Wednesday, December 10, 2008

[whither america] whither the west


Robert James Lee Hawke was an Australian PM and his story has parallels today which you'll see shortly. Wiki says:

Part of Hawke's work at the ACTU was the presentation of its annual case for higher wages to the national wages tribunal, the Conciliation and Arbitration Commission. He attained such success and prominence in this role that in 1969 he was encouraged to run for ACTU President, despite the fact that he had never held elected office in a trade union.

Hawke declared publicly that "socialist is not a word I would use to describe myself" and his approach to government was pragmatic. He concerned himself with making improvements to workers' lives from within the traditional institutions of government, rather than to any ideological theory.

That's the text but my memory is that wherever there was a dispute between government and workers, especially a long running one, Hawke would be called in and before sundown, he usually came out with an agreement which ended the impasse. I recall he never stayed to soak up the adulation but went on to the next one.

Personally charismatic, with those big bushy eyebrows, [it was the 70s, remember], it was clear that the parliamentary scene at the time was dire. The conservatives had made a hash of things and a lame duck leader was in charge. The Labor leader himself didn't look any too promising either and there were rumblings up and down the country: "Let's get Hawke in."

Trouble was that he neither held a seat nor had any parliamentary experience whatsoever. Didn't matter. A lot of shovel work was done, he was found a safe seat in Melbourne, he got in, displaced the current leader, fought and won the upcoming election, all on a wave of near euphoria.

There was considerable comment at the time on his "honeymoon ride" with the press and for about a year and a half, he could do no wrong. Despite his personally aggressive demeanour, his game was consensus and negotiation, in which he was skilled. His less charismatic Treasurer, Paul Keating, was the second half of the equation and he was damned good at what he did - I think no one disputed that at the time. They were a powerful team.

To paraphrase what my friend said yesterday about Obama, in the light of Ruthie's comments - when everyone sees a possible saviour, a solution to the economic woes, when he is eloquent and charismatic and infinitely preferable to the alternative, when he represents the best chance a party has had for a while to gain office, when he has a set of policies which seem sane [to an uncritical mind], then blandishments like "yes we can", "change we can believe in", "enough talk - time now to do" "I'm a pretty straight type of guy" and so on seem to show the man as the type of go-getter who is going to get things done.

People fall for it every time and the Leader is almost always swept in on a landslide. The opposition are irrelevant and attempts to portray the charismatic Leader as evil - the British Tories used a demonic face of Blair, a ploy which backfired - then it only serves to harden people's support of the new man.

"Give him a chance." "Let him govern before we judge him."

The minutiae on eligibility, for example, are barely looked at. A birth extract lands on the desk for scrutiny - yeah, it's fine. All's in order. No one is either interested nor sees the necessity at the time to investigate rigorously and talk of "enhanced FBI checks" by Ruthie yesterday must be seen in the light of the perfunctory way they were handled, as has turned out to be the case at the eleventh hour.

In Blair's case, Britain now sees the monster they let in and there were few tears when he handed over the PMship, the culmination of a sweetheart deal, with zero to do with the will of the people and still, today, with Britain going down the drain, the people can't see it for what it was.

The internet can.

So, in the euphoria of the coming of the messiah, anyone who dares challenge the incoming juggernaut with, "Hey, just how eligible is this person?" is seen as pathetic, a last ditch attempt to grab power, a crank, a bunch of nutters or worse in America, a Truther.

Reasoned debate has flown out the window and the people are off on another blind stampede towards The Light.

Take Christianity, for example. I've found the actual text he spoke, without annotation:



Persuasive, isn't he? Looks good.

On the surface, a reasonable person would have to agree that stories like Abraham and Isaac, another time, another place, are not relevant except in the context of the test of faith at the time. Obama though chooses that and other tricky old testament passages to illustrate that Christianity overall, therefore, has little relevance for a country with many faiths and even no faith at all.

Most would agree.

The problem is that, in a sleight of hand [or rather, of speech], he ignores the hope, faith and charity aspect of Christianity, the new testament passages, its real driving force, the forgiving nature of it.

Look how our society, based on the Judaeo-Christian tradition, tolerates other religions and spawned modern democracy, such as it is. Look at ourselves, our natures today - are we fanatics? Compare that, say, to Saudi Arabia or Burma.

