Category: Uncategorized

TTP & TTIP- The new economic & Corporate world order

 

12 Dead At RNC Headquarters Building After Rubio Fails Voight-Kampff Test

Marco-Rubio2

 

WASHINGTON – (CT&P) – The Associated Press is reporting at least 12 dead and 27 injured today inside the RNC Headquarters building in Washington, D.C. after presidential hopeful Marco Rubio went berserk during a Voight-Kampff test.

The test, which measures bodily functions such as respiration, heart rate, blushing and eye movement in response to emotionally provocative questions, was ordered by RNC Chairman Reince Priebus in an attempt to determine if Rubio was human or some form of advanced robot.

“After Marco’s performance in Saturday night’s debate, we felt we owed it to our voters to determine whether Marco was indeed a human being or some kind of malfunctioning replicant,” said Priebus. “I guess we got our answer.”

Rubio reportedly answered a series of questions about his part-time senate job successfully before the examiner moved on to questions about tortoises and Rubio’s supposed mother.

According to an eyewitness, when the examiner asked Rubio if his mother was a reptile with a protective shell, the candidate leaped over the table and snapped the examiner’s neck like it was a toothpick.

“Then he went on a rampage, overpowering security guards and slaughtering half the staff,” said the witness, on condition of anonymity. “I’ve never seen anything like it. He had this childlike grin on his face as crushed the skulls of our employees with his bare hands. He kept demanding to know when he was made, and when no one could answer, he just slaughtered them. It was horrific.”

According to Priebus, SWAT teams reportedly have Rubio cornered inside a janitor’s closet where he’s holding several volunteers and lobbyists hostage. A FBI hostage negotiator has been called in.

So far Rubio has refused to give up and keeps repeating the phrase “Obama knows what he’s doing” over and over again. An RNC insider is telling Reuters that assault teams will give the negotiator a few hours to reason with Rubio before they move in.

“We hope we can resolve this without further loss of life, but if push comes to shove we’ll blow that closet all to hell,” said Priebus. “We can’t have robots going berserk and killing our people willy-nilly. We don’t care so much about the volunteers, but lobbyists are another thing entirely.”

 

I9 Trillion in debt but spending as if there’s no tomorrow on war for who? Whatching the homeland crumble.

Filed under:

Bronwyn Bishop Named Australia’s Special Envoy For Austerity

bronwyn bishop austerity

A day after Philip Ruddock was announced as Australia’s Special Envoy for Human Rights, former Speaker Bronwyn Bishop has been confirmed in the post of Special Envoy for Austerity.

The role will focus on advancing the concepts of thrift and sound money management in international forums such as the United Nations.

Announcing the position yesterday, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said Mrs Bishop was the obvious choice for the role. “It’s hard to think of a candidate more adept, or more qualified for this position. As the world enters a more cautious growth period, Bronwyn’s natural flair for minimising costs and taking the more economical route will be highly sought after,” he said.

Mrs Bishop will regularly fly between Australia and the UN’s New York headquarters for the role. Australia’s healthcare budget has been scaled back to cater for the new travel expenses.

Rubio Pulls An Ohio State; Claims Victory After Finishing Third

rubioiowa

 

DES MOINES – (CT&P) – In a scene that no doubt reminded Alabama and Clemson supporters of petulant Ohio State players and fans bellyaching about their wonderful 2015 season, Marco Rubio climbed the podium Monday night to declare victory in the Iowa caucuses, a contest in which he finished third behind Antichrist Ted Cruz and up-and-coming fascist Donald Trump.

“For months, they said we had no chance,” said the part-time senator from Florida. “They told me I had no chance because my hair wasn’t gray enough and my jackboots were too high. They told me I needed to wait my turn, that I needed to wait in line, that I needed to be proven against tougher competition. But tonight here in Iowa the people of this great state have sent a very clear message, that we are the national champions!”

Despite being defeated by real men when push came to shove, Rubio droned on for hours about how he had defeated cupcake establishment rivals in a long and glorious season during the campaign in Iowa.

“This victory is unprecedented in the annals of politics, and will go down as one of the greatest comebacks in coaching history!”

On Tuesday morning political pundits wondered aloud just what type of drugs Rubio has been ingesting, but speculated that they are the same type readily available throughout the State of Ohio.

Rubio faces an uphill challenge in his next gridiron battle, taking place in a matter of days in New Hampshire, where the Coaches Poll has him a distant second behind Trump, 36 to 15. But hope springs eternal, and Rubio has confidence that his newly hired offensive speech coordinator will help pull him through.

“Our win in Iowa will give us the momentum we need to pull off this thing in the 4th quarter,” said a thirsty Rubio. “We’re going all the way to number one!”

Rubio is scheduled to meet with Ohio State Coach Urban Meyer on Friday to get some tips on how to spin a second defeat in a row just in case things don’t go according to plan.

