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  1. I’ve just come on a post from 2011 by USA watcher Lawrence P. Farrell Jr. on their extreme debt going to defence.
    https://www.nationaldefensemagazine.org/articles/2011/11/1/2011november-gentlemen-we-have-run-out-of-money-now-we-have-to-think
    …We see massive deficits in national budget projections. We see a Budget Control Act and a Super Committee in the Congress that make only the faintest stab at closing the gap. We see a national debt piling up an additional $15.3 trillion unfunded liability for entitlements between 2012 and 2021. This is 10 times the Super Committee’s debt-reduction target of $1.5 trillion. We see the total deficit during that period of $9.4 trillion, and interest costs in 2021 rising from $168 billion in 2010 to $928 billion in 2021. If projections hold, one can expect a defense budget of $582 billion in 2021. And in 2021, we see discretionary spending at 26 percent of outlays, versus 61 percent for mandatory spending….

    It has been said that their debt is largely because entitlements to welfare of the people is too high. But a country that cannot share its income and get enough tax to meet practical needs of modern civilisation cannot afford to essay around the world with expensive deadly petards! (Cf NZ/AO.) There is a simplicity in that statement I admit is childlike much as the child in Hans Christian Andersen’s commenting on the nudity of the Emperor who had been sold a fiction about new and magical clothes.

    The tale concerns an emperor who has an obsession with fancy new clothes, and spends lavishly on them, at the expense of state matters. One day, two con-men visit the emperor’s capital. Posing as weavers, they offer to supply him with magnificent clothes that are invisible to those who are incompetent or stupid.
    Andersen’s tale is based on a 1335 story from the Libro de los ejemplos (or El Conde Lucanor),[2] a medieval Spanish collection of fifty-one cautionary tales with various sources such as Aesop and other classical writers and Persian folktales, by Juan Manuel, Prince of Villena (1282–1348). Andersen did not know the Spanish original but read the tale in a German translation titled “So ist der Lauf der Welt” (“That’s the way of the world”).
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Emperor%27s_New_Clothes

    If we can fool ourselves as the story sets out to guy, on an observation made in 14th century, how can we cope with AI that aims to show us we all are all fools, a belief that has been woven by sly people amongst us to exploit us? Sharpen up fellow citizens, your nemesis is coming inexorably. We can’t beat it, don’t want to join it, what methods for joy and survival together?

    Looking at statements about Lord Rutherford he might give us a lead :
    “We’ve got a rabbit here from the Antipodes, and he’s burrowing mighty deeply.”
    Andrew Balfour, Advanced Student, Cambridge University. 1904

    This was inspired by him. perhaps burrowing is the way!

    “He was a man who never did dirty tricks.”
    A. S. Russell, 1950.
    A. S. Russell stated this during his Rutherford Memorial Lecture, 8 Dec 1950.

    “It is now possible by modern methods to produce exceedingly minute quantities of gold, but only by the transmutation of an even more costly element, platinum.”
    Ernest Rutherford, 1936.

    “If you can’t explain to the charwoman scrubbing your laboratory floor what you are doing, you don’t know what you are doing.”
    Lord Ritchie-Calder recollection, 1982.

    “I am always a believer in simplicity, being a simple person myself.”
    Ernest Rutherford, Goettingen, 14th Dec 1931.
    Rutherford was delivering a lecture during the celebrations to mark the bicentennial of the founding of the Royal Society of Gőttingen by the British King George II. During the talk Rutherford stated that he believed the atom had to be a simple thing. The hall, which seated 400 people, was filled 15 minutes before time and some 300 later arrivals were reluctantly turned away. Professor Pohl recorded Rutherford’s talk on his work on nine small acetate discs which were later transcribed onto nine 74rpm records. (See Rutherford Artifacts in Miscellaneous.)

    “It is now possible by modern methods to produce exceedingly minute quantities of gold, but only by the transmutation of an even more costly element, platinum.”
    Ernest Rutherford, 1936.
    https://www.rutherford.org.nz/msquotes.htm

    I suggest taking time to read through these statements before making any decisions involving lots of money, big contracts, or lots of deaths and injuries to anyone. A refreshing cooling to the heated brain.

    1. Nice observations Grey, there is a lot of cognitive dissonance based upon what is good for the pocket.

      Many times I have walked through the tunnels and forts on North Head Auckland, Mirimar Wellington and Ripapa in Lyttelton. Apparently the Russians were coming in the late Victorian era. Papers sold, editors whipped up patriotic frenzy, contractors and armament makers made lots of cash. The Russians of course couldn’t even identify NZ on a map, and had no reason to come. Ben continues this great tradition of telling fairytales for the money men.

  2. Maybe if Australia doesn’t want counter-terrorism to happen against it, it should simply stop being involved in terrorism worldwide- from the bombing of Yemeni civilians, to the American race war against Chinese people?

    1. That’s a good thought MK – try passing that on to the Aussies as is and see if it can get past the portcullis in their minds.

  3. Australia’s rising terrorism threat level reflects growing global instability, with increased extremism fueled by divisive online rhetoric and socio-political tensions, posing new security challenges.

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