Sunday, March 11, 2007

Titled: Don't want national ID? Surrender your passport

The ID-card bill only advanced through Parliament after assurances were given that those who needed a passport and did not wish to participate in the National Identity Scheme would have the choice to opt out.

But, as implemented, the only opt-out for British citizens is that they will be able to refuse the physical ID card but, if they wish to travel abroad, they will have to provide the same information for storage in the national database. They will also still have to pay the nearly $200 fee charged for both an ID card and passport – or stay in the UK for the rest of their lives.

Yup - Voluntary - As long as you never leave the country or want to come back...

<sarc> Didn't see that coming </sarc>


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 3/11/2007 9:13:25 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Tuesday, September 26, 2006

Titled:   IAEA commissioner falls into water tank at Czech nuclear plant

A US commissioner from the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) emerged unharmed after falling into a water tank at the Dukovany nuclear power plant on Friday.

The daily Mlada fronta Dnes reported Friday that commissioners training at the facility were moving around the plant in a group. One of them, however, left the group and fell into the tank. The water in the tank was not radioactive.

And these are the guys we are supposed to listen to on Iran, North Korea and other hot-spots...

 


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 9/26/2006 4:41:38 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Friday, September 22, 2006

Titled:    Racist Rev Row

A driver in Scotland is fines ~$250 and spends a couple of days in jail for the ultimate dhimmi crime:

A DRIVER spent two nights in jail after being accused of "revving his car in a racist manner".

Mechanic Ronnie Hutton, 49, yesterday described his court ordeal which finally ended when prosecutors dropped the allegation of racism.

But he was still convicted of a breach of the peace for revving the engine of his £25,000 Lotus.

It's coming this way...


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 9/22/2006 2:42:53 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Thursday, September 21, 2006

Titled:   Animal activists free 15,000 farmed fish to their deaths

POLICE have warned fish farmers to increase their security after 15,000 halibut were released from their cages in an attack believed to have been carried out by animal rights activists.

Thousands of dead fish are being washed up along the west coast of Scotland after the raid at Kames Marine Fish Farm, near Oban. The perpetrators are thought to have attacked last week. Detectives believe that the attack could be linked to a spate of other farm attacks throughout the country. The letters ALF (Animal Liberation Front) were spray-painted near by.

 

The loss is estimated to have cost the fish farm at least £500,000 as boats, cranes and offices were also vandalised. The halibut died from starvation or getting caught in seaweed. They were also being eaten by herring gulls and otters.

The fish farmer, who did not wish to be identified, said: “They claim they liberated them into the sea but sadly, as we all know, farmed animals, whether they are fish or any animals, don’t survive unless they are looked after.

The fish farmer added: “We farm them in a sustainable way. The welfare of the fish is at the forefront of our minds. Isn’t it better to have farmed fish than to be pillaging the seas where stocks are declining dramatically?”

Fish farms in Scotland, Kent and the South West have been attacked in the past year.


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 9/21/2006 11:07:52 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Titled:   Brits break speed record

A BRITISH team has broken the land speed record for diesel-powered engines.

The JCB Dieselmax team averaged a speed of 328.767 mph, officials confirmed.

The team jetted out to Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah to undertake their feat yesterday afternoon. 

The car, driven by Wing Commander Andy Green, was powered by a version of the same engine used in JCB diggers.

The team beat the previous record of 235mph which has stood for more than 30 years.

In 1997, Green became the fastest man in the world when he drove ThrustSSC through the sound barrier to a speed of 763.035mph.

It's good to hear someone still has some character over there...


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 8/23/2006 7:54:38 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Friday, July 07, 2006

Titled:   Nation remembers 7 July victims

As the people of the UK pause to remember the slaughter of innocents by Islamic terrorists on this morning a year ago, another group meets for a different purpose.

Yes folks, its Islam Expo! An event of family fun and forgiveness organised to coincide on the first anniversary of the tube and bus bombings. This tactful group have lined up a great program for the morning, including the sell-out session "Jihad: Holy War?" in the Great Hall at 11am.