 

Jesus Really Pissed Off With Comparison To Pandering Politician Who Can’t Manage His Money; Vows To Lay Waste To Iowa

jesusshotgun

 

DES MOINES – (CT&P) – During a brief, hastily called news conference outside Ames, Jesus of Nazareth expressed his extreme displeasure with Iowans who believe that Marco Rubio is the Second Coming of the popular religious figure.

“That man-child from Cretinville couldn’t manage a rest area on the interstate, much less a universe,” said an angry Prince of Peace. “He may have pulled the wool over the eyes of a bunch of ethanol-crazed hayseeds, but as we move on to other states, that kind of shit just won’t fly.”

Rubio, a part-time senator from Florida and candidate for the GOP presidential nomination, has been called many things in the course of his ascendance from state senator to potential loser to Hillary Clinton: youthful, energetic, a lawn sprinkler, “his party’s best hope,” and the “dud” from the old board game Mystery Date.

Time magazine even called him “The Republican Savior,” as Fox News’s Bret Baier reminded him during Thursday night’s G.O.P. debate, during part of a pointed question about his fall from polling grace. But make no mistake: the presumptive front-runner-in-waiting does not think he’s Jesus.

Rubio, who appeared at the debate with a cross strapped to his back and wearing a crown of thorns, said that he did not want to give the impression that he thinks he is a savior, lord, redeemer, or anything of the sort.

“It’s close, but I’m not the Lamb of God,” said the famously modest Rubio, as sweat poured from his forehead. “I’m just a normal guy with the ambition of a rabid honey badger and the intelligence of a bivalve. Believe you me, if I was Jesus, I’d turn this water I’m chugging into Gatorade,” chuckled the perpetually dehydrated charlatan.

Jesus has apparently not been too pleased with the comparisons and promised that Rubio would wish he had never been born by the time he was finished with him.

“I don’t know who he thinks he’s messing with, but he won’t be smiling when he finds himself standing next to Fred Phelps while getting a pineapple shoved up his ass every ten minutes,” said the visibly irritated King of Kings.

“As for the residents of Iowa, they better get their asses down to Ken Ham’s insane asylum down in Petersburg, Kentucky, and board that lifeboat he’s building to scam money from all those gullible religious kooks. I plan on kicking off the festivities with a tsunami that’ll make the one in Japan look like a kiddie pool. Then it’s gonna be fire and brimstone time. It’s not smart to screw around with the Son of Man.”

Turning up the heat on climate denialists

With ten of the hottest years on record occurring in only the last 18 years, DeSmogBlog’s Graham Readfearn says the chances of this not being due to manmade greenhouse gases are ‘vanishingly slim’.

Source: Turning up the heat on climate denialists

Trump’s Sexist Attacks Aside, Megyn Kelly Is A Shill For Conservative Misinformation

  • Megyn Kelly is garnering another wave of misplaced praise, benefiting from Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump’s latest attacks on her. But outside of the debate scene, Kelly’s role on Fox News is little more than to shill for conservative misinformation.

    Journalists and pundits across the political spectrum are stepping up to defend the Fox News anchor after Trump labeled her a “lightweight journalist” leading up to Fox News’ January 28 GOP primary debate, which he declined to participate in. Kelly’s defenders have called out the sexism in Trump’s attacks while lauding her as a “real journalist willing to stick her neck out to defend the vulnerable.” But in doing so, they have bought into the distorted persona she has carefully crafted for herself — that of the credible journalist, distinct from other Fox figures who are more obviously partisan.

    That image has been bolstered by a series of glowing profiles of Kelly that describe her as a “take-no-prisoners newswoman” who “isn’t afraid to throw hardballs at Republicans” and have called her “the brightest star at Fox News” who “transcends politics with her skillful skewering of windbags of both parties.” Fox helped Kelly reinforce that image in Fox’s first GOP primary debate, where Kelly posed a series of tough questions to the candidates — most notably challenging Trump on his history of sexism — and persuaded many of the 24 million viewers that she is a serious journalist. Fox’s January 28 GOP debate will likely provide yet another opportunity for Kelly to amplify this deceptive image by deviating from her usual bigotry and right-wing misinformation to ask tough questions while all eyes are on her.

    The media is right to call out the sexism of Trump’s attacks on Megyn Kelly, but to argue that she is a serious, legitimate journalist while doing so misses the mark.

    Outside of Fox’s debate scene, Kelly has repeatedly used her authority to prop up conservative misinformation from The Kelly File‘s anchor desk. In the first two weeks of 2016, she spent over 1 hour and 22 minutes promoting Michael Bay’s myth-filled Benghazi movie as “the gripping new film that may pose a threat to Hillary Clinton’s hopes for the White House.” Kelly regularly hosts the leader of an anti-LGBT hate group, and has a long history of offensive, discriminatory comments about minorities.

