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Tips, Links and Tidbits Newsletter

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Read or Condemn Yourself to Death by Ignorance

The newsletter for those prepared to look and see what is there.

No place for those who blindly bow to

the unholy alter of tyrannical authority.

Wednesday 24th October 2018


G’day,

Here is a sampling of all that crossed my digital desk over the last week.

Furniture Feelers

Justice David Davies Confirms $2.2M Mafia Bribe, Systemic Corruption In NSW Supreme Court

Solar Minimum – Biggest Decline Maybe Ever

Before You Marry

Gold Medal Freestyle Indoor Skydiving - Kyra Poh

This Week In Parliament

The Peacock and The Crow

Journalism Explained

It Didn’t Start With Gas Chambers

Politically Correct Disaster

Setting A Great Example

There Is A Message In The Way A Person Treats You

Transgender_MMA_Fighter Breaks Skull of Opponent

A Person Who Feels Appreciated

Destruction Of Yemen

Wake And Kiss The Person Next To You

Senate Vote On Removing Fuel Excise

Invictus by William Ernest Henley

The EU and US are under a deliberate and concerted attack

I hope you get something from my newsletter this week!

Cheers!

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Furniture Feelers
 
Furniture Feelers
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
Justice David Davies Confirms $2.2MILL Mafia Bribe & Systemic Corruption In NSW Supreme Court
 
judges
 
 
 

There is no evidence more powerful that a crime took place than when a criminal confesses to committing a crime. In December 2015 Justice David Davies of the NSW Supreme Court confirmed that NSW judges had been bribed $2.2 million by the Mafia and also confirmed systemic corruption with NSW Judges refusing to publish reasons for their corrupt secret hearings and court orders.

 
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Solar Minimum – Biggest Decline Maybe Ever
 
Sunrise-Space
 
 
 

The sun is entering perhaps one of the deepest Solar Minima in thousands of years. Sunspots have been absent for most of 2018. This is really alarming. Since the start of 2018, there have been totally spotless days for weeks. The sun’s ultraviolet output has sharply declined and this is not going to end well.

 
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Before You Marry
 
Before You Marry
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
Gold Medal Freestyle Indoor Skydiving - Kyra Poh
 
Gold Medal Freestyle Indoor Skydiving - Kyra Poh
 
 
 

Brilliant!

 
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This Week In Parliament
 
 
 
 

I signed a petition to members of parliament a while ago. Since then I have been on Labor’s email newsletter list. Today I received an email detailing the week’s activities in parliament from their perspective. So I responded.

Tony, thanks for your email documenting what you consider to be the highlights of this week in Parliament from Labor’s perspective.

But I fear you have completely missed the boat on two of the most treasonous acts ever to be waged on the Australian people by those the elected in trust to do right by their constituents rather than their corporate sponsors.

The first was the passing of the TPP with the provisions intact that corporations can sue our government in court. Not just any court of peers as specified in Magna Carta, but one not of peers of the realm. This has the potential of exposing we the public, via our government, to billions of dollars of damages awarded to companies against whom the government legislation was perceived as impacting negatively on their profits. Never mind the benefit of the legislation to the people or the harm of the company’s activities! Hang your head in shame both Liberal and Labor for that one!

The second act of treason was the failure to enact legislation to break up the banks and separate their deposit taking activities from their risky investment activities, exposed as they are to trillions of dollars worth of derivatives bubble. This puts at risk the savings of every bank depositor, large and small, corporate and private, of having those savings “appropriated” via a “bail-in” measure. Hang your heads in shame again, both Labor and Liberal!

 
 
 
 
The Peacock and The Crow
 
The Peacock and The Crow
 
 
 

I read this little story on Facebook and wrote this comment. Read the story first then my comment. Hope you get soemthing from one of them!

While this is true, progress comes from constructive impatience with the way things are compared to how they could/should be.

Personal growth comes from closing the gap between where we are and our full potential.

