| |
Unpublished
and Published [P!]
Letters to the
Press in 2008 |
For
2006's letters and cybercomments in other years, click on
2006 or
2007 or
2009 or
2010 or
2011
or 2012 or
2013 |
|
Letters statistics for the past two years |
|
|
2006 |
2007 |
|
Letters Submitted |
75 |
68 |
|
Letters Published |
24 |
17 |
|
Success Rate |
32% |
25% |
|
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
March 2008
January 2008
To Top of index |
Since
from early in 2008 I started writing columns for the Irish Times, I am no
longer eligible
to appear in its Letters columns. Therefore I now include on this page
published comments made by me
in various publications to columns written by others, for which the links
are
provided. |
January
2009 |
|
Comment in the Irish Times
on 24th January 2009 in response to a poll question,
Is George W Bush the worst
president in US history?
(answer: 66% Yes, 34% No)
Yes dammit, he WAS the worst ever.
When was the last time any US president overthrew two
vicious dictatorships, replaced them with democracies however flawed and
liberated 50m people?
I am appalled that he has finally achieved victory in Iraq
- yes, victory. Al Qaeda and the other murderous insurgents have been
defeated and humiliated. Their deaths were for naught. This new democracy,
the only Arab one in the world, is finally at peace and rebuilding itself.
So, thanks to that wretched W, we now have to look
elsewhere than Iraq for our quota of fascist, misogynist, homophobic,
anti-Semitic murderous regimes.
Ah well, at least Hamas and Hezbollah still give us cause
for hope and inspiration.
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Comment in William Sjostrom's Atlantic
Blog 9th January 2009
Some bigots you just can't please
(post about Amnesty International and Gaza)
On 7th January, Amnesty did me the (dis)honour of inviting
me to join their anti Gaza war protest in St Stephen's Green on 9th January.
FYI, this is what I replied ...
QUOTE
Why Amnesty's sudden excitement about Gaza?
You've had eight long years to organise protests in St
Stephen's Green, harangue foreign ambassadors, make demands of the
Government, while Hamas has - in the hope of killing civilians - rained down
thousands of rockets on Israel. Which by the way long ceased being "the
occupying power" in Gaza.
You also seem very relaxed about the Hamas war crime of
launching attacks while shielding behind women and children and within
schools, mosques and hospitals. As you surely know, civilian casualties that
result from such behaviour are attributable under international law to the
party that is using civilians as shields, not to the attacking party.
I would have thought Amnesty would be delighted that
Israel is finally trying to neutralise the Islamicist fascist anti-Semitic
misogynistic homophobic murderous organization that is Hamas. I can't
understand why you would be so keen to defend them (unless - which I can't
imagine - you feel equanimity about killing Jews).
Needless to say, I will not be joining your misplaced
campaign.
UNQUOTE
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December
2008 |
Letter to the Irish
Independent on 13th December 2008
Lisbon Treaty not some
Guide is the Treaty
Sir, - Fionnan Sheahan ends his otherwise
admirable 13-step guide to getting Lisbon II passed (Lisbon
II -- this time read the bloody treaty, Brian,
December 12th) by saying,
If people want a copy of the
treaty, give it to them. But what people really want is a legible guide.
Wrong. They don't want a
legible guide,
they need a legible treaty. For it is the actual, deliberately
unintelligible treaty that the referendum will address, not some legible
guide. This is the insurmountable problem for the "Yessirs". No amount of
guides, explanations, interpretations or clarifications of the treaty have
any relevance, since they are not the treaty. The treaty is the treaty. -
Yours etc.
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Comment in William Sjostrom's inestimable Atlantic
Blog 12th December 2008
Happy Days
Sorry to disappoint you, William, but Ιamon Σ Cuνv is a
member not of the Greens but of Fianna Fail, and a grandson of the revered
Eamon de Valera.
He is one of the most useless members of the cabinet, superseded in
uselessness only by Willie O'Dea, the mustachioed Minister of what Ireland
laughably calls "Defence".
Nevertheless, it is good to learn that Mr Σ Cuνv is at least useful to have
on your side in a brawl. So is Mr O'Dea for that matter, who has a bit of a
roughhouse reputation.
Is there a wider correlation, I wonder, between ministerial ineptitude and
barroom thuggery?
In which case, let's hope the next cabinet is composed
mainly of ladyboys.
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Comment in the
Spectator-hosted Melanie Philips Blog on 6th December 2008
Ruling by a radical
It appears Obama is simply delivering on the solemn
promise he made to ACORN before the election, when he said, Before I
even get inaugurated, during the transition, were going to be calling all
of you in to help us shape the agenda. Were going to be having meetings all
across the country with community organizations so that you have input into
the agenda for the next presidency of the United States of America.
See for yourself on Youtube,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8vJcVgJhNaU
ACORN has demonstrated its democratic skills in terms of both radical
left-wing activism and also pro-Obama voter-registration fraud (measured in
hundreds of thousands).
Mr Obama loves ACORN, having personally delivered training sessions to ACORN
members and having given it $800,000 from his campaign funds earlier this
year.
If you want to know how he intends to re-shape America, just look at ACORN.
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November
2008 |
To: The Times (of London) on
19th November 2008
Hamas militants step up rocket attacks on Israel
Alex Hogg comments that malnutrition amongst Gaza's 1.5
million population is due to "Israel's blockage of the ghetto". Excuse me,
but it is equally Egypt which is enforcing the blockade against its fellow
Arabs. It keeps the Gazans locked up and won't let food in through the
Egypt/Gaza border.
