Friday, 10 April 2015

Australian Values and the Great Islamic Zionist Conspiracy

Australian Values...Recent 'social movements' regarding Reclaiming Australia (apparently from Halal and perhaps even Kosher hamburger providers) represents, for me, the peculiar dissociative phenomenon we call Australian Values. I am surprised that the people who are so anti-Islam have not called it all a Zionist Conspiracy.
Whilst we are compassionate and deeply emotionally supportive of international heroin traffickers facing the laws they knew they were breaking, and seeking to save them from the subsequent known legal terminal punishment; we are, at the same time, more than happy, every day, to have our soldiers and airmen lethally punish (thus execute good and bad alike) a lot of people in communities in Iraq, in 'surgical' (sic) military operations that have never been effective and have never brought about good outcomes for anyone, including us, in the past, and cost us a billion dollars every year as a minimum. I guess we can afford that, but can't afford decent care for disabled Australians. 
Australian Values? Pull the other one.

Kim Jong Un’s wife not seen in state media for nearly four months


Absence is her longest yet, though disappearances from public eye have increased in length and number

Ri Sol Ju, the wife of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, has not been seen in public for nearly four months, according to the NK News leadership tracker.
The disappearance is her longest recorded absence from state media, though she was not seen for more than 90 days last year.

car review Volvo C30S automatic 2009, bought in 2012, selling now (trading-in), April 2015


I bought my 2009 Volvo C30S 2.4l 5 cylinder automatic in 2012 for around $25,000AU with 46,000km on clock. This is the most luxurious kind of car I have ever owned.
I traded in my 2010 Mazda BT50 utility on it. The reason I did so was complex. The Mazda BT50 Utility is a brilliant machine indeed and is the only vehicle I ever owned that gained in value. That aside, I bought the Volvo because it was cool, beautiful, understated, rich with leather and it had the glass boot door that I've always wanted since I was 17 at school and Volvo brought out their coupe that Roger Moore tooled around in The Saint TV series.
A glass boot...wow. This design incorporated a lot of what the English gentry called 'the Shooting Brake'...where a Brake is a kind of horse drawn wagon that gentlemen used to go shooting /hunting in. 
Anyway, it was a kind of romanticism purchase for me because my Maths teacher in 1969 had the original Volvo of the same DNA, and I always wanted one onwards from 1969...so, in 2012 I bought one...well, it's descendant, the 2009 Volvo C30S.
It is downstairs now in the carpark and looks great.
I'm selling it, trading it in on a Skoda Yeti, because 1: I am getting pretty old now and  I have begun to realise now that ever year I live I will grow one year older. This may seem obvious to others but it has only recently dawned on me, the individual and cool and stupid person I have ended up being... 
thus: what I find difficult is climbing out of the fucking low line cool sexy understated car. This is one thing, but when I look a bit forward in time,I realise that it will get a bit harder each year. I don't have many car purchases ahead of me.
Anyway, the review:

3 door Volvo C30S Sports Coupe, seats 4 pretty comfortably.
2.4l Swedish 5cyl petrol engine running best on RON 95...although it will run on standard fuel quite well.
Technology: Whatever was leading edge in 2009 Northern Europe: Pretty damn good.
Performance: Fast as you want to drive it. Cornering: amazing and certain. Braking: Brilliant. Safety: Outstanding. Reliability: Breathtaking.
Fuel usage: Twice as much as a Toyota Corolla.
Servicing Cost: Not bad if you don't use Volvo Service Centres and you only get it serviced once a year. Who the fuck needs pollen filter upgrades? I like pollen.

All in all, out of 10, I'd give it a 8.1. A Real World Car...it's quite brilliant. You can treat it well or badly and it doesn't mind a bit. It's very strong.

A price for a new 2015 model would probably end up close to $40,000 which is a lot more than I would ever pay for a car on Earth. They lose value fast in Australia.

I'm trading it in on a Skoda Yeti with an engine half the size and a big glass roof, basically because I get tired of cars as time goes by anyway; and I have always liked Skoda; and I think the Yeti is a good choice; and because I can. At 61 it is nice to look forward.

I will have to remember that in the Yeti, as in most other new cars in my range, that, unlike in the Volvo, I may have to apply the brakes before taking a 45 degree turn at 200kph.

Well done Volvo. Please keep making really fucking good cars.
Roll on.

