Read more: A treatise on brunch from a curmudgeon’s view.
Be careful of the snake in your bed, the spider in your mind, and the scorpion with the sting in its tail.
Fear is a powerful thing and I remember when I first learned that fear can actually, be manipulated. And it was a long time ago that I let fear rule my life. Unless it is fear of heights... but that is another story.....
So let me tell you how it happened...
Wind the clock back. It was 1972 and I had inherited a small legacy, sufficient to buy a block of land or?
A 50 cc motorbike and a trip to Australia. My goodness, how times have changed. That block of land would be out of my reach these days.
The great Democratic Party President Franklin Roosevelt famously said, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.”
So why do the climate catastrophists – like the anti-nuclear energy crowd – use fear as their main tactic for browbeating an unwilling public into accepting their grotesque bans on natural gas, petroleum, and even nuclear energy (not to mention coal)?
The fear mongers used images to scare people into killing Eisenhower’s dream for the “peaceful uses of nuclear energy,” which died after Three Mile Island and Chernobyl. Fear was the message in the 1959 anti-nuke film On the Beach and the 1964 LBJ “daisy ad” that killed the Goldwater campaign.
George Orwell said “The most effective way to destroy people is to deny and obliterate their own understanding of their history.”
History should be written objectively as it occurred, and time alone should be the judge, not contemporary writers.
Pharaohs in ancient Egypt were well-known for stone-chiseling history. The incoming pharaoh would have the name and exploits of his predecessor chipped off the obelisks and walls, so that it was as if he never existed. It would have been difficult to actually re-write history, as chiseling into sandstone over obliterated cartouches, would have been an undisguisable task.
When my daughter was little, we used to say that she was a Pollyanna. Always wanting to play the glad game. No matter how tough things were, she always tried to see the positive side of things.
Her little face and cheerful smile would always lift our spirits and make us feel happy that we lived in a world with the joy of childhood laughter and a pair of little arms wrapped around our necks while she told us not to worry. " It would all be alright. "
She is now approaching her 50th birthday and is still playing the glad game. She visited yesterday morning and I saw that same little girl who has rewarded life with love and generous dollops of kindness that she has sprinkled on all she knows since she first was introduced to me all those decades ago.
Her own life is challenging, her home life is demanding and her incredible resilience is astounding. I put it down to her early introduction to Pollyanna.
For centuries, dogs have been regarded as indispensable allies in the ongoing battle against pests, particularly rats. Their keen senses, agility, and unwavering loyalty has made them invaluable assets in various fields, from agriculture to urban sanitation.
Rat plagues have haunted our societies since who knows when. The Black Plague was spread by rats. Most children have heard the tale of The Pied Piper of Hamelin.
We talk of " rats deserting sinking ships " and rats being used as euphemisms for liars and traitors. So today, I want to talk about rats. And the dogs who were bred to catch them. It makes me wonder who our modern day Jack Russell's and Fox Terriers will be....
Read more: The Plague of Politicians - A Portrait of Rats in Need of Eradication
The Adelaide River Stakes is the name given to the mass exodus of people prior to and following the Japanese air-raid in Darwin on 19th February, 1942. Thanks mainly to an ill-informed statement by a former Governor General, Paul Hasluck, that it is a story full of shame for our national persona, but it is a myth.
The truth is that with much closer examination it was anything but a shameful episode in our most serious year of peril.
The propaganda disseminated by the government of the day was based on inadequate information, over-the-top censorship and a failure to take the population into its confidence. The faults lie with a succession of failed civilian and military administrations which, like the behaviour of most politicians, was a deliberate trail of cover-ups and refusal to admit fault.
Wine snobs are a bore, don’t you think?
As a one-time food writer, I was often asked to suggest specific wines to go with this or that type of food.
The pretentiousness connected to that sort of business leaves me mostly confused.
Predetermining the taste of an unopened bottle and matching it to a sauce yet to be savoured I leave to prophets and others who take delight in fooling none but themselves.
I expect such blatant heresy leaping from the chronicle of a food writer will send wine bores and budding oenophiles bolting to the nearest maison de vin for spiritual reaffirmation. The truth is, ever so few of us have the well-tuned palate of a Master of Wine.