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October
2008 |
To: The Daily Telegraph
(online) on 22nd October 2008
Barack Obama: Why I [Boris Johnson] he should be the next President
Really, Boris, you have written nothing but a great big
fat racist meme. Your main argument is that Mr Obama is black, therefore go
vote for him, because otherwise you're a racist.
And by the way, if you're looking for minority role models and smashed glass
ceilings, a good place to start is with the second most important position
in the Administration - Secretary of State. The last three have been female,
black, black female. And anyway, wasn't Bill Clinton supposed to have been
the first black president?
Barack Obama is completely unproven. He wants to run the US and two wars,
but other than his campaign he as never run anything. Not a thing. Not a
magazine, not a business, not a town as Mayor, not a state as Governor, not
even an outfit such as the Alaska National Guard. The man's a fraud.
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You write that "Islamic ideologies are not evil,
contrary to what you [ie Mark Steyn] believe".
Actually, pick up the Koran and you will quickly find that Islam is first
and foremost not a "religion" but an "ideology", and not
"good" but "evil". There is no such thing as "extreme" Islam,
just Muslims who follow the letter of the Koran, and those (thankfully the
vast majority) who pay as much attention to its wicked commands as
Christians do to Leviticus.
As for the virtues and benefits of mixing different cultures, think about
this. One can only be "enriched" by another culture if it is richer
than one's own. Otherwise, one's own culture is diluted if not polluted.
Oh, and could you please get away from the ghastly white on black typeface,
both here and on your blog - it's just too uncomfortable to read (the
typeface not the words!).
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|
September
2008 |
Comment in the
Spectator-hosted Melanie Philips Blog on 30th September 2008
Subversives for Obama
No-one in the mainstream media
is asking any questions?
Not quite. Have a look at
my column in Ireland's broadsheet paper of record, the Irish Times,
Obama is a triumph of style over
substance.
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Published in the Sunday Times on
7th September 2008
Lent is not a "feast" P!
Sir, - Matt Cooper talks about "the
Catholic feast of Lent" (No place for faith in state classrooms, 31
August, page 1-14, Irish edition**). He must have been looking out of the
window during his religious education classes at school. Lent is a season
of fasting and abstinence emulating the forty days that Jesus spent fasting
in the wilderness on retreat, prayer and reflection. It is no more a
"feast" than is Islam's current month of Ramadan, which is of course a copy
of Lent. - Yours etc,
**not available online
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|
To the Irish Times on 2nd September 2008
Is the conflict in Georgia a sign of renewed Russian aggression?
In an online poll, 61% answered Yes
This is not only a case of Russian aggression. It is the
first step in no less a project than a new expansion of Russian Imperialism
under Czar Putin (whether he calls himself president or prime minister).
And it's not merely Russian pride that is driving this new
empire.
Russia is a dying country, losing nearly a million people
a year due to age, ill-health, vodka, net emigration, abortion and an
abysmal, population-destroying fertility rate of just 1.3 babies per woman.
It has very nearly reached the non-reversible stage.
So it desperately needs more people, and the easiest way
to get them is to conquer and annex neighbours with large Russian
populations.
First they came for South Ossetia and Abkhazia and I
did nothing.
Then they came for Crimea and I did nothing.
Then they came for Moldova and I did nothing.
Then they came for ...
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|
August
2008 |
To: Sunday TimesOnLine on 10th August
2008
Barack slips away as Obama fatigue sets in
Has anyone any idea what "community worker" and "community
service" actually mean? Apparently this is what Mr Obama did before he
became a senator. To me it sounds like just hanging out.
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|
July
2008 |
Published in the Irish Independent on
30th July 2008
Position harmful to children
P!
At least we know now that the Irish Council for Civil
Liberties (ICCL) does not believe in a child's right to a mother and father
where possible. Nor does the Free Legal Advice Centres, nor the Irish Penal
Reform Trust.
On July 29 ["Attack
on UN rights body just doesn't bear scrutiny"],
the heads of the three above organisations attacked David Quinn for having
the temerity to criticise their view on human rights ('How
dare the UN take us to task on human rights', Irish
Independent, July 18).
Among other things, Mr Quinn pointed out that by
supporting gay adoption, etc, the ICCL and its allied organisations
implicitly deny a child's right to a mother and father. This is highly
controversial.
In their reply to Mr Quinn, they confirm this by also
attacking Professor Patricia Casey, who has written elsewhere in defence of
a child's right to both a mother and father. Prof Casey bases her case on
the growing body of evidence which shows that having both a mother and a
father is of benefit to a child.
In support of her case, Professor Casey cited reports by
Anna Sarkadi of the University of Uppsala [Fathers'
involvement and children's developmental outcomes: a systematic review of
longitudinal studies]
and by Unicef [“Child
Poverty in Perspective: An Overview of Child Wellbeing in Rich
Countries” UNICEF Report Card 7, 2007]
highlighting the importance of fathers. Prof Casey
logically concluded that every child should have a mother and father, where
possible, and that the State should support heterosexual marriage, because
married fathers have more contact with their children than non-married
fathers, on average.
It's true, as Mr Quinn's critics point out, that both
Unicef and Anna Sarkadi attacked Prof Casey for drawing this conclusion, but
her logic is inescapable. If fathers matter, then every child should, where
possible, have one, and presumably a mother also.
In any event, Mr Quinn's critics have proven his point:
namely that there are competing views of human rights; and one flashpoint
concerns the right of a child to a mother and a father. The ICCL, etc, are
firmly aligned with the radical side in this particular debate, a position
that is distinctly -- and self-evidently -- harmful to the interests of
children. - Yours etc.