Obama ignores the positives in order to illustrate that "religion", in general, shouldn't drive public policy, a point most, including me, would agree with.

The trouble is, this opens the door to relativism and all the societally corrosive aspects of multiculturalism, as we've seen. It's no accident that many Muslims and Jews find it astounding that a "Christian" society can tolerate bans on its own festivals for fear of offending them. Most societies embrace their roots and are proud of them. That's a measure of the fact that Christianity is not a state affair - it's a personal commitment but it just happened that enough people had that belief for the society to have been labelled Christian.

Obama says people haven't read their bibles.

He's right, in the sense of not having read the gospels, which he carefully avoids in his argument, for good reason. As with most charismatics of this type, he is a clever man who chooses his words to great effect. However, that effect is not wholesome in its extrapolation into the future. Its effect is to break down the glue which bound the society together and made it great in the first place.

His first act has been to emasculate the society's Judaeo-Christian conscience, consciousness and roots, a rootless man promoting a society in his own image. So with nothing but a pluralistic hotch-potch of values to aspire to, the only values the new society has are those promulgated by the state - it's vision of the tolerant, all-inclusive society, dedicated to impossible equality and the mediocratization of thought.

And in this world, in America at least, there is one fixed point - Obama.

I wouldn't mind betting that the vast majority of those who read this would not concur with the sentiments expressed here, except for some "right wingers". Nevertheless, let me put it this way. At every point along the Obama trail, the man does not add up.

His background, the way he has come to power, his statements of loyalty versus his real views, the enormous efforts in covering up his antecedents, the way he rides public opinion to defy the organs of state, the way he has people mesmerized - this is Blair again, Hawke [who turned out to be human after all], even Hitler.

This is enormous danger, not only for America but for the world.

And to answer all the foregoing: "You're too late, it's a done deal. Just let it go."

And to answer the answer: "No! When something is just plain wrong, it must be pursued."

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

[tuesday caption] this is a family blog, remember

Usual procedure ...

[relapse] nothing a good sleep won't fix

Lemsip at the ready - check. Bed ready - check. Teeth cleaned - check. DVD ready - check. See ya tomorrow, G-d willing.

I'll put in a little prayer for all you poor folk with throats, heads, chests and sniffles and hope we all get better by the end of the week. Plus Angus's foot. :)

[change we can believe in] obama delivers

Mombasa's north beach, not far from the Obama birthplace

Judge for yourself:

* Hillary Clinton is only the biggest name in what has become the second coming of the Clintonites and other old, familiar faces to Washington.

* Obama's new chief of staff Rahm Emanuel was an insider in the Clinton White House.

* So was Susan Rice, who will serve as UN ambassador.

* Attorney general-designate Eric Holder and homeland security secretary nominee Janet Napolitano were both in the Clinton era justice department.

* Bill Richardson, who will become commerce secretary, was energy secretary in the 90s.

* Housing and Human Services nominee Tom Daschle is a long-time member of the Washington 'good-old-boys' network.

* Lawrence Summers, Obama's new top economic adviser, was Clinton's treasury secretary.

* Obama opted to keep a Bush administration appointment, Robert Gates, in charge of the Pentagon, and to appoint a jut-jawed retired general, Jim Jones, as his national security adviser.

* Both men opposed Obama's single most important military and foreign policy promise, to set a timetable for pulling US troops out of Iraq.

* Jones backed McCain in the election and Gates is as Republican-establishment as it gets.

* Including Joe Biden, the vice-president elect, all of the incoming president's core foreign policy team backed the ill-fated invasion of Iraq in 2003.

* The chairman of Obama's economic advisory council, Paul Volcker, isn't from the Clinton era - he is of an even earlier vintage, having served as Federal Reserve chairman under Jimmy Carter three decades ago.

Where is the representation of the young people who voted him in on the change platform - just asking?

By the way:

I asked Ms. Obama specifically, “Were you present when your grandson Barack Obama was born in Kenya?” this was asked to her in translation twice, and both times she specifically replied, “Yes! Yes she was! She was present when Obama was born.”

Though, some few younger relatives, including Mr. Ogombe, have obviously been versed to counter such facts with the common purported information from the American news media that Obama was born in Hawaii, Ms. Sarah Hussein Obama was very adamant that her grandson, Senator Barack Hussein Obama, was born in Kenya, and that she was present and witnessed his birth in Kenya, not the United States.

