Friday, March 30, 2012

Some More Stuff

Fight Night on the Hill.


Be there.



It is also Human Achievement Hour, one hour a year when we remember how awesome it is to have electricity, running water, medicines and the Internet.



A very good example of why Human Achievement Hour matters.



It's always Earth Hour in North Korea.


Speaking of the Koreas....




Lady Gaga will begin her third concert tour, "The Born This Way Ball", on April 27 at the Olympic Stadium in Seoul.

The show had an initial age rating of 12 and older but the Korea Media Rating Board, a state watchdog, has adjusted it upwards, said event organiser Hyundai Card.

"Our company will respect the board's decision and refund all ticketholders younger than 18," a Hyundai Card official told AFP, declining to be named.

Some religious groups in South Korea have opposed the concert, saying Lady Gaga has advocated homosexuality and performed in an explicitly sexual manner.

"Our Christian community needs concerted action to stop young people from being infected with homosexuality and pornography," the Korean Association of Church Communication said in a statement.



I think people should be banned from seeing Lady Gaga because she embodies everything that is wrong about the current music scene- the kind of manufactured, vulgar, pop kitsch that is as exciting and as original as sliced white bread.



(Sidebar: I would like to apologise to white bread. It didn't deserve to be compared to the sucktastic Lady Gaga. It has proven its delicious worth. Lady Gaga could never do that.)



But imagine for a moment a white American Christian group complaining about Lady Gaga's intentional vulgarity.



We trade with China. Discuss:


The Chinese workers who often spend more than 60 hours per week assembling iPhones and iPads will have their overtime curbed and their hourly wages raised after a labour auditor hired by Apple Inc. inspected their factories.

The Washington-based Fair Labor Association says Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., the Taiwanese company that runs the factories, is committing to reducing weekly work time to the legal Chinese maximum of 49 hours.

That limit is routinely ignored in factories throughout China. Auret van Heerden, the CEO of the FLA, said Hon Hai is the first company to commit to following the legal standard.

Apple's and FLA's own guidelines call for work weeks of 60 hours or less.

The FLA found that many workers at the Hon Hai factories want to work even more overtime, so they can make more money. Hon Hai, also known as Foxconn, told the FLA that it will raise hourly salaries to compensate workers for the reduced hours.

Heerden said that it's common to find workers in developing countries looking for more overtime, rather than less.

"They're often single, they're young, and there's not much to do, so frankly they'd just rather work and save," he said.

The FLA auditors visited three Foxconn complexes in February and March: Guanlan and Longhua near the coastal manufacturing hub of Shenzhen, and Chengdu in the inland province of Sichuan. They employ a total of 178,000 workers, with an average age of 23.

Average monthly salaries at the factories ranged from $360 to $455. Foxconn recently raised salaries by up to 25 per cent in the second major salary hike in less than two years.

Foxconn employs 1.2 million workers in China to assemble products not just for Apple, but for Microsoft Corp., Hewlett-Packard Co. and other pillars of the U.S. technology industry.



I'll believe it when I see it.



And let's not forget the potential North Korean labour market to tap into.



Ontario parents: mad as hell, not going to take it anymore:



An estimated up to 2000 concerned parents from a wide range of ethnic and faith communities demonstrated outside Ontario’s legislature Thursday demanding the defeat of the Liberal government’s anti-bullying Bill 13. The speakers and boisterous, chanting crowd, many with homemade signs, expressed fears of a dangerous loss of freedoms from the government bill and its imposition on all Ontario schools of a sex education culture radically opposed to their own beliefs.




Also, see here. He knows what to say!



And now, some really chunky animals.




Friday Post

In the news...


Iran is helping Syria ship oil to China:


Iran is helping its ally Syria defy Western sanctions by providing a vessel to ship Syrian oil to a state-run company in China, potentially giving the government of President Bashar al-Assad a financial boost worth an estimated $80 million.

Iran, itself a target of Western sanctions, is among Syria's closest allies and has promised to do all it can to support Assad, recently praising his handling of the year-long uprising against Assad in which thousands have been killed.

China has also shielded Assad from foreign intervention, vetoing two Western-backed resolutions at the United Nations over the bloodshed, and is not bound by Western sanctions against Syria, its oil sector and state oil firm Sytrol.

"The Syrians planned to sell the oil directly to the Chinese but they could not find a vessel," said an industry source who added that he had been asked to help Sytrol execute the deal but did not take part.

The source named the Chinese buyer as Zhuhai Zhenrong Corp, a state-run company hit by U.S. sanctions in January.



We trade with China. Discuss.



North Korea fires a missile, thereby breaking (again) a promise not to:



North Korea fired two short-range missiles off its west coast on Thursday believed to be part of a test to upgrade capabilities, said news reports published on Friday, quoting South Korean military officials.

North Korea has raised tensions in recent weeks by announcing it would launch a rocket to put a satellite into orbit, but regional powers are urging Pyongyang to drop the plan, saying it would violate U.N. Security Council resolutions.

North Korea launched two short-range missiles believed to be surface-to-ship missiles from its west coast Thursday morning, South Korea's Chosun Ilbo newspaper quoted government officials as saying.

"The launch is believed to be to upgrade missile capabilities and not related directly to the North's long-range missile launch," the newspaper quoted a military official as saying.



Not surprised.



Related:


China has installed a silent alarm system inside every house in a border town as part of its strengthened crackdown on fugitives from North Korea, a report said on Friday.
 
The system is designed to let residents secretly send a signal to police if North Korean escapees come to their houses and ask for help, South Korea’s Yonhap news agency said.

It can transmit dialogue between the owner of a house and visitors, and Chinese authorities plan to expand it into other areas bordering the North, the agency said.

“If you push the red button on the wall, a signal goes directly to a police station,” Yonhap quoted one man as saying.

