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An email from Ireland

My son, Steven, is currently teaching in London and heads off on a break during mid-term.

….From Holyhead i caught a massive ferry into Dublin. I am here currently and although i was a bit uncertain about coming here, i am glad i have. I went on a bus trip around town and visited the Guinness brewery and the Kilmainham gaol. The latter being the best thing i have seen on my travels too date.

The goal can only be viewed with a guide and boy did she know her stuff. This prison is ‘the’ historical piece of Ireland. Established around 1800 when the act of union came into being and closing in the 1920’s upon the establishment of the irish free state. This prisons main purpose was to house the irish political leaders.

Walking through their cells, seeing their graffitti and hearing the reasons for their imprisonment was very emotional stuff. All of the main leaders were put in here from the united irishman who lead the first rebellion in the late 1700’s to the leaders of the 1916 easter rebellion.

The most gripping part was when we went into the court yard where all these amazing men and women were ‘murdered’. There you find a simple black cross and a flagpole with the irish flag waving. You feel the history in the place along with the deep sacrifices made for independence.

Many people were in tears by this place and as she told of one of the 1916 leaders, dragged from hospital still in his wheelchair, stripped, blindfolded, tied, (with a) white cloth placed over his heart so the gunmen could aim at it, i too was moved.

What was also fascinating about this place was the history of the irish civil war which i had no idea about. The terms of the treaty which brought ireland into being, apparently split ireland down the middle and led to a 10 month civil war. The stories from this period are so devasting words can’t describe how it must have affected the people involved in it. People here don’t talk about it, what with it being so recent, considering that people Nana’s age would have been involved, no wonder the conflict is still around.

In the scope of history this thing happened yesterday.

One of the most moving things i read was a letter from one of the political prisoners to his long time girlfriend, also in prison, asking for marriage as his last dying wish before being executed. The wedding took place in the prison chapel, he was handcuffed the entire time, no friends or family were present and after the wedding they shot him while she, being in the same prison, could hear it.

During the potato famine things were so bad that people commited crimes to get in here, for then they were sure to get at least one meal a day. For a prison that was meant to house only 600 people during the famine it took in at least 10 000 prisoners. Thats right at least 10,000.

People were in spaces so tight god only knows how the could have endured it. When they died, which thousands did in this place, they were buried under these massive pieces of stone. Body after body, no names and they had a type of acidic mixture thrown on them to stop disease and everything else. Till this day no body knows how many people are under those stones.

It was also interested to hear about the last prisoner of the jail ending up as the countries first president. This place was left to ruin and was almost demolished, but a small group of people saved it – a story amazing in and of itself. The prison has been used for the setting of many films ‘The Italian Job’,’In the Name of the Father’ and numerous songs by u2 etc.

This prison leaves you with the most deep seated rage and hatred for the English whose role in all this misery is both outrageous and undeniable.

Yet, its the involvement of the irish time and time again in the carrying out of so much of this history as well that, beggers belief. That so many would work with the English against their own people is like imagining the Jews working as guards in the concentration camps. Yet after centuries of persecution they must have either seen no other way to survive, or were ignorant of the fact, regardless it is a most depressing history. I don’t think its for no reason that Dublin is home to many fine beer establishments and whiskey dist.

After you leave these places the words by Parnell sink deep into your very being:

No man has a right to fix the boundary to the march of a nation. No man has a right to say to his country, “Thus far shalt go and no further”.

Which leads me on a lighter note, the Guinness brewery. This is the no.1 tourist destination in ireland. That’s right more people visit a brewery then any other attraction in the whole country. The exhibition was fantastic and the history was great, however i was more taken in by the history of their advertisements. Some of their ads are excellent, particularily the one’s using the circus animals. The originals are very pretty and i must admit that the toucans are absolutely delightful. At the top of the brewery there is a bar which has 360 degree views over Dublin. It is the place to see the city as well as have a pint of the black gold. The brewery is massive around 26 hec. and takes up a huge chunk of the city.

