Tuesday, 11 April 2017

Even the 'worst government on Earth' the DPRK of North Korea (and it is the worst human government on earth, then comes Saudi), whilst it says it will attack and destroy its enemies viciously, it doesn't actually do that at all, and never has, and won't. It is simply making its defence expensively impenetrable...that's all. If your neighbour is Massive China on the one side and the Nuclear US in South Korea, 60km from your border, on the other, you'd be fucking paranoid too, and for good reason. At least China is the real neighbour, and your kinfolk, and so you have to deal with them accordingly. As for South Korea, and Japan... "Go on home, US soldiers, go on home. Have you got no fucking home of your own?" Like Like Love Haha Wow Sad Angry CommentShare Comments Iain Mac Giolla Padraig Write a comment... Iain Mac Giolla Padraig 14 mins · Balwyn North · I think China's 'Walled World Model' where you seriously and very expensively protect yourself, permanently, you do not invade, do not bomb, & do not enforce yourself upon, sovereign nations is a far healthier way to go...for everyone. You do not export revolution, you do not export war, you do not export terror, you do not export poverty, you do not export refugees. You just do your best to trade as best you can with each other. That sounds like peace to me. That sounds like far fewer refugees to me. That sounds like far fewer pointless, meaningless deaths to me. That sounds like human moral responsibility to me. After all these horrible millennia of conquest and strategic horror, we could start there. Where else do we start?


This Perfect Life... "He spent his life acquiring various illnesses for the purpose of being eligible for free Flu Vaccinations...and with the savings bought Doc Martens shoes. It must be noted that his life was a little shorter than the norm, but he did not die of the 'flu, and the mourners commented upon, and praised, his always beautiful shoes, with their bouncing soles." Anyway, I'm off to get the flu shot.


Monday, 10 April 2017

Noting that 2/3 of the Great Barrier Reef's coral is now 'somewhat dead' it was interesting as always to hear the Tourism spokesman come out and say that 'the scientists are just too emotional...(?)...and that things aren't so bad...and that tourists love to see Stage 2 bleaching because it makes the coral kind of glow...coral is much more visually beautiful when it is dying'.


After leaving Cairns 4 months back and now kind of settled in Melbourne, I am pretty sure we will stay here. I miss the connections with my darling kin Jordan and my colleagues in Cairns, for sure, that's true, and I miss the wondrous curlews, but this seems a better place for us, even in the bad weather. I won't be able to afford to buy a place here as the prices are far too high, but still, we will find some way to stay and be happy anyway here. Work is good and plentiful enough and opportunities for Mrs Fitz and DJWaWa are good here. We will visit some penguins this week and I will say hello to them from the curlews...and then we will go for a drive towards the Great Ocean Road, and buy some fresh Scallop Pies...the best pies in the Universe...and, at $10 a pop, they well should be. A small warm Esky full of scallop pies, wow...now that is a rare treasure.


Now, what is it that makes me feel at home in Melbourne? Well, the climate is similar, but faster and a bit colder, than the Sydney suburb where i grew up, and I do like suburbs, and I love the smell of the rain...the cold greenness in it, and the ozone of the storms. We didn't move here just for the Scallop Pies on the Great Ocean Road, but that would have been a good enough reason. In these 4 months we haven't actually gone out much at all as the main thing has been to...first...collapse big time from the journey...then to find enough work, and not to spend money, and then to keep warm...and so we don't really know much about Melbourne at all...we have been to no shows or exhibitions, although we did go to the Australian Open Tennis for a half a day...and witnessed some lunatic killing people by driving a stolen Holden into them in Bourke Street because he had a tiff with his girlfriend...but that has been about it. The Melbourne City Library is a nice place, for sure. Well worth it. We will be spending 3 or 4 days not working or worrying about working over Easter and see the penguins, and acquire the Scallop pies and see some arriving Van Gogh exhibition...and I recall from 1970 that the Melbourne Art gallery had this wonderful sculpture of 'bird in flight' and I'd love to see that true, real art again. I guess our next days off from various worries will be a trip to Ireland or China for 2 weeks next year. Funny how generations are different. When I was growing up, in the family, we never ever went 'on holidays' anywhere, locally, nationally, or internationally...and interestingly, we had a great time every time.


Satisfaction. I just posted my troublesome Casio G Shock watch back to the President of the Casio Group in Yagashina? Japan saying...look, I don't want any recompense for this poor product, I just wish you to make better products, like you used to do. A polite letter. I have always liked Casio gear...good quality, long lasting, affordable. Hardly anyone ever sends real 'letters' any more and it is a bit of a shame. An email means nothing. Same with an email to the government etc about anything good or bad. An email is easily dispensed with... and, at best, it represents one person. Too easy to do or to ignore. But if you go to the trouble of crafting a letter, especially with something like a watch in a proper protective package, and posting it, someone at the other end has to pick it up, open it, read it, and then wonder what to do with it...with both the watch and the letter...and ask around...because both watch and letter are tangible items. The marketing algorithm for posted complaint letters is basically 1 letter=1000 votes/customers, and politicians usually never want to receive letters - too spooky. As noted, I don't want anything from the Casio company, I am just happier that I no longer have that watch...and that it has gone back to where it belongs, and I have registered my calm dissatisfaction. Being a quirky person, I do find satisfaction in this. Meanwhile, I expect the arrival of a Citizen Pro Master Dive watch in the mail today...a bit more expensive, for sure, but I expect much higher quality...and it has a 'winder' for changing the time rather than a 60 page book and 30 useless videos.