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The Trans-Siberian railway

Posted by George Brown on 20/04/2016
Posted in: Culture, Engineering, railway, Tourism, Transportation, Uncategorized. Tagged: longest railway, Moscow, Trans-Siberian railway, Vladivostok. Leave a comment

No railway journey on Earth can match the Trans-Siberian stretches between Moscow and Vladivostok. It is not just its vast length and the great variety of the lands and climates through which it passes. It is not just its history as the line that linked the huge tracts of land which are Russia. It is a dream which calls countless travellers to the adventure of the longest railway in the world.

ANZAC Day 2016

Posted by George Brown on 20/04/2016
Posted in: army, Defence, Democracy, History, Military, tradition, Uncategorized, Warfare. Tagged: ANZAC, ANZAC Day, ANZAC Day 2016, Lest We Forget. Leave a comment

The 25th of April 2016, will be the 101st anniversary of ANZAC here in Australia and New Zealand.

Today we remember the sacrifices given by our servicemen in many and varied conflicts, many who made the supreme sacrifice and laid down their lives so that who are left can enjoy the freedom and liberty so hard-won.

We especially remember those gallant men who stormed the beaches of Anzac Cove at Gallipoli in 1915, and gave their all against a formidable Turkish foe.  We remember their endurance and their perseverance to get the job done.  And ultimately, we remember the tragic failure of the whole Gallipoli campaign.

It was a turning point as a nation for both Australia and New Zealand, a baptism of fire, a loss of innocence for a young country.  Many heroes arose out of this battle, many names becoming those of legend.

ANZAC is synonymous with bravery, stoicism, dogged determination and a drive to succeed. This became a characteristic of all servicemen to follow and is the measure of every “Digger.”

We bow our heads and reflect on their service and their sacrifice.

Who Are These Men

Who are these men that march so proud,
Who quietly weep, eyes closed, head bowed?
These are the men who once were boys,
Who missed out on youth and all of its joys.

Who are these men with aged faces,
Who silently count the empty spaces?
There are the men who gave their all,
Who fought for their country for freedom for all.

Who are these men with sorrowful look
Who can still remember the lives that were took?
These are the men that saw young men die,
The price of peace is always high.

Who are these men who in the midst of pain,
Whispered comfort to those they would not see again?
These are the men whose hands held tomorrow,
Who brought back our future with blood tears and sorrow.

Who are these men who promise to keep
Alive in their hearts the ones God holds asleep?
These are the men to whom I promise again:
“Veterens”, my friends – I will remember them!

Jodie Johnson

This poem was written in 1966 by Jodie Johnson who was 11 years old at the time. The depth of her feeling and understanding for the thoughts of the veterans is unusual for someone so young. I know when I see this sort of understanding by young people, that our future is in good hands.

In Flanders Fields

In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie,
In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.

Lest We Forget

Lest We Forget

They went with songs to the battle, they were young.
Straight of limb, true of eye, steady and aglow.
They were staunch to the end against odds uncounted,
They fell with their faces to the foe.

They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun, and in the morning,
We will remember them.

Lest We Forget.

Crime, Time and the Media

Posted by George Brown on 20/04/2016
Posted in: Crime, Culture, Law, Legal, Media, News, Opinion, Police, Uncategorized. Tagged: abduction, assault, Beirut, conspiracy, kidnapping, Lebanon, Tara Brown, ^) Minutes. Leave a comment

The recent arrest of an Australian 60 Minutes TV crew in Lebanon, has had (Australian) media outlets outraged that a TV crew could be arrested for reporting the news.

What they gloss over in their outrage is that the crew were filming a kidnapping and abduction of two children of an Australian woman who was in Beirut with their Lebanese father.  True, the father had failed to return the children after an access visit, but still a kidnap and abduction has occurred.

The TV crew was not just there filming the abduction.  No, it is alleged that the 60 Minutes producers had actually financed the abduction by hiring a professional company to carry out the grab. it is alleged that AU$115,000 was paid by Channel 9.

That makes the TV crew complicit in the action, and an accessory to kidnapping and abduction,  assault and conspiracy, all serious crime in the Lebanon.

The mother and the TV crew could find themselves in detention in Lebanon for some time to come.

If found guilty, they could face up to 20 years in jail.

Dr Denis Muller, a  media ethics expert at University of Melbourne, believes Channel 9 did the story because they thought it would “rate its socks off”.