The passion that is Ireland and her ‘troubles’ has visited one of us. I’ll reserve my opinion on Ireland and let the email stand on it’s own. The matter of young people going overseas to see for themselves the history they learnt at school and heard at the feet of their elders is one of the great institutuions around today.

All of my kinder have travelled and they are all the better for it.

Well written, don’t you think?

Semantics

Interrogated, interviewed who gives a damn. We are at war and if we can’t interview/interrogate/harrass/threaten/grill/question/cross-examine/quiz/play bad music near/annoint with red textra/yell at/take stupid photos of/point at their dicks and laugh to try and stop them murdering women and kids and slitting throats of innocents then what are we allowed to do?

ABC’s Lateline program can always find some recalcitrant to critisize Howard. It’s hardly world shattering although I know some Banshees, Luvvies of the ABC and others, short of life skills and experiences, thrive on every word; the bulk of the population are more worried about wages, interest rates, kids, kid’s education and other ‘real life’ worries.

ABC see it as their role in life and that’s fine but the ALP, desperate to appear meaningful, are grabbing at straws and need to tell the Left to shutup while they try and regain some relevance in Australian politics.

Nostalgia

“He would say that, wouldn’t he?”

Not only did I close the last post with a line that only 50 plus year old readers would be familiar with, but I accredited it to the wrong woman. It was actually Mandy Rice-Davies, a friend of Christine, who uttered the immortal line “He would say that, wouldn’t he?

Mandy was in court and when the defence claimed that Lord Astor had never paid to have sex with her she uttered the memorable line. The quote entered the English language and basically says nothing objective comes from sources with a vested interest.

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Mandy Rice-Davies

My older readers are now smiling with the memory and the younger ones are wondering what the hell I’m on about.

Stay with me.

A Sydney reader, Terry M. pointed out my error and started me Googling to refresh my memory.

Ah! Now I remember.

In 1962 Christine Keeler, a striking beautiful young woman, had run away from home at the age of 16 and become a showgirl at Murray’s cabaret club in Soho, London, where she was employed “to walk around naked”.

John Profumo was the British Secretary of State for War, married to actress Valerie Hobson, educated at Harrow and Oxford and had everything going for him other than his pronounced zipper problem.

Christine met Mandy Rice-Davies and Stephen Ward, a fashionable London osteopath ,who enjoyed sketching the rich and famous and the three of them often spent weekends at a cottage belonging to one of Ward’s friends, Lord Astor.

So did Profumo.

Getting better, isn’t it?

Profumo and Keeler had a short but torrid affair that most probably would have been ignored by the press except Christine had also slept with Eugene Ivanov, a patriotic Russian who was a naval attach? at the Soviet Embassy – he was also a spy . . .

Back in Albany, WA, aged 15, I was undergoing my penultimate year at high school. A task made very difficult by hormones and testosterone bubbling away forcing maths and English into the background while I tried to come to grips with girls.

In 1962 we didn’t even know what a girl looked like sans clothes.

There was a magazine called ‘Adam’ that had women in suggestive poses but all fully clothed. The only pictures available were hunted out in the school library under ‘Travel’. The odd National Geographic had pictures of foreign woman in various states of undress with a naked, upper torso shot here and there.

There, I’ve said it. My sex education was based on the National Geographic magazine.

It could be said that men of my age were terribly disadvantaged in that we spent years of our youth imagining woman to be built like PNG Marys. The suckling pigs threw us a bit, but we learnt to ignore that.

Albany is a port and I do recall a couple of us talking to sailors on leave and one of them flashing a set of ‘dirty post cards’ The memory is dim however, as the flashing was just that, a flash, and that type of thing needs protracted study.

And then along came Christine and that photo in the chair. It was sheer pornography to us as it was very obvious she was NAKED!

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The press filled in the gaps and we were never the same.

WHERE ARE THEY NOW?

John Profumo has kept a low profile since the sensational events of the 1960s, mainly occupying himself with charity work. He was named Commander of the British Empire in 1975 for his charitable work.

After the scandal broke, the Naval attach? Ivanov was called back to Moscow and never heard from again.

