Only minutes before midnight on Christmas Eve, 1953, the engine driver of the Wellington to Auckland express train will notch back to walking pace in a remote area of New Zealand's North Island's 'volcanic plateau. Most passengers will be sleeping.
The train consisting of eight carriages, a heating unit, postal and guard's van will approach the double span steel trestle bridge, lit by the headlight of the powerful throbbing DX locomotive. At a strategic point the driver will cast a floral tribute into the darkness, where it will come to rest in the gentle waters below to mark the tragic events that occurred here 70 years ago in 1953.
Read more: The Bridge Over The River Cry - A Christmas Eve tale of Tragedy
" A relative who lives in Brisbane was telling me about her visit doing Christmas shopping. She wanted to buy for her young children a Nativity Scene so she could put it on the table and explain the meaning of Christmas. Do you know that none of the shop assistants had a clue what she was talking about or even the real meaning of Christmas. This shows how much Australia has lost over the past generation.
So much for politicians enriching our society by bringing in aliens. To me it shows how bad Australia has got"
And that got me thinking about a Christmas a long time ago.
Read more: Nativity Scenes, Cardboard Boxes, Barbie Dolls and Missing Sheep
General Sir John Monash is one of the truly great Australians. He was an Australian military and civilian leader as well as a great contributor to Australian life. His achievements are outstanding. In my opinion, Monash was not just our most outstanding military leader but our most outstanding citizen of all time.
The achievements of John Monash are so extensive and comprehensive that I cannot condense them into a single post, brief enough to retain the reader’s interest. Therefore I have decided to present them in six episodes of which this is the first. The episodes have been divided into specific eras of his life; Pre 1901 (two parts), 1901-1915 and 1916-1918 and Post WW1.
Some time ago I watched a series on Netflix called " Babylon Berlin." It awoke an interest in the Weimar Republic and the change that occurred in Germany between the First World War and the Second World War when Germany flirted with democracy under the leadership of Hindenburg, the President of Germany from 1925 until 1934.
It was raw, gritty, dark and often troubling. Explicit in its portrayal of the excesses that humanity can so often, like today, embrace or at the very least, tolerate or ignore.
I was struck by the divide between those who had so much and those who had so little. Much like our world today.
From the center of the continental United States to the middle of Australia is 9,241 miles. It’s a little further from London to Sydney—about 10,572 miles. But in economic matters—the laws of economics being both immutable and universal—the distances between the world’s cities and countries are far smaller.
I was recently reminded of this fact while researching the economic history of the Land Down Under. Curious to find out if Australia’s move away from a gold standard bore any similarities to events in the US and the UK, I discovered that the parallels are striking.
Our Governments need to admit that they were wrong. Cut their losses and get us out of the boathouse and set sail once more. We have been at anchor too long.
Set sail on already charted waters and dare to venture out of the so called safe harbour that is politically correct, poll driven mumbo jumbo " I am a rabid wanker and you should all be proud of it. " country.
Can we just start sailing again because I am sick and tired of being stuck in limbo and my sails, quite frankly, are running out of puff.
Read more: Whose Bright Idea Was This? Wankels and Woke Wankers.
By 7.30 am the morning sun had pushed far above a shimmering cloud line. Ignoring that it was final days of a bloody-hot Australian summer it still bit into the weathered necks of some thirty habitual punters who were already milling outside a locked security gate on the Eastern periphery of Sydney’s vast domestic airport.
Meanwhile, some 650 Kms. to the North West, in the NSW city of Armidale, officials were preparing for the 148th running of the Armidale Cup; a horse race that draws punters and good-time blokes from around the nation.
Through the chain-link fence and beyond the ragged grass awaited our chartered DC3.
Read more: Flying High to a Day at the Races - Harking back to the Accidental Punter
A long time ago the universe was made of ice. Then one day the ice began to melt, and a mist rose into the sky.. Out of the mist came a giant made of frost and the earth and heavens were made from his body. That is how the world began, and that is how the world will end. Not by fire but by Ice. An Ancient Scandinavian Legend, quoted by Robert W Felix in his great book:“NOT BY FIRE BUT BY ICE”.