"Islam is not just part of the East anymore," said Mr Hibatullah. "It began there, but is now very much part of Europe, part of Britain.

"Look at these pictures. Here is one of the Union Jack in the style of Islamic calligraphy. I don't think the flag is the trade mark of the British National Party anymore, is it?

To me, the once proud Union Flag looks like the shredded remains from a bomb blast. They can't even take the time to make sure the colors are in the right place.

"We are trying to give people a sense off Islamic history, of identity but, crucially, we are trying to provide means through which British Muslims can show how they have contributed to our society."

On the 7th, most of the UK can remember very clearly how the British Muslims have contributed to society.


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 7/7/2006 2:04:03 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Wednesday, July 05, 2006

Titled:   Peace activist hit rocker in spat over girl, say UK police

A while back I wrote of a ungrateful, yet lucky guy who was rescued by accident from losing his head in Iraq. Ironically, Phil Sands owes his life to those he was trying to hinder.

Another human shield bus passenger who went to Iraq, Christiaan Briggs, is now on trial for putting a rock star into a coma.

Police say the incident occurred on June 22 when Briggs allegedly punched 19-year-old Billy Leeson, causing the rising rock star to hit his head on the ground.

Leeson, the lead singer with rock band Les Incompetents - who have supported Pete Doherty's group Babyshambles - was "still very ill", said Scotland Yard spokesman James Nadin.

His condition was described as "critical but stable".

Mr Nadin said an argument broke out between the pair after Briggs allegedly "made advances" towards Leeson's girlfriend.

... Briggs was a London-based list candidate for the Green Party in the 2002 election.

With "peace activists" like these, who needs terrorists?

From his blog:

The change I wish to see is not simply that of countless Iraqi lives spared, but that of possibly inspiring just a small group of people I know; my family, friends, and community (Napier, New Zealand), illustrating to them an unbelievably important and simple lesson I learnt recently: Wanna be happy? Just centre your life around making others happy.

Still got a lot of progress to go, it seems.


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 7/5/2006 4:29:02 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Thursday, June 22, 2006

No, not from Iraq. John "I have the hat" Kerry's resolution to cut-and-run from Iraq was soundly defeated 86-13. He did however characterize it as a great victory:

Feingold and Kerry declared the vote a victory, since their bid last week to mandate a pullout by December 31 got six votes.

"It was terrific," Kerry said. "Several votes more than we anticipated."

Which is like Germany claiming it won the Second World War because it involved more people that their first attempt.

The withdrawal mentioned in the title is instead from Germany itself, the US having lost a pitched battle against superpower Ghana in the World Cup.

Yes - Ghana! Noted mainly for colorful cloth:

Perhaps the most visible (and most marketable) cultural contribution from modern Ghana is Kente cloth, which is widely recognized and valued for its colors and symbolism.

And now known for keeping #5 ranked USA out of the World Cup finals.


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 6/22/2006 4:37:21 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Thursday, June 08, 2006

Titled:   UK TIMES SMEARS OUR MARINES (UPDATED WITH RESPONSE)

Michelle Malkin is doing a good job keeping on top of the latest press outrage.

Posted on June 1st in the UK Times:

Posted in the same paper, April 2005:

Yup, same picture - different story.

Using pictures of a terrorist execution to smear the Marines.

Shameless.


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 6/8/2006 10:52:28 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Titled:    Eurovision - Good Lordi!!

Lordi

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A while back I mentioned one of the strangest and most original entries for the Eurovision Song Contest, Lordi, from Finland.

They WON.



Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 5/23/2006 4:21:47 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Sunday, May 14, 2006

Titled: Fare comment!

Drudge brings us a snippet of an unlikely hero, trying so hard to please, yet so far out of his depth. A taxi driver waiting in the lobby at the BBC was apparently mistaken for an expert in online music and rushed onto air. He gamely manages to bluff his way through a couple of questions before being whisked away. The best part is the look of sheer horror and confusion on his face when he is introduced and realizes why he is there.

Click here for the video.

The BBC apologised, saying the mistake occurred because the man was wearing Mr Kewney's name tag. Mr Kewney said: "Everyone seems to think he was a taxi driver waiting in reception to take me home. But no one knows for sure."

