Now might be an opportune time to reconsider …
Author: bobmcgee
Owned and operated …
If you ever harboured any doubt that the ALP was owned and operated by the unions for the unions her are Ms Gillard’s own words …
”I’m not the leader of a party called the Progressive Party, I’m not the leader of a party called the Moderate Party, I’m not the leader of a party even called the Social Democratic Party.
”I am leader of the party called the Labor Party – deliberately because that is where we come from, that is what we believe in, that is who we are.”
Her own boast is that she is not there to serve the people of Australia, she is there to serve the unions.
Behead all those who insult the prophet …
Wilhelmus Simon Petrus Fortuijn, known as Pim Fortuyn was a Dutch politician, civil servant, sociologist, author and professor who criticised Islam. On 6 May 2002, at age 54, Fortuyn was assassinated.
Theodoor “Theo” van Gogh was a Dutch film director, film producer, columnist, author and actor. His last film was loosely based on the assassination of the Dutch politician Pim Fortuyn. He was shot dead, stabbed and an attempt was made to decapitate him, as he cycled to work 2nd November 2004.
A third Dutchman, Geert Wilders, who lives under police guard, is presently in Australia to tell us why we should fear Islam. Freedom of speech encounters many obstacles. This article is lifted from the Australian …
DEBBIE Robinson measures freedom of speech by the number of hotels and other venues that have agreed, then abruptly refused, to provide a stage for anti-Islamic Dutch MP Geert Wilders on his Australian speaking tour.
As deputy president of the Q Society, the Australian group hosting Mr Wilders in Melbourne, Perth and Sydney this week, Ms Robinson reckons the latest count is about 30. Most cite damage to their reputation, others the potential damage to walls and windows from protesters. “We are afraid we may offend people,” she said. “It is this huge fear factor.”
As recently as Friday night, the venue where Mr Wilders was booked to speak in Melbourne tomorrow night called Ms Robinson to cancel. Another venue has been found but the location will not be announced until 7pm today, 24 hours before the speech.
The Q Society is still trying to find a hotel in Sydney willing to make available a room for a press conference on Friday.
“He is not being allowed to speak freely,” Ms Robinson said. “It is being shut down. Whether you support or whether you differ, to me the big issue is he should be able to speak.”
The Q Society is a firm supporter of most of what Mr Wilders says. It opposes the “Islamisation” of Australia and, like Mr Wilders, it sees Islam primarily as a political ideology rather than a religion, one that is incompatible with liberal democratic traditions and the Judeo-Christian ethic.
The group is frustrated by what it says is the failure of Australian politicians to talk seriously about the threats posted by Islam and the limits that anti-vilification and discrimination laws place on public debate. “Our politicians think it is just another religion; the man on the street thinks it is just another religion,” group spokesman Andrew Horwood said. “When you actually understand it, it is substantially different.”
Julia Gillard yesterday described Mr Wilders’ views as abhorrent. Former immigration minister Chris Bowen, when he granted Mr Wilders a visa in October, said while his views were offensive, Australian society could “withstand the visit of a fringe commentator”.
I think assassination is abhorrent. I think attempts to stifle free speech are abhorrent.
A pearl indeed …
Oh Canada …
Regulators running riot …
In a potent reminder of the arbitrary censorial powers of Canadian liquor authorities, a rum cheekily named for pornographic actor Ron Jeremy was pulled from Manitoba store shelves after customers complained it was obscene.
Dubbed Ron de Jeremy, the liquor’s label features an image of Ron Jeremy’s face above the taglines “the adult liquor” and “long smooth taste.”
Andrea Kowal, spokeswoman for Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries, said Manitoba liquor stores were ordered to remove the product from shelves late last week after authorities “erred on the side of caution” following several customer complaints.
On Thursday, however, after the decision was publicized, the rum was restocked after liquor authorities determined that it did not, in fact, have any obscene content. “There’s nothing offensive about the name of the product or its label; you have to know who Ron Jeremy is and what his former profession was — and then that has to offend you,” said Ms. Kowal.
“I’m just happy this whole drama is behind us and we can work on getting rum to the Canadian people,” said Olli Hietalahti, the CEO of One Eyed Spirits, the maker of Ron de Jeremy, speaking by phone from Finland.
It’s remarkably easy to be offended …
Rising sea levels …
The Barons of NSW …
Professor Gillian Triggs is President of the Australian Human Rights Commission, a body that seems to exist only to harvest complaints about discrimination …
Prof. Triggs : … If I may say so, I went to an interesting lecture by the foreign minister the other day to celebrate the Magna Carta, quoting the fundamental principles of the Magna Carta that no man—or presumably woman—can be charged or held without a trial of their peers. It seems extraordinary—
Senator BRANDIS: I do not think the barons at Runnymede had friends like Mr Eddie Obeid and Mr Ian Macdonald, unlike our foreign minister, who speaks with eloquence about the Magna Carta …
Remember Thursday, September 12, 1991 …
How I love ya …
How I love ya, how I love ya my dear old Swanee …
Down with sport …
I was horrified this morning as I watched Aurora the Explorer admit she plucked the number of people needing to be interviewed in relation to Australian Sports Blackest day out of her backside …
The Australian brings us more Black views …
JOHN Black, the former Labor senator who in the late 1980s chaired the first government-appointed inquiry into drugs in sport in Australia, has labelled the present Australian Crime Commission investigation as “amateur hour”.
The Senate inquiry headed by Black, which ran concurrently with the Dubin inquiry set up by Canada after Ben Johnson tested positive at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, pioneered drugs-in-sport reform not just in this country but globally. It led directly to the establishment of the Australian Sports Drug Agency – the forerunner to the present Australian Sports Anti-Doping Agency – and indirectly to the creation in 1999 of the World Anti-Doping Agency.
The Black inquiry, conducted nearly a quarter of a century ago, covered virtually the same ground being explored by the ACC, including the possibility of organised crime infiltrating sport through the supply of drugs, the danger associated with athletes being administered drugs intended for veterinary use and the involvement of corrupt doctors and sporting officials …
… But he has little regard for the way the present investigation has been handled and sympathises with innocent athletes and sports angered by the fact they have been embroiled in what he views as a fairly cynical political exercise.
“Well, why the hell wouldn’t they (be angry)?” he asked. “It was just amateur hour. You looked at it and you thought, ‘Oh my god, this is going to end in tears.’ But it kept the Eddie Obeid (ICAC) inquiry off the front pages for a week, so that was the purpose of it.
“It was clearly some kind of media diversion but it was at the expense of sport. It’s had a melancholy and predictable conclusion …
He also points at a reasonably easy avenue towards keeping organised crime out of sport …
“I am just appalled at the advertising for gambling in sports programs, the current exotic betting odds … I’m repelled by that. I think it’s appalling and I think the sports that do it should be condemned for it.
“The emerging problem that has come up has been gambling and sport has embraced it.
“I don’t get how a government can get all wowser-ish about tobacco and then turn a blind eye to this.
“And I don’t know how sport can embrace it either, bearing in mind what has happened on the subcontinent. It’s sitting up and begging for trouble.”
Cruise ship adrift …
Latest report from the Costa Gillardia …
Food and water running out, the toilets are flooded, the electricity cut off, Where are the tugs?
It seems the navigator, Aurora, has been making up the coordinates, several of the crew have abandoned ship, today they can’t find Scotty McClelland. Will there be any lifeboats left for the rest of us.
Nonetheless, Mr Swan, the first mate, is still promising to make port on time even though the fuel is all gone.
Captain Julia hopes to raise everyone’s spirits with a pass close to the shore … as soon as the engines are running.


