Thursday, April 28, 2011

My teams

Inspired by Grog linking me to an old post of his about which sports teams he follows and why, here's my list.

Rugby League:


Tribalism here. Mum grew up in Kogarah (around the corner from what is now known as WIN Jubilee Stadium). Dad grew up in Kiama, on the NSW South Coast (and pretty much in the heart of Illawarra Steelers territory) and ended up living in the St George area.

Australian Rules:


Geographic convenience, really. Well, Sydney and whoever's playing Collingwood ;-)

Rugby Union:


Double lot of teams here. First up, in the NSW Shute Shield is Randwick
Back when I first started getting into rugby union, George Gregan was captain of the Wallabies. Randwick was his club rugby side. Always liked the little fella, stuck with the 'wicks ever since.

In the Super comp, again, geographical convenience gives me the Waratahs


American Football and Major League Baseball

Don't really follow a team, but I will catch whatever game happens to be on OneHD when I'm home. 

Ice Hockey

The newest sport I've been hooked into following.
The Montreal Canadienes.

Fault is all my (Canadian) girlfriend's. Whilst she does live in Ontario, this is her team. And I wasn't allowed to follow the Toronto Maple Leafs, because they suck (although, I write this on the day that the Canadienes were beaten in overtime by the Boston Bruins and knocked out of the playoffs 4-3. Whereas the Leafs didn't make the playoffs - again). What would be nice would be to get some NHL games broadcast here (I'm looking at you, OneHD)


Pretty much all of them. Plus, the obligatory cricket (NSW Blues and Australia).

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Why some NGOs shit me

So last night, I was watching Newshour with Jim Middleton on ABC News 24. They were doing a story on the use of cluster munitions by Qadaffi loyalists in Misrata. In it, they interviewed Laura Cheeseman from the Cluster Munitions Coalition.

She said:

We've been calling upon Libya to stop using cluster bombs....

Time for a reality check. Libya has been ignoring ENTIRE COUNTRIES with armies that could turn Libya into nothing more than a smoking crater. Why do you think they would listen to a small Non-Governmental Organisation, whilst fighting what is essentially a civil war?

I'm not against the aims of the CMC, but seriously - do you really think an egotistical dictator like Qadaffi is really going to listen to you, when he's been ignoring the UN Security Council, NATO and the United States, all of whom have a lot more influence and - more importantly -  means to back up what it says?

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Barry O'Farrell and the Carbon Tax

Poor ol' Baz. Says he opposes the introduction of a $500 impost on NSW voters from Labor's carbon price and starts getting beaten from pillar to post over it.

Monday, February 28, 2011

Carbon pricing, Alan Jones and Ju-Liar

Motivated in part by my sister's Facebook status update

"Was it the real or fake Julia who promised no carbon tax?"

Monday, February 14, 2011

Egypt, democracy and the Muslim Brotherhood.

First of all, let me point out something that is both unpopular and true: What we've seen so far in Egypt has not been a revolution, but a military coup.


Thursday, February 10, 2011

Wikileaks: Australia secretly considering selling uranium to India.

So what?


Published today in the Fairfax papers, are reports from Wikileaks cables that the ALP was considering a deal to sell uranium to India.


THE federal Labor government has secretly canvassed the possibility of uranium sales to India while publicly asserting that it cannot allow such exports as long as Delhi maintains a nuclear arsenal outside the nuclear non-proliferation treaty.


Big whoop.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Freedom House's "Freedom Watch" 2011

One of my university lecturer's said in class that we are in a strange place in history. For the first time ever, there are arguably more democratic states (bearing in mind the variety of types of democracies around) than non-democratic states, and that academics are unsure of what the impact of that will be.


Unfortunately, things are not looking good:

Global freedom suffered its fifth consecutive year of decline in 2010, according to Freedom in the World 2011, Freedom House’s annual assessment of political rights and civil liberties around the world. This represents the longest continuous period of decline in the nearly 40-year history of the survey. The year featured drops in the number of Free countries and the number of electoral democracies, as well as an overall deterioration for freedom in the Middle East and North Africa region.

A total of 25 countries showed significant declines in 2010, more than double the 11 countries exhibiting noteworthy gains. The number of countries designated as Free fell from 89 to 87, and the number of electoral democracies dropped to 115, far below the 2005 figure of 123. In addition, authoritarian regimes like those in China, Egypt, Iran, Russia, and Venezuela continued to step up repressive measures with little significant resistance from the democratic world.

...

Published annually since 1972, Freedom in the World examines the ability of individuals to exercise their political and civil rights in 194 countries and 14 territories around the world. The latest edition analyzes developments that occurred in 2010 and assigns each country a freedom status—Free, Partly Free, or Not Free—based on a scoring of performance on key democracy indicators.

Four countries received status declines, including Ukraine and Mexico, which both fell from Free to Partly Free. Mexico’s downgrade was a result of the government’s inability to stem the tide of violence by drug-trafficking groups, while Ukraine suffered from deteriorating levels of press freedom, instances of election fraud, and growing politicization of the judiciary. Djibouti and Ethiopia were downgraded from Partly Free to Not Free. Other countries showing declines included Bahrain, Côte d’Ivoire, Egypt, France, Sri Lanka, and Venezuela
.

A colour coded map of Free, Partly Free and Not Free states(PDF)

Worrying signs for the future, or a bump in the road?