Monthly Archive for November, 2007

A Short Graphical History of Australia

Via one of my favorite blogs, Coming Anarchy comes this great graphical depiction of the history of Australia:

Very cool graphic that shows how much rapid change has come to Australia over the years to become what it is today.

Muslim Hatred in Sydney

I could only imagine how much press something like this would get back in the US:

TWO pigs’ heads have been dumped at the controversial site of a proposed Islamic school in Sydney’s southwest.

The pigs’ heads, planted on wooden stakes on the Camden site, with the Australian flag draped between them, are believed to be in protest of the Muslim school proposal.

The proposed school, for up to Muslim 1200 students on 15ha and wedged between market gardens and pastures, has been highly controversial.

A public meeting held in Camden earlier this month attracted more than 2000 people opposed to the development.

The local council also received several thousand written objections during the planning approval process.

The chairman of the Community Relations Commission, Stepan Kerkyasharian, said today’s "outrage" revealed what lay behind the opposition to the school.

"This insult and display of hatred is not something any fair-minded Australian would approve of," Mr Kerkyasharian said.  [The Daily Telegraph]

Here in Australia this article is the only mention of this incident I have heard of yet, which is surprising considering the obvious bigotry of this act. 

Northern Territory Holiday Journal Archive

 nt-journal1.JPG

Our trip to the Northern Territory was definitely something my wife and I will remember for the rest of our lives which we recommend to anyone else living or traveling in Australia to experience for themselves. The place is filled with amazing landscapes, vibrant wildlife, and an interesting Aboriginal culture. Below are the links to my fourteen part series that covers our incredible journey that hopefully inspires others to take an adventure to the Top End themselves.


Outline of our roundtrip journey from Melbourne to Darwin and back.

Part 1Brief Outline of Journey
Part 2To the Red Center
Part 3On to Ayers Rock
Part 4The Mighty Olgas
Part 5 - On the Stuart Highway
Part 6 - Darwin and the Jumping Crocodiles
Part 7 - Kakadu National Park: Nourlangie Rock
Part 8 - Kakadu National Park: The East Alligator River
Part 9 - Kakadu National Park: Ubirr Rock
Part 10 - Cruising Katherine Gorge
Part 11 - Beautiful Edith Falls
Part 12 - A Day in Litchfield National Park
Part 13 - The Pearl of the Top End, Darwin
Part 14 - The Journey Home

Northern Territory Holiday Journal Archive

Our trip to the Northern Territory was definitely something my wife and I will remember for the rest of our lives which we recommend to anyone else living or traveling in Australia to experience for themselves. The place is filled with amazing landscapes, vibrant wildlife, and an interesting Aboriginal culture. Below are the links to my fourteen part series that covers our incredible journey that hopefully inspires others to take an adventure to the Top End themselves.


Outline of our roundtrip journey from Melbourne to Darwin and back.

Part 1Brief Outline of Journey
Part 2To the Red Center
Part 3On to Ayers Rock
Part 4The Mighty Olgas
Part 5 - On the Stuart Highway
Part 6 - Darwin and the Jumping Crocodiles
Part 7 - Kakadu National Park: Nourlangie Rock
Part 8 - Kakadu National Park: The East Alligator River
Part 9 - Kakadu National Park: Ubirr Rock
Part 10 - Cruising Katherine Gorge
Part 11 - Beautiful Edith Falls
Part 12 - A Day in Litchfield National Park
Part 13 - The Pearl of the Top End, Darwin
Part 14 - The Journey Home

Aussie Sailors Jailed Over Footy Argument

The things drunk people fight over:

TWO Australian Navy sailors jailed in California after a vicious fight about the merits of footy will learn today if they will face serious assault charges.

Philip Graeme Ferres, 26, and Kolis Barba, 24, have been locked up in San Diego’s Central Jail since their arrest in the early hours of Thursday morning.

Police accuse them of hitting and kicking their alleged victim, breaking his eye socket, after an argument flared at a party about Australian rules football and American gridiron.

The alleged victim, a 28-year-old San Diego man, was a fan of gridiron while the Australians were talking up the virtues of AFL, which led to the fight, police said.

A spokesperson for the San Diego District Attorney’s office said prosecutors were mulling over the evidence today to decide what charges, if any, will be filed against the two sailors, who arrived in the southern Californian city aboard the HMAS Sydney last week.  [Herald-Sun]

If the man was a Chargers fans than I can perfectly understand the beating.*

* I’m only joking. 

Tasmanian Seals Shot

This is just totally senseless:

MORE than a dozen seals have been found dead around Tasmania, most of them believed shot.

The discovery of nine Australian fur seals on the Ile de Phoques and Taillefer Rocks, between Triabunna and Freycinet, is a blow to hopes that breeding was restarting on the island.

Department of Primary Industries and Water Wildlife and Marine Conservation Officer Andrew Irvine said X-rays had confirmed three on the island were shot in the head, while the others were likely to have died from shots to the body as they rushed towards the water.