Read more: A Dish Guaranteed to get Your Guests Crowing - From the Annals of History
This is the story of the story of Ireland's trailblazing seafarer – Grace O'Malley. She met with Queen Elizabeth I at Greenwich Palace.
Grace O’Malley (a. 1530 - 1603) is one of the most famous pirates of all time.
From the age of eleven, she forged a career in seafaring and piracy and was considered a fierce leader at sea and a shrewd politician on land.
She successfully defended the independence of her territories at a time when much of Ireland fell under the English rule and is still considered today ‘the pirate queen of Ireland.’
Back in 2016, millions, from throughout America and around the world, rejoiced when President Trump defeated the favourite, Hillary Clinton.
Millions more cried, screamed and raged tears of unfettered agony to learn that their beloved Hillary had lost the unlosable election.
We enjoyed 4 years of relative calm on the warfront and global economies seemed to prosper. Inflation was low and life was good. But along came the " pandemic. "
Read more: The War between Good and Evil - The Clock is Ticking....
If we believed everything we read, we would probably all be dead. Or worse, vaccinated.
These days, for the vaccinated, it must be like waiting to die every day.
I truly feel sorry for them because they believed in what they were told by the government and the media. But it is not a new phenomenon. It has been with us for a very long time.
The manipulation of truth has been with us since some stupid bugger came up with the idea of having a government.
And we have been fed lies ever since. All veiled and sugar coated in that thing called "Puffery."
Consider this.
Read more: Better to be Slapped with the Truth than Kissed with a Lie
Please donate to
Swiftcode METWAU4B
BSB 484799
Account
Reference PR |
Please email me so I can thank you.
patriot@patriotrealm.com
When our leaders and politicians sign us up to these global accords, declarations and agreements,…
60 hits
It has been truly said that Australia arrived in Gallipoli as six separate States and…
123 hits
Cats have been a part of ocean going ships since time immemorial being needed to…
222 hits
In 1942, my late Uncle was a metallurgist in Papua New Guinea. At the height…
183 hits
We seem to have an outbreak of mental health issues throughout the world. Yelling “allah…
198 hits
Many years ago, about half a century in fact, I played netball with my friend…
199 hits
Some time ago, I watched a fascinating documentary about the history of tanks. I did…
246 hits
Certain battles stand out not just for their strategic significance, but also for the profound…
215 hits
When I was young (many decades ago) we lived on a small family farm at Wheatvale…
227 hits
One thousand and twenty-one submissions to the Covid-19 Response Enquiry, out of the two thousand and…
216 hits
Friends come and go, and sure at times - family too. But Great Granpa …
214 hits
It seems to me that ancient man’s instinct to provide sustenance for his family…
201 hits
John B. Calhoun’s “rat utopia” experiments of the 1960s, designed to be paradises with unlimited…
274 hits
What does the future hold? How the hell will we cope moving on? Our economies…
156 hits
There’s nothing new about academics stoking schoolkids’ climate fears and depression. But nothing I’ve previously…
111 hits
“The record of the Waco incident documents mistakes. What the record from Waco does not…
211 hits
Over a hundred years ago, on February 21, 1916 at 7:15am, the battle of Verdun…
237 hits
In these days of increasing Thought Police intervention in our lives, I had a rather…
230 hits
It was back in the early days of 2019 that Australia was shocked to learn…
283 hits
Most, if not all of us have a freezer of one size or another. But,…
197 hits
Magic happens everywhere and goodness, wonder and delight can be found alive and well throughout…
189 hits
Less than three hours ago, I was sitting in the Israeli Embassy in Washington, DC,…
198 hits
Has the dust settled? Far from it. It is everywhere. We are choking on it.…
249 hits
This Easter, we are praying for a miracle and a rebirth or resurrection where good…
227 hits
This is the dramatic story of how an eccentric environmental speculation grew into a powerful…
385 hits
Comedy is hard because wokeism has moved almost beyond satire. This has required me to…
303 hits
You've probably heard the tale about a chef who killed himself over a dish gone…
197 hits
People who live lives that are out of the ordinary run the risk of being…
260 hits