UK looks inward

Inward-looking election campaign reflects Britain's global retreat


(Reuters) - Britain's membership of the European Union hangs on the outcome of a knife-edge election in four weeks' time, but the issue and that of the country's wider global role have been largely absent from a campaign narrowly focused on domestic worries.
It's not unusual for British elections to be dominated by schools, hospitals and taxes, but foreign policy debate has rarely been so slight as before the May 7 vote.
Many diplomats say this reflects Britain's shuffle from the global stage and a self-inflicted downgrading of its military and diplomatic muscle.
"While much of the world seems to be going to hell in a hand basket, there has been little talk about Britain’s international role and responsibilities," Chris Patten, Britain's last governor of Hong Kong, said in a Project Syndicate commentary.
"The UK was once famous for punching above its weight in global affairs, but perhaps the country no longer really matters much – if only because it does not want to matter," the former Conservative Party chairman and European Commissioner said.
The only full TV debate of the campaign last Thursday, a day of world drama, underscored a pivot towards the parochial.
Iran had just sealed an initial nuclear deal with six world powers including Britain; Yemen, a former British colony, was engulfed in fierce fighting; and in Kenya, another former possession, Islamist militants had slaughtered over 100 people.
None of those events rated a single mention in the debate, which featured Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron and six other party leaders.
Instead, the participants discussed Britain's debts, its stretched public health service and immigration.
The only words on foreign policy were about whether there were too many foreigners in Britain and whether leaving the EU would make things better.
How many Syrians should be let in, how many foreigners are treated free for HIV, and, briefly, whither Britain's membership of the EU ahead a possible referendum on the subject in 2017.
Cameron has promised to renegotiate Britain's EU ties if re-elected, before holding an in-out vote. His rival, Labour Party leader Ed Miliband, has said he won't offer a referendum unless there is a major new transfer of powers to the EU.
That means the election will decide whether or not Britain votes on its EU membership, something it last did in 1975.
Former Prime Minister Tony Blair, channelling fears inside Britain's foreign policy establishment, said on Tuesday the ballot was a chance to show London wouldn't turn in itself.
"It is about character. It is about who we are and where we're going as a nation," said Blair, a fervent believer in liberal interventionism, who led Britain into a string of overseas military engagements from 1997 to 2007.
"A decision to exit Europe would say a lot about us and none of it good: that, with all the challenges of the world crowding in upon us, demanding strong and clear leadership, instead of saying 'here's where the world should go', we say 'count us out'," the Labour politician said in a speech.
GLOBAL PUNCH
Britain, which under Margaret Thatcher sent a flotilla to the South Atlantic in 1982 to recapture the tiny Falkland Islands seized by Argentina, still packs a global punch.
It has the biggest defence budget in the EU, a seat on the U.N. Security Council and is the world's sixth biggest economy.
It took part in 2011 air strikes against Libya to topple Muammar Gaddafi and only ended its combat role in Afghanistan last year. It also has one of the biggest foreign aid budgets and was at the heart of international efforts to combat Ebola.
But some diplomats, speaking on condition of anonymity, date London's retreat from the global stage to August 2013 when Cameron failed to win parliament's backing for air strikes in Syria.
"Things have never been quite the same since," said one.
Britain did join the U.S.-led effort to bomb Islamic State targets in Iraq, but only after Francepiled in. London's contribution - estimated to average just one air strike per day - is, in the words of parliament's defence committee "strikingly modest."
On Ukraine, Cameron also took a backseat, leaving his French and German counterparts to negotiate with Vladimir Putin.
When asked by one worried lawmaker where this left Britain's "so-called leading role in Europe", Cameron urged parliament's liaison committee earlier this year not to fret.
"We should not be too precious about not being involved in every different set of negotiations," he said. "There is no point endlessly obsessing about whether you are in the room."
Traumatised by the heavy cost in blood and treasure of Blair's wars of choice supporting Washington in Afghanistan and Iraq, neither of which was a military success, Britons' appetite to use force has waned.
General Nicholas Hougton, the head of the armed forces, says the country that helped defeat Hitler and Napoleon has become alarmingly nervous about deploying military force.
"I worry that as a nation we could have started to lose some of our courageous instinct: the instinct to take risk and to make sacrifice both for our own security and the common good," Houghton said in December.
Britain's debt woes - a hangover from the 2008 global financial crisis - have played a role. Under pressure to cut a large deficit, Cameron has taken an axe to state spending.
As a result, the armed forces are being shrunk by around a sixth, a move that will leave the army with 82,000 soldiers in 2018, its smallest size since the Napoleonic Wars.
Britain has long boasted of how, unlike most NATO members, it spent 2 percent of Gross Domestic Product on defence. Ahead of the election, neither Cameron nor the Labour Party is ready to pledge that will continue.
One veteran Washington hawk says London's austerity-driven defence cuts are emboldening Western foes from Moscow to Beijing and the Middle East.
"Our mutual adversaries immediately assume, all too accurately, that a weakened Britain reflects a weakened America, and they are emboldened," John Bolton, who served as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under President George W. Bush, wrote in the Daily Telegraph newspaper.
Insiders complain that the British Foreign Office, housed in a grand building in central London from which one fifth of humanity was administered less than a century ago, is a shadow of its former self.
Under Cameron, its budget has been cut by around one sixth in real terms since 2010, and many residual resources have been diverted towards trade promotion rather than classic diplomacy.
The change has not gone unnoticed by allies and foes.
A long list of U.S. politicians and military commanders from President Barack Obamadownwards have urged Britain to stay in the EU and to spend more on defence.
And in Europe, even friends say they have grown weary of Cameron's attempts to score political points at home by fabricating minor rows or by turning discussion of any EU issue, from Greece's debts to France's economy, to domestic advantage.
"Whatever happened to British foreign policy?" lamented one EU diplomat recently. "They’re missing in action everywhere."
(Additional reporting by Alastair Macdonald and Paul Taylor in Brussels; Editing by Paul Taylor)

