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Bob Carr warns Lebanese thugs

Bob Carr warns Lebanese thugs – obey our laws or go back home in this piece in todays Australian

This is pretty easy for Bob to say as State Governments don’t have the power to send them home – it’s a federal thing, but this fact doesn’t detract from the message. The Melbourne gang wars aside, outright ‘machine gunning’ of people is not an Australian pastime. If we are not careful we will have wedding guests spraying AK47s in the air as a celebration and shooting down small aircraft.

I’d like to think that we could pick up on Bobs ‘racist’ speech and say to these turkeys “One strike in certain crime divisions and all bets are off”. Crimes like murder and raping women ‘Leb Style’ get you a one way ticket back to the shit hole you come from. You want to live in a great society then you must remember that is great simply because we don’t put up with that filfth.

Born on this day in 1946 I have lived through the great post war migration where Europeans came from troubled times in the old countries to the new. They brought with them culture, cuisine and artistic expression that has made the Australia of my senior years far better than the one of my youth.

I like to look at it this way. If I invite you into my home what do you contribute? If it’s machine guns and rape you are not welcome. If you bring the hatreds of thousands of years of Middle East troubles and wish to practice them here then likewise I will not invite you to eat at my table.

Thinking about it, what can the Middle East people contribute to Australia? Subjugation of women maybe – just ask my eldest daughter about how the Egyptian males treated her when she was touring the Pyramids. How to hate someone who doesn’t subscribe to your God – just ask the families of of the WTC and Bali victims. The only positive I can see is people from that area who are trying to distance themselves from these mindsets – they are worth the dinner invitation.

The others? One strike and your out.

Cairns Dead

If I lived in Melbourne I would be around to dance on his grave. Not just in celebration but to trample the earth hard so he can’t be resurrected by his followers.

That’s a bit rough Kev, I can hear you say.

Hell it is! If I’m passionate about one thing in my life it’s the treatment handed out to us Vietnam Vets by the extreme left wing movement.

I have no problems with democracy, freedom of speach, the right to assembly, the right to disagree or the right to back a stupid cause and thus by extension I have no problems with the people who marched in the Morotoriums.

But hear me well; if you spat on one digger, if you called one vet a baby killer (it happened to me) or phoned one grieving parent then there is no honour for you here or anywhere else.

A couple of incidences; On 5 Feb 1968 Trent Grall then a corporal in the 7th Battalion was involved in a clash with the Viet Cong.

Three VC were killed and one, a lieutenant captured. Australian press carried the story including a picture of Trent guarding the 32 year old VC lieutenant. The article mentioned Trent’s home town making it easy for activists to track his parents. They received a string of abusive telephone calls from anti-war activists accusing him (because the Lieutenant appeared small in the photo) of being an abuser of Vietnamese children.

The same week Peter ‘Slippery’ Dowling (another corporal) says; “During Tete 68 we made contact with the NVA in a well fortified camp on and off over three days. We had 1 killed and 20 wounded…” The dead Aussie, our mate, someones son, brother, the light in some poor girls eyes, a hole in his mothers heart forever, Private Mick Ayres died in ‘Slippery’s’ arms. He died doing his duty – protecting his mates.

There was a particularly ugly aftermath to Mick’s death. In a vicious gesture, anti-Vietnam war protesters phoned his parents and said “he got what he deserved”. His parents have this dispicable act imprinted on their memory to this day.

Quotes from ‘Conscripts and Regulars’ by General Mike O’Brien, Allen and Unwin 1995 pp115,116.

Jim’s death is reported here in the Australian where Gough Whitlam feels a need to damn him with faint praise. Nevertheless, Gough Whitlam last night told The Australian: “Jim Cairns brought a nobility to the Labor cause which has never been surpassed.” Nobility? Cairns? Even Gough can’t believe that.

And this from Tom Uren; “Cairns did many great things for the ALP and for Australia, but the real tragedy of Jim Cairns was that he didn’t become the driving, creative minister he could have been,” Mr Uren said. “Jim Cairns belongs in the same mould as Nelson Mandela, Ho Chi Minh and Xanana Gusmao, who have the … humility, compassion, courage and commitment our human family needs,” he said.

Well Tom would say that, wouldn’t he? Kind of takes your breath away, doesn’t it? Arguably the worse Treasurer Australia has ever had, forced out of parliament for lying about offering Australia’s sovereignty to some Arabs; he wasn’t even smart enough to keep ‘a bit on the side’ on the side. News.com says it all…nothing. They don’t even mention Gough’s noble mate.

If the extreme left claim Cairn’s as their leader then like all commanders he must wear the consequences of the actions off his troops. You can’t cannonize the man and blame a few hard corps idiots. They fed and fattened on his attacks on the Aussie digger and open support of the communists.