    Kelly has also used her primetime Fox show to push falsehoods about Planned Parenthood, most recently asking whether the grand jury indictment of two members of the group that released deceptively edited smear videos to attack the organization was a “political hit job.” Kelly once told Charlie Rose she’s “not an opinion maker,” yet she has repeatedly advocated for conservative causes and spread misinformation — and has gotten away with it because there are journalists willing to call her credible.

 

Australian coalmines are one of riskiest investments in the world – report | Environment | The Guardian

Oxford University research also finds Australian, Chinese and US coal-fired power stations are the most vulnerable to environmental dangers

Source: Australian coalmines are one of riskiest investments in the world – report | Environment | The Guardian

NSW Premier Mike Baird, in Australia Day address, says doors must open to refugees – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

NSW Premier Mike Baird says Australia will be denying its history if it closes the door on new arrivals.

Source: NSW Premier Mike Baird, in Australia Day address, says doors must open to refugees – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

World Economy

Republicans are doing everything to stop people voting

Economists for Sanders

170 Prominent Economists Back Bernie Sanders’ Plan to Rein in Wall StreetFinancial experts, academics, and economists from across the nation are officially endorsing Bernie Sanders’ proposal to break up big banks and…

When the board of management has only profit in mind other elements are left unconsidered

 

 

 

Yet it was marvelous to hear the strong condemnations at Friday prayers yesterday for behavior that has nothing to do with Islam, which is of course a religion of love and mutual respect. ISIS loses every time they mount an attack. But this was, on the other hand, a wake-up call to Asia on the reach of ISIS into different parts of the globe. What comes next and where? We shall see!

A Philistine in Phnom Penh, Part CXVII: The Anatomy of a Terrorist Attack in Jakarta, 14 January 2016

Last Thursday I got caught up in Jakarta in terrorism’s most recent efforts to scare the hell out a burgeoning democracy. It didn’t work. The predominant local reaction was “We are not afraid”.

I thought it might be worth setting out a few thoughts on what it is like to be close to such an incident. After Paris, Sydney, Ottawa, Beirut, Tunisia, El Said, San Bernardino and this week Jakarta and Burkina Faso there is a growing understanding that global terrorism is not far away but is now local and is most often now directed against Westerners.

While I was never in any danger, I was working in a high-rise building with my work team just a few hundred meters from where the terrorist attack went down. Our building went into immediate lockdown. Streets near us were soon deserted as traffic stopped. We were on the 45th floor holding a training day with our six member team as we prepared for a month’s consultancy work related to development challenges in SE Asian countries like Indonesia, Singapore and Vietnam

Our team had travelled to Jakarta from Bangkok just the night before. We arrived during one of Jakarta’s booming thunder storms and another one of the usual chaotic traffic jam. I walked from my hotel to work next morning feeling pretty good about being back in the world’s largest Muslim country even if it was as hot as ever. Indonesians are exceptionally friendly people so there are lots of greetings even for foreigners. Muslim women seem more often now to wear the najib but that doesn’t seem to stop the friendly smiles and gestures.

It was half past ten that morning when, as we sat around the conference table, we first heard the rumors of the terrorist attacks on the main street of Jakarta. We were told it was near Starbucks on the outside of the Serenah Mall. I knew the Starbucks well, having worked twice n for a few weeks or so in recent years in the nearby United Nations building which is just across the road. It seemed likely that Starbucks had been chosen because it was known to be popular and frequented by foreigners, mainly from the 20 or so UN agencies based in Indonesia.

The first concern of our team members was naturally their loved ones. Anxious calls were made to work sites and two international schools around Jakarta. We learned the schools had immediately gone into lockdowns. Everyone was established to be safe. The team members were calm but there were early reports of terror incidents in other parts of Jakarta which increased apprehension about the scale of the attack but later turned out to be false.

As with any crisis, details of what was really happening were at first sketchy. We heard early on that there was shooting; some bombs had gone off; and there were casualties. Under well-practiced drills, our building and those around us went into immediate lockdown. You feel a bit stuck when that happens!

From our 45th floor eyrie, there was no prospect of trying to escape the scene. We could see police helicopters buzzing about and hear lots of sirens below. We heard no sounds of gunfire or of bombs going off. Indonesia media websites told us that was what was happening, though, but we soon realized the accounts were not entirely accurate and switched to the ABC Australia website, CNN America and the Guardian UK who had reporters on site sending out live blogs.

It is that early fog in information that can befuddle the reaction to a terrorist attack. While there was no panic in our building, we seemed to go into a trance for the first hour and tried to work on in our consultancy preparations, but while some trawled the internet for accurate information.

We heard early on of the traffic policeman who had been shot and killed by an insurgent from a motorcyclist while he was sitting in his sun-protective cabin on the median strip. We also heard there was an assault on a Starbucks and there were casualties. Later on we heard that a Canadian trying to flee the café had been shot dead; we also learnt that a well-regarded Dutchman working with UN who had been advising on environmental policies for greening Indonesia had been seriously injured by gunshots.