Keeler lives quietly in North London, and says she still feels “bewildered” by what happened. Rice-Davies is a grandmother and lives in America.

Mandy Rice -Davies is also quoted as saying;

My life has been one long descent into respectability.

in connection with reports that she was on social terms with Sir Denis Thatcher, husband of ex-prime minister Margaret Thatcher.

My problem with women, maths and English eventually resolved itself but not for some years. In my writings in another venue I recorded this in 1964

We had four days off early in 1964 and three of us chose to go to Sydney. For all of us, all boys from the bush, the thought of maybe a million girls in a 30 or 40-square mile paddock must clear up the virginity problem.

It didn’t.

‘Diddums’ Habib

The Banshees now have their work cut out trying to make Habib’s appearance on last night’s 60 Minutes believable. In this morning’s Australian Foreign Minister Downer says words to the effect that ‘We don’t believe he is inncocent” and ‘He’ll be lucky to get his passport back’ thus reflecting most rational people’s views on the matter.

Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said the Government still had concerns about Mr Habib and doubted whether he would succeed in his action in the Administrative Appeals Tribunal to have his passport returned.

“ASIO has great concerns about him. They have great concerns about his alleged involvement with al-Qa’ida,” he told the Nine Network.

The New York Times also has a piece from the weekend. (free subscription required) They’re happy to get the word ‘Torture’ in the headline but don’t come up with any new allegations.

Federal Attorney-General Philip Ruddock is glad that at least Habib has now admitted that he was in Afghanistan

“The other matter that I think is new, is that the only claims I’ve ever made were that he was in Afghanistan and was believed, on advice from others that were there, that he trained with al-Qaeda,” Mr Ruddock said.

“They are matters that last night he declined to reject outright and said that he might speak to a judge about.

“That is new information because his representatives have always previously denied that he was in Afghanistan.”

Habib has only answered the charges of aiding and abbetting El Quaida with claims of dubious torture. Habib’s saga of undescribable torture includes being forced to look at photoshop piccies.

He also said he was forced to look at photographs of his wife’s face doctored to fit images of naked women placed next to Osama bin Laden.

Oh. My God. Such strength. How brave the man that can endure that level of torture and still live to talk about it.

If someone flashed me a picture of a woman bearing a ‘photoshopped’ face of my wife standing along side Osama Bin Laden I doubt very much that I would think ‘Oh, my God. My wifes having it off with Osama’! ‘I’ll say whatever they want. This is inhumane’.

I’d be thinking ‘Iv’e got these guys tossed if that’s the best they can come up with. I’ve had worse in training.

Habib doesn’t deserve any more oxygen from the press and we need to go on but I wait with baited breath for the Banshees to take up his cause and quote everyting he says as gospel.

As Christine Keeler said many years ago…”He would say that. Wouldn’t he?”

Update: Not only did I close this post with a line that only 50 years old would be familia with, but I accredited to the wrong woman. It was actually Mandy Rice-Davies, a friend of Christine, who uttered the line “He would say that, wouldn’t he?

For those who care about such things, the full story of the Profumo Affair, a British saga of sex, spies, lying Ministers lying to the house and misleading the British House of Commons nearly brought down a Government is here

Frivolous Friday

The mind boggles – particularly considering my wife is the source of the pic – she claims she still has sore knuckles from being taught piano by the Sisters of Mercy at All Hallows, Brisbane.

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I want some! Stools, that is.

Old Soldiers

Quote from Bunker Mulligan in a post on Dissappearing Blogs

Thirty plus years ago Staff Sergeant Billy Webb assured me I had absolutely no reason to have an ego, and the only one authorised was his.

I know the feeling, Forty plus years ago Sergeant King suggested the only reason he was allowing me to pass Corps Training and go on to a Regiment was because he wanted me out of his hair.

Damn, there was a long line of Sergeants in those early days who failed miserably in recognizing my talents.

