Quora answers on fake history and on hated historical figures. My choices can be debated, but the facts are still the facts.
TEDx Speaker says pedophilia is natural. There may be an argument for it in terms of sub-culture, along with cannibalism and extreme xenophobia. To argue it is part of a functioning modern society is worse than decadent. Cannibals should be jailed as should pedophiles if they practice their perversions.
Port Augusta endures toxic dust storm probably partly as a result of AGW policy of previous ALP South Australian government. They used to generate electric power there in a coal fired power plant, but ALP blew it up.
Opposition to medical files being made available to doctors. Civil Libertarians point out the files can be misused. At the moment, the information is often not available to people who need to know. Former ALP Attorney General Roxon promises to make an opt in information server, because Liberals are implementing an opt out system. It has taken two years and my doctor has not got my information. I could die because the information is not available. Roxon does not have a problem with that?
Before Bourdain suicided, he criticised the Clintons. Knife attack on off duty paramedic in Melbourne as Premier disputes that there is a gang problem. Defining gangs is not the problem. The challenge is effective policing. Guardian reports on death of man in custody, but fails to mention why he was incarcerated. The guy was filmed being surrounded after they had been difficult in their cell. Probably would have not had a problem had they behaved. There is no evidence any of the officers went to work looking to kill an idiot.
Barnaby Joyce calls out for drought relief for affected farmers while ALP and Malcolm Turnbull do not rate the issue high. With the upcoming by elections in two weeks, Malcolm and Shorten might say something before burying the issue. Joyce is an effective member and leader.
Priest advocates killing people who want to start a new life? James Martin is highly valued by Pope Francis. Maybe he will apologise now he understands the issues he has raised? If not, it is doubtful he serves God.
A daily column on what the ALP have as a policy, supported by a local member, and how it has 'helped' the local community. I'll stop if I cannot identify a policy. Feel free to make suggestions. Contact me on FB, not twitter. I have twitter, but never look at it.
Gabrielle Williams was appointed Parliamentary Secretary for Carers and Volunteers, working with the Minister for Housing, Disability and Ageing and the Minister for Families and Children. I took time visiting a few business in Dandenong today. I noticed at Springvale station yesterday that Neighbourhood Watch was being promoted by local council. Neighbourhood Watch is an excellent program, and part of the problem for police is that the program has not been prominent while crime in Dandenong is rampant. But even so, police do not have powers to effectively police. Williams is opposing effective policing. While visiting business, one manage of a large supermarket flagged crime as a serious local issue. People do not feel safe in Dandenong, even though they may be located close to a police station and court. One small business pointed out lighting was poor in Dandenong Plaza after hours, making stuff nervous going home late.
As part of the November 24th Vic election campaign I have a petition I want to bring before the Opposition Leader Matthew Guy. I believe Matthew will be the next premier of Victoria and so I am petitioning him as I raise the issues of Employment, Crime and Education in Dandenong. I am also seeking money for my campaign. I don't have party resources, and so my campaign is on foot, and on the internet. Any money I receive that is not spent on the campaign will go to Grow 4 Life. I am asking questions like "What do you love about Dandenong?" and "If you could change something in Dandenong to make it better, what would it be?" I'm not limiting the questions to state issues. I'm happy to discuss anything, and get things done.
I am a decent man and don't care for the abuse given me. I created a video raising awareness of anti police feeling among western communities. I chose the senseless killing of Nicola Cotton, a Louisiana policewoman who joined post Katrina, to highlight the issue. I did this in order to get an income after having been illegally blacklisted from work in NSW for being a whistleblower. I have not done anything wrong. Local council appointees refused to endorse my work, so I did it for free. Youtube's Adsence refused to allow me to profit from their marketing it. Meanwhile, I am hostage to abysmal political leadership and hopeless journalists. My shopfront has opened on Facebook.
Here is a video I made School Musical Parent
Parent who has ambition for his two kids. His wife is less than supportive. Not getting the service he wishes from Mr Conductor
=== from 2017 ===
Some things should not happen, but they do. Bright ideas by the desperate get put forward with little thought. Consider co-opting all Australian youth into armed service. Or corporal punishment at school. Bad ideas need to be debated so people can see why they are bad. Youth military service works in Israel because Israel is fighting for her life. It is nation building. But that does not mean that it would be nation building for Australia. Australia could use effective work for the dole schemes, and I'd be happy to participate too. Volunteering is not recognised or well rewarded by the Australian authorities. I am an accomplished and capable high school math teacher, with full and current credentials. But I cannot even work as a volunteer in a school. The army in Australia is a paid volunteer force and recognised as capable and potent around the world. To mix in conscripts would devalue the force Australia has.
Another awful idea is corporal punishment for school students. Corporal punishment is not the answer to problems experienced in dysfunctional or functional schools. In functional schools it is not needed. In dysfunctional schools it does not help. It does not improve academic standards. It is anecdotally said to be motivational for some. Dysfunctional schools do not become good by throwing money at them. Most Australian schools that are dysfunctional tend to fall inside safe ALP electorates. That suggests there are cultural issues at play. There is a numeracy plan that could help all dysfunctional schools, and it doesn't involve corporal punishment or more funding.
In 622, the beginning of the Islamic calendar. 1054, three Roman legates broke relations between Western and Eastern Christian Churches through the act of placing an invalidly-issued Papal bull of Excommunication on the altar of Hagia Sophia during Saturday afternoon divine liturgy. Historians frequently describe the event as the start of the East–West Schism. 1212, Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa: After Pope Innocent III called European knights to a crusade, forces of Kings Alfonso VIII of Castile, Sancho VII of Navarre, Peter II of Aragon and Afonso II of Portugal defeated those of the Berber Muslim leader Almohad, thus marking a significant turning point in the Reconquista and in the medieval history of Spain. 1377, Coronation of Richard II of England.
In 1661, the first banknotes in Europe were issued by the Swedish bank Stockholms Banco. 1683, Manchu Qing dynasty naval forces under traitorous commander Shi Lang defeated the Kingdom of Tungning in the Battle of Penghu near the Pescadores Islands. 1769, father Junípero Serra founded California's first mission, Mission San Diego de Alcalá. Over the following decades, it evolved into the city of San Diego, California. 1779, American Revolutionary War: Light infantry of the Continental Army seized a fortified British Army position in a midnight bayonet attack at the Battle of Stony Point. 1782, first performance of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's opera Die Entführung aus dem Serail. 1790, the District of Columbia was established as the capital of the United States after signature of the Residence Act.
In 1809, the city of La Paz, in what is today Bolivia, declared its independence from the Spanish Crown during the La Paz revolution and formed the Junta Tuitiva, the first independent government in Spanish America, led by Pedro Domingo Murillo. 1849, Antonio María Claret y Clará founded the Congregation of the Missionary Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, popularly known as the Claretians in Vic, in the province of Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. 1861, American Civil War: At the order of President Abraham Lincoln, Union troops began a 25-mile march into Virginia for what would become the First Battle of Bull Run, the first major land battle of the war. 1862, American Civil War: David Farragut was promoted to rear admiral, becoming the first officer in United States Navy to hold an admiral rank.
In 1909, Persian Constitutional Revolution: Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar was forced out as Shah of Persia and was replaced by his son Ahmad Shah Qajar. 1910, John Robertson Duigan made the first flight of the Duigan pusher biplane, the first aircraft built in Australia. 1915, Henry James became a British citizen, to highlight his commitment to Britain during the first World War. Also 1915, first Order of the Arrow ceremony took place and the Order of the Arrow was founded. 1927, Augusto César Sandino led a raid on U.S. Marines and Nicaraguan Guardia Nacional that had been sent to apprehend him in the village of Ocotal, but was repulsed by one of the first dive-bombing attacks in history. 1931, Emperor Haile Selassie signed the first constitution of Ethiopia. 1935, the world's first parking meter was installed in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
In 1941, Joe DiMaggio hit safely for the 56th consecutive game, a streak that still stands as a MLB record. 1942, Holocaust: Vel' d'Hiv Roundup (Rafle du Vel' d'Hiv): The government of Vichy France ordered the mass arrest of 13,152 Jews who were held at the Winter Velodrome in Paris before deportation to Auschwitz. 1945, World War II: The heavy cruiser USS Indianapolis left San Francisco with parts for the atomic bomb "Little Boy" bound for Tinian Island. Also 1945, Manhattan Project: The Atomic Age began when the United States successfully detonated a plutonium-based test nuclear weapon near Alamogordo, New Mexico. 1948, Following token resistance, the city of Nazareth, revered by Christians as the hometown of Jesus, capitulated to Israeli troops during Operation Dekel in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. Also 1948, the storming of the cockpit of the Miss Macao passenger seaplane, operated by a subsidiary of the Cathay PacificAirways, marked the first aircraft hijacking of a commercial plane. 1950, Chaplain–Medic massacre: American POWs were massacred by North Korean Army. 1951, King Leopold III of Belgium abdicated in favour of his son, Baudouin I of Belgium. Also 1951, The Catcher in the Rye by J. D. Salinger was published for the first time by Little, Brown and Company. 1956, Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus closed its very last "Big Tent" show in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, due to changing economics all subsequent circus shows would be held in arenas.
In 1960, USS George Washington a modified Skipjack-class submarine successfully test fired the first ballistic missile while submerged. 1965, the Mont Blanc Tunnel linking France and Italy opened. Also 1965, South Vietnamese Colonel Phạm Ngọc Thảo, a formerly undetected communist spy and double agent, was hunted down and killed by unknown individuals after being sentenced to death in absentia for a February 1965 coup attempt against Nguyễn Khánh. 1969, Apollo program: Apollo 11, the first mission to land astronauts on the Moon, was launched from the Kennedy Space Centre at Cape Kennedy, Florida. 1973, Watergate scandal: Former White House aide Alexander Butterfield informed the United States Senate that President Richard Nixon had secretly recorded potentially incriminating conversations. 1979, Iraqi President Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr resigned and was replaced by Saddam Hussein. 1981, Mahathir Mohamad became Malaysia's 4th Prime Minister. 1983, Sikorsky S-61 disaster: A helicopter crashed off the Isles of Scilly, causing 20 fatalities.
In 1990, the Luzon Earthquake struck in Benguet, Pangasinan, Nueva Ecija, La Union, Aurora, Bataan, Zambales and Tarlac, Philippines, with an intensity of 7.7. Also 1990, the Parliament of the Ukrainian SSR declared state sovereignty over the territory of the Ukrainian SSR. 1994, Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 collided with Jupiter. Impacts continued until July 22. 1999, John F. Kennedy Jr., piloted a Piper Saratoga aircraft, died when his plane crashed into the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Martha's Vineyard. His wife Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy and sister-in-law Lauren Bessette were also killed. 2004, Millennium Park, considered Chicago's first and most ambitious early 21st-century architectural project, was opened to the public by Mayor Richard M. Daley. 2008, Sixteen infants in Gansu Province, China, who had been fed on tainted milk powder, were diagnosed with kidney stones; in total an estimated 300,000 infants were affected. 2013, as many as 27 children die and 25 others were hospitalised after eating lunch served at their school in eastern India.
In 1910, a Victorian farmer, John Duigan, flew a biplane he had built himself. Inspired by a postcard of the Wright brothers, and using a locally made engine he heavily modified, he placed the wings on top of a tricycle undercarriage. He sat in the middle of the lower wing. On this day in 1910, he flew 7 metres. A year later he had achieved a km length with a height of 30m. That was before todays labor laws killed the Australian manufacturing industry. In 1927, a US armed force cooperating with Nicaraguans to apprehend a criminal were pinned down by the criminal's confederates, but broke free when the USAF dive bombed the enemy position, the first time that dive bombing had ever been employed.
In 1941, Joe Dimaggio hit for the 56th consecutive game, a record that still stands. In 1942, the French puppet government of the Nazis ordered over 13 thousand Jews rounded up and sent to Auschwitz. In 1945, the USS Indianapolis, a heavy cruiser, took Little Boy elements to be assembled to bomb Japan. At the same time, the Manhattan project successfully detonated plutonium in New Mexico. In 1948, Israel liberated Nazareth. On the same day the plane Miss Macao experienced the first hijacking over China, killing all on board except the hijacker, who got a free pass because of international law issues. In 1950, North Korean troops slaughtered some prisoners of war. 1951, The Catcher in the Rye was published for the first time. 1969, Apollo 11 was launched. 1999, JFK jr killed himself, his sister and his wife with a pilot error. Born on this day was Shoeless Joe Jackson 1887, Stan McCabe 1910 and Jerry Doyle 1956. I still remember this day for the death of Harry Chapin.
Australia is the lucky country, and one reason for it is the migration of Vietnamese refugees, an estimated fifty percent having drowned fleeing to Australia. The Pacific Solution is good, because were it to have been implemented then, fewer would have drowned, but all those who fled would have been processed as refugees. Not slaughtered on the beaches of Malaysia, harassed by pirates and fleeced by the corrupt. And not returned to be killed in Vietnam. Meanwhile, the new senate is forcing the federal Australian government to rethink the budget. If you want a responsible government, you can only vote LNP.
Another awful idea is corporal punishment for school students. Corporal punishment is not the answer to problems experienced in dysfunctional or functional schools. In functional schools it is not needed. In dysfunctional schools it does not help. It does not improve academic standards. It is anecdotally said to be motivational for some. Dysfunctional schools do not become good by throwing money at them. Most Australian schools that are dysfunctional tend to fall inside safe ALP electorates. That suggests there are cultural issues at play. There is a numeracy plan that could help all dysfunctional schools, and it doesn't involve corporal punishment or more funding.
In 622, the beginning of the Islamic calendar. 1054, three Roman legates broke relations between Western and Eastern Christian Churches through the act of placing an invalidly-issued Papal bull of Excommunication on the altar of Hagia Sophia during Saturday afternoon divine liturgy. Historians frequently describe the event as the start of the East–West Schism. 1212, Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa: After Pope Innocent III called European knights to a crusade, forces of Kings Alfonso VIII of Castile, Sancho VII of Navarre, Peter II of Aragon and Afonso II of Portugal defeated those of the Berber Muslim leader Almohad, thus marking a significant turning point in the Reconquista and in the medieval history of Spain. 1377, Coronation of Richard II of England.
In 1661, the first banknotes in Europe were issued by the Swedish bank Stockholms Banco. 1683, Manchu Qing dynasty naval forces under traitorous commander Shi Lang defeated the Kingdom of Tungning in the Battle of Penghu near the Pescadores Islands. 1769, father Junípero Serra founded California's first mission, Mission San Diego de Alcalá. Over the following decades, it evolved into the city of San Diego, California. 1779, American Revolutionary War: Light infantry of the Continental Army seized a fortified British Army position in a midnight bayonet attack at the Battle of Stony Point. 1782, first performance of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's opera Die Entführung aus dem Serail. 1790, the District of Columbia was established as the capital of the United States after signature of the Residence Act.
In 1809, the city of La Paz, in what is today Bolivia, declared its independence from the Spanish Crown during the La Paz revolution and formed the Junta Tuitiva, the first independent government in Spanish America, led by Pedro Domingo Murillo. 1849, Antonio María Claret y Clará founded the Congregation of the Missionary Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, popularly known as the Claretians in Vic, in the province of Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. 1861, American Civil War: At the order of President Abraham Lincoln, Union troops began a 25-mile march into Virginia for what would become the First Battle of Bull Run, the first major land battle of the war. 1862, American Civil War: David Farragut was promoted to rear admiral, becoming the first officer in United States Navy to hold an admiral rank.
In 1909, Persian Constitutional Revolution: Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar was forced out as Shah of Persia and was replaced by his son Ahmad Shah Qajar. 1910, John Robertson Duigan made the first flight of the Duigan pusher biplane, the first aircraft built in Australia. 1915, Henry James became a British citizen, to highlight his commitment to Britain during the first World War. Also 1915, first Order of the Arrow ceremony took place and the Order of the Arrow was founded. 1927, Augusto César Sandino led a raid on U.S. Marines and Nicaraguan Guardia Nacional that had been sent to apprehend him in the village of Ocotal, but was repulsed by one of the first dive-bombing attacks in history. 1931, Emperor Haile Selassie signed the first constitution of Ethiopia. 1935, the world's first parking meter was installed in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
In 1941, Joe DiMaggio hit safely for the 56th consecutive game, a streak that still stands as a MLB record. 1942, Holocaust: Vel' d'Hiv Roundup (Rafle du Vel' d'Hiv): The government of Vichy France ordered the mass arrest of 13,152 Jews who were held at the Winter Velodrome in Paris before deportation to Auschwitz. 1945, World War II: The heavy cruiser USS Indianapolis left San Francisco with parts for the atomic bomb "Little Boy" bound for Tinian Island. Also 1945, Manhattan Project: The Atomic Age began when the United States successfully detonated a plutonium-based test nuclear weapon near Alamogordo, New Mexico. 1948, Following token resistance, the city of Nazareth, revered by Christians as the hometown of Jesus, capitulated to Israeli troops during Operation Dekel in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. Also 1948, the storming of the cockpit of the Miss Macao passenger seaplane, operated by a subsidiary of the Cathay PacificAirways, marked the first aircraft hijacking of a commercial plane. 1950, Chaplain–Medic massacre: American POWs were massacred by North Korean Army. 1951, King Leopold III of Belgium abdicated in favour of his son, Baudouin I of Belgium. Also 1951, The Catcher in the Rye by J. D. Salinger was published for the first time by Little, Brown and Company. 1956, Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus closed its very last "Big Tent" show in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, due to changing economics all subsequent circus shows would be held in arenas.
In 1960, USS George Washington a modified Skipjack-class submarine successfully test fired the first ballistic missile while submerged. 1965, the Mont Blanc Tunnel linking France and Italy opened. Also 1965, South Vietnamese Colonel Phạm Ngọc Thảo, a formerly undetected communist spy and double agent, was hunted down and killed by unknown individuals after being sentenced to death in absentia for a February 1965 coup attempt against Nguyễn Khánh. 1969, Apollo program: Apollo 11, the first mission to land astronauts on the Moon, was launched from the Kennedy Space Centre at Cape Kennedy, Florida. 1973, Watergate scandal: Former White House aide Alexander Butterfield informed the United States Senate that President Richard Nixon had secretly recorded potentially incriminating conversations. 1979, Iraqi President Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr resigned and was replaced by Saddam Hussein. 1981, Mahathir Mohamad became Malaysia's 4th Prime Minister. 1983, Sikorsky S-61 disaster: A helicopter crashed off the Isles of Scilly, causing 20 fatalities.
In 1990, the Luzon Earthquake struck in Benguet, Pangasinan, Nueva Ecija, La Union, Aurora, Bataan, Zambales and Tarlac, Philippines, with an intensity of 7.7. Also 1990, the Parliament of the Ukrainian SSR declared state sovereignty over the territory of the Ukrainian SSR. 1994, Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 collided with Jupiter. Impacts continued until July 22. 1999, John F. Kennedy Jr., piloted a Piper Saratoga aircraft, died when his plane crashed into the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Martha's Vineyard. His wife Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy and sister-in-law Lauren Bessette were also killed. 2004, Millennium Park, considered Chicago's first and most ambitious early 21st-century architectural project, was opened to the public by Mayor Richard M. Daley. 2008, Sixteen infants in Gansu Province, China, who had been fed on tainted milk powder, were diagnosed with kidney stones; in total an estimated 300,000 infants were affected. 2013, as many as 27 children die and 25 others were hospitalised after eating lunch served at their school in eastern India.
