interview Charlie Pickering about his new ABC comedy show:
===It’s not going to be a left-wing show — Pickering gets very passionate about the need to be a swinging voter...Clearly a new resolution since leaving The Project.
Kevin Andrews may well wonder who’s leading the Islamic State
Andrew Bolt April 22 2015 (7:36am)
Defence Minister Kevin Andrews and New Zealand Prime Minister John Key last week couldn’t name the Islamic State leader.
Maybe no one knows just yet who’s in charge:
===Maybe no one knows just yet who’s in charge:
The leader of Islamic State, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, has been seriously wounded in an air strike in western Iraq, sources have told the Guardian.
A source in Iraq with connections to the terror group revealed that Baghdadi suffered serious injuries during an attack by the US-led coalition in March. The source said Baghdadi’s wounds were at first life-threatening, but he has since made a slow recovery. He has not, however, resumed day-to-day control of the organisation.
Labor after more taxes to replace what it blew last time
Andrew Bolt April 22 2015 (7:30am)
Having wasted billions of our taxes when last in office, Labor reaches into your savings for yet more:
===High-income earners will lose $14 billion in superannuation tax concessions over the next decade under a Labor policy that it says is needed to keep the system sustainable and restore equity.
The strangest analogy yet to convince you Islamism is no big deal
Andrew Bolt April 22 2015 (7:14am)
Of all the absurd analogies offered by the wilfully blind:
===George Megalogenis, who has written a book and produced a documentary linking Australia’s economic success to its immigration program, said ... the recent spate of terrorism-related arrests should not affect Australia’s attitudes to Muslim migration any more than the Martin Bryant massacre should affect mainland attitudes towards Tasmania.We have about as many Tasmanians as we do Muslims.
Number of Tasmanians jailed for plotting to commit mass murder at the MCG? 0
Number of Tasmanians jailed for plotting to commit mass murder at the Holsworthy army base? 0
Number of Tasmanian leaders citing religious texts to justify a war against mainlanders? 0
Number of Tasmanians volunteering to join mass-murdering groups on the mainland? 0
Number of Tasmanians stopped from flying out to join mass-murdering groups? 0
Number of Tasmanians killed while fighting for mass-murdering groups? 0
Number of bookshops in Tasmania selling texts justifying war against mainlanders? 0
Number of reporters threatened with death by Tasmanians? 0
Number of Tasmanian leaders who have hailed suicide killers as heroes? 0
Number of Tasmanians arrested for allegedly plotting to kill police on Anzac Day? 0
ABC bias may not be selling
Andrew Bolt April 22 2015 (6:37am)
An interesting admission in the Sydney Morning Herald:
Incidentally, thanks to the many listeners who gave Steve Price and me probably our best ratings yet in the same period. Curious contrast.
===It’s situation normal with the latest Sydney radio ratings, apart from a curious trend developing at ABC 702 Sydney. Overall the broadcaster has shed 1.7 points, down from 10 last survey to 8.3 … 702’s local content manager, Andy Henley, believes many listeners may have temporarily departed to escape the station’s comprehensive coverage of the NSW election.Did its bias not sell?
Incidentally, thanks to the many listeners who gave Steve Price and me probably our best ratings yet in the same period. Curious contrast.
Can business afford a Labor government determined to string them up as scapegoats?
Andrew Bolt April 22 2015 (6:27am)
Business leaders should
know that Labor has a policy of scapegoating them as tax cheats,
hoarders, thieves and the cause of the nation’s financial troubles:
If the answer is no, get off the fence.
===Labor senator Sam Dastyari has been accused of ambushing colleagues and threatened with a privileges investigation after he bypassed Senate protocols to unilaterally send a warning letter to the heads of the nation’s big four banks.Can you really afford the return of a Labor party so vindictive, destructive and essentially deceitful over the true cause of our massive deficits?
Senator Dastyari’s actions have led to a fresh outbreak of claims the ambitious former NSW ALP general secretary is using his role as the chairman of the high-profile Senate economics reference committee to further his own ambitions.
It is the same committee which a fortnight ago clashed with technology giants Apple, Google and Microsoft over tax evasion, and has led to questions about whether Senator Dastyari’s aggressive chairmanship has the potential to harm Labor’s relationship with big business.
The deputy chair of the committee, Liberal senator Sean Edwards, is incensed that Senator Dastyari wrote to bank chiefs without the committee’s knowledge and that his intentions to pursue a particular line of questioning were revealed in a newspaper column.
If the answer is no, get off the fence.
Three reasons not to trust a word of Fairfax’s latest warming warning
Andrew Bolt April 22 2015 (5:51am)
The Sydney Morning Herald’s story:
It is appalling that this kind of deceptive propaganda now passes for news.
===Australia has been urged to rapidly accelerate its cuts to greenhouse gases, with the independent Climate Change Authority recommending the Abbott government adopt an ambitious 30 per cent reduction target on 2000 levels by 2025.First reason not to trust a word of what follows:
The “independent Climate Change Authority”?Second reason not to trust a word of what follows:
The authority with these members, all deliberately hand-picked by Labor for their global warming alarmism, is “independent”?:
Tell me why Clive Hamilton, a professor of public ethics who is a former Greens candidate and absurd catastrophist, was an “independent” pick?
Why militant warmist David Karoly, with his history of predictions, his denial of the warming pause and his dud paper, was an “independent” pick?
Why John Quiggin, a warmist who had to admit to grossly exaggerating the difference our carbon tax could actually make, was an “independent” pick?
This graphic:Third reason not to trust a word of what follows:
Any newspaper which illustrates a story about emissions of carbon dioxide, an invisible gas, with pictures of some alarming form of smoke, heavy in particulates, is either deliberately deceitful or appallingly ignorant.
This admission:Oh, and the argument itself is, of course, baloney.
“The report was given to media outlets ahead of its release on conditions that prevented Fairfax Media from seeking comment from the Abbott government.”In other words, the Authority did not want readers to have the other side of its rickety argument, and the Sydney Morning Herald agreed not to go look for it.