The man said he saw the device during a recent trip to his relative in the Yanbian border area in northeastern Jilin province.

Yonhap said China had stepped up a crackdown in border areas since South Korea criticised its repatriation of dozens of North Korean refugees in February and this month.

Almost all those fleeing the North cross first to China, where they face repatriation if caught. Many hide out and then travel on to Southeast Asian nations before flying to the South for resettlement.

Seoul has repeatedly urged Beijing to treat fugitives from the North as refugees and not to send them back, saying they face harsh punishment. China says they are economic migrants and not refugees deserving protection.



We trade with China. Discuss.



(with thanks)




Murderer Omar Khadr is set to return to Canada:


Omar Khadr is just a few steps away from returning to Canada.

U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said he will soon be signing papers that would clear the way to return the convicted terrorist.

“I don't have a specific timeline for signing it, but once those arrangements have been made, we will approve the transfer to Canada,” Panetta told an international press conference in Ottawa on Tuesday.

“It's an important step. We have others there that we would like to be able to move as well, but the steps we've taken here and the precautions we've taken are an example we would like to follow in the future.”

Khadr was taken to Guantanamo Bay, an American military detention camp, after he killed a U.S. medic in Afghanistan when he was 15.

He pleaded guilty last October to murder, attempted murder, supporting terrorism, spying and conspiracy.

The 25-year-old signed a plea deal and is supposed to serve eight years behind bars, but he's allowed to serve seven of them in Canada.

It is expected Khadr will serve only a short time in a Canadian prison before being released.

Once the American officials sign the papers, it will be up to Public Safety Minister Vic Toews to repatriate Khadr.





This could be awesome:



As the saying goes, “If you can't stand the heat, stay out of the kitchen.” Only in this case, things really heated up between edgy neighbors India and Pakistan when professional chefs from both countries competed in Foodistan, a first of its kind cook-off show which concluded Wednesday night following its 26 episode run.

Foodistan brought together 16 professional chefs from India and Pakistan to face off in a battle of national cuisines. Think Iron Chef with a geo-political edge.

The show, which aired simultaneously on India's New Delhi Television's lifestyle channel NDTV Good Times and Pakistan's GEO TV network, has been well received. On NDTV Good Times it drew between eight and 10 million viewers, making it one of the niche channel's bigger shows, according to NDTV Lifestyle CEO Smeeta Chakrabarti.

But the significance of Foodistan goes beyond audience figures and market share. India and Pakistan have fought three wars since independence from British rule in 1947 and tensions between the two nations are notoriously high. In this context, Foodistan can be seen as a pop cultural attempt to bring the two nations together. As the show's tag line put it, in the land of Foodistan "borders cease to exist and food emerges as the winner in this Indo-Pak clash."

“When we were developing the show, we looked at what brought the two countries together and realized that, like cricket (which has a long tradition of fierce rivarly between the two nations), food was integral to both cultures,” Chakrabarti told The Hollywood Reporter.

The eight member teams from both countries were given challenges to create dishes in a limited time frame which were then awarded points by the judges, with Foodistan pushing both sides to prove who could really serve a better kebab or biryani.



If we could put down our guns and eat biryani, the world might be a better place.



Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Mid-Week Post

Briefly....



He doesn't jail dissidents, idiota:



Pope Benedict and Cuban revolutionary leader Fidel Castro, both octogenarians, joked about their age in a brief meeting on Wednesday and then Castro popped the question: so what do you do?

The two world figures chatted for about 30 minutes at the Vatican embassy in Havana near the end of the pope's three-day visit to Cuba, where he called for greater freedom and a bigger role for the Catholic Church in the communist-led nation.



Parents in Saskatchewan complain that nothing is done about bullies:



A number of families in Central Butte, Sask., have taken their children out of the local school claiming not enough has been done to deal with bullying among students.

"I moved out of my Mom's house so I could get my education," Dakota Songer told CBC News about her families decision two years ago to have her attend school in Moose Jaw.

Songer, 18, explained she was a victim of bullying and, despite complaints and an informative talk by RCMP who visited the school, the behaviour did not end.

"I walked into class late one day and the students had put a picture of me up on the board and were defacing me in front of my whole entire class," Songer said, adding the teacher appeared to be condoning the activity. "My teacher was laughing along with them. And that was the last day I was at school."

An examination of the goings-on in Central Butte have revealed three other families with similar stories.

In the last few months the families have pulled nine youngsters out of the school. Six are being driven 40 kilometres every day to attend school in Chaplin.

The others are taking part in home schooling.

Bobby Torrie said her 13-year-old son, who has epilepsy was taunted and physically assaulted prior to them pulling him out of the school.

Torrie said when they took their concerns to officials at the school and the division, they were not taken seriously.

"We'd get answers like, 'We're dealing with these kids. We're talking to the kids,'" Torrie said. "But they're not. I don't see it."



This is how you handle bullies:








This should be required reading:



"Escape From Camp 14: One Man's Remarkable Odyssey From North Korea to Freedom in the West" (Viking), by Blaine Harden: Hitler's death camps, Stalin's gulag and Pol Pot's killing fields are now the stuff of history, but the unspeakable horrors they evoke still endure in the labour camps of North Korea.

However, the veil of secrecy that has kept the camps off the world's radar screen may now be less opaque thanks to the courage of a young man who was born in the harshest of those prisons and at age 23 miraculously escaped and made his way to the West.

Shin Dong-hyuk's story, told by veteran journalist Blaine Harden, details how Shin was bred by camp guards who selected his mother and father. Shin was tortured and starved, taught to inform on family members and classmates, and forced to watch the public execution of his mother and older brother.

