RSS/XML | Add to My Yahoo!| Essays | Main Page | Disclaimer |

April 25, 2007

Prince Harry to army: Use me or lose me

by

Britain’s Prince Harry, third in line to the throne (behind his father and older brother) has reportedly told the British Army that if it prevents him from taking a front-rank assignment in Iraq with his unit, he’ll resign his commission.

“Prince Harry’s deployment to Iraq, as we have always said, is under constant consideration,” a defense ministry spokeswoman said. “It is still our intention that Prince Harry will deploy as a troop leader.”

In this role, the 22-year-old red-haired prince would be leading 12 people in four Scimitar armored reconnaissance vehicles.

But the best-selling Sun tabloid reported that army chiefs had ordered an 11th-hour review of his planned deployment.

The move would likely end up with Harry being banned from going near the front line, the Sun cited unnamed senior sources as saying. …

The prince, who as a Second Lieutenant has the rank of Cornet in his regiment, had reportedly threatened to quit the army if not allowed to serve on the front line.

Good on yer, Harry!


Posted @ 9:12 pm. Filed under Iraq, Britain

February 17, 2007

When gun-control laws don’t work . . .

by

… the answer must be more gun control laws!

Only in Britain would you find this line of reasoning:

We have, post-Dunblane, what are said to be the toughest gun control laws in the world. They have actually proved strikingly ineffectual.

Gun crime has doubled since they were introduced. Young hoodlums are able to acquire handguns - either replica weapons that have been converted, or imports from eastern Europe - with ease. With no dedicated frontier police, our borders remain hopelessly porous. The only people currently incommoded by the firearms laws are legitimate holders of shotgun licences, who are subjected to the most onerous police checks.

So what to do? The usually sensible Telegraph says the solution is to enable even more draconian police powers and stiffen sentences for gun offenses.

The truth is that the laws relating to possession of guns are nowhere near tough enough. …

In particular, the ludicrous inhibitions placed on the police when it comes to exercising powers of stop and search have to be lifted. So must the post-Macpherson burden of political correctness, which makes any police officer think twice before challenging a young black man on the street. There is a wider failure here.

NB: in Great Britain merely possessing a gun, other than a registered shotgun, is illegal. I didn’t say “carrying,” but possessing. As in your house, locked inside a safe. Rusted beyond use. Lacking ammunition. It’s still illegal and a British subject will go to prison for that.

The Dunblane reference, btw, is to a “multiple murder-suicide which occurred at the primary school in the Scottish town of Dunblane on 13 March 1996. It remains the deadliest attack on children in United Kingdom history. Sixteen children and one adult were killed, in addition to the attacker;” more at Wikipedia.

Crime in Britain has become so severe that in 2003 even the BBC explained, “Why Britain needs more guns.”

“You are now six times more likely to be mugged in London than New York. Why? Because as common law appreciated, not only does an armed individual have the ability to protect himself or herself but criminals are less likely to attack them. They help keep the peace. A study found American burglars fear armed home-owners more than the police. As a result burglaries are much rarer and only 13% occur when people are at home, in contrast to 53% in England.

Of the 13 percent of occupied-home burglaries in the US, most stem from the burglars’ mistaken belief that the home is empty. In Britain, they don’t care because it is actually illegal for residents to defend themselves with force against an intruder. Remember Tony Martin? He was convicted of murder and sent to prison because he shot and killed a home intruder after suffering numerous home invasions in which he had been attacked and injured. The result? Mark Steyn, as always, nails it:

These days, even as he or she is being clobbered, the more thoughtful British subject is usually keeping an eye (the one that hasn’t been poked out) on potential liability. Four years ago, Shirley Best, proprietor of the Rolander Fashion emporium, whose clients include Zara Phillips, was ironing some clothes when the proverbial two youths showed up. They pressed the hot iron into her flesh, burning her badly, and then stole her watch. “I was frightened to defend myself,” said Miss Best. “I thought if I did anything I would be arrested.” There speaks the modern British crime victim.

The British used to be a free people, but no longer.


Posted @ 10:56 am. Filed under Britain

February 2, 2007

Tony Blair might walk the plank

by

British Prime Minister Tony Blair announced some weeks ago that he would step down from the PM’s office in July. Now his own Labour party leaders are dropping thinly-veiled hints he should leave much sooner, before Easter. The Daily Mail reports how PM Blair’s administration has become mired in scandal to the point of near shutdown. In fact, police have even spent hours interviewing Mr. Blair himself.

