Adelaide Hills hotel promotes topless barmaids for Anzac Day

AN Adelaide Hills hotel’s decision to introduce topless barmaids on Anzac Day has drawn fire from the RSL.

SA Returned and Services League deputy state president Graham Nybo said the Kersbrook Tavern event was an affront to the dignity of Anzac Day. “For the 106,000 people who lost their lives, it is a day of commemoration,” he said yesterday.

“It is a day of integrity and should be that way (and this) doesn’t lend to the dignity of the day at all,” federal member for Mayo Jamie Briggs said the owners should reconsider to show respect for the day.

We are serious and contemplative in the morning at the Dawn Service and later at the march, but after that, at our reunions, dignity is not necessarily the dominant theme. Either way, I can tell you one group that won’t complain about under dressed bar staff – the Diggers

I don’t know Graham Nybo but I do know he is a Vietnam Vet and Artillery…figures ;-)

ANZAC Day

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Graphic from the Australian War Memorial site

Amongst other interest I run a site for my Vietnam Alma Mater 7RAR, and of late I have redesigned it, mainly due to an increase in interest by the new generation of ‘Protectors of the Realm’. 7RAR currently has troops on operations in Afghanistan and the reality is, if they are not on patrol they can surf the net. Whereas us dinosaurs got some mail weeks after it was posted, and then only if the Posties deemed to let it through; and then only if we weren’t on patrol and then it could more weeks, these guys, members of the instant gratification technological age have immediate comms and I envy them.

That’s where the differences end. They patrol as we did, they loose friends, wounded or dead as we did and the weights they carry, particularly their patrol order, look much heavier than what we dealt with. They also have to deal with a lackluster ally as we did.

On the 7RAR site there is an interview with a Lieutenant and he is discussing training Afghani troops who think they don’t need it. One of the guys says he fought against the Russians so what can this young man teach him. The Lieutenant counters by saying, in an understated Aussie Infantry type of way, that the old man’s tactics are unsound.

It brought back memories of a South Vietnamese Captain who pointed out that he had been soldiering longer than I had been alive. Maybe…maybe, but I also knew that the captain had never spent any more than one night in the field in all that time so I didn’t feel inferior in any way. I must have spent, at the very least, more than 200 days dossing on the ground in the jungle in that year.

7RAR have earned the right to be a part of tomorrows commemorations and if they do have time to stop they will be thinking of their wounded and of Corporal Mathew Hopkins who was Killed in Action on the 16 Mar 09

Corporal Mathew Hopkins was tragically killed in an engagement with insurgents while serving with the Mentoring and Reconstruction Task Force (MRTF) in Afghanistan.

A valued member of the Darwin-based 7th Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment Corporal Hopkins was conducting a patrol near Kakarak when he and his team were engaged by a group of around 20 Taliban.

He was evacuated by a Coalition helicopter to the nearby medical facility in Tarin Kowt as soon as the security situation allowed. Despite all efforts, he died shortly after arriving at the hospital.

Corporal Hopkins was 21 years old, and was married with a young son.

Coincidentally, the two 7RAR soldiers KIA before Mathew in the sad chronology of death, died as a result of a mine detonation. Neither Alan Talbot or ‘General’ Paton knew what hit them but we did. The incident happened on the 1st of February, 1971. Alan died immediately and while I had hope for ‘General”, he succumbed to massive trauma five days later. I managed the Dustoff and the memories stay written indelibly in the dark corners of my mind.

The bad news guys is just that – the memories don’t fade.

The names are different, that’s all.

Lest we Forget.

Visit the Battalion website, look around and maybe leave a comment for the young ones in danger’s way in Afghanistan.

10,000 messages wanted for troops this Anzac Day

AUSTRALIANS are being urged to support members of the Australian Defence Force this Anzac Day by posting a message on a dedicated website or by SMS.

A joint initiative between the Australian Defence Force and Telstra has created this website to enable the messages to be posted.

Text and picture messages can be sent to 044 SUPPORT (0447 877 678).

Do something for the troops – go on, you know you owe it to them.

What on earth is he on about?

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President Obama continues with his left wing plan to lend support to the Terrorists and every little Communist dictator he meets.  

Forelock tugging in the Middle East, smiles and chats with Chavez and ” Hello Cuba, I want to be your friend” type activities must be making for many a wide eyed foreign diplomat.  But that’s not all! Let’s tell the world, including the terrorists trying every day to kill us,  just how we go about extracting information from them.

After releasing details on so called torture he assured a mainly wide eyed CIA audience that they shouldn’t worry and then the next day talks of Bush Officials being probed about their legal advice giving the green light for the so called torture.

The president last week overruled objections from Central Intelligence Agency officials and released documents that described such interrogation tactics as waterboarding, slamming prisoners against walls and confining them in cramped spaces — sometimes populated with insects — to induce fear.

Mark Corallo, a former Bush administration official in the Department of Justice lays it on the line.

“To even leave the door open to prosecuting lawyers who in good faith sought to provide legal advice to our military and intelligence community, who were protecting us from more terrorist attacks, is outrageous and shows a lack of leadership and an unfortunate act of obeisance towards the radical left of the president’s party,”

Even Mr. Obama’s director of national intelligence, Dennis Blair, defended the harsh practices.