“An Australian mum was rescuing children, bringing them back to a great life in Australia, that’s what it was all about,” he said.

“I can’t imagine Channel 9 looked into the risk and I can’t imagine they would have knowingly put their staff at risk like this”. But it appears they did just that.

However, the reporter at the heart of the issue, Tara Brown, has maintained a level of integrity stating, “I cannot talk, I don’t want to jeopardise anything. It has been fortifying to get messages of support, support from my family, friends and colleagues. I am being treated extremely well and the other women here are incredibly generous and kind.”

Will this action receive unbiased reporting from the Australian media?

Not bloody likely, mate!

tara

Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose!

Posted by George Brown on 19/04/2016
Posted in: Humour, Media, Myth and Legend, Uncategorized. Tagged: Loser Lane, New York, urban myths, Winner lane, winners and losers. Leave a comment

In name game, Loser wins and brother Winner loses – tribunedigital-chicagotribune

One son was named Loser, the other Winner.

One became a cop and eventually was promoted to detective–shield number 2762.

The other fell into the life of a small-time crook, racking up at least 31 arrests before being sent away for a two-year stretch in state prison–inmate number 00R2807.

But for the brothers Lane, it wasn’t a case of their unique names sealing their fates.

“I went a totally separate route right from the start,” said Loser Lane, 41, a detective working in the 40th Precinct in the South Bronx of New York City.

Loser, a star student and athlete, went on scholarship to an elite prep school–Pomfret in Connecticut-and to Lafayette College in Pennsylvania. Then he joined the police force because “my mom really wanted me to do this.”

Winner Lane’s life has gone the other way. Now 44, Winner got out of jail in June after spending two years in Southport prison outside Elmira, N.Y., for breaking into a car. He sometimes lives in Camp LaGuardia, a homeless shelter in upstate New York, shuttling back and forth between the camp and the city, trying to get his life on track.

Why did he commit so many crimes?

“It’s just some situations I got in,” Winner said. “It wasn’t really for the need.” He declined to talk further about his trouble with the law.

The brothers rarely see each other now. Winner will call Loser when he’s short on money, but they’re no longer close.

“I’m a cop,” said Loser, who is known as Lou on the job. “And I have a way with me where I don’t tolerate a lot.”

It wasn’t always that way.

The Lane boys ran in the same circles growing up in Harlem’s Wagner Projects. Their names never aroused even curiosity, much less ridicule, from the kids in the neighborhood.

“When you’re young you don’t know that it’s a bad name, and by the time you hit grade school, everybody knows you. It was a regular thing,” Loser said.

The story of how Loser got his name is simple. On the day he was born, their father, Robert, asked his daughter Dinelda what to name the new baby.

“My dad comes home and asks my oldest sister what to name me, and she said, Well, we’ve got a Winner, why don’t we have a Loser?’ And there you go. That was it.”

Winner Lane said he’s not sure how he got his name. Because their father was a “baseball fanatic” and semi-pro player, Winner said he thinks his name “had to have something to do with baseball, but I’m not sure what.”

In any case, by adolescence the lives of Winner and Loser started down routes as divergent as their names.

Around the time Loser entered prep school on a scholarship, Winner began his descent into the criminal justice system.

He was first arrested at age 19, in September 1977, on a charge of recklessly causing physical injury. His first conviction came five years later, a burglary case on Long Island. A steady stream of arrests followed: domestic violence, car burglaries, trespassing, resisting arrest and at least nine arrests for jumping subway turnstiles.

In April 1999, he was arrested for breaking into a car – weeks after serving 135 days for another auto burglary. This time when he pleaded out, the judge gave Winner 1 1/2 to 3 years.

After graduating from college, where he played football and wrestled, Loser joined the New York Police Department in January 1984.

But could this just be an urban myth?

Source: Sean Gardiner, Chicago Tribune

It is time to stand up for our Veterans

Posted by George Brown on 18/04/2016
Posted in: army, Government, Military, Opinion, Uncategorized, Warfare. Tagged: Afghanistan, compensation, DVA, iraq, Korea, Military, PTSD, treatment, veteran support, veterans, Vietnam, war, WW2. Leave a comment

Post traumatic stress disorder affects many who have served this country but little is being done to meet their needs.

As a kid during school holidays, I would be sent off to a country town to stay with elderly friends of the family, who I called Nan and Pop. There, I would roam the streets unsupervised from morning to dusk, saying hi to neighbours and patting their dogs.