When Mr. Ogombe attempted to counter Sarah Obama’ clear responses to the question, verifying the birth of Senator Barack Obama in Kenya, I asked Mr. Ogombe, how she could be present at Barack Obama’s birth if the Senator was born in Hawaii, but Ogombe would not answer the question, instead he repeatedly tried to insert that, “No, No, No, He was born in the United States!”

But during the conversation, Ms. Sarah Hussein Obama never changed her reply that she was in deed present when Senator Barack Obama was born in Kenya.

[the hairy yam] your passport to good health


It's a real pain being ill and the sooner it ends the better. The Chinese might have some wise words of advice on that:

Brown with a rough, hairy coating, yams are ugly in the eyes of many. But in traditional Chinese medicine, it is an outstanding health food which can help reinforce energy and nourish blood. And now, from November to January, is the best time for yams.

The benefits of this vegetable were first identified more than 2,000 years ago with the "Shennong Bencao Jing" (Shennong's Herbal Classic) recording that "neutral" yam can help reinforce energy, dispel pathogenic cold and dampness, nourish muscles and improve hearing and eyesight.

Famous Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) pharmacist Li Shizhen concluded that yams helped to reinforce blood and energy, benefited the kidneys, spleen and stomach, stopped diarrhea, dissolved phlegm and nourished skin and hair.

So there you go. Get your hairy yam today and get healthy! Lee Shizhen [pronounced shitsen] recommends it.

[current brinkmanship] we're not ready yet, says europe

The Asia Times says:

European NATO members are increasingly nervous about the prospect of a military confrontation with Russia. Last August's swift Russian response to act in aid of South Ossetians against the Georgian invasion sent a reality shock through Europe.

Neither Germany nor France wish to admit unstable states like Georgia or Ukraine only to be forced to act militarily in their defense in event of a repeat of the madness of last August.

Much is made of the rusting Russian navy and the depleted army but Russia's strength has always been in numbers, as with China. Not just in numbers either but in a fanaticism which would be lacking in the "away" players. For what strategic purpose would Europe wish to anatagonize the north-east border state over rogue leaders in Georgia and the Ukraine? You can throw Belarussia into that too.

And don't forget a mobile China who have the super-highway to reach the sub-continent plus a friendly neighbour to the north.

As for Europe, the EU state still has a few teething problems e.g. Ireland and the Milliband/Merkel army won't be ready for at least half a decade, except as a sabre-rattling exercise. Of course, a split in NATO would give the EU the green light to proceed full tilt with this.

So what is America's game here? In their brinkmanship with Russia, aren't they forgetting Europe's own grand design?

As far as we're concerned, we're still only entering the great depression and history dictates that it always takes a few years for the seeds of discord and the demoralization of the people to be achieved. At the moment, too many are still hopeful for an upturn of the economy and not everyone is yet sucking on the subsistence teat of the nanny state.

2009 might even see the best laid plans of the inner circle overturned and the whole show postponed for yet another generation. Humans can be so unpredictable at times.

Monday, December 08, 2008

[screenplay] man and the ascended beings


Just finished watching Stargate, the Ark of Truth and the mythology made me start thinking just how much more bizarre the reality of what did occur in the beginning might have been.

Here's a sci-fi plot off the top of the head.

Imagine that there are two types of ascended beings. The first lot created Man and just as a parent loves his child, wants to see him grow, learn, develop, evolve, not by being directed in every action like a robot but by imparting a code to live by, a sort of self-regulatory mechanism, so Man himself was given a lot of rope, only to be tapped back on course a few times. Freedom within limits and oodles of love.

The other type of ascended being recognizes the danger lurking inside Man, the potential power of combined good. You see it everywhere - things being built, communities, families and so on. Get enough humans combining and the collective power is awesome, as long as it is in free association. The downside of this is that humans who are used to this sort of freedom are not particularly amenable to command and control schemes.

Recognizing that humans are susceptible though to the "balance of opposing forces" idea, the Dark Ascended devise a nifty logo and suggest the first teaching - that for every white action, you need to do a black one to "spiritually balance it".

Thus the principle of evil is implanted.

