Author: Jaeger

Another glorious victory

For the Quebec Labour movement:

A union’s celebration of the first contract with a Wal-Mart outlet in North America turned out to be short-lived. The giant retailer announced Thursday it has closed the Tire and Lube Express centre located in a Wal-Mart department store on Maloney Boulevard in Gatineau.

I wonder who will eventually give up first. Will Quebec workers finally decide it’s not productive to unionize at Wal-Mart or will Wal-Mart give up entirely on doing business in Quebec?

Another countdown

The U.S. public debt now stands at $9,945,578,231,981.59.
It will hit the $10 trillion threshold in the next day or two, up a staggering $1 trillion dollars from the same time last year. I’m not sure throwing another $700 billion of debt on top of that to buy distressed financial assets is supposed to build up anyone’s confidence.

A Brilliant Choice

I have to say when Sarah Palin was first picked as VP candidate I was pleasantly surprised, but didn’t think it would have much impact. I appreciated her frontier conservatism but historically VPs have been almost entirely irrelevant to election campaigns.
But who could have guessed that we’d witness such a media meltdown? The more they churn out unhinged rants like this:

Like many people, I thought, “Damn, a hyperconservative, f***able, Type A, antiabortion, Christian Stepford wife in a ‘sexy librarian’ costume — as a vice president? That’s a brilliant stroke of horrifyingly cynical pandering to the Christian right. Karl Rove must be behind it.”

the more enjoyable it is to see it generating results like this:

Sarah – Just Plain Popular
A solid majority of voters (54 percent) say they have a favorable opinion of Palin, while 27 percent assign unfavorable ratings. This gives the 44-year-old GOP vice presidential nominee the best ratio of favorable to unfavorable responses (2.0:1) of any of the four candidates tested in the survey.

Alexander Solzhenitsyn, RIP

The story.
And a flashback from the great, plain-speaking author:

A decline in courage may be the most striking feature which an outside observer notices in the West in our days. The Western world has lost its civil courage, both as a whole and separately, in each country, each government, each political party and of course in the United Nations. Such a decline in courage is particularly noticeable among the ruling groups and the intellectual elite, causing an impression of loss of courage by the entire society. Of course there are many courageous individuals but they have no determining influence on public life.

Beaches on the Baltic

Just a couple of hours driving north of Berlin and you’re into the vacation area of the Baltic beaches. Once out of the northern suburbs of Berlin the landscape quickly changes to a surprisingly pleasant, green countryside with lots of lakes and forests.
And in a nice change from most places in Europe in July, these beaches are delightfully uncrowded:
OstseeStrand.jpg
Unlike the concrete and steel jungle of Berlin, the towns and villages in this area are far more traditional, with thatch roof houses still fairly common.
reetdachhaus.jpg
Since typical East Germans couldn’t travel west, and most couldn’t afford to travel very far south to other communist countries even if they were allowed to, family vacations typically meant coming here to the Baltic.
It’s quite a nice place, actually, and for some reason it seems no one else wants to come here. Traffic is quite light, and cars with foreign plates are all but non-existent, even though Poland is very close and there’s ferry service to Scandinavia.
I’d have to guess East Germany acquired a poor reputation for welcoming foreign tourists and hasn’t managed to correct it yet. I’m not sure it’s deserved any longer as I found the east German Baltic coast a pretty agreeable place to visit, and a welcome relief from the crushing crowds almost everywhere else in Europe this time of year.
Of course, it may be the unexploded munitions:
Munitions.jpg
While hiking or cycling on the trails in the area you occasionally encounter a fenced-off area announcing deadly danger, evidently old DDR military bases that haven’t been completely cleared yet. Remnants of the communist era do show up even in the most out of the way places.