Shin learned during an interrogation that his father was imprisoned because two of his 11 brothers had fled to the South during the Korean War. Shin had to remain in captivity because his father's sins against the state had left him with tainted blood.

He had no knowledge of the world outside Camp 14, a 108-square-mile compound encircled by electrified barbed wire that became home to up to 50,000 prisoners who worked long hours in mines, farms and factories.

Prisoners were consigned to lives of squalor while subsisting on meagre portions of corn and cabbage. The rules were strict, and violators faced swift punishment. Shin said he felt no anger as he watched his teacher beat a 6-year-old classmate to death after he found five kernels of corn hidden in her pocket. Shin, ever passive, thought her punishment was just and fair.

His thoughts turned to escape only after he met an older prisoner who had travelled outside Korea and described to him a world of computers and mobile phones. Faced with constant hunger, Shin was more interested in his friend's stories about food. "Freedom, in Shin's mind, was just another word for grilled meat."

Shin suffered severe burns as he slipped through the fence. He then found himself with no coat in the brutally cold Korean winter and no idea how to make his way to China and freedom. But even as his odyssey took him from there to South Korea and eventually to the U.S., where he decided to work as a human rights activist for North Korean prisoners, his adjustment to a new life posed severe emotional challenges.

"I am evolving from being an animal," he told Harden. "Sometimes I try to cry and laugh like other people, just to see if it feels like anything. Yet, tears don't come. Laughter doesn't come."


Related: children in North Korea are malnourished yet the state still finds enough money to glorify fat dead b@$t@rd Kim Jong-Il.




And now, proof that dogs just need someone to love to make them happy, no matter how hard a life they've had.



Birds of A Particular Feather

Where have we heard this before?


As for feminists serving their own interests - uh, yeah, in the sense that the advancement of gender equity is in their interest. And everyone's, I suppose


The tired, old line of feminists' selfless quest for gender equity hits several logical snags when one notices the fat, aging hippy feminist behind the curtain.


The Famous Five were notoriously white, elitist, anti-Asian and eugenicist. Hardly role models for a post-modern society that ostensibly eschews such backward thinking.


Ostensibly.


In the twenty-first century, who are the beneficiaries of such public policies as affirmative action, custody of children, increased female student enrollment in math programs or abortion?



Well, white women.



Affirmative action- the act of employing racial minorities and women for the purposes of corporate or political eye-candy- has benefitted more white women than any other group. In 2009, women made up 54.7 percent of the public service with aboriginals making up only 4.5 percent of public service. In the US, white women still make up a substantial amount of white collar jobs.



Women in Canada are over-represented in public sector jobs that provide generous benefits:


There are other benefits which come with these public sector jobs such as top-ups for maternity benefits. I can tell you from experience many private sector employers offer nothing beyond the Employment Insurance maternity/paternity leave plans which pay 55% of wages up to a maximum of just over $400 per week. By contrast, federal government workers are eligible for a top-up that pays them 93% of their wages for the full year of maternal leave. 


Women largely are still given sole custody of children after a divorce.



Despite efforts to increase female student enrollment in science, technology or math programs, very few female students actually do enroll:


A study released Tuesday by the Institute for Women's Policy Research says that while women represent a majority of college graduates overall, only 27.5% of Associate’s degrees and occupational certificates in the STEM fields were awarded to women in 2007. Cynthia Costello, the study’s author, found that women are losing ground: This statistic was more than 10% higher in 1997. 

Underrepresentation in STEM fields at community colleges may be part of the reason women lag behind men in the STEM workforce. According to the study, women make up almost half of the American workforce but only around a quarter of the STEM labor pool. Data presented in the study shows that women are leaving some STEM fields. From 2000 to 2009, the number of women working in computers and math dropped about 3%.



And who largely supports unrestricted abortion access as an essential right?



Again, white women like Joyce Arthur (white):


She acknowledged that "nobody likes sex-selective abortion," but said that's not a good enough reason to ban it.



Judy Rebick (the UnWASP but still pasty):



 "If people don't have their own experience with what is an unwanted pregnancy . . . the stories of the anti-choice are more powerful to people," Rebick acknowledged.




 Nancy Pelosi (decidedly un-Japanese):


I would say that as an ardent, practicing Catholic, this is an issue that I have studied for a long time.  And what I know is, over the centuries, the doctors of the church have not been able to make that definition.  And Senator–St. Augustine said at three months.  We don’t know. The point is, is that it shouldn’t have an impact on the woman’s right to choose.  Roe v. Wade talks about very clear definitions of when the child–first trimester, certain considerations; second trimester; not so third trimester.  There’s very clear distinctions.  This isn’t about abortion on demand, it’s about a careful, careful consideration of all factors and–to–that a woman has to make with her doctor and her god.  And so I don’t think anybody can tell you when life begins, human life begins.  As I say, the Catholic Church for centuries has been discussing this, and there are those who’ve decided…



Katherine Sebelius (very white):



The country’s first criminal prosecution of Planned Parenthood was left teetering Friday when it was revealed the state of Kansas destroyed abortion records that prosecutors planned to use as evidence....


The shredding occurred when KDHE was under former Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, an abortion rights supporter. Officials at KDHE, now part of Republican Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration, declined comment.



And how many of these prominent feminists -and feminist groups- deigned to speak out against sharia law or Islamist misogyny?



How many of these prominent feminists and feminist groups dare to speak out against the misogyny of Islamism?


I could find only one reference to NOW against Islamism. It was a handful of women protesting a stoning sentence in Nigeria. I could find nothing else.



Judy Rebick has a delightful bit of equivalence here:


"[In response to a comment from the floor that] Sharia law will make all of the gains women made go up in a puff of smoke, ... the Christians and Jewish courts got their laws in the Arbitration Act and quietly under the radar the Jews and Christians have started to use it."