=== from 2016 ===
It would be difficult to overstate how bad the government of Turkey is. Turkey is corrupt and prone to supporting terrorism. They are behind three attempted genocides and face continuous attack from Kurds as a result. Not that all Kurds are behind terrorism in Turkey. Turkey has embraced a more hardline Islam, less secular administration in recent years. So a coup attempt by the military, although unwelcome, is not a terrible thing. The nation was built on the action of some young Turks. Only it looks like the hardline Islamic Erdogan has survived. It looks like Erdogan had foreign support, and so a jet fighter decisively took out a Sikorsky chopper which had senior coup administrators. The Erdogan administration is too close to Obama, and hostile to Israel. All we are saying, is give peace a chance.
For some, at the moment, the Sex Party has more credibility.
For some, at the moment, the Sex Party has more credibility.
=== from 2015 ===
Canada not lifting sanctions against Iran despite the Obama deal gifting Iran nuclear weapons. The 'deal' allows the lifting of sanctions and the sanctioning of the production of a big nuclear power facility whose only purpose is to produce weapons grade material. It can produce power, but not as efficiently as a power production model that is much smaller and safer.
North Korea copies Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore's example. Only, North Korea has not got much in way of markets. So dedicated roads to bikes have got service points for bikes, but not much else. It is a bit like Clover Moore's vision of Sydney.
Shorten will introduce Carbon Pricing, but not a carbon tax, if elected. Meanwhile, Australia is a democracy and voters should be allowed to vote for Isaac Newton to reverse gravity. Zombies run the ALP. Bronwyn Bishop repays a $5k helicopter trip she had been advised she could legitimately claim. No one has said that the claim was not in the rules. The reason for the breaking of the story is interesting. Editors of a news media group refused to accept the leaked story of ALP continuing with a carbon tax without another story to balance it.
BBC is getting pruned. Programs like Sherlock may be sold off. Programming might be focused on public service programs. Now for the ABC. But the ABC is protected by those who support drowning helpless people, who support jihad and who aren't reasonable in negotiation.
Queensland ALP have irresponsibly misrepresented their status in budget.
Greece, Hissy fits, debt, Gemany. Hysterical marchers oppose austerity in Athens. Greece still has the option of dropping from the Euro, but if they want money, they have to stick with it. And austerity will restore pride and prosperity for Greeks. Thankfully, the German Chancellor has acted responsibly. Meanwhile, from Hollywood, the TV show Madame Secretary with Tea Leoni has a storyline where the US has brokered an agreement where Greece doesn't have to pay back their loans. Only in dreams can Greece be irresponsible and prosper.
New research show windmills excite and damage brains. Still they are the highest priority for the insane global warming believers.
North Korea copies Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore's example. Only, North Korea has not got much in way of markets. So dedicated roads to bikes have got service points for bikes, but not much else. It is a bit like Clover Moore's vision of Sydney.
Shorten will introduce Carbon Pricing, but not a carbon tax, if elected. Meanwhile, Australia is a democracy and voters should be allowed to vote for Isaac Newton to reverse gravity. Zombies run the ALP. Bronwyn Bishop repays a $5k helicopter trip she had been advised she could legitimately claim. No one has said that the claim was not in the rules. The reason for the breaking of the story is interesting. Editors of a news media group refused to accept the leaked story of ALP continuing with a carbon tax without another story to balance it.
BBC is getting pruned. Programs like Sherlock may be sold off. Programming might be focused on public service programs. Now for the ABC. But the ABC is protected by those who support drowning helpless people, who support jihad and who aren't reasonable in negotiation.
Queensland ALP have irresponsibly misrepresented their status in budget.
Greece, Hissy fits, debt, Gemany. Hysterical marchers oppose austerity in Athens. Greece still has the option of dropping from the Euro, but if they want money, they have to stick with it. And austerity will restore pride and prosperity for Greeks. Thankfully, the German Chancellor has acted responsibly. Meanwhile, from Hollywood, the TV show Madame Secretary with Tea Leoni has a storyline where the US has brokered an agreement where Greece doesn't have to pay back their loans. Only in dreams can Greece be irresponsible and prosper.
New research show windmills excite and damage brains. Still they are the highest priority for the insane global warming believers.
From 2014
On this day in 1782 Mozart produced Die Entführung aus dem Serail. It was a triumph. Mozart had left his dad and gone to Vienna and was desperate for work. Hampered by his personal behaviour, his talent was abundant and this was a shining success from a commission to produce German Opera for the court. Italian Opera was already popular. He was twenty five years old and had been producing music for twenty years. Nine years later, Mozart would be dead, and acknowledged as one of the greatest composers of all time. And yet, at the time of his death, his requiem was unfinished. Survived by his wife and two children, neither of his sons married or had children.
In 1910, a Victorian farmer, John Duigan, flew a biplane he had built himself. Inspired by a postcard of the Wright brothers, and using a locally made engine he heavily modified, he placed the wings on top of a tricycle undercarriage. He sat in the middle of the lower wing. On this day in 1910, he flew 7 metres. A year later he had achieved a km length with a height of 30m. That was before todays labor laws killed the Australian manufacturing industry. In 1927, a US armed force cooperating with Nicaraguans to apprehend a criminal were pinned down by the criminal's confederates, but broke free when the USAF dive bombed the enemy position, the first time that dive bombing had ever been employed.
In 1941, Joe Dimaggio hit for the 56th consecutive game, a record that still stands. In 1942, the French puppet government of the Nazis ordered over 13 thousand Jews rounded up and sent to Auschwitz. In 1945, the USS Indianapolis, a heavy cruiser, took Little Boy elements to be assembled to bomb Japan. At the same time, the Manhattan project successfully detonated plutonium in New Mexico. In 1948, Israel liberated Nazareth. On the same day the plane Miss Macao experienced the first hijacking over China, killing all on board except the hijacker, who got a free pass because of international law issues. In 1950, North Korean troops slaughtered some prisoners of war. 1951, The Catcher in the Rye was published for the first time. 1969, Apollo 11 was launched. 1999, JFK jr killed himself, his sister and his wife with a pilot error. Born on this day was Shoeless Joe Jackson 1887, Stan McCabe 1910 and Jerry Doyle 1956. I still remember this day for the death of Harry Chapin.
Australia is the lucky country, and one reason for it is the migration of Vietnamese refugees, an estimated fifty percent having drowned fleeing to Australia. The Pacific Solution is good, because were it to have been implemented then, fewer would have drowned, but all those who fled would have been processed as refugees. Not slaughtered on the beaches of Malaysia, harassed by pirates and fleeced by the corrupt. And not returned to be killed in Vietnam. Meanwhile, the new senate is forcing the federal Australian government to rethink the budget. If you want a responsible government, you can only vote LNP.
Historical perspective on this day
In 622, the beginning of the Islamic calendar. 1054, three Roman legates broke relations between Western and Eastern Christian Churches through the act of placing an invalidly-issued Papal bull of Excommunication on the altar of Hagia Sophia during Saturday afternoon divine liturgy. Historians frequently describe the event as the start of the East–West Schism. 1212, Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa: After Pope Innocent III called European knights to a crusade, forces of Kings Alfonso VIII of Castile, Sancho VII of Navarre, Peter II of Aragon and Afonso II of Portugal defeated those of the Berber Muslim leader Almohad, thus marking a significant turning point in the Reconquista and in the medieval history of Spain. 1377, Coronation of Richard II of England.
In 1661, the first banknotes in Europe were issued by the Swedish bank Stockholms Banco. 1683, Manchu Qing dynasty naval forces under traitorous commander Shi Lang defeated the Kingdom of Tungning in the Battle of Penghu near the Pescadores Islands. 1769, father Junípero Serra founded California's first mission, Mission San Diego de Alcalá. Over the following decades, it evolved into the city of San Diego, California. 1779, American Revolutionary War: Light infantry of the Continental Army seized a fortified British Armyposition in a midnight bayonet attack at the Battle of Stony Point. 1782, first performance of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's opera Die Entführung aus dem Serail. 1790, the District of Columbia was established as the capital of the United States after signature of the Residence Act.
In 1809, the city of La Paz, in what is today Bolivia, declared its independence from the Spanish Crown during the La Paz revolution and formed the Junta Tuitiva, the first independent government in Spanish America, led by Pedro Domingo Murillo. 1849, Antonio María Claret y Clará founded the Congregation of the Missionary Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, popularly known as the Claretians in Vic, in the province of Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. 1861, American Civil War: At the order of President Abraham Lincoln, Union troops began a 25-mile march into Virginia for what would become the First Battle of Bull Run, the first major land battle of the war. 1862, American Civil War: David Farragut was promoted to rear admiral, becoming the first officer in United States Navy to hold an admiral rank.
In 1909, Persian Constitutional Revolution: Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar was forced out as Shah of Persia and was replaced by his son Ahmad Shah Qajar. 1910, John Robertson Duiganmade the first flight of the Duigan pusher biplane, the first aircraft built in Australia. 1915, Henry James became a British citizen, to highlight his commitment to Britain during the first World War. Also 1915, first Order of the Arrow ceremony took place and the Order of the Arrow was founded. 1927, Augusto César Sandino led a raid on U.S. Marines and Nicaraguan Guardia Nacional that had been sent to apprehend him in the village of Ocotal, but was repulsed by one of the first dive-bombing attacks in history. 1931, Emperor Haile Selassiesigned the first constitution of Ethiopia. 1935, the world's first parking meter was installed in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
In 1941, Joe DiMaggio hit safely for the 56th consecutive game, a streak that still stands as a MLB record. 1942, Holocaust: Vel' d'Hiv Roundup (Rafle du Vel' d'Hiv): The government of Vichy France ordered the mass arrest of 13,152 Jews who were held at the Winter Velodromein Paris before deportation to Auschwitz. 1945, World War II: The heavy cruiser USS Indianapolis left San Francisco with parts for the atomic bomb "Little Boy" bound for Tinian Island. Also 1945, Manhattan Project: The Atomic Age began when the United States successfully detonated a plutonium-based test nuclear weapon near Alamogordo, New Mexico. 1948, Following token resistance, the city of Nazareth, revered by Christians as the hometown of Jesus, capitulated to Israeli troops during Operation Dekel in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. Also 1948, the storming of the cockpit of the Miss Macao passenger seaplane, operated by a subsidiary of the Cathay PacificAirways, marked the first aircraft hijacking of a commercial plane. 1950, Chaplain–Medic massacre: American POWs were massacred by North Korean Army. 1951, King Leopold III of Belgium abdicated in favour of his son, Baudouin I of Belgium. Also 1951, The Catcher in the Rye by J. D. Salinger was published for the first time by Little, Brown and Company. 1956, Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circusclosed its very last "Big Tent" show in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, due to changing economics all subsequent circus shows would be held in arenas.
In 1960, USS George Washington a modified Skipjack-class submarine successfully test fired the first ballistic missile while submerged. 1965, the Mont Blanc Tunnel linking France and Italy opened. Also 1965, South Vietnamese Colonel Phạm Ngọc Thảo, a formerly undetected communist spy and double agent, was hunted down and killed by unknown individuals after being sentenced to death in absentia for a February 1965 coup attempt against Nguyễn Khánh. 1969, Apollo program: Apollo 11, the first mission to land astronauts on the Moon, was launched from the Kennedy Space Centre at Cape Kennedy, Florida. 1973, Watergate scandal: Former White House aide Alexander Butterfield informed the United States Senatethat President Richard Nixon had secretly recorded potentially incriminating conversations. 1979, Iraqi President Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr resigned and was replaced by Saddam Hussein. 1981, Mahathir Mohamad became Malaysia's 4th Prime Minister. 1983, Sikorsky S-61 disaster: A helicopter crashed off the Isles of Scilly, causing 20 fatalities.
In 1990, the Luzon Earthquake struck in Benguet, Pangasinan, Nueva Ecija, La Union, Aurora, Bataan, Zambales and Tarlac, Philippines, with an intensity of 7.7. Also 1990, the Parliament of the Ukrainian SSR declared state sovereignty over the territory of the Ukrainian SSR. 1994, Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 collided with Jupiter. Impacts continued until July 22. 1999, John F. Kennedy Jr., piloted a Piper Saratoga aircraft, died when his plane crashed into the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Martha's Vineyard. His wife Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy and sister-in-law Lauren Bessette were also killed. 2004, Millennium Park, considered Chicago's first and most ambitious early 21st-century architectural project, was opened to the public by Mayor Richard M. Daley. 2008, Sixteen infants in Gansu Province, China, who had been fed on tainted milk powder, were diagnosed with kidney stones; in total an estimated 300,000 infants were affected. 2013, as many as 27 children die and 25 others were hospitalised after eating lunch served at their school in eastern India.
In 1661, the first banknotes in Europe were issued by the Swedish bank Stockholms Banco. 1683, Manchu Qing dynasty naval forces under traitorous commander Shi Lang defeated the Kingdom of Tungning in the Battle of Penghu near the Pescadores Islands. 1769, father Junípero Serra founded California's first mission, Mission San Diego de Alcalá. Over the following decades, it evolved into the city of San Diego, California. 1779, American Revolutionary War: Light infantry of the Continental Army seized a fortified British Armyposition in a midnight bayonet attack at the Battle of Stony Point. 1782, first performance of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's opera Die Entführung aus dem Serail. 1790, the District of Columbia was established as the capital of the United States after signature of the Residence Act.
In 1809, the city of La Paz, in what is today Bolivia, declared its independence from the Spanish Crown during the La Paz revolution and formed the Junta Tuitiva, the first independent government in Spanish America, led by Pedro Domingo Murillo. 1849, Antonio María Claret y Clará founded the Congregation of the Missionary Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, popularly known as the Claretians in Vic, in the province of Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. 1861, American Civil War: At the order of President Abraham Lincoln, Union troops began a 25-mile march into Virginia for what would become the First Battle of Bull Run, the first major land battle of the war. 1862, American Civil War: David Farragut was promoted to rear admiral, becoming the first officer in United States Navy to hold an admiral rank.
In 1909, Persian Constitutional Revolution: Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar was forced out as Shah of Persia and was replaced by his son Ahmad Shah Qajar. 1910, John Robertson Duiganmade the first flight of the Duigan pusher biplane, the first aircraft built in Australia. 1915, Henry James became a British citizen, to highlight his commitment to Britain during the first World War. Also 1915, first Order of the Arrow ceremony took place and the Order of the Arrow was founded. 1927, Augusto César Sandino led a raid on U.S. Marines and Nicaraguan Guardia Nacional that had been sent to apprehend him in the village of Ocotal, but was repulsed by one of the first dive-bombing attacks in history. 1931, Emperor Haile Selassiesigned the first constitution of Ethiopia. 1935, the world's first parking meter was installed in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
In 1941, Joe DiMaggio hit safely for the 56th consecutive game, a streak that still stands as a MLB record. 1942, Holocaust: Vel' d'Hiv Roundup (Rafle du Vel' d'Hiv): The government of Vichy France ordered the mass arrest of 13,152 Jews who were held at the Winter Velodromein Paris before deportation to Auschwitz. 1945, World War II: The heavy cruiser USS Indianapolis left San Francisco with parts for the atomic bomb "Little Boy" bound for Tinian Island. Also 1945, Manhattan Project: The Atomic Age began when the United States successfully detonated a plutonium-based test nuclear weapon near Alamogordo, New Mexico. 1948, Following token resistance, the city of Nazareth, revered by Christians as the hometown of Jesus, capitulated to Israeli troops during Operation Dekel in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. Also 1948, the storming of the cockpit of the Miss Macao passenger seaplane, operated by a subsidiary of the Cathay PacificAirways, marked the first aircraft hijacking of a commercial plane. 1950, Chaplain–Medic massacre: American POWs were massacred by North Korean Army. 1951, King Leopold III of Belgium abdicated in favour of his son, Baudouin I of Belgium. Also 1951, The Catcher in the Rye by J. D. Salinger was published for the first time by Little, Brown and Company. 1956, Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circusclosed its very last "Big Tent" show in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, due to changing economics all subsequent circus shows would be held in arenas.
In 1960, USS George Washington a modified Skipjack-class submarine successfully test fired the first ballistic missile while submerged. 1965, the Mont Blanc Tunnel linking France and Italy opened. Also 1965, South Vietnamese Colonel Phạm Ngọc Thảo, a formerly undetected communist spy and double agent, was hunted down and killed by unknown individuals after being sentenced to death in absentia for a February 1965 coup attempt against Nguyễn Khánh. 1969, Apollo program: Apollo 11, the first mission to land astronauts on the Moon, was launched from the Kennedy Space Centre at Cape Kennedy, Florida. 1973, Watergate scandal: Former White House aide Alexander Butterfield informed the United States Senatethat President Richard Nixon had secretly recorded potentially incriminating conversations. 1979, Iraqi President Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr resigned and was replaced by Saddam Hussein. 1981, Mahathir Mohamad became Malaysia's 4th Prime Minister. 1983, Sikorsky S-61 disaster: A helicopter crashed off the Isles of Scilly, causing 20 fatalities.
In 1990, the Luzon Earthquake struck in Benguet, Pangasinan, Nueva Ecija, La Union, Aurora, Bataan, Zambales and Tarlac, Philippines, with an intensity of 7.7. Also 1990, the Parliament of the Ukrainian SSR declared state sovereignty over the territory of the Ukrainian SSR. 1994, Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 collided with Jupiter. Impacts continued until July 22. 1999, John F. Kennedy Jr., piloted a Piper Saratoga aircraft, died when his plane crashed into the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Martha's Vineyard. His wife Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy and sister-in-law Lauren Bessette were also killed. 2004, Millennium Park, considered Chicago's first and most ambitious early 21st-century architectural project, was opened to the public by Mayor Richard M. Daley. 2008, Sixteen infants in Gansu Province, China, who had been fed on tainted milk powder, were diagnosed with kidney stones; in total an estimated 300,000 infants were affected. 2013, as many as 27 children die and 25 others were hospitalised after eating lunch served at their school in eastern India.
=== Publishing News ===
This column welcomes feedback and criticism. The column is not made up but based on the days events and articles which are then placed in the feed. So they may not have an apparent cohesion they would have had were they made up.
===
I am publishing a book called Bread of Life: January.
Bread of Life is a daily bible quote with a layman's understanding of the meaning. I give one quote for each day, and also a series of personal stories illustrating key concepts eg Who is God? What is a miracle? Why is there tragedy?
January is the first of the anticipated year-long work of thirteen books. One for each month and the whole year. It costs to publish. It (Kindle version) should retail at about $2US online, but the paperback version would cost more, according to production cost.If you have a heart for giving, I fundraise at gofund.me/27tkwuc
Bread of Life is a daily bible quote with a layman's understanding of the meaning. I give one quote for each day, and also a series of personal stories illustrating key concepts eg Who is God? What is a miracle? Why is there tragedy?
January is the first of the anticipated year-long work of thirteen books. One for each month and the whole year. It costs to publish. It (Kindle version) should retail at about $2US online, but the paperback version would cost more, according to production cost.If you have a heart for giving, I fundraise at gofund.me/27tkwuc
===
Editorials will appear in the "History in a Year by the Conservative Voice" series, starting with August, September, October, or at Amazon http://www.amazon.com/dp/1482020262/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_dp_dVHPub0MQKDZ4 The kindle version is cheaper, but the soft back version allows a free kindle version.