In a report to be published on Wednesday, the authority has also declared Australia is falling far short of the task required to cut emissions by 2020 if it wants to match the efforts of other countries to halt global warming.Global warming halted 17 years ago. Our own cuts to emissions would make essentially not the slightest difference anyway, being too small. In any event, our efforts to cut our emissions in fact more than match those of China and India, the world’s biggest and third-biggest emitters, both of which say they are not cutting total emissions but increasing them.
It is appalling that this kind of deceptive propaganda now passes for news.
There should be no doubt why Numan Haider was shot
Andrew Bolt April 21 2015 (7:59pm)
I think this appeal, though welcome, lacks something:
This simply feeds the lethal victimology of some Muslims.
Here, for clarity, is why Numan Haider was shot:
UPDATE
This kind of hysterical language from Muslim academic, and published by the ABC, risks further inflaming an already dangerous sense of victimhood. The author is Shakira Hussein, who, far from being “vomited from the body politic” and “purged”, is embedded in it as the McKenzie Postdoctoral Fellow at the National Centre of Excellence for Islamic Studies at the University of Melbourne:
This is a very disturbing detail and I wonder if those responsible for showing the corpse in this manner knew how provocative and inflammatory it would be:
UPDATE
How reckless of the Islamic Council of Victoria to encourage dangerously paranoid suspicions it should actually defuse:
(Thanks to reader Dean.)
===THE devastated parents of a knife-wielding teen shot dead by police have appealed for radicalised young Australians not to inflict terror in their son’s name.Don’t think their son was a terrorist? Don’t know why he was shot?
Numan Haider’s parents called for “only peace’’… following reports that five teenagers arrested over allegations of an Anzac Day terrorist plot against police had planned it to avenge their son…
Asked if they had seen the teens at their son’s funeral at Doveton mosque last year, Haider’s father replied: “We have no idea. There were 800 people there.
“But our son was not a terrorist....”
Still wearing mourning black, his mother said through tears that she had been “shocked and upset” to read of the arrests of the teenagers.
“I just don’t understand it. I feel confused — we still don’t know why the police killed our son....”
This simply feeds the lethal victimology of some Muslims.
Here, for clarity, is why Numan Haider was shot:
When met by two counter-terrorism police officers outside the station Haider pulled a knife from his pocket, the court heard.I think that is so perfectly clear that anyone claiming to be mystified is not to be trusted.
He stabbed the Victorian officer in the left arm and then the Australian Federal Police officer in the face, chest and shoulder.
When the federal police officer fell to the ground Haider climbed on top of him and continued to stab him.
The inquest heard the Victorian officer shouted at him to stop before shooting Haider once in the head.
UPDATE
This kind of hysterical language from Muslim academic, and published by the ABC, risks further inflaming an already dangerous sense of victimhood. The author is Shakira Hussein, who, far from being “vomited from the body politic” and “purged”, is embedded in it as the McKenzie Postdoctoral Fellow at the National Centre of Excellence for Islamic Studies at the University of Melbourne:
Yet the campaign against halal certification impacts on our lives, too. Its message is that, however discrete our presence, however well-integrated we may believe ourselves to be, we are not welcome here. The anti-Muslim racists behind the campaign want us to know that our absorption into Australian society makes them gag. We must be rejected, spat out, vomited from the body politic. In other words, purged.UPDATE
This is a very disturbing detail and I wonder if those responsible for showing the corpse in this manner knew how provocative and inflammatory it would be:
Many young Muslim men in the Melbourne’s far south-eastern suburbs where Haider grew up and died, are openly sceptical of the police version of the events of that night. These are people with no connection to terrorism, but who already feel marginalised by the political and media depiction of their religion.So many critics are calling on the police to do more to ease tensions. It strikes me we should ask instead why some in the community are actually stoking them.
After Haider’s body was seen by many in the open casket at his funeral with a huge bullet hole in his head, the topic has become an ongoing obsession for some.
“Everyone feels sorry for him and even people in my [Shiite] community talk about it a lot,” young Afghan community activist Mohammad Ali Baqiri told Fairfax Media.
“They say there were federal police there, two police officers, and they say he’s only got a knife, so why shoot him in the head? [There’s] always rumours that something was going on.”
A senior member of the al-Furqan mosque, believed to be the epicentre of radical Islam in Melbourne’s south-eastern suburbs, said: “I don’t understand why would the police actually shoot him in the head, why not shoot him somewhere else? It sounds a bit suspicious.”
UPDATE
How reckless of the Islamic Council of Victoria to encourage dangerously paranoid suspicions it should actually defuse:
Islamic Council of Victoria Kuranda Seyit.... [said] Haider’s death should have “very limited impact” on recruitment to Islamic State. But the longer that question marks lurk around the investigation [into Haider’s death], “there will always be young people ... who have conjectures about what happened”.
“Unless an independent investigation brings more light, those questions will linger, and it’s not healthy for community relations.”
(Thanks to reader Dean.)
