For some, at the moment, the Sex Party has more credibility.
=== from 2015 ===
As the NSW election nears, the ABC moves on from obfuscating over the Israeli election. There is still a lot of horse trading to be done, but at first blush the conservative Likud under Netanyahu has won handsomely. The ABC have worked hard to suggest the so called centre left would defeat the party they call right wing. Such rhetoric is telling and misleading. Likud is conservative. There are right wing parties, Likud is not one of them. There are left wing parties, but none are centre left. The main opposition to Likud is populist left. Similarly in Australia, The Liberal Party is conservative. They aren't right wing, and there are a few parties that get little recognition that are. The ALP are not centre left, but populist left. In Australia, under Bill Shorten, the ALP have no policy on any issue, which is why they cannot negotiate with the government on any issue. Shorten has a mental illness which is clearly expressed in his speech, and which the partisan press label as 'zingers' but which are in fact a clear inability to understand the issues of the day. Now the ABC obfuscates over the NSW election. A partisan ICAC which has been unable to present a finding of corruption against the Liberals has claimed scalps through what can only be described as corruption on the part of the ICAC. They have failed to clarify the depth of corruption clearly visible of the NSW ALP. ABC have drawn attention to what are rumours and innuendo in order to turn the public's eye from the excellent NSW Lib Government and it's responsible budgets and public works.
On this day in 37, Caligula managed to have Tiberius' will annulled and was made Emperor. Tiberius had been abysmal as Emperor, a threat to any wealthy Roman. Caligula was worse. In 1741, poor people and slaves were said to be burning buildings in NYC. They wanted freedom? A few were hanged and gibbeted, while others were sent away. In 1765, The UK parliament ended the stamp act, but couldn't stop the developing resentment which became the Revolution of 1776 to 1783. In 1834, six trade unionists were sentenced to be transported to NSW from Dorset. Had they been hanged instead, maybe there would be no ALP? In 1850, American Express was founded by Wells and Fargo. In 1892 in Canada, former Governor General Lord Stanley ordered a silver cup be made for ice hockey, for the best team. In 1921, another peace treaty was signed in Riga between Poland and the murderous Soviets. In 1922, Mohandas Ghandi was sentenced to six years in prison, but only served two, for civil disobedience. In 1942, a Democrat President established an authority to place Americans in concentration camps if they looked Japanese. In 1946, diplomatic relations were established between Switzerland and the murderous Soviets. In 1959, GOP President Eisenhower signed a bill which would welcome Hawaii as the fiftieth US state. In 1985, the first episode of Neighbours was broadcast. In 1990, former communist Germany voted in a democratic election. On the same day in the US art thieves stole twelve paintings worth $300 million. In 1992, South Africa voted to end Apartheid.
On this day in 37, Caligula managed to have Tiberius' will annulled and was made Emperor. Tiberius had been abysmal as Emperor, a threat to any wealthy Roman. Caligula was worse. In 1741, poor people and slaves were said to be burning buildings in NYC. They wanted freedom? A few were hanged and gibbeted, while others were sent away. In 1765, The UK parliament ended the stamp act, but couldn't stop the developing resentment which became the Revolution of 1776 to 1783. In 1834, six trade unionists were sentenced to be transported to NSW from Dorset. Had they been hanged instead, maybe there would be no ALP? In 1850, American Express was founded by Wells and Fargo. In 1892 in Canada, former Governor General Lord Stanley ordered a silver cup be made for ice hockey, for the best team. In 1921, another peace treaty was signed in Riga between Poland and the murderous Soviets. In 1922, Mohandas Ghandi was sentenced to six years in prison, but only served two, for civil disobedience. In 1942, a Democrat President established an authority to place Americans in concentration camps if they looked Japanese. In 1946, diplomatic relations were established between Switzerland and the murderous Soviets. In 1959, GOP President Eisenhower signed a bill which would welcome Hawaii as the fiftieth US state. In 1985, the first episode of Neighbours was broadcast. In 1990, former communist Germany voted in a democratic election. On the same day in the US art thieves stole twelve paintings worth $300 million. In 1992, South Africa voted to end Apartheid.
From 2014
American Express was founded on this day in 1850, making the world a little smaller and better for travellers. The world is very big. So big that when Tiberius died, the Senate amended his will by making Caligula emperor. Caligula was what the press now call a popular choice. Caligula would treat the roman Senate with the same contempt of a Craig Thomson addressing the parliament. Still, Rome was capable of correcting her mistakes, as they did on this day in 235 with Alexander Severus and his mother. In 1834, England made a big mistake sending 6 trade unionists to Australia. The suffering continues. On this day in 1922, Ghandi was sentenced to 6 years prison for civil disobedience. He served two. Today, we suffer from similar sentencing issues. Had it happened today, no doubt Willessee would bargain on behalf of Seven in an attempt to let Ghandi trade on the fame garnered by civil disobedience. For his part, Ghandi might have to wear a "fuck you Tony" T-shirt. To paraphrase Hawke addressing the UN, fucking Gillard would be first prize of a lottery. Tickets given to ALP backbenchers. Multiple entry winners. The silly old bugger.
Winning the longest ever hide and seek game, on this day in 1989, was a 4400 year old mummy found near the pyramid of Cheops. Their prize seems similar to Hawke's one, the brain matter scooped through a hole in the nose, and then covered up. East Germans got to vote for unification with a richer, better state on this day in 1990, echoing Crimea today. But the glory went to a white man in South Africa who had the grace to offer a vote in 1992. It seems sad and nasty that divisive socialists have not honoured the graciousness. But there is hope that there never was under apartheid.
Winning the longest ever hide and seek game, on this day in 1989, was a 4400 year old mummy found near the pyramid of Cheops. Their prize seems similar to Hawke's one, the brain matter scooped through a hole in the nose, and then covered up. East Germans got to vote for unification with a richer, better state on this day in 1990, echoing Crimea today. But the glory went to a white man in South Africa who had the grace to offer a vote in 1992. It seems sad and nasty that divisive socialists have not honoured the graciousness. But there is hope that there never was under apartheid.
Historical perspective on this day
- 37 – The Roman Senate annuls Tiberius's will and proclaims Caligula emperor.
- 633 – Ridda wars: The Arabian Peninsula is united under the central authority of Caliph Abu Bakr.
- 1229 – Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor, declares himself King of Jerusalem in the Sixth Crusade.
- 1241 – First Mongol invasion of Poland: Mongols overwhelm Polish armies in Kraków in the Battle of Chmielnik and plunder the city.
- 1314 – Jacques de Molay, the 23rd and the last Grand Master of the Knights Templar, is burned at the stake.
- 1438 – Albert II of Habsburg becomes Holy Roman Emperor.
- 1608 – Susenyos is formally crowned Emperor of Ethiopia.
- 1644 – The Third Anglo-Powhatan War begins in the Colony of Virginia.
- 1741 – New York governor George Clarke's complex at Fort George is burned in an arson attack, starting the New York Conspiracy of 1741.
- 1766 – American Revolution: The British Parliament repeals the Stamp Act.
- 1793 – The first republic in Germany, the Republic of Mainz, is declared by Andreas Joseph Hofmann.
- 1834 – Six farm labourers from Tolpuddle, Dorset, England are sentenced to be transported to Australia for forming a trade union.
- 1848 – March Revolution: in Berlin there is a struggle between citizens and military, costing about 300 lives.
- 1850 – American Express is founded by Henry Wells and William Fargo.
- 1865 – American Civil War: The Congress of the Confederate States adjourns for the last time.
- 1871 – Declaration of the Paris Commune; President of the French Republic, Adolphe Thiers, orders the evacuation of Paris.
- 1874 – Hawaii signs a treaty with the United States granting exclusive trade rights.
- 1892 – Former Governor General Lord Stanley pledges to donate a silver challenge cup, later named after him, as an award for the best hockey team in Canada the Stanley Cup.
- 1906 – Traian Vuia flies a heavier-than-air aircraft for 11 meters at an altitude of one meter.
- 1913 – King George I of Greece is assassinated in the recently liberated city of Thessaloniki.
- 1915 – World War I: During the Battle of Gallipoli, three battleships are sunk during a failed British and French naval attack on the Dardanelles.
- 1921 – The second Peace of Riga is signed between Poland and the Soviet Union.
- 1922 – In India, Mohandas Gandhi is sentenced to six years in prison for civil disobedience, of which he serves only two.
- 1925 – The Tri-State Tornado hits the Midwestern states of Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana, killing 695 people.
- 1937 – The New London School explosion in New London, Texas, kills 300 people, mostly children.
- 1937 – Spanish Civil War: Spanish Republican forces defeat the Italians at the Battle of Guadalajara.
- 1937 – The human-powered aircraft, Pedaliante, flies 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) outside Milan.
- 1938 – Mexico nationalizes all foreign-owned oil properties within its borders.
- 1940 – World War II: Axis powers – Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini meet at the Brenner Pass in the Alps and agree to form an alliance against France and the United Kingdom.
- 1942 – The War Relocation Authority is established in the United States to take Japanese Americans into custody.
- 1944 – The eruption of Mount Vesuvius in Italy kills 26 people and causes thousands to flee their homes.
- 1946 – Diplomatic relations between Switzerland and the Soviet Union are established.
- 1948 – Soviet consultants leave Yugoslavia in the first sign of the Tito–Stalin split.
- 1953 – An earthquake hits western Turkey, killing 265 people.
- 1959 – President Dwight D. Eisenhower signs a bill into law allowing for Hawaiian statehood, which would become official on August 21.
- 1962 – The Évian Accords end the Algerian War of Independence, which had begun in 1954.
- 1965 – Cosmonaut Alexey Leonov, leaving his spacecraft Voskhod 2 for 12 minutes, becomes the first person to walk in space.
- 1967 – The supertanker Torrey Canyon runs aground off the Cornish coast.
- 1968 – Gold standard: The U.S. Congress repeals the requirement for a gold reserve to back US currency.
- 1969 – The United States begins secretly bombing the Sihanouk Trail in Cambodia, used by communist forces to infiltrate South Vietnam.
- 1970 – Lon Nol ousts Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia.
- 1970 – The U.S. postal strike of 1970 begins, one of the largest wildcat strikes in U.S. history.
- 1971 – In Peru a landslide crashes into Yanawayin Lake, killing 200 people at the mining camp of Chungar.
- 1974 – Oil embargo crisis: Most OPEC nations end a five-month oil embargo against the United States, Europe and Japan.
- 1980 – At Plesetsk Cosmodrome in Russia, 50 people are killed by an explosion of a Vostok-2M rocket on its launch pad during a fueling operation.
- 1985 – First episode of Neighbours broadcast.
- 1990 – Germans in the German Democratic Republic vote in the first democratic elections in the former communist dictatorship.
- 1990 – In the largest art theft in US history, 12 paintings, collectively worth around $300 million, are stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston.
- 1992 – In a national referendum white South Africans vote overwhelmingly in favour of ending the racist policy of Apartheid.
- 1994 – Bosnia's Bosniaks and Croats sign the Washington Agreement, ending war between the Croatian Republic of Herzeg-Bosnia and the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and establishing the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
- 1996 – A nightclub fire in Quezon City, Philippines kills 162 people.
- 1997 – The tail of a Russian Antonov An-24 charter plane breaks off while en route to Turkey causing the plane to crash and killing all 50 people on board and leading to the grounding of all An-24s.
- 2012 – Tupou VI becomes King of Tonga.
- 2014 – The parliaments of Russia and Crimea sign an accession treaty.
=== Publishing News ===
This column welcomes feedback and criticism. The column is not made up but based on the days events and articles which are then placed in the feed. So they may not have an apparent cohesion they would have had were they made up.
===
I am moving from Sydney to Melbourne and am desperate for funding. If you have a heart for giving, I fundraise at gofundme.com/abeueaec
===
Editorials will appear in the "History in a Year by the Conservative Voice" series, starting with August, September, October, or at Amazon http://www.amazon.com/dp/1482020262/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_dp_dVHPub0MQKDZ4 The kindle version is cheaper, but the soft back version allows a free kindle version.
List of available items at Create Space
The Amazon Author Page for David Ball
UK .. http://www.amazon.co.uk/-/e/B01683ZOWGFrench .. http://www.amazon.fr/-/e/B01683ZOWG
Japan .. http://www.amazon.co.jp/-/e/B01683ZOWG
German .. http://www.amazon.de/-/e/B01683ZOWG
===
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 Phuc Le and Jorge Rodas. Born the same day Neighbours was first broadcast in 1985, although a different year for you? Actually, Phuc's birthday is belated, he could turn US dollars green, yesterday.
===- 1395 – John Holland, 2nd Duke of Exeter, English military commander (d. 1447)
- 1496 – Mary Tudor, Queen of France (d. 1533)
- 1602 – Jacques de Billy, French mathematician (d. 1679)
- 1634 – Madame de La Fayette, French author (d. 1693)
- 1640 – Philippe de La Hire, French mathematician and astronomer (d. 1719)
- 1690 – Christian Goldbach, Prussian mathematician (d. 1764)
- 1840 – William Cosmo Monkhouse, English poet and critic (d. 1901)
- 1858 – Rudolf Diesel, German engineer, invented the Diesel engine (d. 1913)
- 1877 – Clem Hill, Australian cricketer (d. 1945)
- 1878 – Percival Perry, English motor vehicle manufacturer, and chairman of Ford of Britain (d. 1956)
- 1893 – Wilfred Owen, English soldier and poet (d. 1918)
- 1898 – Jake Swirbul, American businessman, co-founded the Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation (d. 1960)
- 1905 – Robert Donat, English actor (d. 1958)
- 1922 – Fred Shuttlesworth, American activist, co-founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (d. 2011)
- 1936 – F. W. de Klerk, South African politician, 2nd State President of South Africa, Nobel Prize laureate
- 1941 – Wilson Pickett, American singer-songwriter (The Falcons) (d. 2006)
- 1944 – Dick Smith, Australian publisher and businessman, founded Dick Smith Electronics and Australian Geographic
- 1945 – Michael Reagan, American radio host
- 1945 – Eric Woolfson, Scottish songwriter, lyricist, vocalist, executive producer, pianist, and creator of The Alan Parsons Project (d. 2009)
- 1947 – B.J. Wilson, English drummer (Procol Harum) (d. 1990)
- 1950 – John Hartman, American drummer (Doobie Brothers)
- 1951 – Ben Cohen, American businessman co-founded Ben and Jerry's
- 1959 – Irene Cara, American singer-songwriter, producer, and actress
- 1963 – Vanessa L. Williams, American model, actress, and singer, Miss America 1984
- 1970 – Queen Latifah, American rapper and actress
- 1997 – Ciara Bravo, American actress
- 1871 – French President Adolphe Thiers ordered the evacuation of Paris after an uprising broke out as the result of France's defeat in the Franco-Prussian War, leading to the establishment of the Paris Commune government.