List of available items at Create Space
The Amazon Author Page for David Ball
UK .. http://www.amazon.co.uk/-/e/B01683ZOWGFrench .. http://www.amazon.fr/-/e/B01683ZOWG
Japan .. http://www.amazon.co.jp/-/e/B01683ZOWG
German .. http://www.amazon.de/-/e/B01683ZOWG
Happy birthday and many happy returns Sarah Wong, Jenny Levernier, Frank Acocella and Jacky Chung. Born on the same day, across the years. On your day in 1769, Spanish friar Junípero Serra founded Mission San Diego de Alcalá, the first Franciscan mission in the Alta California region of New Spain. 1790, U.S. President George Washington signed the Residence Act, selecting a new permanent site along the Potomac River for the capital of the United States, which later became Washington, D.C. 1931, Emperor of Ethiopia Haile Selassie signed the nation's first constitution, the first time in history that an absolute ruler voluntarily sought to share sovereignty with his subjects. 1965, South Vietnamese Colonel Pham Ngoc Thao—an undetected communist spy—was hunted down and killed after being sentenced to death in absentia for a February 1965 coup attempt against Nguyen Khanh. 2008, Sixteen infants in Gansu Province, China, were diagnosed with kidney stones due to tainted milk powder; overall 300,000 infants were affected.Great things were founded on your birthday. You have chosen the site for the celebration, and as absolute despotic rulers, you have wisely delegated the fun .. unique in these times where sharing seems to be something others do. You correct your mistakes and the milk you share is that of kindness. Cheers.
- 1194 – Clare of Assisi, Italian saint (d. 1253)
- 1821 – Mary Baker Eddy, American religious leader and author, founded Christian Science (d. 1910)
- 1841 – Nikolai von Glehn, Baltic German landowner and activist (d. 1923)
- 1858 – Eugène Ysaÿe, Belgian violinist, composer, and conductor (d. 1931)
- 1862 – Ida B. Wells, American journalist and activist (d. 1931)
- 1872 – Roald Amundsen, Norwegian explorer (d. 1928)
- 1887 – Shoeless Joe Jackson, American baseball player and manager (d. 1951)
- 1907 – Orville Redenbacher, American farmer and businessman, founded Orville Redenbacher's (d. 1995)
- 1907 – Barbara Stanwyck, American actress and singer (d. 1990)
- 1910 – Stan McCabe, Australian cricketer (d. 1968)
- 1911 – Ginger Rogers, American actress, singer, and dancer (d. 1995)
- 1925 – Cal Tjader, American vibraphone player and composer (d. 1982)
- 1930 – Guy Béart, Egyptian-French singer-songwriter
- 1932 – John Chilton, English jazz trumpeter
- 1936 – Mary Parkinson, English journalist and television presenter
- 1938 – Tony Jackson, English singer and bass player (The Searchers) (d. 2003)
- 1942 – Margaret Court, Australian tennis player and minister
- 1952 – Stewart Copeland, American drummer (The Police, Animal Logic, Curved Air and Oysterhead)
- 1956 – Jerry Doyle, American radio host and actor
- 1963 – Phoebe Cates, American actress
- 1967 – Will Ferrell, American actor, producer, and screenwriter
- 1968 – Larry Sanger, American philosopher, co-founded Wikipedia and Citizendium
- 1976 – Anna Smashnova, Israeli tennis player
- 1985 – Yōko Hikasa, Japanese voice actress and singer
- 1994 – Mark Indelicato, American actor and singer
Deaths
- 1216 – Pope Innocent III (b. 1160)
- 1557 – Anne of Cleves (b. 1515)
- 1882 – Mary Todd Lincoln, American wife of Abraham Lincoln, 19th First Lady of the United States (b. 1818)
- 1981 – Harry Chapin, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (b. 1942)
July 16: Feast day of Our Lady of Mount Carmel(Roman Catholic Church); beginning of The Nine Days(Judaism, 2015)
- 622 – The epoch of the Islamic calendar occurred, marking the year that Muhammad began his Hijra from Mecca to Medina.
- 1769 – Spanish friar Junípero Serra founded Mission San Diego de Alcalá (pictured), the first Franciscan mission in the Alta California region of New Spain.
- 1950 – Korean War: A Korean People's Army unit massacred twenty-one U.S. Army prisoners of war.
- 1965 – South Vietnamese Colonel Phạm Ngọc Thảo—an undetected communist spy—was hunted down and killed after being sentenced to death in absentia for a February 1965 coup attempt against Nguyễn Khánh.
- 2013 – At least 23 students died and dozens more fell ill at a primary school in the village of Dharmashati Gandaman in the Saran district of the Indian state of Bihar after eating a Midday Meal contaminated with pesticide.
And so it begins. Cities are made. The best doctors don't need guns. We detected it. Stay away from the pesticide. Let's party.
Tim Blair 2018
SJW GETS A REAL JOB, DISCOVERS DECENCY
Barrett Wilson – not his real name – delivers food for a living. It’s honest work, as he points out, and it sure beats his previous pastime.
TOXIC TROY THE BAN MAN CALLS IT A DAY
Former NSW deputy premier Troy Grant last week announced his departure from politics, another remnant of the surprisingly brief Mike Baird era consigned to history.
CLOSING-TIME CONTRETEMPS FEATURES POLITENESS PAUSE
A fight broke out at my local bar the other night.
Andrew Bolt 2018
GORKA SUSSES ABC BIAS AFTER TWO ANTI-TRUMP QUESTIONS
Former Trump adviser Sebastian Gorka goes on the ABC's 7.30 program to be interviewed by Ellen Fanning. After just two questions, he's worked out her anti-Trump bias: "Are you going to keep pulling out weird scenarios from thin air?" After eight, he's had enough: "Why are you so adamant at being critical of the President?" Read Fanning's questions.
FARAGE ON ANTI-TRUMP PROTEST: "HOWL OF OUTRAGE" FROM PAMPERED VIRTUE-SIGNALLERS
Nigel Farage on the London protest against President Donald Trump. From my interview on The Bolt Report.
THOSE TRUMP-HATING HYPOCRITES
The Trump-haters are out of their mind. Donald Trump is embracing dictatorship? He should be protested against in London like a real dictator like China Xi Jinping was not? The hypocrites exposed in my editorial from The Bolt Report, Sky News Australia
WHAT THE ABC 'FORGOT' TO SAY ABOUT ISRAEL'S ATTACK
The Hamas terrorist group fired more than 200 rockets and mortars from Gaza at Israel, injuring three. In retaliation, Israel bombed Hamas militant targets, killing two youths. Guess which half of this exchange was totally omitted by the ABC in its weekend report? Guess which angle its AM report today lavished most attention on?
MUNDINE VS BONGIORNO, AS ABC DUCKS
HOW THE LEFT HATES Warren Mundine won't let slide Paul Borngiorno's racial insult, nor accept the ABC's pathetic handwashing: "'Uncle Tom' is a racial slur... I am one of the people Mr Bongiorno’s tweet was directed at... It is... disgraceful that the ABC would continue to hire a regular commentator that uses this expression without requiring him to apologise."
MUSK IN 'PEDO' SLUR
The only person to come out looking shabby after the miracle rescue in Thailand is Elon Musk: "Elon Musk has launched a bizarre attack on a British cave diver who played a crucial role in the rescue of the Thai soccer team, calling the rescuer a 'pedo' because he lives in Thailand." This will cost him.
HOW THE ABC STITCHED UP TRUMP
The ABC ran only part of this quote from Donald Trump. Guess which, and why?: "The European Union is a foe, what they do to us in trade. Now, you wouldn't think of the European Union, but they're a foe. Russia is a foe in certain respects. China is a foe economically... But that doesn't mean they are bad... It means that they are competitive."
RECORD COLD IN AUSTRALIA
But when it's record cold, the news reports don't mention global warming: "A cold snap has delivered some of the chilliest temperatures in decades to parts of Australia’s east coast... Both Parkes and Cowra in New South Wales have set new all-time coldest minimum temperature records today."
SKY HIGH
Offering an alternative to the ABC's Left-wing news shows has worked for Sky: "Earlier this year the broadcaster doubled down on a programming formula of pugnacious [??], strong opinion programs and breaking news coverage... The move has paid off with a 9 per cent bump in the average audience during the first half of the ratings year."
BAGS OF STRIFE
COLUMN Welcome to the new green world, where you’ve just been given one more shopping task by Coles. It's to wipe down your reusable bag with disinfectant after every shopping trip now the free ones are banned. Check the label, but also check why Woolies tells you the opposite.
WINNER TURNBULL THE LOSER
The headline: "Newspoll: Malcolm Turnbull leaves Bill Shorten in the dust". The reality: the poll shows for the 36th time that Turnbull would have led the Liberals to defeat in an election held now. Shorten's Labor leads 51 per cent 49.
TRUMP HATERS FEAR HIS TRUTHS, NOT LIES
COLUMN Donald Trump’s media haters say the US President is a liar. “He has no time for facts,” raged a Fairfax correspondent on Saturday. But what really gets those haters angry is not when Trump tells the truth. And, boy, have they squealed as he storms through Europe, rejecting the lies of the political class that have so weakened Europe.
FROM ZERO TO $14,000: WHY WIND WON'T WORK
Terry McCrann: "For one glorious moment in time in SA last weekend [power prices] might even have dropped... to actual, absolute zero... [But] by Monday the wind... had dropped to a gentle zephyr... And the price... hit $14,000 a MWh... How can you possibly build a power system on “supply” that can go from 1000MW-plus to less than 100MW ?"
ALL THE BASE DOES NOT BELONG TO HIM
Tim Blair – Saturday, July 16, 2016 (3:57pm)
Delcons can probably claim a measure of credit for this:
Malcolm Turnbull donated $1 million of his own money to bail out the Liberal Party during the federal election campaign, so desperate was the party for finances …Self-funded retirees, in particular, declined to donate or volunteer to the party. One senior Liberal source said: “To say it (super) had no impact is ludicrous. Donations dried up, there was tremendous anger.”
Delcons can definitely take credit for this:
Labor’s success against Coalition MPs in marginal seats was underpinned by a flood of preferences from right-wing candidates who instructed their supporters to punish Malcolm Turnbull…Analysis by The Weekend Australian suggests conservative minor party preferences were crucial in toppling Wyatt Roy in Longman and Fiona Scott in Lindsay, and have dragged Ewen Jones’s battle in the Townsville seat of Herbert to the wire.
And yet more Delcon rage may be expressed on Monday:
Recriminations are building within the Liberal Party over the conduct of the election campaign, the quality of strategic advice, a refusal to share key polling and the failure to run attack ads against Bill Shorten, ahead of Monday’s party meeting in Canberra.There are also internal fears the Liberal Party may avoid a thorough review and post-election survey to dodge blame and responsibility for the disastrous showing on July 2.
It’s an exciting time to be a Delcon.
IT’S A RELATIVE TERM
Tim Blair – Saturday, July 16, 2016 (3:18pm)
“Things are getting better every minute,” declares Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, as Turkey’s latest coup attempt seems headed for an early conclusion. They do this sort of thing much more efficiently in South America:
WHAT HAS THIS WORLD COME TO?
Tim Blair – Saturday, July 16, 2016 (2:20pm)
An Australian Islamic extremist has been banned by his local mosque, and he’s not happy about it:
Imagine a world where filthy kuffar are simply “invited in”. It’s just terrible. There should be border restrictions.
Imagine a world where filthy kuffar are simply “invited in”. It’s just terrible. There should be border restrictions.
NO WORDS
Tim Blair – Saturday, July 16, 2016 (5:41am)
Louise Mensch exposes the full extent of Islamic terrorist atrocities – concealed for some time by the French government – that were committed last November in Paris. Perhaps wait until after you’ve eaten.
UPDATE. This story is disputed. Louise Mensch responds: “If Snopes read French or did research they would know the session was in camera … Snopes used Google translate as they speak no French. They messed up.”
FROM YEMEN TO NICE
Tim Blair – Saturday, July 16, 2016 (4:41am)
THE PROBLEMS ARE COLONIALISM AND CHRISTIANITY AND WHITE PEOPLE
Tim Blair – Saturday, July 16, 2016 (1:33am)
Observe from 10:30 as Sydney University academic and uptalker Peter Chen – “I was looking at a map of car bombs? In Baghdad? Since the fall of Saddam?” – utterly beclowns himself on the ABC while discussing Nice’s terror attack:
I think we can call this “radical Islamic terrorism” if we can call civilian casualties of drone strikes “radical Christian terrorism”. Because the US is a Christian country, all its political elites, you know, they swear on the Bible, they’re extremely pious …
Thank you for that deeply considered analysis, Mr Haircutademic. To Peter’s credit, however, he does establish a new world record for ending sentences with “right”.
BASTILLE DAY TERRORIST KNOWN TO POLICE
Tim Blair – Saturday, July 16, 2016 (12:22am)
Mark Steyn, more than ten years ago:
These days, whenever something goofy turns up on the news, chances are it involves a fellow called Mohammed.
Still as true today as when it was written:
A terrorist who used a hired lorry to kill at least 84 people in a rampage during Bastille Day celebrations in Nice has been named as a convicted criminal well known to the police for armed attacks.Tunisian-born Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel, a 31-year-old delivery driver described as a “weird loner” who “became depressed” when his wife left him, was reported to be a French passport holder who lived in the Riviera city and was regularly in trouble with the law.
Indeed, the killer’s last appearance in a criminal court was in March, when he was found guilty of violent contact. The French – and, for that matter, all other civilised nations – may need to consider a version of broken windows theorywhen dealing with repeat offenders from a certain background.
UPDATE. Lone wolf alert! The Sydney Morning Herald:
Those lone wolves sure have come a long way since Laverne and Shirley:
Those lone wolves sure have come a long way since Laverne and Shirley:
O’Keefe: Islam a great religion
Andrew Bolt July 16 2016 (5:52pm)
Don’t criticise Islam! It is one of the ”great Abrahamic religions,” smirks Channel 7’s Andrew O’Keefe, trying unsuccessfully to best Pauline Hanson.
===Coup in Turkey
Andrew Bolt July 16 2016 (9:02am)
This is explosive:
Erdogan has been trying to cast Turkey in a more Islamic mode and has been increasingly oppressive. The army has traditionally wanted a more secular country, as Ataturk insisted.
UPDATE
This is getting out of hand:
The coup seems to have failed:
===In a statement, the Turkish military says the rule of law must remain the priority.President Erdogan’s whereabouts are unknown. The top general is arrested. Gunfire has been heard.
“The power in the country has been seized in its entirety,” said the military statement read on NTV television, without giving further details. The military’s website was not immediately accessible.
State TV TRT reportedly off the air
Erdogan has been trying to cast Turkey in a more Islamic mode and has been increasingly oppressive. The army has traditionally wanted a more secular country, as Ataturk insisted.
UPDATE
This is getting out of hand:
A TURKISH F-16 fighter jet has shot down a Sikorsky helicopter hijacked by coup plotters seeking to oust the government, a presidential source said.UPDATE
Seventeen police officers were also killed earlier at the military’s special forces headquarters in the capital Ankara, state-run Anadolu news agency reported, without giving further details.
The coup seems to have failed:
Scores of members from Turkish armed forces were arrested across the country after a coup attempt blamed by the government on supporters of US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, the state-run Anatolia news agency reported.
754 members of Turkish armed forces were arrested for involvement in the coup, the agency said. A Turkish official added that 29 colonels and five generals had been removed from their posts. At least 60 people were killed in the turmoil.
Voting against Turnbull’s team
Andrew Bolt July 16 2016 (8:30am)
Jared Owens says this was a protest vote against Turnbull:
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
===Labor’s success against Coalition MPs in marginal seats was underpinned by a flood of preferences from right-wing candidates who instructed their supporters to punish Malcolm Turnbull…The Liberals had better know that this phenomenon will not go away.
Analysis by The Weekend Australian suggests conservative minor party preferences were crucial in toppling Wyatt Roy in Longman and Fiona Scott in Lindsay, and have dragged Ewen Jones’s battle in the Townsville seat of Herbert to the wire.
Preferences from the Shooters, Fishers and Farmers Party damaged Liberal MPs Louise Markus in Macquarie and Natasha Griggs in Solomon, and Liberal Democrat preferences helped to cut Immigration Minister Peter Dutton’s margin in the Brisbane seat of Dickson. The tactic was most pronounced in Longman, north of Brisbane, where minor party preferences fomented a 1449-vote defeat for Mr Roy, a prominent backer of Mr Turnbull’s leadership ambitions. More than 10,000 votes in Longman were cast for Pauline Hanson’s One Nation, the Australian Liberty Alliance and conservative independent Greg Riddell — all of whom directed preferences to Labor — while Family First gave no instructions to its roughly 3000 supporters as to preferences.
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
Turnbull buys the Liberal Party and breaks it
Andrew Bolt July 16 2016 (8:24am)
Laurie Oakes:
Latika Bourke:
===Turnbull ... would have recoiled when he saw yesterday’s front-page headline in The Australian: “PM’s $1m bailout for Liberals"… It was “Moneybags Malcolm” and “Mr Harbourside Mansion” up in lights again…Reader Peter of Bellevue Hill:
But it is not just the impact on public perceptions about him that makes the magic million headline a problem for Turnbull. It also stirred discussion among Liberals about the effect such a massive donation from the leader might have on the party itself.
This has the potential to be highly sensitive at a time when blame is being apportioned for a significant loss of seats in what most observers agree was a lazy, old-fashioned and ill-directed Coalition campaign.
“He who pays the piper calls the tune,” a Coalition MP observed. “He would have been in a position to dictate the type of campaign."…
Such a gift would certainly tighten the leader’s grip on the party. “Very unhealthy,” says a Turnbull critic…
It revives memories of the way Turnbull opened his wallet to win Liberal preselection for the seat of Wentworth 13 years ago — even paying Alan Jones $5000 a time to read radio ads endorsing him. Peter King, the incumbent ousted in the process, claimed to be the victim of “money politics”.
Oakes is right to say Turnbull’s donation ‘highlights a growing problem for the Liberal Party’ - but doesn’t cite the problem. As you noted on Friday, the reason traditional donors shut their wallets was because under Turnbull, the Liberals’ super policy stank.UPDATE
Latika Bourke:
Turnbull has declined to confirm or deny reports he forked out $1 million of his own money into the election campaign after the Liberal Party ran low on cash as a result of the leadership change.Michael Koziol & Nicole Hasham:
Liberal sources confirmed to Fairfax Media donations from the private sector dried up in the aftermath of the September leadership coup… One Liberal MP said they were regularly approached and offered donations on the proviso they were not redirected to Mr Turnbull’s federal campaign.
In a statement, federal Liberal Party director Tony Nutt did not deny the PM had made the donation, rejecting only the suggestion that the party was broke or in debt. But senior Liberal sources in the NSW division told Fairfax Media the party’s financial woes were real and severe. “The party is broke. There’s no money,” one source said.
We cannot keep living in this fear
Andrew Bolt July 16 2016 (12:56am)
LOOK now at Nice, the latest Western city to have its streets run red with the blood of the victims of Islamic terrorists.
We in the West cannot live like this. We cannot keep living in this fear of catching a plane, standing in a crowd or even opening our mouths.
We cannot keep making excuses for these attacks — in New York, Paris, Brussels, Bali, Sydney, Melbourne, Boston, London, Madrid, Orlando and dozens more of our cities.
Nor can we keep letting in carriers of a faith whose most dogmatic believers wish to destroy us.
What madness is this “tolerance” of ours that we deem it rude to even discuss the warlike religion that licenses our destruction and demands an end to our most cherished liberties?
And if our politicians will not speak frankly and protect us from Islam, watch out for a civil war. A frightened public will not put up with this for much longer and will defend themselves.
(Read full article here.)
===We in the West cannot live like this. We cannot keep living in this fear of catching a plane, standing in a crowd or even opening our mouths.
We cannot keep making excuses for these attacks — in New York, Paris, Brussels, Bali, Sydney, Melbourne, Boston, London, Madrid, Orlando and dozens more of our cities.
Nor can we keep letting in carriers of a faith whose most dogmatic believers wish to destroy us.
What madness is this “tolerance” of ours that we deem it rude to even discuss the warlike religion that licenses our destruction and demands an end to our most cherished liberties?