Please enjoy this squirrel attempting to hide a nut... inside a dog's fur
Posted by Lost At E Minor on Thursday, 5 March 2015
Please enjoy this squirrel attempting to hide a nut... inside a dog's fur
Posted by Lost At E Minor on Thursday, 5 March 2015
===
Stunning Sapphire & Diamond Dress Rings from our jewellery collection http://bit.ly/1yWoWXq#sapphire #rings #love
Posted by Diamond Imports on Tuesday, 21 April 2015
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Meanwhile, in Australia. Snapchat me @PazPaz
Posted by Paz on Monday, 20 April 2015
Meanwhile, in Australia. Snapchat me @PazPaz
Posted by Paz on Monday, 20 April 2015
===
Photo: Great weather for ducks in #LittleVenice Sydney http://t.co/7El6WmFdrV
— David Daniel Ball (@DaOddBall67) April 22, 2015
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China’s insane new megacities http://t.co/nv5N7hW4NX via @newscomauHQ
— David Daniel Ball (@DaOddBall67) April 22, 2015
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Photo: Milperra Rd in #LittleVenice Sydney http://t.co/va4fuOtw49
— David Daniel Ball (@DaOddBall67) April 22, 2015
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Sacked for illegal ball play. .. English footballer sacked for dugout sex http://t.co/7xoeu1BWd2 via @newscomauHQ
— David Daniel Ball (@DaOddBall67) April 22, 2015
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"Didn't have a choice" snigger .. Geordie Shore star Gary Beadle says he’s bedded over 1,000 women http://t.co/vO0CgiyKEL via @newscomauHQ
— David Daniel Ball (@DaOddBall67) April 22, 2015
===
#Globalwarming ? #TonyAbbott ? Why the destructive east coast low just keeps hanging around NSW http://t.co/IAoKeKd4W9 via @newscomauHQ
— David Daniel Ball (@DaOddBall67) April 22, 2015
===
Reports Bill Spedding ‘questioned’ by police http://t.co/2bW9x52anI via @newscomauHQ
— David Daniel Ball (@DaOddBall67) April 22, 2015
===
Night-stalker rapist Clive Howard, jailed for life http://t.co/p6wDFBRp2e via @newscomauHQ
— David Daniel Ball (@DaOddBall67) April 22, 2015
===
Agree, but there is an alternative .. Mike Baird should abolish the ICAC | Institute of Public Affairs Australia http://t.co/INUmXKQBta
— David Daniel Ball (@DaOddBall67) April 22, 2015
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It is good to not kill people .. Australian PM urges Europe to adopt tough policies on migrant boats http://t.co/8WNamlFpNt
— David Daniel Ball (@DaOddBall67) April 22, 2015
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My bane. http://t.co/d78BaiGeqX
— David Daniel Ball (@DaOddBall67) April 22, 2015
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"Here are the latest road (1:44 pm) issues for Metropolitan Sydney -MARSDEN PARK: Grange Ave remains..." http://t.co/9ILhc0FX35
— David Daniel Ball (@DaOddBall67) April 22, 2015
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Jarryd Hayne NFL: San Francisco 49ers GM Trent Baalke breaks down pros and cons of NRL star http://t.co/sE3QOkm5Or via @newscomauHQ
— David Daniel Ball (@DaOddBall67) April 21, 2015
===
Two missing after fierce storm http://t.co/YyZTGu3dfE via @newscomauHQ
— David Daniel Ball (@DaOddBall67) April 21, 2015
===
Craziest pics of the Sydney storm http://t.co/KIvYbAAWxg via @newscomauHQ
— David Daniel Ball (@DaOddBall67) April 21, 2015
=== Posts from last year ===
Michael Smith’s site down after attack
Andrew Bolt April 22 2014 (11:40am)
Michael Smith’s website is down. I originally thought it was singled out for a hacker-attack as a tribute to his dogged investigation of union and Labor scandals.
But a reader says:
Smith is posting updates on his Facebook page.
===But a reader says:
The attacks are not on Michael’s site in particular but on the Typepad service in general, which runs on thousands of websites around the world, including those of major media companies such as as ABC (USA), MSNBC, the CBC, the BBC, and Sky News. As the official announcement says, “Update 21-April-2014 9:45AM PT: We’re sorry to inform you that Typepad was attacked again overnight. Our team has been working around the clock to restore service. While most blogs are available and the application is up, some mapped domains are showing a message that the domain is “unknown”, but there is no problem with the domain itself.”I have modified the original post as a consequence.
Smith is posting updates on his Facebook page.
The new tribalists attack even our Anzac tradition
Andrew Bolt April 22 2014 (11:30am)
Nick Cater discovers the Left has truly stormed the institutions when Anzac deniers are among the official custodians of our military history:
But even if we accept Stanley’s crude and fashionable identity politics - that modern Australians can only identify with those of their “race” - then he’s still wrong to claim non Anglo-Saxon Australians are excluded.
Here’s part of Melbourne’s Order of March for Friday:
Meet General Sir John Monash, perhaps our greatest Anzac. Not Anglo-Saxon, but a Jew of Prussian ancestry whose funeral brought out 250,000 mourners.
UPDATE
Meet Captain Reg Saunders, another soldier who wasn’t Anglo-Saxon.
Reader Gray:
I’m surprised to read that quotation from Peter Stanley, and would like to see it in context. In previous interviews he’s seemed more respectful than that quote suggests. UPDATE: Or maybe not.
===Anzac deniers [are] the belligerent band of revisionist historians who see the Anzac tradition as a jingoistic myth, and look to the centenary of World War 1 as a chance to put the record straight.It does? I’m not an Anglo-Saxon and certainly don’t feel excluded. In fact, no citizen of this country should feel excluded from a ceremony to honor those who gave their lives in defence of this land, its friends and its values. We are not yet a nation of tribes - are we?
In his recent book Anzac’s Long Shadow, [former Captain] James Brown speaks of a “discordant, lengthy and exorbitant four-year festival for the dead” that he describes as “a military Halloween”.
Craig Stockings accuses his fellow Australians of falling for “zombie myths” about military history, “monsters of the mind” that must be exorcised with “the holy water (of) reasoned arguments”.
Stockings lectures (heaven help us) at the Australian Defence Force Academy. Anzac revisionism is the mainstream position in the military history academies in Canberra.
Peter Stanley, a former senior historian at the war memorial and now a research professor at the Australian National University, criticises what he calls “Anzackery” and questions the special commemoration of the war dead. “Arguably more Australians have been touched by the trauma of car accidents killing loves ones, friends or neighbours,” he writes.
To single out those who died in defence of their country is “peculiar at best and grotesque at worst”. The Anzac tradition is an “essentially minority interest” that excludes “non Anglo-Saxon Australians”, he writes.
But even if we accept Stanley’s crude and fashionable identity politics - that modern Australians can only identify with those of their “race” - then he’s still wrong to claim non Anglo-Saxon Australians are excluded.
Here’s part of Melbourne’s Order of March for Friday:
UPDATE
Meet General Sir John Monash, perhaps our greatest Anzac. Not Anglo-Saxon, but a Jew of Prussian ancestry whose funeral brought out 250,000 mourners.
UPDATE
Meet Captain Reg Saunders, another soldier who wasn’t Anglo-Saxon.
Reader Gray:
The Australian Army commissioned indigenous Australian soldier Reg Saunders MBE as an officer in WWII, with then Captain Saunders returning to serve as a Company commander in the 3rd Battalion, the Royal Australian Regiment, in the Korean War.UPDATE
It has never been clear to me why the story of a brave indigenous soldier like Reg Saunders is not better known, especially as he commanded an infantry company at Kapyong (and refused a decoration!), which is still 3RAR’s proudest battle honour. I know the ABC types love to hate the armed forces but when did the ABC or Fairfax first employ an indigenous Australian as a prominent broadcaster, editor or corporate officer? I suspect a long time after the Australian Army promoted Reg Saunders.