- 1892 – Lord Stanley of Preston pledged to donate an award for Canada's top-ranked amateur ice hockey club, now known as the Stanley Cup (pictured), the oldest professional sports trophy in North America.
- 1925 – The Tri-State Tornado spawned in Missouri, traveled over 219 miles (352 km) across Illinois and Indiana, and killed 695 along the way, making it the tornado with the longest continuous track ever recorded and the deadliest in U.S. history.
- 1985 – The first episode of the Australian soap opera Neighbours was broadcast on the Seven Network, eventually becoming the longest running drama in Australian television history.
- 2005 – As per a court order, the feeding tube of Terri Schiavo, an American woman who suffered brain damage, was removed at the request of her husband, fueling a worldwide debate on euthanasia.
Deaths
- 235 – Severus Alexander, Roman emperor (b. 208)
- 978 – Edward the Martyr, English king (b. 962)
- 1227 – Pope Honorius III (b. 1148)
- 1314 – Jacques de Molay, Frankish knight (b. 1244)
- 1675 – Arthur Chichester, 1st Earl of Donegall, Irish soldier (b. 1606)
- 1689 – John Dixwell, English judge (b. 1607)
- 1696 – Robert Charnock, English academic (b. 1663)
- 1715 – William Fraser, 12th Lord Saltoun, Scottish politician (b. 1654)
- 1745 – Robert Walpole, English politician, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (b. 1676)
- 1768 – Laurence Sterne, Irish clergyman and author (b. 1713)
- 1781 – Anne-Robert-Jacques Turgot, Baron de Laune, French economist and politician (b. 1727)
- 1823 – Jean-Baptiste Bréval, French cellist and composer (b. 1753)
- 1845 – Johnny Appleseed, British-American environmentalist (b. 1774)
- 1871 – Augustus De Morgan, Indian-English mathematician (b. 1806)
- 1939 – Henry Simpson Lunn, English businessman, founded Lunn Poly (b. 1859)
- 1941 – Henri Cornet, French cyclist (b. 1884)
- 2008 – Anthony Minghella, English director and screenwriter (b. 1954)
- 2014 – Jorge Arvizu, Mexican voice actor (b. 1932)
LITTLE DRUMMER BOY
Tim Blair – Friday, March 18, 2016 (3:04pm)
If we didn’t have unions, little children would be forced to work as slave drummers for their tyrant overlords. Oh, wait:
SYDNEY TO MELBOURNE IN JUST THREE HOURS!
Tim Blair – Friday, March 18, 2016 (2:10pm)
If only there was already a way to travel rapidly between Melbourne and Sydney. Ideas, anybody? Possibly some kind of futuristic sky-based transport system? Big metal tubes with a means of elevation attached, perhaps?
EVERYBODY OUT
Tim Blair – Friday, March 18, 2016 (6:17am)
The Guardian‘s Vanessa Badham, Lenore Taylor and cartoonist First Dog on the Moon have all expressed support for Fairfax staffers currently striking over Fairfax’s plan to cut 120 jobs. But now it’s their turn to down tools:
The Guardian will cut 250 jobs as it seeks to staunch heavy losses, raising the threat of its first ever compulsory redundancies.The publisher told staff that there was “urgent need for radical action” as it announced 100 journalists and 150 staff in non-editorial departments will lose their jobs.
HAD TO ASK
Tim Blair – Friday, March 18, 2016 (4:03am)
Fairfax journalist Tim Barlass writes:
“Why are we on strike? Ask the homeless, suicidal, dementia sufferers … They know.”
This seemed like good advice, so I approached a homeless suicidal dementia sufferer and asked him why Fairfax staffers were on strike. He stole my cigarettes and ate them.
SJW DONALD
Tim Blair – Friday, March 18, 2016 (2:59am)
Jim Treacher continues presenting the case against Donald Trump:
Trump is as much of a Social Justice Warrior as any purple-haired third-wave feminist with a Tumblr and a grudge. The Donald whines about any and all criticism, he makes his volunteers sign a non-disclosure agreement with a “no disparagement” clause, he makes no secret of his contempt for the First Amendment when it protects his critics, and he cheers on his campaign aides when they hurt reporters who ask him tough questions. If you’re supporting Trump to spite the SJWs and campus fascists and other lefties who want to shut you up, you’re just buying the old wine in a new bottle.Wait, scratch that last part. Even Trump Wine isn’t really Trump Wine. Everything he says and does is a lie.
And from NRO’s Stephen L. Miller:
Something in Trump appeals deeply to his most ardent supporters – something they do not find in the more traditional lineup of conservative candidates. Trump has never said he’d like to shrink our overbearing federal bureaucracy. Quite the contrary: He has stated his intention to expand it wherever he can. He has promised to replace Obamacare and Common Core with things that are “terrific.” Given Trump’s penchant for gold leaf and marble, “terrific” sure doesn’t sound prudent.
Both Jim and Miller are correct, but it very likely won’t make much difference. We might already have passed the point where Trump’s momentum overwhelms any criticism. Right now, you could probably report that “kitten-slaughtering secret Scientologist Donald Trump has confessed to years of selling arms to al Qaeda”, and the only words anyone would hear in that sentence would be “Donald Trump”.
Barack Obama enjoyed this level of immunity in 2008. It isn’t an ideal circumstance, because it means a candidate’s reckoning only takes place after he’s in office. Trump is further assisted by the weakness of his Republican competitors – and he might be assisted further by the weakness of his probable Democrat presidential rival.
MANILA SMOLDER
Tim Blair – Friday, March 18, 2016 (2:35am)
A reader in the Philippines emails:
I’m an Australian living in Manila. Al Gore was in town this week. His talk to a climate conference got him front page coverage in my local paper, The Philippine Star.See coverage here.I thought it may interest you for several reasons:1. The juxtaposition of two American clowns on the front page.
2. The precision of Al’s prediction: 13.6M Pinoys (Filipinos) in peril! Who crunches these numbers?3. This sentence on the inside pages: “Scientists have blamed man-made climate change for the fast rise in sea levels in the past 2,800 years.” Those fast-rising seas are kinda slow.4. And, finally, the bit that actually irritated me enough to write to you (after years of reading your blog daily without ever feeling compelled to contribute): “Gore urged sectors demanding government action on climate change to continue what he described as a ‘moral struggle’ amid the Philippines’ continued support for coal-fired power plants ... He said that while the Philippines has experienced a number of weather-related disasters in almost two decades, the country is still reluctant to use clean energy.”First of all, those weather-related disasters were not “related.” They were weather. Sometimes the Filipinos call bad weather a typhoon. And those typhoons occur every year during a season the Filipinos like to call ... wait for it ... “typhoon season.” It’s been happening every May-October for longer than the “fast-rising seas” have been trying to breach Manila’s sea-level walls. People die and things are destroyed in typhoon season because this is a poor country, albeit one trying to pull itself up by the boot straps.The Filipinos are poor, not stupid. As the story points out, the Aquino administration – after committing to reducing carbon emissions early in its tenure – quickly dropped that policy in the face of overwhelming power shortages and constant brown outs in the major cities, especially Manila. It then went ahead and approved 21 new coal-fired plant projects in the past five years. Impressive. It needs those plants to fuel the remarkable economic growth that is happening here. Growth that has lifted millions out of poverty and allowed them to build better homes that can withstand those weather-related events.There’s still a long way to go but this country is heading in the right direction. Exactly what this country doesn’t need right now is another American clown telling them to convert to clean, expensive, unreliable energy. That way spells disaster.Seriously.Your Man in Manila.
Much thanks for that report, sir.
MULTI CULTI FAULTY
Tim Blair – Friday, March 18, 2016 (2:26am)
The Merkeling of Germany proceeds apace:
New York-based conservative think tank Gatestone Institute has compiled a shocking list of sexual assaults and rapes by migrants in Germany in just the first two months of the year.
Drawing only from German media reports, the list documents more than 160 instances of rape and sexual assault committed by migrants in train stations, swimming pools and other public places against victims as young as seven.
Germany’s Earth Hour on Saturday night might be slightly brighter than usual.
JOE AND THE VOLCANO
Tim Blair – Thursday, March 17, 2016 (11:29pm)
“We’re not all on strike”: the Financial Review‘s Joe Aston defies his bolshie Fairfax colleagues and continues working. Hit that link and scroll down to see the love being cast Joe’s way.
On days like this I wish I was still a freelancer. I’d cross that picket line – if they’ve actually got one – and work at the Sydney Morning Herald for nothing, just for the sheer fun. Come to think of it, any unemployed journalists or youngsters wishing to get a start in the industry should turn up at their nearest Fairfax office over the next few days and offer to put in a few shifts. If you can write about lawn, you might even score a column.
UPDATE. A wonderful Fairfax job offer.
Turnbull vs his party on Marxist “anti-bullying” scheme
Andrew Bolt March 18 2016 (2:52pm)
Malcolm Turnbull faces his first big party revolt:
Attempts by Labor and some in the media to shout “homophobe” at critics of the Sage School program are pathetic. It’s the kind of sanctimonious and self-serving abuse that paves the way for a Trump.
In fact, Josh Manuatu, ACT Young Liberal president and staffer for Liberal Senator Eric Abetz, demonstrates how gay conservatives are just as troubled by this proselytising scheme:
Speaking of Left-wing lynch mobs, how about the one that trashed Senator Cory Bernardi’s office, destroyed his fence and menaced his staff today? Don’t these totalitarian thugs see the irony in bullying people to defend what they claim is an anti-bulling program?
Here is Bernardi’s office after the mob left:
Check their faces here. Note the gloating of the mob-members, trespassing, intimidating, trashing:
UPDATE
Turnbull caves, as he had to:
The list of changes is very long. It should make Liberals wonder at the judgement of Education Minister Simon Birmingham, who defended this program and now must clean it up.
(Thanks to readers Peter of Bellevue Hill, Max and Diego.)
===MALCOLM Turnbull has been left with little choice today but to axe funding for the controversial Safe Schools program or defy a majority of his backbench MPs and senior members of his cabinet.Sex educator Liz Walker, of the Youth Wellbeing Project, has questions for the expert who reviewed the Safe Schools program for the Turnbull Government and gave it qualified support:
The signatures of 43 Liberal and National backbench MPs have been secured for a petition calling on the Prime Minister to suspend funding due to its sexual material and instigate a full parliamentary inquiry into the program…
A number of senior cabinet ministers including Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce have also expressed their concern about aspects of the anti-bullying program… Immigration Minister Peter Dutton refused to back the program yesterday.
Whilst there is a considerable number of adolescents who will be attracted to a person of the same sex, by adult years this number drops considerably. Why is this not mentioned at all in the curriculum?UPDATE
Lesson 3 states that the average age of coming out is 16. Why isn’t it mentioned that over half of young people who think they may be same-sex attracted are going through a stage of experimentation and do not experience anything other than a crush that lasts for a short period of time?
Many gender-questioning young people do not progress to transitioning and settle into same-sex or bisexual relationships. Why is this not mentioned in the curriculum?…
In Lesson 4, “Nevo”, who identifies as transgender, shares that he is looking forward to a life with his girlfriend and wants to have kids, little versions of him running around. The loose notes around IVF, fostering and adoption do not seem to be clear about Nevo not having the biological capacity to father a child, nor about the complexities of birthing a child post-medical transition. Would this lack of explanation create confusion in this age bracket?
The young people in the videos are very confident in owning their sexuality and stories, certain of their decisions and portraying a positive outcome. Why is there only limited focus on the turbulent nature of this period of life? Why no strong focus on the importance of seeking professional psychiatric support?…
Attempts by Labor and some in the media to shout “homophobe” at critics of the Sage School program are pathetic. It’s the kind of sanctimonious and self-serving abuse that paves the way for a Trump.
In fact, Josh Manuatu, ACT Young Liberal president and staffer for Liberal Senator Eric Abetz, demonstrates how gay conservatives are just as troubled by this proselytising scheme:
This Orwellian program attempts to indoctrinate students as young as eleven with gender fluidity being promoted as a worthwhile and desirable choice for young students. Indeed it goes as far as pushing that gender is not binary (male-female) stereotype but a process of self-expression and “how you feel inside” and “may change over time"…UPDATE
Roz Ward, who established the program, when addressing the 2015 Marxism Conference in Melbourne belled the cat on the true intentions by saying “to smooth the operation of capitalism the ruling class has benefited, and continues to benefit, from oppressing our bodies, our relationships, sexuality and gender identities alongside sexism, homophobia and transphobia..."…
The public debate and discourse around the program has been disappointingly reflective of the bullying that takes place by those very advocates of this ‘anti-bullying’ program. Indeed, anyone who dares suggest that the program is bad policy or bad for the development of children is labelled as extremists, homophobes or bigots…
Recently at an event with left-wing students I dared to suggest that there are some very valid concerns about the program and received a full-blown dressing down. When I then said that I was gay I was ridiculed as being ‘self-hating’, a ‘traitor’ – and matters only got worse when I told them of my view that marriage should stay as currently defined – this is a prime example of the kind of bullying that the advocates of the programme insist must be dealt with.
I know of countless people in a similar position to me who are gay and conservative who think that the safe schools programme is bad and that marriage should remain the same but who are too afraid to speak out for fear of being attacked by the PC lefty lynch-mob.
Until they can demonstrate the tolerance that they demand of others they have absolutely no leg to stand on especially on the topic of anti-bullying.
Speaking of Left-wing lynch mobs, how about the one that trashed Senator Cory Bernardi’s office, destroyed his fence and menaced his staff today? Don’t these totalitarian thugs see the irony in bullying people to defend what they claim is an anti-bulling program?
Here is Bernardi’s office after the mob left:
Check their antics in the video here.
Check their faces here. Note the gloating of the mob-members, trespassing, intimidating, trashing:
The protest featured Socialist Alternative banners. So we have Marxist stormtroopers in effect providing the muscle for the Marxist theoreticians whose work the Safe Schools project is.
UPDATE
Turnbull caves, as he had to:
The hotly contested Safe Schools anti-bullying program will be drastically overhauled, after Malcolm Turnbull bowed to pressure from conservative MPs and moved to quell a backbench revolt.
Arguing the need for a “strong and measured” response to the extensive concerns raised by MPs, Education Minister Simon Birmingham said the government would order major changes to resources used in the classroom.
Among the government’s changes will be the restriction of lessons to secondary schools, the removal of role-playing exercises from the program, and “empowering parents” to be involved in deciding whether the resources are used in their children’s schools.
The government will also move to prevent third parties using the Safe Schools material to promote other websites or advocacy groups by moving the content to a government controlled anti-bullying “hub”.
The list of changes is very long. It should make Liberals wonder at the judgement of Education Minister Simon Birmingham, who defended this program and now must clean it up.
(Thanks to readers Peter of Bellevue Hill, Max and Diego.)