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To Top of index |
To
the Economist on 18th July 2008
No Regret or Sympathy for
Ahmad Batebi
Sir, - It was moving to learn of the tribulations, torture
and eventual escape to America of the courageous young Iranian student Ahmad
Batebi after his photo appeared on the cover of your issue of July 17th 1999
protesting against the regime ("Silent
no more", July 12th).
But you were ungracious to express not a word of either
regret or sympathy to reflect the part you played, however honourably, in
his suffering. - Yours etc,
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To the Irish Independent on 12th July 2008
Poverty in Ethiopia
Sir, - Kevin Myers observations about Ethiopia and the
ineffectiveness, if not reverse effectiveness, of the decades of aid that
has poured in there (and elsewhere in Africa) are perspicacious if unpopular
(Africa
is giving nothing to anyone -- apart from AIDS, July 10, 2008).
Michael Buerk, the BBC reporter who first reported the
Ethiopian famine of 1983-5 and inspired Bob Geldof and Live Aid, returned 20
years later for a TV follow-up. Though average annual income per head had
by then dropped from
$190 to $108 (it's now
$100) and the number of heads had doubled to 68 million (now 78m), he
described the (still current after 17 years) Meles Zenawi regime as saints
compared with the preceding 17-year brutal reign of Mengistu Haile Mariam.
This was because it was ideologically, even romantically, focused on the
peasants ... It genuinely wants them to have a better life, regardless
of the untold death and misery that its policies were actually fostering.
And what were those policies? Essentially Marxist, which
is no doubt why Mr Buerk, living up to his name, felt unable to criticise
them.
The one approach that the making poverty history
adherents who profess compassion for the poor never advocate is making
the poor rich and thus self-reliant. Because this would mean applying
the same policies that made the rich rich, namely Western liberal democratic
free-trade capitalism, whilst tearing down the West's own protectionist
barriers.
Many in the poverty industry are so mired in left-wing
ideology, as exemplified by Mr Buerk, that the thought of fostering
capitalism is abhorrent to them. But much aid money will remain
counter-productive until such attitudes change.
As you could conclude from Kevin Myers' article, aid
usually prolongs the misery of those unfortunate to live under the thumb of
vile regimes for which poverty is their lifeblood. - Yours etc,
To Top of index |
Comment on 10th July 2008 in a climate-change site
called Think or Swim by occasional Irish Times columnist John Gibbons
Still singing the same sad old [climate-change denying]
song
I would question your disparagement of the two writers.
Bjorn Lomborg is a scientist of considerable weight. The
way you write of him, I have to conclude you havent read his books,
certainly not the Skeptical Environmentalist. It is built on the most solid
of scientific foundations, with every statement backed up with references to
the research on which it is based. There are wonderful illustrations, and
deductions which are hard to argue against. Thats why Denmarks Global
Warm-mongers tried to get him silenced for his apostasy. But when he
challenged them to find anything scientifically incorrect in his book they
were rendered silent.
You are suffering from the same ailment. You slag off Prof
Lomborg but provide not a single piece of evidence to show he is an author
of, in your words, science fiction.
And you do something similar with Kevin Myers, who is not
a scientist, just a lowly newspaper columnist - like you (and me, for that
matter). He provides easily verifiable facts that challenge the orthodoxies
of global warm-mongering. But you make no effort to either disprove them or
draw different conclusions from them. You also lie about what he actually
wrote: he never said a cold April proves that global warming cant be
happening, just pointed out the inconsistency. Your idea of refutation
is to tell Mr Myers to keep taking the pills. Is that the best you can do?
Your opening paragraph starts with wave after wave of
science fact gradually washes away the last stubborn traces of our excuses
for inaction. Unless you and those who agree with you are prepared to
deal scientifically with the wave after wave of science fact that
denies man-made climate change, youre going to continue to lose the
argument. Ad hominen attacks just dont cut the mustard.
Good luck!
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June
2008 |
To the Irish Times on 28th June 2008
Proinsias De Rossa
Disrespects Referendum
Madam, - There should be no surprise that Proinsias De
Rossa MEP is running around screaming in fury at and about his dastardly
fellow countrymen for daring to shout no to Lisbon (Letters
June 28th and elswhere). This is the man who last March voted, along
with 448 other MEPs in the European Parliament, to
specifically disrespect the outcome of the Irish referendum, a
thoroughly shameful motion that was carried almost 4:1. In another era,
behaviour such as his might have been regarded as verging on the treasonous.
- Yours etc,
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Comment on 9th June 2008 in the Irish Independent site
in relation to a column by columnist
Kevin Myers
From a few tiny beginnings the American Dream is born
Great post, and like "IEH" I never saw it coming either,
despite the give-away title.
But poor old Barack; he doesn't stand a chance, and not merely because some
whites, and nearly all Hispanics and Asians, will never vote for someone
blacker than themselves.
For Obama is someone with no achievements whatsoever in his past by which
his character and capabilities may be measured. So you can know him only by
the company he keeps and takes money from - Jeremiah Wright, Tony Rezko,
Bill Ayers, Bernardine Dohrn , to mention just the handful of lunatic
racists, business fraudsters and unrepentant terrorists that we know about.
You can be sure the Republicans have a few more up their sleeves and are
keeping their powder dry.
And that's not to talk about his avowed intention to run away from Iraq as
fast as he can, regardless of military progress.
The Geriatric must be salivating at the tussle ahead.
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Comment on 9th June 2008 in the Irish Independent site
in relation to a column by columnist
Ian O'Doherty
Is anything sadder than anonymous web cowards?
Very good piece, and amusing - except for your inexcusably
appalling grammar. You're a journalist for God's sake; writing English is
your stock in trade. Why then do you repeatedly mistake the singular for the
plural in, for example,
"any hack who says they don't want people writing about them is telling
fibs."