Tony Blair’s premiership was on the verge of complete paralysis on Thursday night after it emerged that he was interviewed a second time in secret by police investigating the cash for honours scandal.

Detectives questioned the Prime Minister for nearly an hour in Downing Street over claims that key aides tried to cover-up the affair.

What is the “cash for honours” scandal? It is that wealthy people loaned money to Mr. Blair’s party for the 2005 election campaigns in exchange for being nominated for honors by the government, usually meaning a knighthood.

What intensifies the scandal at this moment is the fact that, having already been interviewed by police in December, the PM’s second interview was not announced to the public. Despite that Scotland Yard itself put the QT on the interview, for “operational reasons,” the public and media reaction has been very negative. That Mr. Blair’s official spokespersons were thereby forced to deny it only made matters worse, reported The Telegraph.

Downing Street was forced further on the defensive after it became clear that the press had been kept in the dark about Mr Blair’s second interview.

At daily press briefings over the past week, Tom Kelly, Mr Blair’s official spokesman, was repeatedly asked whether the Prime Minister had spoken to police or been approached for a further interview.

On each occasion he said he was not aware of any such development.

Members of Blair’s own party have gone on the record as saying that if Mr. Blair doesn’t quit the PM office very quickly, it will mean the end of the Labour party, says the Daily Mail.

With Downing Street looking increasingly like a crime scene and less like a seat of government, senior figures painted a devastating portrait of a discredited administration that is falling apart by the day. …

Sources in the Whips Office warned that a majority of Labour’s 352 MPs now want the Prime Minister to tear up his plans to quit this summer after a decade in office and go before Easter.

They claim Labour activists are deserting in droves, leaving the party facing meltdown in May’s council elections.

Last night left-wing Labour MP Jeremy Corbyn said: “Many members of the Labour party are finding these episodes deeply embarrassing and very damaging. The sooner that Tony Blair sets a date for his departure, the better for all of us.”

Never before has a serving prime minister been interviewed by police in relation to a criminal investigation. It seems nearly certain now that one of the principal targets of the investigation is Lord Levy, one of Mr. Blair’s primary aides and his chief fund raiser (now nicknamed “Lord Cashpoint”). Nearly all political watchers in Britain agree that the scandal will overshadow the rest of Mr. Blair’s legacy for many years, preventing him from receiving “justified credit” for his administration’s many positive accomplishments, according to former Labour leader Lord Kinnock..


Posted @ 8:55 am. Filed under Britain

February 1, 2007

Muslim soldiers acted as “tethered goats”

by

About that plot of Islamists in Britain to kidnap a couple of British Muslim soldiers and behead them (”Let this be a warning to you all. . . “) , it turns out that the two Muslim soldiers designated by the terrorists to be snatched were aware of the plot. And, better yet - and bully for them - they actually agreed to put themselves at risk to help authorities nab the terrorist wannabes.

The soldiers - who are not thought to have told their families that they were potential targets - were placed under unprecedented surveillance for weeks as officers waited for the terrorists to strike.

And as they tried to carry out their ordinary duties, the pair were aware that if the gang attempted to stage their abduction they could be attacked and bundled into a waiting vehicle at any time.

To prevent this, the security forces mounted a sophisticated surveillance operation.

In an operation reminiscent of a spy drama, their every move was monitored by a team of crack MI5 agents - linked to the soldiers by the latest in modern technology. ...

Incredibly, the two men carried on with their daily routines but were secretly shadowed around the clock by police and intelligence personnel, using high-technology tracking and bugging techniques. Surveillance teams kept a constant watch, looking for any sign of the plotters.

The two men were fitted with discreet tracking devices, with similar beacons attached to their cars, and armed response teams were on permanent standby to stage a rescue mission in case a kidnap plot was sprung. ...

The 330 Muslims serving in the UK military - including some 250 Army soldiers - have been ordered to take particular care over their own security.

An amazing story, and major kudos to the two soldiers who agreed to place themselves at lethal risk to defend their country. I hope this part of the story gets major publicity. If Western Muslims are sometimes criticized for passivity in the face of Islamist terrorism, then their courage against it should be widely acknowledged. I’ve done my part, anyway.