I feel better now.

700 sheep stage a protest

700 sheep stage a protest against the treatment of their mates on the good ship MV Cormo Express.

Locals at Clifton, a Darling Downs town in Queensland, think it’s all about a Sheep Dog Trail coming up but impressed by the similarities of other protest marches lately lately I think they missed the point.

In other protests of similar intellect a loser in Britian pushed a peanut with his nose 11 km to protest against something or other.

Mark McGowan, a 37-year-old artist, arrives outside 10 Downing Street, in London Friday September 12, 2003. McGowan rolled the nut 11km using his nose as a protest against student fees. McGowan handed the nut over to Number 10, along with a letter asking Prime Minister Tony Blair to accept it as payment for his student debt.

Click here for a pic of the idiot artist

And theres more. A peace activist attempted to pay a court fine with a check chiseled on a small tombstone Friday, as a protest at the number of civilians killed in the recent war in Iraq.

At least the cheque won’t ‘bounce’.

Thumbs up to the sheep at Clifton. There protest is pointless but then they make no claims of intellect.

Just when I was thinking

Just when I was thinking Arnie had yet to graduate to speaking in whole paragraphs he enters a 76 day race for the governorship of the world 5th largest economy and wins. Today I note he has a BA in business and economics from Wisconson so maybe I need to look up the recipe for humble pie. Then…… I remembered that in my previous life, I considered BAs earned by subalterns as a ticket stating – this man has shown an ability to learn, conduct research and study and is therefore considered capable of learning his profession.

I resist the temptation to comment on Arnie’s groping in case some poor girl from my past has a flash back occassioned by repressed memory syndrome and trolls my site. (I wish)

With the quality of advise Arnie’s type of money can buy I’m sure it can work but the relevant point about the whole affair, to me at least, will be the sound of the squealing of California’s ‘we have been bloody robbed again’ left wing. Like El nino these harmonious sounds will burst across the Pacific and when they hit the Great Barrier Reef, slowed by the her bulk, will reverberate around the east coast giving me pleasure on an otherwise boring day.

It appears we still have

It appears we still have a lot of work to do to help our fellow Aussies, the Aborigines, to come out of the Stone Age.

Telstra, only eight weeks away from connecting Mornington Island to high speed computer access, have had to stop work while The Carpentaria Land Council are demanding more than $300 a day for cultural monitors. Yep, thats what it says ‘cultural monitors’

What the hell are cultural monitors? Luddites with the role of keeping these poor bastards in the Stone Age.

$300 a day is stuff-all but the principle is huge. Whoever thought of the cultural monitor scam needs to be locked in an outback dunney with a big angry red roo. I know kids are going to play computer games when the link finally over-rides ‘cultural issues’ but maybe, just maybe, someone will access the internet, the greatest library since Alexander’s time, in the search of knowledge.

For foreign readers, Mornington Island is as remote a location as you might see anywhere in the western world and the thought that they were about to get internet access was great until cultural tom-foolery came to the fore.

Bourke Shire councilers are furious and flying to Brisbane to confront the State Government about ‘cultural issues’. The person who had handled the issue for the Carpentaria Land Council was ‘on leave’ and no-one else was prepared to comment.

Independant Federal MP, Bob Katter, who should know, says the issue is all about deciding which Aboriginal group/tribe had rights to which area. They are also fighting among themselves over who belongs to which tribe. Bob puts a kind spin on it but I think the fight is over who belong to whom and which tribe stands to get the best ‘sit down’ money.

Mining companies with associated jobs and income for Aborigies are falling over themselves to leave the area for politically stable new sites and I don’t blame them.

Poor fella my country indeed.

Update: Dave, a reader, comments $300 per diem may be stuff all but not when paid to every local tribesman This article underlines the problem and makes further mockery of ‘cultural issues’.

Can we do something to stop this…..NOW!

Tim Blair links to an

Tim Blair links to an article in todays Age by Mark Forbes and John Silvester. It deals with how the AFP and the Indonesian police got onto the Bali Bombers. It’s a great piece of reporting and you should read it in full. I have included the direct link below to save your mouse finger.

Over the years I’ve had a lot of comments from people that are against training Indonesians in our military and police institutions. I’ve always argued that if we train them then we know how they are going to react in any given circumstances and this is important if we ever have to fight them. However, presuming this is unlikely to happen, a real and obvious advantage of letting Indonesians into our colleges is that a certain rapport will develop between Police and Army Officers from both countries as they get to know each other.

Never understimate how important this is. When Gen Cosgrove or Leah have an Indonesian based problem they can pick up the phone and talk to their counterparts. When Gen Lewis, Director of Special Forces and Bahasa Indonesian speaker has a problem then he does the same but in Bahasa. All these officer will have done a lot of courses with Indonesians of similar rank over their respective careers.

Keelty, AFP Commissioner has a similar network.

The week after the attack, President Megawati Soekarno-putri signed an agreement in Jakarta for a historic joint investigation into the tragedy. Luckily for the Australians, the straight-talking officer General I Made Pastika was named as chief investigator. He had become friends with Keelty after the pair did a police management course in Canberra in 1993.

and;

Ashton, the Federal Police liaison officer in Jakarta between 1995 and 1997, spoke Bahasa and was friendly with senior Indonesian police.

Go read the article in full and then thank your lucky stars that we have people like this working diligently and professionally to track down the terrorists.

Over at troppo Wayne Wood

Over at troppo Wayne Wood accuses me of parroting a line and Niall thinks I’ve fizzled out. My wife might agree with Nial and the kids most probably could quote most of my parroted old lines but a debate needs more than cliches to win a point.

Still, I welcome any debate on defence. I allows me to climb up on my soap-box and wave my sword around in my best Colonel Blimp impersonation. Great stuff. You might read the ‘Defence’ posts below before you go over to troppoarmadillo or you might just miss Wayne’s point.

Twent years ago I did

Twent years ago I did my Infantry Company Commanders course and as a part of Corps familiarization travelled to Puckapunyal, then the home of the Armoured Regiment, to talk to our ‘turret head’ brothers. We aspiring infantry commanders were put in the drivers seat of the Leopard Battle Tank and got to play ‘Boys and their Toys’ at the ultimate level. Under command of qualified crew commanders we drove the tank and on a quite Friday night in Brisbane, if you listen carefully, you can still here me extolling the wonders of this ultimate weapon.

Driving down a steep slope with the Crew Commander saying ‘bore it up ‘er, sir’, I hit 80 kph and then acted on the order, ‘hard right stick’. My limited high school physics brought up visions of impending doom as I thought – 50 plus tons, 80 kph, hard right turn on downward sloping hill has to equal disaster. Not so. The Leopard obeyed and the magnificent suspension coped beyond physics. Similarly I drove it over a 6 foot creek gap at speed and actually had the 50 ton green ‘tonka toy’ airborne for a second ot two.

The smart reader will have already noticed the point of this post. It was twenty bloody years ago! To put that in perspective a twenty year gap in battle tank development can be best explained by comparing World War One battle Tanks with World War Two models. Get my drift?

When I commanded a company in the Operational Deployment Force in Townsville in the early eighties my troops were carring machine guns that were older than they were. They were riding in APCs that had been rebuilt from 60s stock and restricted parts and flying hours for helicopters was setting the stage for the later Blackhawke disaster. From then till now things have not improved that much. Don’t be mislead by videos of well equiped Aussie soldiers on patrol in East Timor or in Iraq. You are only seeing the cheap end of military hardware. The expensive stuff, the new tanks, carriers and artillery have been put in the ‘too hard’ basket for too long.

The debate that we should have had two or three times in the past is just surfacing now. This article from todays Australian sets the pace and, in fact backs up my post earlier in the week. It’s a pity the Generals and I didn’t think the same when I was serving.

Lieutenant-General Leahy said the army was undergoing a “military transformation” that could require it to operate independently in protecting Australia and its regional interests, and in coalitions further afield.

“The new army that will develop over the next few years will be a land force that is mobile, agile and versatile,” Lieutenant-General Leahy told a conference in Canberra. “It will be a land force that is able to … operate independently, jointly or in coalitions, across a complex spectrum of conflict. The complexity of the army’s missions in areas as diverse as East Timor, Afghanistan, Iraq and the Solomons, shadowed as they are by the ongoing war on terror – indicates the challenging character of the new international security environment.

“We are in transition away from being a light infantry force towards becoming a light armoured force.”

And this;

Defence forces suggest there is a split within the ADF over the purchase of new tanks. The army is thought to be pushing for the purchase of 100 new Leopard tanks at a cost of about $300 million to replace Australia’s ageing fleet.

But defence force chief General Peter Cosgrove is believed to favour the much heavier US Abrams-style tanks, which would fit more easily Australia’s role in supporting the US. A final decision will have to be taken by cabinet as part of its review of the future of Australia’s 10-year $25 billion defence forward purchasing plan. Spending on the previous 2001-2010 plan is estimated to already have blown out by at least $2 billion.

I’m with Cosgrove here. If we are going to fight with the Yanks then lets have some commonality of equipment. It makes all the diiference in matters logistic and matters logistic make all the difference.

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