"These are areas that have been set aside for the conservation of wildlife and it appears that a person has gone to these islands specifically to shoot some of the wildlife," Mr Irvine said.  [Mercury]

Aussie Used Car Commercials Get Even Worse

Just when you thought Aussie used car commercials couldn’t get any worse than this, here comes another one that just makes you wonder what these people were thinking when filming this?:

Australia to Attack Japanese Whaling Ships?

Well if the eco-loons get their way that is what they wanted newly installed Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd to do:

Speaking before a presentation at Griffith University on the Gold Coast today, Capt Watson said the newly-elected Labor Government needed to take responsibility in trying to stop the Japanese fleet.

Japan exploited a 1986 international moratorium on commercial whaling through a loophole that allows a limited hunt for scientific research.

"We’re hoping that the new Labor Government will send Australian naval vessels down there to monitor their illegal activities," Capt Watson said.  (…)

But Capt Watson said it was time for firm action against the Japanese, who will target 935 Antarctic minke whales, 50 fin whales and 50 humpback whales, potentially including the famous white whale Migaloo.

"By Japan targeting humpbacks, what they’re really doing is slapping Australia in the face," Capt Watson said.

"They’re saying: `We’re going to go down there and do whatever we want and your Government doesn’t have the guts to stop us’.

"All it would take to end Japanese whaling is for Australia to demand that they get out of the Australian Antarctic Territory and back that up by sending a navy vessel down there.

"Everybody’s afraid of harming trade relations with Japan. I can tell you right now Japan needs Australia more than Australia needs Japan."  [AAP]

I blogged about these eco-loons last year and here they are at it again this year.  Just to repeat what I said last year, the Japanese have a population of a 128 million, but their home islands can only produce food for 40% of their population.  That is why seafood has been a staple of the Japanese diet. 

Many Japanese feel it is hypocritical of countries like Australia and New Zealand that have small populations, but abundant land to grow food on to criticize the Japanese for providing food for their population.  Many of Japanese feel that if these countries don’t want the Japanese to harvest whales through the legal means that the IWC has allowed them to, then these countries should provide the equivalent amount of food free of charge to Japan.

Many Japanese also feel there is a racist component to this as well.  The Japanese use the scientific loophole to hunt whales while the Norwegians and Icelanders openly hunt whales commercially in violation of the IWC and yet the eco-loons aren’t asking the government to send the Royal Australian Navy to attack Norwegian whaling ships. 

Also if the Australian Navy deployed ships to intercept the Japanese whaling ships the Japanese government would be forced to deploy an overwhelming naval armada to defend the ships.  Australia would lose major face because the Japanese navy is significantly larger than Australia’s.  The Japanese Maritime Self Defense Force has fifty-three advanced destroyers and frigates compared to the Royal Australian Navy’s thirteen frigates. The Japanese have twenty submarines while Australia has six.   The Australian Navy would look feeble compared to the armada the Japanese could put together.

I don’t have a problem with Kevin Rudd, he seems like a perfectly smart and capable guy, but it is the people around him that worry me and this is a perfect example.  Kevin Rudd is a former diplomat so I would be highly surprised if he gives in to the eco-loons on this issue, but I guess time will tell.

I have said this before and I will say it again, if you don’t like the International Whaling Commission’s laws then lobby to get them changed.  Everything the Japanese are doing is perfectly legal unlike the open commercial whaling the Scandinavians are doing.  I watched Free Wily 1,2, & 3 and I just recently took a whale tour off the coast of New Zealand; I like whales but not enough to start a war over them against a country violating no international laws. 

The Worst Used Car Commercial Ever

This has to be the worst commercial  for a used car dealership I have ever seen:

The Queen to Get the Boot Down Under?

Out of all the election issues I have listened to, the decision to remove the queen as head of state of Australia is not one I have heard of.  Despite the relative unimportance of this issue the newly elected Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is making it an issue now:

Australia will hold a referendum on removing the Queen as head of state after Kevin Rudd, the Labor leader and a staunch republican, swept to power at the weekend, bringing an end to 11 years of Conservative rule.

Mr Rudd, 50, a former diplomat, has promised to hold a plebiscite on severing links with the monarchy. He said yesterday that he would withdraw Australian troops from Iraq and ratify the Kyoto pact on climate change.

With 53 percent of the vote, Mr Rudd brought an emphatic end to the 11-year tenure of John Howard, an avowed monarchist who was set last night to become the first Prime Minister since 1929 to lose his seat at a general election.

During the campaign Mr Rudd, who speaks fluent Mandarin and has lived in China, said: “Can I say, we’re going to consult the people again. We haven’t fixed a time frame for doing that, and I think the time will come before too much longer when we do have an Australian as our head of state,” Mr Howard allowed a referendum on the issue in 1999 but it was roundly rejected despite two thirds of Australian voters saying in successive polls that they wanted a Republic with an Australian head of state.   [Times of London]

Talking to guys at work about this, none of them cared about this issue and the concencus was that Rudd is preparing to make a big issue over this in order to cover up the back tracking of election promises he made that is sure to come.  I guess only time will tell.