Posted @ 8:26 pm. Filed under War on terror, London/UK, Britain, MBA Foreign Policy

“Wave of hatred” at all-time high

by

Anti-Judaism in Britain is at an all-time high:

A study published today shows the number of reported anti-Semitic incidents has almost tripled in 10 years, with more than half the attacks last year taking place in London.

The findings prompted the report’s authors to warn of a “wave of hatred” against Jews.

The number of incidents increased to 594 last year, up by 31 per cent on the previous year.

Violent assaults soared to 112, up by more than a third on 2005. …

• An Orthodox Jew punched in the face and almost pushed off a Tube platform by an Arab man who screamed: “Get back to Stamford Hill, I want to kill you all”

• A Jewish man walking to synagogue with his two young sons suffered a broken leg after being punched and kicked by a white man shouting “f***ing Jew”

• Seventy incidents of desecration and damage to synagogues, cemeteries, Jewish schools and private homes with attacks including swastikas daubed on walls

• Savage assault of a 12-year-old Jewish girl Jasmine Kranat, who was beaten unconscious on a north London bus by two teenage girls who asked her first if she was Jewish.

Here is the USA, the number of anti-Semitic incidents actually declined, though slightly, in 2006 from the year before. But 2004 saw the highest number of anti-Jewish incidents since 1994.


Posted @ 8:13 pm. Filed under Trends, Current events/news, Britain, Judaism

November 28, 2006

Russian hit job? Probably not.

by

Russian ex-spy Alexander Litvinenko, poisoned in London with polonium 210, died just after accusing Russian President Vladimir Putin of ordering his assassination. The case is under investigation by Scotland yard, who is flying investigators to Moscow.

Last evening I asked a colleague I have known for many years what he thought about this case. “Bob” grew to adulthood in communist Romania and offers insights into those years that are firsthand and insightful. He has emphasized to me over the years that in the East Bloc, especially Russia, the communists never left power, they just changed their name. Putin, of course, headed the old Soviet KGB before the USSR dissolved.

So, I asked him, did Putin order the FSB (the KGB’s successor agency, same thing by a different name) to kill Litvinenko?

A: Probably not. Certanly the FSB could have done it, as far as capability goes, but the hit was too sloppy and poorly contrived to be a FSB job. Besides, if the FSB wanted Litvinenko dead, they would not have chosen a method that took so long to kill him and would gain such notoriety. The FSB would have killed him very quickly.

Q: Maybe the FSB wanted to send a warning by killing Litvinenko so cruelly.
A: Warn whom? Anyone who ever lived under the old regimes already knows what they are capable of. This kind of murder, as a state deed, is not necessary simply to warn others.

Q: Revenge, perhaps, for Litvinenko’s dissent and turning against his former employers?
A: Litvinenko never really knew anything that could seriously hurt Russia. Besides, if they wanted to silence him, they would have made sure he died very quickly, probably instantly. They would not have poisoned him in such a way that would find him in safe hands in a hospital where he couls tell the British everything he knew with impunity.

Q: So if the Russian government didn’t kill Litvinenko, who did?
A: Don’t know. But I don’t think it was a state hit.

The mystery deepens.


Posted @ 8:48 am. Filed under Foreign Affairs, Britain

November 3, 2006

Farewell Guy, we hardly knew ye

by

Especially since you’ve been dead for 399 years.

Only in England!

Hat tip: Nancy Reyes.


Posted @ 12:47 pm. Filed under History, Britain

September 26, 2006

The UK continues to surrender

by

In Nottingham a new cemetery has just opened that will use Muslim rules of burial for everyone, Muslim or not.

A new, $4.7 million cemetery in Nottingham is the first public graveyard in the UK to have all its burial plots aligned with Mecca and to inter those of all faiths in the Muslim tradition.

All headstones at the 40-acre burial site will face northeast, enabling the dead to look over their shoulder toward Mecca, the manner prescribed for followers of Islam in the UK.

Church leaders have criticized the decision by local officials, saying that imposing a Muslim model on Christians, who traditionally are buried facing east, is discriminatory. …

Steve Dowling, the official with the Nottingham city council, said that he met with the city’s Cemeteries Consultative Committee, a multi-faith group, before deciding on the Islamic burial plan. He made his decision, in part, on esthetics and the need for symmetry.

“For people of the Muslim faith this fits in with a religious requirement, but it will also ensure a tidy appearance for the site,” he said. “People can choose to be buried facing another direction but if they do not specify that, they will be buried facing northeast. The vast majority of people do not express a preference.”