And if our politicians will not speak frankly and protect us from Islam, watch out for a civil war. A frightened public will not put up with this for much longer and will defend themselves.
(Read full article here.)
CLOVERYANG
Tim Blair – Thursday, July 16, 2015 (4:12am)
Finally, another nation recognises Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore’s visionary bicycle lane genius:
North Korea has installed cycle lanes on major thoroughfares in Pyongyang in an apparent bid to cut down on pedestrian accidents, as more residents are able to afford to buy bicycles.Bicycles are an expensive but increasingly popular mode of transport …They are often used by women to transport goods to semi-tolerated markets, where one of the most common services is bicycle repair.
So you ride your bike to the market where the big industry is … someone fixing it. No wonder North Korea is such an economic powerhouse.
BARRY THE CARBON TAX
Tim Blair – Thursday, July 16, 2015 (3:50am)
According to Labor leader Barry Shorten yesterday, “Labor will not introduce a carbon tax”. These words were echoed exactly by Shorten’s Climate Change spokesman Mark Butler.
The last time a Labor leader was this emphatic was in 2010, when then-PM Julia Gillard vowed: “There will be no carbon tax under the government I lead.’’ And then she introduced one anyway.
So we’d best prepare for an eventual return of the carbon tax, as outlined in leaked Labor documents. Here are all the answers to your vital questions raised by Labor’s latest plan.
Continue reading 'BARRY THE CARBON TAX'
THAT’S HOW YOU DO IT
Tim Blair – Thursday, July 16, 2015 (3:41am)
Please take an admiring look at the elegant minimalist head tilt on Australian filmmaker and asylum-seeker compassionista Eva Orner. More extravagant head tilts are simply vulgar by comparison.
ACTION! ACTION! ACTION!
Tim Blair – Thursday, July 16, 2015 (3:24am)
An email from the Women’s Earth & Climate Action Network – a “solutions-based, multi-faceted effort established to engage women worldwide to take action as powerful stakeholders in climate change and sustainability solutions” – announces the upcoming Global Women’s Climate Justice Day of Action:
Women across the world are invited to hold decentralized local actions on Sept. 29, including sit-ins at extractive industry sites, marches, educational events, art displays, and direct solution implementation such as planting a community garden.
Nothing says “action” quite like planting a community garden. Ambulances are already on standby.
Yes, a bloated state media organisation can be slashed. Learn from the BBC
Andrew Bolt July 16 2015 (4:05pm)
In Australia, the Abbott Government merely refuses to go on Q&A.
In Britain, the Cameron Government is showing how to cut a bloated, Left-captured state broadcaster down to a healthy size:
Here we must ask why taxpayers should subsidise ABC services directly competing with commercial rivals. Why subsidise the ABC’s on-line newspaper, for instance? Why subsidise ABC24 when Sky News provides a better service at no cost to taxpayers?
Why subsidise four TV stations for the ABC? Why not just one?
Why subsidise five radio stations? Why not just two - a local and a national broadcaster in each region?
Why subsidise Triple J, when local content rules could produce the same effect at no cost to taxpayers?
And why, oh why, subsidise a massive media outfit that is breaking the law in plain sight - the law requiring it to be impartial?
(Via the IPA,)
===In Britain, the Cameron Government is showing how to cut a bloated, Left-captured state broadcaster down to a healthy size:
.... the BBC will face major cuts as part of the Government’s renewal of the Royal Charter and will be told to abandon commercial programmes like Sherlock and Strictly Come Dancing.How can you sensibly quarrel with this?
John Whittingdale, the Culture Secretary, will on Thursday publish a green paper setting out potential reforms to the BBC to take place during the process of charter renewal.
It is expected to question whether the BBC should stop chasing viewers and instead provide more public service programmes.
It could open the door to replacing the TV licence with a household tax… The BBC’s website, which has been described as “imperialist” by George Osborne, the Chancellor, could also be dramatically scaled back amid fears it is destroying local and regional newspapers.
Here we must ask why taxpayers should subsidise ABC services directly competing with commercial rivals. Why subsidise the ABC’s on-line newspaper, for instance? Why subsidise ABC24 when Sky News provides a better service at no cost to taxpayers?
Why subsidise four TV stations for the ABC? Why not just one?
Why subsidise five radio stations? Why not just two - a local and a national broadcaster in each region?
Why subsidise Triple J, when local content rules could produce the same effect at no cost to taxpayers?
And why, oh why, subsidise a massive media outfit that is breaking the law in plain sight - the law requiring it to be impartial?
(Via the IPA,)
Bishop to repay when she should not have claimed
Andrew Bolt July 16 2015 (1:41pm)
Speaker Bronwyn Bishop says she will repay the $5000 she claimed for flying from Melbourne to Geelong, a one-hour car ride, to attend a party fundraiser.
But wait. Why did she claim it in the first place? Why did she yesterday claim this expense was within the official guidelines? Should there be penalties for claiming expenses you aren’t entitled to?
===But wait. Why did she claim it in the first place? Why did she yesterday claim this expense was within the official guidelines? Should there be penalties for claiming expenses you aren’t entitled to?
Queensland Labor finds ways to spend what it does not really have
Andrew Bolt July 16 2015 (8:37am)
Joe Branigan shows how the Queensland Labor Government cooked the books to trick up a Budget that looks much milder than the very dangerous reality.
===Greece could go feral if forced to repay its loans
Andrew Bolt July 16 2015 (8:20am)
Germany, Holland, France and other European lenders quite reasonably does not want to lend yet more billions to Greece without seeing Greece do what’s necessary to repay them. They have their own hard-pressed voters to please, after all.
And if Greece does not like the terms it has an option - to say no to Europe’s loans.
But Paul Sheehan says Europe is pressing too hard:
I thought I must be missing something when so many journalists - albeit mostly of the Left - claimed Europe was trampling over Greece’s democracy and sovereignty. But then it read this excellent headline:
===And if Greece does not like the terms it has an option - to say no to Europe’s loans.
But Paul Sheehan says Europe is pressing too hard:
It’s not as if Greece has been on some wild spending binge in recent years. From 2009 to 2014, conservative Greek governments moved a mountain to appease the eurozone creditors:There is also a risk the Greece, with its volatile culture, may fall to even uglier demagogues and nationalists than the idiots who won the last election:
- Public sector employment was slashed from 907,000 workers to 652,000, a cut of 28 per cent.
- The budget deficit was reduced from 15.6 per cent of GDP to 2.5 per cent, the largest downward adjustment in Europe.
- Reforms to the pension system pushed the projected retirement age from the second-lowest in the European Union to one of the highest in the next 20 years.
- These structural changes were made while Greece was in an economic depression as deep as the Great Depression in the United States from 1929 to 1937.
Debt relief was the obvious offset for all of the pain, a write-off of some of the debt and an extension of maturities for most of the rest. Or Greece could leave the euro, return to the drachma, coupled with debt relief.
But procrastination, denial and delusion prevailed, is now steamrolling the sovereignty of Greece in everything but name. The Greek government is expected to quickly sell €50 billion ($74 billion) worth of public assets (having raised just €4 billion from selling public assets in the past four years) and the Parliament is meant to pass, this week, a raft of measures that have just been rejected in a national referendum, including tax increases even more onerous than those rejected.
Civil servants have already announced planned strikes and there are very likely going to ne new protest marches in the streets, perhaps even scuffles, that will play in the hands of the right-wing extremists of Golden Dawn – a party that defends national sovereignty, Greek patriotism and rejects European bail-outs. The situation in Greece – hard conditions, tight deadlines – could either lead to a renewed radicalisation of the voters, with further gains for Golden Dawn on the one hand and the “hardcore” Syriza on the other, or a renewed support to the more mainstream parties to deal with the complicated economic predicament.Nick Apoifis:
Today’s Greek neo-Nazis found their political voice in the form of Golden Dawn as youth unemployment hit 50 per cent, and overall joblessness about 25 per cent, once austerity measures began to bite. The stresses of the economic contraction within Greek communities are palpable; even the rates of stillbirths have increased because many women can no longer afford neo-natal screening or care.UPDATE
Against this backdrop of declining living standards and acute uncertainty about the future, Greece is also facing relentless waves of immigrant arrivals by sea. In the first four months of this year alone over 21,000 people arrived by boat, mainly fleeing Syria, compared to about 33,000 people for all of 2014. Unfortunately, this confluence of factors adds up to a textbook scenario for the rise of political extremism.
Golden Dawn took to the national political stage in 2012, winning 21 seats to enter the Hellenic Parliament for the first time. In national elections earlier this year it won more than 6 per cent of the primary vote, even though its leadership had been jailed under anti-gang laws.
More ominous than the popular vote, perhaps, is its considerable support within the Greek security forces. About half the Greek police voted for Golden Dawn in 2012…
The neo-Nazi presence in Parliament has given oxygen to overt racism. On the streets, such sentiment is playing out in violent attacks on immigrants and street battles between far left groups and Golden Dawn-aligned gangs.
I thought I must be missing something when so many journalists - albeit mostly of the Left - claimed Europe was trampling over Greece’s democracy and sovereignty. But then it read this excellent headline:
No, the Greek agreement is not a coup and if you think it is, you’re an idiotJames Kirkup explains:
#thisisacoup has been trending in various parts of the world for several hours over the latest Greek talks… [T]he argument seems to boil down to suggesting that because the Greek government is about to sign up to policies advocated by foreign governments and international organisations, Greek democracy has been thwarted. After all, the Greek people voted against something like the proposed deal in a referendum last week…(Via the IPA.)
Here’s a quick Politics 101 lesson for the #thisisacoup mob: Greece is not a direct democracy. It is a representative one. That means that the Greek people elect their governments to make decisions on their behalf.. Those governments do things, things like spending, taxing and borrowing. If the Greek people don’t like those things, they can sack their government and get another one. The things that Greek governments do, things like spending, taxing and borrowing, have consequences. One of those consequences is that Greece has run out of money and needs to get more money from someone else. Hence the negotiations in Brussels, where the people who will provide that money are asking for conditions before giving them that money.
Are those conditions extreme, draconian and potentially counterproductive? Quite possibly, yes. Is Greece under enormous pressure to accept them, and facing horrible consequences if it says no? Oh yes.... And are the negotiations slanted against Greece, because Germany has more money and political clout within the EU than Greece? Yes. But so what? Germany is a bigger, richer country than Greece. That’s just a fact of life. Welcome to the real world, kids. And while we’re on the subject of Germany, can I just suggest that the “voice of the people” argument cuts both ways here. Angela Merkel and her government are answerable to the German people, whose taxes are on the line in this deal. The Chancellor is doing the job she holds in the German democractic system, and she’ll be held accountable for her actions by German politicians and voters through that system.
Shorten’s zombie tax returns
Andrew Bolt July 16 2015 (8:19am)
THANK God at least one person in Bill Shorten’s team knows Labor has gone mad with global warming and must be stopped.
That’s obvious from that anonymous person’s decision to leak Labor’s plans for a new carbon tax to the Daily Telegraph.
This paper was never likely to treat the plans gently and indeed ran them on Wednesday with an illustration of Shorten, the Opposition Leader, as a zombie crawling from the grave of Labor’s last carbon tax.
The leaker’s aim was plain: to either destroy the embattled Shorten or to embarrass Labor into dropping a tax that will cost it any change of winning next year’s election.
Disloyal, maybe. But at least someone in Labor still has brains and bad luck for Labor it’s not Shorten.
Because here is what you won’t hear from the ABC and many other media outlets. Labor under Shorten is proposing a new carbon tax that would hurt workers and consumers yet do nothing to stop global warming, which actually stopped nearly two decades ago anyway.
(Read full article here.)
===That’s obvious from that anonymous person’s decision to leak Labor’s plans for a new carbon tax to the Daily Telegraph.
This paper was never likely to treat the plans gently and indeed ran them on Wednesday with an illustration of Shorten, the Opposition Leader, as a zombie crawling from the grave of Labor’s last carbon tax.
The leaker’s aim was plain: to either destroy the embattled Shorten or to embarrass Labor into dropping a tax that will cost it any change of winning next year’s election.
Disloyal, maybe. But at least someone in Labor still has brains and bad luck for Labor it’s not Shorten.
Because here is what you won’t hear from the ABC and many other media outlets. Labor under Shorten is proposing a new carbon tax that would hurt workers and consumers yet do nothing to stop global warming, which actually stopped nearly two decades ago anyway.
(Read full article here.)
Thanks to Obama, Islamist Iran now on the path to nuclear weapons
Andrew Bolt July 16 2015 (8:01am)
Greg Sheridan warns that Barack Obama has given Iran a nuclear deal it can rort sideways:
===The benefits in this deal for Iran are immense. It gets tens, ultimately hundreds, of billions of dollars in sanctions relief.Colin Rubenstein:
Despite the nonsensical notion of a sanctions “snapback” if Iran is found to violate the deal, the business of constructing international consensus for effective sanctions is so laborious, painstaking and time-consuming that once sanctions are gone there is very little chance of their ever being imposed again, especially as Iran will deny any violation.
Iran also ... does not have to destroy or abandon one single nuclear facility....
But what about inspections, won’t they prevent Iran from cheating? The inspections regime in this deal is infinitely weaker than that which the Americans previously said was their absolute minimum. There are no surprise inspections and military facilities are altogether off the table....
Don’t we need Iran’s help to confront Islamic State? Isn’t Iran becoming more moderate? As to moderation, the allegedly moderate President of Iran, Hasan Rowhani, was marching through the streets of Tehran last Friday at the head of the annual “Death to America! Death to Israel!” parade, in which those two plainly moderate and reassuring slogans were shouted by the crowds.
...if Iran abides by the deal, it will retain most of its nuclear program and all its facilities, but will be prohibited from expanding or modernising its uranium enrichment infrastructure for at least a decade. After that, it is effectively open slather…
While the sunset clause is a huge concession to Iran, there are serious doubts that even the 10-year time frame can be maintained because of the weak inspections regime and Iran’s history of concealing its nuclear sites.
Earlier this year, US President Barack Obama promised that a deal would allow for “anytime, anywhere” inspections. However, that is not in the deal. Instead, the deal provides for “managed” inspections that require international inspectors to comply with a convoluted dispute resolution mechanism whenever they want to inspect locations outside known nuclear sites at Fordow and Natanz.
The process is likely to take a minimum of 24 days. Therefore, there can be no “surprise” visits and the dispute mechanism will provide Iran ample time to conceal any breaches before allowing in inspectors.
Obama has claimed sanctions will simply “snap back” if any breach by Iran is detected, but such claims appear fanciful. Not only do the inspection problems make it very unlikely Iran will be unambiguously caught cheating, once sanctions are lifted reinstating them would require a long process of consideration by a joint commission consisting of Iran and the six world powers before the issue can be referred back to the UN Security Council.
Furthermore, once sanctions are lifted — probably later this year — it will free about $150 billion that Iran can use to further its plans to dominate the region and export its “Islamic Revolution” — which include its funding of the Assad regime in Syria and Houthi rebels in Yemen, and supporting terrorist groups Hezbollah, Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
New research suggests wind turbines excite brains - and not in a good way
Andrew Bolt July 16 2015 (7:52am)
Normally the Left is hair-trigger fast to hype even the slightest health risk of a new technology. But when that new technology is the crucifix of their global warming faith it’s a very different story:
===Groundbreaking research from Germany on low-frequency “infrasound” adds to the recent body of work that is challenging wind energy proponents’ insistence that turbines are not linked to health complaints reported by those living close by.
The international project led by the National Metrology Institute of Germany (PTB) concludes that exposure to infrasound below the range of hearing could stimulate parts of the brain that warn of danger. It finds that humans can hear sounds lower than had been assumed and the mechanisms of sound perception are much more complex than previously thought.
The researchers do not claim the results are definitive regarding wind turbines and health impacts, and say more work is needed. But the research builds on recent work in Japan and Iran — and investigations by NASA dating back to the 1980s — that suggests the health science of wind energy is far from decided and would benefit from further inquiry...
Hanson-Young repeats the horror in the Mediterranean
Andrew Bolt July 16 2015 (7:09am)
YOU’D think Sarah Hanson-Young would shrivel in shame at the drowned boat people on her conscience.
But, no, “accidents happen, tragedies happen”, the Greens senator chirruped when asked in 2011 if she took moral responsibility for the then Labor-Greens government luring hundreds of boat people to their deaths at sea.
And now she’s helping to repeat in the Mediterranean exactly the tragedies we saw in the seas between Australia and Indonesia before the Abbott Government ended the horror.
This week Hanson-Young was on a millionaire’s ship between Italy and Libya, using some of her taxpayer-supplied overseas study allowance to join an expedition that encourages the people smugglers plying a deadly trade.
Of course, she doesn’t see it that way.
(Read full article here.)
UPDATE
Sarah Hanson-Young tells a gullible and unquestioning ABC host, Fran Kelly, that the “refugees” she is “rescuing” are generally foreign workers trapped in Libya by the militias. People smugglers tell a different story - they are taking truckloads of illegal immigrants over the Sahara for shipment to Italy.
Labor keeps saying it’s against the carbon tax it keeps voting for
Andrew Bolt July 16 2015 (6:50am)
Labor is against a carbon tax even when it’s for it.
Environment spokesman Mark Butler, July 15:
UPDATE
Terry McCrann cuts through the Labor spin:
===Environment spokesman Mark Butler, July 15:
In the late part of the last Labor government ... we took a decision to terminate the carbon tax and that remains very much Labor’s policy.Labor’s policy was to terminate the tax? Then explain this vote last July:
The Senate passed the government’s amended carbon tax repeal bills by a margin of 39 votes to 32 ... with only the Labor Party and the Greens opposing their passage into law.Labor keeps saying it’s against the carbon tax, yet keeps voting for it.
It was the government’s third attempt to pass the repeal legislation through the upper house.
UPDATE
Terry McCrann cuts through the Labor spin:
SO, there will be a carbon tax under a government that Bill Shorten leads…(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
This time Labor will try to argue that it’s not a “tax” but an ETS — emissions trading scheme. But a tax by any other name is still a tax and still takes money out of your pocket. In this case, utterly pointlessly other than to make you pay — yet — more for your electricity and gas and indeed everything else as it trickles down right through the economy…
And while the ETS is tricked up to supposedly be a “market-based mechanism” as opposed to a clunky “government tax”, that is a complete fraud. Almost certainly, literally.
At least, with a formal ‘carbon tax’ we would be paying the money — around $10 billion a year at the start, rising to $20 billion a year and who knows how much more in future years… — to ourselves. To wit, to the Federal Government…
With a market-based (sic) ETS we would end up paying similar figures each year, but mostly to foreign suppliers of so-called permits.
That is to say we would literally hand over tens of billions of real money for little bits of paper which said in effect: this is permission to keep your power stations open and your factories operating.
Apart from the sheer stupidity of that, every “Nigerian” with access to the internet would be rubbing their hands and saying: come in sucker; do I have a nice bit of paper for you.
Shapes in the Sky The best structure shot I got while chasing this year was while I was with Blake Knapp and Colt...
Posted by Matt Granz on Thursday, 16 July 2015
This just says it all! Reagan famously secretly and illegally sold weapons to Iran in the Iran Contra scandal. But that'...
Posted by Occupy Democrats on Wednesday, 15 July 2015
===
Julia Roberts is breaking the internet with this video!