We also saw on CNN two blasts in the Starbucks car park accompanied by dense smoke. That apparently marked two suicide bombers blowing themselves up, having been forced back from the café by police fire. From the bombers’ perspective, according to jihadist propaganda, their earthly martyrdom led them straight on to heaven where virgins were waiting to greet them. Two other gunmen were caught and arrested.

The police later said ISIS was behind the attack and that its organizer was an Indonesia jihadist based at the headquarters of the alleged caliphate in Rakka in Syria. He has just become a high value target and, as with the ghastly beheadings by Jihad John had ensured, his plotting will help to speed up his departure from this life.

CNN also showed film of a gunman wandering about in a distracted state holding a large semi-automatic. In the close background there seemed to be crowds in their hundreds many of whom seemed absorbed by the spectacle he provided, with only some running away. Throughout the five hours of the siege police seemed to provide little crowd control. For some hours police conducted a room to room search in nearby buildings as local people and media staff watched from below. A large bomb was apparently found not far from Starbucks and thankfully defused before it could cause any mayhem.

Meanwhile, we sat upstairs in our 45th floor conference room, trying to stay updated on what was happening on the streets of Jakarta. Somehow some brave souls sneaked out of the building and bought back packs of prepared meals of steaming beef rendang. We had also made contact with our US company’s security firm, Crisis 24, in Jakarta and a very sympathetic company manager in Bangkok.

The security firm’s assistance amounted to regular calls to check on us and getting us to fill in some forms, but absolutely no practical advice on what to do. They did contact the company’s Washington headquarters but, rather hilariously, by text rather than by placing a phone call, given it was the middle of the night. Communication failures like this are not appreciated!

For other reasons we rather lost confidence in the security firm’s capacity to assist. We decided ourselves we would stay put and started to wonder how longer that might be. There were rumors of fresh gunfire. We had barely touched the food provided to us for our training day so we didn’t have any worries about food or drink. We also talked through how we might get home once the siege was over, recognizing that Jakarta might be utterly chaotic and some team-members were staying some distance away and might need to use the motorcycle taxi which can be a scary experience at the best of time.

Around 4pm we to our surprise heard the security situation was over. We packed up and took the elevator to the ground. We gained confidence as we left the lift to see the traffic had started to move again. It was chaotic outside with policemen, armed personnel carriers and street barriers everywhere. The team wandered back towards my hotel. We were stopped by police at various points who could not have been more courteous and helpful. They tried to help us find taxis for the team. When I got to the hotel, there was barbed wire outside and a number of security checks and body searches to get through. My colleagues

riding home on motorcycles (there were no taxis available) had a quite an experience in the very busy traffic that was doing its best to get out of central Jakarta.

It was kind of surreal to turn on the TV that night to see the attack was the lead news item around the world. The detestable Donald Trump even tried to boost the significance of Jakarta as yet another sign that Americans should be very afraid of the terrorist that are going to come after them.

But it was more riveting to us to see the parts of Jakarta where we are staying depicted on the news and to start to get a better sense of what actually occurred. We had heard of 17 killed and 20 injured. The total was in fact 7 killed, although today we heard another Indonesian man who was shot in the head had passed away.

Another 12 suspected terrorists have since been arrested in various outlying provinces. A number of websites expressing support for the attacks were shutdown. There was much action on social media expressing defiance against the terrorists, as well as a small demonstration we witnessed from our hotel window.

For us lucky persons who had witnessed the terror attack from a safe distance the aftermath was worse than the event. Next day, apart from form filling, registering with embassies and setting up new emergency protocols, we had to endure a long Skype debrief with security folks from the company in Washington DC who seemed at least as interested in trying to explain the communication stuff ups as anything else.

I did not hold back in describing the failures in support that had occurred but then most of all wanted advice as team leader on what we do next. Usually after such an attack all goes quiet but you can’t count on it.

Our Washington masters then made our life more difficult by requiring we not go out over the weekend, meaning a number of meetings were cancelled. Next week we are to travel everywhere for appointments in hire cars with darkened windows. However, our issues are but slight as compared to the people who live here in the long term.

The attack was nothing like as bad as Paris or the Burkina Faso assault yesterday in which 20 people died. These were some young provincial boys, some of the 700 returned and radicalized Indonesians who had fought in the war in Syria. They had been told to come to town and to lift the ISIS profile in Jakarta. This was much harder for the police to anticipate, although there had been warnings.

The police have done a great job recently in destroying structured terrorist organizations across Indonesia, with help from the Australian Federal Police, but their ability to follow other small and looser groupings of disaffected young people is not as effective.

The terrorists were not the hardened killers of the Paris massacre. Their planning was weak and they seem to have panicked early on and resorted to amateur hour. Only three deaths of civilians is nothing short of miraculous.

We all feel for the people of Indonesia who know this may happen again sometime soon. They seem resolute and determined to stay positive about life. Indonesia is a rising middle income country that still has its problems with poverty, economic underperformance, rampant corruption, worsening pollution and much environmental degradation.

Yet it was marvelous to hear the strong condemnations at Friday prayers yesterday for behavior that has nothing to do with Islam, which is of course a religion of love and mutual respect. ISIS loses every time

they mount an attack. But this was, on the other hand, a wake-up call to Asia on the reach of ISIS into different parts of the globe. What comes next and where? We shall see!

Regards

Edmund Attridge

17 January 2016

A Philistine in Phnom Penh, Part CXVII: The Anatomy of a Terrorist Attack in Jakarta, 14 January 2016

Last Thursday I got caught up in Jakarta in terrorism’s most recent efforts to scare the hell out a burgeoning democracy. It didn’t work. The predominant local reaction was “We are not afraid”.

I thought it might be worth setting out a few thoughts on what it is like to be close to such an incident. After Paris, Sydney, Ottawa, Beirut, Tunisia, El Said, San Bernardino and this week Jakarta and Burkina Faso there is a growing understanding that global terrorism is not far away but is now local and is most often now directed against Westerners.

While I was never in any danger, I was working in a high-rise building with my work team just a few hundred meters from where the terrorist attack went down. Our building went into immediate lockdown. Streets near us were soon deserted as traffic stopped. We were on the 45th floor holding a training day with our six member team as we prepared for a month’s consultancy work related to development challenges in SE Asian countries like Indonesia, Singapore and Vietnam

Our team had travelled to Jakarta from Bangkok just the night before. We arrived during one of Jakarta’s booming thunder storms and another one of the usual chaotic traffic jam. I walked from my hotel to work next morning feeling pretty good about being back in the world’s largest Muslim country even if it was as hot as ever. Indonesians are exceptionally friendly people so there are lots of greetings even for foreigners. Muslim women seem more often now to wear the najib but that doesn’t seem to stop the friendly smiles and gestures.

It was half past ten that morning when, as we sat around the conference table, we first heard the rumors of the terrorist attacks on the main street of Jakarta. We were told it was near Starbucks on the outside of the Serenah Mall. I knew the Starbucks well, having worked twice n for a few weeks or so in recent years in the nearby United Nations building which is just across the road. It seemed likely that Starbucks had been chosen because it was known to be popular and frequented by foreigners, mainly from the 20 or so UN agencies based in Indonesia.

The first concern of our team members was naturally their loved ones. Anxious calls were made to work sites and two international schools around Jakarta. We learned the schools had immediately gone into lockdowns. Everyone was established to be safe. The team members were calm but there were early reports of terror incidents in other parts of Jakarta which increased apprehension about the scale of the attack but later turned out to be false.

As with any crisis, details of what was really happening were at first sketchy. We heard early on that there was shooting; some bombs had gone off; and there were casualties. Under well-practiced drills, our building and those around us went into immediate lockdown. You feel a bit stuck when that happens!

From our 45th floor eyrie, there was no prospect of trying to escape the scene. We could see police helicopters buzzing about and hear lots of sirens below. We heard no sounds of gunfire or of bombs going off. Indonesia media websites told us that was what was happening, though, but we soon realized the accounts were not entirely accurate and switched to the ABC Australia website, CNN America and the Guardian UK who had reporters on site sending out live blogs.

It is that early fog in information that can befuddle the reaction to a terrorist attack. While there was no panic in our building, we seemed to go into a trance for the first hour and tried to work on in our consultancy preparations, but while some trawled the internet for accurate information.

We heard early on of the traffic policeman who had been shot and killed by an insurgent from a motorcyclist while he was sitting in his sun-protective cabin on the median strip. We also heard there was an assault on a Starbucks and there were casualties. Later on we heard that a Canadian trying to flee the café had been shot dead; we also learnt that a well-regarded Dutchman working with UN who had been advising on environmental policies for greening Indonesia had been seriously injured by gunshots.

We also saw on CNN two blasts in the Starbucks car park accompanied by dense smoke. That apparently marked two suicide bombers blowing themselves up, having been forced back from the café by police fire. From the bombers’ perspective, according to jihadist propaganda, their earthly martyrdom led them straight on to heaven where virgins were waiting to greet them. Two other gunmen were caught and arrested.

The police later said ISIS was behind the attack and that its organizer was an Indonesia jihadist based at the headquarters of the alleged caliphate in Rakka in Syria. He has just become a high value target and, as with the ghastly beheadings by Jihad John had ensured, his plotting will help to speed up his departure from this life.

CNN also showed film of a gunman wandering about in a distracted state holding a large semi-automatic. In the close background there seemed to be crowds in their hundreds many of whom seemed absorbed by the spectacle he provided, with only some running away. Throughout the five hours of the siege police seemed to provide little crowd control. For some hours police conducted a room to room search in nearby buildings as local people and media staff watched from below. A large bomb was apparently found not far from Starbucks and thankfully defused before it could cause any mayhem.

