Friday, May 26, 2023

STREWTH

 🌏 Zali Steggall MP Retweeted

The PWC stench just gets stronger “the private consultancy of the man who was PwC chief executive at the time of the leaks has received 17 government contracts since April 2021, totalling more than $6.2 million. Luke Sayers (also the president of Carlton Football Club) is a friend of former treasurer Josh Frydenberg (former number-one ticket holder at Carlton).. (cont)

Kissinger 100

 

Henry Kissinger at 100: Still a War Criminal

Forget the birthday candles, let’s count the dead.

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Henry Kissinger is turning 100 this week, and his centennial is prompting assorted hosannas about perhaps the most influential American foreign policymaker of the 20th century. The Economist observed that “his ideas have been circling back into relevancy for the last quarter century.” The Times of London ran an appreciation: “Henry Kissinger at 100: What He Can Tell Us About the World.” Policy shops and think tanks have held conferences to mark this milestone. CBS News aired a mostly fawning interview veteran journalist Ted Koppel conducted with Kissinger that included merely a glancing reference to the ignoble and bloody episodes of his career. Kissinger is indeed a monumental figure who shaped much of the past 50 years. He brokered the US opening to China and pursued detente with the Soviet Union during his stints as President Richard Nixon’s national security adviser and secretary of state. Yet it is an insult to history that he is not equally known and regarded for his many acts of treachery—secret bombings, coup-plotting, supporting military juntas—that resulted in the death of hundreds of thousands. 

Kissinger’s diplomatic conniving led to or enabled slaughters around the globe. As he blows out all those candles, let’s call the roll.

Cambodia: In early 1969, shortly after Nixon moved into the White House and inherited the Vietnam War, he, Kissinger, and others cooked up a plan to secretly bomb Cambodia, in pursuit of enemy camps. With the perversely-named “Operation Breakfast” launched, White House chief of staff H.R. “Bob” Haldeman wrote in his diary, Kissinger and Nixon were “really excited.” The action, though, was of dubious legality; the United States was not at war with Cambodia and Congress had not authorized the carpet-bombing, which Nixon tried to keep a secret. The US military dropped 540,000 tons of bombs. They didn’t just hit enemy outposts. The estimates of Cambodian civilians killed range between 150,000 and 500,000.

Bangladesh: In 1970, a political party advocating autonomy for East Pakistan won legislative elections. The military dictator ruling Pakistan, Gen. Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan, arrested the leader of that party and ordered his army to crush the Bengalis. At the time, Yahya, a US ally, was helping Kissinger and Nixon establish ties with China, and they didn’t want to get in his way. The top US diplomat in East Pakistan sent in a cable detailing and decrying the atrocities committed by Yahya’s troops and reported they were committing “genocide.” Yet Nixon and Kissinger declined to criticize Yahya or take action to end the barbarous assault. (This became known as “the tilt” toward Pakistan.) Kissinger and Nixon turned a blind eye to—arguably, they tacitly approved—Pakistan’s genocidal slaughter of 300,000 Bengalis, most of them Hindus.

Chile: Nixon and Kissinger plotted to covertly thwart the democratic election of socialist president Salvador Allende in 1970. This included Kissinger supervising clandestine operations aimed at destabilizing Chile and triggering a military coup. This scheming yielded the assassination of Chile’s commander-in-chief of the Army. Eventually, a military junta led by Gen. Augusto Pinochet seized power, killed thousands of Chileans, and implemented a dictatorship, Following the coup, Kissinger backed Pinochet to the hilt. During a private conversation with the Chilean tyrant in 1976, he told Pinochet, “My evaluation is that you are a victim of all left-wing groups around the world and that your greatest sin was that you overthrew a government which was going communist.”

East Timor: In December 1975, President Suharto of Indonesia was contemplating an invasion of East Timor, which had recently been a Portuguese colony and was moving toward independence. On December 6, President Gerald Ford and Kissinger, then Ford’s secretary of state, en route from a visit to Beijing, stopped in Jakarta to meet with Suharto, who headed the nation’s military regime. Suharto signaled he intended to send troops into East Timor and integrate the territory into Indonesia. Ford and Kissinger did not object. Ford told Suharto, “We will understand and will not press you on the issue. We understand the problem and the intentions you have.” Kissinger added, “It is important that whatever you do succeeds quickly.” He pointed out that Suharto would be wise to wait until Ford and Kissinger returned to the United States, where they “would be able to influence the reaction in America.” The invasion began the next day. Here was a “green light” from Kissinger (and Ford). Suharto’s brutal invasion of East Timor resulted in 200,000 deaths.