No great person (by that I mean a person of great accomplishment) was ever satisfied to rest on their laurels.

Major changes for the better in society will only occur when we as individuals step up to the challenge of making them happen. Each day your actions, large and small, send out ripples in our mutual pond. Make your ripples count for the better!

Ignore your looks, they matter but little. It’s who you are that matters more. Look at Eleanor Roosevelt’s life as an example of that! (https://www.thoughtco.com/eleanor-roosevelt-1779802) Only yesterday I was reading a story of how much she was invalidated in her youth yet she was able to get the Universal Declaration of Huma Rights enacted. What a great accomplishment!

Currently solutions are being conceived and implemented for many of the things that are wrong with society. If you are not happy with some aspect of your personality, your actions or your results, create or forward a purpose in which you believe and this will make you feel a whole lot better about yourself and others!

To a happier you!

 
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Journalism Explained
 
Journalism Explained
 
 
 

Gotta love Mark Twain!

 
 
 
 
It Didn’t Start With Gas Chambers
 
It Didn't Start With Gas Chambers
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
Politically Correct Disaster
 
Politically Correct Disaster
 
 
 

This meme is an appropriate encapsulation of where this society is headed.

 
 
 
 
Setting A Great Example
 
Setting A Great Example
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
Transgender_MMA_Fighter Breaks Skull of Opponent
 
Transgender_MMA_Fighter Breaks Skull of Opponent
 
 
 

This is WRONG! If you are born with male parts you play with the sport with the boys, NOT the girls! This case proves the point.

 
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There Is A Message
 
There Is A Message
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
A Person Who Feels Appreciated
 
A Person Who Feels Appreciated
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
Destruction Of Yemen
 
Destruction Of Yemen
 
 
 

The US is ready to defend Syria from a brutish assault launched by Syria’s own government and its allies – or so Washington wants you to believe. In the backdrop, Yemen continues to burn in silence.

 
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Wake And Kiss The Person Next To You
 
Wake And Kiss The Person Next To You
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
Invictus by William Ernest Henley
 
William Ernest Henley
 
 
 

(invictus means unconquerable in Latin)

Out of the night that covers me,
Black as the Pit from pole to pole,
I thank whatever gods may be
For my unconquerable soul.

In the fell clutch of circumstance
I have not winced nor cried aloud.
Under the bludgeonings of chance
My head is bloody, but unbowed.

Beyond this place of wrath and tears
Looms but the Horror of the shade,
And yet the menace of the years
Finds, and shall find, me unafraid.

It matters not how strait the gate,
How charged with punishments the scroll.
I am the master of my fate:
I am the captain of my soul.

In addition to the story below, he was much of the time in excruciating pain from tuberculosis o the bone. One leg was amputated from the knee down, and this fact is not mentioned in some biographies. However that is the reason for this poem - he acted like a pirate, talked like one (actually created the pirate personnae we think of pirates today, arrrgh!) and overrode his horrible pain and disability by a thunderous, but poetic and sensitive side that inspired so many creative men and women of his day. No pussy that man.

Five Fascinating Facts about William Ernest Henley

Posted by interestingliterature

The life of Victorian writer W. E. Henley, told through five quick interesting facts

1. William Ernest Henley was the inspiration for one of the most recognisable characters in Victorian fiction. Henley (1849-1903) was friends with Robert Louis Stevenson, and when Stevenson wrote his first novel, Treasure Island (1883), he was inspired by Henley’s distinctive appearance to create the famous fictional pirate. Henley, who had suffered from tuberculosis from an early age, had his left leg amputated below the knee while still a teenager. Stevenson wrote to Henley that it ’was the sight of your maimed strength and masterfulness that begot Long John Silver. The idea of the maimed man, ruling and dreaded by the sound, was entirely taken from you.’ Henley, who by all accounts exuded a masculine strength and vigour (and had a large red beard and a hearty laugh – a sort of Victorian Brian Blessed, we might say), thus became immortalised as the one-legged Silver. It would be Robert Newton’s film portrayal of Silver, with the West-Country twang and trademark ’Aarrrgh!’ cry, that would lead to the modern perception of pirates in the popular consciousness. So, we might say that ultimately we have Henley to thank for International Talk Like a Pirate Day, too.