(Sidebar: Jews and Christians don't stone women to death, Judy. )



Nancy Pelosi "bravely" covered her head while in Syria:


Thus, both U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have donned the hijab when visiting Arab and Muslim countries whereas Arab and Muslim female dignitaries and spouses do not remove the hijab or the niqab while visiting the West. On July 18, 2010, British Minister Caroline Spelman, the environment secretary and second most powerful woman in the cabinet, described the burqa as "empowering." She said, "I don't, living in this country as a woman, want to be told what I can and can't wear. One of the things we pride ourselves on … is being free to choose what you wear … so banning the burka is absolutely contrary to what this country is about."


Now, where is the solidarity with their fellow Muslim feminists?


To which I say, clothes don’t oppress people – people oppress people.  (See what I did there?)  A woman who wears a hijab is no more or no less oppressed than a woman who wears a string bikini.  You simply cannot tell these things by looking at the clothes a woman wears.


In America, as I've written elsewhere, our president is proud of our efforts on behalf of a Muslim girl's right to wear hijab in school. (Yes, hijab, the headscarf that Turkey, France, and parts of Germany have banned in public schools. More: Various American feminists view the essentially non-existent "choice" to wear the Islamic Veil as akin to a feminist choice, a feminist right. (For a long time I and a handful of other feminists have despaired of the use of feminist concepts to justify, even glorify, being a "sex worker," a "surrogate uterus," etc. My Body, Myself—Because My Mind Is Sure Gone).

Indeed, feminist philosopher Martha Nussbaum, in the august pages of the New York Times, recently insisted that the burqa wearers are not coerced into wearing the shroud-like garment, nor is it really uncomfortable, dangerous to one's health, or associated with violence against women. She doesn't believe that showing one's face for purposes of identification is even really necessary—and that, of course, banning the burqa would be "discriminatory." Nussbaum deftly marshals all her arguments without even getting to the "delicate issue of religiously grounded accomodation." In her view, a ban would be "unacceptable in a society committed to equal liberty. Equal respect for conscience requires us to reject" all the arguments that have been made against face veiling.



Of sex-selection abortions:


I don’t think that abortion should be banned because of the reason the woman is procuring it. I believe that women should be able to have an abortion for any reason at all, no matter how “shallow” or wrong someone else may judge it to be.  ...

The situation in Punjab offers a great example of this. It’s unfair, in my eyes, to go after the women having these abortions. Yes, they’re making a choice, but they’re doing so in reaction to a series of cultural issues that make them believe, as females themselves, that femaleness is inferior and that it’s a burden. We can attempt to rectify the deep-seated wrongs instead of attacking the women who are simply trying to negotiate their own lives in a thoroughly fucked-up world. 


Surely this crusader for all things female will step in change things, right?



Who came to the defense of Sarah Palin when she endured some of the ugliest personal attacks the US political scene has ever known?


The Washington Post isn’t the only daily D.C. newspaper to rave about Sandra Bernhard’s anti-Palin ranting. Wednesday’s Washington Examiner joined in, with the headline "Comedienne delivers enraged optimism." Barbara Mackay claimed "in the end, oddly and subtly, Bernhard’s message is positive."
That’s not the impression you’d get from the blog of Theater J, where Bernhard is appearing. It has video of Bernhard calling Palin "Uncle Women," a "turncoat b—h" and a "whore." One complaint on the blog that Bernhard crosses a line of political incorrectness draws a defense from Ari Roth of Theater J that really drops the curtain on how coarse this show is:
In fact, the play wears its politically VERY correct heart on its sleeve with its indictment of America as "A Man’s World, It’s a White Man’s World, It’s a F–ked Up White Man’s Racist World" and can only be suggested to be racist in its content if one is hell-bent on protecting White Folk for Sandra’s blistering indictment.When Sandra warns Sarah Palin not to come into Manhattan lest she get gang-raped by some of Sandra’s big black brothers, she’s being provocative, combative, humorous, and yes, let’s allow, disgusting.
The fact that the show has a few riffs like this does not — to my mind — make it a "disgusting show." there’s too much beauty, variety, vitality, and intelligence to label the entire show as "disgusting." I’ll agree with you that we produced this show because we did find it to be edgy — because we wanted to give right wing conservative Jews a good run for their money by being on the receiving end of some blistering indictments from Sandra.Does it go over the edge sometimes? On the gang-rape joke, yes. Sure. Not much else. It goes over the edge and then comes right back to the cutting edge. [Profanity editing is mine.]
Forgive me if gang-rape jokes don't greet my ears as oddly and subtly positive, as the Examiner suggests, and forgive me if gang-rape jokes aren't "a rotating sprinkler that a spectator washes in most happily," like the Washington Post insists

 
Why black American men would be the criminal elements in this scenario is anyone's guess but surely someone in the feminist ranks thought this was not at all humourous.



Feminists serving everyone's interests?



I don't think so.



Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Some More Stuff

The butt-covering begins now:


"What I said yesterday, Ben, is something that I think everyone in this room understands. Arms control is extraordinarily complex, very technical, and the only way it gets done is if you can consult and build a strong understanding, both between countries and within countries. And, when you think about the New Start treaty that Dmitry and I were able to hammer out and ultimately get ratified, that was a painstaking two year process.

"I don't think it's any surprise that you can't start that a few months before presidential and congressional elections in the United States, and at a time when they just completed elections in Russia, and they're in the process of a presidential transition where a new president's going to be coming in a little less than two months."


Is that so?








President Obama: On all these issues, but particularly missile defense, this, this can be solved but it’s important for him to give me space.

President Medvedev: Yeah, I understand. I understand your message about space. Space for you…

President Obama: This is my last election. After my election I have more flexibility.

President Medvedev: I understand. I will transmit this information to Vladimir.

