Tuesday, 18 January 2011
And where was Tony?
Before that? Well he was doing the odd 'flood' interview while on holidays.
Definitely a talker not a doer when it doesn't involve wearing lycra or showing off the navel.
Jules tongue-in-cheek scores a Keneally bullseye
After a year of ignoring NSW North Coast invitations to inspect problems on the Pacific Highway, NSW Premier Krisitina Keneally quickly hops up by helicopter for a photo opportunity during the recent flooding, and...............the locals noticed!
The Daily Examiner
political cartoon on 15 January 2011Monday, 17 January 2011
Slightly stir-crazy in Yamba, January 2011
Locals are quietly smiling at the fact that Clarence Valley Council set up a road block just out of town.
Rumour has it that after endless rain then flood, tourists just wanted to go home - please!
Unfortunately they wanted to take the family cars and caravans though flood water coursing over a narrow river causeway which is one section of the only road which ties the village to the outside world.
Yamba Road is expected to be open today.
Photo from The Daily Examiner
Oh, Germaine! It can't be the tyranny of distance at work - you're just around the corner
A hat tip to Clarrie Rivers for sending this Germaine Greer quote concerning the Clarence Valley flooding in January 2011:
Actually Germaine, Yamba stayed relatively dry even if flood waters had cut it off from the rest of the New South Wales North Coast.
That’s because it had stopped heavily raining in the catchment about 36 hours before the flood peak came past this little coastal town during a very low tide period on its way out to sea.
Germaine presumably was submitting her copy electronically to The Guardian U.K. from somewhere in Queensland and did not think to click onto the Australian Bureau of Meteorology website to double check her ‘facts’.
It is difficult to find an acceptable raison d'être for modern whaling by advanced nations
Minke whale image from Mad Black Cat
Japan is not the only nation which, despite not being protein poor, insists on clinging to annual whale hunts as a national ‘right’.
Iceland which resumed commercial whaling in 2006 also vigorously protects its hunts in the face of world-wide calls to desist.
How far removed this right to hunt is from any societal food need or commercial reality is seen in an extract from a 9 July 2009 U.S. diplomatic cable:
¶2. (SBU) Staff members of Hvalur, hf, which is the only company in Iceland with the capability to hunt large whales, told Emboff on July 3 that whaling is providing jobs for 150 to 200 people. However, they admitted they are keeping their fingers crossed that there is a market for the meat and said, otherwise "this is a doomed operation." Since minke meat is the only whale meat consumed and sold in Iceland, the fin meat must be exported to another market, such as Japan. In May, Greenpeace and a local environmental group held a press conference which featured a recorded conversation with the Japanese importer of the Icelandic whale meat who stated he would not be importing any meat from Iceland this year. In late June, the Japanese Charge d'Affaires told Emboff that he didn't believe there was a market for the fin meat in Japan.
¶3. (SBU) Charge d'Affaires met with the Minister of Fisheries on July 9 and strongly protested the renewed whaling, particularly the large number of fin whales hunted. CDA reiterated that whaling is an impediment to agricultural and fish exports to the U.S, particularly to environmentally conscious outlets like Whole Foods grocery store, and underscored the Japanese CDA's belief that there is no market for Icelandic whale in Japan. The Minister responded that this was a sovereignty issue and that Iceland is a coastal nation that is using all its marine resources sustainably. He noted his political party is generally against whaling and the government is redoing the country's whaling laws, which date from 1947. He
also said the government has tasked the University of Iceland Economic Institute to create a cost and benefits report on whaling, which the Minister expects to use to develop a new whaling policy at the end of this whaling season. Regarding the reported absence of a whale meat market overseas, the Minister said that marketing was a private commercial issue which did not concern the government.
In the 2009-2010 whaling season the Iceland Government was reputed to have allowed a total hunt quota of 200 minke whales and 150 fin whales.
In the same year Japan’s stockpile of unsold whale meat was thought to be more than 6,000 tonnes.
The Wall Street Journal on 14 January 2011:
Read the WikiLeaks cables with Japan mentions in regard to Iceland’s whale hunting policies here:
June 10, 2008 cable from the U.S. embassy in Reykjavik
June 13, 2008 cable from the U.S. embassy in Reykjavik
January 30, 2009 cable from the U.S. embassy in Reykjavik
June 10, 2009 cable from the U.S. embassy in Reykjavik
Sunday, 16 January 2011
Google's visual aid to Australian January 2011 flooding
NSW's Show Pony made a rare visit to the north coast of NSW
Keneally cannot be bothered to take up a long standing invitation from north coast communities to travel the Pacific Highway and experience the deathtrap first hand , but she managed a flight there as quick as a wink for the flood.
The Sun Herald's Heath Aston had this piece in his column Naked Eye.
Well done, local journo Terry Deefholts (The Daily Examiner)!