Nigel Lymn Rose, past president of the National Association of Funeral Directors, said he had been surprised when he asked Dowling if the new cemetery had made accommodations for Muslims and Dowling answered, “Oh yes, we’re burying everyone so they are aligned to Mecca. It will make things easier.”

“It’s one thing to be buried facing northeast because that is the way the cemetery lies, or the plot within it – it is quite another thing to learn that you have been buried facing that direction because it follows Islamic law,” said Rose.

Even Raza Ul Haq, imam at the Madni Masjid Mosque, is bewildered by the decision.

“It is part of our religion for the dead to be aligned with Mecca. It is very important. But for Christians, if they want to face somewhere else we support them,” he said.

Muslims make up less than five per cent of the Nottingham region’s 500,000 population.

I’m trying to imagine the bureacratic hoops next of kin will have to jump through to request burial facing another direction. As for Raza Ul Haq, he sounds like the only straight-up guy involved with the whole thing.


Posted @ 11:08 am. Filed under Britain, Islam
Email (to donald-at-donaldsensing.com) is considered publishable unless you request otherwise. Sorry, I cannot promise a reply.

Blogroll:

News sites:

Washington Times
Washington Post
National Review
Drudge Report
National Post
Real Clear Politics
NewsMax
New York Times
UK Times
Economist
Jerusalem Post
The Nation (Pakistan)
World Press Review
Fox News
CNN
BBC
USA Today
Omaha World Herald
News Is Free
Rocky Mtn. News
Gettys Images
Iraq Today

Opinions, Current Events and References

Opinion Journal
US Central Command
BlogRunner 100
The Strategy Page
Reason Online
City Journal
Lewis & Clark links
Front Page
Independent Women's Forum
Jewish World Review
Foreign Policy in Focus
Policy Review
The New Criterion
Joyner Library Links
National Interest
Middle East Media Research Institute
Institute for the Secularisation of Islamic Society
Sojourners Online
Brethren Revival
Saddam Hussein's Iraq
National Coalition Against Legalized Gambling
Telford Work
Unbound Bible
Good News Movement
UM Accountability
Institute for Religion and Democracy
Liberty Magazine

Useful Sites:

Internet Movie Database
Mapquest
JunkScience.com
Webster Dictionary
U.S. Army Site
Defense Dept.
Iraq Net
WMD Handbook Urban Legends (Snopes)
Auto Consumer Guide
CIA World Fact Book
Blogging tools
Map library
Online Speech Bank
Technorati
(My Tech. page)

Shooting Sports

Trapshooting Assn.
Nat. Skeet Shooting Assn.
Trapshooters.com
Clay-Shooting.com
NRA
Baikal
Beretta USA
Browning
Benelli USA
Charles Daly
Colt
CZ USA
EAA
H-K; FABARM USA
Fausti Stefano
Franchi USA
Kimber America
Remington
Rizzini
Ruger
Tristar
Verona
Weatherby
Winchester
Blogwise

Coffee Links

How to roast your own coffee!

I buy from Delaware City Coffee Company
CoffeeMaria
Gillies Coffees
Bald Mountain
Front Porch Coffee
Burman Coffee
Café Maison
CCM Coffee
Coffee Bean Corral
Coffee Bean Co.
Coffee for Less
Coffee Links Page
Coffee Storehouse
Coffee, Tea, Etc.
Batian Peak
Coffee & Kitchen
Coffee Project
HealthCrafts Coffee
MollyCoffee
NM Piñon Coffee
Coffee is My Drug of Choice
Pony Espresso
Pro Coffee
7 Bridges Co-op
Story House
Sweet Maria’s
Two Loons
Kona Mountain
The Coffee Web
Zach and Dani’s

Roast profile chart

Links for me

Verizon text msg
HTML special codes
Google Maps
Comcast
RhymeZone
Bin Laden's Strategic Plan
Online Radio
The Big Picture
SSM essay index
See my Essays Index!
Web Enalysis

Other:

An online news and commentary magazine concentrating on foreign policy, military affairs and religious matters.

Editor:
Donald Sensing

Columnists:
John Krenson
Daniel Jackson


Google Search
WWW
This site
Old Blogspot OHC

Fresh Content.net

Sitemeter

Fight Spam! Click Here!

Archives

November 2007
S M T W T F S
« Oct    
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
252627282930  

Archives for Jan 03-Mar 05.

Where ya from?

18 queries. 0.246 seconds