More Greenpeace lies

Amongst all the spin and lies amongst the environmental movement at the moment, there are none so shameless as Greenpeace and WWF.

Here is the latest Greenpeace con job.

From Andrew Bolt:

Andrew Bolt

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The Greenpeace ad, claiming our Great Barrier Reef is being destroyed:

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But wait. That picture of dead coral is actually of coral in the Philippines, and was lifted from another Greenpeace publication:

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Even more amazing, Greenpeace had actually used that picture to demonstrate how coral killed by a cyclone could actually grow back. Don’t panic!

Apo Island’s community-managed marine sanctuary is considered one of the best of its kind in the world. Established in the mid1980s, the sanctuary became a beacon of hope that damaged reefs can, with proper protection, management, and community buy-in, be restored back to health. ..

Strong storm surges decimated the corals and washed them ashore. The sanctuary, once known to be teeming with marine life was left devastated and now resembles a coral graveyard. Fortunately the reefs on the other sides of the island were spared. But while the damage to the sanctuary was significant not all was lost because marine life around the island was already healthy…

Apo Island’s success story has always been a model of hope for the Philippine seas. 

What a con. Here’s Greenpeace using a dodgy picture to push a dodgy scare about a dodgy warming theory – with the result that it’s likely to drive away tourists.

It’s also pretending nothing is being doing to “save” the Reef, when in fact more than $2 billion of taxpayers’ money is being spent over the next decade to protect it.

Has Greenpeace no shame?

 

Shear Madness

I took a step towards insanity today. 

First I read this article by Tim Blair, which was harmless:

Be polite to sheep – or face investigation: 

A case of alleged animal abuse in the far west of New South Wales has led to debate about whether sheep can comprehend human speech …

It was alleged sheep were abused verbally during shearing.

Brilliant response from the farmer whose station was accused of the sheep rudeness:

For Ken Turner, who operates Boorungie Station, the obvious answer to the quandary was to ask the sheep themselves to corroborate the evidence.

 

Then I clicked on one of the links which took me here, and that is where the madness really took hold:

A case of alleged animal abuse in the far west of New South Wales has led to debate about whether sheep can comprehend human speech.

It began in September last year, when the New South Wales branch of the RSPCA received a tip-off about the alleged mistreatment of sheep, including verbal abuse, that were being shorn at Boorungie Station, 130 kilometres from Broken Hill.

The complaint was lodged by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), which had apparently obtained footage and testimony from an undercover operative working at the station.

For Ken Turner, who operates Boorungie Station, the complaint itself suggests the sheep could at least understand English.

“The basis for the concerns was the rights of the animals, that they might have been harassed by viewing things they shouldn’t have seen or verbal abuse by people using bad language,” he said.

“To my knowledge, there was no actual cruelty on the job.

“The allegation was that bad language was used by an employee on the property in front of the sheep, and that they could have been offended by the use of bad language.”

Steve Coleman, CEO of NSW RSPCA, said the war over the words began when it was decided, for reasons that remain unclear, that the video footage was not legally usable.

“We felt the footage was inadmissible and therefore we relied on what oral evidence came from both parties,” he said.

“It was conflicting, and on that basis we were unable to continue.

“The evidence that was available basically came down to one person’s word against another.”

While Mr Coleman did not deny that verbal abuse was a factor, he insisted the complaint contained more concerning issues than just bad language.

“Certainly there were other concerns well beyond yelling at sheep,” he said.

While describing claims about verbal abuse of animals as “rare”, Mr Coleman said the RSPCA took such allegations seriously.

The allegation was that bad language was used by an employee on the property in front of the sheep.

Ken Turner, Boorungie Station

“If there is an allegation that puts at risk an animal that would cause it unnecessary suffering and distress, we would investigate it,” he said.

“I don’t know if it matters what language is used. An animal is not going to understand it.”

But Nicolah Donovan, president of Lawyers for Animals, said animals did understand.

“I think it is conceivable that verbal abuse of an extreme nature against an animal, whether it be human, sheep or otherwise, could constitute an act of violence,” she said.

“We have accepted that domestic violence can certainly be constituted by acts of extreme verbal abuse, particularly when the victim of the abuse is especially vulnerable – if they have a low fear threshold or they lack understanding that the verbal abuse isn’t going to proceed to a physical threat against them.