Nabokov unloads
Andrew Bolt March 18 2016 (2:32pm)
Driving home today I listened to this 1970 interview with novelist Vladimir Nabokov. It is marvelous. Laugh out loud in bits.
===Blair asks a homeless, suicidal and demented man to explain the Fairfax strike
Andrew Bolt March 18 2016 (2:19pm)
Fairfax has had to sack
another fifth of its journalists because it’s unable to sell enough
papers or ads to keep paying them all.
In response, the staff have bizarrely called a three-day strike to protest, seemingly believing that crippling their struggling paper will make ads and sales magically appear.
Fairfax journalist Tim Barlass defiantly attempts to explain the strike explains (and also explains something about the general tediousness of Fairfax reporting):
===In response, the staff have bizarrely called a three-day strike to protest, seemingly believing that crippling their struggling paper will make ads and sales magically appear.
Fairfax journalist Tim Barlass defiantly attempts to explain the strike explains (and also explains something about the general tediousness of Fairfax reporting):
Why are we on strike? Ask the homeless, suicidal, dementia sufferers … They know.So Tim Blair did.
Islamic State in slow retreat
Andrew Bolt March 18 2016 (2:11pm)
Too, too slow. But the IHC Conflict Monitor says the Islamic State is at least in retreat:
===
The tide of the war is turning against the Islamic State. Between 1 Jan and 15 December 2015, the Islamic State lost control of 14% of its territory. New analysis indicates that in the last 3 months, the Islamic State has lost a further 8% of its territory.
In 2016, we have seen major losses in the north-east extend south towards Raqqa and Deir al-Zour as the mixed-sectarian Kurdish and Sunni Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) advance under the cover of US and Russian airstrikes…
The Islamic State’s last major territorial advance into Palmyra and Ramadi in June 2015 came at the expense of losing large swathes of territory in northern Syria. These included the strategically important Tal Abyad border crossing, which was the group’s main crossing point between Turkey and the so-called Caliphate’s de-facto capital city of Raqqa.
Following the loss of Tal Abyad, IHS began picking up indicators that the Islamic State was struggling financially, which included various tax hikes, increases in the cost of state-run services, and significant cuts of up to 50% in the salaries paid to Islamic State fighters. These financial difficulties have been exacerbated further by both US-led Coalition and Russian airstrikes on the group’s sources of oil revenue since late 2015.
The loss of access points to the Turkish border, and heightened border security on the Turkish side, have significantly reduced the flow of goods and potential recruits into the Caliphate…
The Islamic State is increasingly isolated, and being perceived as in decline. This plays into the hands of its main rival, al-Qaeda’s Jabhat al-Nusra, which despite sharing the same ultimate goal of establishing an Islamic caliphate, has criticised the Islamic State for prematurely declaring it.
If Turnbull has a plan, this would be a good time to hear it
Andrew Bolt March 18 2016 (1:30pm)
Graham Richardson on the Prime Minister with no plan and no map:
Richardson, like Terry McCrann, says Turnbull is just inviting more trouble:
===Malcolm Turnbull is the traveller who turns up at the airport not knowing which plane to catch and no idea of his destination. The plane therefore was not booked and neither was the hotel…But what of Turnbull’s plan to wipe out the preference arrangements that got so many crossbenchers elected?
I knew it would be a roller-coaster ride but even then I could not have foreseen the utter shambles [the Senate] debate [has this week] became…
Niki Savva’s [statement] [in] her column ... that “each policy announced has been well thought through” (you don’t need the fingers of one hand to count them — at this rate the well-thought-out budget won’t be delivered until next year) looks very odd when applied to a few days in the Senate, which saw the Liberals vote against a debate on the Australian Building and Construction Commission bill and the Greens vote against a debate on introducing same-sex marriage. If that was part of the Prime Minister’s plan, then he has no idea what he is doing. The government and the Greens make for strange bedfellows at the best of times…
(T)he determination to act in their own self-interest has forced the new Senate coalition of Greens, Liberals and Nationals to vote against their core belief systems and make themselves look utterly ridiculous.
Now to obtain a trigger for a double dissolution, the PM will be compelled to try to rush through an ABCC debate on one day, when convention suggests contentious legislation tends to be debated over many days and nights in a Senate where the government doesn’t have a majority.
Just how stupid would the PM look if he made the short trip from the Lodge to the Governor-General’s residence in Yarralumla to ask for a double dissolution on the grounds that twice the Senate refused to support debate on his ABCC bill, even though on one of those occasions it was the government he leads that voted against bringing on that debate.
Even if Turnbull had the gall to ask, it would be difficult for any governor-general to set a precedent for calling a double dissolution on the mere rejection of bringing on a debate rather than a rejection of the bill itself. Given the prime ministerial collusion in holding out on the debate this week, Peter Cosgrove would be placed in an impossible position.
There is real anger among both frontbench and backbench MPs and senators on the government side that Senate voting reform is a fringe issue for most, while prosecuting proper debate and legislation on reviving the ABCC is at the very core of their political ethic. There is no method in this muddle. It is just a muddle of one man’s making — the man whose job security now seems to dominate all thought and discussion on election timing and policy formation: the Prime Minister.
Richardson, like Terry McCrann, says Turnbull is just inviting more trouble:
The changes to the way Australians elect their senators may well end the chances of the Muirs and the Days being elected, but the fallout doesn’t stop there. These changes will consolidate the Greens and cement the Senate as a chamber where the government of the day will almost never have a majority.But the Parliamentary Library thinks Turnbull’s plan will backfire in another way:
A double-dissolution election will not wipe out the “dysfunctional” Senate crossbench, according to analysis from the Parliamentary Library that suggests the number of independent and micro-party senators could increase.Mind you, the Parliamentary Library’s analysis makes me suspicious. This assumption is clearly wrong:
As Malcolm Turnbull weighs up whether to spill the entire Senate to hold a July 2 election, the advice finds the number of crossbenchers could increase by eight to 10 or 11 under the new Senate voting rules…
Contrary to claims by Labor, the report suggests the Coalition and the Greens, which have made a pact to pass the biggest changes to the Senate voting system in 32 years, would not gain the balance of power…
If the predictions eventuate, the Prime Minister could find himself in a tricky situation, with the previous goodwill between him and most crossbenchers all but gone…
“He’s blown it as far as that goodwill is concerned,” Liberal Democrat David Leyonhjelm said…
Independent senator John Madigan said: “Prime Minister Turnbull invites you to dinner at The Lodge at the taxpayers’ expense after kicking you in the teeth … No integrity, no reason, no honesty and no bloody idea.”
The research, based on the 2013 Senate election, allocates five seats for Palmer United, up from the three it won in the half-Senate poll.(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
Danes work to keep immigrants in welfare
Andrew Bolt March 18 2016 (12:59pm)
Workers in the West are paying for the welfare now claimed by immigrants from the Middle East and Africa. Take Denmark:
But what if the “you” is someone with no hope or intention of reciprocating? What if they are all take and no give?
How do you then maintain a social welfare system, or even a society?
(Thanks to reader the Evil Right.)
===Of all totally dependent families in Denmark, married couples where both partners are on social assistance — state benefits — some 84 per cent are “non-Western origin” migrants. In total, a third of all cash paid out in benefits every month goes to these non-Western migrants in Denmark, according to the latest figures obtained by Ekstra Bladet.This is not just an intolerable drain on funds. It also breaks the social contract: the implicit bargain that if I look after you in tough times, you will look after me.
These figures might be considered especially high, as among Denmark’s working age population non-Western migrants make up just eight per cent of residents. The paper reports experts agree the phenomenon of a minority group of eight per cent of the population making up such a significant part of the claimant count, and concede it is a “large and especially expensive problem”.
It is estimated Denmark’s migrants cost the government some 11 billion crowns (£1.1 billion) a year reports BT, a significant sum for a country of just five and a half million people.
But what if the “you” is someone with no hope or intention of reciprocating? What if they are all take and no give?
How do you then maintain a social welfare system, or even a society?
(Thanks to reader the Evil Right.)
Do they want the sack as well?
Andrew Bolt March 17 2016 (10:29pm)
This is the maddest way for staff to respond to a struggling company that’s just had to sack a fifth of its journalists:
What madness is this? Do people really think the papers are charities?
One Fairfax staffer can’t believe it either, but when Joe Aston explains the economics he gets the most astonishing abuse from colleagues and unionists.
===TWO Fairfax Media newsrooms have voted to go on strike until Monday to protest the cutting of 120 journalists and editorial staff jobs at The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.Fairfax is sacking journalists because it’s not earning enough to afford them. And the remaining staff take action that’s bound to lose subscribers and cost the company more money?
What madness is this? Do people really think the papers are charities?
One Fairfax staffer can’t believe it either, but when Joe Aston explains the economics he gets the most astonishing abuse from colleagues and unionists.
Jihadis fill atheist void
Miranda Devine – Wednesday, March 18, 2015 (6:18am)
JIHADIST Jake Bilardi is a symptom of the spiritual anorexia of the West. He was a lost boy looking for meaning in life and finding it in the worst possible place.
The youngest of six children in suburban Melbourne, Bilardi lost his father to divorce when he was nine, and his mother to cancer when he was 15. Brought up an atheist, highly intelligent, he had no anchors in his life at a time when he was seeking spiritual nourishment.
He converted to Islam shortly after his mother died, before dropping out of school in August to run off to Syria and join Islamic State.
Last week he blew himself up, aged 18, in a suicide bombing in Iraq.
After his death, IS propagandists proclaimed he “originated from an atheist family & ended up selling his soul to Allah for a cheap price.”
Bilardi was taught to believe in nothing and ended up a fanatical believer in something very bad.
That is evident. But when I wrote about this last week and pointed out that Bilardi’s life is a warning of the “inevitable trajectory of the West’s cultural nihilism”, the torrent of abuse on Twitter was insane, even by the standards of that sewer of human discourse.
The extreme reaction proved one thing, that militant atheism is synonymous with an unhinged hatred of religion. It also suggests that bien pensants have internalised the horrors of totalitarian Islamist ideology, not with Islamophobia, but with "Christophobia" and anti-Semitism, a paradox, if ever there was one.
Some examples:
“Belief in #God is an admission of mental incompetence.”
“What has mainstream religion given us — peadophiles [sic], Spanish Inquisition, ethnic cleansing, destruction of indigenous cultures?.”
“Most Christians suffer from neurosis and that’s a mental disorder.”
“The time has come to put the boot into evil vicious journalists who use their power to bully others about ?#god.”
“Your moral slime is as turpid as the brainless act of violence committed by that idiot Jake.”
“Parents divorced when I was 12, and I’m an atheist. Therefore I must want to blow myself up for religion.”
“You need to speak to atheists. We raise our children not to be self serving hypocrites.”
“Miranda, atheists have beliefs — beliefs in nature, wildlife conservation, community, anti CSG for instance”. ?
“Religion is an illness — get well soon.”
There is no understanding here of the effect a vacuum of spiritual belief has on vulnerable adolescents, or the role religion has played in human flourishing, and a feeling of connectedness.
In fact, Bilardi’s conversion from atheist child to jihadi is not so uncommon. When the Paris-based Centre of Prevention of Sectarian Derivatives last year investigated Islamist radicalisation, it interviewed 160 families of young jihadists and found 80 per cent described themselves as ‘atheist’.
I’ve spared you the foulest insults of my Twitter feed, but it’s important to be aware of what passes for thought online because this is the seedbed which radicalised Jake Bilardi.
In fact, the politics of his “manifesto”, a blog explaining his trajectory from “being an Atheist school student in affluent Melbourne to a soldier of the Khilafah preparing to sacrifice my life for Islam in Ramadi”, could be from any left wing blog.
At about age 13 he starts reading about international politics online. He is angered by injustices he discovers, identifying with underdogs from the street gangs of South America, to the Taliban and Palestinians. He blames the United States, Israel and Western democracy for the ills of the world, and then starts to relate to Islam’s victim narrative.
“Slowly but surely I began being drawn towards the religion and it was no longer a political interest for me but the truth I had been circling around for years.”
For adolescent psychologist Michael Carr-Gregg, Bilardi’s case is nothing special. He has treated plenty of lost boys like him, the sort who join gangs, or cults or who, in America, become school shooters.
“Because there was nothing in his life he became obsessed with a range of global issues and he simply self-activated,” Carr-Gregg said yesterday.
“Initially, there was spiritual anorexia. Then there was this idea of how terrible the West is and that is the cause I can jump on.
“His personalisation of injustice sped up and was exacerbated by the personal events in his life (parents’ divorce and mother’s death) and ultimately he came to believe it’s OK to use violence as a problem-solving device.”
A lonely adolescent like Jake Bilardi, with no parents, no anchors, and no other consolation or meaning in his life, could not afford to be an atheist, because all that could provide was despair.
His “soul” as his IS recruiters found, was easy prey. This is what educated, comfortable, happy atheists fail to comprehend.
JE SUIS TIM POWELL
Tim Blair – Wednesday, March 18, 2015 (3:38pm)
I furkan derya to find a better name than Tim Powell:
I don’t know this Powell guy, but he’s obviously a brilliant columnist who deserves a huge pay increase. Here’s a more accurate piece by Metro‘s Rob Waugh, and don’t miss previous commentary from Mark Steyn and Matthew Hayden.
I don’t know this Powell guy, but he’s obviously a brilliant columnist who deserves a huge pay increase. Here’s a more accurate piece by Metro‘s Rob Waugh, and don’t miss previous commentary from Mark Steyn and Matthew Hayden.
IT’S A HIT
Tim Blair – Wednesday, March 18, 2015 (2:35pm)
Fairfax is now claiming its festival for nobody was actually a huge success:
Fairfax has told Mumbrella that “9,000+ people” attended Spectrum Playground over the weekend …
Er, sure they did. Maybe Peter Hartcher was counting those attendees. Then again, it is possible Fairfax is right, and that nearly 10,000 people did in fact visit the first of their Spectrum parties. After all, who could resist this sort of lure:
Step beyond the printed page to meet the people who write and edit The Sydney Morning Herald arts and entertainment coverage each day, every week. The Full Spectrum is a fiesta of talks, confessions, discussions and debate, created and hosted by Fairfax journalists. It’s the chance to see our cultural heroes live on stage, eavesdrop on creative pillow talk and turn the tables to ask your own questions.
Alternatively, you could just park a truck and wait for SMH staffers to come to you.
BIBI BACK FROM THE EDGE
Tim Blair – Wednesday, March 18, 2015 (1:01pm)
Mike Carlton predicts:
That thug Bibi Netanyahu teeters on the edge of oblivion. Hooray.
Mike may wish to temper his excitement. The Economist reports:
The Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, has once again confounded the pollsters. In 1996, opinion surveys predicted he would lose against the then Labour prime minister, Shimon Peres, but he came out on top. This time around he had been trailing behind his main challenger, Yitzhak Herzog, the leader of Zionist Union, for much of the campaign. But when polls closed on March 17th, the exit polls found he had drawn level with Mr Herzog, and he may yet secure a fourth term.