Extreme makeover – Berlin edition

I last visited Berlin in 1991, when the wall was open but the city was very much two cities. In the west a colourful, modern, hectic western city with all the trappings of a big European city, including foreign tourists and immigrants.
And in the east – a dull, grey, run-down city with few tourists, no immigrants and a population driving awful East German Trabant cars on poorly maintained roads.
Where I stayed was just a few minute walk from Alexanderplatz, near the centre of old East Berlin.
Alexanderplatz.jpg
The building above was once the Centrum Warenhaus, what passed for a department store in communist times. Like much of this part of Berlin, it’s been refurbished inside and out and doesn’t show much evidence that it was ever a communist eyesore. Indeed, you can drive back and forth in many parts of Berlin now and not really notice where the wall was. The roads, trains and stations have been brought up to western standards, as have many, many buildings. The typical concrete slab communist buildings can still be found, but many have been demolished and many more have been refurbished into something more livable.
However, a couple of blocks away I found this:
Stasi-archives.jpg
A classic concrete slab building that hasn’t been touched since the collapse of communism. I wondered why this particular building still stood untouched while so many around it have been modernized and repurposed.
It turns out the building holds the Stasi archives, which are still being preserved.
Another interesting note – two major streets that intersect Alexanderplatz are named after Karl Marx, and Karl Liebknecht, a founder of the German Communist Party. I found this a little shocking at first, especially at such a prominent location, but these communist era names still exist all over the former East Germany. It’s common to see a Marx-Engels Platz, Lenin street, and even a German-Soviet Friendship street, which surprising still exist even though the Soviet Union no longer does. I expected such things would have been renamed by now, but it appears the locals are happy to keep them.

The Messiah called

People of the world – look at Berlin!
BrandenburgerTor.jpg
And so I did.
Actually I was on vacation in Germany before the Messiah arrived in Berlin for his speech. If you think the media here are infatuated with Obama you can not imagine the nauseating, fawning coverage he received over there.
I was in Berlin up until a few days before the Celebrity Himself arrived and had to suffer through the breathless anticipation of his arrival. How the media can fill so many pages and so many hours of coverage when they have nothing of substance to actually report is indeed remarkable.
Fortunately, I had already planned to move on to a beach on the Baltic coast by the time Obama arrived and so I was able to enjoy my vacation anyway.
But even out in the boonies enjoying a morning coffee and skimming the local regional paper I had to put up with daily dose of headlines like Obama Superstar and Berlin in Obama-fever. And this in a local paper that more typically carries local interest stories like describing how the recent weather has been affecting the population of wasps and rats. (It’s been too good for them, apparently.)
I just got back from Germany and since Kate’s away anyway I’ll post of few thoughts and pics from the trip. I spent about three weeks in Germany and drove about 3000kms – and most of it happened to be in the formerly Communist east. I don’t intend to bore you with an exhaustive travelogue – I’ll just post some thoughts and observations that touch on some of the themes frequently covered here.
First observation – a steady diet of schnitzels, wurst and strudels washed down with copious quantities of beer is not at all an effective weight control program.

Crimethink

George Jonas has been practicing crimethink against the Human Rights Commissions since their inception. He addresses the topic again:

To borrow Orwell’s language, anyone retained by Canada’s thinkpol should be a goodthinker, fluent in newspeak. He ought to bring to his task a bellyfeel about crimethinkers and the correct way of dealing with them. He should have a capacity for doublethink and recognize the importance of keeping anything malreported out of the public discourse, especially away from such prolefeed as the Internet.

How Arabs deal with troublesome immigrants

Western countries aren’t the only ones that have to confront crime in immigrant communities. It’s interesting to see how an Arab country like Bahrain reacts to a brutal murder by a Bangladeshi immigrant:

Bahrain will not renew the work permits of thousands of Bangladeshis working in the Gulf state, in a ban expected to heavily impact the nation’s construction industry.

The government officials have repeatedly claimed Bangladeshi immigrants are behind the nation’s growing crime problems.
Bahrain MP Abdul Halim Murad had called on the government to “put a timetable for the deportation of Bangladeshi labourers from Bahrain after their repeated involvement in murders and other crimes”.

One less pavilion in Bahrain’s folkfest.
h/t

More Pavilions in South Africa’s Folkfest

Xenophopic violence continues in South Africa– the toll so far being 62 dead and 670 wounded:

Attacks broke out in a poor neighbourhood of Johannesburg on May 11 and spread across the country, targeting immigrants including Zimbabweans and Mozambicans, whom locals blamed for taking their jobs.

The Ugandans aren’t impressed with South Africans:

We have always known South African black people to be even more discriminatory than the whites who rode roughshod over them during apartheid. We just didn’t think they’d go this far- beating and killing fellow blacks from other countries, blaming them for their economic woes.

