Saddam for the ‘Long Drop’ today

According to Al Jazeera Saddam Hussein is due to be executed sometime today. I have stated before I’m against the death sentence mainly due to the possibility of errors in law or questionable guilt however I don’t think any of those factors are relevant in this case.

Some will say his execution will make him a martyr but so what? By definition a martyr is no longer able to terrorise his own people and that has to be seen as a plus. I wouldn’t advocate the death sentence as some sort of revenge for his past deeds; rather I see it as a means to ensure he will never again be able to wreak havoc and terror at home and abroad.

One down but there is still a lot to go

UPDATE:   Saddam was executed at dawn this morning Iraq time (1.00pm EST)

How’s this for predictable and meaningless?

Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International both complained that Maliki’s government had pressured the judge to return guilty verdicts, and called for the accused to be brought before an international tribunal.

“Imposing the death penalty, indefensible in any case, is especially wrong after such unfair proceedings,” said Richard Dicker, director of Human Rights Watch’s international justice programme, after the appeal failed. 

Yeah…right.

The Water debate

How’s this for sheer ignorance?

IT’S like a horror story. Over the centuries, countless millions of people have died from drinking polluted water. The World Health Organisation tells us that 50,000 people per day are still dying from drinking polluted water. Yet, in southeast Queensland, we are being pressured by the state and local governments and the monopoly newspapers to accept recycled sewage being dumped into our dams. Recycled sewage is not safe and I’m telling you that as a fully qualified sewage treatment plant operator.
R. Hobbs
Carrara, Qld

fully qualified sewage treatment plant operator……mmm. Key words Hobbsie. Southeast Queendsland is first world not third. If it comes out of your tap it’s safe to drink and I think you will find we are talking about water extracted from the sewage system and chemically rendered potable, not the sewage itself. You’d think a fully qualified sewage etc would know the difference – just like a fully qualified Garbologist knows all about paper recycling….they do don’t they?

Mind you, the water used by industry for cooling and cleansing most probably doesn’t have to be potable so even if we have to lay a separate pipe system to industrial areas I think in the long term it would impact on our overall consumption. Now that’s a matter for debate as Julie Allen from Camp Hill suggests

It’s all well and good to talk about selective use of recycled water for industry and agriculture (and in some cases that can be a practical option), but does it make sense to dig up cities to build a second pipeline network for recycled water beside a perfectly good existing network just to satisfy the uneducated, the scaremongers and those prone to phobias. Let’s face it – the people telling us that recycled water is safe to drink are the same people who have given us drinking water for the past 100 years. Why should we stop trusting them now?

Why indeed.

In note this morning that CSIRO have stated that the current drought is just a part of the normal weather cycles we have on earth and not Global Warming. Makes sense to me and is based on science rather than the new Global Warming Gospel.

The drought will end but if nothing else it has forced us to look more closely at water consumption and the lack of storage infrastructure occassioned by state governments actively pursueing the Greenie vote as Ray Duncan from Smithfield Heights, so eloquently points out.

THE only reason that there has been a sharp decline in investment in new dams in Queensland in the past decade is because of the Beattie Labor Government’s pathetic pandering to the greens in exchange for their preferences.

This is particularly evident in Cairns, where every time someone raises the prospect of a new dam, the greens howl long and loud and the proposal is immediately quashed. In the forgotten far north of Queensland, we are using a dam that was commissioned in the late 1970s for a population of 35,000. Now, in 2006, with a population close to 130,000, we have the same dam and permanent water restrictions (in the wettest part of Australia). The Beattie Government’s fear of a green backlash against any new dam proposal is holding the rest of us to ransom.

In one way I hope the drought doesn’t break to soon or the politicians will get away with having done nothing for decades and will not be forced to think big, beyond their next term, and fix the problem for once and for all.

It can be done. We are not short of water in Australia. Go for a trip up north in the wet season if you don’t believe me.

We are just short of competant water management.

Back From Darkest Asia

Well, that’s what it seems like. Now resident in the Grand President Appartments, Sukhumvit, Bangkok, the appartment is decidedly presidential after the last eight days in Cambodia. Welcomed also is the front page of the Bangkok Post announcing “Ruthless Aust win back Ashes” All I need to make it a great day is a couple of Poms at the bar tonight

Cambodia – Day One.

We flew out of Bangkok just over a week ago with Bangkok air and had a very good short flight to Phnom Penh. Picked up at the airport by our Khmer contact we drove to Kampot in a Mercedes Van thus heralding my reinsertion into Asian culture. It was a hot insertion as well as the traffic can be best described as chaos in motion. Mitsibishi vans with 15 people inside, three 150cc Honda bikes on the roof and three other people hanging onto them. We watched amazed as one guy transfers from inside the van to the cooler upstairs seats (read roof) and we then pull out to pass a truck to be confronted by 10 Hondas coming straight at us. Everyone merges…against all apparent odds (to a western eye) and we get back into the comparative safety zone of the right hand lane. If the van had seat belts they were not apparent which would’ve gone some way to calm my fears as we risked head-on crashes at a frequency of at least 20-25 per kilometer.