Earth is living in the latter days of the Holocene Warm Era. This is the latest short, fertile, warm interlude within the long, barren, Pleistocene Ice Age.
At 9.41am on Monday 15 December 2014, Man Monis directed Tori Johnson (the manager of the Lindt Cafe in Martin Place, Sydney) to call 000 and say that all those in the cafe had been taken hostage by an Islamic State operative armed with a gun and explosives.
Eighteen hostages were held in the cafe for 16.5 hours. Over that period, 12 of the 18 hostages were able to escape in four separate episodes.
At around 2.13am on Tuesday 16th December, the cafe manager Tori Johnson was executed by Man Moris. Following the execution, police stormed the cafe and another hostage, Katrina Dawson, was struck by fragments of one or more deflected police bullets and died at the scene. The hostage-taker, Man Monis, was also killed in the firefight that followed the police storming the cafe.
When good women get involved with good men, all manner of amazing things can happen. In a partnership of equals, the possibility of one plus one equalling three or even four is not only possible, but it is also extremely likely. While standing alone, one person can only ever achieve the potential output of one. But, when coupled with someone of equal potential, the numbers can change dramatically.
It is time to gather our resources and focus on the job at hand: to get back to OUR world where we worked together in unity and harnessed our strengths and pulled together as a team.
History has shown us that many powerful men partnered with powerful women. Their power may have come from different directions, but they were. as it is said so sagely " Sympatico." They worked in harmony to each other's benefit.
Please donate to
Swiftcode METWAU4B
BSB 484799
Account
Reference PR |
Please email me so I can thank you.
patriot@patriotrealm.com
I am a Christian Brothers College (CBC) old boy and attended a few of the…
133 hits
Between the mid-19th and early 20th centuries, more than a hundred thousand British children were…
221 hits
10 hits
Picture the scene. It is the ACME desert, Somewhere in the MIDDLE of nowhere.......... somewhere…
235 hits
As young folk, didn't some of us feel like rebels without a cause? I am…
241 hits
The Battle of Britain ended on 15th September, 1940 but the Blitz continued long after that. Following…
208 hits
In 1984, Sir Alec Jeffreys, a British geneticist, made a groundbreaking discovery that would forever…
243 hits
As our countries are collapsing under the weight of wokeism, social and communist ideology, who…
207 hits
How often do we lament that we do not have visionaries and forward thinkers in…
229 hits
Yesterday, one of our community members spoke about a film he watched called " Black…
209 hits
43 hits
A perfect storm of crises has been building. It comes from still bubbling rage with…
277 hits
Recently, the internet has gone crazy over the issue of pets being eaten by illegal…
252 hits
When I was a child, my teacher taught us the story of Grace Darling, a…
245 hits
“The stupidity of democracy. It will always remain as one of democracy’s best jokes that…
261 hits
Henry Lawson managed to capture the heartbeat of The Bush. And that heart is under…
275 hits
"The Prisoner," a British television series created by Patrick McGoohan, first aired on the 29th…
281 hits
It is strange that there is no discussion of it, but in two weeks and…
253 hits
During the early years of World War II, the British Army encountered difficulties in advancing…
278 hits
Just as is the case in many countries around the world, Australians are increasingly confused about…
273 hits
In 1929, Joseph Stalin was hell-bent on getting the farmers to forfeit their rights to…
222 hits
Today, I want to talk about Laughter. Humour to be exact. Today, we are talking…
306 hits
The following article was published in 1993. Over 30 years ago. Does the modern bureaucratization…
301 hits
The Weimar Republic was born out of the ashes of World War I, following Germany's…
297 hits
58 hits
Until people learn that the same propaganda they see in media, schools, and entertainment today…
284 hits
I have had a pretty colourful life one way or another. And it got me…
251 hits
“Some of us may forget that, of all the Allies, it was the Australians who…
262 hits
The Emu War is one of Australia's most curious and bizarre historical events. It took…
303 hits
Of all the magnificent units and regiments of the Australian Army I doubt if any…
296 hits
The 1951 waterfront dispute in New Zealand, often referred to as the "1951 Waterfront Lockout,"…
294 hits
During World War II, Australia was a key player in the Allied war effort, providing…
310 hits