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Law and Order

Posted by George Brown on 09/09/2012
Posted in: Crime, Politics, Views. Tagged: Conservative Party, law and order, Margaret Thatcher quotes, social services. Leave a comment

I was reading some old articles on the Thatcher era of UK politics, and found these quotes on law and order and social services:

Margaret Thatcher

Margaret Thatcher – Photo: Wikipedia

“I think we’ve been through a period where too many people have been given to understand that if they have a problem, it’s the government’s job to cope with it. ‘I have a problem, I’ll get a grant.’ ‘I’m homeless, the government must house me.’ They’re casting their problem on society. And, you know, there is no such thing as society. There are individual men and women, and there are families. And no government can do anything except through people, and people must look to themselves first. It’s our duty to look after ourselves and then, also to look after our neighbour. People have got the entitlements too much in mind, without the obligations. There’s no such thing as entitlement, unless someone has first met an obligation”

“Law and order is a social service. Crime and the fear which the threat of crime induces can paralyse whole communities, keep lonely and vulnerable elderly people shut up in their homes, scar young lives and raise to cult status the swaggering violent bully who achieves predatory control over the streets. I suspect that there would be more support and less criticism than today’s political leaders imagine, for a large shift of resources from Social Security benefits to law and order – as long as rhetoric about getting tough on crime was matched by practice.”

“I have always voted for the death penalty because I believe that people who go out prepared to take the lives of other people forfeit their own right to live. I believe that the death penalty should be used only very rarely, but I believe that no-one should go out certain that no matter how cruel, how vicious, how hideous their murder, they themselves will not suffer the death penalty.”

I never particularly liked Maggie Thacther’s (Conservative) policies, but I found I could find common ground with some of her thoughts, and these are some I particularly liked.

I may add more of her better quotes as they come to light.

US Security Concerns Melts Swiss Chocolate

Posted by George Brown on 09/09/2012
Posted in: Politics, Views, Workplace. Tagged: bioterrorism, contamination, inspections, swiss chocolate, US FDA. Leave a comment

Chocolatiers in Switzerland are infuriated by US inspections on their high quality confectionary for bioterrorism, contamination or radioactive threats. Factories have no choice but allow checks otherwise will they be banned from the very profitable US market.

Swiss Chocolate

Truffes et Pralinés de Teucher – Photo: Wikipedia

­At least 21 Swiss chocolate factories and 18 dairies were obliged to allow inspections of their work until September 20, German business journal Handelszeitung reports.

“The fact that a foreign authority is involved in our Swiss businesses is unseemly,” Daniel Bloch, of Chocolates Camille Bloch told the journal.

Despite the anger and disappointment, chocolate manufacturers want to be able to continue to sell chocolate to the US.

But the planned examinations turned out to go well beyond health issues, and included details such as sales, ownership, employees and the sizes of company buildings.

“We ask ourselves, what is the real reason for the FDA inspections,” Jacques Gygax, director of the Swiss dairy association Fromarte.

The reason for that is the new America’s Food Safety Modernization Act, signed by President Obama in April 2011. From that time onwards Americans check all the food coming from abroad, Swiss chocolate being no exception. These inspections are carried out in the country where products were produced prior to export. Before the Act, examinations were conducted at the US border.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) suspect that imported foods could be contaminated chemically or radioactively. The cause for this “concern” was not clearly specified.

It beggars belief that the US FDA would need to inspect any other aspect of the business beyond the manufacturing process.  Are the inspectors going to be there 24/7/365?

Let’s look at this with logic.  The Swiss chocolate manufacturers have been making chocolates for centuries without issue, and are proud of the quality of their work. The Swiss further  have a policy of political neutrality and non-aggression which is something the US seem to have forgotten about. By offering anything other than a first class quality product, the Swiss chocolate industry has got everything to lose and absolutely nothing to gain.

In 2008, Americans were able to consume over 1.586 billion kilograms of chocolate. This was almost 25% of the world’s total chocolate production during this year. That’s 5kg for every man, woman and child in the US!  Maybe it’s not contamination that the US FDA needs to concentrate upon, but rather the long-term effects of chocolate consumption on its obese population, and the health related flow on effects of that obesity.