I’m surprised to read that quotation from Peter Stanley, and would like to see it in context. In previous interviews he’s seemed more respectful than that quote suggests. UPDATE: Or maybe not.
The difference between Gillard and a conservative? A couple of years and a leaked email
Andrew Bolt April 22 2014 (11:29am)
Troy Bramston’s new book says Julia Gillard was privately telling Kevin Rudd of failings that wicked conservatives were describing publicly:
Even as Prime Minister Gillard pretended for a long time that the sharp rise in boat people under Labor was caused by not Labor’s weakening of our border laws but by “push factors” overseas:
From Ray Hadley’s interview today with Immigration Minister Scott Morrison:
===TWO days before Julia Gillard challenged Kevin Rudd’s position as prime minister, she told him in writing that the Labor government was perceived as “incompetent and out of control” and was headed towards electoral oblivion.Note something specific that Gillard was saying privately but refusing to admit publicly - that under Rudd there had been a “loss of control of the borders”.
An extraordinary email sent by Ms Gillard to Mr Rudd at 9.49am on Monday, June 21, 2010, reveals she was deeply troubled about the government’s performance, even panicked, and expressed “a great deal of anxiety” over asylum-seeker policies…
“To state the obvious — our primary is in the mid-30s; we can’t win an election with a primary like that and the issue of asylum-seekers is an enormous reason why our primary is at that low level,” Ms Gillard wrote in the email. “It is an issue working on every level — loss of control of the borders feeding into a narrative of a government that is incompetent and out of control. As you know I have been raising this with a great deal of anxiety and I remain desperately concerned about lack of progress."…
The never-before-published email, sent to Mr Rudd and his chief of staff, Alister Jordan, is included in a new book, Rudd, Gillard and Beyond, published next week…
She offers Mr Rudd advice on how to lead the government after a series of meetings was scheduled and cancelled, and work on “a draft narrative document” to be undertaken in the prime minister’s office was not completed ... on “our key negative areas”, which were identified as asylum-seeker policy, the proposed internet filter and climate change. Again, the work was not completed.
Even as Prime Minister Gillard pretended for a long time that the sharp rise in boat people under Labor was caused by not Labor’s weakening of our border laws but by “push factors” overseas:
CHRIS UHLMANN: ...you had a solution that did stop the boats - 288 boats over five years before you came to government; after you came to government - 288 people, I should say. After you came to government, 11,600. You had a solution; you dismantled it. Surely that’s where the problem started.UPDATE
JULIA GILLARD: Well, Chris, that’s a gross oversimplification of all of the things that have happened. For example, you’ve forgotten the civil war in Sri Lanka, which got people on the move. So there are a broad range of circumstances here, global circumstances that cause people to move.
CHRIS UHLMANN: So it was all push factors?
JULIA GILLARD: Well, regional circumstances that cause people to move.
CHRIS UHLMANN: It had nothing to do with you?
JULIA GILLARD: Well, Chris, I don’t think you can pretend there wasn’t unrest in Sri Lanka that caused people to get on the move and caused us ...
CHRIS UHLMANN: But can you pretend that the changes that you made - can you pretend that the changes that you made had no effect? JULIA GILLARD: Well, Chris, let’s be frank about this: there will always be global factors and regional factors that cause people to get on the move. We’ve seen one in our own region in the last few years in relation to Sri Lanka. We are still seeing people from Afghanistan turn up on our shores in boats. We’re seeing increasing numbers from Iran. So this is a problem that moves and changes depending on global circumstances and what’s happening in different parts of the world.
From Ray Hadley’s interview today with Immigration Minister Scott Morrison:
HADLEY: We are coming up to the end of the fourth month. We haven’t had a boat since the 19th of December, correct?
MINISTER MORRISON: That’s right, well that is more than four months since the 19th but obviously this year we are getting towards the end of April ...
HADLEY: How many had arrived at the same stage between mid-December and this period, so the end of April in 2013? MINISTER MORRISON: Oh, over 100 boats and well over 6,000 people.... So this is, we’re well into the post monsoon phase now Ray I believe. I mean people might want to debate the weather but I mean over March and April of last year there was over 2,000 in both of those months.
A killer gets a fourth chance?
Andrew Bolt April 22 2014 (11:15am)
Once again I am stunned by the faith some judges have in the ability of evil men to repent - and give chances for which other Australians must pay:
===For the past 17 years [Reginald Kenneth Arthurell] has been [in] a NSW prison cell but even behind bars he has been at the centre of another murder investigation.At least three people killed in three separate attacks and he still has the right to walk free? And if he’d been made to serve his first manslaughter charge in full, probably two lives would have been saved.
Police named him as the major suspect in the murder of Catherine Mary Page, an 82-year-old woman bashed to death in her Coonamble home at the height of the 1971 floods ...
Ms Page may well have been Arthurell’s first victim…
In May, 1974, he was in Sydney visiting his mother when he bumped into his ex-stepfather Thomas Thornton. They ended up back at Thornton’s home in Guildford, where the stepfather was later found stabbed to death…
In November, 1981, the partly decomposed body of a young sailor, Ross Browning, 19, was found with massive head wounds off the Barkly Highway near Tennant Creek.
As the Northern Territory police hunted Arthurell, who they discovered had been given a lift by Browning, Queensland police announced they wanted to question him over the “Wolf Creek-style” shooting deaths of two men and a woman near Mt Isa in 1978…
In late November, 1981, Arthurell was arrested ... [and] pleaded guilty to the manslaughter of Browning and a murder charge was dropped. In May, 1988, he was released from jail, having served six and a half years of a 12-year sentence.
NSW detectives immediately extradited him to Sydney where he pleaded guilty to manslaughter, this time on the grounds of provocation, for killing his stepfather.
In July, 1989, he was jailed for a minimum of four and a half years with a maximum period of 11 years as Justice Peter McInerney remarked on Arthurell’s “remarkable transformation” after he had been baptised in a Darwin jail.