Posted by Mysterious Things in The World on Thursday, 28 May 2015
===
The Chaplain–Medic massacre was a war crime that took place in the Korean War on July 16, 1950, on a mountain above the village of Tunam, South Korea. Operating at the Kum River during the Battle of Taejon, troops of the US Army's 19th Infantry Regiment were cut off from resupply by a roadblock established by North Korean troops of the NK 3rd Division. The roadblock proved difficult to break, and forced US troops to move through nearby mountains to evacuate their wounded. Thirty unarmed and critically wounded US troops were stranded at the top of a mountain along with a chaplain (Herman G. Felhoelter, pictured) and a medic. They were discovered by a North Korean patrol. Though the medic was able to escape, the North Koreans executed Felhoelter as he prayed over the wounded, then killed the rest of them. The massacre was one of several incidents that led US commanders to establish a commission in July to look into war crimes during the war. The same month, the North Korean commanders, concerned about the way their soldiers were treating prisoners of war, laid out stricter guidelines for handling enemy captives. (Full article...)
===The only danger in leafy Mosman is this crazed council
Miranda Devine – Tuesday, July 15, 2014 (8:58pm)
THERE’S hardly a more law-abiding place in the world than Mosman.
Continue reading 'The only danger in leafy Mosman is this crazed council'Fat controller wants monopoly on power
Miranda Devine – Tuesday, July 15, 2014 (8:46pm)
CLIVE Palmer substituted a suit and tie for the tablecloth and put his ID on a leash this week when he arrived in parliament declaring his intention to repeal the carbon tax.
Continue reading 'Fat controller wants monopoly on power'AXELLE ROSE. AND THEN …
Tim Blair – Wednesday, July 16, 2014 (5:58am)
Just two weeks ago, Axelle Despiegelaere was an unknown but extremely photogenic teenager cheering for her Belgian countrymen during a World Cup match against Russia. Images of Despiegelaere created an online sensation, quickly leading to the offer of a modelling contract from makeup giant L’Oreal. So far, so good for the 17-year-old.
Then something terrible happened. Despiegelaere revealed she was a hunting enthusiast, posting a shot of herself alongside a gazelle she’d bagged in Africa a year or so ago.
It wasn’t as though she’d butchered a polar bear or taken down a mountain gorilla. Gazelles are not exactly among the planet’s most endangered species. They’re basically a kind of African land-carp, swarming around the place to no great purpose except as targets for hungry carnivores. And Belgian teenagers.
Continue reading 'AXELLE ROSE. AND THEN …'Then something terrible happened. Despiegelaere revealed she was a hunting enthusiast, posting a shot of herself alongside a gazelle she’d bagged in Africa a year or so ago.
It wasn’t as though she’d butchered a polar bear or taken down a mountain gorilla. Gazelles are not exactly among the planet’s most endangered species. They’re basically a kind of African land-carp, swarming around the place to no great purpose except as targets for hungry carnivores. And Belgian teenagers.
RACING FOR SECOND
Tim Blair – Wednesday, July 16, 2014 (5:46am)
It is common in the early stages of a Formula One race for a temporarily well-placed driver to radio his team for information about the position of a rival much further back in the field. He does this because he knows that over the entire course of the race, all things being equal, he is likely to fall within that rival’s range.
Just a theory, but this could explain Bill Shorten’s otherwise-mystifying defence of the carbon tax.
Shorten currently leads Tony Abbott and the Coalition government in opinion polls, but it isn’t exactly a lead he would feel confident of maintaining over the next two years. It may be that the Labor leader knows he isn’t racing against the government. It may be he’s racing – at least in terms of the inner-city vote – against the Greens.
MARILYN AND JEAN LOSE THEIR CONTRACTS
Tim Blair – Wednesday, July 16, 2014 (5:20am)
===YOU CANNOT DEFEAT THE ISRAELI HUNGER FOR PIZZA!
Tim Blair – Wednesday, July 16, 2014 (5:14am)
Hamas recently hacked the Facebook page of Domino’s pizza chain in Israel. Hamas lost the subsequent online conflict. They brought tabbouleh to a pizza fight.
(Via Instapundit)
WARMIST WHEEL
Tim Blair – Wednesday, July 16, 2014 (4:59am)
Are you worried about global warming? Then why not ride a unicycle across Canada! You know it makes sense:
Naturally, he ran into rain and snow.
Naturally, he ran into rain and snow.
FLOAT INVESTIGATED
Tim Blair – Wednesday, July 16, 2014 (4:26am)
This really happened:
Department of Justice officials are in Norfolk to discuss a controversial parade float.Last Saturday, a man put an outhouse on his parade float with a sign that read, “Obama Presidential Library.”
Further on this from Mark Steyn and Dave Burge.
FACE EDITED
Tim Blair – Wednesday, July 16, 2014 (1:49am)
Quality image cropping from Fairfax’s Age:
Liberty has another friend in parliament. Meet James McGarth
Andrew Bolt July 16 2014 (8:26pm)
Great stuff. David Leyonhjelm has a friend:
===An incoming Liberal senator has set out a radical libertarian program in his maiden speech, calling for the GST rate to rise to 15 per cent, federal health and education departments to be abolished and for the immediate sell-off of youth radio station Triple J, with the rest of the ABC to also be privatised if it fails to address perceived left-wing bias.
Former Liberal party deputy director James McGrath also defended people’s right to make homophobic comments, as well as “hurtful and bigoted and stupid and dumb things”.
Mr McGrath also ... argued the GST should rise to 15 per cent and include items that are currently excluded, such as fresh food…
He vowed to argue for lower regulation and smaller government as he took aim at the federal health and education departments, both of whom had thousands of staff but had no patients, ran no schools and did not teach students…
“I want to support the ABC. I like the ABC.
“Yet while it continues to represent only inner-city leftist views, and funded by our taxes, it is in danger of losing its social licence to operate.” “I’m calling for a review of the charter of the ABC and if they fail to make inroads to restore balance then the ABC should be sold and replaced by a regional and rural broadcasting service”.
What does the UN want? To flood us with boat people? More corpses?
Andrew Bolt July 16 2014 (8:01pm)
What exactly is the lesson we’re supposed to learn from Italy? How to take in 64,000 illegal immigrants in just six months?
===Volker Turk, the director of international protection for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, said ... the UNHCR shared Australia’s concern about people smuggling and loss of life at sea, but pointed to the approach of Italy, which had rescued 64,000 asylum seekers in the Mediterranean since the start of the year.Or is this the lesson we must learn from Italy?
Ten migrants drowned after the boat they were travelling in sank off the Libyan coast ...Or do we learn this lesson?
Last year the risks facing those crossing the Mediterranean became all too apparent when 366 people drowned after their boat capsized one mile from the Italian island of Lampedusa…Who are these UN people?
The disaster led the Italian government to take a commendable stance… Italy began a search-and-rescue effort called Mare Nostrum – or “Our Sea” – which focuses on saving lives. So far this year the Italian navy has picked up more than 65,000 survivors, far higher than the previous peak in 2011 of 56,000.
We didn’t deserve this imported danger
Andrew Bolt July 16 2014 (5:44pm)
How did we come to import such a danger?:
===ASIO has warned that a number of Australians known to have recently been in Syria - and potentially fighting with terror linked jihadists - had already returned home and were now among the community.
The head of the country’s leading spy agency David Irvine made the alarming revelation today, warning of a heightened risk of domestic terrorism.
“We are working of in the basis that probably about 60 Australians in Syria fighting with one side or the other, predominantly on the anti-government side and an alarming number of those people , in fact the majority we are concerned about are gravitating toward the al Qaeda offshoots…(ISIL),” Mr Irvine said.
“We have some tens of people who have already returned. “We probably have another 150 we are looking at here in Australia who have an inclination to support those two extremist group.”
Not just a buffoon but a bully
Andrew Bolt July 16 2014 (12:37pm)
I suspect Clive Palmer has now crossed the line with the press corps - and maybe the public:
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
===PUBLIC servant Maureen Weeks was seen shaking. Her hands trembled and the redness of her eyes gave away her obvious distress.Simon Benson:
A witness, who had been increasingly concerned for her as she repeatedly went in and out of the Senate chamber, described to The Australian his disgust at what he subsequently discovered was occurring behind closed doors: a bellowing, bullying tirade by Clive Palmer, furious he was not getting his way....
Weeks ... had tried to explain to the founder of the Palmer United Party — that his last-minute, half-baked carbon-tax amendments effectively amounted to a new “tax”, and could not possibly fly in the Senate last week. Their efforts to reason with him fell on deaf ears; he yelled and talked about going to the High Court…
This is trademark behaviour — accounts of fierce shouting, bullying and threatening of his staff and others, in meetings including at his Sunshine Coast dinosaur park and golf resort, are commonplace. Managers have been blasted as “lazy, thieving, c…s"…
As the public and more journalists see his antics as a pox on democracy, an assault on the fair go, and an international embarrassment, his image is being remade to something closer to reality… When PUP’s senators work out they can draw a taxpayer-funded pay cheque, be constructive in public life and vote in the Senate, without having to put up with Palmer pulling their strings and yelling it will be all over.
A FORMAL inquiry could be launched into Clive Palmer’s verbal attacks on female parliamentary staff after senators from all parties rallied behind them and called on the rogue MP to apologise.Buffoon.
The Daily Telegraph has learned several options were open to deal with Mr Palmer’s continued public harassment of the non-political staff, including an official inquiry into the incident initiated either by the Senate President or the clerk of the Senate.
Labor, independent and Greens senators have condemned Mr Palmer for calling on the Senate clerk Dr Rosemary Laing to resign after accusing her and another staff member of trying to sabotage his constitutionally flawed carbon tax amendments.
Independent Nick Xenophon called Mr Palmer a bully, and called on him to apologise, after The Daily Telegraph first revealed on Monday that the Queensland MP and mining baron had marched into the clerk’s office last Thursday and verballed staff for trying to fix his poorly written amendment to make it constitutional… Mr Palmer has denied yelling at the clerks despite having earlier said “who knows?” He later admitted that he had threatened to take legal action against them after they explained to him that changes had to be made in order to ensure his amendment was constitutional. He likened the clerks to Stalinist Russia and said she should “get out of her job”.
(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
One tax passed, but not a single saving. We have a crisis
Andrew Bolt July 16 2014 (12:28pm)
Peter Costello isn’t impressed by Senate negotiations that give us a 2 per cent tax hike on high incomes but not a single saving:
===The increase in the top marginal tax rate has sailed through the Parliament with Labor support. It was the largest revenue measure over the forward estimates, but as a political measure it has not been successful. The idea was, so it was said, that if the Liberal Party compromised one of its core principles and supported higher income taxes, then the Labor Party would compromise one of its core principles and support lower spending. In fact no such thing has happened. The tax increase has gone through and the expenditure reductions are facing stiff opposition. Higher taxes have not brought any lower spending.Running riot in the Senate are utterly reckless politicians who vote to save handouts even when they scrap the tax meant to pay for them:
THE government ... faces defeat in its bid to scrap the mining tax after the Palmer United Party held firm on a threat to oppose it unless $8.2 billion in linked spending measures were retained…What a disgrace - and a frightening portent of our future:
These included the low-income superannuation contribution, which costs $2.6bn over four years, the income support bonus costing $1.1bn over four years and the Schoolkids Bonus costing $4.5bn over four years…
The Coalition campaigned on abolishing the mining tax and associated spending measures at the election, arguing that the tax did not raise enough to pay for them.
THE Abbott government will head to a six-week winter break with all but one element of its $40 billion worth of budget reforms blocked by the Senate, and a $10.9 billion bill from Clive Palmer for his support in scrapping the mining tax…(Thanks to reader Peter of Bellevue Hill.)
Treasurer Joe Hockey told a meeting of the Coalition party room that the Budget faced a new crisis, namely the failure so far to get any of its reform measures passed. The only budget reform measure to have been passed was a tax on the nation’s high- income earners.
Christine Milne calls me a criminal. I feel oddly proud
Andrew Bolt July 16 2014 (11:58am)
I’ve always shied from being a criminal, but Greens leader Christine Milne made it sound an honorable profession in the Senate last night:
===In 25 years in politics I have never witnessed such a dismal failure of the business community in Australia and never will the business community be able to say to this parliament that politicians do not show leadership. The Greens have stood here showing leadership on management of society and the economy at a time of a global emergency and the Business Council and the Mineral Council of Australia have said, ‘Forget it. We want to stick with the greed and the money of the last century.’ I think at some point we will have a website of climate criminals and I would have a few people to put on that list. It would include Dick Warburton, Brian Fisher, David Murray, Maurice Newman, Mitch Hook and so you could go on, with Chris Mitchell, Gina Rinehart, Innes Willox, Ian Plimer, Rupert Murdoch, George Pell, Andrew Bolt, John Roscom, Martin Ferguson and so on and so forth. In years to come, those people will try to pretend that they did not tear down the climate bills, when they have and the record will clearly show it.
Memo to ABC: dead Palestinians is just what Hamas wants
Andrew Bolt July 16 2014 (11:54am)
When will the ABC fix its anti-Israel bias?
Strange: Egyptian TV hosts give up on Hamas and its murderous leaders when an ABC TV host will not.
(Thanks to reader rabbit.)
===PERHAPS our friends at 7:30 could have a little look at what Hamas is up to just for a change. Israel’s fault? ABC, 7.30, Monday:UPDATE
SARAH Ferguson: You say you don’t target civilians, but the question is the amount of care that’s taken to avoid hurting civilians. There was a rocket attack on the home of the Gaza police chief. He has known sympathies to Hamas. At the same time, a number of children were killed in that attack. Do you take enough care to avoid those casualties, ‘cause it appears the answer is no?Return to your property and be a human shield! Hamas’s Ministry of Interior spokesman Iyad al-Buzu, on Facebook, July 13:
ANSWERING the occupation’s (Israel’s) calls will merely aid it in carrying out its plans to weaken the (Palestinian) home front and to destroy property and homes as soon as you leave them. We call on all our people who have left their homes to return to them immediately.Unchecked Israeli racism? ABC, 7.30, Monday:
SARAH Ferguson: … a number of leading Israeli writers, including Chemi Shalev, said (the murder of Mohammed Abu Khadair) wasn’t a response to the killing of the young settlers, for example, but something bigger in Israel, an unchecked racism. Does Netanyahu at the same time take responsibility for allowing that racism to continue unchecked?Not a single question from Ferguson about unchecked Palestinian racism? Op-ed by Yahya Rabah, member of the Fatah Leadership Committee in Gaza and columnist for official Palestinian Authority daily Al-Hayat Al-Jadida, July 12:
WE have nothing with which to speak to these Israeli murderers ... whose God, Yahweh ... demands, according to the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, that they offer him sacrifices during Passover in the form of Matzah made from the blood of our children. We have nothing with which to open a dialogue but these rockets.
Strange: Egyptian TV hosts give up on Hamas and its murderous leaders when an ABC TV host will not.
(Thanks to reader rabbit.)
Australian turns 50: ABC sneers when it should report
Andrew Bolt July 16 2014 (11:35am)
I was at the 50th birthday celebration last night of The Australian, a world-class newspaper founded by Rupert Murdoch. Also there were Prime Minister Tony Abbott and Opposition Leader Bill Shorten and former Liberal Prime Minister John Howard and former Labor Prime Minister Paul Keating.
A major speech was delivered by Aboriginal leader Noel Pearson. In short, this was a serious event to honour a serious publication with serious things said, not least about the paper’s advocacy of Aboriginal advancement and immigration.
Now let’s see how the state broadcaster reported this in AM, which is - I should remind you - ostensibly a news program.
Here’s how the reporter referred to the tribute Murdoch paid to his father in noting he, too, had dreamed of such a newspaper:
ABC boss Mark Scott keeps claiming his organisation is balanced and his does not know the politics of his staff. How many more examples must I give before he admits the ABC is in breach of its charter obligations not to be biased?
===A major speech was delivered by Aboriginal leader Noel Pearson. In short, this was a serious event to honour a serious publication with serious things said, not least about the paper’s advocacy of Aboriginal advancement and immigration.
Now let’s see how the state broadcaster reported this in AM, which is - I should remind you - ostensibly a news program.
Here’s how the reporter referred to the tribute Murdoch paid to his father in noting he, too, had dreamed of such a newspaper:
SIMON SANTOW: He may be 83, but Rupert Murdoch still craves a bit of parental approval.Here’s how the reporter referred to Murdoch’s comments in praise of immigration:
SIMON SANTOW: His dinner was billed as a celebration, but the media mogul never misses an opportunity to give advice to the country of his birth.Here’s how the reporter introduced a grab of Abbott’s speech:
SIMON SANTOW: Tony Abbott enjoys the support of his host - and it showed.And then here’s how the reporter introduced the last third of the report, not by assessing the content of the night’s speeches or the influence The Australian has had on public dehate, but with a great slag - a rehashing for the umpteenth time of the old phone hacking scandal at Britain’s News of the World:
TONY ABBOTT: Rupert Murdoch, a man who has changed our world.
SIMON SANTOW: While Tony Abbott appeared happy in the warm embrace of Rupert Murdoch, the News Corp empire is on the nose elsewhere.This is not reporting but sneering. not analysing but sniggering. Murdoch is dictatorial, Abbott a lapdog and no politician in Britain would be caught dead with the media giant.
NICK DAVIES: He is still very entangled in the phone hacking scandal… [I]t is still the case that the prime minister in the UK would not want to be seen with him or to be known to be meeting him.. SIMON SANTOW: Nick Davies says it’s only a matter of time before detectives from Scotland Yard interview Rupert Murdoch...
ABC boss Mark Scott keeps claiming his organisation is balanced and his does not know the politics of his staff. How many more examples must I give before he admits the ABC is in breach of its charter obligations not to be biased?
Fairfax creates diplomatic row with China. China calls it out
Andrew Bolt July 16 2014 (10:52am)
Fairfax newspapers beat up Foreign Minister Julie Bishop’s comments to produce this:
Continue reading 'Fairfax creates diplomatic row with China. China calls it out'
===Australia will stand up to China to defend peace, liberal values and the rule of law, says Foreign Minister Julie Bishop.Then Fairfax newspapers went big on the reaction they’d provoked:
Australia was once an outpost of “rascals and outlaws” but will soon adjust to the shifting realities of power, says a Chinese state-owned newspaper, which also has called Foreign Minister Julie Bishop a “complete fool"…Now, having had everything explained to them, Chinese officials accept Fairfax exaggerated what Bishop actually said - although that’s not exactly what Fairfax reports:
The newspaper, owned by The People’s Daily, the Communist Party’s self-described “mouthpiece”, was responding to comments made by Foreign Affairs Minister Julie Bishop published by Fairfax Media on Thursday.
On Monday, China’s most popular tabloid, The Global Times, blasted Australian Foreign Affairs Minister Julie Bishop as a “complete fool” for telling Fairfax Media that she would stand up to China in defence of Australian values…Fairfax then runs the quotes from its interview with Bishop in a bid to establish that Bishop and the Chinese were wrong, and that it had faithfully reported the Foreign Minister vowing to “stand up to China”. Trouble is, the quotes Fairfax publishes do not show Bishop using such inflammatory language:
However, late on Tuesday night, on the eve of China’s highest-ranking general arriving to meet Australia’s top brass and Prime Minister Tony Abbott, China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs denied that Ms Bishop said any of those offending remarks at all.
In a remarkable statement provided in Q&A form, the ministry’s spokesman, Hong Lei, suggested that it was Australian diplomats who had informed them that the interview was bogus...
Continue reading 'Fairfax creates diplomatic row with China. China calls it out'
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Larry PickeringWHY RUDD’S ETS IS A SUPER CON
This is a bit long-winded but after listening to that person Kevin Rudd today I am bloody angry so, if you hang in there, I will try to explain why and how we are being conned by a disingenuous jerk who claims he will fix Global warming with an ETS.
Green gophers believe the world is coming to an end in a Noah type flood. They believe an international ETS will cool the globe and in the process justifiably wreck world economies, enrich speculators and satisfy a corrupt UN.
They believe green-house gases are causing earth-warming and that’s plain dumb because carbon dioxide is as integral to global cooling as it is to warming.
