In deference to our New Zealand brothers I thought it would be fair to do an item about them rather than make this series of contributions an exclusively Australian affair and recognise the NZ part of the ANZAC legend.
The River Plate (Rio de la Plata) separates Argentina and Uruguay.
In 1939 it was the scene of one of the most dramatic naval battles of the war and has been the subject of a movie of the same name.
Read more: The Battle of the River Plate - December 1939
" A relative who lives in Brisbane was telling me about her visit doing Christmas shopping. She wanted to buy for her young children a Nativity Scene so she could put it on the table and explain the meaning of Christmas. Do you know that none of the shop assistants had a clue what she was talking about or even the real meaning of Christmas. This shows how much Australia has lost over the past generation.
So much for politicians enriching our society by bringing in aliens. To me it shows how bad Australia has got"
And that got me thinking about a Christmas a long time ago.
Read more: Does anyone know what a Nativity Scene is these days? We do, but the Young Ones don't....
“The powerful are panicking, and so they should. Their secrets are leaking.” —Miranda Devine, The New York Post
As the Yule log burns down, and the trivialities of the season melt into air, the nation might ask itself how the authorities who run things went to war against the citizens of this land. I will tell you and it will probably make you angry:
It started when the women of the professional and managerial class watched their avatar, Hillary Clinton, lose the 2016 election against a man who seemed the quintessence of everything they hated about Daddydom.
Read more: “The powerful are panicking, and so they should. Their secrets are leaking.”
The EPA has approved Robbins Island Mega Wind Factory in a remote island off Tasmania that will have to stop working for five months of the year so it doesn’t hurt the Orange-bellied Parrot. It will however be able to kill eagles and other birds for the other seven months of the year.
Green electrons are revered, Orange-bellied parrots are sacred but our way of life is up for grabs. It’s a cult.
Read more: Tasmanian mega wind farm approved that can’t operate half the year
The raid on Pearl Harbour failed to catch the US carrier force which was still at sea. It also failed to destroy the oil storage facilities that would have crippled any ability to send a pursuing force. The Japanese strategists knew that the obvious place for an American fight back to be based was Australia. It rapidly consumed the Dutch East Indies and the island of New Britain which was part of the PNG mandated territory awarded to Australia by the League of Nations.
On 10th December, 1941 the tactics conceived by Yamamato and Nagano were again proved correct when Japanese aircraft sank the British battleships Prince of Wales and Repulse off the coast of Malaya. At the same time Guam was captured from the Americans.
Read more: The Bombing of Darwin Part 2 - the Australian Connection
When I first wrote this article I kept thinking " what is the image that most encompasses Australia? "
The Sydney Harbour Bridge?: Opera House? The Great Barrier Reef? What is it that makes us Australia?
And I realised that it was not a place. It was not building or a monument or even a flag. It was us.
It is the people and no matter what our government tries to do, we Aussies still love our country. Though many of our recent migrants do not. So I am leading off with something unexpected.
It is a photo that I love. It is of Dame Edna.
Read more: Indigenous or Aboriginal? First Nation? Is Australia about Race or about Australians?
Back in 1920, in the small town of Winton, the airline company QANTAS was born. The Queensland and Northern Territory Aerial Services Ltd was created and would be known as QANTAS from that day forward.
Its co-founders, Sir Hudson Fysh and Paul McGinness, said "[Qantas] was conceived in Cloncurry, born in Winton and grew up in Longreach."
The Adelaide River Stakes is the name given to the mass exodus of people prior to and following the Japanese air-raid in Darwin on 19th February, 1942. Thanks mainly to an ill-informed statement by a former Governor General, Paul Hasluck, that it is a story full of shame for our national persona, but it is a myth.
The truth is that with much closer examination it was anything but a shameful episode in our most serious year of peril. The propaganda disseminated by the government of the day was based on inadequate information, over-the-top censorship and a failure to take the population into its confidence. The faults lie with a succession of failed civilian and military administrations which, like the behaviour of most politicians, was a deliberate trail of cover-ups and refusal to admit fault.
Read more: The Bombing of Darwin Part 1 - it all started 40 years before
American elections have had a wacky, wild, and wooly history with all kinds of corruption from stuffed ballot boxes to buying votes to voting multiple times, to dead people voting (almost always for Democrats) and miscounting of ballots. Joe Stalin is credited with saying, “The people who cast the votes don’t decide an election, the people who count the votes do.” Stalin was a Communist in Russia not a Democrat in Georgia.