As early as April, 1991, he was released on parole after he was befriended by a naive but loving Christian prison visitor, Venet Raylee Mulhall, 54… One of the conditions of his release was that he live with Mulhall and the couple were briefly engaged. In February, 1995, she was found bashed to death at her home in Coonabarabran. Arthurell killed her because she wouldn’t give him her car.
He was convicted of murder but still not jailed for life. Finding the killing was not in the “worst-case” category, Justice David Hunt jailed him for 24 years with a minimum of 18. Arthurell can apply for parole in May next year.
How the “reconciliation” industry is working
Andrew Bolt April 22 2014 (11:07am)
We should be free to discuss this absurd and dangerous retribalisation of Australia:
===It is a shame we have moves to legitimise these sentiments in our Constitution:
“You know the ones that were here first? The black fellas, the Kooris, which I am. This is our country mate.”(No comments.)
Where’s Rudd’s war with Indonesia?
Andrew Bolt April 22 2014 (8:20am)
Remember Kevin Rudd’s utterly reckless warning - to both us and Indonesia - last June?
===KEVIN Rudd has claimed that electing Tony Abbott as prime minister could spark conflict with Indonesia that could escalate…In fact we’ve seen not such thing as Abbott fixes what Rudd wrecked with his open borders, rudeness and spying:
Prime Minister Mr Rudd said the opposition’s plan to turn back asylum-seeker boats risked “some sort of conflict with Indonesia"…
“What I am talking about is diplomatic conflict. But I am always wary about where diplomatic conflicts go,” he said, before referring to the 1962-66 Indonesia-Malaysia conflict.
“Konfrontasi with Indonesia evolved over a set of words, and turned into something else.’’
Pressed on the claim, Mr Rudd suggested the opposition’s boats policy could lead to a naval showdown.
INDONESIAN Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa says there is now a “body of evidence” that Australia will honour undertakings not to engage in intelligence activity against his country’s interests.We should never forget that disgraceful scare-mongering. ABC1’s 7.30, June 28:
Dr Natalegawa ... also acknowledged it was “absolutely” the case that the Abbott government’s clampdown on asylum-seekers arriving by boat had heavily reduced the traffic through Indonesia and the risk of deaths at sea…
After opening an international conference on the protection of asylum-seekers at sea, Dr Natalegawa said he wouldn’t ask for confirmation of military chief General Moeldoko’s claim that the Australians had undertaken to stop sending asylum-seekers back by life boats. “No, I think sometimes there is constructive ambiguity (that) can be very, very useful as well,” he said with a smile. Indonesia was very keen to work closely with the Abbott government on the shared issue of irregular immigration movements by sea.
CHRIS Uhlmann: There is no doubt what [Rudd] was suggesting today. A vote for Tony Abbott risks war with Indonesia.(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
No more pretending to “stop” global warming
Andrew Bolt April 22 2014 (8:08am)
Clive Palmer is absolutely right to want to block this waste - but I wish he’d just use the savings to retire debt:
===CLIVE Palmer has warned he will scupper the government’s direct action climate change plan in the Senate, saying the money would be better spent on pensioners…
The Coalition said it would cost $3.2 billion by 2018. Mr Palmer, the leader of the Palmer United Party, said the scheme was a waste of money. “Direct action is a token gesture to addressing carbon issues — it is not a game-changer one bit,” he said yesterday.
Help make a film about a killer the media didn’t really want to mention
Andrew Bolt April 22 2014 (7:56am)
I’ve promoted this movie project before:
You will probably know the filmmakers from their FrackNation, Not Evil Just Wrong and Mine Your Own Business.
===At record-breaking speed, public donations to fund a movie about the nation’s worst abortionist, Philadelphia doctor Kermit Gosnell, have reached over $1 million, making the project one of the biggest “crowd sourced” movies in history.Donate here. If the film does not go ahead, the money is returned.
In just three weeks, the producers of “Gosnell” have reached $1,092,000 of the $2.1 million they are seeking to make a TV movie about the man they’ve dubbed “the most prolific serial killer in American history.”
With the help of some Hollywood stars, the producers expect to raise the money by May 12, the deadline set by the online crowdsourcing fundraiser indiegogo.com.
Filmmaker Phelim McAleer ... decided to seek donations from the public because Hollywood and the mainstream media have shown little interest in the story of Gosnell, convicted last year of murder. In court, he faced charges of handling several late-term abortions and mutilating babies born alive.
You will probably know the filmmakers from their FrackNation, Not Evil Just Wrong and Mine Your Own Business.
Sydney could build a cheap second airport at, er, Mascot
Andrew Bolt April 22 2014 (7:33am)
Terry McCrann says Sydney’s second airport will just waste more billions:
===There are two ways to solve Sydney’s airport capacity challenge and neither of them is building a NSW version of Victoria’s Avalon mini-port.Mind you, says McCrann, for real waste check out the latest numbers on Labor’s NBN:
The first is to make the existing airport at Mascot work properly. Last year Sydney processed 36 million passengers. Compare that with the similarly sized Singapore, which processed around 50 per cent more passengers, at 53 million, on the way comfortably to 60 million-plus.
Apart from the general working practice inefficiencies endemic across the Australian economy, achieving Singapore-level usage requires two things.
The first is to end the curfew. The second is to change the limitations on plane movements per hour. Do that, and spend some more dollars on infrastructure at Mascot, and we have built our second Sydney airport.
If such a step into the reality of the 21st century is considered still a step too far, the alternative is to do what Hong Kong did. Build a second airport, a real second airport, and close Mascot… If we did commit to a real airport at Badgerys Creek, much of the funding could come from the redevelopment and sale of the prime land at Mascot. Why, I imagine we could realise at least billions from selling property there to Chinese buyers.
The amount spent so far, an impressive $8.4bn; total number of users, just 166,642.And with increasing evidence that mobile and other competing technologies will kill the income forecasts.
A rich gift from a lobbyist is not one to forget - or accept
Andrew Bolt April 22 2014 (7:23am)
Laurie Oakes is forgiving - to a point:
Andrew Clennell:
===I think O’Farrell is probably telling the truth when he blames “a massive memory fail” for his unequivocal denials that he received the expensive wine from Nick Di Girolamo, a Liberal fringe-dweller and fundraiser trying to get a billion dollar public-private partnership deal for his water infrastructure company.True, but Di Girolamo did get a board position on the Sydney Water Corporation. Oakes continues:
What Liberals call O’Farrell’s “get-out-of-jail-free card” is the fact that his government rejected the deal Di Girolamo was after.