The Nigerians are protesting at the South African embassy.
Mozambique claims there has been no retaliation against South Africans but they have absorbed 32,000 people fleeing the violence.
Of course none of this is really new to South Africa, it has just become more intense and is now making the news. Just check out the dismal photo gallery that has been documenting the death of Johannesburg since 2006.
doors_was-heaven_marshall.jpg

The Triumph of the Political Class

This sounds like an interesting book that would be worth the time for Canadians to read, too. While the book addresses British politics I think many of the same maladies and trends apply to Canada as well. We’ve certainly seen a rather stubborn trend of growth and power of the political class in Canada and getting Conservative parties elected has rather less effect on this trend than we would like.
Perhaps we haven’t descended as far or fast down this path as Britain has, and thankfully we don’t have the complications of the EU to deal with, but I think this book might offer some lessons for us in Canada.
Read the whole post here:

His basic argument is that today’s political class has little experience of the real world outside the corridors of power, is drawn from an insular group of metropolitan folk who consider themselves superior to, and cut off from, the ordinary mass; it craves power for its own sake and for its monetary rewards, is corrupt, venal, obsessed by controlling the media, and has damaged and is damaging any institutions and practices – such as the old House of Lords or judiciary – that get in its way. Oborne argues his case with a tremendous passion and penetrating use of argument. At the end of the 334 pages of text one is left – which I think is the idea – feeling rather depressed. With good reason.

And check out the book here.

Nancy Pelosi on the surge

Nancy Pelosi demonstrates her keen understanding of military affairs – and credits Iranian goodwill for the success of the surge:

Asked if she saw any evidence of the surge’s positive impact on her May 17 trip to Iraq she responded:
Well, the purpose of the surge was to provide a secure space, a time for the political change to occur to accomplish the reconciliation. That didn’t happen. Whatever the military success, and progress that may have been made, the surge didn’t accomplish its goal. And some of the success of the surge is that the goodwill of the Iranians-they decided in Basra when the fighting would end, they negotiated that cessation of hostilities-the Iranians.

One hardly knows how to respond to such idiocy. The Iranians are finding it harder to blow up American troops these days, so it must be because of their goodwill. Of course.

Y2Kyoto – the attack of the killer corn flakes

Cereal killer warning over corn flakes:

CLIMATE change could lead to “killer cornflakes” with the most potent liver toxin ever recorded, an environmental health conference has been told.
The effects of the toxins, known as mycotoxins, have been known since the Middle Ages when rye bread contaminated with ergot fungus was a staple part of the European diet, environmental health researcher Lisa Bricknell of Central Queensland University (CQU) said.
“People started suffering mass hallucinations, manic depression, gangrene, abortions, reduced fertility and painful, convulsive death,” Ms Bricknell told the 10th World Congress on Environmental Health in Brisbane today.

Update: And in other news, a greenie muses about why hysterical doomsayers are losing the debate:

When I launched the TalkClimateChange forums last year, I was initially worried as to where I would find people who didn’t believe in global warming. I had planned to create a furious debate, but in my experience global warming was such a universally accepted issue that I expected to have to dredge the slums of the internet in order to find a couple of deniers who could keep the argument thriving.
The first few days were slow going, but following a brief write-up of my site by Junk Science I was swamped by climate skeptics who did a good job of frightening off the few brave Greens who slogged out the debate with. Whilst there was a lot of rubbish written, the truth was that they didn’t so much frighten the Greens away – they comprehensively demolished them with a more in depth understanding of the science, cleverly thought out arguments, and some very smart answers.

Those nasty skeptics, ridiculing hysterical forecasts and then demonstrating a more in depth understanding of the science – that’s just not fighting fair!

Organic Blasphemy

Just noticed this fine piece of blasphemy debunking organic food myths via the corner:

They’re not healthier or better for the environment – and they’re packed with pesticides. In an age of climate change and shortages, these foods are an indugence the world can’t afford, argues environmental expert Rob Johnston

I disagree, actually. They’re faddish hypocritical nonsense that we can easily afford. If farmers want to supply hippies with their organic nonsense so that hippies can feel better about themselves I’m fine with that. But it’s still nice to see these myths being busted in the Independent of all places.

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