Arabs fight a war over a camel

Arabs once fought a forty year war over a female camel…Yep, that’s what it says. In an interview on MEMRI TV Sheik Muhsen Al-’Awaji talks about the Busous War where a female camel was humiliated, and a 40-year war ensued to defend its honor. The Sheik rationalizes it all for us;
…proud that honor and nobility always characterized the Arabs, and then came Islam to reinforce these traits. I’m not saying I’m proud of a war over a female camel’s honor, or that I would call to wage a war to defend the honor of a female camel… But since this was done for the honor of a female camel, do not rebuke someone who would do anything to defend our beloved Prophet Muhammad.
Got that? Good. As Tim Blair says, we can’t be having a clash of civilizations…to do that we need two civilizations. So while the young western civilization either followed woman to war or went to war because of woman…Boadacia and Helen of Troy come to mind… the Arabs fight over a camel….for 40 years. Must have been a very, very pretty camel. via LGF I tried to google Busous War but it didn’t deliver any insights. Does anyone have a good link to Arabian Military history other than those depicting another thrashing by the Israelis where one can seek more such gems?

Eureka supporters in Baton protest

SUPPORTERS of the Eureka rebellion against the British empire plan to disrupt the Queen’s Baton relay as it passes through the site of the 1854 uprising in regional Victoria this week. For non-Commonwealth readers, the baton is being carried around AUstralia as a prelim to the Commonwealth Games – previously known as the Empire Games. I always presumed the Empire Games were established so Australia could have off-season Olympic Games training but I could be wrong. The spokeman, Marcus Neofitou, is reported as saying;
“These brave men wanted independence from the British Empire. The Commonwealth Games were the Empire Games right up to 1954.”
Imagine the stress of arriving at my point in life and realizing I had been poorly tutored, and worse, all the books I had read were wrong. I was always under the impression that the miners at Eureaka were protesting about Miners licences and the heavy handed monitoring of them by the Victorian police but Marcus says the were protesting against the entire British Empire…..well now, that’s a new approach. True, there was talk of a Republic at Eureka but let’s face, get two Irishmen together and amidst the alcohol-driven conversatons the words “Republic”, “Bloody” and “British” always gets a mention. There could be a case for Australia to become a republic but only if it happens because it is seen as best for the country; not just because certain people ‘hate the British’. However I may still be right and Marcus Neofitou wrong as the Eureka Centre at Ballarat shares my view. They do quote politicians who think the eureka rebellion was about a republic but their emphasis is not on this issue, it is on the issue of hard policing. I have to conclude that Marcus has got some press for his nefarious little protest against the British by saying something outrageous. Poor Fellow, my country has a distinct lack of wars in our long march to democracy. No War of Independance like our American cousins; no religious and monarchist wars like the Europeans; just a plain old get together and make a commonwealth. Given the lack of millions of war dead as the basis for a free country we are left to make do with what we have – 30 miners killed in a fight with the local police. This makes the Eureka rebellion an important event in our history and it also makes the Eureka flag (depicted on the stamp above) historically significant but unfortunately the BLF has used the flag as their logo for many years and Australians won’t accept it as a national icon, let alone flag, until the thugs of the BLF are long forgotten.

Qld MP resigns

QUEENSLAND Premier Peter Beattie faces the prospect of Labor’s third by-election loss in seven months after his absent backbencher Robert Poole resigned yesterday to live in Thailand. Poole claims he was in Thailand to undergo knee surgery and to be with his family. The Thai hospital says he had an appointment on 14 Feb but hasn’t been seen since and certainly hasn’t had any surgery.
Servants at Mr Poole’s Thai house said yesterday that he had not been seen there for at least two weeks, but had been busy working in the yard in January despite being in the country for a serious knee operation.
Just love the ‘servants’ bit. Beattie gave him three months leave to sort out the problem and appointed another MP to look after his election. The other MP promptly flew off to Thailand and Beattie claims to be surprised.
The MP tendered his resignation in a handwritten letter to Mr Beattie, hand-delivered by Ipswich Labor MP Don Livingstone, who made an unauthorised trip to Thailand last week to visit his friend and colleague.
Does Beattie expect us to believe that there is so little coordination, process and disipline in the Qld Labour Party that MPs can wonder off will-nilly to anywhere in the world? There’s a couple of questions going begging here such as; when talking to the stand-in MP did Beattie state the obvious… ‘I expect you to be in your electorate whilst so appointed’ and if he did why didn’t the MP say ‘well I’m planning a trip to Thailand myself’ Of course questions should have been asked of Poole at preselection. Questions that normally people would not find a need to ask such as; ‘If elected do you intend to represent your electorate or do you plan to leave Australia and live overseas?’ Beattie is being back-footed every week and it doesnt bode well for his chances of re-election. The only fly in that ointment is the standing of the local opposition. It’s a worry.