Of course the earth’s temperature is changing, but so what? It’s supposed to change. It always has changed but it has nought to do with our emissions, and you will see why.
Climate change (formerly Global warming until that con was discredited) is as cyclical and interconnected as ice-ages were, and will be again.
The clear fact is that the Earth’s average temperature since the year 2,000 has gone down, not up and there is not one unusual centimeter increase in tidal extremities anywhere.
Pacific islands, historically barely inches above high tide, are still there supporting happy native life.
Check data supplied on sea levels and you will find miniscule rubbery records in the order of 0.01cc per year variations with a margin of error of plus or minus 0.01cc. In other words these pundits don’t have a damn clue and have no hope of measuring or attributing anything to anything!
Venice is still there and so are the lowlands of Holland. Surprise, surprise!
Why has there been no inundation? For the simple reason we are talking miniscule figures. Earth warming has little to do with sea levels anyway but it has everything to do with sea temperatures.
When and if the Earth warms it will not be due to unusual carbon emissions because marginal cyclical increases in global temperatures began before 1920… well before the hysterical, “green-house” industrial age.
There has been no inundation so far and there never will be. Well, not that we will know about.
Take a plastic bottle of water and place it in the freezer over night. In the morning the ice will have expanded. Leave the bottle out of the freezer and the water returns to its natural state. In other words the volume (not the mass) of the ice decreased when it thawed.
Now, because almost all northern Pole ice is already below the water surface, what is the inevitable effect of any thaw? Maybe a diminution in volume? Oops, we didn’t think of that did we!
The UN Panel on Climate Control and those idiot researchers from the Adelaide University now claim Australia’s southern States will be inundated from alarming southern Pole ice-melt. “People in SA wetlands will need to relocate”, they wailed in dismay.
Exactly one year earlier those same clots were telling us that the South Pole was getting unusually colder. Why are we paying these people?
The southern icecap is almost twice the size of Australia (hard to comprehend eh?). The northern icecap is barely one third the size of Australia, and that is still huge.
Most of the northern cap is already well below sea level. Unlike the southern cap, it is a floating, moving mass of fractured ice.
The position of the North Pole is constantly changing in relation to the position of the ice. As a result, many who have claimed to have reached the North Pole were actually nowhere near it! Not until they had a GPS.
Not only is the North Pole constantly moving in relation to the ice, it is enveloped by developed countries. Its temperatures are more volatile due to local geographical, topographical and industrial influences.
But the southern icecap is embedded on land mass. The southern Pole cannot be traversed below by submarines as the northern Pole has been. It is fixed. Amundsen knew where he was.
It is also far more remote and isolated from other continental influences. It has its own unaffected, self-induced, weather patterns.
The World’s water, in its different forms, is a renewable resource. You cannot add to, or subtract from, the volume of the World’s water. It cannot be diminished. It can only be recycled and redistributed.
To be able to measure or predict a temporary increase in sea levels, you first need to know two things… exactly how much water is to be added from elsewhere and exactly how much water is already there.
The water to be added must not be the volume of under-sea ice because that displacement already exists and if it melts its volume will decrease.
We know nothing of that because to compute it requires knowledge of exact volumes or cubic measurements.
We know nothing of the volumes of under-sea ice and we know nothing of above-sea ice, what melt-water we are likely to get in future and nothing at all of 40% of the World Ocean floor and its depths.
How can we know the aggregate volume of the Earth’s oceans when we do not even know their unexplored depths?
The surface area of the World Ocean (and let’s not forget that all oceans except the Caspian Sea are interconnected) is 361 million square kilometers and more than 70% of the earth’s total surface area.
So we only know the World Ocean surface area is well in excess of two thirds of the World’s total surface area.
The uncharted 40% of the ocean floor therefore represents over 50% of the earth’s total area, an infinite knowledge of which is necessary to even guess at possible volumes. Yet a resident moron named Al Gore shows us New York graphics of seawater covering 118th of 42nd Street.
Wall Street has only ever been less than one metre above sea level as have hundreds of inhabited islands. No-one has got their feet wet yet and if we experienced the hottest summer in 60 years last year, does that not mean that it was hotter 60 years ago?
Europe and North America have recently broken all cold weather records, even colder than the mid-nineties. Upper New York State has recently experienced the coldest weather in 30 years.
This cold weather is strangely a cyclical response to previous earth-warming.
An idiot government-funded agency came out recently with this: “Australian production down 5% by 2050, due to global warming.”
But the dramatic glacial ice flows shown breaking off into the Arctic Ocean have been dramatically breaking off for millions of years. And why do they break off? Because the ice is increasing at its source, relentlessly pushing the outer warming perimeter to the ocean.
The aging ice is forced into the sea by the expansion of the developing new ice… or do the Greens believe there is a walrus in a bloody bikini pushing it?
Our own orbiting satellites show no unusual change in temperatures. But our weather stations sited close to major cities do. I wonder why.
Legitimate ground-based measurements show that average global temperature is a mere 0.5° C higher than a century ago. In another century it may be the reverse. Who cares?
The Earth’s temperature fell from 1940 to 1980.
There is some scant evidence to suggest it has increased marginally since then, and has not changed at all since the year 2000.
The Earth’s median temperature is not regulated by green-house gases it is regulated by our Sun. It always has been… we evolved via this imperative.
The Earth’s green-house gases in its atmosphere are a mere 0.037% of its other abiding gases. Green-house gases have always been there and that miniscule amount hardly equates to the Sun’s influence.
Yet the zealots of Earth-warming completely neglect the Sun and they ignore the World Ocean and its conveyor! They concentrate on insignificant stuff they can see... forests and reefs and rivers.
Although, one would be forgiven for guessing that if all the World’s glaciers melted all at once it would barely register on the scale of total oceanic volumes and the inevitable increasing huge evaporative process over a greater surface area would need to be subtracted from that oceanic volume anyway.
That evaporative process would mean more rain distributed to, and absorbed by, dry areas. The World’s glaciers have melted before, without any industrial influence at all! We humans are still here.
If the melting icebergs of the northern cap (of which we only see the tips) are 95% under water, then the feared displacement factor already exists and some idiot last week claimed a 28 inch increase in high tides due to global warming. (But anyone can call themselves a scientist.)
At the end of the last Ice Age, the resultant flood of fresh water due to global warming caused temperatures in the North Atlantic region to fall by 5°C over a few decades.
It is important to remember that the Earth is an isolated ball. We live in a bubble encased in a thin film of replenishing, reparative atmosphere.
The Earth has a finite amount of water… be it solid, vapour or liquid. No-one, not even God, can add or subtract one teaspoonful of water or one shovel of land mass to or from the Earth.
It is simply a matter of continual redistribution, temporarily, to different places. Water redistribution can only be due to ice-melt induced rivers, tides, evaporation leading to convection and thus, rainfall.
Land mass redistribution can only be due to inner core convulsions. These continuous redistributions keep the Earth robust, healthy and productive. Without these continuous redistributions the
Earth would stagnate and die.
If there was a God he would be wetting his pants laughing at these alarmist idiots.
To affect tidal extremities one is talking the gravitational impact of the Moon and the Sun combined, not a few melting ice-blocks.
London’s Thames, along with Holland’s rivers, are rivers that suffer possible, seriously damaging tidal surges. They knew that this was so millennia ago and it has little to do with Earth warming!
London’s problem is that it is sinking. Some silly prick decided to build London on a silt plain. That’s why there are no tall buildings in London… it won’t support them. It’s founded in putrid mud. But the dishonest Greens cite London’s predicament as an example of global warming.
It is the oceans’ temperatures that dictate our World’s temperatures… the Ocean Conveyor evens out temperatures, making life livable and pleasurable.
Global temperature changes since the latest Ice Age, between a mere 13,000 and 17,000 years ago, have been comparatively mild.
This temperature mildness, which ended the Ice Age, was not a result of green-house gases at that time either.
There are two types of temperature change. The abrupt change and the long-term change. By far the most compelling, definitive reason for any abrupt Earth temperature change is volcanoes. They are immediate and have immediate effect.
The earth has always done, and continues to do, more “damage” to itself than man has ever done, or can ever do, to it. Except it’s not damage, it is healthy redistribution!
Was it man who killed the mammoths, the hundreds of species of dinosaur, the saber tooth tiger, the coelacanth, the thousands of bird species, the millions of extinct oceanic species, any one of the thousands of hitherto unknown petrified species, fossils, the unknown, ambered entomological species, not to mention botanical?
Of course not! We were not responsible for the demise of a single one! So why the hell do we think we are so important when 93% of everything that ever lived on Earth is now extinct?
Did the Exxon Valdese disaster wipe out anything? No, because it was a small-time, man-made, fully redeemable “catastrophe”, barely registering on the scale of what the Earth may decide to do to itself.
The “catastrophic” Chernobyl site is now a lush tourist Mecca! Only 53 people in the immediate vicinity died from the explosion, not the feared radiation.
The Earth has always recovered from what it does to itself! What possible permanent injury could mere man impart to it?
In twenty years Al Gore’s thesis will be no more relevant than it is now.
His statement that, “It’s hard to convince a man of a theory when his salary depends on another”, applies aptly to him more than anyone.
According to Gore, the snow flakes that trapped oxygen 150,000 years ago (yet again a blink in the space of time) at the North Pole are core-sampled and studiously measured to gauge increases in green-house gases.
That’s fine, but the trouble is it doesn’t snow at the North Pole. Anyway, what’s the point in core-sampling ice formed 150,000 years ago when these so-called excessive green-house gases are deemed the result of a mechanical age barely 70 years old?
Doesn’t anyone ask these questions of those pathetic pundits?
The truth is that core-sampled polar ice has only revealed that temperatures abruptly dropped immediately after the brown, layered, tell-tale signs of volcanic ash.
So, without volcanic ash, temperatures remained relatively stable. To try to drag industrial green-house gases into that little equation is more than dishonest.
Al Gore has got his hand on it. But you have to admire his multi-million dollar production, even if it is frogshit. The northern pole has only 1% of the airborne moisture that we do, so snow, hail or rain can’t develop or form, through lack of humidity.
The poles are not even the coldest places on earth. The water surrounding the floating North Pole keeps temperatures to 50 below zero. It’s much colder elsewhere.
There were no ice caps 2.7 million years ago. Then as far as we can tell, a mere 17,000 years ago, came the big ice age.
Life was prolific then and it has progressed to what it is now.
Then a slow Earth-warming and another Earth-cooling around the Tudor period. Now that the northern cap has once again begun to partly recede over the last crumby 50 years, these morons want us to believe it’s the end of the World?
Let’s look at some cold (or warm) hard facts:
The total mass of the hydrosphere (the oceans) is about 1.4 × 1021 kilograms, which is incredibly only a thin film representing 0.023% of the Earth's total mass.
So, if surface land mass is only one third of 0.023% (or 0.0073%) of the Earth’s total mass, then we land dwellers run a distant last in terms of influencing our World’s climate, behind the hydrosphere, the protective magnetosphere, planetary and stellar gravitation and the Sun’s and the Earth’s inner core mass.
The land’s regulating factor is the hydrosphere. If you need to be convinced of the size and influence of the hydrosphere, go to your computer and centre Papeete on Google Earth.
Without historic undersea volcanic eruptions and tectonic plate movements there would be no continents or mountain ranges.
Without volcanic eruptions and tectonic gyrations, there would be no islands. Volcanoes and earthquakes create islands of land, large and small… and we all live on those small islands, or big islands they call continents.
All land is joined and at some time was under the sea. We mostly use the current waterline as our countries' borders. Seashells and marine fossils are found in deserts and mountain ranges world-wide.
Volcanoes are the heartbeat of the World.
Volcanoes and tectonic plate movements produce mountains, mountains produce rains, rains produce the run-off of the rich, volcanic sediment… alluvial deposits. These deposits produce the fertile soil of the silt plains and deltas. These fertile soils feed the World.
Excerpt SMH:
“Dr. William Gray, one of the planet’s most respected meteorologists, informed media that Gore’s rant is “’ridiculous’” and a result of “’people who don’t understand how the atmosphere works.’ “’We’ll look back on all of this in 10 or 15 years and realize how foolish it was,’ Dr Gray said,” …per Steve Lytte of The Sydney Morning Herald.
So, Al Gore has had his fifteen minutes of illegitimate fame.
The catastrophic eruption of the super-volcano beneath the Indonesian island of Sumatra, about 74,000 years ago, blew the shit out of what we now know as Asia and jettisoned some 800 cubic miles (yes miles) of the island into the World’s atmosphere, wiping out sunlight and photosynthesis for years. We humans are still here, thriving.
Poor old Al is concerned about a few melting ice blocks.
Al Gore’s idea of time and space is how long he sleeps in first class while flying the breadth of Europe spreading his well-practised fraud.
He charges $US200,000 per guest speaker fee.
We are not important in the expanse of time. We have no effect. We are too small, too ineffective. Because we live three score and ten years, we arrogantly think it’s important what happens in that small window of “our” time. It’s not!
We are merely temporary, insignificant tenants of this planet and we are lucky to be here for a short time!
The World couldn’t give a damn! It simply motors on.
It has far larger parameters to cope with and it always will, at least for the next four and a half billion years our Sun has left of life.
We won’t be here then but our mother Earth will and whatever remains will either have continued adapting to a changing environment quickly enough or it will have died and left vacancies for those in the wings.
It is not true that without the Sun there can be no life. Cultures smarter and older than ours already thrive on the deep black ocean floors without photosynthesis. They have learnt to rely on bacterial fuel.
The only thing we can wipe out is ourselves, and we probably won’t even do that effectively. There will always be a species of us left in some remote jungle in Peru.
Somewhere there will be a tribe least affected by a man-made Armageddon, or a galactic catastrophe, and that species will survive and continue in much the same way as insecticide kills bugs… but not all bugs and those it doesn’t kill, live to promote a genetic tolerance of that same insecticide, until a new insecticide is invented and the process starts again.
One day our Earth will appear as Mars does now. Mars is a light of other days and a victim of its own inner core and intergalactic temperature changes and gravitational forces over billions of years.
It may have had life because it had, and probably still has, water; the only possible basis for life… well, what we call “life”.
Darwin’s natural selection process, and even mobile genetics, was far too slow to prevent Mars’ annihilation of its own species, due to abrupt temperature change.
Earth’s millions of lost species have suffered the same fate, but our planet’s life survived with sufficiently-tolerant species to progress the evolutionary process.
Why should any intelligent person think we have a hands-on role in Earth’s role in planetary evolution?
Abrupt temperature change is the result of the land’s natural and irregular emissions.
The land’s natural emissions then reverse its temperature via the Earth’s oceans.
The word for it all is, “cyclical”. As cyclical as the oceans’ tides. But Gore doesn’t worry that an incoming tide will not ebb. And he hasn’t the intelligence to entertain the magical simplicity of it all.
We humans are nothing but mere reactive flotsam riding the currents to wherever they take us.
The exploding gases from volcanoes, one of which is sulphur dioxide, forms gels in the upper atmosphere, a sort of mirror-like sheet which reflects the sun's rays back into space, resulting in global cooling.
The coldest nights occur when you can see the stars, when there is no lower blanketing cloud cover. Why? Because the warmer, rising air is allowed to escape… there are no clouds to trap it and cause warm inversions.
The displacement of the rising Earth-affected warmer air ensures the sinking colder air reaches the land. Water reacts the same as air but due to its greater density it reacts more slowly.
The Earth’s land masses resemble a permanent hot water bottle. The mountains retain permanent heat in rock, year-round. They condense the warmer air to form cloud to contain the warmth and produce moisture.
Deserts are colder at night because there are no mountains to condense the air to form cloud-cover to retain residual heat. It rarely rains in deserts. That’s why they became deserts and remain as deserts.
No matter what we do to a desert or a rain forest, if left alone for a moment in time (say ten thousand years) they will both return to exactly what they always were... environmentally perfected deserts and rainforests. If they don’t, they should not and will not be there anyway.
Idiot green gophers who arrogantly believe they can have a god-like, hands-on influence are merely playing with their dongers.
Why are taller mountains colder and ice covered, even on the equator? Because air temperature decreases by an average two degrees every thousand feet of elevation.
A long-term temperature change can be triggered by a short-term change and can last thousands of years. But it is balanced!
Warming causes cooling, cooling causes warming and there is nothing we can do about it anyway.
When the ice caps increase in size (as the southern cap is now) the Earth will become warmer as the process inevitably reverses itself.
The Earth’s magical equilibrium has been in process since the big bang. It is way beyond the control of vain, aberrant men who arrived on this planet only this morning.
The atmosphere’s existing green-house gases make up less than 0.04% of all gases, most of that minimal amount is carbon dioxide produced by the Earth and its bush fires, its animals’ flatulence, its plant life and its oceans… not us!
The reasonably-minded will assume that all is cyclical and due to circumstances way beyond our control or influence.
We have even thought of a beaut new way to make money from all this warming frogshit… we trade carbon quotas! Much like we trade gold. It’s expensive.
Rich people get richer, poor people have to pay for their excesses. Gold stocks will never be used in ear-rings. We are simply content to shuffle paper around representing some bar of gold in some vault somewhere in the World.
Gold bullion has only a perceived value… as has carbon and water quotas. Neither has added to, nor subtracted from, anything!
If ever it was necessary to reduce carbon emissions, then the first thing we should do is ground the 10,000 airliners, permanently in the air dumping billions of tons of unrefined burnt fossil fuel (kerosene) into our atmosphere.
Do the green gophers advocate that we ground all airliners? No! They need them to fly around the World spreading their dishonesty while preventing logging of trees which produce (and cleanse us of) more carbon dioxide than the airliners.
If you think global warming, if it occurs, won’t be so bad, you are correct but think again, because it’s not the warming that will hurt us… it’s the resultant eventual cooling that will temporarily stunt crop growth, temporarily destroy rain forests and render arable land temporarily useless.
It is cooling that will create the temporary worthless tracts of desert causing temporary starvation. It is cooling that will send food costs temporarily beyond reach. It is cooling that will wreck, perhaps permanently, otherwise healthy economies.
Now, if the Greens were talking about global-cooling perhaps they might have a point! But they are not, are they?
Flannery and Garnaut expound silly theories without knowledge or qualification to do so. Those who wrote their dishonest scripts are gone, unchallenged.
They have been used by cashed-up environmental lobbies with a wonky wheelbarrow to push.
This mindless bullshit serves to excite and attract simpleton uni students and the tree-hugging greenies of the ratbag, doomsday brigade.
It excites vote-hoarding opportunistic prime ministers vaulted into action by media but, if someone actually dissected what the Greens are saying, none of it holds water.
So, what to do with the lying, misleading bastard who started all this nonsense?
Give Al Gore a Nobel Peace Prize, that sounds a pretty good thing to do! Hopefully now, with a Nobel Peace Prize on his mantle-piece people won’t look too closely at what he is actually saying.
Those in the know simply shake their heads in disbelief.
Next thing you know, the Nobel Committee will be giving a Nobel Peace Prize to a known terrorist!
Hang on… shit! I forgot! They have already done that! They gave one to Yasser Arrafat. Mmmmm… so much for the efficacy of that defamed little politicized prize.
Let’s face it, humans have no concept of space or time. The doomsday soothsayers talk in millions of years but have no idea what a million years is.
They only have the ability to conceptualise their own (unimportant, insignificant) life span. They have the arrogance to believe that what happens within their piddly 70 to 80 years of existence is actually important.
It is not! It is no more a blink in the space of time than a melting ice block is in the Atlantic.
That harebrained, absentee greenie, Bob Brown, declares a clear-felled forest is lost forever! Much like the idiot newsreader who declares a hundred acres were “destroyed” by bushfire.
