Monday, July 8, 2013

Fickle Australian voters do a complete turn around or is it that they can see through Tony?

A couple of weeks ago, very few people would have picked that the Coalition led by Tony Abbot would do anything other than completely annihilate the Labor Party at the upcoming elections. Julia Gillard (for all the wrong reasons) was leading a party over the cliff; to a place from which most saw them as taking years to resurrect. The infighting in the Labor Party just added to that prospect.
Then, along comes Ned Kelly---oops I mean Kevin Rudd and all bets are off if anything can be taken from the polls. One must ask---‘Did Australians really hate the ‘hard lady who sometimes cried,’ that much? It can’t have been her policies alone, because apart from a bit of tweaking here and there, they are basically the same as Kevin’s. It must therefore be about perception with undertones of a deeply sexist Australian society. It seems that ‘strong women’ are not favoured in Aussie politics. That Australian women have fought to build a strong Australia just as hard as men (some would say more) seems to have been relegated to a place that does not take into account their huge contributions.
I have alluded to Australia being a ‘hard place,’ in every sense of the word, in previous blogs and this latest turn around adds to my ‘perception.’ Maybe I have totally missed the point (I can hear the raucous cries of—you got that right mate!’) OK, you have brought back Kevin, but the problems you face are the same. Is it that a man is now mouthing the solutions that you can get on with things and put things ‘right?’
I remain perplexed!

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Try this wonderful and naughty recipe. It's from my cousin Barbara.

Hi Neil and Rio herewith recipe for Chocolate Fudge

500gms chocolate bits
60gms butter
2 tbsp rum
400 gms sweetened condensed milk (not Lite)
1/2 cup roughly chopped macadamia nuts

Place foil in a lasagne type dish cover bottom and sides.
Combine chocolate bits, condensed milk and butter in large saucepan and stir constantly over low heat, without boiling, until smooth. Stir in rum and macadamias. Spread evenly into prepared dish, cover and refrigerate until set before cutting. Enjoy!!!

 I am going to try it with various other liquers and nuts and maybe dried berries. I shall of course only have small pieces.

NIMBYism raises its head again, this time in the 'richer' suburbs.

Oh no! Jets are going to be flying over some inner city suburbs in an experiment to lessen the noise and pollution for those areas traditionally encumbered by the activities of the airport. How terrible and ‘unfair.’ ‘It may affect values,’ claim local residents. OMG---we can’t have that! The flight paths should stay as they are; right through South Auckland, where the people don’t matter!
Get real Royal Oak and other atlas. Why not share the burden of having an airport that brings huge numbers of tourists and serves NZers so well? For year the residents of Otara and Papatoetoe, just to mention a few, have put up with the noise and pollution from the jets as they zoom in over their houses.
For a start, todays planes are quieter and less polluting, so man or woman up, and better still---shut up. Technology is on your side and as the years pass, the noise and pollution will lesson. If you can’t hack it---do what many South Auckland people have done---move! If you want peace and quiet, try the South Island. They need people. Oops, they may not want NIMBY Aucklanders!
I have noticed the planes as they come nearer to where I live. I just get used to it and I very much doubt that my little house in the glen will devalue. It even gives my elderly neighbours something to watch. They are not complaining!

Saturday, July 6, 2013

So you think that the casino deal is good for NZ and Auckland?

The casino deal is being touted in some quarters as the best thing since sliced bread. Those who are praising Johnny's latest bellicose announcement are being sucked into the big lie that Auckland is 'coming of age' and that there will be many benefits, the least of which is the large number of jobs. Yes, there will be jobs, both in the construction period and for the actual running of the business once it is built.
Lets just think about that claim for a moment. Forget about the social costs (that we are all going to be paying for!) in the form of 'broken families,' and the crime that feeds off these type of establishments. The jobs after the construction period, will be mainly low paid ones, often taken up by people who cannot afford to live near the city and have to spend their meagre pay on travel costs, further eroding any benefit they may have. Sure, a job's a job, and I am not decrying that, but lets get real about just what the employment really is.
So JK, (and Len Brown) don't go crowing about your magnificent  'victory.' Len won't gain so much, other than possibly extending his time in office but JK and his friends are the only real beneficiaries of this neighbour to the giant syringe in the sky!
www.authorneilcoleman.com

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Egypt must not become another Syria! That means 'hands off,' USA and Russia.

There is little doubt that Egypt faces a torrid time over the next few years. After having experience the nearest thing to a free and democratic election, it now finds itself facing a return to the dark old days of a military dictatorship, albeit one that is supported by a large proportion of its people.
When war planes and helicopters fly over the vast crowds in the ‘square,’ and receive applause and shouts of joy, one must remember that things can take a very different turn when those same weapons are turned on the people. Crowds are fickle in their reaction political and real life events. The huge numbers were drawn to the streets because they were unhappy with the incumbent President Morsi and his Government.
Perhaps Egyptians have been a tad inpatient for the economy to improve after what can only be described as a basket case performance since the demise of the former dictator. The people in the streets are angry for a myriad of reasons, not the least the economy and the perceived direction of President Morsi. His plan to take Egypt in the direction of an Islamic and possibly a fundamentalist Islamic future did not sit well with many Egyptians.
Women in particular felt that they had been relegated to a role that they thought was something from the past, a role of subservience and poor representation in the political process. Young people had their grievances, one of which was the movement towards curtailing their rights to express themselves in this modern world. Morsi was playing a dangerous game. On the one hand he was trying to appease those who elected him and that large group is a conservative branch of Egyptian society, especially away from the big cities. On the other hand, he had to walk tight rope that had the liberal non-religious on the other side of the ‘rope.’ It is difficult to say which group is the more numerous, but his actions were beginning to show that he was not taking the vast majority of Egyptian people with him on his religion-based state.
I am uncomfortable about the way in which Morsi has lost power. The military seems to have a stake in Egyptian society that is more reminiscent of a less than democratic past. Of course they are not alone in this. Just look back to the bad old days of Greek history and the role of the army or take a glance at Argentinian history to see like-minded movements. In the case of Egypt though, it feels like the military have the ‘temporary’ support of the people.
Morse was elected and it was the first time that a relatively free expression of the peoples’ will brought him to power. It is what he has done since (or not done) that has put him offside with the people. What Egypt does not need is what we are witnessing in Syria. To avoid this, the major players in the region, must take a deep breath and stay clear of trying to influence the result of this latest move in Egypt. The USA and Russia must stay clear and let the people of Egypt chose their own destiny, painful as that may be in the short to medium term.
I am uncomfortable about the imprisonment of the leading figures in the Muslim Brotherhood movement. If there is to be any agreement about Egypt’s future, imprisoning a major ‘force’ should not be part of the solution. This very group that became the government sprang from many years of fighting to gain recognition. Not letting them be part of the future, merely thrusts Egypt back into the terrible past.
One can only hope and pray that the people of Egypt come through this crisis and emerge as a state that has its own character and one that serves all the people.
www.authorneilcoleman.com

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Before and ----plus 3 months pictures.

I shall let the pictures speak for
Two years ago (2011)
me----or whatever. Off to take Perdy for a walk now!
Today, at work, 4th July NZ time, 2013

Vets tell us that throwing a stick for your dog is dangerous!

I just read that Vets in NZ and elsewhere have condemned the throwing of sticks for your doggie to retrieve. Is this PC for dogs a bit over-the-top? Hell no. IT is about time that we curtailed this terrible practice. I am so over it. I throw my much reduced weight behind the efforts of the ‘Doggie control, spoil the fun council. Oops, that doesn’t exist-----yet!
I must take a balanced look at this pronouncement. Since dogs invaded our psyches and became an integral and very loyal part of our lives, they have demanded attention. We feed them, brush them and play---which usually means at least one daily walk. For most dog owners that walk includes a ‘toy.’ You can choose the flash pet-store variety or turn to nature and pick up a stick and throw it. In the case of my dog, a manic Jack Russell, the bigger the stick the better. She often responded best to huge sticks, several times her size.
She would take that stick and challenge other dogs to attempt a ‘hand-over.’ Then the battle would begin. It didn’t take me long to realize the threat to dogs and to humanity. She enjoyed nothing more than a threesome. Before you get your hackles up, I mean she would tempt two other dogs to join in and they would have a three-way tug of war-----at speed. It may have looked funny, but if you or any other peace-minded dog got in the way of this Boadicea-like entourage, then their chances of coming off unscathed were much reduced. That crazy rush of dog-propelled mischief was enough to graze human knees and lower legs and probably sent many other dogs to a psychiatrist.
I decided to at least limit the size of the potential weapon but I remained a bit wary of throwing sticks. The report I read this morning talked about possible injuries re mouth parts and teeth. Yes, we have all been in the position of throwing the stick, but maybe the vets are correct. I am not saying don’t do it at all. Perhaps it comes down to being aware and keeping a close watch on the type of stick your use; one that will not easily splinter and one that won’t injure us dog daddies and mummies.
I have long preferred throwing a ball. OK, I admit it--- I can’t throw anything that far anyway and I don’t want the young people to continually ‘show me up’ when they offer to throw the ball or stick so much further than I possibly can. I just make myself feel ‘inflated’ by using one of those ‘throwers.’ Wow---watch out Valery Adams. I feel like an Olympian!