"nobody has to declare their identity in what they post on-line"
"where is the fun in insulting someone when they won't know it was you who
did it?"
If you are too terrified to use "he" to include both men and women, and find
"he/she" or "she/he" too clumsy, then try pluralising the subject or some
other way round to hid your embarrassment.
Just don't don't abuse the language.
By the way, I am owning up to this criticism using my true name and you can
moreover find my blog at www.tallrite.com/blog.htm. No anonymity for me!
To Top of index |
May
2008 |
To Top of index |
Comment in the Topix on-line news journal on 22nd May 2008
Saudi Arabia: Woman Changes Sex, Dreams of Driver's Licence
Doodzy wrote:
OMG, where do u get this
nonsense from? And Mohammed was a PEDO!? There's Non-Muslims
historians commending him as being one of the most protective and
generous men EVER! He married them so that they wouldn't get harmed and
have food and sustenance in his house because some of their husband's
had died at war. Nothing to do with lust at all.
Hmmm. Well, how do you explain the fact that Mohammed
married his (favourite) wife Aisha when she was just five years of age, but
with great self-control did not copulate with (rape) her until she was nine
years. Ayatollah Khomeini also married a nine-year-old, and lowered the age
of consent in Iran to nine years, which stands to this day.
Does all this make Mohammed and Khomeini and no doubt many
devout Iranians Pedos?
Make your own mind up!
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Comment in journalist Sarah Carey's blog, GUBU, on 16th May 2008
Can someone please tell me wtf the Lisbon Treaty is all
about?
Your analysis, Sarah, amounts to vote YES to Lisbon for
just five mostly very thin reasons.
- Enlargement means new rules are needed because the EU
is becoming unwieldy though all the evidence is that EU
legislation-making has become MORE slick not less since enlargement, so
no new rules are in fact needed. See for example this
Charlemagne article in the Economist,
- It reduces our commissioner-count but well be no
worse off than anyone else. Why is it nevertheless good to reduce our
commissioner-count?
- No need to worry about harmonisation of direct taxes,
defence, abortion, neutrality or agriculture. Its great that retention
of two vetoes defends those tax and defence worries. But if retaining
two vetoes is so valuable, why is it also supposed to be great to
surrender no fewer than 32 other vetoes?
- A prosecutor will chase up fraud issues and this
from an outfit whose multi-billion uro accounts have not been audited
for fourteen years because the EU is rife with institutionalised
crookery. I wouldnt expect much from the fraud-chasers.
- New laws and institutions will prosecute cross-border
trafficking in drugs and humans very laudable but we dont need a
Lisbon treaty for that.
The (insuperable) task the YES advocates face is that the
onus is on THEM to make the case for change, and they simply cannot do it,
as you yourself demonstrate in your five-item shopping list. Moreover, the
deliberately obscure language is designed to prevent the case being made
because it is obviously so dodgy.
It is not up to the Naysayers to disprove Lisbon they
are innocent until proven guilty.
If the YESsirs cant make a convincing case, any mature
person will vote NO. NO to Lisbon, but this is at the same time a big YES to
the EU as currently constituted.
NOTE: This response generated
further heated discussion,
to which I added a second and third comment
To Top of index |
Comment in the
Spectator-hosted Melanie Philips Blog on 16th May 2008
A Buried Truth (about the value of biological parenthood)
Many people regularly dispute the claim (self-evident
truism) that
kids have a better chance in
life if reared by their married biological parents.
So I collated a number of pieces of evidence for this
here, which others might find useful.
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To the Irish Times on 5th May 2008
Removing the Israeli Regime
Madam, - Jim Roche of the
Irish
Anti-War Movement
(along with others) maintains that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran was talking
only about the removal
of the Israeli regime, and not
the country or state of Israel
(Letters,
Iranian
threat to Israel,
May 5th, 2008). The president must therefore be delighted that since
Khomeini's day the Israeli regime has been removed no fewer than
seven times. That is the beauty of Western liberal democracy - the
people can remove the regime when they don't like what they're doing. Just
ask Ken Livingstone. - Yours etc,
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April
2008 |
Published in the Irish Times on 28th April 2008
Clinton threat to
Obliterate
Iran
P!
Madam, - It is not a
factual error
that Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has threatened to
wipe Israel from the map
(April
25th).
This threat has been widely reported, including by Al
Jazeera (eg http://tinyurl.com/36yv6c),
since he uttered it to 4,000 students on Wednesday October 16th 2005 at a
conference in Tehran entitled
The World without Zionism.
If it were a mistranslation from Farsi, as Coilνn Σ
hAiseadha suggests, Mr Ahmadinejad has had over two years to make a
correction, not to mention those 4,000 students. He has not, and neither
have they.
- Yours, etc,
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Comment in the Irish
Independent on 22nd April 2008, on a column by Kevin Myers
It's down to us to halt curse that is the Lisbon Treaty
Eσin Lynch asks Kevin,
how can you be against something
you have not read?.
This is the wrong way round. It is up to those who want the change to put
the case for ratification. They have hardly even tried to.
Yet when so-called
neutral
taxpayer-funded bodies, such as the National Forum on Europe, choose to
facilitate a debate, they make every effort, in best Mugabe fashion (but
without the violence), to rig it to favour the Yes side.
Just last week, NFE staged two so-called
open discussions
where they invited a couple of unwelcome foreigners (a German frump and some
slick Portuguese guy) to interfere in this Irish constitutional process by
instructing the Irish to vote Yes. Not only were the staged "discussion"
sessions copper-fastened to ensure there were two pro-Lisbon speakers for
every opponent, but the two interloping pro-Lisbon foreigners were,
extraordinarily, permitted to give both the opening and the closing
addresses.
