The world according to me. To sum up the general idea of the place: if History and Theory don't agree, it's not History that's wrong.
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Friday, 22 February 2008
I'm back...
The topic du jour is the debacle in Kosovo in the last while. The Americans have once again failed to see where their interests, and by extension the interests of Western Civilization lie. Backing an independent Muslim Albanian state, taken by demographic stealth and NATO interference in the middle of Europe is short-sighted and ignorant of history for a start.
It also antagonizes (as badly as possible) the Serbs, who should be our natural allies, and further annoys the Russians, with whom we should have a better relationship than we do.
I'll leave it there for the moment, as I still don't have the best resources for doing this sort of thing, but I certainly (as always) want to make people think and of course some debate is always fun.
More to follow...
Monday, 13 August 2007
Off the grid.
Tuesday, 7 August 2007
More than cheap exports...
As always, "be careful what you wish for" goes with "the enemy of my enemy is my friend", but this article touches on the enervation of Europe, suggesting that the opposition to a Caliphate future rests elsewhere. Of particular interest:
"Islam might defeat the western Europeans, simply by replacing their diminishing numbers with immigrants, but it will crumble beneath the challenge from the East. "
and
"Years ago I speculated that if Mecca ever is razed, it will be by an African army marching north; now the greatest danger to Islam is the prospect of a Chinese army marching west."
I may point out that Mecca has been despoiled before, in fact by the early Wahhabis (see the book God's Terrorists by Charles Allen), but to date not actually razed. I don't see flattening Mecca as a realistically useful way to counter the people who would destroy us, but it would nicely polarize any other Muslims to a real drop-the-gloves us-vs.-them Götterdämmerung.
If things head in that direction, I suppose it won't be any time soon, but just because the Western "progressives" pooh-pooh all of our secular and religious heritage, the rest of the world does not share our collective self-loathing and desire to be erased. Something to keep in mind...
Wednesday, 1 August 2007
'Nuff said.
Unlimited liability means up to and including death, but I won't re-hash it; he does a pretty good job, so I suggest you read it yourself. It's not something most of us have had a direct experience with, but examples abound without looking too hard. This ties in loosely with my bit on that Aussie law from a few days ago, and it's something to keep an eye on.
I don't think it's at all classy to crap on peoples' holy books, but if that's all it takes to set off riots and generate a raft of death threats then I think there are some people with screwed up priorities and I for one don't want to be held hostage to that.
Tuesday, 31 July 2007
The downhill slide?
If we lose in
“Commanders have also ordered troops to hold off attacking militants in some situations where civilians are at risk”.
If you can think of a statement of more use to irregular forces that have no concept of the Laws of Armed Conflict, I’d like to hear it.
'Mr de Hoop Scheffer said Gen Dan McNeill, the commander of the Nato force in Afghanistan, Isaf, had also instructed troops to delay attacks on Taleban fighters if civilians are at risk.
"We realise that, if we cannot neutralise our enemy today without harming civilians, our enemy will give us the opportunity tomorrow," he added,
"If that means going after a Taleban not on Wednesday but on Thursday, we will get him then."'
I could go on and on about this, but I’ll content myself with just saying that if this is permitted to stand as NATO’s official position, we will inevitably lose in Afghanistan, and the opposition will manage to claim PR points on us every time we accidentally kill the civilians that they were hiding behind.
This leads me to the UN announcement that they want peacekeepers for
“UN resolution number 1769 will allow peacekeeping troops to use force for self-defence, to allow humanitarian workers to move freely and to protect civilians under attack.
However, they won't be able to seize and dispose of illegal arms.
A threat of future sanctions against
The resolution authorizes up to 19,555 military personnel and 6,432 civilian police in what is being called a "hybrid" force.”
As with pretty much everything the UN has been responsible for, this will be an expensive waste of time. Probably not an issue, as
Sunday, 29 July 2007
Military-Industrial Complex Economics
This is a drop in the bucket in terms of their trade deficit, but selling a crapload of expensive weapons to the Saudis and other OPEC states is a good way for the
It doesn’t really look at a casual glance that others are seeing it this way, and the Israelis are understandably nervous. Or that is they are, but not so much that $3B per annum in aid from the same
Some people have a problem with this, but as I’ve always said, I’d back
The idea of JDAMs in the inventory of a probable eventual enemy (House of Saud is unlikely to stand forever) on the face of it sounds like really bad idea, but if the Americans sell them the hardware, they know what it can do, most likely where it is, and in any event they’ll have a lot more of it and better trained troopies to use the stuff when push comes to shove. Besides, it’s only a matter of time (if it hasn’t happened already) before
Speaking of
I’ve seen a bit of traffic on the state of the
How long they can maintain what they have, let alone if they can recover what they have lost, is a serious concern to the rest of us “western” democracies. For ideas on that, see my earlier posts (and the plethora of stuff on the web) about seriously developing REAL alternatives to oil. Ethanol is NOT one of them, although it’s making a lot of corn farmers more financially solvent (ha!) in the meantime.
The
Saturday, 28 July 2007
About time, with the inevitable brainiac backlash.
"The Australian government says it will enact a far-reaching law to ban films, literature and games advocating terrorist acts."
Of course the ivory-tower types see this as an assault on freedom of speech, but it's obvious that it is designed to counter the proliferation of jihadist material that infects the world.
Fisher points out that "terrorism itself is a subjective term."
"History is littered with this type of subjectivity masquerading as the voice of reason. So-called terrorists have been criminals one day and revered leaders the next. For example, Nelson Mandela and Mahatma Gandhi were both labelled as terrorists in their pursuit of the freedom of their peoples."
Uh huh. Missing the point of course, but the question is is it willfully or not? There are already laws on the books against making threats, and that is technically an infringement on peoples' "freedom of speech". It is therefore obvious that the precedent exists to curtail the rights of people to say whatever they want.
I would like to see this same group's position on "hate speech", Holocaust denial, that sort of thing. I am personally of the opinion that if people want to say stupid stuff about history or whatever, anything which doesn't directly advocate violence they should be allowed to do so. Then it is up to people like me to call them on their crack-headedness.
To anyone who has been paying the slightest attention to the world, this legislation is designed to give the police tools to use against (primarily) the spread of pernicious Salafist/jihadist propaganda; beheading videos, books exhorting acts of violence against "the infidel", this sort of thing.
Reading the article I linked to doesn't even hint at any of that, it just makes it look like Australia is about to start Nuremberg Rally style book burnings. Again, more balanced journalism. And to trot out comparisons to Gandhi and Mandela is at best moral relativism (albeit of the worst type) and at worst an insult to those men, their political successors, and the people of those free, democratic countries.
They don't know, they don't care, or both? I've no idea, and no inclination to find out, having better uses for my free time. The sort of people this law is targeting are not any stripe of "freedom fighter", quite the opposite.
It does conveniently cover any other breed of terrorism, which, let's face it, is ILLEGAL by its' very definition anyway. This just closes some loopholes and gives the government more of a handle on these clowns. We need more of this kind of thinking, not less.