(In my later years the long line may still have been there but military ettiquette and a natural desire for promotion may have tempered their comments)

Crew Error

According to this report from News.com the sad case of HMAS Ballarat running aground at Christmas Island points to human error

I had posted earlier on this incident and said then it was a bad career move. I could be right if todays news release at News.com is anything to go by.

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HMAS Ballarat

Ian McPhedran, defence reporter writes,

A series of errors prompted the computer system to over-ride manual commands and the ship’s company had to stand by and watch as HMAS Ballarat backed on to the rocky shoreline.

Well, that’s it then, I thought. The Navy have obviously held their inquiry and found the cause to be Human error.

But wait, the inquiry is not due to start until later in February!

A public board of inquiry will be conducted from February 22 and the ship’s captain could face a court-martial.

It looks to me like the Captain and crew have already been found guilty by the press.

Readers from the legal proffessions may comment here, but this simple layman thinks the inquiry is now prejudiced.

Is this too much information to release prior to an inquiry?

Seems like it to me.

‘Anna’ witch hunt

In an article in the Age, Andra Jackson sheets home the blame for the trials and tribulations of Cornelia Rau, AKA ?Anna Schmidt,? to the Queensland Police.

Queensland police say they were unable to identify her, even though she was listed as missing with NSW police. They handed her over to immigration authorities after she gave an alias of “Anna” and spoke some German, leading them to suspect she was “an illegal non-citizen”.

The words even though she was listed as missing with NSW police don’t really mean much if the woman is talking German, doesn’t give her name and is carrying no ID. It was most probably reasonable to take the action they did – hand her over to immigration.

The words even though she was listed as missing with NSW police definitely don’t mean anything when the family hadn’t even submitted their missing persons report at the time of the Queensland police intervention. The Age’s timeline has her handed over to the police by the Aborigines at Coen in March and her family filing a missing person’s report with the NSW Police in August. (scroll down to the bottom of the page) So not only are the police guilty of thinking that someone who looks, talks and acts like an illegal non-citizen needs to be handed over to Immigration but they failed to check for a missing person’s file that hadn’t even been submitted.

I’m of the opinion that the initial problem in this terrible case is the State Governments abrogation of their duty towards the care of mentally ill people. Mental institutions are politically incorrect in these enlightened days with the result that more and more of the insane or mentally disturbed are pushed into standard hospitals that can ill afford the bed space or time to give them proper treatment.

‘Send them back on the street’ say the bean counters and we end up with ‘Anna’ walking around Coen jabbering in German.

During her detention she was subjected to physical restraint in Brisbane prison. At Baxter she was isolated for a week and then locked in her room for 18 hours a day, despite exhibiting highly disturbed behaviour.

Says who?

In another article in The Age Pamela Curr, co-ordinator of the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre in Melbourne says;

…her (Anna’s)fate could befall Australia residents who could not confirm their identity, whether ill or not.

and she is most probably right.

If you look foreign, speak only in a foreign tongue, can’t ID yourself and generally act ‘iffy’ then you will attract the attention of Immigration. That’s their job and if one is found acting like an illegal non-citizen then it is the job of police hand such people over to immigration for them to make an assessment.

Pamela Curr and Andra Jackson are both supporters of illegal boat people and visa over-stayers who shop for the country with the best social security and consequently come here. Pamela, Andra and their kind will never forgive Howard for stopping the boat people cold in their tracks and look for every breech or supposed breech of their vision of how the country should be run as a means to attack the government.

Beazley talks of compensation

Speaking on Channel Ten’s Meet The Press, Mr Beazley said Ms Rau could well have a compensation claim against the Immigration Department.

Good idea Kim. Start with the Manly Hospital and the NSW Health Department.

The Democrats want a judicial enquiry and also demand a Senate enquiry. They will want that before June so it will be stacked with Labour, Democrats and Greens. They most probably see this as their last chance to embarrass the government.

Not to be outdone the Refugee Action Coalition want a royal commission with Vanstone?s head on a plate as the centre-piece.

The NSW Refugee Action Coalition has called for a royal commission into Ms Rau’s detention and for Immigration Minister Amanda Vanstone to resign “for allowing such a brutal episode to take place in one of her detention centres”.