He added: "There were several surprising things about 'my' interview. Judging by my performance, English wasn't my first language and I didn't seem to know much about Apple, online music or The Beatles." He said the taxi driver "seemed as baffled as I felt".

Last night, the driver's identity remained a mystery. None of the taxi firms regularly used by the BBC would admit to employing him.

Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 5/14/2006 8:41:44 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Monday, May 08, 2006

Titled:   Walk a Quarter-Mile or Die

If you can walk a quarter-mile, odds are you have at least six years of life left in you, scientists announced today.

And the faster you can do it, the longer you might live.

While walking is no guarantee of health or longevity, a new study found that the ability of elderly people to do the quarter-mile was an "important determinant" in whether they'd be alive six years later and how much illness and disability they would endure.

"The ability to complete this walk was a powerful predictor of health outcomes," said study leader Anne Newman of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. "In fact, we found that the people who could not complete the walk were at an extremely high risk of later disability and death."

Newman and colleagues recruited nearly 2,700 white and African-American men and women aged 70 to 79 to complete in non-running races. All the participants were screened and determined to be in relatively good health, and they had all said they had previously walked that far with no problem.

However, only 86 percent of them finished.

The scientists then monitored the health and mortality of all participants for the next six years.

"There was a big gap in health outcomes between people who could complete the longer walk and people who could not, with the latter being at an extremely high risk of becoming disabled or dying," Newman said. "What was really surprising is that these people were not aware of how limited they actually were."

Finishing times were found to be crucial, too. Those who completed the walk but were among the slowest 25 percent faced three times greater risk of death than the speedier folks.

This probably has a good correlation to the recent study showing the fact that the Brits are generally more healthy than Americans. Walking to and from shops and around town provides much more exercise than the equivalent US experience. I think I can still do the quarter-mile, but it sure is easier to drive.


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 5/8/2006 12:18:20 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Friday, April 28, 2006

Titled:    Finland Squirms as Its Latest Export Steps Into Spotlight

Has Dave thA decided to make up for a week or two of slow posting? Lost his job? 3 posts in one day? Well, I just couldn't resist reporting a story that digs deep at the European psyche.

For those of you unfamiliar with the Eurovision Song Contest, it is a yearly ritual of polite boredom, politics and occasionally music where the ever-expanding empire of Europe and guests pits its singers against each other.

It used to include a jury in each country that would award marks for all the other countries except themselves. This would lead to predictable voting, with the French always voting down the Brits and other nationalistic rivalries. (The UK scored zero overall in 2003, probably a reflection of the Iraq invasion as much as a poor song choice.)

This may explain why Ireland, famously neutral, has won seven contest, also a record.

Strange rules abounded thoughout the years - songs had to be sung in the local dialect - even the weird Maltese,  and with Lithuania singing in Samogitian which is a dialect of Lithuanian, making many songs totally incomprehensible to most viewers.

Norway holds the record for scoring zero point in three years ("nul points"), closely followed by Turkey and Austria.

The maximum duration of each song is three minutes, and although musicians of any genre can play, the musicians and songs selected for the Contest tend towards very commercial pop. Some viewers of the Contest view the event as a combination of camp entertainment and a musical train wreck (a fact played upon in the UK broadcast with the sardonic BBC commentary of Terry Wogan) and a subculture of Eurovision Song Contest drinking games has evolved in some countries.

It's worth noting that the voting system used for the Contest was originally designed to select a single compromise winner from a large field of candidates. A number of countries use this same system to select their entries, some of them going through several rounds of voting before selecting a winner. After repeated iterations of the system, variations from middle-of-the-road pop music tend to be eliminated.

So it is with great humor that I note the entry from Finland this year:

Don't forget this is a competition famous for the likes of Abba, and Céline Dion with most winners fading immediately into obscurity.

They have eight-foot retractable latex Satan wings, sing hits like "Chainsaw Buffet" and blow up slabs of smoking meat on stage.

"In Finland, we have no Eiffel Tower, few real famous artists, it is freezing cold and we suffer from low self-esteem," said Mr. Putaansuu, who, as Lordi, has horns protruding from his forehead and sports long black fingernails.

As he stuck out his tongue menacingly, his red demon eyes glaring, Lordi was surrounded by Kita, an alien-man-beast predator who plays flame-spitting drums inside a cage; Awa, a blood-splattered ghost who howls backup vocals; Ox, a zombie bull who plays bass; and Amen, a mummy in a rubber loincloth who plays guitar.

It is not the first time the contest, which began in 1956, has spawned discontent. Last year's Ukrainian entry song was rewritten after being deemed too political by government officials in Kiev because it celebrated the Orange Revolution. When Dana International, an Israeli transsexual, won in 1998 with her hit song "Diva," rabbis accused her of flouting the values of the Jewish state.

But not everyone in this Nordic country of five million views the monster squad as un-Finnish. Some Finns say that Lordi is right at home and that the band's use of flaming dragon-encrusted swords and exploding baby dolls expresses the warrior spirit of the Vikings.

Europe isn't what it used to be.

In 2006 the format of the Eurovision Song Contest was sold to an American Broadcaster in order to compete with American Idol in the ratings. The member countries of [Europe] will be replaced by the different States and territories of the United States.

Watch out USA.

Hat-tip to Nobody's Business again


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 4/28/2006 9:59:59 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Monday, April 17, 2006

Titled:   John Pilger sees freedom die quietly

The UK is making fast moves to complete its Big Brother society. ID cards are imminent. And the British parliament is passing laws to remove debate and oversight of the process. The Legislative and Regulatory Reform Bill will remove the right of parliamentary scrutiny of government legislation under the guise of "cutting red-tape."

From the New Statesman:

It will mean that the government can secretly change the Parliament Act, and the constitution and laws can be struck down by decree from Downing Street...

...The new bill marks the end of true parliamentary democracy; in its effect, it is as significant as the US Congress last year abandoning the Bill of Rights...

...If you fail to keep an appointment to be photographed and fingerprinted, you can be fined up to £2,500...

...Every place that sells alcohol or cigarettes, every post office, every pharmacy and every bank will have an NIR terminal where you can be asked to "prove who you are". Each time you swipe the card, a record will be made at the NIR - so, for instance, the government will know every time you withdraw more than £99 from your bank account. Restaurants and off-licences will demand that the card be swiped so that they are indemnified from prosecution...

Read it and weep.


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 4/17/2006 1:29:23 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Thursday, April 06, 2006

Titled:   Why black sheep are barred and Humpty can't be cracked

Newspeak (1984):

The underlying theory of Newspeak is that if something can't be said, then it can't be thought. One question raised by this is whether we are defined by our language, or whether we actively define it. For instance, can we communicate the need for freedom, or organise an uprising, if we do not have the words for either? This is related to the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, and Ludwig Wittgenstein's proposition, "The limits of my language mean the limits to my world."

Britain (2006):

TRADITIONAL nursery rhymes are being rewritten at nursery schools to avoid causing offence to children.

Instead of singing “Baa baa, black sheep” as generations of children have learnt to do, toddlers in Oxfordshire are being taught to sing “Baa baa, rainbow sheep”.

“This is fairly standard across nurseries. We are following stringent equal opportunities rules. No one should feel pointed out because of their race, gender or anything else.”

In keeping with the new approach, teachers at the nurseries have reportedly also changed the ending of Humpty Dumpty so as not to upset the children and dropped the seven dwarfs from the title of Snow White.

Ok - so it's not the first or most significant change that has taken place to traditional speech. The actual nursery-rhyme in question was written in 1744 and is related to a tax imposed on wool by the king, which divided receipts equally between the local lord (the master), the church (the dame), and the farmer (the little boy). Black wool was apparently taxed at a lower rate than white wool. So a protest song, became a nursery rhyme and then becomes the target of the government.

Before the original is erased from our collective memories, here are the words in full:

Baa, baa, black sheep,
Have you any wool?
Yes sir, yes sir,
Three bags full.