Or maybe this is just another example of the US security paranoia! The use of “stand-over” tactics by the US FDA to enter another sovereign country, to inspect their manufacturing processes is both unacceptable and a political slap in the face to those friendly countries involved.  I for one, could never see the US allowing any foreign power to enter the country to inspect their manufacturing processes, staffing, business ownership et al.

Source: MINA, CNN

Germany – Leader of the (Euro) World?

Posted by George Brown on 09/09/2012
Posted in: Finance, Politics, Views. Tagged: austerity, Euro, Eurocrisis, Europe, eurozone, German. 1 Comment

Italy is again stating that Germany must accept shared leadership of the European Union if the region is to prosper, former European Commission President Romano Prodi, told CNBC on Friday.

Romano Prodi

Romano Prodi

The European Central Bank’s announcement on Thursday that it will commence unlimited purchases of short-term sovereign bonds from struggling Eurozone countries was greeted with open hostility from both the Bundesbank (Germany’s central bank) and the German press.

However Romano Prodi, former president of the European Commission and twice-prime minister of Italy, said it was in Germany’s interest to accept it could not be the sole decision-maker in the Eurozone as “Germany alone cannot be the leader of the (Euro) world.”

“If Europe wants to survive, it must have a big European infrastructure,” Prodi said, speaking at the Ambrosetti Forum, an annual international conference held on the shores of Lake Como in Italy.

“Of course Germany will be the leader of that, because of its numbers, its quality, but Germany alone cannot be leader of the world, so I think it in the interest of Germany to share this task with other countries.”

Prodi said that European nations could only compete with the “Asia cluster” if they work together, and added that this applied to Germany too, despite the strength of her manufavturing and service industries.

“If we do not build a European supply chain, in which Germany is linking with all other countries, we are lost. Even Germany is lost,” he said. “This is the new reality.”

The new reality or not, the Germans and to a lesser degree the French, because of their robust economies, see themselves in strong position to dictate the actions of the other members of the European Union, especially those economies are in crisis. Italy and Greece strongly resent this position that Germany has adopted, reminding Germany that they are still their own sovreign countries.  Angela Merkel sees that Germany and Germans in particular are indeed supporting the rest of Europe, and she remains strongly opposed to the action of the ECB. She has repeatedly stated that she has made it as plain as possible that there will be no open-ended collective commitment to pay the debts of individual countries in the Eurozone. She is known as Frau Nein (or Madame Non, in France) because of her stance on this issue.

Whatever the outcome, it will take the collective will of all European members to recover the financial stability of the Eurozone.

Sources: MINA, Der Spiegel, BBC

Time Away II

Posted by George Brown on 07/09/2012
Posted in: Photography, Tourism, Travel. Tagged: Hawks Nest, Mid North Coast, Myall River, pelicans, Port Stephens, Tea gardens, travel, war memorial park. Leave a comment

Those of you who read Time Away would know of my present location at a holiday spot of the NSW Mid-North Coast known as Tea Gardens-Hawks Nest.

At the risk of turning this blog into a travelblog, I have included a few photos to show what a magnificent place this is:

View from the Apartment

View from our Apartment

This is the view from our second storey apaprtment, which looks directly out over the main surfing area of bennett’s beach.. You will agree it’s a very pleasant sight to wake up to each morning.

Bennett's Beach

Bennett’s Beach

This is the southern view from Bennett’s Beach, with Yacabaa Headland in the background. Yacabaa is the northern headland covering the entrance to Port Stephens and Nelson Bay.

Bennett's Beach

Bennett’s Beach

Another southern view looking a little more out to sea, this time showing Cabbage Tree and Boondelbah Islands.

Pelicans

A Scoop of Pelicans

A “scoop” of pelicans settling in for the evening on one of the Tea Gardens wharves, after a particularly blustery afternoon.

The Singing Bridge

The Singing Bridge

A closer view of The Singing Bridge which joins Tea gardens to Hawks Nest, so named for the whistling sound that occurs when strong winds blow.

War Memorial

Tea Gardens War Memorial

The Tea Gardens War Memorial Park. The park has a little interactive facility giving an overview of Australia’s commitment to past conflicts. The flag is at half-mast in remembrance of the five Australian soldiers killed in Afghanistan recently. Lest We Forget.