Hey and where is that other celebrity foreigner, the
rabidly anti-Lisbon Jean Marie LePen? Ah yes, much as he would love to get
involved, he is staying out of Ireland in order not to be an external
interference in a national debate.
How come this brutish guy has a better grasp of diplomatic niceties than
Angela and Josι?
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Comment in the
Spectator-hosted Melanie Philips Blog on 15th April 2008
Terror in academia
Anyone who wants to equate Israeli self-defence (or as Dr
Jackson would have it, "state terrorism") with Palestinian terrorism
should consider the following.
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict could be resolved at
a stroke. The Palestinians merely have to stop attacking Israel; that's
all!
This would immediately open the way to constructive
negotiations. Unfortunately, as we have so often seen, it won't work the
other way round.
Anyone who advocates or defends continued attacks by
Palestinians on Israel cannot also want a peaceful, just outcome.
Moreover, this simple test establishes who, of the
pair, are the true terrorists. No amount of anti-Semitic ranting will
change the facts.
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Comment in the
Spectator-hosted Melanie Philips Blog on 12th April 2008
Winning an asymmetric war
Maj-Gen Yaakov Amidror and Melanie are of course
right.
I am surprised she didn't also cite the Northern
Ireland peace process, which came about only after the IRA was if - not
defeated - neutralised, giving the British army in effect a sufficient
victory.
Its tactics were often along the ruthless lines
described by Amidror. For example, that (in)famous ambush by the SAS in
Gibraltar killed three IRA unarmed terrorists in 1988, who were planning
to blow up the weekly changing-of-the-guard ceremony. Many still
complain that their human rights were abused, but it had a salutary
effect on the IRA.
Only after many encounters and other dirty tricks were
Sinn Fein/IRA willing to talk peace, and in fact sought it out.
Today, all of Ireland is the better for it.
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|
Comment in the Irish
Independent on 11th April 2008, on a column by Kevin Myers
My narrow escape from an ambush by the liberal left
Kevin [Myers], you start off with
We know what
anti-war
and
peace
mean in the current argot: it means Yanks out.
Well, I for one don't know this, and disagree with your diagnosis except to
the extent that
Yanks out
is a symptom not a pathology.
In the current argot, anything or anyone sporting
anti-war
or
peace
in its name or speech, means only one thing: pro-war
pro-the-anti-democrat's-side. They most certainly do not want peace in any
conflict zone; they want a war that results in the defeat of democrats, so
that the tyrants and murderers can prevail. Only this kind of war equates,
in their Orwellian minds, to peace.
It so happens that the US is among the democrats and tries - however ineptly
- to support democracy. Hence the
Yanks out
epithet.
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Comment in the Irish
Independent on 8th April 2008, on a column by Kevin Myers
Notions of gender have been corrupted by sexual politics
Frankly I couldn't care less how freakishly people choose
to behave, so long as it is by and/or between consenting adults.
But this Thomas Beatie has crossed the line. He has deliberately and
knowingly brought an innocent child into the world in such a way that it
will be denied knowledge of its own father (and vice-versa), and will be
denied even a father figure during its upbringing.
And why? Purely to satisfy the desires of a selfish individual.
No-one has ever demonstrated that in raising a child a father is,
effectively, surplus to requirements. Until someone can do this
convincingly, no-one has a right to deliberately exclude the father from a
child's life. It amounts to a social experiment to satisfy the vanity of the
adult at the expense of the child's fundamental human rights. This adds up
to child abuse.
Ditto for those who would deliberately exclude the mother.
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Comment in the
Spectator-hosted Melanie Philips Blog on 7th April 2008
The Club of Tyranny
We should not be
surprised that the UN has become a despots' club - only 42% of its
member-stages, each with an equal vote, are proper democracies and many of
those are just "dots" like Andorra.
So, being the thoroughly democratic institution that it
is, the UN is dominated by tyrants and anti-democratic thugs of various
hues.
Institutionalised defence by the UN of thuggish
behaviour is therefore inevitable and irreversible.
Thus, I fully agree with Ian C.
It is time for the democracies to walk out of the UN
(and cut off its funding) in order to set up a new United Democracies.
The UD, open only to proper democracies as decided by the UD, would be
unashamedly dedicated to spreading Western style democracy across the
world, in the sure knowledge that this is the foundation of
international peace & security;
that true democracy eliminates poverty; that elimination of poverty
promotes effective environmentalism & countless other benefits.
See
United Democracies
To Top of index
|
March
2008 |
Comment in the Irish Times
on 24th March 2008 Head2Head:
Should the permitted level of blood alcohol for drivers be lowered?
YES 40% NO 60%
Seαn Coleman is right to point out many reasons to punish
the illegitimate Communist dictatorship ruling China for its appalling human
rights record. However I agree with Pat Hickey that traditional Olympic
boycotts don't work. But there is another way; another more democratic way
involving personal empowerment. Let the games go ahead. Let no athletes be
denied their chance to prove they're the world's best. Instead, it is the
spectators who should boycott the games. For, from the Chinese perspective,
worse even than a few countries not showing up in Beijing will be TV
pictures, beamed across the world, of empty stadiums whilst the contests
proceed, and everyone knowing why. Personally, I have cancelled my plans to
attend.
To Top of index |
To the Sunday Times on 26th March 2008
Spectators Should Boycott Beijing Olympics
Sir, - Boycotts of the Beijing Olympics, as mooted by
Michael Portillo and others, will punish the unfortunate, innocent athletes
but, as we saw in Moscow (1980) and Los Angeles (1984), do little to change
the behaviour of the host government (Tibet:
the West can use the Olympics as a weapon against Beijing, March 23rd).