Good. Further from Andrew Bolt and the New York Post.
UPDATE. It’s now looking even better for Netanyahu:
The Israeli elections took a dramatic turn in the early morning hours on Wednesday as official tallies from nearly all precincts indicate that Likud has opened up a significant lead over Zionist Union, a far cry from the virtual dead heat that television exit polls had reported Tuesday evening.With nearly 90 percent of precincts reporting before dawn on Wednesday, the Likud holds a major edge over Zionist Union in the distribution of Knesset seats.
The Bibi-sitter is back in town.
MUSTAPHA READ
Tim Blair – Wednesday, March 18, 2015 (11:39am)
Mark Steyn reviews a continuing online debacle. As does Matthew Hayden.
Netanyahu leads in Israeli election. Let the media weep
Andrew Bolt March 18 2015 (11:35am)
Benjamin Netanyahu seems to have won the Israeli elections, despite fierce media attacks - not just at home but abroad - and the open hostility of President Barack Obama:
The final results are even better for Netanyahu than the exit polls - let alone the pre-election polls - suggested. Barack Obama has a slap in the face:
===Israeli parliamentary elections ended Tuesday in a virtual deadlock, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud Party appearing to hold the upper hand in forming the next governing coalition.UPDATE
Exit polls conducted by the country’s three major TV stations late Tuesday gave mixed results, showing an extremely tight race between Netanyahu’s Likud Party and opposition leader Isaac Herzog’s Zionist Union.
All showed the centrist newcomer Moshe Kahlon with enough seats to determine who will be the next prime minister. Kahlon, a Likud breakaway, has not said whether he favors Netanyahu or Herzog…
Two polls showed the parties deadlocked with 27 seats each, and a third gave Likud a slight lead of 28-27…
Since the parties all fall short of the required 61-seat majority in parliament, the country will now head into weeks of negotiations as they try to form a coalition… The left wing appeared to have slightly more seats, but would rely heavily on a new Arab list that has said it will not sit in a coalition. That gives Netanyahu and his right-wing allies the upper hand. But Kahlon, who has already demanded control of the Finance Ministry, is likely to drive a hard bargain before agreeing to join the government.
The final results are even better for Netanyahu than the exit polls - let alone the pre-election polls - suggested. Barack Obama has a slap in the face:
With nearly all votes counted, Netanyahu’s Likud party has at least 29 seats in the 120 seat Knesset, according to unofficial numbers from the Israeli election committee.
Main rival Zionist Union has 24 seats, it said.
Rising tribalism: how did the Armenian massacre become an election issue in NSW?
Andrew Bolt March 18 2015 (11:25am)
This is very ugly and shame on any Liberals who may be stoking old ethnic hatreds to defeat NSW Labor leader Luke Foley:
===Two months later, it appears his Liberal opponent - longtime local councillor Ronney Oueik - is winning the recognition race. Oueik’s posters outnumber Foley 10 to one around the electorate and the Labor leader also faces problems trying to placate local sensitivities over his past predilections.
Some say the Turkish community is less than impressed with Labor foisting on them a man who is a member of the Armenia-Australia Parliamentary Friendship Group and Foley’s endorsement of the NSW Parliamentary Friends of Israel has not endeared him to the Arab community.
Smothering the argument
Andrew Bolt March 18 2015 (11:17am)
Bizarre. Fairfax is so anti-Abbott that it now reports Labor’s response before it mentions the Tony Abbott argument Labor is attacking:
===Labor has condemned Prime Minister Tony Abbott’s claim that Australia was heading for a “Greek-style economic future” as inflammatory, irresponsible and capable of harming economic confidence.
Mr Abbott made the remark during a radio interview in which he pledged he would not fix the federal budget this year at the expense of households but predicted a “broad budget balance” within five years.
“Under the former Labor government we were heading to a Greek-style economic future,” the Prime Minister told 2SM host Grant Goldman.
Abbott cannot be blamed for the damage Labor wilfully does
Andrew Bolt March 18 2015 (9:15am)
It is popular to blame the Abbott Government for the Senate’s spiteful refusal to pass legislation to stop the debt blowing out to even more dangerous levels.
But why is it the Government’s fault that Labor, the Greens and some independent Senators categorically refuse to fix Labor’s disaster? Why demand the Government do a better “sales job” when Labor should need no sales pitch to know its duty?
Result: Labor is now being rewarded for its cynical wrecking job in the Senate. It blocks but Abbott gets blamed - which is Labor’s strategy exactly.
This cannot keep going:
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
===But why is it the Government’s fault that Labor, the Greens and some independent Senators categorically refuse to fix Labor’s disaster? Why demand the Government do a better “sales job” when Labor should need no sales pitch to know its duty?
Result: Labor is now being rewarded for its cynical wrecking job in the Senate. It blocks but Abbott gets blamed - which is Labor’s strategy exactly.
This cannot keep going:
A worse-than-expected decline in the iron ore price since December has forced the federal government to downgrade revenue predictions by another $1.8 billion a year…Why is the Government being blamed for being unable to persuade a Senate that is actually determined not to be persuaded at all? Unless the media takes on Labor (forget the irredeemable Greens) the country will slide inexorably to some economic crisis. Surely damaging the hated Tony Abbott is not worth this terrible price.
(S)ources said the decline in the ore price to $US56 ($73), below the conservative annual average price estimate of $US60 in the mid-year budget update, has forced another revenue downgrade in the forthcoming May budget…
The budgetary situation is being compounded further by the government’s politically unpopular measures. In recent weeks it has junked the $3.6 billion in Medicare charges, performed a $200 million backflip on defence pay, made available at least $105 million in car industry assistance, and faces the defeat of measures at the hands of what Mr Abbott called a “feral Senate”.
[Note: all these backflips were actually forced on the Government by the Senate.]
On Tuesday night, the Senate, by 34 votes to 30, killed off the higher education policy which ... was worth more than $4 billion in savings over four years…
The change to [the aged pension] indexation is not due to begin until 2017 and had only a small budgetary impact in the four-year period. But over 10 years, the indexation change to the aged pension alone would save more than $22 billion
The recently released Intergenerational Report said the budget – currently facing a $40 billion deficit – would only achieve balance in five years if every budget measure announced last year, or something equivalent, was passed. It found that if the 30 or so measures still stuck in the Senate and which are worth more than $20 billion over four years, stayed stuck, the budget would be in deficit for another 40 years.
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
Victoria’s Labor Government will save the planet from global warming. Never mind the cost!
Andrew Bolt March 18 2015 (9:05am)
The madness is back. More millions to be wasted to make no difference at all to a global warming that’s now paused for some 17 years:
(Thanks to reader mem.)
===Climate change is back on the political agenda in Victoria, with the Andrews Government considering going it alone with a state-based greenhouse gas emissions reduction target.The idiocy is astonishing. This, mind you, is from the party that last time around built the hideously expensive and now mothballed desalination plant on the false assumption that global warming would stop the rain.
In a symbolic but significant gesture, Environment Minister Lisa Neville has ordered bureaucrats in her department to “call it what it is - climate change”, banning the phrase “climate variability” preferred by the former Napthine government.
(Thanks to reader mem.)
Senate damns Abbott for wanting to fix the Aboriginal disadvantage it won’t
Andrew Bolt March 18 2015 (8:37am)
One of Tony Abbott’s mistakes is not to do a Keating - to go in harder when challenged by fools, rather than keep quiet and give the impression he’s been rightly pinged.
A classic example came last week, when Abbott was vilified for saying something true and important about the folly of spending so much money to house Aborigines were there were no jobs or schools. Abbott should have taken on the outrage brigade rather than lapse into silence, as if saying “lifestyle choices” was really the gaffe so many young journalists happily assumed, and not the blunt truth that some prominent Aborigines have acknowledged, either deliberately or accidentally.
But here’s a new chance for Abbott to defend his “lifestyle choices” comments and expose the destructive pieties of the sanctimonious Senate:
Fact: Aboriginal health, education and employment standards are all worse in these micro-communities than they are among Aborigines in the cities.
Fact: generations of other Aborigines have put their duty to their children above their connections to the land and moved to where there are jobs and schools, and have done so without being any less Aboriginal. And without actually feeling any less bonded to their traditional lands.
Fact: Aboriginal poverty and welfarism will never end while children are raised where there are no schools and no opportunities to work - or even examples of people earning a living.
Fact: we spend twice as much per person on Aborigines than we do on non-Aborigines - and that has still not ended Aboriginal disadvantage. In fact, in the last Labor governments, spending shot up but results generally worsened or failed to improve. We are simply reinforcing failure, and more money is not the answer.
Fact: what the Senate demands will perpetuate the Aboriginal poverty that the likes of Siewert will then moralise over.
===A classic example came last week, when Abbott was vilified for saying something true and important about the folly of spending so much money to house Aborigines were there were no jobs or schools. Abbott should have taken on the outrage brigade rather than lapse into silence, as if saying “lifestyle choices” was really the gaffe so many young journalists happily assumed, and not the blunt truth that some prominent Aborigines have acknowledged, either deliberately or accidentally.
But here’s a new chance for Abbott to defend his “lifestyle choices” comments and expose the destructive pieties of the sanctimonious Senate:
WA Greens Senator Rachel Siewert has secured Senate support in her bid to get Tony Abbott to apologise over his comments that remote Aboriginal communities are a “lifestyle choice”.Reader John:
The Prime Minister said last week “it’s not the job of the taxpayer to subsidise lifestyle choices” in regards to the WA government’s plans to close almost half of the 270 remote aboriginal communities in the west.
The Prime Minister’s comments have been universally panned by indigenous leaders around Australia.
Ms Siewert, Greens spokesperson on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Issues, moved a motion on Tuesday, calling on Mr Abbott to apologise immediately for his “insensitive” remark.
The WA Senator’s motion also called on the Abbott government to reinstate the Municipal and Essential Funding for WA and the Barnett government to kybosh its plans to close Aboriginal communities…
“Community and Aboriginal leaders concede remote Aboriginal communities are important to cultural, emotional and social wellbeing and should not be shut down for the sake of short-sighted budgetary measures,” she said.
Siewert went home yesterday thinking she had accomplished something. She made a speech in Canberra. That’s her entire contribution. Mission accomplished.Fact: it makes no sense to spend $85,000 per person per year to service micro-communities of around eight people each in areas where there are no jobs or schools.
But she accomplished nothing other than make herself feel good about herself, which is the only measure by which the Greens measure success.
Fact: Aboriginal health, education and employment standards are all worse in these micro-communities than they are among Aborigines in the cities.
Fact: generations of other Aborigines have put their duty to their children above their connections to the land and moved to where there are jobs and schools, and have done so without being any less Aboriginal. And without actually feeling any less bonded to their traditional lands.
Fact: Aboriginal poverty and welfarism will never end while children are raised where there are no schools and no opportunities to work - or even examples of people earning a living.
Fact: we spend twice as much per person on Aborigines than we do on non-Aborigines - and that has still not ended Aboriginal disadvantage. In fact, in the last Labor governments, spending shot up but results generally worsened or failed to improve. We are simply reinforcing failure, and more money is not the answer.
Fact: what the Senate demands will perpetuate the Aboriginal poverty that the likes of Siewert will then moralise over.
Yes, Senator Lambie, the Senate is indeed feral
Andrew Bolt March 18 2015 (7:42am)
What Tony Abbott actually said:
Lambie arcs up at this terrible insult:
Heaven help this country.
But Lambie is a symbol of the feral Australian Senate today - a Labor, Greens and independents shambles that is recklessly opposing what is in the national interest, motivated more by spite and political advantage than serious calculation of the public good.
And, like Labor, the Greens and several crossbenchers, she refuses to accept the money is gone and savings must be made. Last night again, rather than appeal for more cuts she demanded more spending:
Yes, the Senate is feral. Exhibit A: Jacqui Lambie.
Yet hear the ABC this morning (Michael Brissenden on AM, for instance) blame the Government for the Senate’s bloody-minded refusal to pass what it should.
UPDATE
Reader Rogue Bull has a challenge for Labor and the Greens:
===Prime Minister Tony Abbott told the coalition joint party room meeting on Tuesday the government was facing what he called a “feral Senate”.What the ABC’s Sabra Lane to Senator Jacqui Lambie what Abbott said:
On the Government handling in the Senate, the Prime Minister told a meeting of the joint party room today that the Senate crossbench were “ferals”. How do you respond, how do you respond to that? Do you feel like ferals?An adjective becomes a noun, with a nastier connotation. The object in changed from the Senate generally to eight cross-benchers personally. Your ABC at work.
Lambie arcs up at this terrible insult:
Well, I think this: obviously if the man’s coming out and saying that - which I find absolutely quite disturbing and really disrespectful to the crossbenchers - is he’s now getting desperate.Yet Lambie, so upset by this “disrespect”, is herself the most abusive politician in Parliament:
Just in the past six months, Senator Lambie has publicly described Mr Abbott as a “political psychopath” and a “barefaced, uncaring liar”; called him and Treasurer Joe Hockey “nothing less than a pair of deceitful, lying, political politicians” on national television. She also claimed Mr Abbott put his daughters at risk by “parading” them around during the election campaign.More hypocrisy from Lambie:
If [Abbott is] not used to attacks by now then you probably shouldn’t be in that position… You’ve got one of two choices. You can run and hide or you can say to yourself `here’s a bucket of cement - toughen up’.But does Lambie have any consistency at all, including in the decisions she makes on the future of this country? Here is how she last night justified voting against a bill that would stop governments telling universities what fees to charge - a bill that every single vice-chancellor in the country bar one has urged the Senate to pass:
Yeah, I think [the vice chancellors] want reform. But what I’m hearing is they didn’t ask for a deregulation. So I’m going to double-check on that…Lambie is actually demanding what she’s actually voted against - and asking for the advice she’s actually got.
But you know what? These [vice chancellors] are supposed to be the brains of the country. Why are we telling them how the universities should be run? So it’s about time they stood up, they stood tall and they help come up with the solution.
Heaven help this country.
But Lambie is a symbol of the feral Australian Senate today - a Labor, Greens and independents shambles that is recklessly opposing what is in the national interest, motivated more by spite and political advantage than serious calculation of the public good.
And, like Labor, the Greens and several crossbenchers, she refuses to accept the money is gone and savings must be made. Last night again, rather than appeal for more cuts she demanded more spending:
But the other problem is: spending 0.6 per cent of our GDP on our higher education is just not enough. Even back in 1995 we were spending 0.9 per cent. So I say: let’s at least spend one per cent of our GDP.Given our GDP is around $2,000 billion, Lambie last night just demanded new spending of $8 billion a year just on universities. That, when we’re already borrowing $110 million a day.
Yes, the Senate is feral. Exhibit A: Jacqui Lambie.