The second teaching is that the things taught to you by the white side, authority figures and your parents are restrictive, anachronistic and boring - that there is really only one rule in life: "Do as thou will." So all human activity is taken to excess and called good. However, as Anakin Skywalker and many others across the galaxy found to their cost and that of billions of others, unrestrained action actually weakens a person's character and makes him more susceptible to the Dark Ascended.

The DAs also recognize that if they can get enough humans worshipping them, there is immense power in that, allowing them to fulfil their real goal of enslaving and slaughtering Earth's population, the original threat. The only way to get Man to knuckle under is to first create a utopian ideal he'll cling to - the fair redistribution of wealth to all humans who will now live in an ascendant paradise, with no war, no misery and no suffering. Call it, for want of a better term, the Illumined Way.

The Dark Ascended now point to the disaster that unbridled greed, hedonism and lack of self-control have led to and say the only way to get Man back on course to the Utopian nirvana, where all men are brothers and share equally in the collective wealth, is for each person to voluntarily sign away his freedoms and give a pledge of loyalty to the brave new world.

Having got most humans on the planet to sign freely, having coerced almost all the rest, there are just a few rebels left who support the white side and the Old Ways - they're hunted down across the galaxy as insurgents and terrorists and that's where the film ends.

Not a bad plot, d'you think?

[word verification] is it the water or something

What's going on today? Already we have these two gems:

PANTIES

PSYSLUTS

Is it just me?

[britain near bankrupt] and the joy of the soviet union


Seeing as, this Monday morning, we're all into the hat tipping business, let me hat tip the Shrewd Mammal for presenting this:

So now, we implement the “Zimbabwe protocol”.

Hat tip to Guido & the UKLP blog

Aside from bailing out the banks with our money, it appears the government is about to run out of it so what do they do?

  • repeal an act that has been in place for over 164 years
  • release the Bank of England from it’s reporting obligations
  • print more money

Predicted here, reported here, and detailed (??!!) here.


He covers the issue well and it needs no further comment from me, so let me move tangentially and tell you some stories from Russia about the Soviet days.

The people whose stories you'd give the most credence to were the grandparents, many of whom still hankered after the dead weight of the nanny state, on the grounds that everything was nominally free and one didn't have to think for oneself, which left one in a state of infantilization, whilst not delivering on the whole raison d'etre of that state in the first place.

The Eggs

Anyway, I was having lunch at one set of grandparents and the gf was telling me that they used to travel to Moscow overnight on the train to buy food and other goods, including eggs.

"And do you know, James," added the grandmother, "where they were produced in the first place?"

"No."

"Here. Right here." Both of them laughed at the incompetence of the creaky old "welfare' state.

The Denunciation

They wouldn't have dared laugh during Soviet times, as the story of Misha testifies. Misha told a tale of when he was in school. He apparently asked a question about the efficiency of state shops and one or two other choice topics, for which he was put in a spare room, until a local official arrived to "correct" his error.

Misha told me he was held there for four hours and still had to do the homework afterwards, on the lessons he'd missed. His mother did not fare as well.

There was a principle, in Soviet times, of Denunciation and all citizens were exhorted to turn in or officially denounce wrong thinking neighbours, especially teachers. Apparently this lady transgressed, was denounced by the mother of a pupil whom she'd offended and the whole time-wasting paraphernalia of due process got under way.

I understand the whole matter was shelved eventually and the documents were all stamped and filed. As long as the documents are filed, that was everything.

The general goods shop

Even when I arrived in Russia, some years after the Soviet times, things hadn't greatly altered in the state shops but a new type of entrepeneur was starting to open western style chains which were still a bit expensive, comparatively.

This was how it worked. You needed a new lock for your door, say. You took the bus, then tram, to the line of state shops and inside, the numbers of people were surprising in such a suburban corner of the city. The counters ran round three walls of the long, rectangular shop and behind them were maybe five different points, manned by two or three women with little hats, tunics and forbidding grimaces.

A lot has been made of this stereotype and to be fair, would you be smiling if you'd had to put up with customer scowls all day, every day, for little actual pay? So, to get this lock, you had to be savvy and know which queue. I got into the wrong queue and when I eventually made it to the top, was told, summarily, that those locks were "over there", with a wave of the hand.