One for the master,
One for the dame,
And one for the little boy
Who lives down the lane.

Baa, baa, black sheep,
Have you any wool?
Yes sir, yes sir,
Three bags full.

One to mend the jerseys
one to mend the socks
and one to mend the holes in
the little girls' frocks.

Baa, baa, black sheep,
Have you any wool?
Yes sir, yes sir,
Three bags full.


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 4/6/2006 11:08:36 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Titled:   This ID project is even more sinister than we first thought

As we look East to the UK's slow slip into serfdom, as expected, the ID card project continues to become more sinister by the day. The Observer, not know for wild conjecture, brings news of the latest changes, rumors and talk:

It became clear last week that the government will do anything to get this bill through parliament, including ignoring its own manifesto pledge to make the cards voluntary, a fact that we should remember as each of us entrusts the 49 separate pieces of personal information to a national database.

Remember that lesson - agree to something as long as it is voluntary, and soon it is mandatory.

Oddly enough, the compulsory provision of personal information to the government database is not the greatest threat to our freedom, though it is in itself a substantial one. The real menace comes when the ID card scheme begins to track everyone's movements and transactions, the details of which will kept on the database for as long as the Home Office desires.

Lesson two - the initial purposes of the system - preventing terrorism - is soon forgotten as new uses are discovered.

Over the past few weeks, an anonymous email has been doing a very good job of enlightening people on how invasive the ID card will be. 'Private businesses,' says the writer, 'are going to be given access to the national identity register database. If you want to apply for a job, you will have to present your card for a swipe. If you want to apply for a London underground Oystercard or supermarket loyalty card or driving licence, you will have to present your card.'

You will need the card when you receive prescription drugs, when you withdraw a relatively small amount of money from a bank, check into hospital, get your car unclamped, apply for a fishing licence, buy a round of drinks (if you need to prove you're over 18), set up an internet account, fix a residents' parking permit or take out insurance.

Lesson Three - Soon enough you will not be able to live a normal life without the "voluntary" card.

One of the most chilling passages in the bill is section 13 which deals with the 'invalidity and surrender' of ID cards, which, in effect, describes the withdrawal of a person's identity by the state. For, without this card, it will be almost impossible to function, to exist as a citizen in the UK. Despite the cost to you, this card will not be your property.

Lesson Four - Even if you have a card, they can take it away, effectively crippling your ability to function.

ID cards are coming this way too, such as those disguised as federally-approved driver's licenses in the Real ID Act of 2005. Note also that cards of this type are mandated for air travel in other bills up for consideration such as the H.R. 4439: Transportation Security Administration Reorganization Act of 2005. This bill seems to require a passport or ID Card for all air travel, domestic or international.

Remember - it's only voluntary until it isn't.


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 3/22/2006 10:46:17 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #   
 Thursday, March 02, 2006

Titled:   Anger over UK gun register delay

Just as Canada learns that gun registration is a thankless and expensive task, the UK marches onwards with plans to repeat the exact same experiment and hopes to achieve different results:

The government has said it still plans to set up a UK gun register amid mounting criticism over its delay.

Commons Leader Geoff Hoon said the government was still committed to a register as the UK prepares to mark 10 years since the Dunblane massacre.

...

Mr Hoon replied: "I recognise the disappointment, and I share it, that the national firearms licensing management scheme has taken so long to deliver.

"The Government remains fully committed to the project and it is planned to be rolled out to all forces in England and Wales from June, assuming that the final pilot in May is successful."


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 3/2/2006 4:14:45 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #   
 Friday, February 24, 2006

One thing worth keeping an eye on for those interested in the future of the US, the dollar, savings and 401ks is the approaching Iranian Oil Bourse. In real simple terms, oil is sold in dollars only, which forces all other consuming nations to keep buying US currency. Now Iran is opening a Euro-denominated oil bourse in March, just a few weeks away. This will enable it to sell oil to Europe and the rest of the world for euros instead of dollars, meaning that there is a lot less reason for countries to hang onto their stockpiles of dollars. A much more detailed version is found here.