He wrote in a letter to colleagues last week that “high-value information came from interrogations in which those methods were used and provided a deeper understanding of the al Qaeda organization that was attacking this country.”

Slamming prisoners against the wall….oh my God, the horror of it all! But really, if just one American life was saved by these ‘abhorrant interrogation techniques’ then it is justified.

The fact that hundreds and possibly thousands of lives have been saved makes me ask ‘What on earth is he on about?

More at WSJ

Missing Vietnam RAAF Bomber found

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A Canberra bomber with 2 Sqn RAAF in South Vietnam

THE remains of an RAAF Canberra bomber flown by Australia’s last two MIAs have been found in Vietnam.

canberracrewThe wreckage was found in a remote mountainous region near the Viet-Lao border but no human remains have been located so far, Defence Science and Personnel Minister Warren Snowdon said in a statement.

Flying Officer Michael Herbert (left) and Pilot Officer Robert Carver went missing in November, 1970.

More
Additional reading;
2 Sqn Association site and Airwarvietnam info on 2 Sqn.

Server upgrade

Our US hosts have been upgrading their servers with the result that some posts and comments have been lost, presumable permanently.   I realize that fact won’t impact negatively on the world’s literary inventory but it is annoying just the same, in that I can’t for the life of me remember what I said other than it was about asylum seekers. 

Now I have to worry about another problem..maybe like the servers,  I’m also losing large chunks of memory.

rudd1As proof that Rudd’s “We either spend 40 billion or we do nothing” line is working is this letter in The Australian this morning.

THIS week I went to my local supermarket and purchased goods worth less than $50 which I paid for with my EFTPOS card. I live less than 200 kilometres from the Sydney CBD in a major tourist town. As I stood there, my EFTPOS card failed to function due to a “modem error”. To my great surprise, I was told that the local store uses dial-up modem! This is horse-and-buggy technology. What a national disgrace that, in 2009, business is still relying on dial-up modem.

Australia needs the Government’s proposed broadband network and we need it now. If the critics can’t comprehend the need for high-speed broadband, then they just don’t understand technology and the massive benefits that the proposed new broadband network could deliver to the national economy. It is best that the Government ignores the Luddites and proceeds with all haste to bring our economy into the 21st century.

Adrian Bishop

If your local store in the area that you describe has dial-up it is because they have made a commercial decision to do so – it’s cheaper. These same people, small businesses, will make similar decisions after Rudd has thrown 40 Billion at the problem.

If you can’t comprehend that the debate is not about the need for high speed broadband but about the method of attaining same then you should keep quiet until you do some more reading on the matter.

My mate Google tellls me Adrian is a serial commenter and letter write extolling the talents of the ALP and the shortcomings of the Coalition. All well and good but his letter and comments elswhere in the media suggest he is an ALP stooge who accepts everything Rudd says as gospel and when interested parties question the method he fails to see the question and thus is a long way from providing any sort of answer.

I am getting jaded with Rudd’s “We intend to spend X billion on X problem, the alternative is to do nothing”

No it isn’t! The alternative could be do something less grandiose which in the case of Broadband doesn’t depend on punters paying for a Rolls Royce when a Commodore solution may well do the job.

 

Henry Ergas touches on the subject in The Australian
 

No business case has been developed, yet ministers promise both low prices and (as required by the Competition Principles Agreement) a fully commercial rate of return. However, even with high take-up rates, breaking even requires national retail prices of $160 a month; to break even with lower take-up rates would require retail prices higher than $200 a month. Given those prices, the network will struggle in metropolitan areas, where it will face strong competition, while bearing large losses in the country (where costs per line will be more than $300 a month). 

I think I’ll be sticking with the Commodore plan for a while yet. By the time Rudd’s plan undergoes full scrutiny the “spend $40 billion or do nothing” quote will have morphed into another throw away line.

You just wait and see

Pirates shot

AFTER days of tense negotiations, the US Navy rescue of an American sea captain came in a matter of seconds on Easter Sunday when a few sniper bullets killed three Somali pirates who authorities feared were about to kill him.

There is a simple and economic answer to pirates. Just have an Infantry section (10 men) on each ship. They don’t have to be special forces – just trained infantrymen.

A damn site cheaper than deploying destroyers.

Can’t read a compass or map

Some 200 mosques in Islam’s holiest city, Mecca, point the wrong way for prayers, reports from Saudi Arabia say.

All mosques have a niche showing the direction of the most sacred Islamic site, the Kaaba, an ancient cube-like building in Mecca’s Grand Mosque.

But people looking down from recently built high-rises in Mecca found the niches in many older mosques were not pointing directly towards the Kaaba.

That’s the way guys, you keep working on the real problems of the world and us western folk will worry about the small stuff. You know science, maths, art, research and development, health, disease, transport……

Taps – so sweet

In the last century, when I was a soldier, many a night I went to sleep listening to Taps on the Battalion PA system – on other nights I ignored it and order another round.

However it was never played as sweetly as this and never by one so young – do yourself a favour, stop, watch and listen for 5 minutes.

Her name is Melissa Venema