But there is another much more democratic way. The games
should go ahead as planned, but it is the spectators who should be doing
the boycotting, and in their droves.
From the perspective of the Chinese politburo, nothing
could be worse than TV pictures, beamed across the world, of empty stadiums
whilst the contests proceed, and everyone knowing why. And a sea of
Oriental rather than Caucasian faces would not change the world's
perception: everyone would conclude they were Chinese stooges not genuine
spectators.
This would be the ultimate, unthinkable humiliation for
the undemocratic hence illegitimate politburo in China, where face is such
an important part of national culture, history and psyche. And it would be
made grimmer by the knowledge that no Government had done it; just ordinary
free people with honourable principles. If the Chinese leadership become
convinced that a popular boycott of the Beijing Olympics is in serious
danger of happening, they will move heaven and earth to prevent it.
Otherwise, they will continue happily suppressing Tibetans
and their culture, supporting fellow-dictators in Burma and Sudan, and
routinely
harvesting
organs from healthy Falun Gong prisoners for the transplant tourism
business.
Each of us potential Olympic spectators has a personal
choice. I have cancelled my own plans to attend. - Yours etc,
To Top of index |
To the Irish Times on 3rd March 2008
Violence in Gaza
Madam, - The Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign is
absolutely right to condemn the violence in Gaza, saying
enough is enough.
So is its chairwoman, Marie Crawley, when she calls on the Irish Government
to condemn what is happening in
Gaza in the strongest possible terms and to break with the criminal
negligence of EU foreign policy
(200 Palestinians protest against violence in Gaza, March 3rd).
For too long, the Government and the EU - not to mention
the media - have ignored the daily, unilateral rocketing of Israel by Hamas
militants in Gaza, at rates of dozens per day. The negligence of
politicians to take any action to stem this unwarranted violence has meant
that it has been left to Israel itself to try to curtail it. - Yours etc,
To Top of index |
February
2008 |
To the Irish Times on 26th February 2008
FF Was in
the Red but Ahern Kept Raiding its Finances
Madam, - In Fintan O'Toole's excellent article,
FF
was in the red but Ahern kept raiding its finances
(Opinion, February 26th), he talks about the so-called B/T account in the
name of Tim Collins, from which £30,000 was withdrawn as a loan to Bertie
Ahern's life partner.
Surely "B/T" couldn't possibly mean "Bertie/Tim"? Nah, of
course not! - Yours, etc
To Top of index |
January
2008 |
To the Irish Times on 28th January 2008
Israel and the
Palestinians
Madam, - Theo Dorgan makes an eloquent case against what
he calls the
collective punishment
of Palestinians due to the blockade of Gaza (Letters,
February 12th).
But he misdirects his ire. For it is their fellow-Arabs
in Egypt who actually hold the key to their incarceration, and whose
security forces brutally
injured 90 of them when the Egypt/Gaza wall was recently breached. The
Egyptians have now rebuilt it to keep the Gazans in again, yet they don't
even have the excuse that their Palestinian brothers are trying to kill them
with a daily precipitation of cross-border Qassam rockets. - Yours etc,
To Top of index |
To the Irish Times on 28th January 2008
Unsubstantiated
Nazi Charges against the Hunts
Madam, - Four years ago, Dr Shimon Samuels of the Simon
Wiesenthal Centre, in an act of stunning impertinence to an elected head of
state, demanded that President McAleese withdraw an award she had made to
the Hunt Museum, on trumped-up inferences that the Hunts were, in effect,
closet Nazis and the museum populated with art looted by Nazis from Jews.
Apparently abetted by a trio of Irish persons with seemingly their own
agendas and catalogue of tricks, he was nevertheless unable to present a
single iota of evidence to support this outrageous position. Yet the Museum
found itself in the odd position of having to demonstrate the innocence of
itself and its now-dead benefactors of unsubstantiated charges and
suggestions.
In fits and starts, and with a number of wrong turns, the
Museum eventually hired the world's leading expert on looted Nazi art, Lynn
Nicholas, who duly vindicated the Museum and Hunts of the essential
charges. She did criticise aspects of behaviour of the Museum and the Irish
Government, but she reserved her main ire for Dr Samuels, who signed the
original letter, has fronted the anti-Hunts campaign ever since and refused
to co-operate with any attempt to verify or refute his allegations. Ms
Nicholas wrote,
|
The
sensational and calculated manner in which Dr Samuels announced his
suspicions in an open letter containing serious personal allegations and
implied criticism of the wartime actions of the Republic of Ireland,
then holding the Presidency of the EU, was both undiplomatic and
offensive. |
|
The
decision to challenge the Irish authorities in a sort of blackmail game
was unprofessional in the extreme. |
In this context, when the President last week pointed out
that the charges of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre - a lobbying body with no
connection to Simon Wiesenthal other than renting his name - had been
baseless ... unfounded ... a
tissue of lies ... mean-spirited
and had
diminished
the reputation of its namesake, she was being both apt and restrained.
It is notable that the response of the SWC to the
demolition of their central argument has been to attack Mrs McAleese, a lady
it knows will not respond. Yet it whispers not a word about that other
esteemed lady, Ms Nicholas, the one who has demonstrated the falsity of the
SWC's charges, for she is well able to both respond and refute everything it
might care to say.