Add to this the rapidly rising inflation rates in the US, which continuously erodes the value of overseas dollar holdings and you have another reason to ditch the dollar.

Remember Iraq tried this just before the second Gulf War, although it was severely shackled by the UN Bribe Oil for Food Program.

If the dollar drops in value, everything we import, especially oil, will become a lot more expensive.

There are some upsides, especially for exports and balance of trade:

A key effect of devaluation is that it makes the domestic currency cheaper relative to other currencies. There are two implications of a devaluation. First, devaluation makes the country's exports relatively less expensive for foreigners. Second, the devaluation makes foreign products relatively more expensive for domestic consumers, thus discouraging imports. This may help to increase the country's exports and decrease imports, and may therefore help to reduce the current account deficit.

And some downsides, including that pesky inflation problem which will eat away at the real value of investments and savings:

A significant danger is that by increasing the price of imports and stimulating greater demand for domestic products, devaluation can aggravate inflation. If this happens, the government may have to raise interest rates to control inflation, but at the cost of slower economic growth.

And the thing about inflation is you can't solve it by printing more money. You have to increase interest rates, restricting the money supply. Which is bad for investment and spending, especially on the now more costly imports.

And VERY bad for the housing market. Mortgage rates would rise, slowing the housing market and lowering house values. On the other hand, house price reductions would be partially offset due to inflation making many homeowners feel a little better even as their assets lose real value.

Interesting Times - Keep your powder dry - Buy Gold!


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 2/24/2006 9:04:47 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #   
 Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Hey - a movie about Libertarianism? Maybe not in the way you think:

As SayUncle says:

V for Vendetta’s movie tagline is:

People should not be afraid of their governments. Governments should be afraid of their people.

Based on that, I’ll go see it.

A more in depth review can be found at Libertas, which puts forward a conservative view of movies:

Make no mistake about it (and question all the authorities who tell you otherwise): this film set in the jolly ol’ England of the not-so-distant future is very much about America here and now. Or more accurately: it is a paranoid, left-wing fever dream of what America is here and now. On that level, it can be amusing at times (unintentionally, because this film is oh-so-very self-important…as I’m sure will be the reviews that call it “brave” and “thought-provoking”). It is also educational in that it serves as a psychological study of left-wing projection and paranoia. Needless to say, this is one misguided, naive film that is everything it accuses the government within the film of being: fear mongering, deceitful, hateful, and propagandistic. This irony, unfortunately, seems to be lost on director James McTeigue and writers Andy and Larry Wachowski (who adapted Alan Moore and David Lloyd’s graphic novel).

It seems that Holywood has again taken a noble aim, and twisted it 180 degrees. The right-wing oppressive government is shown using the tools and methods of the left, leaving it a mish-mash of ideologies and wasting an opportunity to tap into the growing awareness of "small-l" libertarianism.

Probably worth a look for the action and neat comic-style imagery.


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 2/21/2006 10:19:52 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #   
 Tuesday, February 14, 2006

Titled:   The threat of ID cards gets closer

Samizdata brings us news of the UKs decision to make ID cards voluntary compulsory. Yes, despite the promises of a voluntary system, mentioned before here, MPs made it compulsory for people to be given cards - and put on a register - when they apply for passports.

The BBC reports that even investigation of the costs of the system should be ignored:

Home Secretary Charles Clarke had said a stand-alone ID card would cost £30, while one linked to a passport would cost £93.

But that figure has been disputed, most notably by a London School of Economics report estimating the cards could cost up to £300 each.

Of course the cards are still called voluntary, but:

"The only way in which people will be able to opt out of the system is by giving up their right to travel abroad.

Now is the time for me to decide. I still have British citizenship and a current passport alongside my US one. I use it to get in the short line through customs when visiting family in the UK. When renewal comes due, and that is pretty soon, I will probably not renew it. The cost in terms of liberty and money is just too great.

The Brits will lose my $400 and I will have to wait a little longer at Gatwick Airport. I'll pay that price.