Meanwhile, we sat upstairs in our 45th floor conference room, trying to stay updated on what was happening on the streets of Jakarta. Somehow some brave souls sneaked out of the building and bought back packs of prepared meals of steaming beef rendang. We had also made contact with our US company’s security firm, Crisis 24, in Jakarta and a very sympathetic company manager in Bangkok.

The security firm’s assistance amounted to regular calls to check on us and getting us to fill in some forms, but absolutely no practical advice on what to do. They did contact the company’s Washington headquarters but, rather hilariously, by text rather than by placing a phone call, given it was the middle of the night. Communication failures like this are not appreciated!

For other reasons we rather lost confidence in the security firm’s capacity to assist. We decided ourselves we would stay put and started to wonder how longer that might be. There were rumors of fresh gunfire. We had barely touched the food provided to us for our training day so we didn’t have any worries about food or drink. We also talked through how we might get home once the siege was over, recognizing that Jakarta might be utterly chaotic and some team-members were staying some distance away and might need to use the motorcycle taxi which can be a scary experience at the best of time.

Around 4pm we to our surprise heard the security situation was over. We packed up and took the elevator to the ground. We gained confidence as we left the lift to see the traffic had started to move again. It was chaotic outside with policemen, armed personnel carriers and street barriers everywhere. The team wandered back towards my hotel. We were stopped by police at various points who could not have been more courteous and helpful. They tried to help us find taxis for the team. When I got to the hotel, there was barbed wire outside and a number of security checks and body searches to get through. My colleagues

riding home on motorcycles (there were no taxis available) had a quite an experience in the very busy traffic that was doing its best to get out of central Jakarta.

It was kind of surreal to turn on the TV that night to see the attack was the lead news item around the world. The detestable Donald Trump even tried to boost the significance of Jakarta as yet another sign that Americans should be very afraid of the terrorist that are going to come after them.

But it was more riveting to us to see the parts of Jakarta where we are staying depicted on the news and to start to get a better sense of what actually occurred. We had heard of 17 killed and 20 injured. The total was in fact 7 killed, although today we heard another Indonesian man who was shot in the head had passed away.

Another 12 suspected terrorists have since been arrested in various outlying provinces. A number of websites expressing support for the attacks were shutdown. There was much action on social media expressing defiance against the terrorists, as well as a small demonstration we witnessed from our hotel window.

For us lucky persons who had witnessed the terror attack from a safe distance the aftermath was worse than the event. Next day, apart from form filling, registering with embassies and setting up new emergency protocols, we had to endure a long Skype debrief with security folks from the company in Washington DC who seemed at least as interested in trying to explain the communication stuff ups as anything else.

I did not hold back in describing the failures in support that had occurred but then most of all wanted advice as team leader on what we do next. Usually after such an attack all goes quiet but you can’t count on it.

Our Washington masters then made our life more difficult by requiring we not go out over the weekend, meaning a number of meetings were cancelled. Next week we are to travel everywhere for appointments in hire cars with darkened windows. However, our issues are but slight as compared to the people who live here in the long term.

The attack was nothing like as bad as Paris or the Burkina Faso assault yesterday in which 20 people died. These were some young provincial boys, some of the 700 returned and radicalized Indonesians who had fought in the war in Syria. They had been told to come to town and to lift the ISIS profile in Jakarta. This was much harder for the police to anticipate, although there had been warnings.

The police have done a great job recently in destroying structured terrorist organizations across Indonesia, with help from the Australian Federal Police, but their ability to follow other small and looser groupings of disaffected young people is not as effective.

The terrorists were not the hardened killers of the Paris massacre. Their planning was weak and they seem to have panicked early on and resorted to amateur hour. Only three deaths of civilians is nothing short of miraculous.

We all feel for the people of Indonesia who know this may happen again sometime soon. They seem resolute and determined to stay positive about life. Indonesia is a rising middle income country that still has its problems with poverty, economic underperformance, rampant corruption, worsening pollution and much environmental degradation.

Yet it was marvelous to hear the strong condemnations at Friday prayers yesterday for behavior that has nothing to do with Islam, which is of course a religion of love and mutual respect. ISIS loses every time

they mount an attack. But this was, on the other hand, a wake-up call to Asia on the reach of ISIS into different parts of the globe. What comes next and where? We shall see!

Regards

Edmund Attridge

17 January 2016

Out of Left Field: Trumbo Gets Oscar Nomination for Sympathetic Treatment of Communist

Trumbo, a Hollywood movie with big name actors and cutting edge production values, portrays communists and by extension their principles in a sympathetic light. And now Bryan Cranston, playing the …

Source: Out of Left Field: Trumbo Gets Oscar Nomination for Sympathetic Treatment of Communist

“As much as I love this country,” David Bowie says, “it’s probably one of the most racially intolerant in the world, well in line with South Africa.

“As much as I love this country,” David Bowie says, “it’s probably one of the most racially intolerant in the world, well in line with South Africa. I mean, in the north, there’s unbelievable intolerance. The Aborigines can’t even buy their drinks in the same bars-they have to go round the back and get them through what’s called a ‘dog hatch.’ And then they’re forbidden from drinking them on the same side of the street as the bar; they have to go to the other side of the road.”

Sunnis and Shiites: Islam’s ancient divide, explained – Your Middle East

Here are some questions and answers about the religious split dividing Sunni Saudi Arabia and Shiite Iran:Q: What is the split about?A: The split emerged over

Source: Sunnis and Shiites: Islam’s ancient divide, explained – Your Middle East

The FBI & Entrapping Muslims: Web-Exclusive Interview with Fort Dix Five Attorney Bob Boyle

  • Fortdix

     

    In 2008, five Muslim men from suburban New Jersey were convicted of conspiring to kill U.S. soldiers at the Fort Dix Army base. The men say they were entrapped by the FBI. We speak to attorney Bob Boyle.
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Cole Miller And Trevor Duroux: Some One-Punch Deaths Are Good For Media Business, Some Not-So-Much – New Matilda

An Aboriginal man died in a one-punch assault in Queensland one month ago. So, you know, who cares? You can’t watch the video of Cole Miller’s father addressing media yesterday over the death of his young son on Monday morning without being deeply moved. It’s gut-wrenching. But if you work in the media, you canMore

Source: Cole Miller And Trevor Duroux: Some One-Punch Deaths Are Good For Media Business, Some Not-So-Much – New Matilda

Democracy: ‘Disastrous for the Jewish People’

author Wednesday January 06, 2016 18:01author by Alternative Information Center (AIC) Report post

On Wednesday, the Israeli parliament will discuss the “law of the Sabbath,” a new law that aims to ban all trade on the Sabbath.

Photo: Wikipedia
Photo: Wikipedia

The Sabbath is a holy day in Judaism during which agricultural, industrial and commercial activities are prohibited.

The bill was proposed by Likud MK, Miky Zohar, and adopted by the Council of Ministers. It seeks to ban businesses opening on Saturdays without special permission from the Economy Minister. Violating the ban would be considered “an injustice against citizens.” Business owners will be able to file a claim against franchise operators who force businesses to open on the day of rest.

For Zohar, the law is not about religious coercion, but the defense of “social rights and the Jewish character of Israel.

“To be a Jew it is necessary that your mother is a Jew. But, a nation that wants to endure must have a tradition, a way and principles,” Zohar said in an interview with the Israeli newspaper, The Marker.

“If you lose your tradition, your way and your principles, you will end up becoming something else,” he continued, adding, “if Israel is a democratic state, the existence of this nation would be in danger.”

The Likud legislator made it clear that he not only opposes a democratic project, but also sees the ideas of the Enlightenment as disastrous for the Jewish people.

“We are still paying the price for adhering to the ideas of the Enlightenment,” he explained, stressing that “if we give up the Jewish idea our children will be living in a democratic country.”

“I say: Israel could easily transform into a democratic country within a few decades and this would jeopardize the existence of the Jewish people.”

“I will continue fighting for the existence of the Jewish people,” Zohar concluded.

Zohar was elected to the Israeli parliament in the March 2015 elections. He previously served as president of basketball club Maccabi Kiryat Gat.

AIC archives: Netanyahu Renews Efforts to Define Israel as Jewish State

Families Of Oregon Militiamen Glad They Are Away From Home For A Few Days

rednecks-with-guns

 

PORTLAND – (CT&P) – The families of the militiamen who have seized control of Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Oregon are telling CNN that they are relieved to have them out of the house for a while.

When interviewed by Wolf Blitzer on his show, The Situation Room, the wives and children of the motley crew of misfits, conspiracy theorists, and Christian terrorists told Blitzer that they were glad that for at least the time being the miscreants were someone else’s problem.

The mentally deficient wingnuts, who have started calling themselves the Citizens for Constitutional Freedom, whatever the fuck that’s supposed to mean, have told anyone willing to listen that they are “in it for the long haul,” and “came well prepared.”

“I certainly hope the son of a bitch is in it for the long haul,” said Wanda Scrotum, wife of Corporal Rodent Scrotum of the Dysentery Springs Chapter of the Texas Minuteman Militia. “All he does all day is watch Fox News and throw beer cans at the TV when Obama is on. He’s worthless. The only time he ever perks up is when his government check is due in the mail.”

Bertha Bundy, wife of ringleader Ammon Bundy, said, “Ammon has a lot of big guns and a very small penis. Do you know what it’s like to be married to a microdick? I shouldn’t have waited til we got married. It was the worst mistake of my miserable life. I hope he freezes to death in that hell hole.”

The militiamen have made only vague claims about what they are trying to achieve by the occupation, and as of yet the federal government has taken no action to force them out.

FBI Director James Comey told the Washington Post that although he was being encouraged by the families of the men to napalm the building and “do the world a favor,” he didn’t want another Waco on his hands.

“These idiots either grew up under power lines or have a great deal of lead paint in their diet,” said Comey.

“You don’t put a dog down merely because it’s a dumb ass. I think we’ll just cut off the water and electricity to the building and see how long the tough guys want to stay there without any Budweiser.

“I’m sure once they figure out that no one really gives a shit about their insane ideas they’ll surrender peacefully.”

Did Shane Warne cop this flack? Was Frank Sinatra right to call Australian media the worst in the world? Saving Peter Dutton.

A relaxed Chris Gayle talking to the media at Melbourne's Tullamarine airport.

Oregon Militants Vow To ‘Kill And Be Killed If Necessary,’ But FBI Isn’t Biting

The feds are taking a calculated approach to the ongoing standoff in Oregon.

Source: Oregon Militants Vow To ‘Kill And Be Killed If Necessary,’ But FBI Isn’t Biting

Islam and the birth of Capitalism and Social Responsibility

Early Islam and the Birth of Capitalism proposes a strikingly original thesis—that capitalism first emerged in Arabia, not in late medieval Italian city states as is commonly assumed.
Early Islam made a seminal but largely unrecognized contribution to the history of economic thought; it is the only religion founded by an entrepreneur. Descending from an elite dynasty of religious, civil, and commercial leaders, Muhammad was a successful businessman before founding Islam. As such, the new religion had much to say on trade, consumer protection, business ethics,

Israeli Logic

Israeli PM: ‘Arab terror and Jewish terror’ are different

Israeli PM: ‘Arab terror and Jewish terror’ are different

Ma’an News Agency | – – BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — In lieu of a growing Israeli focus on Jewish extremism, Israel’s Prime Minister on Sunday said that comparing “Arab terror and Jewish terror”…

A testament to the power local TV news stations have to poison public opinion

Republican Politics

EU Terrorism Fact

Al Jazeera has just been exposed for blocking an article criticizing one of its closest allies, Saudi Arabia.

Mainstream Media Bias: Al Jazeera Blocks Article Criticizing Saudi Arabia For Human Rights Violations

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Mainstream Media Bias: Al Jazeera Blocks Article Criticizing Saudi Arabia For Human Rights Violations

December 27th, 2015 | by Amando Flavio

When we talk of Mainstream Media bias, we are not joking. It is real. It is happening. Some of their news contents are filled with government and corporate propaganda. What is even worse is

Freedom USA Planned

Bombshell: United States Planned To Exterminate Civilians Living In East Berlin, Moscow And Beijing During The Cold War

Bombshell: United States Planned To Exterminate Civilians Living In East Berlin, Moscow And Beijing During The Cold War

December 26th, 2015 | by Amando Flavio

It has emerged that the United States of America planned during the Cold War era to systematically destroy civilian’s lives in major Soviet bloc cities such as East Berlin, Leningrad, Moscow and others. The Chinese capital,…

Rescued Senegalese migrant wins €400,000 in Spain’s Christmas lottery | World news | The Guardian

An unemployed Senegalese man scooped a share in El Gordo – the annual lottery which handed out more than €2bn this year

Source: Rescued Senegalese migrant wins €400,000 in Spain’s Christmas lottery | World news | The Guardian

US Military Lied: 16 Tests On Anthrax And One On Bubonic Plague In South Korean Capital AnonHQ

In May 2015, a sample of live anthrax was “accidentally” delivered to South Korea– courtesy of good old Uncle Sam’s military. Then it “misplaced” another sample of bubonic plague. Unfortunately, it seems that these incidents weren’t just a series of isolated “accidents”; a South-Korean/ American team of investigators …

Source: US Military Lied: 16 Tests On Anthrax And One On Bubonic Plague In South Korean Capital AnonHQ

Christians & Muslims Celebrate Christmas Together In The Holy Town of Najaf AnonHQ

Leave, convert or die was the threat given by ISIS to all the Christians living in Mosul and the majority of them decided to go with the reliable option and fled ISIL control area. Head in the direction of the southern part of Iraq that …

Source: Christians & Muslims Celebrate Christmas Together In The Holy Town of Najaf AnonHQ

Israeli Medic: “We Don’t Provide Treatment To Wounded Palestinians”

Text of tweet from Israeli medic (image from Twitter)

An Israeli medic said on his Twitter page Thursday that field medical crews do not provide treatment to what he called “terrorists”, and stated that, in Hebron, he provided treatment to wounded Israelis “but I did not provide any treatment to the terrorist although he suffered more serious wounds.”

 

Israeli Medic: “We Don’t Provide Treatment To Wounded Palestinians”

Muslims hailed for protecting Christians during terror attack on Kenyan bus | World news | The Guardian

Passengers donated headscarves to help prevent non-Muslims being targeted after al-Shabaab militants stormed the packed vehicle

Source: Muslims hailed for protecting Christians during terror attack on Kenyan bus | World news | The Guardian