Russia and Greece; a workable future

Russia, Greece to discuss EU sanctions, economy in Moscow


(Reuters) - Russian President Vladimir Putin and Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras plan to discuss economic ties and the European Union's sanctions against Moscow when they meet for talks next week, a Kremlin spokesman said on Friday.
Russia wants the EU to lift the sanctions imposed over Moscow's role in the turmoil in Ukraineand hopes to get support from some EU member states, notably Hungary and Greece.
The Kremlin spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said it was too early to talk about any possibility of Moscow providing financial help to the cash-strapped Greece before the talks.
"Relations between Moscow and the European Union will be discussed in the light of Brussels's policy of sanctions and Athens' quite cold attitude to this policy," Peskov said.
Greece's new left-wing government has said it will not seek aid from Moscow but has so far failed to reach a deal with its EU/IMF creditors to unlock fresh funds.
Putin and Tsipras will meet in Moscow on Apr.8. It will be Tsipras' first visit to the Russian capital after his leftist Syriza party swept to victory in a snap election in January.
Tsipras visited Moscow in May, 2014, and attended a conference on ties between Russia and Greece, as well as being received by senior Russian state officials. Five other members of the Greek delegation now also hold senior government roles in Athens. (Reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin)

Moscow condemns anti-Russian US campaign

Moscow condemns 'anti-Russian campaign' in U.S


(Reuters) - Russia expressed outrage on Friday over a "frenzied anti-Russian campaign" by U.S. media and political analysts, stepping up a war of words that has intensified during theUkraine crisis.
Ties between Moscow and Washington have sunk to their lowest level since the Cold War over the crisis in Ukraine, and each side has accused the other of waging an information war.
The Russian Foreign Ministry said "propagandists" working on orders from Washington were producing "Russophobic lampoons, carefully building an image of Russia as an enemy, instilling hatred of anything Russian in ordinary people."
The West accuses Russia of backing separatists in east Ukraine by providing them with weapons and troops, and Russia says the West plotted the overthrow of a Moscow-backed president in Kiev last year. Each side denies the accusations.
Washington imposed sanctions on Moscow after it annexed the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea from Ukraine in March last year and stepped them up after the separatist rebellion began in east Ukraine the following month.
The two nuclear powers and veto-wielding members of the U.N. Security Council are also at odds over many other international matters and differ on human rights and democracy issues.
(Reporting by Lidia Kelly and Gabriela Baczynska, Editing by Timothy heritage)

DPRK, rockets in the sea

North Korea fires missiles into sea as U.S. defence chief visits region


(Reuters) - North Korea has fired two surface-to-air missiles off its west coast, South Koreasaid on Thursday, with the latest in a string of short-range firings by the North coming shortly before the U.S. defence secretary arrived in the region.
The two short-range missiles were fired on Tuesday, South Korea's defence ministry said, and followed the launch on Friday of four short-range missiles off the west coast of North Korea.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Ash Carter arrived in Japan on Tuesday afternoon and travelled toSouth Korea on Thursday, where he was expected to discuss a response to North Korea's growing missile and nuclear threat.
"It's just a reminder of how tense things are on the Korean peninsula. That's the reason I’m going," Carter told reporters at Yokota air base in Japan before departing for South Korea.
"If it was a welcoming message to me, I’m flattered."
A senior U.S. official described the missile test as a provocative act ahead of Carter's visit.
"Their missile inventory is growing and their willingness to test those missiles appears to be growing as we've just seen today," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
U.S. military officials have said a sophisticated air defence system is needed in South Koreato counter the North's missile threat, although Washington has not made a formal proposal for deploying THAAD and it is not officially on the agenda for Carter's visit.
"These are missiles launched and it reinforces the missile defence preparations we’ve long had on the Korean peninsula and have here, by the way in Japan," Carter said when asked if the latest North Korean missile launch underscores the need for THAAD deployment in South Korea.
China and Russia have both spoken out against placing THAAD, or Terminal High Altitude Area Defence, in South Korea.
(Additional reporting by Jack Kim in SEOUL; Writing by Tony Munroe; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)