Well, couldn't you possibly ...? Already she'd turned to the next customer behind me. There was nothing for it but to line up in the other queue. Very quickly, in post-Soviet days, you learnt the expresssion, "Kto poslyedni?" meaning, "Who's last in the line?" Then came the wait yet again.

At the top of the queue [and I've shortened this process for reader consumption], the woman stabbed a finger at the one example of the lock in the locked glass case but it wasn't the one I needed. She shrugged. I realized I had to take this one and as I was near the end of the process, I said, "Da."

She went over to the table behind her and started to fill out a chit, cme back and gave it to me.

"Where do I go?"

She waved in the general direction of the other end of the room and a kind old chap pointed me to the citadel, the glassed in holder of the moneys, the cashier, obscured behind a queue which stretched back to the entrance to the shop. Of course, mathematically, customers from five different points, descending on the one cashier, was always going to create a mega-queue.

It wasn't anyone's job to notice this, let alone comment on it. To report this inefficiency was more than your flat was worth.

So, some hour and twenty minutes after entering the store and with a perverse determination to complete this cursed exercise, I got to the cashier, paid, had the chit torn at one corner and joined the "collect" queue to get the lock.

Eventually I made it to the top again, she took the chit and scrutinized it, then went out the back. I could hear her rummaging round. She came back, if not apologetically, at least with less assertiveness and here was the one redeeming feature of the business. She had no right to have the item on display if it wasn't in stock. Rules are rules. She knew it might be sheeted home to her and as I'd been reasonable and was foreign, she let me have the other lock which was available and was at the same price.

Conclusions

What we had here was a centrally imposed, inflexible system, which a cowed and compliant population had long ago decided wasn't worth the consequences in opposing and instead, an air of resignation pervaded. Nothing was done to reform the system because that would have involved reporting one's misgivings to one's hierarchical superiors and those superiors could see that to their advantage.

People said nothing and kept their own counsel until one chink in the armour appeared in Gorbachev and then the floodgates opened.

Similarly, Brown is running out of money and even the IMF reportedly [don't quote me on this] warned him there was a cap to his assertions to the British people. No one can change the system because everyone is too frightened for his own job, with Christmas coming.

At this stage, people like bloggers and the MSM are still speaking out but look at the American situation where no one is commenting in the MSM on Obama's ineligibility. The expression "knowing which side the bread's buttered on" springs to mind.

Britain is not yet Soviet Russia but we are already at a stage where the sins of the Beloved Leader are officially forgiven and all sorts of excesses and inefficiencies of the centrally organized and mushrooming bureaucracy are lightly passed over, once the MSM and blogosphere have had their say. We're also seeing the beginnings of people being encouraged to grass on neighbours who fail to comply with legislation on, say, wheelie bins.

As in Soviet Russia, the system is bankrupt underneath the facade but unlike Soviet Russia, we are not moving to drop the discredited socialist system but are actually hell-bent on creating a new one.

It's just a question of time, tovarischii.

[pc carol 4] for the winter solstice season

Mythical deity-like Figure Rest you Merry Gentlemen and Ladies, Boys, Girls and Small Furry Animals, not excluding other Creatures of all Shapes and Sizes, Capitalized and non-capitalized; also not exclusively Mammalian and in no particular order


Now to the asserted yet unsubstantiated authority figure in an alleged and unproven region of the cosmos, sing praises,

All you within these non-denominational, all-inclusive, supportive and non-discriminatory places,

And with true love and brotherhood and sisterhood, irrespective of sexual orientation or colour, celebrating the joy of multiculturalism,

Each other now embrace in an entirely platonic and non sexually harassing way, devoid of sexism, ageism, disabilitism or any other -ism;

This holy [in the sense of it being of personal spiritual delusion only] tide of the holiday around the 25th of December - the one we've now defaced:

O tidings of comfort and joy,

Comfort and joy,

O tidings of comfort and joy


Under no circumstances are the following lyrics to be sung, failure to observe this stipulation possibly resulting in prosecution, seizure and confiscation of any or all winter holiday gifts you may erroneously have pre-purchased:

Now to the Lord sing praises,
All you within this place,
And with true love and brotherhood
Each other now embrace;
This holy tide of Christmas
All other doth deface.
O tidings of comfort and joy,
Comfort and joy
O tidings of comfort and joy