 The reality: Obama scrapped the missile defense shield, thus turning the US' back on its eastern European allies. He defended the decision saying that Iran was not planning on attacking the US. Iran has not only launched missiles but is in the process of developing a nuclear weapon. Obama said he would meet Iran without pre-conditions in 2008. Russia- which backs regimes like Iran, Syria and North Korea- has benefitted from the new START treaty which calls for inspections of "declared facilities" (leaving undeclared ones free and clear) and a lop-sided arsenal.


What will Obama give Medvedev (read: Putin's Russia) if he is re-elected? There is no point in discussing any treaty or defense plan prior to an election that may remove him from the seat of power. Obama's hubris and deceit is what was witnessed. The American electorate should be worried.



An anti-Obamacare protest - allegedly larger than any "Occupy..." event - took place in San Francisco. It went unnoticed. Wouldn't want the masses to think there was dissent in the ranks:


The crowd of 1000 was about half men, half women, with significant numbers of Hispanic, Asian and African Americans.
Attendance in San Francisco was double that reported by Catholic San Francisco Online, the National Catholic Register or the San Jose Mercury News. High resolution photographs captured by Fund47 reveal at least a 30×30 grid of protesters, with an additional hundred around the periphery. Also, the crowd turned over at a decent clip during the 90–120 minute event, scheduled on a workday, meaning even higher numbers.

The silence by San Francisco mainstream media on the Catholic protest is deafening. I could not find a report in the San Francisco Chronicle online, which recently gave full page coverage to a “bum rush” by 25 protestors (and 30 photographers) on the residence of Wells Fargo’s CEO by an OccupySF splinter group, revealed as utter farce by Fund47. Two weeks ago, a war protest with 15 professional protestors received frothy local TV news coverage.


I called it:


Pope Benedict and Cuban President Raul Castro met on Tuesday for talks on a papal trip that has sparked hopes for economic and political change, but one national leader said there would be no political reform on the communist island.


This is what I (and Saint Paul) have to say about this and that:


The book in question contains Koranic verses advocating, even demanding, wives to be mistreated, beaten and restrained.

From the Letter of Saint Paul to the Ephesians (5: 22-33):

"Wives, be subject to your own husbands, as to the Lord. For the husband is the head of the wife, as Christ also is the head of the church, He Himself being the Savior of the body.  But as the church is subject to Christ, so also the wives ought to be to their husbands in everything.

 Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself up for her,  so that He might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the washing of water with the word, that He might present to Himself the church in all her glory, having no spot or wrinkle or any such thing; but that she would be holy and blameless. So husbands ought also to love their own wives as their own bodies. He who loves his own wife loves himself; for no one ever hated his own flesh, but nourishes and cherishes it, just as Christ also does the church, because we are members of His body. FOR THIS REASON A MAN SHALL LEAVE HIS FATHER AND MOTHER AND SHALL BE JOINED TO HIS WIFE, AND THE TWO SHALL BECOME ONE FLESH. 

This mystery is great; but I am speaking with reference to Christ and the church.  Nevertheless, each individual among you also is to love his own wife even as himself, and the wife must see to it that she respects her husband."

Wives and husbands love each as Christ loves the Church. Husbands love their wives as themselves "for no one ever hated his own flesh, but nourishes and cherishes it, just as Christ also does the church, because we are members of His body".

Does that sound like a manual for abuse to you?

Suck it, Global!


I'm stealing this meme because it goes here:


Your insults, degrading remarks and home made statistic only shows your own lack of capacity to fathom the realities in the world. Islam and 1.7 billion Muslims are not going to disappear just because some illiterate westerns do not like it or do not understand it. Besides Muslim countries, you to have also deal with 1.2 billion Indians, 1.4 billion Chinees and many other challenges. So tighten your belt and get ready to go down the drain of history. 


Now let us juxtapose:


The idea of tens of thousands of former Muslims coming to Jesus Christ in North Africa within a few short years is mind-boggling. But entire mosques coming to faith? That news is even harder to wrap one’s mind around, but it is in fact what is happening according to reports from a former church planter among Muslims in West Africa.

In the new book Miraculous Movements, Jerry Trousdale, now director of International Ministries for CityTeam International, records amazing and inspiring stories of faith among Muslim communities in North Africa. The author opens up a new world to Western readers, taking them into the heart of the “miraculous movement” of God in Africa that is transforming the hearts of Muslims.
Trousdale writes that “unprecedented” events are happening among the Muslim populations that his ministry and its affiliates are working among, including:

• Multiple cases of entire mosques coming to faith
• Thousands of ordinary men and women being used by God to achieve seemingly impossible outcomes
• Tens of thousands of Muslim background Christians becoming dedicated intercessors who fast and pray for the gospel to penetrate the next community
• Muslim people groups that never had even one church among them now have more than fifty church planted, and in some cases more than one hundred churches – within two years of engagement
• Former sheikhs, imams and militant Islamists making up 20 percent or more of the new Christian leaders in Muslim regions



What was that about "the drain of history"?



(With great admiration, respect and gratitude)



A Tuesday Post


Watch "The Thrilla on the Hilla" this Saturday.



Well, this must be embarrassing:







Whoever chooses to merely dismiss the significance of today’s exchange between our President and Russia’s President should have their intelligence and patriotism questioned. Let this exchange be a warning to voters: President Obama will have “more flexibility” to weaken us if he’s re-elected in November. He was caught speaking candidly to Russian President Dmitri Medvedev before a “hot mic” today (and surely one must believe he didn’t know the mics were still on; surely he’s not so audacious as to purposefully broadcast his intentions)…

Let’s consider what this “flexibility” might mean. We know that he has repeatedly conceded to foreign demands and backed down on missile defense. I pointed this out as Governor of Alaska when he proposed reducing Alaska’s missile defense system capabilities. I explained then that the President’s proposed military cuts would diminish Alaska’s opportunity to defend the union with our strategic location’s defense infrastructure. We also know that in 2009, as part of his “reset” with Russia, President Obama turned his back on our Eastern European allies by abandoning past promises for a missile shield in Poland and the Czech Republic.


