Posts Tagged ‘Politics’

Sharia in the West is like urine in a waterhole… Any amount is too much.

July 20th, 2010

Here’s Pat Condell in fine form, with some refreshing well-targeted brutality. If you want to know more about the Islamist front group he mention, the book is available in hardback or you can visit Anti-CAIR’s website.

The title of this post was the most memorable line for me.

Why is Obama so scary?

April 12th, 2010

Edward Current recorded the below video last year, but only just released it.

It’s bull!

April 10th, 2010

Every Tuesday to Saturday I sit down (be it at home or on a bus) to watch the Rachel Maddow Show via iTunes, and wish we had a similar current affairs show here in Australia. Here’s a clip from episode from 02 April 2010 that nicely illustrates why:

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

On rebates

December 14th, 2009

Events in my professional life have had me thinking about government rebates. At present the Commonwealth Government and other agencies have stimulus schemes that offer to reimburse expenditure on reducing electriicity use. Homeowners can end up getting a selection of goods at little or, commonly, no cost to themselves.

Homeowners, knowing that the government will reimburse them whatever price they pay are less likely to seek value for money. Should a company inflate its prices in order to “chew up as much of the rebate as possible”? While unethical, it certainly seems financially sensible to do so.

As it presently stands, the rebates give little incentive to the householder to seek good value for money. Companies can inflate their quotes but keep it under the rebate in the hope the customer won’t care. This is particularly problematic when there’s no need to provide evidence that multiple quotes were sought. It’s a transfer of money from the taxpayer to the proprietors of the businesses, and reduces the multiplier effect of stimulus spending.

A better scheme, if the government does choose to provide rebates, is to cost share. For every dollar spent by the customer, the rebate provider should put in a dollar, or some multiple. This gives the customer more incentive to shop around for a good price, as they share the cost of a bad price with the rebate provider. The stimulus money would then have a higher multiplier effect and the economy would be better off.

While in general I support the idea of government intervention in the form of stimulus spending and think reducing electricity use is a good idea (both environmentally and to reduce future need for electricity infrastructure), that spending needs to be spent in such a way as to have as high a multipler effect as possible, both to stimulate the economy as much as possible and to achieve good value for many for the tax payer.

This rant has been triggered by two weeks working for the worst employer I have yet experienced. Organisation and planning were words not in the company dictionary, and the intent to inflate prices and work around rules was explicitly discussed. Things got so bad that staff weren’t being paid, refundable deposits couldn’t be refunded to unsatisfied customers, and everyone was massively stressed.

Anyway, I’m now looking for work again. If there’s someone looking for an administrative worker who likes organisation, planning and ethical conduct, email me!

The Family: “Morality is for the little people”

August 10th, 2009

The Family, a secretive religious cult, is in the US news at the moment due to its C Street residence for politicians in Washington, and the sexual adventures of Senator John Ensign and Giver Mark Sanford, among others. Jeff Sharlet has been reporting on the group for quite a while. He’s interviewed by Bill Maher in this clip.

Baptist newspaper forges signatures on Proclamation for Morality

July 21st, 2009

Over in the US state of Oklahoma, various Christian groups have rallied together to push a “Proclamation for Morality”. A local Christian newspaper, the Baptist Messenger, decided to throw it’s support behind the Proclamation. It printed a copy of the Proclamation in the paper with the addition of the forged signatures of the state’s Governor and Secretary of State. It’s website later carried the message:

In the July 16 Messenger, the graphic representation of the Oklahoma Citizen’s Proclamation for Morality was misleading, indicating that Oklahoma Gov. Brad Henry and Secretary of State Susan Savage had signed the document. This is not the case, and the Messenger staff apologizes for the oversight and error.

No, this wasn’t an oversight and an error, it was straight out dishonesty. It was fraudulent, and they should have the book thrown at them. That they would commit such a dishonest act on a “Proclamation for Morality” is a delicious irony.

Stuff (LinkFest)

July 18th, 2009

In local news, the Cairns Post reports that a real estate development at Ella Bay, near Innisfail, may be challenged after a rare species of dolphin, the Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin (Sousa chinensis), was seen in the area.

Over in the US there are three sex scandals in the news, all involving Republican politicians. Another common thread to all three is the involvement of the Family, a secretive nominally Christian (but really more a power cult). The group cast off what is generally thought of as Christianity, saying it’s for the masses and not the powerful. Morality is, they say, a secular invention, and the “chosen” seem to have carte blanche to transgress. The group also has had ties to despotic regimes around the world, including Suharto’s Indonesia. Jeff Sharlet, an investigative reporter who had previously written about the group, is suddenly in great demand, and is popping up across the media spectrum. Appearances have included two of my favourites, the Rachel Maddow Show and the Reasonable Doubts podcast. The Reasonable Doubts interview, in particular, is well worth a listen.

The Moon is also in the news, with the 40th Anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing. Amongst other events, NASA’s Lunar Reconaissance Orbiter has taken photos of the remains of the Apollo landing craft from 100km above. Will this convince the lunatics who claim man never went to the moon? Of course not… Nothing could.

An English girl on holiday in Spain has set a new world record for the largest freshwater fish caught by a child. Check out this story for a photo. The fish is twice as heavy as her, and two and a half times as long. Part of me can’t help but think about how big an aquarium I would need. I was glad to read that the massive catfish was released after being measured.

In a “Well, duh!” scientific study, the University of Illinois has investigated the link between speed limits and fatalities. No surprise, speed limits work.

Mr Deity continues to pump out a lot of work. After a long hiatus, it’s nice to have the original Mr Deity, the Larry/Deity interview, and Words appearing on a regular basis. Check out Mr Deity’s YouTube channel. I loved the Baptism of Fire‘s line about how they “would rank the devotion of converts, in fact, by degree… First degree, second degree, third degree.”

Defence vs everything else

June 27th, 2009

George Monbiot opines on a possible way for the UK to save some money:

At the end of 2003, the Ministry of Defence observed that “there are currently no major conventional military threats to the UK or NATO … it is now clear that we no longer need to retain a capability against the re-emergence of a direct conventional strategic threat”. So why is most of this ministry’s budget spent on retaining a capability against the emergence of a direct conventional strategic threat?

To read the MoD’s spending stats is to read the accounts of a lost world: a faraway land where threats and funds are unlimited. Its PFI service charges (£1.3bn) exceed the entire budget of the department of energy and climate change. The department for international development could be funded twice over from the MoD’s budget for capital charges and depreciation (£9.6bn). Property management sucks up £1.5bn a year, consultants and lawyers £470m, bullets, bombs and the like, £650m.

What does it give us? Our wars make us less safe. We would be better protected from terrorism and global instability if the UK’s armed forces stopped going abroad to make trouble. No one in office can produce a coherent account of why this money is needed: the ministry’s budget is sustained by the greed of contractors and nostalgia for imperium long passed. We could cut defence spending by 90% and suffer no loss to our national security. Instead, the MoD has just dropped its spending on climate change research. This accounted for a quarter of the Met Office’s climate programme.

I wonder if there isn’t something in that for Australia too. Read the whole post, and Monbiot’s other essays.

Barney Frank, the US Democrat Senator came out with a nice related comment when talking about Republican arguments against cutting funding for the F-22 fighter:

These arguments will come from the very people who denied that the economic recovery plan created any jobs. We have a very odd economic philosophy in Washington: It’s called weaponized Keynesianism. It is the view that the government does not create jobs when it funds the building of bridges or important research or retrains workers, but when it builds airplanes that are never going to be used in combat, that is of course economic salvation.

A disturbing picture

May 26th, 2009
The fallen

Map the fallen

While skimming through the various websites I check each day, I was scrolling down the page at Crooks and Liars. The above graphic didn’t hit at first and I scrolled on. I then stopped, scrolled back, and looked again. Each yellow dot in the image is a marker on Google Earth to the home town of one of the US and Canadian troops that has died in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Each marker carries information on the deceased, with photos, biographical information, information on how they died, etc.

Map the Fallen gives a quite remarkable view on the human cost of the wars in Iraq and Afhghanistan- and it includes only the coalition forces, including the Australians that have lost their lives. Not included are the civilians that have lost their lives in the conflicts. A project mapping those lives lost would be a far greater logistical challenge, and be even bleaker.

US poll on support for torture

May 1st, 2009

The Pew Forum in the USA conducted a survey measuring support for torture. The below graphic summarises the findings:

Source: http://pewforum.org/docs/?DocID=156

Source: http://pewforum.org/docs/?DocID=156

It’s interesting to see the higher level of support for torture amongst religious people. I suspect some or perhaps most of the difference is a result of religious people aligning themselves with the Republican Party on other issues (including abortion, homosexuality, teaching Creationism, etc) and following the Republican line on this one too.

Or perhaps religious people really do support torture more. Let’s face it, many Christians do seem delighted by the idea of non-believers being tortured for eternity in Hell.