But ordinary punters, to whom $3000 is a great deal of money, will find it hard to understand how anyone could forget a gift of such value. They might also think it odd that a premier would accept gifts from people seeking government favours in the first place.Spot on.
And they could be forgiven for wondering whether there is much difference between $3000 in a bottle and $3000 in a brown paper bag…
Had the “thank you” note that cost O’Farrell his job been for cash-in-hand, no-one would be complaining that ICAC exceeded its remit in pursuing the matter.
Andrew Clennell:
To give you an idea of how gifts are routinely handled, O’Farrell’s predecessor Kristina Keneally received a bottle of 2001 Grange at her office while disability services Minister in 2007.
She declared the wine, valued at $450, on the pecuniary interest register…
O’Farrell had been in parliament for 16 years at the time the parcel arrived at his doorstep. As if he didn’t know how to handle such a gift…
Alarm bells rang when O’Farrell, having pledged higher standards, initially kept Greg Pearce on after The Daily Telegraph proved he had used taxpayer money to attend a Photios function in Canberra, after the premier had given him a final warning.
Pearce had to pay back $200 for the difference between a public fare and the government fare.
After an inquiry, O’Farrell said: “You can steal $200 or $2 million and the courts will give you different penalties. What I’m saying is this is a minor breach, he’s repaying the funds and I think what he’s gone through over the past two weeks is punishment enough.” What an attitude. It’s all right as long as you don’t rort millions. Food for thought as we reflect on Grangegate.
Boy lost. Parents blame police
Andrew Bolt April 22 2014 (6:19am)
A boy lost, and you wonder how he can ever be rescued:
UPDATE
In Perth, a child better off without this “father”:
===A BOY, 14, with a rap sheet spanning three states, and who was once jailed for a horrific box-cutter attack on a young father and his pregnant wife, is in trouble again.With someone so young, we should look at cultural factors - especially how they were parented. Here’s the boy’s mother in January:
He had been out on parole for only about a week when he was arrested in the city for karate-kicking a stranger in the head in an unprovoked and alcohol-fuelled attack.
A 34-year-old father who had been out with friends was knocked unconscious for up to 15 seconds when attacked in Bourke St around 1.30am last Thursday…
Police sources say that in recent years the teen has spent more time in detention than at home with his family, and has been to a drug and rehabilitation centre at least three times.
“We’re not bad people. He’s not a bad person. He’s just made bad decisions because he doesn’t understand what he is doing.”There are some clues already.
The 13-year-old hasn’t attended school in two years.
His dad has not worked in a year to look after his son and take him to medical appointments.
Both parents claim their son is a victim of racist police officers and plan to make an official complaint.
A previous complaint in November is already being investigated. It was revealed by the Herald Sun last Wednesday the 13-year-old had been granted bail seven times despite facing more than 60 outstanding charges including arson, armed robbery, robbery and aggravated burglary.
UPDATE
In Perth, a child better off without this “father”:
A POLICE officer plucked a three-year-old girl from a stolen car that was on fire after her father allegedly crashed the vehicle and left her in the front passenger seat with internal bleeding…
Police claim they found her dad hiding nearby a short time later…
The man, 25, ... has been charged with 10 offences including assault for allegedly hitting his niece with a baseball bat and dangerous driving causing harm. Superintendent Byrne said ... [the girl] underwent emergency surgery to repair her bladder, torn on impact in the crash, and was yesterday in a spinal splint at Perth’s children’s hospital.
Without the unions, what is Labor’s great cause?
Andrew Bolt April 22 2014 (6:05am)
This does remove a potentially distorting influence - but could also mean removing a brake on the Left:
And then there’s this consideration: if Labor doesn’t believe in unions, what will it believe in? After all, the green thing is covered, isn’t it?
===LABOR leader Bill Shorten is to announce today a symbolic break with the trade union movement issuing a warning that his party must reform or it will die.It’s actually Labors policies rather than its internal rules that cost it the last election.
Admitting Labor could no longer be seen as the political wing of “anything” — in a direct reference to the industrial movement — he says it’s time to face up to some “hard truths”.
Starting with the scrapping of compulsory union tickets for ALP members and MPs, ... Mr Shorten will also announce further moves to dilute the influence of unions and factions.
US primary style preselections of candidates, which began in NSW, would be trialled in all currently non-held seats across the country, giving the local community a say in preselections. A new rule would also give branch members a majority say — up to a 70/30 split over the party machine — in preselecting candidates at a state and federal level.
And then there’s this consideration: if Labor doesn’t believe in unions, what will it believe in? After all, the green thing is covered, isn’t it?
Matt Ridley: to get rich is glorious. And good for the planet
Andrew Bolt April 22 2014 (5:45am)
Matt Ridley says we’ll be so rich by 2100 that global warming probably won’t hurt - unless we suddenly start breeding like rabbits:
===In the past 50 years, world per capita income roughly trebled in real terms, corrected for inflation…
In 2012, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) asked the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) to generate five projections for the economy of the world… The average per capita income of the world in 2100 is projected to be between three and 20 times what it is today in real terms.
The OECD’s “medium” scenario, known as SSP2, ...is a world in which, in the OECD’s words, “trends typical of recent decades continue” with “slowly decreasing fossil fuel dependency”, uneven development of poor countries, delayed achievement of Millennium Development Goals, disappointing investment in education and “only intermediate success in addressing air pollution or improving energy access for the poor”.
And yet this is a world in which by 2100 the global average income per head has increased 13-fold to $100,000 (in 2005 dollars) compared with $7,800 today… The average Indonesian, Brazilian or Chinese will be at least twice as rich as today’s American…
The IPCC has done its own projections to see what sort of greenhouse gas emissions these sorts of world would produce, and vice versa. The one that produces the lowest emissions is the one with the highest income per head in 2100 — a 16-fold increase in income but lower emissions than today: climate change averted. The one that produces the highest emissions is the one with the lowest GDP — a mere trebling of income per head. Economic growth and ecological improvement go together. And it is not mainly because environmental protection produces higher growth, but vice versa. More trade, more innovation and more wealth make possible greater investment in low-carbon energy and smarter adaptation to climate change.