We can’t know for certain what this newly revealed “flexibility” means, but considering President Obama’s past actions, be sure it won’t involve a position of strength for America and our allies. Russia has been thwarting us on one issue after another, including the rushed-through New START Treaty that many of us questioned after Obama insisted America ratify it first, then allow Russia to sit on it – unratified on their end – until it suited that foreign power’s needs.

Meanwhile, North Korea is planning another long-range missile launch, and the United States and our allies are still vulnerable to the threat of ballistic missiles. Our president has done nothing to alleviate this vulnerability; in fact, he’s done just the opposite. He has consistently taken a position of weakness and naïve trust in Putin’s Russia. Consider that one-sided New START Treaty as an example of this. Or consider those cuts to Alaska’s missile defense system, which leaves us much more vulnerable in the face of a nuclear North Korea. Now consider the state of our national defense under a President who whispers to a foreign power that he needs even “more flexibility” to weaken us further.


Obama has undercut his nation’s defense, his eastern European allies’ defenses and has pretty much made a deal with Russia, the backer of such regimes as Syria and North Korea.


The man cannot remain in office.



Medvedev, embarrassed at being caught, attacked Mitt Romney for rightly pointing out how his deal with Obama is against American interests:


Russian President Dmitry Medvedev told Mitt Romney on Tuesday to use his head and stop reverting to Hollywood stereotypes after the US presidential hopeful branded Moscow as Washington's top foe.

"I recommend that all US presidential candidates, including the candidate you mention (Romney), do at least two things," Medvedev told Russian reporters on the sidelines of a nuclear security conference in Seoul.

"That they use their head and consult their reason when they formulate their positions, and that they check the time -- it is now 2012, not the mid-1970s," said the outgoing Russian president in comments broadcast on state television.

Medvedev said Romney's quip "smelled of Hollywood" because it typecast Moscow as Washington's main enemy from the Cold War era just like in the popular spy movie thrillers of the time.

"As for ideological cliches, I always get nervous when one side or the other starts using phrases such as 'enemy number one' and so on," Medvedev said.

Romney had roundly criticised Obama on Monday for getting caught by an open mike making a controversial promise to Medvedev about missile defence.

Obama appeared to suggest at the Seoul meeting that he was ready to make a concession on the issue if he wins the November presidential election.

Romney told CNN in a transcript released by the station that Obama should understand that "Russia is not a friendly character on the world stage" because it has old ties to the governments of Syria and Iran.

Russia "is without question our number one geopolitical foe," Romney said.

It is unusual for world leaders to get involved in a foreign state's elections and the foreign ministry quickly moved to make light of Romney's "emotional statement."


Romney is absolutely correct in pointing out Russia's animosity towards the US.  Accusing him of stereotyping Russia as a Cold War enemy is only valid if Russia didn't back Iran, Syria and North Korea, threaten eastern Europe or not live up to the START treaty.




Japan steered off the agenda at a nuclear security summit on Tuesday to hit out at North Korea's plans for a rocket launch next month, as U.S. President Barack Obama cautioned against complacency in dealing with the threat of nuclear terrorism.

North Korea and Iran's nuclear weapons programs are not on the agenda at the summit in the South Korean capital, Seoul, and neither country was invited to the forum involving some 50 world leaders tasked with improving security at nuclear facilities.

The secretive North has been widely criticized on the sidelines of the meeting, including by main ally China, but host Seoul has explicitly stated Pyongyang's weapons of mass destruction programs were off the table during the summit itself.

Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda used his opening speech at the summit to say the international community strongly demands North Korea exercise self-restraint on next month's planned rocket launch.

"The planned missile launch North Korea recently announced would go against the international community's nuclear non-proliferation effort and violate U.N. Security Council resolutions," Noda said.

No other major leaders mentioned North Korea's nuclear ambitions or the ballistic missile launch which the Pyongyang says will carry a weather satellite into orbit. The West says the launch is a disguised test of a long-range missile designed to reach the American mainland.

North Korea said last week it would consider it a "provocation" if its "nuclear issue is placed on the agenda at the Seoul summit" and if any statement is issued against the North for pursuing such a program.

On Tuesday, it said there was no reason to fire a missile after February's agreement to suspend nuclear tests in return for food aid with the United States.

Obama has said the destitute North could be hit with tighter sanctions if it goes ahead with the rocket launch, but experts doubt China will back another U.N. Security Council resolution against it.



Why shouldn’t Japan give a very restrained warning to a nation that most likely strike it? South Korea walks on egg-shells, China will continue protecting its North Korean lapdog and the US doesn’t want to rock the boat. North Korea’s planned launch is a clear violation of its promise (nothing it hasn’t done before) and anything anyone does is a “provocation”.


Japan should get the Bomb. What have they got to lose?





The naïveté of the Court of Appeal is this regard is astonishing. The learned justices have a vision of professionally accomplished, commercially savvy young women, contemplating careers either as hookers or graphic designers, and concerned about the enforceability of contracts and provision of benefits. A few high-end prostitutes would benefit from no longer having to disguise their “escort” services, but prostitution in Canada is not a high-end occupation. It preys upon the desperately poor, the drug addicted, the homeless, the mentally ill and other vulnerable women in the dark corners of society.

Our prostitution laws are a mess, but the prohibition on operating a brothel was one of the few tools that law enforcement and social services could use to pry women out from a life that precious few of them would ever choose. In the euphemisms employed by the plaintiffs, prostitutes are “sex workers,” as if they were selling real estate or peddling cosmetics. A more accurate term would be “sex slaves” — women forced to turn tricks by their drug dealers, the violent gang culture of the streets, or even abusive boyfriends.