“This might be the case with children or farm animals, and the level of abuse needn’t be that extreme to cause that kind of fear in an animal.”

 

Click on the link to read the full article if you dare.

Any article quoting any member of PETA or Animal Liberation or, good grief, Lawyers For Animals should come with a trigger warning for extreme stupidity.

Get a grip people. Animals are not humans. They cannot understand human speech. They do not have a sense of morality. Do not equate children and farm animals that is just insulting.

Counting Dead Women- A Dangerous Campaign

Let me start by saying I abhor violence in general, murder in particular and domestic violence above all.

I am sickened by the statistic that already in 2015 35 women have been murdered in Australia, many of them by an intimate partner or ex-partner.

But surely all people murdered should count. When organisations like Destroy the Joint, ably supported by the ABC, just put up one side of the story we get a skewed picture. They deliberately muddy the waters by suggesting that all those women were victims of family violence.

The true story is this: men are much more likely to be murdered than women.

In 2006-07 the Australian Institute of Criminology reported there were 55 women murdered in Australia which is bad enough. But there were 244 men who were murdered in the same year. In other words more than 80% of murder victims were men.

Common sense tells us that if you want to make any change in any field you tackle the big figures first because a change at the margins makes a big difference. But the feminist activists just want us to look at the women who make a much smaller part of the overall violence picture.

In the particular issue of family violence, it is not just a story of men beating up women. About 1/3 of all victims of DV are men, and child killers are roughly split between men and women.

According to AIC, 78  men were killed by “Intimates” and “Family Members” compared to 37 women.

Family Violence is not a women’s issue. It is a people issue.

By putting out figures of how many women have been killed, with no context, activists risk diverting resources away from areas that would make a big difference to satisfy a narrow objective. That is always a Bad Thing.

Time To End The Death Penalty

There aren’t too many Australians who don’t have an opinion about the death of Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran last night. There aren’t too many opinions on the other non-Australians executed at the same time.

The thing that Australians need to take hold of is this- if it is wrong for Indonesia to execute Australians, it is wrong for any government to kill any people as part of the judicial system.

In the ten years since they were convicted of attempting to smuggle 8.3 kg of heroin out of Indonesia to Australia and sentenced to death, they have shown an amazing turn around in their lives. Both became Christians and devoted themselves to helping other prisoners.

It was a classic case of the best outcome for the penal system to change people for the better.

But judicial systems are not there to make people better, they are there to punish people for crimes.

There are many reports this afternoon that the condemned men spent their last hours worshipping God. As they were standing in front of the firing squad, all 8 men sang “Amazing Grace.” A pastor who was with them to offer spiritual support said she had never witnessed a group of people so willing to go to be with the Lord.

How many lives have been changed by the testimony of these people? How many are yet to be brought into a relationship with God through them?

Having said that, the fact remains that the death penalty is always wrong. In this case, the authorities proceeded even though there were appeals still in process. But the President needed to show the voters he is tough on crime. In the U.S. it is a fact that the death penalty falls disproportionately on poor black people.

I hope that the “Stand For Mercy” campaign gains momentum and expands to cover all the countries in Asia, plus the United States.

I suspect it won’t because Aussies tend to be very parochial in their passions.

Autumn in Narrabri

Many people reckon that autumn is the best season in Narrabri. I tend to agree as the worst of the summer heat has gone and the unpleasant winter cold is yet to come.

After a long dry spring and summer, everything seems to be responding to the cool and wet conditions. Flowers are blooming, insects are buzzing and gardens are looking great.

Here are some photos from my afternoon walk around my yard.

I love these bright orange fungi slowly devouring the old tree stump.

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These bushes are covered in blue and yellow flowers.

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Vincas thrive on neglect and just keep flowering and growing.

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Native rosemary is in bloom.

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These things are drought hardy and just keep going ,then flower at the first chance after rain.

img_7620Good old petunias just keep going and going. I do need to buy some more as we lost a lot over summer, but for annuals they certainly live for a long time!
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Ann Voskamp: What To Do When You Want Light To Overcome Dark

For a short time, Cliff Young was an Aussie legend- the old farmer who beat all the young guys in the Sydney to Melbourne ultra-marathon. Ann Voskamp shares what we can learn from him.