What frogshit! Maybe a lot of houses were destroyed but the hundred acres were reinvogorated.
Aborigines have been lighting fires for 60,000 years to promote growth and attract game. A logged forests returns in a mere 60 years, as the Greens can see if they cared to look.
In 300 years it’s an even bigger, more robust, forest than it was before and it will be begging to be logged again!
But Greens’ brains don’t survive 300 years, thank God.
Forests only develop and thrive because conditions persist that suit forests. Fires and floods are our life-blood.
Seeds timelessly remain in the earth eagerly awaiting germination at the very first opportunity. Real temporary damage is that of erosion but even that serves to distribute water to other areas… even erosion has a role and is self-reparative.
Politicians can’t comprehend anything beyond the next election anyway.
Flooding forecasts due to so-called ice displacement, is utter nonsense. Any amount of ice melt-water is mixed with the saltwater and distributed around the World via the Conveyor.
The oceans’ surface salt water is more dense than fresh melt-water and is cooled further via evaporative winds and begins to sink, forcing the now warmer, ocean-bed water to the surface. This increases sea surface temperatures and convectional rainfall.
Now, stay with me here. The warmer surface saltwater is in turn cooled and again sinks to replace the comparatively warmer deeper water and the cyclical process starts all over again.
Not only that! The deeper, comparatively warmer, ocean bed water is rich in algal sediment (phytoplankton). When it is forced to the surface it serves to remove air-borne carbon dioxide in the same way as land-based vegetation does.
To complete the conveyor’s global cycle takes up to 20 years but it is a massive project and involves two thirds of the Earth’s surface in a rolling motion of cyclical temperature changes.
Kevin Rudd’s ETS con can now be seen for exactly what it is when the sheer scale of the ocean conveyor is understood.
Seriously, the ignorant offerings of global warmists are getting a bit tiresome so I hope you will excuse me getting this off my chest.
===
Pastor Rick Warren
Where the grass is greener, the water bill is bigger. Envy is Stupid
===Ged MacMahon
He knows. He is a doctor - ed
Celebrity Saudi preacher 'raped' and tortured his five-year-old daughter to death
Lama al-Ghamdi's back was broken and she had been raped and burned
She died in October from her injuries after ten months in hospital
Her father Fayhan al-Ghamdi, a prominent Islamist preacher, admitted beating her but was freed after agreeing to pay £31,000 compensation
Campaign to give women and children better protection gaining momentum
A Saudi preacher who tortured his five-year-old daughter to death has been released after agreeing to pay 'blood money', activists said.
Lama al-Ghamdi died in October having suffered multiple injuries including a crushed skull, broken ribs and left arm, extensive bruising and burns.
The child had also been repeatedly raped and the burned.
Her father Fayhan al-Ghamdi, a prominent Islamist preacher who regularly appears on television in Saudi Arabia, served only a few months in jail despite admitting having used a cane and cables to inflict the injuries.
Activists from the group Women to Drive said the preacher had doubted Lama's virginity and had her checked up by a medic.
Randa al-Kaleeb, a social worker from the hospital where Lama was admitted, said the girl's back was broken and that she had been repeatedly raped.
Her injuries were then burned.
Rather than the death penalty or a long prison sentence, the judge in the case ruled the prosecution could only seek 'blood money', according to activists.
The money is compensation for the next of kin under Islamic law.
Activists said the judge ruled the few months al-Ghamdi spent in prison since his arrest in November was sufficient punishment.
He has reportedly agreed to pay £31,000 ($50,000), which is believed to have gone to Lama's mother.
The amount is half that would have been paid if Lama had been a boy.
Activists say under Islamic laws a father cannot be executed for murdering his children. Husbands can also not be executed for murdering their wives, the group say.
Three Saudi activists, including Manal al-Sharif, who started the women's right to drive campaign, have raised objections to the ruling.
A social media campaign is now gaining
momentum after the ruling was publicised.
Manal al-Sharif has launched a campaign on Twitter using the hashtag 'Ana Lama', which is translated as I am Lama, calling for better protection for children and women.
Local reports say public anger in Saudi Arabia is also growing and authorities have said they will create a 24-hour hotline to take calls about child abuse.
Women to Drive said in a post on their Facebook page
Secular law rules should apply here .. ed
===
- 1782 – Mozart's opera Die Entführung aus dem Serail made its premiere, after which EmperorJoseph II anecdotally made the comment that it had "too many notes".
- 1862 – David Farragut became the first person to be promoted to the rank of rear admiral in the United States Navy.
- 1981 – Mahathir Mohamad was sworn in as Malaysia's fourth prime minister, a post which he held for 22 years, making him the country's longest-serving one.
- 1994 – Fragments of Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 began hitting the planet Jupiter, with the first one causing a fireball which reached a peak temperature of about 24,000 K.
- 2004 – Chicago's Millennium Park (pictured), currently the world's largest rooftop garden, opened.
- 622 – The beginning of the Islamic calendar.
- 997 – Battle of Spercheios: Bulgarian forces of Tsar Samuel are defeated by a Byzantine army under general Nikephoros Ouranos at the Spercheios River in Greece.
- 1054 – Three Roman legates break relations between Western and Eastern Christian Churchesthrough the act of placing an invalidly-issued Papal bull of Excommunication on the altar of Hagia Sophia during Saturday afternoon divine liturgy. Historians frequently describe the event as the start of the East–West Schism.
- 1212 – Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa: After Pope Innocent III calls European knights to a crusade, forces of Kings Alfonso VIII of Castile, Sancho VII of Navarre, Peter II of Aragon and Afonso II of Portugal defeat those of the Berber Muslim leader Almohad, thus marking a significant turning point in the Reconquista and in the medieval history of Spain.
- 1232 – The Spanish town of Arjona declares independence and names its native Muhammad ibn Yusuf as ruler. This marks the Muhammad's first rise to prominence; he would later establish the Nasrid Emirate of Granada, the last independent Muslim state in Spain.
- 1377 – Richard II of England is crowned.
- 1661 – The first banknotes in Europe are issued by the Swedish bank Stockholms Banco.
- 1683 – Manchu Qing dynasty naval forces under traitorous commander Shi Lang defeat the Kingdom of Tungning in the Battle of Penghu near the Pescadores Islands.
- 1769 – Father Junípero Serra founds California's first mission, Mission San Diego de Alcalá. Over the following decades, it evolves into the city of San Diego, California.
- 1779 – American Revolutionary War: Light infantry of the Continental Army seize a fortified British Army position in a midnight bayonet attack at the Battle of Stony Point.
- 1790 – The District of Columbia is established as the capital of the United States after signature of the Residence Act.
- 1809 – The city of La Paz, in what is today Bolivia, declares its independence from the Spanish Crown during the La Paz revolution and forms the Junta Tuitiva, the first independent government in Spanish America, led by Pedro Domingo Murillo.
- 1849 – Antonio María Claret y Clará founds the Congregation of the Missionary Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, popularly known as the Claretians in Vic, in the province of Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.
- 1861 – American Civil War: At the order of President Abraham Lincoln, Union troops begin a 25-mile march into Virginiafor what will become the First Battle of Bull Run, the first major land battle of the war.
- 1862 – American Civil War: David Farragut is promoted to rear admiral, becoming the first officer in United States Navy to hold an admiral rank.
- 1909 – Persian Constitutional Revolution: Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar is forced out as Shah of Persia and is replaced by his son Ahmad Shah Qajar.
- 1910 – John Robertson Duigan makes the first flight of the Duigan pusher biplane, the first aircraft built in Australia.
- 1915 – Henry James becomes a British citizen to highlight his commitment to Britain during the first World War.
- 1915 – First Order of the Arrow ceremony takes place and the Order of the Arrow is founded to honor American Boy Scouts who best exemplify the Scout Oath and Law.
- 1927 – Augusto César Sandino leads a raid on U.S. Marines and Nicaraguan Guardia Nacional that had been sent to apprehend him in the village of Ocotal, but is repulsed by one of the first dive-bombing attacks in history.
- 1931 – Emperor Haile Selassie signs the first constitution of Ethiopia.
- 1935 – The world's first parking meter is installed in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
- 1941 – Joe DiMaggio hits safely for the 56th consecutive game, a streak that still stands as an MLB record.
- 1942 – Holocaust: Vel' d'Hiv Roundup (Rafle du Vel' d'Hiv): The government of Vichy France orders the mass arrest of 13,152 Jews who are held at the Winter Velodrome in Paris before deportation to Auschwitz.
- 1945 – World War II: The heavy cruiser USS Indianapolis leaves San Francisco with parts for the atomic bomb "Little Boy" bound for Tinian Island.
- 1945 – Manhattan Project: The Atomic Age begins when the United States successfully detonates a plutonium-based test nuclear weapon near Alamogordo, New Mexico.
- 1948 – Following token resistance, the city of Nazareth, revered by Christians as the hometown of Jesus, capitulates to Israeli troops during Operation Dekel in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.
- 1948 – The storming of the cockpit of the Miss Macao passenger seaplane, operated by a subsidiary of the Cathay PacificAirways, marks the first aircraft hijacking of a commercial plane.
- 1950 – Chaplain–Medic massacre: American POWs are massacred by North Korean Army.
- 1951 – King Leopold III of Belgium abdicates in favor of his son, Baudouin I of Belgium.
- 1956 – Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus closes its last "Big Tent" show in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; due to changing economics all subsequent circus shows will be held in arenas.
- 1965 – The Mont Blanc Tunnel linking France and Italy opens.
- 1965 – South Vietnamese Colonel Phạm Ngọc Thảo, a formerly undetected communist spy and double agent, is hunted down and killed by unknown individuals after being sentenced to death in absentia for a February 1965 coup attemptagainst Nguyễn Khánh.
- 1969 – Apollo program: Apollo 11, the first mission to land astronauts on the Moon, is launched from the Kennedy Space Center at Cape Kennedy, Florida.
- 1979 – Iraqi President Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr resigns and is replaced by Saddam Hussein.
- 1983 – Sikorsky S-61 disaster: A helicopter crashes off the Isles of Scilly, causing 20 fatalities.
- 1990 – The Luzon earthquake strikes the Philippines with an intensity of 7.7, affecting Benguet, Pangasinan, Nueva Ecija, La Union, Aurora, Bataan, Zambales and Tarlac.
- 1990 – The Parliament of the Ukrainian SSR declares state sovereignty over the territory of the Ukrainian SSR.
- 1999 – John F. Kennedy Jr., piloting a Piper Saratoga aircraft, dies when his plane crashes into the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Martha's Vineyard. His wife and sister-in-law are also killed.
- 2004 – Millennium Park, considered Chicago's first and most ambitious early 21st-century architectural project, is opened to the public by Mayor Richard M. Daley.
- 2007 – An earthquake of magnitude 6.8 and 6.6 aftershock occurs off the Niigata coast of Japan killing eight people, injuring at least 800 and damaging a nuclear power plant.
- 2013 – As many as 27 children die and 25 others are hospitalized after eating lunch served at their school in eastern India.
- 2015 – Four U.S. Marines and one gunman die in a shooting spree targeting military installations in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
- 1194 – Clare of Assisi, Italian nun and saint (d. 1253)
- 1486 – Andrea del Sarto, Italian painter (d. 1530)
- 1517 – Frances Grey, Duchess of Suffolk, English duchess (d. 1559)
- 1529 – Petrus Peckius the Elder, Dutch jurist, writer on international maritime law (d. 1589)
- 1611 – Cecilia Renata of Austria (d. 1644)
- 1661 – Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville, Canadian captain, explorer, and politician (d. 1706)
- 1714 – Marc René, marquis de Montalembert, French engineer and author (d. 1800)
- 1722 – Joseph Wilton, English sculptor and academic (d. 1803)
- 1723 – Joshua Reynolds, English painter and academic (d. 1792)
- 1731 – Samuel Huntington, American jurist and politician, 18th Governor of Connecticut (d. 1796)
- 1749 – Cyrus Griffin, American lawyer, judge, and politician, 16th President of the Continental Congress (d. 1810)
- 1796 – Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, French painter and etcher (d. 1875)
- 1821 – Mary Baker Eddy, American religious leader and author, founded Christian Science (d. 1910)
- 1841 – Nikolai von Glehn, Estonian-German architect and activist (d. 1923)
- 1858 – Eugène Ysaÿe, Belgian violinist, composer, and conductor (d. 1931)
- 1862 – Ida B. Wells, American journalist and activist (d. 1931)
- 1863 – Anderson Dawson, Australian politician, 14th Premier of Queensland (d. 1910)
- 1870 – Lambert McKenna, Irish priest, lexicographer, and scholar (d. 1956)
- 1871 – John Maxwell, American golfer (d. 1906)
- 1872 – Roald Amundsen, Norwegian pilot and explorer (d. 1928)
- 1872 – Frank Cooper, Australian politician, 25th Premier of Queensland (d. 1949)
- 1880 – Kathleen Norris, American journalist and author (d. 1966)
- 1883 – Charles Sheeler, American photographer and painter (d. 1965)
- 1884 – Anna Vyrubova, Russian author (d. 1964)
- 1887 – Shoeless Joe Jackson, American baseball player and manager (d. 1951)
- 1888 – Percy Kilbride, American actor (d. 1964)
- 1888 – Frits Zernike, Dutch physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1966)
- 1889 – Arthur Bowie Chrisman, American author (d. 1953)
- 1895 – Wilfrid Hamel, Canadian businessman and politician, 35th Mayor of Quebec City (d. 1968)
- 1896 – Otmar Freiherr von Verschuer, German biologist and eugenicist (d. 1969)
- 1896 – Trygve Lie, Norwegian trade union leader and politician, 1st Secretary-General of the United Nations (d. 1968)
- 1902 – Alexander Luria, Russian psychologist and physician (d. 1977)
- 1902 – Mary Philbin, American actress (d. 1993)
- 1903 – Fritz Bauer, German lawyer and judge (d. 1968)
- 1903 – Carmen Lombardo, Canadian singer-songwriter (d. 1971)
- 1903 – Irmgard Flügge-Lotz, German mathematician and engineer (d. 1974)
- 1904 – Goffredo Petrassi, Italian composer and conductor (d. 2003)
- 1906 – Vincent Sherman, American actor, director, and screenwriter (d. 2006)
- 1907 – Frances Horwich, American educator and television host (d. 2001)
- 1907 – Orville Redenbacher, American farmer and businessman, founded Orville Redenbacher's (d. 1995)
- 1907 – Barbara Stanwyck, American actress (d. 1990)
- 1910 – Stan McCabe, Australian cricketer (d. 1968)
- 1910 – Gordon Prange, American historian, author, and academic (d. 1980)
- 1911 – Ginger Rogers, American actress, singer, and dancer (d. 1995)
- 1911 – Sonny Tufts, American actor (d. 1970)
- 1912 – Milt Bocek, American baseball player (d. 2007)
- 1912 – Amy Paterson, Argentine composer, singer, poet, and teacher
- 1915 – Barnard Hughes, American actor (d. 2006)
- 1915 – Elaine Barrie, American actress (d. 2003)
- 1918 – Denis Edward Arnold, English soldier (d. 2015)
- 1918 – Paul Farnes, famed World War II Royal Air Force (RAF) fighter pilot and one of "The Few" surviving pilots of the Battle of Britain
- 1918 – Samuel Victor Perry, English biochemist and rugby player (d. 2009)
- 1919 – Hermine Braunsteiner, Austrian SS officer (d. 1999)
- 1919 – Choi Kyu-hah, South Korean politician, 4th President of South Korea (d. 2006)
- 1920 – Anatole Broyard, American critic and editor (d. 1990)
- 1923 – Chris Argyris, American psychologist, theorist, and academic (d. 2013)
- 1924 – James L. Greenfield, American journalist and politician
- 1924 – Bess Myerson, American model, actress, game show panelist, and politician, Miss America 1945 (d. 2014)
- 1924 – Rupert Deese, Northern Mariana Islander ceramic artist (d. 2010)
- 1925 – Frank Jobe, American sergeant and surgeon (d. 2014)
- 1925 – Rosita Quintana, Argentine actress
- 1926 – Ivica Horvat, Croatian footballer and manager (d. 2012)
- 1926 – Irwin Rose, American biologist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2015)
- 1927 – Pierre F. Côté, Canadian lawyer and civil servant (d. 2013)
- 1927 – Shirley Hughes, English author and illustrator
- 1927 – Derek Hawksworth, English footballer
- 1928 – Anita Brookner, English novelist and art historian (d. 2016)
- 1928 – Bella Davidovich, Soviet-American pianist
- 1928 – Robert Sheckley, American author and screenwriter (d. 2005)
- 1928 – Jim Rathmann, American race car driver (d. 2011)
- 1928 – Dave Treen, American lawyer and politician, 51st Governor of Louisiana (d. 2009)
- 1928 – Andrzej Zawada, Polish mountaineer and author (d. 2000)
- 1929 – Charles Ray Hatcher, American serial killer (d. 1984)
- 1929 – Sheri S. Tepper, American author and poet
- 1929 – Gaby Tanguy, French swimmer
- 1930 – Guy Béart, Egyptian-French singer-songwriter (d. 2015)
- 1930 – Michael Bilirakis, American lawyer and politician
- 1930 – Bert Rechichar, American football defensive back and kicker
- 1931 – Fergus Gordon Kerr, Scottish Roman Catholic priest of the English Dominican Province
- 1931 – Norm Sherry, American former catcher, manager, and coach in Major League Baseball
- 1932 – John Chilton, English trumpet player and composer (d. 2016)
- 1932 – Max McGee, American football player and sportscaster (d. 2007)
- 1932 – Dick Thornburgh, American lawyer and politician, 76th United States Attorney General
- 1933 – Julian A. Brodsky, American businessman
- 1934 – Donald M. Payne, American educator and politician (d. 2012)
- 1934 – Katherine D. Ortega, 38th Treasurer of the United States
- 1935 – Carl Epting Mundy, Jr., American general (d. 2014)
- 1935 – Lynn Wyatt, American socialite and philanthropist
- 1936 – Yasuo Fukuda, Japanese politician, 91st Prime Minister of Japan
- 1936 – Buddy Merrill, American guitarist
- 1936 – Jerry Norman, American sinologist and linguist (d. 2012)
- 1936 – Venkataraman Subramanya, Indian-Australian cricketer
- 1937 – Richard Bryan, American lawyer and politician, 25th Governor of Nevada
- 1937 – John Daly, English director, producer, and screenwriter (d. 2008)
- 1938 – Cynthia Enloe, American author and academic
- 1938 – Tony Jackson, English singer and bass player (d. 2003)
- 1939 – William Bell, American singer-songwriter
- 1939 – Lido Vieri, Italian football manager and football player
- 1939 – Denise LaSalle, American singer-songwriter and producer (d. 2018)
- 1939 – Ruth Perry, president of Liberia (d. 2017)[1]
- 1939 – Shringar Nagaraj, Indian actor and producer (d. 2013)
- 1939 – Corin Redgrave, English actor and activist (d. 2010)
- 1939 – Mariele Ventre, Italian singer and conductor (d. 1995)
- 1941 – Desmond Dekker, Jamaican singer-songwriter (d. 2006)
- 1941 – Dag Solstad, Norwegian author and playwright
- 1941 – Hans Wiegel, Dutch journalist and politician, Deputy Prime Minister of the Netherlands
- 1941 – Sir George Young, 6th Baronet, English banker and politician, Secretary of State for Transport