It is time to ignore any future fulminations by the SWC or
its director. There are worthy of no further space in the Irish media. -
Yours etc,
References:
To Top of index |
Published in the Irish Times on 11th January 2008
Gaza/Egypt Apartheid
Wall
Madam, - What an extraordinary
photo on the front page of the Irish Times (January
24th). I had never realised that the infamous apartheid wall,
declared illegal in 2004 by the International Court of Justice, which
imprisons Gazan inhabitants in their ghetto and was a key element of the
recent blockade in response to sustained Hamas rocket attacks, was in fact
built in order to keep Palestinians out of Egypt. Good for the latter for
knocking it down. It's time the democratic Egyptian entity learnt to
embrace its enemies. - Yours etc,
To Top of index |
Published in the Irish Times on 11th January 2008
Pay Increase for State
CEOs P!
Madam, - So, chief executives of commercial State bodies
are to get
significant increases
because a consultant says their pay is 14 to 20 per cent behind the average
in the private sector (Salary
rises approved for heads of commercial State firms, January 9th).
But this observation is valueless unless accompanied by
statistics showing that CEOs are fleeing state enterprises to join private
sector. They are not, and I would suspect that is simply because in their
present jobs they are cosily protected from the rigours of shareholder
ruthlessness. Fourteen to 20 per cent sounds like a reasonable trade-off to
me. - Yours etc,
To Top of index |
Published in the Sunday Times on 13th January 2008 -
not available online
Courage Misplaced P!
Sir, - It is not the Labour party that requires the
courage
to table a private members' bill in favour of abortions, so much as the
unborn children who need the courage to face the resultant abortions.
(Courage on abortion, Comment, January 6th, p1.16 -
not available online). - Yours etc,
| Bumper sticker spotted by
reader Joe:
Isn't it hypocritical to
support abortion
when you've already been born?
|
To Top of index |
To the Irish Times on 3rd January 2008
Fluoridation and Water Pollution
Madam, - My elderly dentist father, now retired but an
international pioneer of fluoridation in his time, remarked when he read
Mary Hilary's letter moaning about fluoridation,
bloody dentists blamed for
ruining the environment; bloody fluoromoans trying to ruin kids' teeth
(Letters,
January 3rd). That about sums it up. - Yours etc,
To Top of index |
| |
|
Gift Idea
Cuddly Teddy Bears
looking for a home
Click for details
“” |
Neda Agha Soltan;
shot dead in Teheran
by Basij militia |
Good to report that as at
14th September 2009
he is at least
alive.
FREED AT LAST,
ON 18th OCTOBER 2011,
GAUNT BUT OTHERWISE REASONABLY HEALTHY |
|
|
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My Columns in the
|
What I've recently
been reading
“The Lemon Tree”, by Sandy
Tol (2006),
is a delightful novel-style history of modern Israel and Palestine told
through the eyes of a thoughtful protagonist from either side, with a
household lemon tree as their unifying theme.
But it's not
entirely honest in its subtle pro-Palestinian bias, and therefore needs
to be read in conjunction with an antidote, such as
See
detailed review
+++++
This examines events which led to BP's 2010 Macondo blowout in
the Gulf of Mexico.
BP's ambitious CEO John Browne expanded it through adventurous
acquisitions, aggressive offshore exploration, and relentless
cost-reduction that trumped everything else, even safety and long-term
technical sustainability.
Thus mistakes accumulated, leading to terrifying and deadly accidents in
refineries, pipelines and offshore operations, and business disaster in
Russia.
The Macondo blowout was but an inevitable outcome of a BP culture that
had become poisonous and incompetent.
However the book is gravely compromised by a
litany of over 40 technical and stupid
errors that display the author's ignorance and
carelessness.
It would be better
to wait for the second (properly edited) edition before buying.
As for BP, only a
wholesale rebuilding of a new, professional, ethical culture will
prevent further such tragedies and the eventual destruction of a once
mighty corporation with a long and generally honourable history.
Note: I wrote
my own reports on Macondo
in
May,
June, and
July 2010
+++++
A horrific account
of:
|
how the death
penalty is administered and, er, executed in Singapore,
|
|
the corruption of
Singapore's legal system, and |
|
Singapore's
enthusiastic embrace of Burma's drug-fuelled military dictatorship |
More details on my
blog
here.
+++++
This is
nonagenarian Alistair Urquhart’s
incredible story of survival in the Far
East during World War II.
After recounting a
childhood of convention and simple pleasures in working-class Aberdeen,
Mr Urquhart is conscripted within days of Chamberlain declaring war on
Germany in 1939.
From then until the
Japanese are deservedly nuked into surrendering six years later, Mr
Urquhart’s tale is one of first discomfort but then following the fall
of Singapore of ever-increasing, unmitigated horror.
After a wretched
journey Eastward, he finds himself part of Singapore’s big but useless
garrison.
Taken prisoner when Singapore falls in
1941, he is, successively,
|
part of a death march to Thailand,
|
|
a slave labourer on the Siam/Burma
railway (one man died for every sleeper laid), |
|
regularly beaten and tortured,
|
|
racked by starvation, gaping ulcers
and disease including cholera, |
|
a slave labourer stevedoring at
Singapore’s docks, |
|
shipped to Japan in a stinking,
closed, airless hold with 900 other sick and dying men,
|
|
torpedoed by the Americans and left
drifting alone for five days before being picked up, |
|
a slave-labourer in Nagasaki until
blessed liberation thanks to the Americans’ “Fat Boy” atomic
bomb. |
Chronically ill,
distraught and traumatised on return to Aberdeen yet disdained by the
British Army, he slowly reconstructs a life. Only in his late 80s
is he able finally to recount his dreadful experiences in this
unputdownable book.
There are very few
first-person eye-witness accounts of the the horrors of Japanese
brutality during WW2. As such this book is an invaluable historical
document.