There was one particular man I was scared of, however, who would sit on his front porch all day, several doors down from Nan’s. He had only one leg and would stare blankly for hours on end. He looked so sad, it seemed as if he was perpetually crying.

Off to war: It’s time our nation’s government provided better services to our veterans, many of whom suffer ongoing conditions such as depression and PTSD upon their return.

Off to war: It's time our nation's government provided better services to our veterans, many of whom suffer ongoing ...

Photo: ABC Publicity

Generally there was a respected truce between us. He would see me and I him but neither would acknowledge the other. One day I asked Nan what had happened to the man’s leg and why he was so sad.

“He lost his leg in the war,” she answered. “Don’t be scared of him. Reg is a lovely, gentle man. I’ve known him since he was a kid. He’s just not been right since he came home from the war. A lot of the boys who went from here aren’t.”

I took this on board as well as a seven or eight-year-old can, and the next day I decided to wave to Reg. To my delight, he waved back.

That afternoon I took the 20 cents I had earned cleaning out Nan’s chook pen and bought two Paddle Pops, one for me and one for Reg. I was tenuous climbing those stairs to his porch but Reg’s reaction was worth my tiny terror. The soldier’s face lit up and a tear trickled down his bristly cheek.

Reg didn’t say much but I visited him every day during that stay, telling him how Nan’s chooks kept escaping and how she swore as she tried to catch them. Sometimes Reg would have a Mintie or a biscuit for me. I believe we became firm friends.

It was a year before I returned to the town and the first thing I noticed was Reg wasn’t at his porch, so I ran to ask Nan why. She looked distressed and put me on her knee and told me Reg was “gone”.

“He just couldn’t take it anymore,” she said. “We can only hope he is in a happier place.”

I couldn’t comprehend suicide at the time, but hell – I do now. I’ve had several friends and many more acquaintances take their own lives over the years, and today I have one dear friend I worry about daily, who I fear may do the same.

It’s because my friend today has the same blank look as Reg, half here and half somewhere else he doesn’t want to be. My friend was a policeman and now suffers acute post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

If it wasn’t for his loving family and their constant care, I have no idea how he would survive. The fact that the very force he suffered for has all but abandoned him to deal with an aggressive and cruel insurance company for compensation is beyond me. It disgusts and angers me to my marrow. And the police force is only the tip of an insidious iceberg of neglect in this country.

Tomorrow I will be attending a rally in Melbourne, on the steps of Parliament House, joining veterans, families and supporters calling for a royal commission into the Department of Veteran Affairs.

From 1999 to the start of February 2016, some 249 soldiers returned from wars in the Middle East have committed suicide, more than 30 in 2015 alone. This is only a roughly accrued estimate – the actual number is probably far more. Compare this to how many soldiers died in war in Afghanistan – 41 dead and 261 injured – and it becomes clear the real battle these soldiers face is not at war but home, in the country they fought for.

Since 1975 Australia has deployed 120,000 troops on overseas operations. The numbers suffering mental illness is estimated to be between 20,000 and 30,000.

Yet these men may have been better off staying in battle, where at least they would have received attention, because little is happening here.

As the number of post-1975 veterans has been growing, the DVA has been reducing staffing numbers and cutting back entitlements. There are different processing elements, depending where you are in Australia, with most still operating a single file, paper-based system. Veterans have no way of telling where claims are up to or in which state they are being handled, and files are often lost.

Veterans are required to attend up to five appeals to gain their proper compensation because of this poor administration, and the use of adversarial work cover assessors under-evaluating veteran incapacities to lower compensation amounts.

From lodgement of claim to payment – if the claims go through the appeal process – can take up to five years.

This is too long! These people are suffering now – good men like Reg, haunted by what they have seen and done protecting our freedom. It is a national disgrace and one every citizen should get on board to protest.

And while we’re at it, let’s look at the police force leadership and demand they treat their own with respect, dignity, care and compensation too. Because I will be damned if my friend decides there is “happier place”. That place should be his home, and it is up to all of us to ensure it is.

Source: Saturday Age columnist Wendy Squires is a journalist, editor and author.

A tribute to the Two Ronnies

Posted by George Brown on 11/04/2016
Posted in: Culture, Entertainment, Humour, Media, Uncategorized. Tagged: Ronnie Barker, Ronnie Corbett, The Two Ronnies. Leave a comment

Ronnie Corbett: And now, it’s goodnight from me…

Ronnie Barker: …and it’s goodnight from him.