Next time you hear some green, doom-mongering Jeremiah insisting that the only way to avoid Armageddon is to go back to eating home-grown organic lentils cooked over wood fires, ask him why it is that the IPCC assumes the very opposite.
In the IPCC’s nightmare high-emissions scenario, with almost no cuts to emissions by 2100, they reckon there might be north of 4 degrees of warming. However, even this depends on models that assume much higher “climate sensitivity” to carbon dioxide than the consensus of science now thinks is reasonable… And in this storyline, by 2100 the world population has reached 12 billion, almost double what it was in 2000. This is unlikely, according to the United Nations: 10.9 billion is reckoned more probable....
If $6 is too much then you don’t need to go
Andrew Bolt April 22 2014 (5:38am)
A visit to the doctor has got to be worth $6 - and if it’s not, then don’t go:
===A CO-PAYMENT of $6 for bulk-billed visits to GPs will be included in the Abbott government’s first budget with the aim of saving $750 million over the next four years.
The expenditure review committee has decided to go ahead with the co-payment, including a proposal to cap it at 12 visits, meaning a maximum extra cost of $72 a year for patients… The annual Medicare bill has risen in the past 10 years from $8.1 billion to $17.8bn, and the frequency of GP visits has jumped from 4.3 a person in 2003-04 to 5.6 between April 2012 and March last year.
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Larry Pickering - WHY GREENS TASTE TERRIBLE
Labor legislation to excise our borders, with Opposition support, has been languishing in the Senate for months. Now, why would that be?
Aussies are paying interest on a ballooning $8 billion (that’s 8,000 millionaires) debt to support 34,000 illegal arrivals.
The excise legislation would assist to curb the current illegal invaders by denying them free access to our court system. That’s the intent of the proposed border sequestration.
At last count almost $9 million has flowed into Labor law firms’ coffers to overturn ASIO security risk assessments by referring them to the Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT).
The RRT is comprised of human rights advocates and ASIO determinations of “security risks” are invariably overturned.
There is no cost to the illegal immigrants who are given instructions how to manipulate the system prior to departing Indonesia.
Corrupt interpreters ensure they follow the procedure after arriving.
The Gillard Government is loathe to publicise that foreign interests are actually arranging for the overturning of ASIO’s “security risk” rulings.
The excise legislation, currently gathering cobwebs in the Senate, would put a stop to this but the Greens are bitterly opposed to it on human rights grounds and Labor seems happy to allow them to have their way.
In the meantime our security agency’s processing has become a pointless exercise.
The burdensome task of determining whether people without any form of identity are security risks or not is completely negated by an ensuing corrupted appeals process.
ASIO has become basically obsolete and, understandably, is handing their processing procedures to Labor lawyers and the human rights dominated, UN sanctioned, Refugee Review Tribunal.
This matter has become so serious even the Gillard Government has, with the Opposition’s support, rushed this remedial legislation through the Lower House.
On the one occasion that Gillard has realised her folly and taken measures to correct it, she runs slap bang into a coven of Green gophers in the Senate who are demanding the measures not be passed..
On the one occasion that Gillard has realised her folly and taken measures to correct it, she runs slap bang into a coven of Green gophers in the Senate who are demanding the measures not be passed.
Oh well, the Green nightmare can cause Abbott sleepless nights soon.
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- 1500 – Portuguese explorer Pedro Álvares Cabraland his crew landed in present day Brazil and claimed the land for Portugal.
- 1889 – Over 50,000 people rushed to claim a piece of the available two million acres (8,000 km2) in theUnassigned Lands, the present-day U.S. state of Oklahoma, entirely founding the brand-new Oklahoma City.
- 1911 – Tsinghua University ("The Old Gate" pictured), one of the leading universities in mainland China, was founded, funded by an unexpected surplus in indemnities paid by the Qing Dynasty to the United States as a result of the Boxer Rebellion.
- 1969 – British yachtsman Sir Robin Knox-Johnston won the Sunday Times Golden Globe Race to complete the first solo non-stopcircumnavigation of the world.
- 2004 – Flammable cargo exploded at Yongcheon Station inRyongchon, North Korea, killing 160 people.
“I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one will snatch them out of my hand. My Father, who has given them to me, is greater than all; no one can snatch them out of my Father’s hand. I and the Father are one.”” - John 10:28-30
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Gershom
[Gûr'shŏm] - a stranger there.
1. The first-born son of Moses and Zipporah. He was born in Midian (Exod. 2:22; 18:3; 1 Chron. 23:15-16).
2. The eldest son of Levi, and referred to as Gershon (Gen. 46:11;Josh. 21:6).
3. One of the family of Phinehas, and one of the "heads of houses" who returned with Ezra from Babylon (Ezra 8:2).
4. Father of Jonathan, the Levite who became priest to the Danites who settled at Laish (Judg. 18:30). The Danite tribe was guilty of the evil of setting up a graven image.
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Morning and Evening by Charles Spurgeon
Morning
"I know that my Redeemer liveth."
Job 19:25
Job 19:25
The marrow of Job's comfort lies in that little word "My"--"My Redeemer," and in the fact that the Redeemer lives. Oh! to get hold of a living Christ. We must get a property in him before we can enjoy him. What is gold in the mine to me? Men are beggars in Peru, and beg their bread in California. It is gold in my purse which will satisfy my necessities, by purchasing the bread I need. So a Redeemer who does not redeem me, an avenger who will never stand up for my blood, of what avail were such? Rest not content until by faith you can say "Yes, I cast myself upon my living Lord; and he is mine." It may be you hold him with a feeble hand; you half think it presumption to say, "He lives as my Redeemer;" yet, remember if you have but faith as a grain of mustard seed, that little faith entitles you to say it. But there is also another word here, expressive of Job's strong confidence, "I know." To say, "I hope so, I trust so" is comfortable; and there are thousands in the fold of Jesus who hardly ever get much further. But to reach the essence of consolation you must say, "I know." Ifs, buts, and perhapses, are sure murderers of peace and comfort. Doubts are dreary things in times of sorrow. Like wasps they sting the soul! If I have any suspicion that Christ is not mine, then there is vinegar mingled with the gall of death; but if I know that Jesus lives for me, then darkness is not dark: even the night is light about me. Surely if Job, in those ages before the coming and advent of Christ, could say, "I know," we should not speak less positively. God forbid that our positiveness should be presumption. Let us see that our evidences are right, lest we build upon an ungrounded hope; and then let us not be satisfied with the mere foundation, for it is from the upper rooms that we get the widest prospect. A living Redeemer, truly mine, is joy unspeakable.