Posted by Dave the still-hyphenated American


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 2/14/2006 12:05:31 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #   
 Monday, February 13, 2006

Titled:    Anders Fogh Rasmussen reveals his dhimmi side

Dhimmi Watch notes the irony of the current situation in Denmark. Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the Danish Prime Minister recently had an interview in Der Spiegel, where he describes how his country has spent the past few years sending money to the Palestinians to appease the arabs:

SPIEGEL: Your government launched an ambitious program two years ago to strengthen the dialogue and ties with Arab countries that has now failed. How are you going to revive this program?

Fogh Rasmussen: It is a paradox: we were one of the first countries to start such a partnership program and we are among the largest net contributors to, for example, the Palestinians. And now we have to watch as the Danish flag is burned and violent demonstrations against us are organized. The Arab initiative was supposed to accelerate economic and social reforms in the region so it's now a shock to be so severely criticized. At the time, we felt we were at the forefront of modernization.

SPIEGEL: Now some are calling for a drastic reduction in economic support to, for example, the Palestinian Authority.

Fogh Rasmussen: We won't change our policies. It's now time to calm the waters, not cut funds. In the long-term, it would be in our own best interest to rebuild our good relationship with the Arab world.

They paid the Danegeld, then got attacked anyway. And with all that understood, they have decided to continue to pay.

Fools.

Posted by Dave the hyphenated American


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 2/13/2006 2:35:25 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #   
 Thursday, February 09, 2006

Titled:   Don't mention the walk

With Europe still trying to work out exactly what it believes in concerning when cartoons and Freedom of Speech collide, Germany is making restrictive policy of its own. English fans visiting Germany for the soccer World Cup are banned from certain traditional activities, namely walking in a funny way and making jokes about the war. Not the War on Terror, mind, but WWs I and II - yes, those of over 60 years ago.

The Sun Online reports:

GERMAN cops will use sweeping powers to collar England fans doing Basil Fawlty-style Hitler impressions at the World Cup.

Yobs will be instantly banged up for TWO WEEKS if they goose-step like John Cleese in his most famous Fawlty Towers scene.

And hard core louts who give Nazi salutes — like the one jokingly made by Michael Barrymore in Celebrity Big Brother — could be hauled before a judge within 24 hours.

If convicted of inciting hatred they will face jail terms of up to THREE YEARS.

Wearing joke German helmets or any offensive insignia will also result in a stretch behind bars.

Given the British penchant for anti-German humor, I would expect a large portion of the crowd to be herded off into pens to await the end of hostilities the competition.

I guess that imprisonment for alcohol-induced insensitivity is a step more civilized than burning down embassies, but it is time that the so-called developed countries decide that free speech, in all its forms, is worth protecting.


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 2/9/2006 8:35:28 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #   
 Thursday, February 02, 2006

Titled:   More cartoons and protests in Mohammad blasphemy row

The cartoon row mentioned in an earlier article continues to reveal the character of modern Europe.

The Danes and Norwegians rolled over pretty quickly in the face of Muslim complaining. Then France and Germany waded in, republishing the cartoons, followed by Spain and Italy. This was quite surprising for the French, especially after their talk of nuclear weapon use last week. It seemed for a moment that the French had found some backbone.

This morning we see that the French were merely dipping their toes in the water of controversy:

The owner of France Soir, a Paris daily that reprinted them on Wednesday along with one German and two Spanish papers, sacked its managing editor to show "a strong sign of respect for the beliefs and intimate convictions of every individual".

With France resuming its white flag-waving character, what of the rest of Europe?

Switzerland's Le Temps and La Tribune de Geneve ran some of them on Thursday, as did Magyar Hirlap in Budapest. Some European dailies ran cartoons making fun of the controversy.

I thought the Swiss were traditionally neutral? I mean, who would bother to invade a country where every household has to keep a military rifle and ammunition by law? Mind, for all their years of sitting on the sidelines watching the world fight around them, they don't have a lot to show for it. Money, maybe, but what have the Swiss done for you lately? Sure, they have made some fine watches, some lovely clocks and their chocolate is pretty tasty. But hardly world changing innovation and paradigm-busting thought.