Ronnie Barker: We interrupt this website for a special bulletin: The Metropolitan Police today denied that prisoners in their custody are excessively pampered. This follows yesterday’s report that a man was hustled out of New Scotland Yard with an electric blanket over his head.

Ronnie Corbett: And we’ve just heard that a juggernaut of onions has shed its load all over the M-1. Motorists are advised to find a hard shoulder to cry on.

Ronnie Barker: Following the dispute with the domestic servants’ union at Buckingham Palace today, the queen, a radiant figure in a white silk gown and crimson robe, swept down the main staircase and through the hall. She then dusted the cloak room and vacuumed the lounge.

Ronnie Corbett: After a series of crimes in the Glasgow area, Chief Inspector McTavish has announced that he’s looking for a man with one eye. If he doesn’t find him, he’s going to use both eyes.

Ronnie Barker: The perfect crime was committed last night, when thieves broke into Scotland Yard and stole all the toilets. Police say they have absolutely nothing to go on.

Ronnie Corbett: And we’ve just heard that in the English Channel, a ship carrying red paint has collided with a ship carrying purple paint. It is believed that both crews have been marooned. And now, back to our regular programme.

Ronnie Barker: And now a sketch featuring Ronnie Corbett whose wife thinks he’s the salt of the earth. That’s why she keeps him in the cellar.

Ronnie Corbett: Good evening! It’s wonderful to be back with you again, isn’t it, Ronnie?

Ronnie Barker: Indeed it is. And in a packed programme tonight, I shall be having a word with a man who goes in for meditation, because he thinks it’s better than sitting around doing nothing.

Ronnie Corbett: And we’ll be talking to a car designer who’s crossed Toyota with Quasimodo and come up with The Hatchback of Notre Dame.

Ronnie Barker: And we had hoped to have been bringing you Arthur the Human Chameleon, but this afternoon, he crawled across a tartan rug and died of exhaustion. But first, the news: The House of Commons was sealed off today after police chased an escaped lunatic through the front door during Prime Minister’s question time. A spokesman at Scotland Yard said it was like looking for a needle in a haystack.

Ronnie Corbett: West Mercia police announced tonight that they wish to interview a man wearing high heels and frilly knickers, but the Chief Constable said they must wear their normal uniforms.

Ronnie Barker: Many old music hall fans were present at the funeral today of Fred “Chuckles” Jenkins, Britain’s oldest and unfunniest comedian. In tribute, the vicar read out one of Fred’s jokes, and the congregation had two minutes silence.

Ronnie Corbett: Latest on the bullion robbery: At Wansforth Police Station, a man who’s as deaf as a post, and doesn’t speak English, with a terrible stutter, bad breath and squeaky shoes, is not helping the police with their inquiries one little bit.

Ronnie Barker: At London’s Heathrow, senior customs officer Seaforth Mumbly retired today. He shook hands with passengers passing through the customs, and confiscated a gold watch for himself.

Ronnie Corbett: There was a fire at the main Inland Revenue office in London today, but it was put out before any serious good was done.

Ronnie Barker: The search for the man who terrorizes nudist camps with a bacon slicer goes on. Inspector Lemuel Jones had a tip-off this morning, but hopes to be back on duty tomorrow.

Ronnie Corbett: Finally, it was revealed in a government survey published today that the Prime Minister is doing the work of two men. Laurel and Hardy.

Ronnie Barker: And now a sketch, featuring Mr Ronnie Corbett, whose wife tries not to bring out the beast in him, because she’s afraid of mice.

Ronnie Barker: I say, Humphrey.

Ronnie Corbett: What is it, Godfrey?

Ronnie Barker: Who was that terrible woman you were with today?

Ronnie Corbett: That was my sister.

Ronnie Barker: Oh, yes! Of course! I should have noticed the resemblance. Just got married, hasn’t she?

Ronnie Corbett: Yes. Yes. And do you know, she’s married a man who, invariably, people take an instant dislike to.

Ronnie Barker: Oh? Why is that, do you think?

Ronnie Corbett: It saves time. She’s just moved to Cheltenham. She loves Cheltenham. She says, in Cheltenham, breeding is everything.

Ronnie Barker: Yes, well, we enjoy it in Kensington as well, but we’re not fanatical about it.