Time Away

Posted by George Brown on 06/09/2012
Posted in: Photography, Tourism, Travel. Tagged: Forster, Great Lakes, Hawks Nest, Manning, Mid North Coast, Tea gardens, Tuncurry. Leave a comment

I’m probably being a bit self-indulgent with this post, but my wife and I decided to take some time away from home and have a week’s vacation.

So on Wednesday 5th (dear wife’s 59th birthday) found us in the twin township of Forster-Tuncurry.  This wonderful seaside town is found on the Mid-North Coast of NSW.  The smaller township of Tuncurry is found on the north side of the Wallis Lake channel, and the larger town of Forster is found on the south.

The towns are joined by a rather long road/foot bridge which celebrated the 50th anniversary of its construction this year.

Forster-Tuncurry Bridge

Forster-Tuncurry Bridge

Unfortunately, the local parish priest, fellow blogger and aficionado of good coffee, had also chosen this time to take his vacation, and thus was not available for the Ritual of Good Coffee.  But don’t despair Andrew, I went ahead and enjoyed the coffee anyway!  The coffee shop (Sotos) is situated on the banks of the channel you see below, and this is more or less the view from the coffee shop window. This is the south channel with Godwin Island in the background.

Forster-Tuncurry Channel

Forster-Tuncurry Channel

Thursday saw us leave this rather ideallic spot for another of the Mid-North Coast’s pleasant little seaside towns, this time Tea Gardens-Hawk’s Nest. We had taken a short rental of an apartment overlooking Hawk’s Nest’s main beach. The two following photos are the view from our patio or deck.

Hawks Nest Beach

Hawks Nest Beach

and this one

Hawks Nest Beach

Hawks Nest Beach

Again twin coastal towns separted by a bridge. This bridge which spans the Myall River, is referred to as the “Singing Bridge” apparently from the whistling created by the wind passing around it.

The Singing Bridge

The Singing Bridge

. The town Hawks Nest has frontage onto the Pacific Ocean and to Port Stephens, which is arguably the best unspoilt natural harbourin Australia.

Myall River Channel

Myall River Channel

Oh! Apologies for poor standard of photos! An Apple iPhone is not a Nikon D5000. Seem to have left home without the latter.

Working Safely

Posted by George Brown on 04/09/2012
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a comment

This is the demolition of the No.4 ore bridge at the former Newcastle BHP steelworks. I’ve had this video for several years.

This video was taken by a statutory authority responsible for workplace safety.  They were filming with a view to gain evidence to support allegations of breaches of workplace health and safety. You can hear the investigators talking to each other.

The video starts slowly, but persevere, you wont be disappointed.

Lastest Addition to Australia’s Navy!

Posted by George Brown on 02/09/2012
Posted in: Humour, Politics, Views. Tagged: hmas gillard, humour, RAN. Leave a comment
HMAS Gillard

HMAS Gillard

5 Australian Soldiers Killed in Afghanistan

Posted by George Brown on 02/09/2012
Posted in: Defence, News, Politics, Religion, Views. Tagged: Afghan war, australian fatalities, insurgents. Leave a comment

In the darkest days for the Australian armed services, it mourned the deaths of five of its soldiers in Afghanistan, three murdered by an Afghan army infiltrator, in the nation’s deadliest combat since the Battle of Long Tan in 1966 when 18 soldiers were killed during the Vietnam War.

Australian flag on military vehicle – Photo: AP

The Australians were killed in two separate incidents just hours apart late Wednesday and early Thursday.

The first incident took place at a base in Uruzgan province, when a man in an Afghan army uniform opened fire on Australian soldiers, killing three and wounding two.  A few hours later, two Australian soldiers died and a crew member was wounded when their helicopter rolled over while landing in Helmand province.

What is particularly distressing about the first incident is that it occurred while the Australians were relaxing at the base when the assailant, probably a Taliban infiltrator, began shooting at close range with an automatic weapon. Soldiers returned fire, but the shooter scaled a fence and escaped.

The Australians attempted to resuscitate their comrades, but the soldiers did not respond to treatment. One of the wounded soldiers sustained a serious gunshot wound and was evacuated to a base hospital for further treatment. He is in satisfactory condition. The other was treated at the scene.

The insurgent posing as an Afghan soldier is named Hekmatullah, and was  a night guard at the Afghan army base where Coalition troops had stopped to spend the night. Australian and Afghan soldiers were hunting for the killer on Thursday.  These attacks, in which Afghan armed forces or insurgents posing as soldiers or police fire on their coalition allies, have been on the rise over the past year and have surged even higher in the last few weeks. There have been at least 34 such attacks so far this year, killing 45 coalition members, mostly Americans.

This is a particularly dangerous circumstance in a war were there is no distinct enemy, and no Afghan man, woman or child, can be completely trusted. Often the perpetrators of these despicable acts, may not be Taliban members themselves, but rather people placed under duress by threats by the Taliban against the individual or their family members.  It is particularly sad that there is no honour amongst insurgents, who will strike at unarmed soldiers relaxing in a base area, the same as they will kill and threaten to kill their own people for the sake of the cause.

Australia plans to begin withdrawing troops once Afghan troops are fully trained, and this may be as early as next year. Gillard said the latest bloodshed would not speed up that timeline.

“Our strategy is well defined, our strategy is constant. And we cannot allow even the most grievous of losses to change our strategy,” Gillard said. “We are there for a purpose and we will see that purpose through.”

It is unfortunate that Julia Gillard has not learnt a lesson from the history of Afghanistan.  The largest army in the world; the Soviet army, in a 10 year campaign, which cost them 25,000 dead soldiers, could not win their Afghan campaign.  The present Coalition will not win their campaign either.  When they pull out in 2013, Afghanistan will revert to the way it has been for millennia; a lawless land governed by the gun, administered by regional commanders or warlords, and a return to fundamentalist Islam with the resumption of Taliban rule.

History proves that we learn nothing from history.

What’s In a Smartphone?

Posted by George Brown on 28/08/2012
Posted in: Legal, Media, News, Technology, Views. Tagged: Android, Apple, Breach of Patent, Intellectual Property, iOS, Samsung, Windows Mobile. Leave a comment

A US court has ordered Samsung to pay Apple $1.05bn in damages for infringing intellectual property.

The jury decided several Samsung devices had infringed US iPhone-maker Apple’s software and design patents, and rejected counter-claims by Samsung, the BBC reports.  Apple will now seek import bans on several of its rival’s products. Samsung has said it will appeal. The ruling is one of the most significant in a global battle over patents and intellectual property.

Apple iPhone and Samsung Galaxy

 In other parts of the world Apple had different outcomes to their court cases. In South Korea ruled that both technology firms had copied each other, while a British court threw out claims by the US company that Samsung had infringed its copyright.

But the year-long US case has involved some of the biggest damages claims, and is likely to shape the way patent licences are handled in the future. Samsung promised to appeal against the decision describing it as “a loss for the American consumer”. Samsung stated,  “It will lead to fewer choices, less innovation, and potentially higher prices,” the South Korean firm said. Samsung further added, that it was “unfortunate that patent law can be manipulated to give one company a monopoly over rectangles with rounded corners“.

 Apple, however, said it applauded the court “for finding Samsung’s behaviour wilful and for sending a loud and clear message that stealing isn’t right”.

Apple said it intended to seek sales injunctions at a follow-up hearing on 20 September.

The two firms account for more than half of global smartphone and tablet computer sales.

It is interesting to note that Windows based smartphones have a similar version of the rectangle on the touch screens. Consider the Nokia Lumina 800 below:

Nokia Lumina 800

Nokia Lumina 800

It can be seen that the Nokia smartphone has a similar display of the icons as the Samsung and iPhone. Will Nokia/Google be the next victim of Apple’s slanted view of what or what is not a breach of patent law?

Remember that these three phones use different OS’. Apple uses its proprietary OS, iOS; Samsung uses the Android OS as developed by Google and used under licence; and Nokia uses the Windows Mobile OS under licence from Microsoft. You will remember too that Windows has used the icon on their home screen for nearly every edition of the Windows OS. The bottom line here is that three different OS’ all use the rectangle with rounded corners, aka “the icon” to activate the attached app or program. Yes Google does call their programs, apps. Could this be a breach of an Apple copyright too? Or, could it be that Apple has actually breached a Windows icon patent? Where does it stop?

Source: MINA (as edited)

Macedonian Flag Waving

Posted by George Brown on 26/08/2012
Posted in: Media, News, Politics, Uncategorized, Views. Tagged: drug possession, Greece, macedonia; makedonija, macedonian flag, politics. 1 Comment

Stiljan Samardziev born 1988 in Thessaloniki, is a Macedonian activist who was detained twice by the Greek Secret Service during the past three weeks.

Samardziev was first detained on August 1st when he hung the former Macedonian flag (the 16 ray Vergina Sun flag – see the example below) onto the Florina main police station. For this deed, Stiljan spent 10 days in jail and was released on August 11.

MK Flag

Pre-1991 Macedonian Flag

Samardziev was undeterred by the experience and on his Facebook profile wrote he would bring the Macedonian flag during an anti-Macedonian rally organized in Thessaloniki.

His Facebook post alerted the Greek Secret Service, who on August 16, once again detained Samardziev. He was kept in jail until August 24 but once again released, except this time he was charged for a alleged drug possession. It is allegedly well documented for Greek police and their Secret Service to plant drugs on ethnic Macedonians. That’s an interesting assertion as Samardziev is a Greek national, albiet an ethnic Macedonian.

Greek police has attempted to make it look that the flag incidents never ocurred, however they have already been reported by local Greek media. It is expected that the matter to end up in court.

I will say however that I smell a rat here. How anyone could place a flag (Macedonian or other) on the main police station in Thessaloniki (the second largest city in Greece)?  He would be stopped before the flag got anywhere near raised.  And Samardziev is a Greek national and a supposed ethnic Macedonian.  Something is not quite right here!

Stiljan Самарџиев роден 1988 година во Солун е македонски активист кој бил уапсен двапати од страна на грчката тајна служба во текот на изминатите три недели.

Самарџиев првпат беше уапсен на 1 август, кога тој ја спушти поранешниот македонското знаме (16 ray Вергина Сонцето знаме – види го примерот подолу) кон Лерин главната полициска станица. За ова дело, Stiljan помина 10 дена во затвор и бил издаден на 11 август.

 

MK Flag

Самарџиев беше заплашен од искуство и на неговиот Фејсбук профил напиша тој ќе донесе македонското знаме за време на анти-македонски собир организиран во Солун.

Неговиот Фејсбук пост предупредени на грчката тајна служба, кој на 16 август, уште еднаш притворен Самарџиев. Тој бил задржан во затвор до 24 август, но уште еднаш ослободен, освен овој пат тој беше обвинет за наводна поседување на дрога. Тоа е, наводно, добро документирани за грчката полиција и нивните тајни служби да садиш лекови на етничките Македонци. Тоа е еден интересен тврдење како Самарџиев е грчки државјанин, albiet етнички Македонец.

Грчката полиција се обиде да го направите да изгледа дека никогаш знамето инциденти ocurred, но тие веќе се пријавени од страна на локалните грчките медиуми. Се очекува дека ова прашање да завршат во суд.

Јас ќе кажам дека сепак јас мирис на стаорец тука. Како некој може да постави знаме (македонски или други) на главната полициска станица во Солун (вториот по големина град во Грција)? Тој ќе биде запрен пред знаме доби близу зголеми. И Самарџиев е грчки државјанин и би требало етнички Македонци. Нешто не е сосема во право тука!

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    George Brown is a decorated soldier and health professional and 40 year veteran in the field of emergency nursing and paramedical practice, both military and civilian areas. He has senior management positions in the delivery of paramedical services. Opinions expressed in these columns are solely those of the author and should not be construed as being those of any organization to which he may be connected.

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    Џорџ Браун е украсени војник и професионално здравствено лице и 40 годишен ветеран во областа на за итни случаи старечки и парамедицински пракса, двете воени и цивилни области. Тој има високи менаџерски позиции во испораката на парамедицински услуги. Мислењата изразени во овие колумни се исклучиво на авторот и не треба да се толкува како оние на било која организација тој може да биде поврзан.

    Тој е роден во Велика Британија на шкотскиот потекло од Абердин и член на Kланот MacDougall. Тој е член на македонската заедница во Њукасл, и зборува течно македонски. Иако ова можеби изгледа контрадикција, тоа е неговата сопруга кој е македонски, и како резултат научил македонскиот јазик и ја примија православната вера.

    Неговите интереси вклучуваат авијација и дигитална фотографија, и тој секогаш ужива во можност да се комбинираат двете. Отиди до неговиот Фликр сајт да видите последните дополнувања на неговата слика библиотека.

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