Now the Ontario Court of Appeal has said it be would better for these (mostly) men if prostitutes are able to ply their trade more openly. The upshot is that, after these laws take effect, Ontario will have more prostitutes. It’s simple economics: Reduce the barriers to entry and more firms will enter. As a public policy matter, it is also simple. At the margin, this judgment will ensnare women in prostitution who otherwise would not have been.

Jonathan Kay argues persuasively that the underworld culture of prostitution is a brutal and dangerous place for women. He thinks, along with the Court of Appeal, that the solution is to get it out from the underworld. But what if prostitution is inherently brutal and dangerous, the inevitable consequence of a trade that invites people of repellant moral character to degrade the poor and vulnerable for depraved pleasure or commercial gain? The solution then is not to bring the brothels out of the darkness and into the strip malls, but rather to use creative public policy to flush out the underworld.



The "religion of peace" has a junior-sized lone wolf:


The suicide bomber behind the first Australian civilian casualty in Afghanistan was a boy of about 12, apparently drafted into a chilling new Taliban campaign to use children as weapons.

The injured man is frontline veteran David Savage, whose role with the Australian Federal Police as a peacekeeper in East Timor inspired a TV mini-series.

Mr Savage, 49, of Canberra, whose condition is serious but stable, was treated at the Australian base at nearby Tarin Kowt before being flown to Kandahar, then Germany.

The bomber attacked as Mr Savage was with a group of soldiers and staff outside a bazaar in the Chora Valley, Uruzgan, where he was working with local communities on development activities.
The head of Afghanistan's Counter-Criminal Department General Gulab Khan said three NATO soldiers and an Afghan National Army soldier were also injured in the blast.

A Taliban spokesman claimed the attack was payback for the alleged massacre of villagers by a US soldier.

The suicide bombing follows a series of "insider" attacks by Afghan soldiers on foreign troops, including separate attacks on Monday that killed two British servicemen and a US soldier.



Proceed to bury head in the sand.



And now, a cat and a bald eagle enjoy some tense moments on a snowy porch:







Monday, March 26, 2012

Monday Post

Quickly now...


Could you imagine four more years of this self-conceit?


Three business people, five students, a teacher and a North Korean refugee in South Korea won copies of Obama's personal political manifesto as a prize for submitting questions to the president in advance of his visit to Seoul for an international nuclear summit.

The top three questioners to the "Ask President Obama" competition also got actual replies from the president, including a rare reflection on the favorite speeches that he has delivered.

Not surprisingly, he listed his 2004 speech to the Democratic National Convention, an address that immediately made him a national political figure. He also listed his 2008 speech on race, a discourse forced upon him by the controversial sermons of his pastor, Jeremiah Wright, and his Nobel Peace Prize speech in Oslo that tried to reconcile the prosecution of just wars with the pursuit of peace.


 If you want the South Koreans' respect, take a hardline to the remaining Tub-in-Chief, Mr. "President".



Related: these men are dead because of the Kim dynasty and something just as bad, if not worse, than trade with China.



Also related:


At the tail end of his 90 minute meeting with Russian President Dmitri Medvedev Monday, President Obama said that he would have “more flexibility” to deal with controversial issues such as missile defense, but incoming Russian President Vladimir Putin needs to give him “space.”

The exchange was picked up by microphones as reporters were let into the room for remarks by the two leaders.

The exchange:

President Obama: On all these issues, but particularly missile defense, this, this can be solved but it’s important for him to give me space.

President Medvedev: Yeah, I understand. I understand your message about space. Space for you…

President Obama: This is my last election. After my election I have more flexibility.

President Medvedev: I understand. I will transmit this information to Vladimir.


(Thank you)



The brother of the "lone wolf" is charged as an accomplice and his father wants to sue the French government for his son's "martyrdom":



The Islamist gunman whose murder spree shocked France will be buried in his ancestral homeland Algeria, his father told AFP Monday, adding that he planned to sue France over his son’s death....

He also hit out against France for having shot his son instead of taking him alive at the end of a 32-hour siege at his apartment in Toulouse.

“France is a big country that had the means to take my son alive. They could have knocked him out with gas and taken him in,” he said. “They preferred to kill him.”

“I will hire the biggest named lawyers and work for the rest of my life to pay (their) costs. I will sue France for having killing my son.”


She has "Islamophobia" AND the Crusades all in one article:


Islamophobia is also a violation of essential Western values: tolerance, liberalism and egalitarianism. Founded on fear and ignorance, it also flies in the face of Western rationalism. We have created a global market in which, whether we like it or not, we’re interconnected as never before. If we want a peaceful, stable and sustainable world, we have to learn to live with those we instinctively regard as “other.” 



I imagine it has never occurred to Miss Armstrong that pulling a girl's hair just so one can shoot her directly in the head is an act of barbarity not unfamiliar to the unscholarly Islamic world which does not espouse values like tolerance, liberalism and egalitarianism.



But why bring things like THAT up?



(with thanks)



Benedict XVI visits Cuba, asks for religious freedom, won't get it:


Pope Benedict arrived in Cuba on Monday and told the government it had nothing to fear from the Catholic Church, asking for more freedoms to help the communist country in times of change.

Just three days after saying that communism no longer works in Cuba, the pope took a softer stance as he landed in the eastern city of Santiago de Cuba for a three-day trip aimed at boosting the Church's role on the island.



Hey! Let's vacation in Cuba!



Ontario is in the hole for $16 billion. Thanks, Premier Dad!



And now, chocolate-eaters have a lower body mass:


Healthy people who exercise and also eat chocolate regularly tend to have a lower body mass index than those who eat the rich brown sweets less often, a US study suggested on Monday.

The survey of a population of more than 1,000 adults, published as a research letter in the Archives of Internal Medicine, reinforces the notion that chocolate packs heart healthy benefits, despite its high calorie and sugar content.

People in the study, whose ages ranged from 20 to 85, reported eating chocolate an average of twice a week and exercising an average of 3.6 times a week.

Those who said they ate chocolate more often than the norm tended to have a lower ratio of weight over height, a calculation made by taking a person's weight and dividing it by their height times two.

A normal BMI is typically 18.5 to 24.9, while people who figure lower are considered underweight and those above 25 are overweight.

"Adults who consumed chocolate more frequently had a lower BMI than those who consumed chocolate less often," said the study led by Beatrice Golomb and colleagues at the University of California San Diego.


Celebrity Apartheid Week: Coda

Why does Celebrity Apartheid Week matter?


It matters because celebrities- the highest-paid for the least amount of valuable work among us- have somehow replaced traditional exemplars of moral, social and political conscience. That is just sad. How are people who live in mansions and drive expensive foreign-made cars the same as officer-workers who take the bus to work everyday? How are they one of the "common" men? How do the morals of a handful match those who root them in higher laws? Do people whose "carbon footprint" is bigger than most families know more than scientists and other industrial experts?



The banal has become the fascinating. Artifice has attained a value truth could only covet.



Simply, we've given the most vain and vapid among us a place of honour.



Let me know when people who actually change the world are on the front pages of magazines.


Friday, March 23, 2012

Celebrity Apartheid Week: the Revenge of the Blog

Aaahhhh... Friday....



Oh no! Hollywood is too good for message movies (Avatar, An Inconvenient Truth, anything by Michael Moore, any crappy movie based on crappy Margaret Atwood's crappy books, Dan Brown's cinematic excrescence, Rendition, The Hurt Locker, Che, Game Change, insert own unsubtle leftist movie here).



Some action heroes have dry catch-phrases. The Chosen One has several stock catch-phrases, as the Danes have been so good as to point out.



(with thanks)



Watch as Peter Hitchens rips apart non-funnyman, Russell Brand.







Remember when British people possessed intellect and dry wit? Guess which one had both of those qualities (hint: it wasn't the unwashed man in the hat).



(Thank you)



Perhaps the biggest controversy about Good Christian Beetches is that it is unoriginal, uses stereotypes to carry the plots (such as they are) and relies on unsophisticated acting and - dare I say it?- viewing to carry it through. When does the episode with the flaming imam who paints pictures of Mohammad with pink glitter glue going to air? What about the episode with Texas' majority religion- Catholicism- filmed entirely at Beth Yeshun Synagogue (one of Houston's many synagogues)? Will there be an episode filmed entirely in Spanish? How about an episode featuring life in twenty-first century Texas where people don't wear cowboy hats and go "yee ha!"?



How about it, Good Christian ect? Shake some peaches. Be bold.



More to come...




A Word...


If I may interrupt the flow of Celebrity Apartheid Week before this timely topic becomes quickly buried and forgotten by a popular press incredibly disappointed that the culprit was not who they wished it would be.


After a thirty hour stand-off with French police, Mohamed Merah was shot and killed by a sniper. He was pursued after killing- and filming- seven people, including three children.




The killer of French schoolchildren and soldiers turns out to be a man called Mohammed Merah. The story can now proceed according to time-honored tradition:

Stage One: The strange compulsion to assure us that the killer is a “right wing conservative extremist,” in the words of NRO commenter ExpatAsia, echoed by Chrisman and Galt’s Bain. Up north, this view was shared by Canada’s most prominent establishment Jew and the Liberal Party attack poodle Warren Kinsella (whom NR readers may recall from my free-speech cover story, which mentioned the groveling apology he was forced to make to “the Chinese community” after an unfortunately sinophobic cat joke). The insistence that the killer was emblematic of an epidemic of right-wing hate sweeping the planet is, regrettably, no longer operative. Instead, the killer isn’t representative of anything at all.

So on to Stage Two: Okay, he may be called Mohammed but he’s a “lone wolf.” Sure, he says he was trained by al-Qaeda, but what does he know? Don’t worry, folks, he’s just a lone wolf like Major Hasan and Faisal Shahzad and all the other card-carrying members of the Amalgamated Union of Lone Wolves. All jihad is local.

On to Stage Three: Okay, even if there are enough lone wolves around to form their own Radio City Rockette line, it’s still nothing to do with Islam. I’m sad to see the usually perceptive Ed West of the London Telegraph planting his flag on this wobbling blancmange.

And then, of course, Stage Four: The backlash that never happens. Because apparently the really bad thing about actual dead Jews is that it might lead to dead non-Jews: “French Muslims Fear Backlash After Shooting.” Likewise, after Major Hasan’s mountain of dead infidels, “Shooting Raises Fears For Muslims In US Army.” Likewise, after the London Tube slaughter, “British Muslims Fear Repercussions After Tomorrow’s Train Bombing.” Oh, no, wait, that’s a parody, though it’s hard to tell.


There one has it.


Had this been an isolated incident, one could make out that this was a “lone wolf”. But it isn’t.















Are these isolated incidences? Are all of these culprits victims of the West which has given them succour? Are the victims to blame for their tragic end?


I wager this will become a non-story very soon. If the facts don’t fit the narrative, they must be disposed of. It is galling to see that happen but what is truly appalling is how we have let it happen. We have committed cultural suicide by tolerating the intolerably violent and backward nature of Islam and casting the blame on ourselves before we bury ourselves in the sand. 


One will notice the gates of Rome have been kicked in.




How prophetic, Mr. Lincoln.