We book into the Sen Monorom Guest House and get used to life at a different pace. The French have a lot to answer for in South East Asia but surely the legacy of their plumbing has to top the list. A bidet is the local answer to hygiene and the bathrooms are unusual to say the least. 2.5 metres square; a toilet in one corner, a hand basin in another, the shower on the wall with intermittant hot water; all with a drain hole on the floor in the furtherest corner from the shower head. This guarantees the floor and your clothes are always wet unless you strip before entering.

The Guest House looks good from outside;

but on closer inspection the painters could’ve used a tape measure;

and maybe R&M could be given a higher priority.

Just saying.

Notwithstanding all the above the staff were very friendly and helpfull and the rate was only $20.00US per day. We went down town and had lunch at a local food/drink bar. Food is good and very cheap while Beerlau costs less than 1.00 a glass and became the preffered drink for the group.

We are in town, fed and watered and ready to start. Through the afternoon we rest up in preparation for meeting the Khmer and expat players at a BBQ at a locals riverside house. We are promised a cow on a spit, plenty of local refreshments and transport to the event on a traditional Khmer long boat.

More tomorrow. I can hear some Poms in the bar and I need to chat to them. I might start the conversation by saying straight face..“We’ve been bush in Cambodia for a week…do you know how the last test went?”

On Leave

Today I commence a journey to Kampot in Cambodia with a view to help bed in a programme that will eventually see a small local village become self sufficient. More on the project after I spend some time on-site. I am looking forward to this weekend in old Bangkok where I spent time during the Vietnam war. Should be fun but not too much fun if you get my drift.

Monday we fly on to Pnom Penh and then to Kampot. I will hopefully be able to blog from there with my take on Cambodia with pics and details of the project. In the new year I will set up a website to publicise and help gain support for the project. Those old South East Asian hands who spent their younger days blowing this part of the world to pieces may consider putting up their hands to help rebuild a small part of a nation shattered by communism. There is more than one way to fight the bastards even if it is remedial rather than preemptive.

Must go…plane to catch.

A new ALP or is it?

NEW Labor leader Kevin Rudd today told voters to give his office a call and share their ideas on how his party should develop policies that offer a clear alternative to the Howard Government.

Do you mean to say he has got this far and doesn’t have a clear set of policies?

I’m not a Rudd fan for the same reason I don’t like my wife when she nags excessively nor my old teachers when they ticked me off too much. I have only heard him harp about Howards policies; never about his own vision for the future and I definitely don’t like the handbag on his left arm; Gillard.

She holds Jim Cairns dear and quotes him in a speech she gave to Melbourne High School students as she extolls the virtues of peace activism, supporting the Soviets and anarchy.

Rudd may not be a loose cannon like Latham but the ropes holding him down are frayed and the ship’s sailing though a heavy swell. With Gillard as navigator there will too much of a risk that the party will keep on veering to port and I for one wouldn’t like Australia going down that road again.

A softer shade of Cairns as Whitlam’s deputy and what has Rudd promised in return for the support of the left?

I liked Beazley and he definitely has my commisserations for the very bad day he had. I also think there is a smattering of talent in the ALP but it remains to be seen whether Rudd will be able to pick and choose his own front bench nothwithstanding his demand for that very right.

Mr Rudd, who had an emphatic victory in yesterday’s caucus ballot, is now under pressure to promote backers into senior front bench roles.

Of course he is.

The ALP are in a better position than they were when they opted for the lunatic Latham to lead but I don’t think it’s enough for a ground swell against Howard.

The ALP can attack IR laws all they like but untill they come up with a better policy that includes a guarantee of keeping unemployment down it won’t wash with the electorate. The AWB Cole Commission was a fizzer for those hoping it would bring down Howard and yet that’s all I’m hearing – nag, nag, nag!

Time will tell if new leadership will mean much but I’m betting it won’t be enough to cross the divide.

ARRIVAL OF AUSTRALIA’S FIRST C-17

From Defence Media

What: Media Opportunity – Flypast and arrival of the Royal Australian Air Force’s first Boeing C-17 Globemaster III aircraft.

Where: No 34 Squadron, Richmond Avenue, Defence Establishment Fairbairn, ACT.

When: Media to arrive no later than 11.00am Monday 4 December 2006.

The media release is for journalists but if you’re moving around the capital on Monday then you will be able to witness the arrival of a significant improvement in the ADF’s deployability.

It’s on!

Kevin ‘Tricky’ Rudd has thrown his hat in the ring as Kim Beazley gives in to pressure and declares a spill of his entire frontbench.

Mr Beazley today declared a spill of his entire frontbench following a fortnight of pressure for him to stand aside in favour of Labor’s foreign affairs spokesman Kevin Rudd.

It just keeps on getting better

Labor’s health spokeswoman Julia Gillard will make a statement on the leadership spill later today, her spokeswoman said.

Ms Gillard, the member for Lalor in Victoria, has been mooted as a possible leader or deputy leader.

In the past she was endorsed for the leadership position by former leader Mark Latham.

Personal endorsement by Latham…mmm that should help.

With ‘Tricky’ Rudds carping voice and Julia’s left wing antics it bodes well for us conservatives in 2007.