2. Henley’s daughter inspired another classic figure in children’s literature. Henley’s daughter Margaret – who died of meningitis in 1894, aged five – was the inspiration for Wendy Darling, J. M. Barrie’s character in Peter Pan. Margaret reported referred to Barrie as her ’fwendy-wendy’, and thus a name was born, and Barrie would immortalise her in his children’s classic. We’ve discussed Wendy Darling – including the popular misconception about the real origin of the name – in this post.

3. His followers were known at the ’Henley Regatta’. Henley’s name is not as widely known now as it was in his day: during the late nineteenth century he was considered one of the leading Victorian men of letters, with his William Ernest Henleyinfluence even being compared to that of Dr Johnson, whose opinions formed and dominated the previous century’s literary tastes. He attracted many followers and devotees and many big literary figures of the day looked to him for guidance and advice.

4. One of his poems is still remembered and anthologised, however. ’Invictus’, written in 1875 when Henley was still in his mid-twenties, was originally published in 1888 without its distinctive title (Latin for ’unconquered’). You can read the entire short poem here. Indeed, the title wasn’t even Henley’s idea, but when Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch, the king of the literary anthology, added the poem to The Oxford Book of English Verse in 1900, he appended the memorable Latin title. The poem introduced a couple of famous phrases into the language: ’bloody, but unbowed’, and the final two lines: ’I am the master of my fate: / I am the captain of my soul.’ Like Kipling’s ’If’, it became popular with readers and has remained popular because it offers a stoic approach to life’s hardships. And we like that sort of thing. The poem was almost certainly inspired by Henley’s loss of the lower half of his left leg: he would remain ’unbowed’ and ’unconquered’ by this physical setback. Clint Eastwood’s 2009 film about the 1995 Rugby World Cup in South Africa is named after the poem, and for good reason: Nelson Mandela recited the poem to his fellow prisoners while he was incarcerated on Robben Island.

5. H. G. Wells dedicated The Time Machine to W. E. Henley. Many readers will encounter Henley’s name now in one of two places: in a poetry anthology containing ’Invictus’, or on the dedication-page of Wells’s first novel, The Time Machine, published in 1895. Henley had published Wells’s novel in serial form in The New Review – one of several publications he edited – and Wells dedicated the one-volume book edition to his editor.

For more information: see the W. E. Henley biography on the Victorian Web. If you enjoyed these facts, check out our interesting facts about Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book.

 
 
 
 
Vote On Removing Fuel Excise
 
Vote On Removing Fuel Excise
 
 
 

Please realise that the major parties are not there for their constituents, they are there to forward an agenda. Remember this at the next election and vote accordingly.

 
 
 
 
The EU and US are under a deliberate and concerted attack
 
The_Killing_Of_Free_Speech
 
 
 

The genocidal Kalergi plan to destroy the indigenous nations and peoples of Europe.

 
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Until next time,
dream big dreams,
plan out how to achieve them,
be continually executing your plans,
enlist people to your causes,
travel and/or read widely, preferably both,
all the while observing what you observe
rather than thinking what you are told to think,
think well of your fellow man,
take time to help your fellow man,
he sorely needs it and it will help you too,
eat food that is good for your body,
exercise your body,
take time to destress,
and do the important things
that make a difference -
they are rarely the urgent ones!

Tom

 
 

Most of the content herein has been copied from someone else. Especially the images. My goodness some people are talented at creating aesthetics! The small bits that are of my creation are Copyright 2014-2018 © by Tom Grimshaw - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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