Retired infantry officer. Conservative by nature and politics; Happily married and father and grandfather of eight. Loves V8 powered Range Rovers, Golden Retrievers, good books and technology and think there should be open season on Greenies. Born in the mid forties and overdue for servicing but most parts still work.

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

China again

Talking to a teacher recently, an ex barrister/solicitor type, who looked stunned when I mentioned Chinese espionage agents operating in Australia. “Says who?” he asked, intimating I had totally lost the plot or worse, was into anti ALP conspiracies.. “Why on earth would they want to spy on us?” He asked as if I couldn’t see the Chinese were an amiable lot and only wanted the best for everybody. Mmm…well let me count the ways. We are a favoured client of the US and thus have state of the art military hardware and software…we are good at software ourselves…..we trade with China and they look for any advantage…they are a communist state thus paranoid and the list goes on. Here’s a couple more articles on the Chinese spying in Australia I didn’t feel up to having a long conversation with someone that naive so didn’t pursue the matter but it is an indication of a lack of worldliness amongst our academia. In Britain intelligence chiefs have warned that China might have gained the capability to shut down the country by crippling its telecommunications and utilities.
Intelligence officials have told ministers of their fear that equipment in a new communications network installed by Huawei, the Chinese telecom giant, for BT, the main British telco, could be used to halt critical services such as power, food and water supplies. Huawei was allegedly founded with significant funding from the Chinese state. Its head is Ren Zhengfei, a former director of an arm of the three-million-strong People’s Liberation Army responsible for telecommunications research.
It could be something-nothing…it could be a real threat. The point is – don’t trust them. We should deal with them by all means, sell and buy, have deep and meaningful conversations with them but keep in the back of our minds where they come from and what they have done. David Burchell opines on Rudd’s recent meeting with Australia’s new-found friend, the CPC’s chief censor, Li Changchun.
Who is this unknown Chinese bureaucrat to whom we have accorded so many of the trappings of a royal visit, and who our political and business leaders seem so eager to propitiate? Li, who formally speaking is nothing more than an ordinary politburo member, is routinely referred to as the propaganda head of the CPC. And yet this sells him short. For his helium-like ascent through the ranks of the CPC has had less to do with disseminating favourable stories than suppressing unwelcome ones. He is, in effect, the party’s chief censor. In particular his brief is to suppress what remains of the liberal-minded opposition within the CPC.
Li has talks with a number of influential Australians;
… with acting Governor-General Marie Bashir at Government House in Sydney, with Environment and Arts Minister Peter Garrett, with Seven Network owner Kerry Stokes, and with ABC chairman Maurice Newman and general manager Mark Scott, the last of whom was photographed, looking a little uneasy, conducting Li around the set of The Gruen Transfer. According to the Xinhua report, Scott agreed to “provide a full range of views” about China for the ABC’s audience, a statement Chinese citizens were doubtless expected to interpret as a reference to Tibet.
and the Australian people are told nothing about the propaganda visit Whitlam started this ALP love affair with the Chinese and went there in indecent haste as Chinese equipped North Vietnam divisions invaded the South. While the bodies of our battle dead lay in recent graves, most probably killed by bullets supplied by China, Whitlam dines with their leaders. Matched, of course by his one time deputy Cairns visiting the USSR, the other supplier of weapons designed to kill Aussie diggers, while he was President of the Australia-USSR Society. Busy boy Jim – he was also involved in organizing the Moratoriums to show his moral support for North Vietnam as well arranging collections at Australian Universities to help fund them. Is it any wonder I don’t like the Left.

Blackout Night

Viv Forbes, chairman of the Carbon Sense Coalition, today came out in support of Earth Hour – but said it should be renamed “Blackout Night” and held outdoors, for the whole night, in mid-winter, on the shortest and coldest day of the year – 22 June in the Southern Hemisphere.
“Spending just one night in the cold and the dark, with no hot coffee or beef on the barbecue, using no light, heat or vehicle energy from coal, gas, petrol or diesel, and without protection from metal or concrete structures, would be good practice for the blackouts and shortages to come if world rationing of carbon products and carbon energy is achieved,” he said.
More I thought I might go for a long drive in my vehicle nicknamed “Global Warmer with Middle Finger V8 package” and run over a Prius or two.

What is it with the ALP and China?

First we have Rudd holding private, undisclosed talks with a Chinese Government minister as reported by Greg Sheridan;
KEVIN Rudd’s semi-secret meeting on Saturday with Li Changchun, the Chinese politburo member in charge of propaganda, media and ideology, is one of the most bizarre episodes of his prime ministership. It is almost certainly more stupid than sinister, but it does raise legitimate questions about Chinese influence in Australia.
And this;
Just as they are telling us Chinalco is not directly related to the Chinese Government, the general manager of Chinalco, Xiao Yaqing, has been appointed to the Chinese cabinet.
Is followed by reports Joel Fitzgibbon is being investigated for his association with a Chinese born Helen Liu
Reports today claim the Defence Department has been spying on the minister, using the Defence Signals Directorate spy agency to tap into computers in Mr Fitzgibbon’s office to gain information about his relationship with a wealthy Chinese-born Sydney business woman, Helen Liu. KEVIN Rudd says he’ll await the findings of a Defence investigation into claims departmental officials conducted covert inquiries into their minister.
Some observations from Christian Kerr; Alexander Downer could be coruscating to his public servants. He would tear strips off them in private – but in public they were always “my hard-working department” The Defence Minister has taken a different approach.
“Have I seen incompetence?” Fitzgibbon asked rhetorically last month as the opposition hammered home its attack on bureaucratic bungling over SAS pay. “Absolutely yes. “Have I seen attempts to nuance information to cover for mistakes? Yes. “Have I seen nuanced information in an attempt to produce outcomes that are more favourable to those who are responsible for the issue? Yes.”
And what are we to make of this;
Defence officials also allegedly found Ms Liu’s banking details on the minister’s office IT system.
Was it just her BSB and account number and if so, why report it, or was it more? If so, what is going on? I think it unlikely Defence would conduct a security check without cause and I doubt it is all simply based on the fact that Fitzgibbon has a bad habit of blaming his department and calling them incompetent. I will be interested in the developments.