Argentina: In March 1976, a neofascist military junta overthrew President Isabel Perón and launched what would be called the Dirty War, torturing, disappearing, and killing political opponents it branded as terrorists. Once again, Kissinger provided a “green light,” this time to a campaign of terror and murder. He did so during a private meeting in June 1976 with the junta’s foreign minister, Cesar Augusto Guzzetti. At that sit-down, according to a memo obtained in 2004 by the National Security Archive, a nonprofit organization, Guzzetti told Kissinger, “our main problem in Argentina is terrorism.” Kissinger replied, “If there are things that have to be done, you should do them quickly.” In other words, go ahead with your savage crusade against the leftists. The Dirty War would claim the lives of an estimated 30,000 Argentine civilians.

Throughout his career in government and politics, Kissinger was an unprincipled schemer who engaged in multiple acts of skullduggery. During the 1968 presidential campaign, while he advised the Johnson administration’s team at the Paris peace talks, which were aimed at ending the Vietnam War, he underhandedly passed information on the talks to Nixon’s camp, which was plotting to sabotage the negotiations, out of fear that success at the talks would boost the prospects of Vice President Hubert Humphrey, Nixon’s opponent in the race. After the secret bombing in Cambodia was revealed by the New York Times, Kissinger, acting at Nixon’s request, urged FBI director J. Edgar Hoover to wiretap his own aides and journalists to discover who was leaking. This operation failed to uncover who had outed the covert bombing, but, as historian Garrett Graff noted in his recent book, Watergate: A New History, this effort seeded “the administration’s taste for spying on its enemies—real or imagined.” 

In 1976, Kissinger was briefed on Operation Condor, a secret program created by the intelligence services of the military dictatorships of South America to assassinate their political foes inside and outside their countries. He then blocked a State Department effort to warn these military juntas not to proceed with international assassinations. As the National Security Archive points out in a dossier it released this week on various Kissinger controversies, “Five days later, Condor’s boldest and most infamous terrorist attack took place in downtown Washington D.C. when a car-bomb, planted by Pinochet’s agents, killed former Chilean ambassador Orlando Letelier and his young colleague, Ronni Moffitt.”

It’s easy to cast Kissinger as a master geostrategist, an expert player in the game of nations. But do the math. Hundreds of thousands of dead in Bangladesh, Cambodia, and East Timor, perhaps a million in total. Tens of thousands dead in Argentina’s Dirty War. Thousands killed and tens of thousands tortured by the Chilean military dictatorship, and a democracy destroyed. His hands are drenched in blood. 

Kissinger is routinely lambasted by his critics as a “war criminal,” though has never been held accountable for his misdeeds. He has made millions as a consultant, author, and commentator in the decades since he left government. I once heard of a Manhattan cocktail reception where he scoffed at the “war criminal” label and referred to it almost as a badge of honor. (“Bill Clinton does not have the spine to be a war criminal,” he joshed.) Kissinger has expressed few, if any, regrets about the cruel and deadly results of his moves on the global chessboard. When Koppel gently nudged him about the secret bombing in Cambodia, Kissinger took enormous umbrage and shot back: “This program you’re doing because I’m going to be 100 years old. And you are picking a topic of something that happened 60 years ago? You have to know it was a necessary step.” As for those who still protest him for that and other acts, he huffed, “Now the younger generation feels if they can raise their emotions, they don’t have to think.”

As he enters his second century, there will be no apologies coming from Kissinger. But the rest of us will owe history—and the thousands dead because of his gamesmanship—an apology, if we do not consider the man in full. Whatever his accomplishments, his legacy includes an enormous pile of corpses. This is a birthday that warrants no celebration.