+++++
“Culture of Corruption:
Obama and His Team of Tax Cheats, Crooks, and Cronies”
This is a rattling good tale of the web
of corruption within which the American president and his cronies
operate. It's written by blogger Michele Malkin who, because she's both
a woman and half-Asian, is curiously immune to the charges of racism and
sexism this book would provoke if written by a typical Republican WASP.
With 75 page of notes to back up - in
best blogger tradition - every shocking and in most cases money-grubbing
allegation, she excoriates one Obama crony after another, starting with
the incumbent himself and his equally tricky wife.
Joe Biden, Rahm Emmanuel, Valerie Jarett,
Tim Geithner, Lawrence Summers, Steven Rattner, both Clintons, Chris
Dodd: they all star as crooks in this venomous but credible book.
ACORN, Mr Obama's favourite community
organising outfit, is also exposed for the crooked vote-rigging machine
it is.
+++++
This much trumpeted sequel to
Freakonomics is a bit of disappointment.
It is really just
a collation of amusing
little tales about surprising human (and occasionally animal) behaviour
and situations. For example:
|
Drunk walking kills more people per
kilometer than drunk driving. |
|
People aren't really altruistic -
they always expect a return of some sort for good deeds. |
|
Child seats are a waste of money as
they are no safer for children than adult seatbelts. |
|
Though doctors have known for
centuries they must wash their hands to avoid spreading infection,
they still often fail to do so. |
|
Monkeys can be taught to use washers
as cash to buy tit-bits - and even sex. |
The book has no real
message other than don't be surprised how humans sometimes behave and
try to look for simple rather than complex solutions.
And with a final
anecdote (monkeys, cash and sex), the book suddenly just stops dead in
its tracks. Weird.
++++++
A remarkable, coherent attempt by Financial Times economist Alan Beattie
to understand and explain world history through the prism of economics.
It's chapters are
organised around provocative questions such as
|
Why does asparagus come from Peru? |
|
Why are pandas so useless? |
|
Why are oil and diamonds more trouble
than they are worth? |
|
Why doesn't Africa grow cocaine? |
It's central thesis
is that economic development continues to be impeded in different
countries for different historical reasons, even when the original
rationale for those impediments no longer obtains. For instance:
|
Argentina protects its now largely
foreign landowners (eg George Soros) |
|
Russia its military-owned
businesses, such as counterfeit DVDs |
|
The US its cotton industry
comprising only 1% of GDP and 2% of its workforce |
The author writes
in a very chatty, light-hearted matter which makes the book easy to
digest.
However it would
benefit from a few charts to illustrate some of the many quantitative
points put forward, as well as sub-chaptering every few pages to provide
natural break-points for the reader.
+++++
This is a thrilling book of derring-do behind enemy lines in the jungles
of north-east Burma in 1942-44 during the Japanese occupation.
The author was
a member of Britain's V Force, a forerunner of the SAS. Its remit was to
harass Japanese lines of
command, patrol their occupied territory, carryout sabotage and provide
intelligence, with the overall objective of keeping the enemy out of
India.
Irwin
is admirably yet brutally frank, in his
descriptions of deathly battles with the Japs, his execution of a
prisoner, dodging falling bags of rice dropped by the RAF, or collapsing
in floods of tears through accumulated stress, fear and loneliness.
He also provides some fascinating insights into the mentality of
Japanese soldiery and why it failed against the flexibility and devolved
authority of the British.
The book amounts to
a very human and exhilarating tale.
Oh, and Irwin
describes the death in 1943 of his colleague my uncle, Major PF
Brennan.
+++++
Other books
here |
Click for an account of this momentous,
high-speed event
of March 2009 |
Click on the logo
to get a table with
the Rugby World Cup
scores, points and rankings.
After
48
crackling, compelling, captivating games, the new World Champions are,
deservedly,
SOUTH AFRICA
England get the Silver,
Argentina the Bronze. Fourth is host nation France.
No-one can argue with
the justice of the outcomes
Over the competition,
the average
points per game = 52,
tries per game = 6.2,
minutes per try =
13 |
Click on the logo
to get a table with
the final World Cup
scores, points, rankings and goal-statistics |
|
|
Melanie Phillips must be the most incompetent journalist in Britain
As Brian Wilson and others infer, since Mr Kawczynski MP, as a co-author, did not publicly dissent from the report, he therefore endorsed it. Period.
If through embarrassment he has now decided to change his mind, he better make some very public statements to that effect very fast and very loud. Moaning in a blogpost or writing private letters does not achieve this.
I totally agree with Melanie Phillips on this issue.
BTW, I am astonished at some of the anti-Jew invective in this thread, the more so because it is a "Conservative" site.
_______________________________
And again on 26th July
[Commenter] Woody finds it "amusing" that the Hamas charter includes an ambition to exterminate Israel. Jew-killing is such fun!
Contrary to what Woody also says, Israel is not trying to exterminate Palestinians, and it is Palestinian Muslims who are driving Christians out of the Holy Land, not Jews.
And by the way there are no such things as "Palestinian lands" or "Palestine". I think Woody means "disputed territories", disputed only because the Palestinian leadership(s) have repeatedly refused the offer to create a Palestinian state whenever offered, whether in 1936, 1947, 1967 or 2000. Because that would entail recognizing Israel. Driving Jews into the sea has always taken precedence over the interests and welfare of Palestinians.
And because the land is "disputed", and Arab-fostered wars over it have been won by Israel, why shouldn't the Israelis build houses there? Despite this, why anyway should Jews be excluded from areas where Palestinians live? There are over a million Palestinians living within Israel, and with more freedoms than any other Arabs in the Middle East.
_______________________________