Qld Politics

I’m disappointed but at least there are no Greens elected and the Environment Minister, Andrew McNamara, lost his seat. With the ALP losing between 8 and 10 seats it does bring us closer to power but there is a lot of work to be done. In a group discussing the election on Friday there was one intelligent, educated young voter who wasn’t sure which way he was going to vote and when I pointed out some of the corruption he countered; “I don’t know any of the history, I’ll vote on what I see now” and there is our problem. We conservatives need to take lessons from the ALP; Federal and State, and the US Democrats, and go to where the young ones socialize and hit them with facts. Facebook springs to mind; use all the resources of the internet and give them no excuse to vote ALP when they know all the facts. Like Obama or not, you have to respect his campaign on the road to the White House. Go read the article and remember – to win, we need to know the enemy. Here was a man who was introduced to politics by a member of a group of murders, the Weathermen, but it didn’t matter because not enough voters knew what the hell a Weatheman was…didn’t know the history….. but they recognized someone who spoke their language and he spoke their language where they congregated – on the internet. Here was a man who had never done anything significant but it didn’t matter – he spoke their language. We need to start campaigning now. We need a new leader, good looking with presence, male or female, educated, articulate, from a metro seat and they must have computer savvy. Not a programmer or hardware mechanic, but someone who understands the basic principles of the internet and its power and someone who is prepared to rewrite the Conservative Campaigning Handbook. Otherwise…get used to the back benches and more incompetence and corruption. With the ALP totally in control of the media, the law and the Public Service and the young ones not “knowing the history” and voting based on the last 10 second screen bite they saw on telly, it could be a long, cold winter.

The ALP under fire

The ALP get a caning in todays Opinion page in The Australian with Michael Stutchbury, Economics editor writing on the problems of forcing the restaurants to march in step with hotels
JUST as licensing regulations restrict competition in the hotel industry, working conditions in pubs have long been standardised by the award system and the liquor trades union. By contrast, the restaurant business is lightly regulated, dynamic and highly competitive. Restaurants used John Howard’s Work Choices and its individual work contracts to more flexibly deploy and reward their waiters and cooks. Now it’s payback time as the Rudd Government foists the straitjacket of the protected hotel industry on to its restaurant competitors.
Hotels can handle penalty loadings with their markups and large scale operations but restaurants, operating on tiny margins can’t, so I guess anybody thinking of starting a restaurant will, at the moment be thinking otherwise. Uni students who traditionally fill the restaurant jobs will have to look elsewhere.
Just one example is set out in sections 32.1 to 32.4 of the “modernised” Hospitality Industry (General) Award 2010. These impose 25 per cent penalty loadings for working on Saturday, 175 per cent for Sunday work, and 250 per cent for public holidays. Casuals get a hefty 25 per cent loading on top of that, lifting them up to 275 per cent for public holidays.
Why bother going to Uni when you can get $450 a day as a dish pig! Pretty soon we’ll all be restricted to Maccas and KFC for weekend dining or you’ll be paying a hundred bucks for an eye fillet. Malcom Colless gets straight to the point under the header ALP Lacks IR Mandate
THE Rudd Government’s industrial relations laws are bad for business, bad for the economy, and bad for democracy and freedom in the workplace. They are designed to get square with employees who dared to enter into private deals with their employers and shut out the prying eyes of the unions.
Colless again;
While the premise underpinning Work Choices was fundamentally sound – to encourage more flexibility and freedom of choice in the workplace – it was managed badly by the Coalition. But even then it was the well crafted and highly emotive union media campaign rather than the shortcomings of the system that drove a stake through the heart of the former government.
That has long been my take on the last election and with the unions now demanding payback for the tens of millions they spent on outing Howard the economy is heading for disaster. Never mind the Global problem, when it is all sorted out we will find business has simply stopped employing people. Get used to it folks.

Aboriginal Cop sacked

THE Northern Territory Police Force is proud of its Aboriginal Community Police Officers except, it seems, when they act like Aborigines. Gwen Brown, 53, one of the most awarded and senior ACPOs in the Territory, has been sacked for hitting her nephew with a stick, but she says she has the cultural right to do so.
“I got him and hit him on the butt with a stick, about three times,” she said. “It was just a long, thin ceremony stick. He put his arms behind him and I accidentally broke his arm.”
I used to smack my kids on the backside and they always put their hands there to try and deaden the blows and never once did any of them end up with a broken arm. Gwen Brown’s nephew was either suffering from some desease that took all the strength from his bones or she went ballistic. One or the other. “I accidentally broke his arm with a thin stick” doesn’t cut it.
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