Sizzler ignores poison

Police have arrested a woman over the food poisoning scare at two Sizzler restaurants in Brisbane.

The Sizzler chain has closed all of its self-serve salad bars in Australia after rat poison was found in food at two Brisbane restaurants.

That last sentence should read;

The Sizzler chain has closed all of its self-serve salad bars in Australia 37 days after after rat poison was first found in food at two Brisbane restaurants.

The Queensland Health Minister is not happy and I would imagine the thousands of Sizzler customers who visited over the last five weeks would be a little miffed as well.

Apparently Australian labs can’t identify rat poison as Sizzlers sent the sample overseas for testing.

The bitch is in Australia

Jane Fonda is in town. Readers may wonder why a man who is normally reserved would resort to such profanity but I have along memory, and the years to develop it, and remember Jane Fonda more as an agent for the Vietnamese communists during the Vietnam War than an actress. In 1968 Jane starred in the sci-fi movie Barbarella where she drove every young male into fantasy overload with her looks, figure and costumes. I too was taken in untill four years later we all saw beyond her looks, figure and costumes and discovered her intelectuall appreciation of all things communist. Dropped her like a red hot coal, I did. No more could she have her way with me as even then I appreciated there was more to woman than looks. Here’s my favourite pin-up picture of Jane. It shows her manning a Communist Anti Aircraft gun during a trip she made to North Vietnam in 1972. She had accepted their offer to star in communist propaganda movies and radio interviews to the detriment of her fellow Americans. As one disgruntled marine pilot said. It’s one thing to protest about the war and the government’s involvement but that gun wasn’t aimed at the government; it was aimed at US pilots. To put her treason in perspective one would have to imagine an Australian actress posing on a Japanese gun emplacement when the Japs were busy shooting down Australian and US pilots during World War 2. Treason, plain and simple, writ huge. Here for more details of her treason. Over at Tim Blairs people are discussing the roll of actors and entertainers in society and the thread settles on the fact that good or bad, actors are just entertainers. A lot of people get confused with a pretty or handsome face and the parts actors play. I swear there are film buffs out in the world who confuse the lines actors ‘read’ with reality and end up thinking an actor is smart when the only smarts are from the script writer. George Clooney is a case in point. In this article in the Age he says;
….he is proud to be denounced as unpatriotic for questioning US policy because he wanted to be on “the right side of history”.
I have enjoyed his acting over the years but I know it’s acting and that the parts he plays are just that, parts in a movie. George, and not a few of his peers in Hollywood, seem to think that being popular translates as being intelligent and that people will vote out a Political party because he doesn’t like them and, don’t you know, he is smarter that us…he is, after all, a popular actor. Whether or not he is on “the right side of history” remains to be seen. Jane Fonda’s communism has been defeated and only remains in a few countries that no-one cares about and I believe George Clooney’s terrorists will eventually go the same way. Life is too short (at least in my time of life it is) to spend valuable time watching movies and supporting actors who think they are always on the right side of history based on their Tinsel Town life experiences. I mean, just how much history has George read?

Redfern still a problem

POLICE in NSW’s top robbery hotspot, Redfern, have demanded 20 more frontline officers be posted to the area or they will consider industrial action.
Robbery rates in Redfern are spiralling, a Police Association branch meeting was told yesterday. Redfern local area command last year experienced a massive 7.4 per cent of all robberies across the state. 
The meeting voted to give NSW Police 30 days to meet the demand or face industrial action. Association president Bob Pritchard said the extra numbers were essential to ensure the community got the service it needed. Maybe we should level the place, turn it into a giant CBD carpark and call it Whitlams Folly but then we would have to number it to account for all of his folleys…maybe “Whitlam’s Folly 3615” or similar.

Optus in command

Landline down Thursday…ADSL down…can’t fix until Monday…Monday…landline fixed….ADSL coding has to be reprogrammed…will take another four to five days.  On the seventh tele call to Optus had a win and spoke to someone whose first language was English. Dialup is so slow I forget what I was looking for by the time I get there so will work on the 150 emails (two-thirds spam) tonight and post tomorrow. You remember the dialup problem…Dad, can I make a phone call?

Just when you thought it was safe to go in the water again…it is.

PETER Benchley, author of the bestseller Jaws that was the basis for the blockbuster movie that terrified beachgoers and kept many out of the water for years, died at his home at age 65, his family said overnight.but I empathise with the Benchly family but one of my daughters is still traumatised by the movie Jaws and still views the sea as a source of terror so I’m glad the chance of another Jaws movie has deminished by his demise.

AWB Fiasco III

Greg Sheridan in the Australian.
I THINK it’s time we all took a cold shower on AWB (formerly the Australian Wheat Board) and its participation in the Iraq oil-for-food scandal. According to the Volcker inquiry, about 2253 companies from 66 countries were involved in paying kickbacks to the Saddam Hussein regime as part of their trade under oil-for-food.
My thoughts exactly. If you do business in this part of the world you pay bakshees. If you don’t pay you don’t sell. Would ‘Tricky’ Rudd or Beasley have compensated the thousands of Australian wheat growers for loss of sales if the crop stayed in the bins? No way. Australians see that it’s all about the ALP trying to score a strike against the government; that the government most probably didn’t know about the details of the case and that after all, the AWB did what it was chartered to do – sell the wheat crop in extremely difficult circumstances. As well as getting money to the wheat growers for their efforts they most probably saved lives in Iraq. Kids had food for a change. I guess that in the total absence of any coherent policies the ALP can not hope to win power; they can only hope to bring the government down by a technicality.
The broader question of corruption is very slippery. When people are accused of corruption, this normally means acting dishonestly, stealing money for themselves. Many people connected to the UN, such as Kofi Annan’s son Koji, made a lot of money personally through oil-for-food. No one is alleging that folks at AWB were improperly pocketing money themselves.
It’s not about the AWB, they are just the catalyst for the ALP to attack. There will be any amount of Australian companys who will have paid ‘fees’ to get goods over the wharves in Indonesia, through customs in some South African excuse for a country or even into a European market. It just happens and the only difference is the actual word used to describe the ‘fees’. In fact, if any company tells you they don’t pay ‘fees’ to get goods into Indonesia I would say they are telling porkies. The ABC, SBS and ALP should get over it and start acting as a constructive opposition. There are plenty of bills to debate and the AWB will not cost Howard any votes.

Beazley and Downer on cartoons

OPPOSITION Leader Kim Beazley has condemned the publication in Australia of controversial cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed. Mr Beazley said he believed publishing the caricatures was “extremely unwise”.
“It’s an offensive cartoon and it shouldn’t be printed,” he said.
I’m sure he meant to say they are offensive cartoons. Brisbane’s Courier-Mail newspaper has published one of the 12 cartoons, while political commentator Tim Blair has posted all 12 on his website.The cartoons, which were first published in Denmark, have sparked violent protests around the Muslim world. Downer says;
“I see the cartoons they produce of me and John Howard and so on and they’re usually incredibly offensive but that is just the nature of our society.” “I think around the world people have got to learn that not everybody needs to agree with them or have the same interpretations that they have of events or people, and they need to demonstrate a higher degree of tolerance.”
Mr Beazley also has condemned the global violence over the cartoons, as “absurd and disproportionate”. It might be procative to publish the cartoons but the alternative is to be seen as buckling under fatwas and only printing in our media what these 7th century zealots authorise. Not this little black duck. Meanwhile, Al JAzeera reports that Iran is planning a series of Holocaust cartoons in retaliation
Iran’s largest selling newspaper has announced it is holding a contest on cartoons of the Holocaust in response to the publishing in European papers of caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad.
When no Mosques are destroyed, no riots eventuate, no Iranian flags burnt and no threats made they are going to appear stupid. So stupid in fact that they won’t even realize it.
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