Evening
"Who is even at the right hand of God."
Romans 8:34
Romans 8:34
He who was once despised and rejected of men, now occupies the honourable position of a beloved and honoured Son. The right hand of God is the place of majesty and favour. Our Lord Jesus is his people's representative. When he died for them, they had rest; he rose again for them, they had liberty; when he sat down at his Father's right hand, they had favour, and honour, and dignity. The raising and elevation of Christ is the elevation, the acceptance, and enshrinement, the glorifying of all his people, for he is their head and representative. This sitting at the right hand of God, then, is to be viewed as the acceptance of the person of the Surety, the reception of the Representative, and therefore, the acceptance of our souls. O saint, see in this thy sure freedom from condemnation. "Who is he that condemneth?" Who shall condemn the men who are in Jesus at the right hand of God?
The right hand is the place of power. Christ at the right hand of God hath all power in heaven and in earth. Who shall fight against the people who have such power vested in their Captain? O my soul, what can destroy thee if Omnipotence be thy helper? If the aegis of the Almighty cover thee, what sword can smite thee? Rest thou secure. If Jesus is thine all-prevailing King, and hath trodden thine enemies beneath his feet; if sin, death, and hell are all vanquished by him, and thou art represented in him, by no possibility canst thou be destroyed.
"Jesu's tremendous name
Puts all our foes to flight:
Jesus, the meek, the angry Lamb,
A Lion is in fight.
"By all hell's host withstood;
We all hell's host o'erthrow;
And conquering them, through Jesu's blood
We still to conquer go."
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Today's reading: 2 Samuel 12-13, Luke 16 (NIV)
View today's reading on Bible GatewayToday's Old Testament reading: 2 Samuel 12-13
Nathan Rebukes David
1 The LORD sent Nathan to David. When he came to him, he said, "There were two men in a certain town, one rich and the other poor. 2 The rich man had a very large number of sheep and cattle, 3 but the poor man had nothing except one little ewe lamb he had bought. He raised it, and it grew up with him and his children. It shared his food, drank from his cup and even slept in his arms. It was like a daughter to him.
4 "Now a traveler came to the rich man, but the rich man refrained from taking one of his own sheep or cattle to prepare a meal for the traveler who had come to him. Instead, he took the ewe lamb that belonged to the poor man and prepared it for the one who had come to him."
5 David burned with anger against the man and said to Nathan, "As surely as the LORD lives, the man who did this must die! 6 He must pay for that lamb four times over, because he did such a thing and had no pity...."
Today's New Testament reading: Luke 16
The Parable of the Shrewd Manager
1 Jesus told his disciples: "There was a rich man whose manager was accused of wasting his possessions. 2 So he called him in and asked him, 'What is this I hear about you? Give an account of your management, because you cannot be manager any longer.'
3 "The manager said to himself, 'What shall I do now? My master is taking away my job. I'm not strong enough to dig, and I'm ashamed to beg-- 4 I know what I'll do so that, when I lose my job here, people will welcome me into their houses.'
5 "So he called in each one of his master's debtors. He asked the first, 'How much do you owe my master?'
6 "'Nine hundred gallons of olive oil,' he replied.
"The manager told him, 'Take your bill, sit down quickly, and make it four hundred and fifty....'
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MAUNDY THURSDAY
Jesus said, “Now is the Son of Man glorified and God is glorified in him. If God is glorified in him, God will glorify the Son in himself, and will glorify him at once. My children, I will be with you only a little longer. You will look for me, and just as I told the Jews, so I tell you now: Where I am going, you cannot come. A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.”(John 13:31-35)
The word “Maundy” comes from the Latin word for commandment (mandatum), which Jesus talked about when he told his disciples that he was leaving them “a new commandment,” that they “love one another.” There were probably so many things going on in the disciples’ minds in that upper room where they had their last supper together, including fear and bewilderment from Jesus telling them that someone in that very room would betray him.
Jesus handed the betrayer a piece of bread, just as he had been feeding all his disciples all along. Always giving, always gracing. Jesus fed thousands of people with fish and loaves, and every word that came out of his mouth was spiritual food for those who listened and understood. But on this night he fed them differently. Passing the bread, and then the wine, he spoke ominous, comforting words: “this is my body… this is my blood.” This was not an ordinary supper, not even an ordinary Passover. His words connected with what he had said on the shores of far-away Galilee “I am the bread of life. He who comes to me will never go hungry, and he who believes in me will never be thirsty…. whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day” (Jn. 6:35,54).
Jesus told them to repeat this unique meal in the future, and then it was time to go out into the chilly night. In a quiet garden among olive trees, quiet but for the deep night sounds of distant dogs barking, Jesus prayed. In agony he prayed. The specter of shameful execution and of bearing the curse of sin tore into the human consciousness of Jesus. And in the end it was sheer obedience to the divine plan that carried Jesus into the hands of the conspirators waiting for him. Did the disciples remember “the new command”?
Ponder This: What would have been going on in your mind had you been one of the disciples at the last supper or in the garden of Gethsemane?
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Today's Lent reading: John 19-20 (NIV)
View today's Lent reading on Bible GatewayJesus Sentenced to Be Crucified
1 Then Pilate took Jesus and had him flogged. 2 The soldiers twisted together a crown of thorns and put it on his head. They clothed him in a purple robe 3 and went up to him again and again, saying, "Hail, king of the Jews!" And they slapped him in the face.
4 Once more Pilate came out and said to the Jews gathered there, "Look, I am bringing him out to you to let you know that I find no basis for a charge against him." 5 When Jesus came out wearing the crown of thorns and the purple robe, Pilate said to them, "Here is the man!"
6 As soon as the chief priests and their officials saw him, they shouted, "Crucify! Crucify!"
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