 

Tuesday, May 23, 2023

The Moose

 

Hello Carey,

A drunk moose got stuck in a tree. It sounds like the start of a bad joke, but it's actually a true story that happened in Sweden back in 2011. This moose made the poor decision to eat fermented apples and ended up highly inebriated and stuck in a tree. It's a funny story, but it also highlights the fact that alcohol can lead to poor decision-making, even for animals.

And it’s not just Swedish moose that have been known to have one too many.

In Canada, a group of birds ate fermented berries and ended up crashing into windows and cars. In Germany, two hedgehogs spent the night locked up in the zoo after indulging in a discarded beer bottle. And then there’s the drunken bees. Bees can get drunk from fermented nectar, and become very dangerous flyers, often causing accidents.

These stories may be amusing, but they also demonstrate that we're not alone in our issues with alcohol.

We humans are no strangers to making bad decisions when we've had a few too many drinks. I'm sure we've all had nights where we woke up and thought, "What on earth was I thinking?" Maybe we sent a text we regretted, said something we shouldn't have, or ended up in a situation we never imagined we would be in.

But the reality is, alcohol lowers our inhibitions and impairs our judgment, making us more likely to do things we wouldn't normally do.

When we drink, our brains slow down. Like wayyyyy down. Alcohol interferes with the brain's communication pathways and can affect the way the brain looks and works. Alcohol makes it harder for the brain areas controlling judgment to do their jobs and suddenly we understand how the moose ended up in the tree.

Making better decisions is something we can all use help with - even when we're no longer drinking.

After all, it isn’t just alcohol that we use to numb out.

Mindless Facebook scrolling, storm eating, there are so many other ways we often find ourselves making poor choices. These 3 tips can help you make choices you can live with -

1) Practice mindfulness. Be present in the moment, pay attention to your thoughts and feelings, and make conscious choices. By taking a step back and thinking about the consequences of your actions, you can avoid making impulsive decisions you’ll regret later.

2) Don’t do it alone. We all need people we can turn to for advice and guidance to help us make better decisions. It’s helpful to have a sounding board when we're feeling uncertain. And they can also offer practical solutions to our problems, and help us stay accountable.

3) Put it off if you need to. Impulsiveness and trusting your gut isn’t always the best choice. Often we need to gather more information and combine it with what our intuition is telling us in order to make better choices.

The thing is - most of these animals don’t know any better. They can’t do their research or make a conscious choice to make better decisions. They need to rely on their survival instincts. We have so many more resources at our disposal yet, we often choose to be the moose.

xxAnnie

P.S. Have you been the moose in the tree one too many times? Had enough? 

Wednesday, May 03, 2023

Vale Fisky

 A couple of years ago I had a friend request on Facebook from Darrell Fisk. I remembered Fisky from my time in Wangaratta when I played footy at Greta from 1978-1981. Greta was a happy place, I made many friends there, some close, some casual, but it was great for me personally at the time to be involved in such a warm friendly environment. I was of course more than happy to accept Fisky's friend request.

I'm not a frequent poster on FB, but I do check it most days. Fisky was also an occasional poster, but I found him to be of good humour and interesting. A Saint supporter, football evoked a comment from him now and then and I enjoyed picking up on his banter with his mates.

A few weeks back with the Saints starting the year winning everything it occurred to me that I hadn't seen a post from Fisky for a while. It's not unusual for friend's posts not to come up on my feed, so I thought I must have missed his. I searched and looked at his site and saw that along with a birthday wish from me last September, there was one other that had RIP. I messaged Bill O'brien who played at Greta when I did in the 1980 premiership, Bill also being a friend on FB. A few days later Bill answered my question as to Fisky's status, to learn that he died last July. In a very sad accident, he was out cutting firewood with his sons when a tree hit him and killed him.

Fisky was born in 1958 I learned when I googled him and found funeral details. He would have been 63 years old, 6 years 5 months younger than me, so he was in the younger circle at Greta, and we didn't play as teammates in the same team to my recollection. 

It was a shock to learn of his passing by such a means, some nine months after the event. I'm grateful for every day that I lay my head down at night for the safe passage of the day. Random accidents can happen to anyone anytime. I feel for Fisky's family. I'm sorry he didn't get to see the Saints win another flag.