Ronnie Corbett: Funny thing is, though, although he’s a bully, an idler and a drunk, she intends to have seventeen children by him.

Ronnie Barker: Good grief! Why on earth would she want to do that?

Ronnie Corbett: She says she’s hoping to lose him in the crowd.

Ronnie Barker: And Solomon F. Potts, America’s most persistent practical joker, was buried today. He’s not dead, it’s just the neighbours getting their own back.

Ronnie Barker: This kitchen appliance completely replaces the milkman, unless you’re the woman at 14 Catbury Drive with the green door.

Ronnie Corbett: …in this wretched, dreadful old husk of a town – absolutely nowhere near Watford – I must make that clear, I wouldn’t want people ringing in complaining. No, no, it’s true… some of them are on the telephone now.

Ronnie Corbett: My wife and I had a bit of a fight, there was some high-spirited name calling, and I had stormed upstairs to fetch my birth certificate.

Bastille Day 2015 Military Parade

Posted by George Brown on 06/04/2016
Posted in: army, Culture, Defence, Democracy, Military, tradition, Uncategorized. Tagged: Bastille Day 2015, French military parade. Leave a comment

Now the French really know how to turn on a parade.

Note the particularly slow marching pace of the Foreign Legionnaires.  In comparison to the 116-step-per-minute pace of other French units, the Foreign Legion has an 88-step-per-minute marching speed. It is also referred to by Legionnaires as the “crawl“.  Because of the impressively slow pace, the Foreign Legion is always the last unit marching in any parade.

MP double standards!

Posted by George Brown on 06/04/2016
Posted in: Emergency Services, Entitlements, expenses, Government, Opinion, Parliament, Politics, taxpayers, Uncategorized. Tagged: emergency service workers, Gladys Berejiklian, government, Mike Baird, NSW government, parliamentary allowances. Leave a comment

To piously impose a pay freeze on the men and women who keep the state running, paramedics, nurses, firefighters and teachers, while simultaneously helping themselves to tens of thousands of dollars – often for doing absolutely nothing – is an absolute farce.

It is a damning indictment on Premier Mike Baird and Gladys Berejiklian when they declare the state is broke when it comes to improving the modest salaries of public sector workers, but they can easily find a lazy two million to shovel at their mates.

New South Wales is a state being run for the one per cent, and the first members of the elite to get their gravy train top ups are the members of the Baird Government.

It seems Mr Baird is never short of a quid when it comes to bonuses for his MPs and funding for his social media advisers. But when it comes to paying public sector workers with dignity suddenly there’s not a cent.

The State’s public services have been cut to the bone. If there is money to spent it should be on these emergency service personnel and teachers, and not on wholly unnecessary bonuses to government MPs.

Like their Federal Liberal counterparts, the NSW politicians too have their snout in the pay and allowance trough!

By Mark Morey, Secretary, Unions NSW (as edited)

The Most Dangerous Town on the Internet

Posted by George Brown on 05/04/2016
Posted in: businees, Crime, Research, Software, Technology, Uncategorized. Tagged: crime, Cybercrime, internet, Norton. Leave a comment

Norton explores the secret world of bulletproof hosting that’s hidden deep in underground bunkers.  You make your own decision/conclusion on this interesting subject

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CashAq5RToM

World’s Oldest Scoop?

Posted by George Brown on 02/04/2016
Posted in: acedemia, Culture, History, Humanity, Indigenous, Opinion, tradition, Uncategorized, Views. Tagged: ATSI people, Indigenous Australians, Invasion, James Cook, Settlement, Terra Nullius. Leave a comment

Daily Telegraph Uncovers Academic ‘Invasion’ Plot… 20 Years Too Late

cook

 

Settlement or Invasion?

Australia’s least trusted newspaper may have just broken the record for ‘world’s oldest scoop’.

Yesterday’s (30/03/2016) Daily Telegraph’s scoop – that the University of NSW is “controversially” instructing teachers to refer to the “settlement” of Australia as an “invasion” – is based on a teaching resource produced two decades ago which was published under the auspices of the Howard government.

Entitled, Teaching the Teachers: Indigenous Australian Studies for Primary Pre-Service Teacher Education, the teaching guide was the culmination of more than two years consultation and research, and produced by UNSW in cooperation with the federally-funded Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation.

It was released in 1996 by UNSW and CAR as a guide to appropriate terminology when discussing First Nations issues. Ironically, the Prime Minister at the time, John Howard – went on to spark the ‘history wars’, after abolishing the CAR.

The guide was inspired by Aboriginal poet and activist Oodgeroo Noonucal (Kath Walker) and distributed widely throughout schools and universities around the country, in particular NSW primary schools.

Since then, it has been used widely as the basis for university guides on appropriate terminology when teaching about issues affecting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians.

Australian universities, including Flinders in South Australia, UNSW and Queensland University of Technology have all produced guides based on the document.

An entire section of the teaching guide – page 13 – is devoted to dealing with the issue of invasion. After noting the term ‘settlement’ is “less appropriate”, and the term ‘invasion’ “more appropriate”, the guide notes:

“Australia was not settled peacefully, it was invaded. Describing the arrival of the Europeans as a ‘settlement’ attempts to view Australian history from the shores of England rather than the shores of Australia.

“The use of the word ‘settlement’ ignores the reality of Indigenous Australian peoples’ lands being stolen from them….

“The fact that most settlers did not see themselves as invading the country, and that convicts were transported against their will is beside the point. The effects were the same for Indigenous peoples.”

New Matilda reader Serena O’Meley – a community and union activist – located the original resource at the State of Library of Victoria early this morning.

She told New Matilda: “This particular curriculum resource is highly auspiced, and it’s been around for 20 years. It was a seminal text involving substantial consultation,” Ms O’Meley said.

“It’s just sensationalist reporting by the Daily Telegraph, and it has to stop.

“Invasion is a fact, it’s not a political position. Once again they’re playing into the hands of racists and people who want to change history to suit themselves.”

Notwithstanding the motivations of the Telegraph, Ms O’Meley said some good would likely come from the debate.

“I think it’s been useful in the sense that it’s opened up a discussion, because younger people born during the history wars haven’t been properly educated about these issues,” she said.

“I’m personally a product of poor history teaching, and I know many of my peers have been as well. It’s taken me many years to understand the real basis of Australia’s true history.

“I cannot imagine what young people know and understand about these issues, so a curriculum resource like this is immensely valuable.”

New Matilda has sought to interview the Daily Telegraph reporter responsible for the story, Clarissa Bye, but at the time of press no reply was forthcoming.

A spokesperson for the University of NSW told New Matilda that the teaching resource at the centre of the Telegraph’s coverage had actually been in place since 2012. The spokesperson also noted that the resource does not mandate language from teacher’s rather it suggests ‘less and more appropriate’ terminology.

According to dictionary.com, one definition of the term ‘invasion’ is “entrance as if to take possession or overrun”.

It’s use to describe the gradual arrival of people, against the will of an existing population – as opposed to an immediate military force – is uncontroversial. The Daily Telegraph has used the term itself to describe the gradual arrival over time of asylum seekers to Australian shores.

Source: Chris Graham on March 31, 2016

Comment/Thoughts

  • In the mindset of the initial European arrivals to Australia’s eastern shores, the British government of the time would have seen this as settlement rather than invasion given information supplied by James Cook. It is not possible, nearly 250 years later, to reassess the mindset of that time, when acting under the official instruction of the government of the day.
  • At the time Australia was considered to be ‘Terra Nullius‘.  However, this is clearly clearly incorrect as  instead of admitting that it was “possessing” land that belonged to Aboriginal people, Britain always acted as it were settling an empty land.
  • If James Cook said that Australia was “Terra Nullius“, who in England was a position to dispute this assertion?
  • It could be argued that the original settlers were in fact, not settlers at all!  As convicts coming to a penal colony, they were hardly coming of their own free will.  Once their sentence had been completed, they were hardly in a position to take themselves home! They became settlers, rather than invaders, by no choice of their own.
  • Academia and academics often have outspoken and controversial views which are not held by the mainstream population and government.
  • This story does remain an example of poor reporting on the part of the Daily Telegraph.

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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.

    He was born in the UK of Scottish ancestry from Aberdeen and a member of the Clan MacDougall. He is a member of the Macedonian community in Newcastle, and speaks fluent Macedonian. While this may seem a contradiction, it is his wife who is Macedonian, and as a result he embraced the Macedonian language and the Orthodox faith.

    His interests include aviation and digital photography, and he always enjoys the opportunity to combine the two. Navigate to his Flickr site to see recent additions to his photo library.

    Me

    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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