Yet hear the ABC this morning (Michael Brissenden on AM, for instance) blame the Government for the Senate’s bloody-minded refusal to pass what it should.
UPDATE
Reader Rogue Bull has a challenge for Labor and the Greens:
So we have 40 out of 41 University Vice Chancellors agreeing that the Higher Education sector needs deregulation.
That’s 97% of the experts agree there is an existential threat. A solid, provable 97%.
Who are the deniers now?
Would you buy a policy from these koalas?
Andrew Bolt March 18 2015 (7:35am)
First NSW Labor used fluffy kittens to sell its policies - even policies on national parks.
Now it hides behind koalas - and makes like a Green:
===Now it hides behind koalas - and makes like a Green:
LABOR has turned a deep shade of green — promising a koala summit and reservation, more wind farms and reaffirming the party’s uranium ban — in a huge gift to the Greens after the two parties struck a preferencing deal in a raft of key state election battlegrounds.These people do not deserve to be within a cooee of the levers of power.
Opposition leader Luke Foley, already firmly in the pocket of the unions, jumped into bed with the Greens yesterday as he unveiled Labor’s environment policy, including plans to “save” the koala, which has a conservation status of “least concern” from the International Union for Conversation of Nature because of its “presumed large population”.
The spill that wasn’t
Andrew Bolt March 18 2015 (7:14am)
Here is a handy list of the journalists who predicted Tony Abbott could be gone in the spill that never came. Check their output from now on to see if they try to make their dud predictions of Abbott’s fall come true.
===Abbott’s recovery continues, despite all the media’s attempts to deny it
Andrew Bolt March 17 2015 (5:23pm)
I’ll say it again - Tony Abbott’s recovery is slow but real, and even more extraordinary for occurring despite a furious media campaign to destroy him.
From today’s Essential Media poll, a result better than the consensus of recent polls:
Fair-minded commentators should at least cut Abbott some slack and let him fail or succeed on his merits, without fearing that they’ll be left looking silly for defending a man far better than his feral critics allow. And certainly without hoping to make their predictions of his fall come true.
From today’s Essential Media poll, a result better than the consensus of recent polls:
To misquote a certain windsock:
To those who mocked the “stunning recovery” line last week what now?Imagine how much more remarkable this recovery would be were Malcolm Turnbull loyal and the ABC fair?
Fair-minded commentators should at least cut Abbott some slack and let him fail or succeed on his merits, without fearing that they’ll be left looking silly for defending a man far better than his feral critics allow. And certainly without hoping to make their predictions of his fall come true.
===
PUT IT ON A SIGN
Tim Blair – Tuesday, March 18, 2014 (12:13pm)
As succinctly as he is able, John Birmingham describes the March in Marchers:
… a gathering of the randomly but deeply aggrieved to give voice to the anger of people increasingly feeling themselves to be utterly powerless in the face of the social and political re-engineering of their country to serve the interests of powerful corporations and the true elites …
The full sentence includes another 41 words.
TURN IT UP
Tim Blair – Tuesday, March 18, 2014 (4:18am)
Formula One’s new eco-tech engines sound like sad robots working in an industrial laundry. It’s an unappealing sonic combination of dull mechanical racket and Dyson testing lab. And the volume is weak:
The boss of the Australian grand prix is threatening legal action against the governing body because he thought Sunday’s event “wasn’t loud enough” …Australian Grand Prix chief executive Andrew Westacott is threatening legal action and claims that because the new Formula One cars with V6 engines are quieter than previous years, there is a potential breach of contract.“It’s about getting what you paid for, and we don’t believe what he got there [at the Albert Park] was what we paid for,” he told Neil Mitchell.
Readers were warned of this three years ago when F1 first proposed an engine shrinkage.
UPDATE. Hear for yourselves:
ANTI-PSYCHOTIC DONUT
Tim Blair – Tuesday, March 18, 2014 (4:16am)
Several of these might come in handy at the next family dinner. And that’s just for me.
CLARISSA DICKSON WRIGHT
Tim Blair – Tuesday, March 18, 2014 (3:55am)
The wonderful Clarissa Dickson Wright, last of the Two Fat Ladies, has died at just 66.
ENDLESS LOVE
Tim Blair – Monday, March 17, 2014 (10:59pm)
Naturally, the Holy Gillard Choir receives taxpayer funding:
Voters tell Abbott: keep your word and we’ll cop it
Andrew Bolt March 18 2014 (5:25pm)
The real winner in last Saturday’s elections in Tasmania and South Australia? Tony Abbott, says Terry McCrann:
===I know, as politicians and commentators claim repeatedly, state elections are not about federal issues…
[But] let’s take Labor at its word. These elections were all about Abbott: South Australian voters backed him 53-47 per cent; and Tasmania even more resoundingly with 53 per cent of first preferences. Labor and the Greens were shredded.
Also, add that to the Griffith by-election where the Prime Minister (and true, a very good local candidate) scored a rare by-election swing to the Government — and they did so, against Labor’s imprecations, and the easy option of being able, to ‘send a message to Canberra’, and to Abbott in particular…
Now, he’s proved such a ‘successful’ focus of Labor attack, that he’s managed to ‘lose’ Labor every state and territory government, bar the ‘beltway cocooned ACT’, and if not also South Australia, only because of an outrageous gerrymander ...
We’ve already seen ... the government’s ‘tough decisions’ to refuse SPC and Qantas what they wanted… What’s again got lost in the hysteria, is that Abbott’s tactical instincts proved best. To have taken the all-too easy path of handing SPC $25 million and Qantas a ‘costless’ debt guarantee would have undermined the necessary tough decisions those companies had to make…
The big thing that flows from all this, is that the Prime Minister has gained an increasingly powerful mandate to take tough and decisive action.
The two state elections and the Griffith by-election have given him the most useful mandate of it all — one where the voters have had a second, and all-too easy, chance to fall prey to scare campaigns, and instead increased their support.
Clearly, the success in ‘stopping the boats’ has been of huge, huge, benefit to the Government and to Abbott in particular, in winning post-election respect and confidence. The message is twofold: deliver on your promises, and we’ll cop the tough decisions.
Will power destroy these independents as it did Windsor and Oakeshott?
Andrew Bolt March 18 2014 (5:23pm)
Two independents risk becoming the Rob Oakeshott and Tony Windsor of South Australia:
===VOTERS in the electorates of two independents who loom as kingmakers overwhelmingly want them to deliver a Liberal government in a likely hung State Parliament.
Exclusive Advertiser-Galaxy polls taken last night show a combined 60 per cent of respondents in the seats of Fisher (Happy Valley) and Frome (Port Pirie), want a conservative government.
Who is selecting our immigrants? Are they doing a good job?
Andrew Bolt March 18 2014 (10:28am)
Not for the first time do I doubt our immigration program - and refugee intake - is working in the best interests of Australians:
===TWENTY-SEVEN people have been arrested in major pre-dawn police raids targeting a Middle Eastern organised crime syndicate in Melbourne’s northern and western suburbs. The raids, executed after investigations by Santiago Taskforce, involved 44 properties in suburbs including Altona North, Campbellfield, Truganina and Sunshine.Note: all those arrested are entitled to the presumption of innocence.
No case yet for Sinodinos to step aside
Andrew Bolt March 18 2014 (10:13am)
Yes, something about Australian Water Holdings smells to high heaven and needs investigating, but at this stage what is the specific allegation against Arthur Sinodinos?:
Sure, more may emerge and I do not deny everything about this company needs investigation.
But right now there is not even an allegation of impropriety against Sinodinos, let alone proof of one.
There are no grounds for Sinodinos to step aside, and it should be beneath Labor to suggest there is.
===ASSISTANT Treasurer Arthur Sinodinos stood to gain up to $20 million if a deal between a private infrastructure group in which he held shares and the publicly owned Sydney Water went through, the NSW Independent Commission against Corruption has heard.Labor – through a backbencher - says this alone requires Sinodinos to step aside:
On the first day of hearings into whether former NSW Labor MPs Eddie Obeid, Joe Tripodi and Tony Kelly misused their positions to favour Australian Water Holdings, it was revealed that Australian Water Holdings tried to seek favours from both sides of politics and paid donations to the Liberal Party out of the money it overcharged Sydney Water Corporation…
Asked if he would step aside as Assistant Treasurer, a spokeswoman for Senator Sinodinos, a former chief of staff to John Howard while he was prime minister, said he would be a witness and was looking forward to assisting the ICAC.
Labor backbencher Kelvin Thomson said the Senator should step aside while the matter is investigated.But what precisely is alleged to be Sinodinos’s offence? That he got himself a well-paid job with a big success fee is no crime. And other than that, nothing at all improper is alleged against him.
“These are very unsatisfactory arrangements,” he said.
“It’s clear that the Liberal Party understands that these are dodgy dealings.
“It’s handed back the campaign donation it received as a consequence of the dealings. “I think that it’d be in the best interests of the integrity of the system if Senator Sinodinos were to step aside.”
Sure, more may emerge and I do not deny everything about this company needs investigation.
But right now there is not even an allegation of impropriety against Sinodinos, let alone proof of one.
There are no grounds for Sinodinos to step aside, and it should be beneath Labor to suggest there is.
SBS gives Abbott an opening in the culture wars
Andrew Bolt March 18 2014 (9:39am)
The Abbott Government has a chance to redress bias at SBS, with the three members of the board - one a former Labor adviser - not winning reappointment, and two of the four-member board selection committee appointed by Labor needing replacement.
I have some hope that this Government has a sharper understanding of the culture wars and a more comprehensive black book than was obvious with the Howard Government. Tony Abbott, George Brandis and Chris Pyne seem particularly adept at this kind of work.
===I have some hope that this Government has a sharper understanding of the culture wars and a more comprehensive black book than was obvious with the Howard Government. Tony Abbott, George Brandis and Chris Pyne seem particularly adept at this kind of work.
A dilemma for many Greens voters
Andrew Bolt March 18 2014 (9:38am)
===Worse even than the French?
Andrew Bolt March 18 2014 (9:17am)
Britain’s mighty James Delingpole concludes:
===...there’s no lefty quite so despicable as an Aussie lefty.Discuss.
Repeal Day: digging us out from under a mountain of laws
Andrew Bolt March 18 2014 (8:56am)
Maurice Newman, chairman of the Prime Minister’s business advisory council, on cutting the paper chains that bind us:
===If Australia’s labour laws are largely off the table for the time being, and if the Senate is mindlessly hostile to urgent reductions in energy costs, the Abbott government’s options are restricted. One it will pursue is Repeal Day, on March 26.Judith Sloan on the paper tyrants:
Initially this will involve axing 8000 regulations, some going back 100 years, said to save at least $1bn annually. Repeal Day will be annual… What seems clear is that it will be more difficult to repeal the Coalition’s 8000 regulations than it was for the Labor government to introduce 21,000 of them in the past six years.
WHENEVER Anthony Albanese, former government leader of the House of Representatives, bragged about how many bills had been passed by parliament during Labor’s terms in office, I would break out into a cold sweat.In the hit list for Repeal Day:
Take this boast: “as of December 2011 the government had passed 254 bills through the parliament compared to just 108 bills in the first year of the Howard government.” ...
Many of these regulations were ill-considered, badly drafted and, in some instances, completely unworkable. Both Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard, when in the top job, were only too happy to exempt new legislation from the requirement for a Regulation Impact Statement. There were some 80 exemptions and missing statements during the Labor years of government.
- Removal of the need for medical practitioners to have multiple provider numbers;
- Streamlining of the approval for the prescription of certain drugs by the Department of Health;
- Dramatically reducing the reporting requirements on universities;
- Altering the coverage and content of gender equality reporting by private businesses;
- Reducing the regulatory reach of the Therapeutic Goods Administration, particularly with regard to over-the-counter medicines; - Streamlining environmental approval processes based on partnerships between the federal and state governments.
Watching them towed back, I actually felt relief
Andrew Bolt March 18 2014 (8:44am)
I do not criticise the ABC at all for the way it presented a video made by boat people who were towed back to Indonesia by our navy. I am simply surprised that the boat people behind the video thought this was a good way to get public support for their bid to enter Australia illegally:
GEORGE ROBERTS: After Arash Sedigh was refused entry to Australia through the skilled migration program, they came to Indonesia to apply for resettlement as refugees, but gave up waiting and turned to people smugglers.I understand the extreme disappointment at being turned back, but why the threats of another September 11? If Sedigh and his fellow passengers were allowed here, would they make such threats again if denied anything else, such as a job or welfare or loan?
ARASH SEDIGH: We decided to go there in illegal way, to make them accept us… When Customs come inside our wooden boat, I just ask them, “Please, please help us. Would you please take us in a safe place?” They just shouted on me, “Shut up, shut up, sit down!”
GEORGE ROBERTS: Arash Sedigh became angry after demanding a doctor to treat sick passengers and a pregnant woman.
ARASH SEDIGH: ... I couldn’t tolerate. I told them, “I will kill you if you don’t take us to that ship. I have nothing to lose. I will kill you. Believe me....”
GEORGE ROBERTS: As their boat foundered, the asylum seekers were taken onboard the Australian Customs ship the Triton…
ARASH SEDIGH: They pushed us, they punched us, when we were just asking for our rights. They just told us, “Shut down, shut down - sit down, shut up. Sit down, shut up.” And ...
GEORGE ROBERTS: Is that because asylum seekers were protesting or being violent?
ARASH SEDIGH: Yeah, sometimes protesting, sometimes asking for some rights…
GEORGE ROBERTS: Australian Customs had deployed a new weapon in the campaign: a fleet of high-tech orange lifeboats…
ARASH SEDIGH: After that, they took me from the water, they pushed me into the orange boat…
GEORGE ROBERTS: On the morning of 5th February, the Triton towed the orange lifeboat towards Indonesia… As they got closer to Indonesia, the Australians cut them loose… Arash Sedigh provided a running commentary on the journey [on the video].
ARASH SEDIGH (on asylum seeker boat): They put us in this f**king orange boat and sent us back to Indonesia. And the Navy was escorting that ship until today. ... F**k Australia. ... I said to them, “You are criminals”. If later on you said why they do that to America on September 11, you should know the cause of it is your very deeds. Remember 9-11 for United States. All the world should know why. Australian Government, Tony Abbott, Scott Morrison, Immigration - all of them are the smugglers.
MAN (on asylum seeker boat): F**k Australia!
Even Labor and the Greens never meant these laws to muzzle us as they now do
Andrew Bolt March 18 2014 (8:44am)
Nick Cater says no one predicted that racial discrimination laws would actually be used to silence legitimate debate simply on the grounds of offence:
===AUSTRALIAN magistrates have always tended to take a dim view of people who threaten to throw bricks through other people’s windows. Nevertheless, Paul Keating insisted the law should go further.Read on. Cater discovers Tony Abbott’s concern with such laws dates from his maiden speech. And Cater, like me, is heartened by signs the Government will not back off from its proposed reforms, although Labor and the Greens seem set in the Senate to keep us muzzled.
“Why do we need a racial hatred bill?” John Laws asked the then prime minister in 1994.
“Because basically having people running around saying ‘I’m going to throw a brick through your window or burn your building down because of your race’ should be an offence,” replied Keating....
Importantly, however, in Keating’s view racial vilification was explicitly linked to an act of physical violence to a person or their property.
There was no suggestion that the provisions could be used to redress hurt feelings or against the likes of Andrew Bolt.... If the 1995 amendments to the Racial Discrimination Act had reflected these sentiments there would be little reason to repeal it....
The Keating government was expressly warned by the then Human Rights and Equal Opportunity commissioner, Irene Moss, not to legislate against the causing of offence.
In her influential 1991 report on HREOC’s National Inquiry on Racist Violence, Moss advised against following the model adopted in New Zealand where section 9C of the Race Relations Act had been “widely used and even abused by individuals complaining of insults or remarks of a relatively trivial nature"…
As it turned out, the proposed amendments to the Crimes Act were a step too far even for the Greens, who sided with the Coalition to block them in the Senate.
“It will create a crime of words,” the Greens’ Christabel Chamarette told the Senate.
“This will take the legislation across a certain threshold into the realm of thought police.”
The changes to the RDA were passed, however, with the shoddily worded section 18C unamended. Thus, for the past 19 years, it has been a civil offence “to offend, insult, humiliate or intimidate” a person or group on the grounds of national identity.
It is a legislative dog’s dinner that Attorney-General George Brandis is now obliged to clear up.
Human rights lawyer Burnside loves the thought of drowning Abbott
Andrew Bolt March 18 2014 (8:28am)
Celebrity “human rights” lawyer Julian Burnside says people who send rude messages have something wrong with them:
===It occurred to me then that the passion which drove their initial hostility was the mark of people who were alienated from the community: they were accustomed to being ignored, so they fall to shouting abuse as a way of getting attention. Just once listen to them, and they quickly fall back to observing the ordinary rules of civil behaviour.Does Burnside suffer a mental disability or lead a hopeless life? I ask because of some of his recent tweets, including one nominating his favorite anti-Abbott sign at last weekend’s “March in March” festival of hate:
This is not just an argument for good manners: I think it goes much deeper. Too many people in our community feel alienated from it and that alienation is unstable: it tends not to self-correct, but to amplify itself… There are many reasons why members of the community become alienated from it. They may have been dealt a bad hand: they have been born poor, they have been badly educated, they have a mental or physical disability, they have bad luck in employment, they make bad choices which lead them into a hopeless life.
And, of course, this was this infamous little “joke”, followed by an unconvincing apology:
Not for the first time I wonder whether the houses of the Left have mirrors.
ABC makes the smallest apology it could get away with
Andrew Bolt March 18 2014 (6:53am)
The ABC’s apology did not go far enough, failing to include a specific acknowledgement that claims I’d subjected Dr Misty Jenkins to “foul abuse” and driven her from “public life” were utterly false. But it is a start:
===THE ABC last night apologised to Daily Telegraph columnist Andrew Bolt over claims from Aboriginal academic Marcia Langton on Q&A last week that he was racist. Host Tony Jones made the apology for comments accusing Bolt last week of racial vilification during a discussion about racial discrimination laws.
“Marcia Langton publicly said she did not think he was a racist. As a result the ABC apologises for broadcasting her comments,” Jones said last night.
Just two days to design a $2 billion disaster which killed four men
Andrew Bolt March 17 2014 (6:53pm)
This just screams of Kevin Rudd in every detail:
===KEVIN Rudd’s department gave two environment department staffers just two days to secretly cost and assess the risks of its scheme to deliver pink batts to every uninsulated Australian home.This, too, is pure Rudd:
Environment Department Assistant-Secretary Mary Wiley-Smith ... told the commission she’d received a call late on the Friday of the Australia Day long weekend in 2009 from a Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet staffer. She was told she and another environment department official had to cost and consider the risks of two massive government programs by the Monday — which was a public holiday.
Ms Wiley-Smith ... also confirmed she and her fellow bureaucrat were told to keep the matter confidential and they could not ring industry representatives to seek advice.The rush, the thought-bubble process, the lack of consultation, the lack of consideration for staff, the lack of process - exactly what also gave us the NBN white elephant, Grocery Watch, Fuel Watch, overpriced school halls, an underfunded school computer program, unbuilt superclinics and more than 1000 dead boat people.
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
===
- 1241 – First Mongol invasion of Poland: Mongols overwhelmed the Polish armies of Sandomierz and Kraków provinces in theBattle of Chmielnik and plundered the abandoned city of Kraków.
- 1871 – French President Adolphe Thiers (pictured) ordered the evacuation of Paris after an uprising broke out as the result ofFrance's defeat in the Franco-Prussian War, leading to the establishment of theParis Commune government.
- 1906 – Romanian inventor Traian Vuia became the first person to fly a heavier-than-air monoplane with an unassisted takeoff.
- 1970 – United States postal workers began a two-week strike after Congressraised its own wages by 41% but only raised the wages of postal workers by 4%.
- 1996 – The deadliest fire in Philippine history burned a nightclub in Quezon City, leaving 162 dead.
- 37 – The Roman Senate annuls Tiberius's will and proclaims Caligula emperor.
- 633 – Ridda wars: The Arabian Peninsula is united under the central authority of Caliph Abu Bakr.
- 1068 – An earthquake affects the Levant and the Arabian Peninsula, leaving up to 20,000 dead.
- 1229 – Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor, declares himself King of Jerusalem in the Sixth Crusade.
- 1241 – First Mongol invasion of Poland: Mongols overwhelm Polish armies in Kraków in the Battle of Chmielnik and plunder the city.
- 1314 – Jacques de Molay, the 23rd and the last Grand Master of the Knights Templar, is burned at the stake.
- 1438 – Albert II of Habsburg becomes Holy Roman Emperor.
- 1608 – Susenyos is formally crowned Emperor of Ethiopia.
- 1644 – The Third Anglo-Powhatan War begins in the Colony of Virginia.
- 1741 – New York governor George Clarke's complex at Fort George is burned in an arson attack, starting the New York Conspiracy of 1741.
- 1766 – American Revolution: The British Parliament repeals the Stamp Act.
- 1793 – The first republic in Germany, the Republic of Mainz, is declared by Andreas Joseph Hofmann.
- 1834 – Six farm labourers from Tolpuddle, Dorset, England are sentenced to be transported to Australia for forming a trade union.
- 1848 – March Revolution: In Berlin there is a struggle between citizens and military, costing about 300 lives.
- 1850 – American Express is founded by Henry Wells and William Fargo.
- 1865 – American Civil War: The Congress of the Confederate States adjourns for the last time.
- 1871 – Declaration of the Paris Commune; President of the French Republic, Adolphe Thiers, orders the evacuation of Paris.
- 1874 – Hawaii signs a treaty with the United States granting exclusive trade rights.
- 1892 – Former Governor General Lord Stanley pledges to donate a silver challenge cup, later named after him, as an award for the best hockey team in Canada the Stanley Cup.
- 1906 – Traian Vuia flies a heavier-than-air aircraft for 11 meters at an altitude of one meter.
- 1913 – King George I of Greece is assassinated in the recently liberated city of Thessaloniki.
- 1915 – World War I: During the Battle of Gallipoli, three battleships are sunk during a failed British and French naval attack on the Dardanelles.
- 1921 – The second Peace of Riga is signed between Poland and the Soviet Union.
- 1922 – In India, Mohandas Gandhi is sentenced to six years in prison for civil disobedience, of which he serves only two.
- 1925 – The Tri-State Tornado hits the Midwestern states of Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana, killing 695 people.
- 1937 – The New London School explosion in New London, Texas, kills 300 people, mostly children.
- 1937 – Spanish Civil War: Spanish Republican forces defeat the Italians at the Battle of Guadalajara.
- 1937 – A human-powered aircraft, Pedaliante, flies 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) outside Milan, Italy.
- 1938 – Mexico creates Pemex by expropriating all foreign-owned oil reserves and facilities.
- 1940 – World War II: Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini meet at the Brenner Pass in the Alps and agree to form an alliance against France and the United Kingdom.
- 1942 – The War Relocation Authority is established in the United States to take Japanese Americans into custody.
- 1944 – The eruption of Mount Vesuvius in Italy kills 26 people and causes thousands to flee their homes.
- 1946 – Diplomatic relations between Switzerland and the Soviet Union are established.
- 1948 – Soviet consultants leave Yugoslavia in the first sign of the Tito–Stalin Split.
- 1953 – An earthquake hits western Turkey, killing 265 people.
- 1959 – President Dwight D. Eisenhower signs a bill into law allowing for Hawaiian statehood, which would become official on August 21.
- 1962 – The Évian Accords end the Algerian War of Independence, which had begun in 1954.
- 1965 – Cosmonaut Alexey Leonov, leaving his spacecraft Voskhod 2 for 12 minutes, becomes the first person to walk in space.
- 1967 – The supertanker Torrey Canyon runs aground off the Cornish coast.
- 1968 – Gold standard: The U.S. Congress repeals the requirement for a gold reserve to back US currency.
- 1969 – The United States begins secretly bombing the Sihanouk Trail in Cambodia, used by communist forces to infiltrate South Vietnam.
- 1970 – Lon Nol ousts Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia.
- 1970 – The U.S. postal strike of 1970 begins, one of the largest wildcat strikes in U.S. history.
- 1971 – In Peru a landslide crashes into Yanawayin Lake, killing 200 people at the mining camp of Chungar.
- 1974 – Most OPEC nations end a five-month oil embargo against the United States, Europe and Japan.
- 1980 – At Plesetsk Cosmodrome in Russia, 50 people are killed by an explosion of a Vostok-2M rocket on its launch pad during a fueling operation.
- 1985 – First episode of Neighbours broadcast.
- 1990 – Germans in the German Democratic Republic vote in the first democratic elections in the former communist dictatorship.
- 1990 – In the largest art theft in US history, 12 paintings, collectively worth around $300 million, are stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston.
- 1992 – In a national referendum white South Africans vote overwhelmingly in favour of ending apartheid.
- 1994 – Bosnia's Bosniaks and Croats sign the Washington Agreement, ending war between the Croatian Republic of Herzeg-Bosnia and the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and establishing the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
- 1996 – A nightclub fire in Quezon City, Philippines kills 162 people.
- 1997 – The tail of a Russian Antonov An-24 charter plane breaks off while en route to Turkey causing the plane to crash and killing all 50 people on board and leading to the grounding of all An-24s.
- 2014 – The parliaments of Russia and Crimea sign an accession treaty.
- 2015 – The Bardo National Museum in Tunisia is attacked by gunmen. 23 people, almost all tourists, are killed, and at least 50 other people are wounded.