- 1942 – Margaret Court, Australian tennis player and minister
- 1942 – Frank Field, English politician
- 1943 – Reinaldo Arenas, Cuban-American author, poet, and playwright (d. 1990)
- 1943 – Vernon Bogdanor, English political scientist and academic
- 1943 – Jimmy Johnson, American football player and coach
- 1944 – Angharad Rees, English-Welsh actress and jewellery designer (d. 2012)
- 1946 – Louise Fréchette, Canadian civil servant and diplomat, Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations
- 1946 – Barbara Lee, American politician
- 1946 – Ron Yary, American football player
- 1947 – Don Burke, Australian television host and producer
- 1947 – Alexis Herman, American businesswoman and politician, 23rd United States Secretary of Labor
- 1947 – Assata Shakur, American-Cuban criminal and activist
- 1948 – Rubén Blades, Panamanian singer-songwriter, guitarist, and actor
- 1948 – Lars Lagerbäck, Swedish footballer and manager
- 1948 – Kevin McKenzie, South African cricketer
- 1948 – Pinchas Zukerman, Israeli violinist and conductor
- 1949 – Alan Fitzgerald, American guitarist and keyboardist
- 1950 – Pierre Paradis, Canadian lawyer and politician
- 1950 – Dennis Priestley, English darts player
- 1950 – Frances Spalding, English historian and academic
- 1950 – Tom Terrell, American journalist and photographer (d. 2007)
- 1951 – Jean-Luc Mongrain, Canadian journalist
- 1951 – Che Rosli, Malaysian politician
- 1952 – Stewart Copeland, American drummer and songwriter
- 1952 – Richard Egielski, American author and illustrator
- 1952 – Marc Esposito, French director and screenwriter
- 1952 – Ken McEwan, South African cricketer
- 1953 – Douglas J. Feith, American lawyer and politician, Under Secretary of Defense for Policy
- 1954 – Jeanette Mott Oxford, American politician
- 1955 – Susan Wheeler, American poet and academic
- 1955 – Saw Swee Leong, Malaysian badminton player
- 1956 – Tony Kushner, American playwright and screenwriter
- 1957 – Faye Grant, American actress
- 1957 – Alexandra Marinina, Ukrainian-Russian colonel and author
- 1958 – Michael Flatley, American-Irish dancer and choreographer
- 1958 – Mike Rogers, American politician
- 1959 – Gary Anderson, South African-American football player
- 1959 – James MacMillan, Scottish composer and conductor
- 1959 – Zoran Jolevski, Macedonian economist, politician, and diplomat, Macedonian Ambassador to the United States
- 1959 – Jürgen Ligi, Estonian economist and politician, 25th Estonian Minister of Defence
- 1960 – Terry Pendleton, American baseball player and coach
- 1962 – Grigory Leps, Russian singer-songwriter
- 1963 – Phoebe Cates, American actress
- 1963 – Srečko Katanec, Slovenian footballer and coach
- 1963 – Mikael Pernfors, Swedish tennis player
- 1964 – Phil Hellmuth, American poker player
- 1964 – Miguel Indurain, Spanish cyclist
- 1965 – Michel Desjoyeaux, French sailor
- 1965 – Claude Lemieux, Canadian ice hockey player
- 1965 – Sherri Stoner, American actress, producer, and screenwriter
- 1966 – Jyrki Lumme, Finnish ice hockey player
- 1966 – Johnny Vaughan, English journalist and critic
- 1967 – Will Ferrell, American actor, comedian, and producer
- 1968 – Dhanraj Pillay, Indian field hockey player and manager
- 1968 – Barry Sanders, American football player
- 1968 – Larry Sanger, American philosopher and businessman, co-founded Wikipedia and Citizendium
- 1968 – Michael Searle, Australian rugby league player and businessman
- 1968 – Robert Sherman, American songwriter and businessman
- 1968 – Olga Souza, Brazilian singer and dancer
- 1969 – Jules De Martino, English singer-songwriter and bass player
- 1969 – Kathryn Harby-Williams, Australian netball player and sportscaster
- 1970 – Raimonds Miglinieks, Latvian basketball player and coach
- 1970 – Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Thai director, producer, and screenwriter
- 1971 – Corey Feldman, American actor
- 1971 – Ed Kowalczyk, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (Live)
- 1972 – Ben Cahoon, American-Canadian football player and coach
- 1972 – François Drolet, Canadian speed skater
- 1973 – Shaun Pollock, South African cricketer
- 1973 – Graham Robertson, American director and producer
- 1973 – Tim Ryan, American politician
- 1974 – Jeremy Enigk, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1974 – Maret Maripuu, Estonian politician, Estonian Minister of Social Affairs
- 1974 – Ryan McCombs, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1974 – Wendell Sailor, Australian rugby player
- 1975 – Bas Leinders, Belgian race car driver
- 1976 – Tomasz Kuchar, Polish race car driver
- 1976 – Carlos Humberto Paredes, Paraguayan footballer
- 1976 – Anna Smashnova, Belarusian-Israeli tennis player
- 1977 – Bryan Budd, Northern Ireland-born English soldier, Victoria Cross recipient (d. 2006)
- 1979 – Chris Mihm, American basketball player
- 1979 – Mai Nakamura, Japanese swimmer
- 1979 – Kim Rhode, American sport shooter
- 1979 – Nathan Rogers, Canadian singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 1979 – Konstantin Skrylnikov, Russian footballer
- 1980 – Adam Scott, Australian golfer
- 1981 – Giuseppe Di Masi, Italian footballer
- 1981 – Robert Kranjec, Slovenian ski jumper
- 1981 – Zach Randolph, American basketball player
- 1981 – Vicente Rodríguez, Spanish footballer
- 1982 – André Greipel, German cyclist
- 1982 – Carli Lloyd, American soccer player
- 1982 – Michael Umaña, Costa Rican footballer
- 1983 – Duncan Keith, Canadian ice hockey player
- 1984 – Hayanari Shimoda, Japanese race car driver
- 1984 – Attila Szabó, Hungarian decathlete
- 1985 – Mārtiņš Kravčenko, Latvian basketball player
- 1985 – Denis Tahirović, Croatian footballer
- 1986 – Dustin Boyd, Canadian ice hockey player
- 1986 – Misako Uno, Japanese actress, singer, and fashion designer
- 1987 – Mousa Dembélé, Belgian footballer
- 1987 – AnnaLynne McCord, American actress and producer[2]
- 1988 – Sergio Busquets, Spanish footballer
- 1989 – Gareth Bale, Welsh footballer
- 1990 – Bureta Faraimo, New Zealand rugby league player
- 1990 – Wizkid, Nigerian singer and songwriter
- 1990 – Johann Zarco, French motorcycle racer
- 1991 – Andros Townsend, English footballer
- 784 – Fulrad, Frankish diplomat and saint (b. 710)
- 866 – Irmgard, Frankish abbess
- 1212 – William de Brus, 3rd Lord of Annandale
- 1216 – Pope Innocent III (b. 1160)
- 1324 – Emperor Go-Uda of Japan (b. 1267)
- 1342 – Charles I of Hungary (b. 1288)
- 1344 – An-Nasir Ahmad, Sultan of Egypt (b. 1316)
- 1509 – Joao da Nova, Portuguese explorer (b. 1460)
- 1546 – Anne Askew, English author and poet (b. 1520)
- 1557 – Anne of Cleves (b. 1515)
- 1576 – Isabella de' Medici, Italian noble (b. 1542)
- 1647 – Masaniello, Italian rebel (b. 1622)
- 1664 – Andreas Gryphius, German poet and playwright (b. 1616)
- 1686 – John Pearson, English bishop and scholar (b. 1612)
- 1691 – François-Michel le Tellier, Marquis de Louvois, French politician, French Secretary of State for War (b. 1641)
- 1729 – Johann David Heinichen, German composer and theorist (b. 1683)
- 1747 – Giuseppe Crespi, Italian painter (b. 1665)
- 1770 – Francis Cotes, English painter and academic (b. 1726)
- 1796 – George Howard, English field marshal and politician (b. 1718)
- 1831 – Louis Alexandre Andrault de Langeron, French-Russian general (b. 1763)
- 1868 – Dmitry Pisarev, Russian author and critic (b. 1840)
- 1879 – Edward Deas Thomson, Scottish-Australian politician, 3rd Chief Secretary of New South Wales (b. 1800)
- 1882 – Mary Todd Lincoln, First Lady of the United States 1861-1865 (b. 1818)
- 1886 – Ned Buntline, American journalist and author (b. 1823)
- 1896 – Edmond de Goncourt, French critic and publisher, founded Académie Goncourt (b. 1822)
- 1915 – Ellen G. White, American theologian and author (b. 1827)
- 1917 – Philipp Scharwenka, German composer and educator (b. 1847)
- 1939 – Bartholomeus Roodenburch, Dutch swimmer (b. 1866)
- 1949 – Vyacheslav Ivanov, Russian poet and playwright (b. 1866)
- 1953 – Hilaire Belloc, French-born British writer and historian (b. 1870)
- 1954 – Herms Niel, German soldier, trombonist, and composer (b. 1888)
- 1960 – Albert Kesselring, German field marshal (b. 1881)
- 1960 – John P. Marquand, American author (b. 1893)
- 1964 – Rauf Orbay, Turkish colonel and politician, Prime Ministers of Turkey (b. 1881)
- 1965 – Boris Artzybasheff, Ukrainian-American illustrator (b.1899)
- 1969 – James Scott Douglas, English-born Scottish race car driver and 6th Baronet Douglas (b. 1930)
- 1981 – Harry Chapin, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (b. 1942)
- 1982 – Charles Robberts Swart, South African lawyer and politician, 1st State President of South Africa (b. 1894)
- 1985 – Heinrich Böll, German novelist and short story writer, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1917)
- 1985 – Wayne King, American saxophonist, songwriter, and bandleader (b. 1901)
- 1989 – Herbert von Karajan, Austrian conductor and manager (b. 1908)
- 1990 – Robert Blackburn, Irish educator (b. 1927)
- 1990 – Miguel Muñoz, Spanish footballer and manager (b. 1922)
- 1991 – Meindert DeJong, Dutch-American soldier and author (b. 1906)
- 1991 – Robert Motherwell, American painter and academic (b. 1915)
- 1991 – Frank Rizzo, American police officer and politician, 93rd Mayor of Philadelphia (b. 1920)
- 1992 – Buck Buchanan, American football player and coach (b. 1940)
- 1994 – Julian Schwinger, American physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1918)
- 1995 – May Sarton, American playwright and novelist (b. 1912)
- 1995 – Stephen Spender, English author and poet (b. 1909)
- 1996 – Adolf von Thadden, German lieutenant and politician (b. 1921)
- 1998 – John Henrik Clarke, American historian and scholar (b. 1915)
- 1999 – John F. Kennedy Jr., American lawyer and publisher (b. 1960)
- 1999 – Alan Macnaughton, Canadian lawyer and politician, Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons (b. 1903)
- 2001 – Morris, Belgian cartoonist (b. 1923)
- 2002 – John Cocke, American computer scientist and engineer (b. 1925)
- 2003 – Celia Cruz, Cuban-American singer and actress (b. 1925)
- 2003 – Carol Shields, American-Canadian novelist and short story writer (b. 1935)
- 2004 – George Busbee, American lawyer and politician, 77th Governor of Georgia (b. 1927)
- 2004 – Charles Sweeney, American general and pilot (b. 1919)
- 2005 – Pietro Consagra, Italian sculptor (b. 1920)
- 2005 – Camillo Felgen, Luxembourgian singer-songwriter and radio host (b. 1920)
- 2006 – Winthrop Paul Rockefeller, American businessman and politician, 13th Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas (b. 1948)
- 2007 – Caterina Bueno, Italian singer and historian (b. 1943)
- 2008 – Jo Stafford, American singer (b. 1917)
- 2008 – Lindsay Thompson, Australian politician, 40th Premier of Victoria (b. 1923)
- 2011 – Forrest Blue, American football player (b. 1944)
- 2012 – William Asher, American director, producer, and screenwriter (b. 1921)
- 2012 – Stephen Covey, American businessman and author (b. 1932)
- 2012 – Gilbert Esau, American businessman and politician (b. 1919)
- 2012 – Ed Lincoln, Brazilian bassist, pianist, and composer (b. 1932)
- 2012 – Masaharu Matsushita, Japanese businessman (b. 1913)
- 2012 – Kitty Wells, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (b. 1919)
- 2013 – Alex Colville, Canadian painter and academic (b. 1920)
- 2013 – Marv Rotblatt, American baseball player (1927)
- 2014 – Karl Albrecht, German businessman, co-founded Aldi (b. 1920)
- 2014 – Mary Ellen Otremba, American educator and politician (b. 1950)
- 2014 – Johnny Winter, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer (b. 1944)
- 2014 – Heinz Zemanek, Austrian computer scientist and academic (b. 1920)
- 2015 – Denis Avey, English soldier, engineer, and author (b. 1919)
- 2015 – Evelyn Ebsworth, English chemist and academic (b. 1933)
- 2015 – Alcides Ghiggia, Uruguayan footballer and manager (b. 1926)
- 2015 – Jack Goody, English anthropologist, author, and academic (b. 1919)
- 2017 – George Romero, American filmmaker (b. 1940)
- Christian feast day:
- Engineer's Day (Honduras)
- Holocaust Memorial Day (France)
“Therefore, get rid of all moral filth and the evil that is so prevalent and humbly accept the word planted in you, which can save you.” James 1:21 NIV
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Morning and Evening by Charles Spurgeon
Morning
Keep the altar of private prayer burning. This is the very life of all piety. The sanctuary and family altars borrow their fires here, therefore let this burn well. Secret devotion is the very essence, evidence, and barometer, of vital and experimental religion.
Burn here the fat of your sacrifices. Let your closet seasons be, if possible, regular, frequent, and undisturbed. Effectual prayer availeth much. Have you nothing to pray for? Let us suggest the Church, the ministry, your own soul, your children, your relations, your neighbours, your country, and the cause of God and truth throughout the world. Let us examine ourselves on this important matter. Do we engage with lukewarmness in private devotion? Is the fire of devotion burning dimly in our hearts? Do the chariot wheels drag heavily? If so, let us be alarmed at this sign of decay. Let us go with weeping, and ask for the Spirit of grace and of supplications. Let us set apart special seasons for extraordinary prayer. For if this fire should be smothered beneath the ashes of a worldly conformity, it will dim the fire on the family altar, and lessen our influence both in the Church and in the world.
The text will also apply to the altar of the heart. This is a golden altar indeed. God loves to see the hearts of his people glowing towards himself. Let us give to God our hearts, all blazing with love, and seek his grace, that the fire may never be quenched; for it will not burn if the Lord does not keep it burning. Many foes will attempt to extinguish it; but if the unseen hand behind the wall pour thereon the sacred oil, it will blaze higher and higher. Let us use texts of Scripture as fuel for our heart's fire, they are live coals; let us attend sermons, but above all, let us be much alone with Jesus.
Evening
Jesus "appeared first to Mary Magdalene," probably not only on account of her great love and persevering seeking, but because, as the context intimates,she had been a special trophy of Christ's delivering power. Learn from this, that the greatness of our sin before conversion should not make us imagine that we may not be specially favoured with the very highest grade of fellowship. She was one who had left all to become a constant attendant on the Saviour. He was her first, her chief object. Many who were on Christ's side did not take up Christ's cross; she did. She spent her substance in relieving his wants. If we would see much of Christ, let us serve him. Tell me who they are that sit oftenest under the banner of his love, and drink deepest draughts from the cup of communion, and I am sure they will be those who give most, who serve best, and who abide closest to the bleeding heart of their dear Lord. But notice how Christ revealed himself to this sorrowing one--by a word, "Mary." It needed but one word in his voice, and at once she knew him, and her heart owned allegiance by another word, her heart was too full to say more. That one word would naturally be the most fitting for the occasion. It implies obedience. She said, "Master." There is no state of mind in which this confession of allegiance will be too cold. No, when your spirit glows most with the heavenly fire, then you will say, "I am thy servant, thou hast loosed my bonds." If you can say, "Master," if you feel that his will is your will, then you stand in a happy, holy place. He must have said, "Mary," or else you could not have said, "Rabboni." See, then, from all this, how Christ honours those who honour him, how love draws our Beloved, how it needs but one word of his to turn our weeping to rejoicing, how his presence makes the heart's sunshine.
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Today's reading: Psalm 13-15, Acts 19:21-41 (NIV)
View today's reading on Bible GatewayToday's Old Testament reading: Psalm 13-15
For the director of music. A psalm of David.
1 How long, LORD? Will you forget me forever?
How long will you hide your face from me?
2 How long must I wrestle with my thoughts
and day after day have sorrow in my heart?
How long will my enemy triumph over me?
How long will you hide your face from me?
2 How long must I wrestle with my thoughts
and day after day have sorrow in my heart?
How long will my enemy triumph over me?
3 Look on me and answer, LORD my God.
Give light to my eyes, or I will sleep in death,
4 and my enemy will say, "I have overcome him,"
and my foes will rejoice when I fall.
Give light to my eyes, or I will sleep in death,
4 and my enemy will say, "I have overcome him,"
and my foes will rejoice when I fall.
Today's New Testament reading: Acts 19:21-41
21 After all this had happened, Paul decided to go to Jerusalem, passing through Macedonia and Achaia. "After I have been there," he said, "I must visit Rome also." 22 He sent two of his helpers, Timothy and Erastus, to Macedonia, while he stayed in the province of Asia a little longer.
The Riot in Ephesus
23 About that time there arose a great disturbance about the Way. 24 A silversmith named Demetrius, who made silver shrines of Artemis, brought in a lot of business for the craftsmen there. 25 He called them together, along with the workers in related trades, and said: "You know, my friends, that we receive a good income from this business. 26 And you see and hear how this fellow Paul has convinced and led astray large numbers of people here in Ephesus and in practically the whole province of Asia. He says that gods made by human hands are no gods at all. 27 There is danger not only that our trade will lose its good name, but also that the temple of the great goddess Artemis will be discredited; and the goddess herself, who is worshiped throughout the province of Asia and the world, will be robbed of her divine majesty."
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Stephen
[Stē'phen] - wreath or crown. One of the seven primitive disciples chosen to serve tables. Stephen was the most prominent of these. Although called to supervise benevolences, he overleaped the limitations of his task and became a powerful preacher. He was also the first martyr of the Christian Church, being stoned to death by the Jews (Acts 6:5-9; 7:59; 11:19; 22:20).
[Stē'phen] - wreath or crown. One of the seven primitive disciples chosen to serve tables. Stephen was the most prominent of these. Although called to supervise benevolences, he overleaped the limitations of his task and became a powerful preacher. He was also the first martyr of the Christian Church, being stoned to death by the Jews (Acts 6:5-9; 7:59; 11:19; 22:20).
The Man with an Angel Face
The remarkable defense of Stephen in which he summarized Old Testament teachings provoked the Jewish leaders so much that they cast him out of the city and brutally stoned him to death. God, however, can make the wrath of man to praise Him, thus the prominent fruit of Stephen's martyrdom was the conviction and conversion of Saul of Tarsus, who witnessed Stephen's illegal murder, unsanctioned by Roman law. Stephen's character is worthy of emulation. He was a man:
Full of Faith - no room for doubt or fear in his heart (Acts 6:5).
Full of Grace - a gift from God proving itself in graciousness (Acts 6:8 RV).
Full of Power - the ability of God to do things (Acts 6:8).
Full of Light - the Holy Spirit within gave him the face of an angel (Acts 6:15).
Full of Scripture - Stephen covered history from Abraham to Christ (Acts 7).
Full of Wisdom (Acts 6:3, 10), wisdom from above ( Jas. 1:5).
Full of Courage - the face and fear of man did not trouble Stephen (Acts 7:51-56).
Full of Love - the stones broke Stephen's head but not his heart. Grace was his to forgive his murderers (Acts 7:60).
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