courtesy of www.cnn.com
No Sermons from the Ludicrous UNHCR please
Greg Sheridan, in The Australian, 12 November 2015, where the title is “Turnbull won’t fall for the Human Rights Hogwash”
HQ of United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Geneva
* “The UN is rotten to the core and the General Assembly is its core” = John Dauth
* “Everyone who looks closely at the UN sees how corrupt and ludicrous most of its workings are” – Sheridan
Nothing could more fully illustrate the fatuous idiocy of the United Nations than having North Korea, Iran and Egypt portentously criticising Australia’s human rights record as we are sized up for whether as a nation we meet the lofty standards required for membership of the UN Human Rights Council. Other member nations bring valuable insights from their different traditions. This can be a rich and textured dialogue. No one should preach the absoluteness of their own tradition.
You think?
Perhaps we could learn something from that member of the Human Rights Council in good standing, Saudi Arabia. We could introduce frequent beheadings, ban women from driving, and outlaw the public practice of any but the state approved religion. Continue reading
Sanga. A Parochial Assessment Profound
Adieu! Adieu! How Sanga smashed my Thomian Prejudices! … by Shanaka Amarasinghe, courtesy of The Cricket Monthly where the title reads “Liberation Song”
Filed under unusual people, world affairs
Refugee Migrant Influx or Invasion in Europe?
Are these Images True or False? Today’s Computer Wizardry in Political Dirty Tricks … OR A Searing Tale of Desperation?
Leopards and Wildcats in Lanka endangered?
An international summit on Asian wildcats begins tomorrow in Mount Lavinia as local concerns rise over the number of leopards – Sri Lanka’s most charismatic wild cat – killed in the span of a few weeks, some through reckless driving.
Sri Lanka is home to four wild- cats: leopards, fishing cats, jungle cats and rusty spotted cats all of which are threatened species. According to the National Red List on Threatened Fauna and Flora, the jungle cat is “near threatened” while the other species are “endangered”.
“As predators, these species are of potentially profound importance to the ecosystems of which they are a part and it is only armed with knowledge of their behaviour and ecology that we can implement effective conservation and management strategies to ensure their long-term survival,” said Dr. Andrew Kittle of the Wilderness and Wildlife Conservation Trust (WWCT), ahead of the symposium aimed at sharing research knowledge on wildcats. Continue reading