- 1075 – Al-Zamakhshari, Persian theologian (d. 1144)
- 1395 – John Holland, 2nd Duke of Exeter, English commander (d. 1447)
- 1496 – Mary Tudor, Queen of France (d. 1533)
- 1555 – Francis, Duke of Anjou (d. 1584)
- 1578 – Adam Elsheimer, German painter (d. 1610)
- 1590 – Manuel de Faria e Sousa, Portuguese historian and poet (d. 1649)
- 1597 – Jérôme le Royer de la Dauversière, French religious leader, founded the Société Notre-Dame de Montréal (d. 1659)
- 1602 – Jacques de Billy, French priest, mathematician, and theorist (d. 1679)
- 1603 – Simon Bradstreet, English businessman and politician, 20th Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony (d. 1693)
- 1609 – Frederick III of Denmark (d. 1670)
- 1634 – Madame de La Fayette, French author (d. 1693)
- 1640 – Philippe de La Hire, French mathematician and astronomer (d. 1719)
- 1657 – Giuseppe Ottavio Pitoni, Italian organist and composer (d. 1743)
- 1685 – Ralph Ersine, Scottish minister (d. 1752)
- 1690 – Christian Goldbach, Prussian-German mathematician and academic (d. 1764)
- 1701 – Niclas Sahlgren, Swedish businessman and philanthropist, co-founded the Swedish East India Company (d. 1776)
- 1733 – Christoph Friedrich Nicolai, German author and bookseller (d. 1811)
- 1780 – Miloš Obrenović I, Prince of Serbia (d. 1860)
- 1782 – John C. Calhoun, American lawyer and politician, 7th Vice President of the United States (d. 1850)
- 1798 – Francis Lieber, German-American jurist and philosopher (d. 1872)
- 1800 – Harriet Smithson, Anglo-Irish actress (d. 1854)
- 1804 – Carl Nebel, German engineer, architect and draughtsman, known for scenes of Mexico (d. 1855)
- 1813 – Christian Friedrich Hebbel, German poet and playwright (d. 1864)
- 1814 – Jacob Bunn, American businessman (d. 1897)
- 1816 – Antonio Salviati, Italian lawyer and businessman (d. 1890)
- 1823 – Antoine Chanzy, French general (d. 1883)
- 1828 – Randal Cremer, English politician, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1908)
- 1837 – Grover Cleveland, American lawyer and politician, 22nd and 24th President of the United States (d. 1908)
- 1840 – William Cosmo Monkhouse, English poet and critic (d. 1901)
- 1842 – Stéphane Mallarmé, French poet and critic (d. 1898)
- 1844 – Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Russian composer and academic (d. 1908)
- 1848 – Nathanael Greene Herreshoff, American engineer and architect (d. 1938)
- 1848 – Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll (d. 1939)
- 1853 – Emilie Kempin-Spyri, Swiss lawyer and academic (d. 1901)
- 1858 – Rudolf Diesel, German engineer, invented the Diesel engine (d. 1913)
- 1862 – Eugène Jansson, Swedish painter (d. 1915)
- 1863 – William Sulzer, American lawyer and politician, 39th Governor of New York (d. 1941)
- 1866 – Cemil Topuzlu, Turkish surgeon and politician; Mayor of Istanbul (b. 1958)
- 1869 – Neville Chamberlain, English businessman and politician, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (d. 1940)
- 1874 – Nikolai Berdyaev, Russian-French philosopher and theologian (d. 1948)
- 1877 – Edgar Cayce, American mystic and psychic (d. 1945)
- 1877 – Clem Hill, Australian cricketer and engineer (d. 1945)
- 1878 – Percival Perry, 1st Baron Perry, English businessman (d. 1956)
- 1879 – Norval Baptie, Canadian speed skater (d. 1966)
- 1881 – Paul Le Flem, French composer and critic (d. 1984)
- 1882 – Gian Francesco Malipiero, Italian composer and educator (d. 1973)
- 1884 – Bernard Cronin, Australian author and journalist (d. 1968)
- 1886 – Edward Everett Horton, American actor, dancer and singer (d. 1970)
- 1890 – Henri Decoin, French director and screenwriter (d. 1969)
- 1891 – Alice Cullen, Scottish politician (d. 1969)
- 1893 – Costante Girardengo, Italian cyclist (d. 1978)
- 1893 – Jean Goldkette, French-American pianist and bandleader (d. 1962)
- 1893 – Wilfred Owen, English soldier and poet (d. 1918)
- 1898 – Jake Swirbul, American businessman, co-founded the Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation (d. 1960)
- 1901 – William Johnson, American painter (d. 1970)
- 1903 – Galeazzo Ciano, Italian journalist and politician, Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs (d. 1944)
- 1904 – Srečko Kosovel, Slovenian poet and author (d. 1926)
- 1904 – Margaret Tucker, Australian author and activist (d. 1996)
- 1905 – Thomas Townsend Brown, American physicist and engineer (d. 1985)
- 1905 – Robert Donat, English actor (d. 1958)
- 1907 – Rosita Moreno, Spanish-American actress (d. 1993)
- 1907 – Verda Welcome, American educator and politician (d. 1990)
- 1907 – John Zachary Young, English zoologist and neurophysiologist (d. 1997)
- 1908 – Loulou Gasté, French composer (d. 1995)
- 1909 – Ernest Gallo, American businessman, co-founded the E & J Gallo Winery (d. 2007)
- 1909 – C. Walter Hodges, English author and illustrator (d. 2004)
- 1911 – Al Benton, American baseball player (d. 1968)
- 1911 – Smiley Burnette, American singer-songwriter and actor (d. 1967)
- 1911 – Kullo Must, Estonian film producer (d. 1987)
- 1912 – Art Gilmore, American voice actor and announcer (d. 2010)
- 1913 – René Clément, French director and screenwriter (d. 1996)
- 1913 – Reinhard Hardegen, German commander
- 1913 – Werner Mölders, German colonel and pilot (d. 1941)
- 1914 – César Guerra-Peixe, Brazilian violinist, composer, and conductor (d. 1993)
- 1915 – Richard Condon, American author and screenwriter (d. 1996)
- 1918 – Bob Broeg, American journalist (d. 2005)
- 1919 – Christopher Challis, English cinematographer and photographer (d. 2012)
- 1921 – Frank Searle, Scottish zoologist and photographer (d. 2005)
- 1922 – Egon Bahr, German journalist and politician, Federal Minister for Special Affairs of Germany (d. 2015)
- 1922 – Seymour Martin Lipset, American sociologist and academic (d. 2006)
- 1922 – Fred Shuttlesworth, American activist, co-founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (d. 2011)
- 1923 – Andy Granatelli, American businessman (d. 2013)
- 1925 – James Pickles, English journalist, lawyer, and judge (d. 2010)
- 1926 – Peter Graves, American actor and director (d. 2010)
- 1926 – Dick Littlefield, American baseball player (d. 1997)
- 1926 – Akkitham Achuthan Namboothiri, Indian poet and social worker
- 1927 – John Kander, American pianist and composer
- 1927 – George Plimpton, American writer and literary editor (d. 2003)
- 1927 – Lillian Vernon, German-American businesswoman and philanthropist, founded the Lillian Vernon Company (d. 2015)
- 1928 – Julia Mullock, American-South Korean wife of Yi Gu
- 1928 – Miguel Poblet, Spanish cyclist (d. 2013)
- 1928 – Fidel V. Ramos, Filipino general and politician, 12th President of the Philippines
- 1929 – Jacki Clérico, French businessman (d. 2013)
- 1929 – John Macurdy, American opera singer
- 1929 – Samuel Pisar, Polish-American lawyer and author (d. 2015)
- 1929 – Jack B. Sowards, American screenwriter and producer (d. 2007)
- 1930 – Pat Halcox, English trumpet player (d. 2013)
- 1931 – Howard Coble, American captain, lawyer, and politician (d. 2015)
- 1931 – John Fraser, Scottish actor
- 1931 – John Mollo, English costume designer and author
- 1932 – John Updike, American novelist, poet, and critic (d. 2009)
- 1932 – Frank Nagai, Japanese singer (d. 2008)
- 1933 – Unita Blackwell, American activist and politician
- 1934 – Roy Chapman, English footballer and manager (d. 1983)
- 1934 – Pietro Rizzuto, Italian-Canadian politician (d. 1997)
- 1935 – Ole Barndorff-Nielsen, Danish mathematician and statistician
- 1935 – Antonios Naguib, Egyptian patriarch
- 1935 – Frances Cress Welsing, American psychiatrist and author (d. 2016)
- 1936 – F. W. de Klerk, South African lawyer and politician, 2nd State President of South Africa, Nobel Prize laureate
- 1937 – Rudi Altig, German cyclist and screenwriter
- 1937 – Mark Donohue, American race car driver (d. 1975)
- 1938 – Carl Gottlieb, American actor and screenwriter
- 1938 – Shashi Kapoor, Indian actor and producer
- 1938 – Kenny Lynch, English singer-songwriter and actor
- 1938 – Timo Mäkinen, Finnish race car driver
- 1938 – Charley Pride, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1938 – Machiko Soga, Japanese actress (d. 2006)
- 1939 – Ron Atkinson, English footballer and manager
- 1939 – Yannis Markopoulos, Greek composer
- 1940 – József Tóth, Hungarian geographer and academic (d. 2013)
- 1941 – John W. Derr, American soldier and politician
- 1941 – Wilson Pickett, American singer-songwriter (The Falcons) (d. 2006)
- 1942 – Albert Van Vlierberghe, Belgian cyclist (d. 1991)
- 1943 – Kevin Dobson, American actor and director
- 1943 – Toula Grivas, French-Greek actress
- 1943 – Nobuko Imai, Japanese viola player and educator
- 1943 – Dennis Linde, American singer-songwriter (d. 2006)
- 1944 – Amnon Lipkin-Shahak, Israeli general and politician, 22nd Transportation Minister of Israel (d. 2012)
- 1944 – Frank McRae, American actor and an American football player
- 1944 – Dick Smith, Australian publisher and businessman (Dick Smith Electronics and Australian Geographic)
- 1945 – Joy Fielding, Canadian actress and author
- 1945 – Hiroh Kikai, Japanese photographer
- 1945 – Michael Reagan, American journalist and radio host
- 1945 – Susan Tyrrell, American actress (d. 2012)
- 1945 – Eric Woolfson, Scottish singer-songwriter, pianist, and producer (The Alan Parsons Project) (d. 2009)
- 1946 – Martyn Griffiths, English race car driver
- 1946 – Michel Leclère, French race car driver
- 1947 – Patrick Barlow, English actor and playwright
- 1947 – Patrick Chesnais, French actor, director, and screenwriter
- 1947 – Roger Kenneth Evans, English politician
- 1947 – David Lloyd, English cricketer, journalist, and sportscaster
- 1947 – Heather Ryan, American model
- 1947 – B. J. Wilson, English drummer (Procol Harum) (d. 1990)
- 1948 – Guy Lapointe, Canadian ice hockey player and coach
- 1948 – Brian Lloyd, Welsh footballer
- 1948 – Lockwood Phillips, American radio host
- 1949 – Bertha Gilkey, American activist (d. 2014)
- 1949 – Alex Higgins, Irish snooker player (d. 2010)
- 1949 – Åse Kleveland, Norwegian singer and politician
- 1949 – Hannu Siitonen, Finnish javelin thrower
- 1950 – James Conlon, American conductor and educator
- 1950 – Brad Dourif, American actor
- 1950 – John Hartman, American drummer (The Doobie Brothers)
- 1950 – Eiji Okuda, Japanese actor and director
- 1950 – Linda Partridge, English geneticist and academic
- 1950 – Larry Perkins, Australian race car driver
- 1951 – Paul Barber, English actor
- 1951 – Ben Cohen, American businessman co-founded Ben and Jerry's
- 1951 – Bill Frisell, American guitarist and composer
- 1951 – Mart Murdvee, Estonian psychologist and scholar
- 1952 – Will Durst, American journalist and actor
- 1952 – Pat Eddery, Irish jockey and trainer (d. 2015)
- 1952 – Bernie Tormé, Irish singer-songwriter and guitarist (Gillan, Guy McCoy Tormé, and Desperado)
- 1952 – Mike Webster, American football player (d. 2002)
- 1953 – Franz Wright, Austrian-American poet and translator (d. 2015)
- 1953 – Takashi Yoshimatsu, Japanese composer
- 1954 – Ryosuke Otani, Japanese actor and voice actor
- 1955 – Ana Obregón, Spanish actress, screenwriter, and biologist
- 1955 – Francis G. Slay, American lawyer and politician, 45th Mayor of St. Louis
- 1955 – Jeff Stelling, English journalist and game show host
- 1956 – Rick Martel, Canadian wrestler
- 1956 – Ingemar Stenmark, Swedish skier
- 1957 – Christer Fuglesang, Swedish physicist and astronaut
- 1957 – György Pazdera, Hungarian bass player (Pokolgép)
- 1957 – Wolfgang Schilling, German footballer
- 1958 – Richard de Zoysa, Sri Lankan journalist and author (d. 1990)
- 1959 – Luc Besson, French director, producer, and screenwriter, founded EuropaCorp
- 1959 – Irene Cara, American actress and singer-songwriter
- 1960 – Guy Carbonneau, Canadian ice hockey player and coach
- 1960 – James MacPherson, Scottish actor
- 1960 – James Plaskett, Cypriot-English chess player
- 1961 – Grant Hart, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (Hüsker Dü)
- 1961 – Todd Nelson, American tennis player
- 1962 – Michael Andrews, Australian rugby league player
- 1962 – Brian Fisher, American baseball player
- 1962 – Thomas Ian Griffith, American actor and martial artist
- 1962 – James McMurtry, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and actor
- 1962 – Mike Rowe, American actor, singer, and television host
- 1962 – Bob Shennan, English broadcaster
- 1962 – Etsushi Toyokawa, Japanese actor and director
- 1962 – Volker Weidler, German race car driver
- 1963 – Keith Brown, English cricketer
- 1963 – Jeff LaBar, American guitarist (Cinderella and Naked Beggars)
- 1963 – Vanessa L. Williams, American model, actress, and singer, Miss America 1984
- 1964 – Bonnie Blair, American speed skater
- 1964 – Paul Elliott, English footballer and sportscaster
- 1964 – Mika Kanai, Japanese voice actress and singer
- 1964 – Courtney Pine, English saxophonist and clarinet player
- 1965 – Birgit Clarius, German heptathlete
- 1965 – Yoriko Dōguchi, Japanese actress
- 1966 – Jerry Cantrell, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (Alice in Chains)
- 1966 – Peter Jones, English businessman
- 1967 – Miki Berenyi, English singer-songwriter and guitarist (Lush)
- 1967 – Ken Edenfield, American baseball player
- 1968 – Miguel Herrera, Mexican footballer and manager
- 1968 – Paul Marsden, English businessman and politician
- 1968 – Shin-ichiro Miki, Japanese voice actor
- 1969 – Andy Cutting, English accordion player and composer (Blowzabella)
- 1969 – Vassily Ivanchuk, Ukrainian chess player
- 1969 – J. David Shapiro, American actor, director, and screenwriter
- 1969 – Shaun Udal, English cricketer
- 1970 – Queen Latifah, American actress, singer and rapper
- 1971 – Wayne Arthurs, Australian tennis player
- 1971 – Mike Bell, American wrestler (d. 2008)
- 1971 – Mariaan de Swardt, South African-American tennis player, coach, and sportscaster
- 1971 – Kitty Ussher, English economist and politician
- 1972 – Dane Cook, American comedian, actor, director, and producer
- 1972 – Anja Möllenbeck, German discus thrower
- 1972 – Reince Priebus, American lawyer and political activist
- 1973 – Max Barry, Australian author and blogger
- 1973 – Luci Christian, American voice actress and screenwriter
- 1974 – Arsi Harju, Finnish shot putter
- 1974 – Tina Križan, Slovenian tennis player
- 1974 – Evan Lowenstein, American singer-songwriter (Evan and Jaron)
- 1974 – Jaron Lowenstein, American singer-songwriter (Evan and Jaron)
- 1974 – Laure Savasta, French basketball player, coach, and sportscaster
- 1974 – Stuart Zender, English bass player, songwriter, and producer (Jamiroquai)
- 1975 – Sutton Foster, American actress, singer, and dancer
- 1975 – Brian Griese, American football player and sportscaster
- 1975 – Kimmo Timonen, Finnish ice hockey player
- 1975 – Tomas Žvirgždauskas, Lithuanian footballer
- 1975 – Lucid Fall, South Korean singer
- 1976 – Giovanna Antonelli, Brazilian actress and producer
- 1976 – Jovan Kirovski, American soccer player and coach
- 1976 – Tomo Ohka, Japanese baseball player
- 1976 – Scott Podsednik, American baseball player
- 1976 – Mike Quackenbush, American wrestler, trainer, and author, founded Chikara wrestling promotion
- 1977 – Zdeno Chára, Slovak ice hockey player
- 1977 – Danny Murphy, English footballer and sportscaster
- 1977 – Fernando Rodney, Dominican-American baseball player
- 1977 – Willy Sagnol, French footballer and manager
- 1977 – Terrmel Sledge, American baseball player
- 1978 – Fernandão, Brazilian footballer and manager (d. 2014)
- 1978 – Jan Bulis, Czech ice hockey player
- 1978 – Juris Fernandez, Filipino singer-songwriter (MYMP)
- 1978 – Brooke Hanson, Australian swimmer
- 1978 – Antonio Margarito, Mexican-American boxer
- 1978 – Brian Scalabrine, American basketball player and coach
- 1978 – Yoshie Takeshita, Japanese volleyball player
- 1978 – Jonas Wallerstedt, Swedish footballer, coach, and manager
- 1978 – Virginia Williams, American actress
- 1979 – Adam Levine, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and actor (Maroon 5)
- 1979 – Anthony Maher, American soccer player
- 1980 – Sébastien Frey, French footballer
- 1980 – Sophia Myles, English actress
- 1980 – Alexei Yagudin, Russian figure skater
- 1980 – Natalia Poklonskaya, Ukrainian-Crimean lawyer and politician
- 1981 – Tora Berger, Norwegian biathlete
- 1981 – Fabian Cancellara, Swiss cyclist
- 1981 – Leslie Djhone, French sprinter
- 1981 – Jang Na-ra, South Korean singer and actress
- 1981 – Kasib Powell, American basketball player
- 1981 – Tom Starke, German footballer
- 1981 – Doug Warren, American soccer player
- 1981 – Lovro Zovko, Croatian tennis player
- 1982 – Chad Cordero, American baseball player
- 1982 – Timo Glock, German race car driver
- 1982 – Mantorras, Angolan footballer
- 1982 – Adam Pally, American actor, director, producer, and screenwriter
- 1982 – Rei Yoshii, Japanese actress
- 1983 – Ethan Carter III, American wrestler
- 1983 – Stéphanie Cohen-Aloro, French tennis player
- 1983 – Andy Sonnanstine, American baseball player
- 1983 – Tomasz Stolpa, Polish footballer
- 1984 – Simone Padoin, Italian footballer
- 1984 – Rajeev Ram, American tennis player
- 1984 – Gary Roberts, English footballer
- 1984 – Vonzell Solomon, American singer and actress
- 1985 – Gennaro Esposito, Italian footballer
- 1985 – Bia Figueiredo, Brazilian race car driver
- 1985 – Marvin Humes, English singer and actor (JLS and VS)
- 1985 – Vince Lia, Australian footballer
- 1986 – Abdennour Chérif El-Ouazzani, Algerian footballer
- 1986 – Kaloyan Ivanov, Bulgarian basketball player
- 1986 – Lykke Li, Swedish singer-songwriter
- 1987 – Gabriel Mercado, Argentinian footballer
- 1987 – Cesare Rickler, Italian footballer
- 1987 – Rebecca Soni, American swimmer
- 1987 – Mauro Zárate, Argentinian footballer
- 1989 – Francesco Checcucci, Italian footballer
- 1989 – Lily Collins, English-American actress
- 1989 – Shreevats Goswami, Indian cricketer
- 1989 – Kana Nishino, Japanese singer-songwriter
- 1989 – Paul Marc Rousseau, Canadian guitarist and producer (Silverstein)
- 1990 – Corey Liuget, American football player
- 1991 – Dylan Mattingly, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1991 – Sam Williams, Australian rugby league player
- 1992 – Ryan Truex, American race car driver
- 1993 – Mana Iwabuchi, Japanese footballer
Births[edit]
- 235 – Severus Alexander, Roman emperor (b. 208)
- 978 – Edward the Martyr, English king (b. 962)
- 1227 – Pope Honorius III (b. 1148)
- 1314 – Jacques de Molay, Frankish knight (b. 1244)
- 1675 – Arthur Chichester, 1st Earl of Donegall, Irish soldier (b. 1606)
- 1689 – John Dixwell, English soldier and politician (b. 1607)
- 1696 – Robert Charnock, English academic (b. 1663)
- 1715 – William Fraser, 12th Lord Saltoun, Scottish politician (b. 1654)
- 1745 – Robert Walpole, English scholar and politician, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (b. 1676)
- 1768 – Laurence Sterne, Irish novelist (b. 1713)
- 1781 – Anne Robert Jacques Turgot, Baron de Laune, French economist and politician, Controller-General of Finances (b. 1727)
- 1789 – Thomas Rawlins (sculptor) English funerary stonemason
- 1789 – Catherine Murphy, English counterfeiter
- 1823 – Jean-Baptiste Bréval, French cellist and composer (b. 1753)
- 1835 – Christian Günther von Bernstorff, Danish-Prussian politician and diplomat (b. 1769)
- 1845 – Johnny Appleseed, American environmentalist (b. 1774)
- 1871 – Augustus De Morgan, Indian-English mathematician and academic (b. 1806)
- 1898 – Matilda Joslyn Gage, American author and activist (b. 1826)
- 1907 – Marcellin Berthelot, French chemist and politician, French Minister of Foreign Affairs (b. 1827)
- 1913 – George I of Greece (b. 1845)
- 1918 – Henry Janeway Hardenbergh, American architect, designed the Plaza Hotel (b. 1847)
- 1933 – Prince Luigi Amedeo, Duke of the Abruzzi (b. 1873)
- 1936 – Eleftherios Venizelos, Greek journalist, lawyer, and politician, 93rd Prime Minister of Greece (b. 1864)
- 1939 – Henry Simpson Lunn, English businessman, founded Lunn Poly (b. 1859)
- 1941 – Henri Cornet, French cyclist (b. 1884)
- 1947 – William C. Durant, American businessman, co-founded General Motors and Chevrolet (b. 1861)
- 1954 – Walter Mead, English cricketer (b. 1868)
- 1956 – Louis Bromfield, American environmentalist and author (b. 1896)
- 1962 – Walter W. Bacon, American accountant and politician, 60th Governor of Delaware (b. 1880)
- 1963 – Wanda Hawley, American actress and singer (b. 1895)
- 1964 – Sigfrid Edström, Swedish businessman, 4th President of the International Olympic Committee (b. 1870)
- 1965 – Farouk of Egypt (b. 1920)
- 1965 – Jack Quinlan, American sportscaster (b. 1927)
- 1969 – Barbara Bates, American actress and singer (b. 1925)
- 1973 – Johannes Aavik, Estonian philologist and poet (b. 1880)
- 1975 – Alain Grandbois, Canadian poet and educator (b. 1900)
- 1976 – Giuseppe Genco Russo, Italian mob boss (b. 1893)
- 1977 – Marien Ngouabi, Congolese politician, President of the Republic of the Congo (b. 1938)
- 1977 – Carlos Pace, Brazilian race car driver (b. 1944)
- 1978 – Leigh Brackett, American author and screenwriter (b. 1915)
- 1978 – Peggy Wood, American actress and singer (b. 1892)
- 1980 – Erich Fromm, German psychologist and philosopher (b. 1900)
- 1981 – Cahide Sonku, Turkish actress, director, and producer (b. 1916)
- 1982 – Patrick Smith, Irish farmer and politician, Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine (b. 1901)
- 1983 – Umberto II of Italy (b. 1904)
- 1984 – Charley Lau, American baseball player and coach (b. 1933)
- 1986 – Bernard Malamud, American novelist and short story writer (b. 1914)
- 1988 – Billy Butterfield, American trumpet player and cornet player (b. 1917)
- 1990 – Robin Harris, American comedian and actor (b. 1953)
- 1993 – Kenneth E. Boulding, English-American economist and activist (b. 1910)
- 1995 – Sadri Alışık, Turkish actor (b. 1925)
- 1995 – Robin Jacques, English illustrator (b. 1920)
- 1996 – Odysseas Elytis, Greek poet and critic, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1911)
- 1999 – Elizabeth Huckaby, American educator (b. 1905)
- 2000 – Eberhard Bethge, German theologian and academic (b. 1909)
- 2001 – Viktor Masing, Estonian botanist and ecologist (b. 1925)
- 2001 – John Phillips, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (The Mamas & the Papas) (b. 1935)
- 2002 – R. A. Lafferty, American soldier and author (b. 1914)
- 2002 – Gösta Winbergh, Swedish tenor (b. 1943)
- 2003 – Karl Kling, German race car driver (b. 1910)
- 2003 – Adam Osborne, Thai-English businessman, founded the Osborne Computer Corporation (b. 1939)
- 2004 – Harrison McCain, Canadian businessman, co-founded McCain Foods (b. 1927)
- 2006 – Dan Gibson, Canadian photographer and cinematographer (b. 1922)
- 2007 – Bob Woolmer, Indian-English cricketer, coach, and sportscaster (b. 1948)
- 2008 – Andrew Britton, English-American author (b. 1981)
- 2008 – Anthony Minghella, English director and screenwriter (b. 1954)
- 2008 – Geoffrey Pearson, Canadian diplomat and author (b. 1927)
- 2009 – Omid Reza Mir Sayafi, Iranian journalist and blogger (b. 1980)
- 2009 – Natasha Richardson, English actress (b. 1963)
- 2010 – Fess Parker, American actor, singer, and businessman (b. 1924)
- 2011 – Warren Christopher, American lawyer and politician, 63rd United States Secretary of State (b. 1925)
- 2012 – Imra Agotić, Croatian general (b. 1943)
- 2012 – Furman Bisher, American journalist (b. 1918)
- 2012 – William R. Charette, American soldier, Medal of Honor recipient (b. 1932)
- 2012 – William G. Moore Jr., American general (b. 1920)
- 2012 – Jalal Zolfonun, Iranian setar player and composer (b. 1937)
- 2013 – Muhammad Mahmood Alam, Pakistani general and pilot (b. 1935)
- 2013 – Mindy Baha El Din, American-Egyptian ornithologist and environmentalist (b. 1958)
- 2013 – Henry Bromell, American director, producer, and screenwriter (b. 1947)
- 2013 – Clay Ford, American lawyer and politician (b. 1938)
- 2013 – Earl Hersh, American baseball player (b. 1932)
- 2013 – Robin M. Williams, New Zealand mathematician and academic (b. 1919)
- 2014 – Catherine Obianuju Acholonu, Nigerian author, playwright, and academic (b. 1951)
- 2014 – Kaiser Kalambo, Zambian footballer, coach, and manager (b. 1953)
- 2014 – Joe Lala, American actor and drummer (Blues Image and Manassas) (b. 1947)
- 2014 – Lucius Shepard, American author and critic (b. 1943)
- 2014 – Ara Shiraz, Armenian sculptor (b. 1941)
- 2015 – Zhao Dayu, Chinese footballer and manager (b. 1961)
- 2015 – Roy Doty, American illustrator (b. 1922)
- 2015 – Thomas Hopko, American priest and theologian (b. 1939)
- 2015 – Grace Ogot, Kenyan nurse, journalist, and politician (b. 1930)
Deaths[edit]
- Anniversary of the Oil Expropriation (Mexico)
- Christian feast day:
- Earliest date on which Holy Wednesday can fall, while April 21 is the latest; celebrated on the week before Easter. (Christianity)
- Flag Day (Aruba)
- Gallipoli Memorial Day (Turkey)
- Men's and Soldiers' Day (Mongolia)
Holidays and observances[edit]
“A psalm of David. The LORD is my shepherd, I lack nothing. He makes me lie down in green pastures, he leads me beside quiet waters, he refreshes my soul. He guides me along the right paths for his name’s sake.” -Psalm 23:1-3
===
Morning and Evening by Charles Spurgeon
March 17: Morning
"Remember the poor." - Galatians 2:10
Why does God allow so many of his children to be poor? He could make them all rich if he pleased; he could lay bags of gold at their doors; he could send them a large annual income; or he could scatter round their houses abundance of provisions, as once he made the quails lie in heaps round the camp of Israel, and rained bread out of heaven to feed them. There is no necessity that they should be poor, except that he sees it to be best. "The cattle upon a thousand hills are his"--he could supply them; he could make the richest, the greatest, and the mightiest bring all their power and riches to the feet of his children, for the hearts of all men are in his control. But he does not choose to do so; he allows them to suffer want, he allows them to pine in penury and obscurity. Why is this? There are many reasons: one is, to give us, who are favoured with enough, an opportunity of showing our love to Jesus. We show our love to Christ when we sing of him and when we pray to him; but if there were no sons of need in the world we should lose the sweet privilege of evidencing our love, by ministering in alms-giving to his poorer brethren; he has ordained that thus we should prove that our love standeth not in word only, but in deed and in truth. If we truly love Christ, we shall care for those who are loved by him. Those who are dear to him will be dear to us. Let us then look upon it not as a duty but as a privilege to relieve the poor of the Lord's flock--remembering the words of the Lord Jesus, "Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me." Surely this assurance is sweet enough, and this motive strong enough to lead us to help others with a willing hand and a loving heart--recollecting that all we do for his people is graciously accepted by Christ as done to himself.
Evening
"Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God." - Matthew 5:9
This is the seventh of the beatitudes: and seven was the number of perfection among the Hebrews. It may be that the Saviour placed the peacemaker the seventh upon the list because he most nearly approaches the perfect man in Christ Jesus. He who would have perfect blessedness, so far as it can be enjoyed on earth, must attain to this seventh benediction, and become a peacemaker. There is a significance also in the position of the text. The verse which precedes it speaks of the blessedness of "the pure in heart: for they shall see God." It is well to understand that we are to be "first pure, then peaceable." Our peaceableness is never to be a compact with sin, or toleration of evil. We must set our faces like flints against everything which is contrary to God and his holiness: purity being in our souls a settled matter, we can go on to peaceableness. Not less does the verse that follows seem to have been put there on purpose. However peaceable we may be in this world, yet we shall be misrepresented and misunderstood: and no marvel, for even the Prince of Peace, by his very peacefulness, brought fire upon the earth. He himself, though he loved mankind, and did no ill, was "despised and rejected of men, a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief." Lest, therefore, the peaceable in heart should be surprised when they meet with enemies, it is added in the following verse, "Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." Thus, the peacemakers are not only pronounced to be blessed, but they are compassed about with blessings. Lord, give us grace to climb to this seventh beatitude! Purify our minds that we may be "first pure, then peaceable," and fortify our souls, that our peaceableness may not lead us into cowardice and despair, when for thy sake we are persecuted.
===
Lamech
[Lā'mech] - overthrower, a strong young man or who is stuck.
A son of Methusael of the race of Cain, who had two wives, Adah and Zillah. It is not difficult to trace in the moral character of Lamech a close resemblance to Cain. We can detect the same haughty spirit, the same self-confidence, the same disregard of human life, the same absence of reverence for God. His address to his wives is that of one who glories in his self-strength and vigor (Gen. 4:18-24).
A son of Methuselah, and father of Noah. This antediluvian was of the race of Seth (Gen. 5:26-31) and an ancestor of Christ (Luke 3:36).
===
Today's reading: Deuteronomy 30-31, Mark 15:1-25 (NIV)
View today's reading on Bible GatewayToday's Old Testament reading: Deuteronomy 30-31
Prosperity After Turning to the LORD
1 When all these blessings and curses I have set before you come on you and you take them to heart wherever the LORD your God disperses you among the nations, 2 and when you and your children return to the LORD your God and obey him with all your heart and with all your soul according to everything I command you today, 3 then the LORD your God will restore your fortunes and have compassion on you and gather you again from all the nations where he scattered you. 4 Even if you have been banished to the most distant land under the heavens, from there the LORD your God will gather you and bring you back....Today's New Testament reading: Mark 15:1-25
Jesus Before Pilate
1 Very early in the morning, the chief priests, with the elders, the teachers of the law and the whole Sanhedrin, made their plans. So they bound Jesus, led him away and handed him over to Pilate.
2 "Are you the king of the Jews?" asked Pilate.
"You have said so," Jesus replied.
3 The chief priests accused him of many things. 4 So again Pilate asked him, "Aren't you going to answer? See how many things they are accusing you of."
5 But Jesus still made no reply, and Pilate was amazed....
===
Today's Lent reading: Matthew 19-20 (NIV)
View today's Lent reading on Bible GatewayDivorce
1 When Jesus had finished saying these things, he left Galilee and went into the region of Judea to the other side of the Jordan. 2 Large crowds followed him, and he healed them there.
3 Some Pharisees came to him to test him. They asked, "Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife for any and every reason?"
4 "Haven't you read," he replied, "that at the beginning the Creator 'made them male and female,' 5 and said, 'For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh'? 6So they are no longer two, but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate...."
===
No comments:
Post a Comment