Some cynics would say, “A rose by any other name is still a rose.” Or a skunk called a wobbet still stinks to high Heaven.
I went down to see Redhead (my Mum) yesterday morning. I had a headache which had been stubbornly hanging on for a few days and I was not feeling that chipper. It was about 8 am when I arrived and Redhead was sitting on her throne also known as the Magic Chair as I staggered down her walkway with a thudding head and eyes that did not seem to enjoy the bright summer sunshine of Queensland.
I HATE not being well.
Redhead got off her regal chair and deigned to rise to come to the door to greet me.Two nervous manx cats scarpered out the door because a " stranger" had arrived. Hell, I have only been coming for over 6 months since they arrived. But, no, I am still a " stranger. "
Which brings me to Sailors and Shoeboxes full of memories.
The COVID-19 pandemic brought us a panoply of lies and evidence-light declarations that were less intended to inform Americans than to consolidate power and buy time. Among these were Anthony Fauci’s famous shift from arguing against wearing masks, to recommending wearing one, and, finally, to wearing two.
Fauci also tried to convince us that the SARS-CoV-2 virus was not manipulated in a lab even though his inner circle had emailed him about “unusual features” of the virus that looked “potentially engineered.” And, of course, we had “fifteen days to stop the spread,” an evergreen concept that dragged on for two years. Lest readers fault us for forgetting, there was also the “gain of function” controversy, the focused protection battle, school closures, lockdowns, vaccine mandates, and vaccine misrepresentations.
Please donate to
Swiftcode METWAU4B
BSB 484799
Account
Reference PR |
Please email me so I can thank you.
patriot@patriotrealm.com
Between the mid-19th and early 20th centuries, more than a hundred thousand British children were…
145 hits
Picture the scene. It is the ACME desert, Somewhere in the MIDDLE of nowhere.......... somewhere…
228 hits
As young folk, didn't some of us feel like rebels without a cause? I am…
237 hits
The Battle of Britain ended on 15th September, 1940 but the Blitz continued long after that. Following…
205 hits
In 1984, Sir Alec Jeffreys, a British geneticist, made a groundbreaking discovery that would forever…
242 hits
As our countries are collapsing under the weight of wokeism, social and communist ideology, who…
205 hits
How often do we lament that we do not have visionaries and forward thinkers in…
228 hits
Yesterday, one of our community members spoke about a film he watched called " Black…
207 hits
43 hits
A perfect storm of crises has been building. It comes from still bubbling rage with…
277 hits
Recently, the internet has gone crazy over the issue of pets being eaten by illegal…
250 hits
When I was a child, my teacher taught us the story of Grace Darling, a…
245 hits
“The stupidity of democracy. It will always remain as one of democracy’s best jokes that…
261 hits
Henry Lawson managed to capture the heartbeat of The Bush. And that heart is under…
274 hits
"The Prisoner," a British television series created by Patrick McGoohan, first aired on the 29th…
281 hits
It is strange that there is no discussion of it, but in two weeks and…
252 hits
During the early years of World War II, the British Army encountered difficulties in advancing…
278 hits
Just as is the case in many countries around the world, Australians are increasingly confused about…
272 hits
In 1929, Joseph Stalin was hell-bent on getting the farmers to forfeit their rights to…
221 hits
Today, I want to talk about Laughter. Humour to be exact. Today, we are talking…
306 hits
The following article was published in 1993. Over 30 years ago. Does the modern bureaucratization…
300 hits
The Weimar Republic was born out of the ashes of World War I, following Germany's…
297 hits
57 hits
Until people learn that the same propaganda they see in media, schools, and entertainment today…
282 hits
I have had a pretty colourful life one way or another. And it got me…
251 hits
“Some of us may forget that, of all the Allies, it was the Australians who…
261 hits
The Emu War is one of Australia's most curious and bizarre historical events. It took…
302 hits
Of all the magnificent units and regiments of the Australian Army I doubt if any…
296 hits
The 1951 waterfront dispute in New Zealand, often referred to as the "1951 Waterfront Lockout,"…
294 hits
During World War II, Australia was a key player in the Allied war effort, providing…
310 hits
The first occupants of the Olympics village in Paris quickly taught the caterers that athletes…
244 hits