Roll on the Conservative Senate majority.

‘Anna’s” case is regrettable but terms of reference for any enquiry needs to centre on how she slipped through the system in the first place. What was her path from Manly to Coen. How does a psychiatric patient in such a bad way as has been reported, escape in the first place. Coen is a bloody long way from Manly – did no one notice a deranged woman, unable to speak English wandering around?

When she was in the Brisbane prison and ‘had to be restrained’ why wasn’t she subject to a full psychiatric assessment and treated accordingly. Kim Beasley might suggest the family sue Queensland Corrective services and Health Department as well as the NSW Health system.

I feel sorry for the woman and wish her and her family well but I think point- scoring by the banshees of the left needs to be toned down so we can look at all aspects of the case – starting with the contributions of the NSW and Queensland Health and Corrective Services departments and then by tracing her path of troubles all the way from Manly Hospital to Baxter.

Sugar Ray Robinson

‘Sugar’ Ray, an ATSIC commissioner, refuses to answer questions on cheque cashing as it might incriminate him.

Damn right it might but he’s in court on fraud charges and the truth will out.

ATSIC commissioner “Sugar” Ray Robinson took to the stand yesterday in his fraud trial and twice refused to answer questions on the grounds he might incriminate himself.

Mr Robinson’s gambling habits also came under close scrutiny with claims he put $4.3 million through the poker machines at Brisbane’s Treasury Casino over three years.

$4.3 million bloody dollars through the poker machines!

Mr Hunter put it to him that records from the Brisbane casino showed he had spent $4.3million from January 2001 to August 2004.

Mr Robinson denied he had spent that amount, saying the casino’s recording system did not accurately reflect the amount gamblers actually put into the machines.

I was once a licenced poker machine operator and believe me, that’s exactly what the machines and computers do record. The amount fed in and the amount paid out. If he is using a card then believe the figures.

“The machines roll around for three to four hours,” he said.

“You can have $50,000 or $60,000 registered on the machines when you only put in $100.”

Yeah. Right mate. Everybody gets 50 or 60k for a $100 outlay particularly when the industry works on an 85% return.

When a Crown prosecutor accused the former ATSIC deputy chairman of cashing an indigenous housing company cheque for $6000 and depositing $2900 in his personal bank account Mr Robinson refused to answer, saying: “It may incriminate me.”

It goes on and on and Aborigines wonder why the Government are in the process of gutting ATSIC.

Pedophile on the loose

LETTING communities know pedophiles are living among them is a bad idea, a prominent New South Wales civil liberatarian says.

Community leaders such as school principals and politicians were not responsible enough to use the information properly, NSW Council for Civil Liberties president Cameron Murphy said.

The man rapes three children, is convicted and serves 14 years. He refuses to undergo any rehabilitation in prison. He is eventually released from prison and then gets 15-month sentence for failing to tell NSW’s Child Protection Register he had a job that gave him access to children.

On the face of it I can’t see any signs of Ferguson being a changed man but the civil libertiy people are all up in arms about mothers and fathers demanding their civil liberties. You know… freedom for their children to play and move around the community without being molested.

Opposition Deputy Leader Jeff Seeney, whose electorate includes Murgon, called on all communities that became home to Ferguson to protest so the Government would tighten the laws.

Mr Seeney said 519 serious sex offenders had walked free from Queensland prisons in the past five years without completing rehabilitation and they should be put into institutions indefinitely.

The father in me wants him dead. The citizen in me wants him in a position where he can’t molest kids. If he has shown no remorse and refuses rehabilitation then can’t we keep him secure at Her Majesty’s pleasure until we, as the citizens, through our law courts, are satisfied that he wont offend again.

Some of these people rape and murder, are convicted, spend time in prison and are then released. They then rape and murder, are convicted……

Do Civil Libertarians notice this cycle. Does it feature in what they say about the rapists liberties and what do they say about the victims liberties?

Not much I would think and Cameron Murphy says school principals and politicians are not responsible enough.

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