The old cahoot ran in his boots. Weren’t too many of anybody who believed he could. The kids and I read about the old guy one night after supper and the dishwasher’s moaning away, crumbs still across the counter. How the old guy ran for 544 miles. His name was Cliff Young and he wasn’t so much. He was 61 years old. He was a farmer. Levi grins big. Mr. Young showed up for the race in his Osh Kosh overalls and with his workboots on, with galoshes over top. In case it rained. He had no Nike sponsorship.

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He had no wife – hadn’t had one ever. Lived with his mother. Never drank. Never ran in any kind of race before. Never ran a 5 mile race, or a half-marathon, not even a marathon. But here he was standing in his workboots at the starting line of an ultra-marathon, the most gruelling marathon in the world, a 544 mile marathon. Try wrapping your head around pounding the concrete with one foot after another for 544 endless, stretching miles. They don’t measure races like that in yards – -but in zip codes. First thing Cliff did was take out his teeth. Said his false teeth rattled when he ran.

Read the full article here

Why You Need Maths (and Maths Teachers)

One of the complaints that Maths teachers hear more than any other subject is “But we will never use that in real life.” Nobody ever says that about Shakespeare or quantum physics, which is strange.

So here’s an example where a bit of thinking about maths could save a motza in real life.

A number of online betting companies are currently offering huge prizes for correctly guessing the final make-up of the AFL ladder- that is getting all the teams in the right position at the end of the season. One ad that I saw is offering a prize of $100 million for a $5 bet.  Wow! What a deal!

Hold on, let’s consider the odds. We will assume that at the beginning of the season all teams have an equal probability of standing in any position on the ladder. Although some teams are more likely to fill the top 4 or the bottom 4 you really have no way of knowing in advance the possible effects of injuries or even disciplinary action by the AFL over drug use or salary cap infringements.

There are 18 teams in the AFL. That means that the number of ways that the ladder can stand at the end of the season are:

18x17x16x15x14x13x12x11x10x9x8x5x4x3x2x1= 6400000000000000 (rounded off, but the odd digit here makes no difference). Remember those classes on combinations and permutations?

That means if you place one bet you have a 1 in 6400000000000000 chance of winning.

And the odds being offered are 100 million to 5 or 20 million (20000000) to 1.

So let’s knock off a few zeroes to find out what the margin is for the bookmaker on this competition:  6400000000000000 to 20000000 or 320,000,000 to 1.

In other words the scale is stacked 320,000,000 times in favour of the bookie.

To put that in words:

  • the odds of winning are astronomically remote 1 in 6.4 x10^15
  • the payout is so ridiculously stacked in favour of the bookie that even if every combination is covered by a $5 bet, they pay out the $100 million but rake in 320 million x $5 or 1600 million
  • to make sure that their payout is capped they limit the number of bets a single person can make and also stipulate that if more than one person picks the final result, they share the prize.
  • Even if all 20 million (give or take) people in Australia take up the opportunity and put on the maximum number of bets (say 20 each) that is still only 400 million bets and the probability of the bookies paying out is still only 1 in 15 million.

That is why you need to pay attention to your maths teacher. The bookie did and that’s why he drives a Lexus when you drive an old Ford.

Well Done Jacqui Lambie and the Rest of the Feral Senate.

The wanton hypocrisy of the Senate at the moment is unprecedented. If Abbott wants it we will oppose it is the mantra of Labor and Greens. The cross-benchers are just as bad with Jacqui Lambie the worst of them. She vowed to get out of her hospital bed to vote against University reforms, and now Tasmania, the state she claims to be fighting for, is leading the way in cutting back their university places.

Politics in Australia is just disgusting.

UTAS campuses in Launceston and Burnie under threat if funding falls short

Professor Peter RathjenPHOTO: Professor Peter Rathjen said university managers would need to make some tough decisions.(University or Tasmania)

The University of Tasmania has signalled it will consider closing its Burnie and Launceston campuses if it does not receive financial support for a restructure.

It followed the Senate’s rejection of higher education legislation allowing universities to set their own fees.

UTAS’s $450 million proposal to split the university in two, with big developments in Burnie and Launceston, hinges on the passage of the legislation.

Vice-chancellor Peter Rathjen told ABC Local Radio that managers would now have to make some tough decisions unless there was more funding.

Full story here