Of course the Muslims continue to behave as stereotyped:

In Beirut, the leader of Lebanon's Shi'ite Hizbollah said the row would never had occurred if a 17-year-old death edict against British writer Salman Rushdie been carried out.

"Had a Muslim carried out Imam Khomeini's fatwa against the apostate Salman Rushdie, then those lowlifers would not have dared discredit the Prophet, not in Denmark, Norway or France," Hizbollah head Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said on Wednesday night.

Such nice people. So tolerant. So peaceful. Right...


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 2/2/2006 8:11:10 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #   
 Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Titled:   Why Radical Muslims and the US Don't Mix

The first protected right of the people of the US is the Freedom of Speech.

US Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes in United States v. Schwimmer (1929):

"The principle of free thought is not free thought for those who agree with us but freedom for the thought we hate."

When 12 cartoons - published last September by the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten and republished in a Norwegian paper this month - included an image of the muslim Prophet wearing a turban shaped as a bomb with a burning fuse, the reaction from the Religion of Peace was anything but peaceful.

The religion that thinks nothing of calling for the death of unbelievers, started a string of protests, flag burning and boycotts.

Things took a more sinister turn yesterday when 15 masked gunmen armed with hand grenades, automatic weapons and anti-tank launchers took over an EU office and demanded an apology. They behaved, ironically, much as the cartoon they were protesting against had depicted.

Pakistan's Daily Times reported that they left after half an hour, without an apology, but still angry:

 “We are calling on the citizens of the two countries to take this threat seriously because our cells are ready to implement this all over Gaza,” said one of the militants.

This morning, the UK's Gaudnian (yes, they are bad at spelling) reported a change of mind and a full apology, following further threats and attacks on Danish citizens as far away as Saudi Arabia. 

Denmark's largest selling broadsheet newspaper last night issued an apology to the "honourable citizens of the Muslim world" after publishing a series of cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad that provoked protests across the Middle East.

Just so you didn't miss it, those are the honorable citizens that threaten civilians with anti-tank missiles.

CNN.com reports that a Danish muslim group has accepted the apology:

A spokesman for Denmark's Islamic Faith Community, Kasem Ahmad, said on Danish radio Tuesday that "we will clearly and articulately thank the prime minister and Jyllands-Posten for what they have done."

But they await the reaction from muslims in other countires.

Can you imagine how this would play out in the US? An armed group of terrorists threatening an office of civilians not even connected with the publication of cartoons? Followed by apologies and retractions from the President and the press? Denmark is in the grip of dhimmitude.

We must ensure we protect the liberties we have before we end up like our European cousins.

Update:    France enters Muslim cartoon row

A French newspaper has reproduced a set of caricatures depicting the Prophet Muhammad that have caused outrage in the Muslim world.

France Soir said it had published the cartoons to show that "religious dogma" had no place in a secular society.

Under the headline "Yes, we have the right to caricature God", the paper ran a front page cartoon of Buddhist, Jewish, Muslim and Christian gods floating on a cloud.

It shows the Christian deity saying: "Don't complain, Muhammad, we've all been caricatured here."

The full set of Danish drawings, some of which depict the Prophet Muhammad as a terrorist, were printed on the inside pages.


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 1/31/2006 9:00:51 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #   
 Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Titled:   Italy approves self-defence law

The Italian parliament has passed legislation allowing people to shoot robbers in self-defence.

The new law will allow people to use legally registered weapons to protect themselves or others, and their property and the property of others, from harm.

It applies if there is a danger of aggression and the attacker does not desist.

Wow. It sounds like the Italians finally get it.

Justice Minister Roberto Castelli backed the new law.

"Today criminals will have more to fear while there will be fewer problems for honest people," said Mr Castelli, who belongs to the Northern League.

However, the centre-left opposition expressed concern that it would encourage violence and lead to increased use of firearms.

Hopefully it will encourage violence and the increased use of firearms towards the perpetrators, not the victims as has been the case.

We should keep an eye on the crime figures over the coming months.

(Hat-tip to John Lott)


Posted by Dave the hyphenated American
posted on 1/25/2006 1:53:01 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #