"The longest-running, least-read blog in the world" Peter Forsythe in Hong Kong
Friday, 31 July 2009
Organic food "unlikely to be of any public health relevance."
Thursday, 30 July 2009
Hurrah for pesticides and artificial fertilisers!
Why won't America speak to Israel?
Regarding Celestine Bohlen’s “Telling Israel no: Obama’s bold move” (Letter from Europe, July 29): The Palestinians are not in any way, shape or form ready to negotiate; they are split in a million pieces. The Palestinian Authority is corrupt and ineffectual; Hamas is terrorizing Gaza’s population; Gaza is hemmed in on all sides by Egypt and Israel; Iran is a mess.
What good does it do to pressure Israel on settlements when the other partner in the conflict is in never-never land?
This has been the story all along. The Palestinians refuse to negotiate seriously; the Israelis take more land. In the end, there won’t be any land to negotiate over.
Andrea Moriah, Jerusalem
James Carroll (“A shared Jerusalem,” Views, July 28) writes that “President Obama has replaced the Bush policy of hands-off with a gloves-off readiness to push all parties hard.”
Can Mr. Carroll point to anything at all that Mr. Obama has done that could be interpreted as pushing the Palestianians?
Tuvia Fogel, Milan
Hillary in, Sarah out
Sarah seems happily oblivious that she benefited from Hollywood casting techniques. Just as movie directors have beautiful young actresses playing nuclear physicists and Harvard professors, knowing the fusion of sex appeal and a heavyweight profession will excite, the novelty of a beautiful former beauty queen and TV reporter cast in a powerful role that has featured dour, gray old men like Dick Cheney was thrilling. At first.
As McCain pal and Republican strategist Mike Murphy so sagely observed recently: “If Palin looked like Golda Meir, would we even be talking about her today?”
Sarah should follow her own advice to Hillary and work harder to be capable. Until then, she’s all cage, no bird.
59 is the new 30. Yeah!
...a 59-year-old man who had played his opening two rounds in this tournament with a 16-year-old Italian amateur — was able to best the greatest golfers in the world at least a decade after anyone would have dreamt it possible.
...This wonderful but cruel game never stops testing or teaching you. “The only comment I can make,” Watson told me after, “is one that the immortal Bobby Jones related: ‘One learns from defeat, not from victory.’ I may never have the chance again to beat the kids, but I took one thing from the last hole: hitting both the tee shot and the approach shots exactly the way I meant to wasn’t good enough. ... I had to finish.”
Wednesday, 29 July 2009
Why won't America speak to Israel?
Mr. Obama’s quest for diplomacy has appeared to Israelis as dangerous American naïveté. The president offered a hand to the Iranians, and got nothing, merely giving them more time to advance their nuclear program.
....
Mr. Obama seems to have confused American Jews with Israelis. We are close emotionally and politically, but we are different. We speak Hebrew and not English, we live in the Middle East and have separate historical narratives. Mr. Obama’s stop at Buchenwald and his strong rejection of Holocaust denial, immediately after his Cairo speech, appealed to American Jews but fell flat in Israel. Here we are taught that Zionist determination and struggle — not guilt over the Holocaust — brought Jews a homeland. Mr. Obama’s speech, which linked Israel’s existence to the Jewish tragedy, infuriated many Israelis who sensed its closeness to the narrative of enemies like Mahmoud Ahmedinejad.
....Mr. Obama has made a mistake in focusing on a settlement freeze. For starters, mainstream Israelis rarely have anything to do with the settlements; many have no idea where they are, even when they’re a half-hour’s drive from Tel Aviv....
Next time in Shanghai, check this place out..
The crumbling stone walls that surround the Tian Zi Fang neighbourhood in Shanghai belie a colourful and fascinating corner of the city, with a cosmopolitan mixture of shops, restaurants and galleries.
Its cluster of tiny Shikumen cottages, some brightly painted, others their original dull grey, are criss-crossed by narrow alleys festooned with colourful banners, Chinese lanterns and the odd bit of revolutionary zeal. It's a place of contrasts, reflecting China's past and future, and is as much home to locals as to foreign entrepreneurs, designers and tourists.Inside the former 1920s commune, the smells of Thai noodles, Italian coffee and ginseng tea waft through the photo galleries, CD stores and boutiques. Symbols of the Great Leap Forward are mixed with modern iconography: hanging in a makeshift al fresco gallery, chisel-jawed communist soldiers are juxtaposed with KFC logos and the golden arches of McDonald's, and in a silk boutique figurines of Mao dressed in a green great coat are immersed in an aquarium with Chinese carp.
Kommune was the first Western restaurant to start up in Tian Zi Fang, opening to meet the caffeine needs of a band of Australian expatriates.
Visitors to the restaurant's weekly Great Aussie Barbecue have included the Australian consul general and the head of Qantas, and there are rumours an Australian ex-prime minister will don a Kommune apron in the coming months.
Monday, 27 July 2009
Let the '12 Campaign Begin!
Jerusalem United
The great obstacle to Middle East peace is not that Jews insist on living among Arabs. It is that Arabs insist that Jews not live among them.
Battery bicycles for Hong Kong!
"Submission to Hong Kong Government, to legitimize the use of environmentally-friendly e-bikes in Hong Kong", Peter Forsythe, May 2008. Here.
S&P Multiples
- Current level: 13 times earnings (I forget if this was trailing or forward, though if I recall, they're most often on forward earnings)
- Average of last five decades: 16.5 times
- If stocks were to increase in price to 16.5 times earnings, the market would need to go up 26%.....
Short Stock, Long Stock?
Saturday, 25 July 2009
"Foreigners" in Hong Kong: shock, horror!
Friday, 24 July 2009
Golfing, such a tough life
Thursday, 23 July 2009
Watching the eclipse
Down to the Plaza yesterday to catch the eclipse over HK -- just 75% occluded, but I thought should be good, and was right -- perfect clear day and so relaxing down by Pacific Coffee, watching the moon, crisp and black, slide over the dark yellow sun. Much longer than I thought, overall lasted from 08:15 to 10:32 (or thereabouts....)
Monday, 20 July 2009
Why the Battle of Tours
The Battle of Tours (732). Charles Martel vs Abdul Rahman. Martel was victorious, driving back the Muslim invasions to Europe |
13 May 2019: I’m kind of Archiving this. I don’t want to delete it, but I’m changing the direction of the Blog and so I just want to put it somewhere that I can find it, because it’s part of my history with this blog, now nearly ten years old. There’s also the fact I don’t want to be associated with the “far right’ folks that are identified by the “replacement theory”. That I don’t buy into, although I recognise concerns, as senior Muslim leaders have specifically said they’re going to take over Europe with the “wombs of our women”. So there’s that. But also maybe scare talk. In any case, I don’t want that to be up front because I’m shifting to talk more about a book I’m writing.I call this my "Personal Blog". A place to keep articles and links to issues that interest me. That's why I have no comment section.
I started it after 9/11, 2001, as I got interested in Islam. So it's mainly about Islam, but not exclusively.
I got interested in Islam because George W. Bush said it was a "Religion of Peace". And I thought, funny, then why have 19 of its votaries attacked America?
I still remember George W Bush cutting a fine figure in the rubble, saying that "these folks" (odd word, that, "folks"...) will not get away with it. We will hunt them down and they will pay. Fine fine.... It was then that W said what stuck in my mind "Islam is a religion of peace", he said. So these people (these "folks") who have done this don't represent Islam.
Well, at that time, I'd had nothing much to do with Islam. I'd travelled to many Islamic countries. Let's see: Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Malaysia, Indonesia. And since to Sudan, Egypt, Ethiopia. But I'd not taken much notice of Islam as their religion. Sure, the burkas in Afghanistan were a bit weird to a 24-year-old me. But weird, not threatening.
And then 9-11. And W Bush saying that the perpetrators -- who we pretty quickly knew were Muslim -- did not represent this "religion of peace".
So... I thought I'd better have a closer look at this religion. To see how it was that a "religion of peace" could lead 19 men to hijack planes and slam them into skyscrapers all in the name of their religion of peace. ("I slam, Allah, I slam them for you")
So I bought Koran, Dawood's Penguin edition. And read it cover to cover. Which one can do pretty promptly because it's not long. Not like the Bible. It's less than the size of the New Testament, I'd reckon. And then I read the Hadith, the sayings and doings of Muhammad. And the Sirah, by Ibn Ishaq, which is the authorised biography of Muhammad. I read them all.
Anyway, I can still remember that first reading of the Koran The hairs on the back of my neck stood up. I thought: if this is what we're dealing with, we've got a problem.
Because the Koran is pretty much cover to cover a manual for terrorism. It's no wonder, I thought, that those 19 did what they did. They were bound to do so if they were pious and believed that the Koran was the literal word of God, which they do.
(I still keep that Dawood copy of the Koran by my sofa-side. I dip into it, at random, to see if I randomly come across a peaceable verse. Nope. It's pretty much horror, cover to cover.)
The more I read about Islam, the more concerned I got. So I started to collect links and books. All along I wanted to make sure that I read around the subject, not just the critical side, but the side that supports Islam. That's led me to a library, now numbering in the 1000's with books on all sides of Islam, from Karen Armstrong to Richard Spencer.
But overall, one can't escape the conclusion that Islam is very problematic, to say the least. Tody of doctrine -- the Trinity of Koran, Hadith and the Sirah (the Life) of Muhammad -- is profoundly in contradiction to our traditions of freedom of speech, freedom of conscience, equality of women and minorities. Of course not all Muslims are against the rights and freedoms of the west. But the core ideology of Islam is.
And then, I wanted somewhere to keep my research and links.
Hence this Blog. As for the name of the Blog, well...
The Battle of Tours (October 732) was a battle between Frankish (Charles Martel) and Muslim (Abdul Rahman) forces near Poitiers and Tours in north-central France. The Frankish forces were victorious. Gibbon saw the battle as the high tide of Muslim advance into Europe and Leopold von Ranke as "the turning point of one of the most important epochs in the history of the world".
Many today see a similar battle -- for hearts and minds -- in the world today. Hence "The Battle of Tours."
19th March 2019: And a friend sent me this, which strikes me as a pretty fair description of the Battle: