‘Uncategorized’ Category Archives

9
Aug

THE AUSTRALIAN GREENS PARTY, IDEALISTIC, CHARMING, YUMMY: Scratch the surface and what do you find?

by Arnold Jago in Uncategorized

Many Australian Greens Party policies sound warm and fuzzy, but the Greens advocate a cruel and bleak social agenda.

The Greens have supported legalising assisted suicide in each of the Federal, Victorian, South Australian and Tasmanian parliaments.

We know that overseas, assisted suicide has led to the killing of more and more elderly, handicapped and sick people.

In places where assisted suicide is legal, Palliative Care services tend to be non-existent or inadequate.

Is such a lack of resources what you want for your grandmother?

* * *

Legalising assisted suicide also sends a seriously wrong message to young people — reinforcing their thought that they are worthless and that suicide is OK.

Meanwhile organisations like Beyond Blue try to help those suffering depression instead of sanitising suicide.

Remember, if you vote Greens, you vote for assisted suicide.

* * *

The Greens also want to make abortion legal – all abortion, right up to the day of birth.

In Victorian parliament, the three Greens members all voted in favour of legalised late-term abortion.

A vote for the Greens is a vote for unrestricted abortion.

* * *

And don’t forget, if you vote Labor you vote for the other half of a Greens-dependent coalition likely to control the Senate.
Senator Bob Brown. Plausible chap. Seriously homicidal policies.

23
Jul

CHILD SPONSORSHIP AND THIRD WORLD POVERTY: Does what you give really reach those in need?

by Arnold Jago in Uncategorized

Do you sponsor a child in a third world country?

Have you ever wondered if the child really exists?

Do you wonder what percentage of your giving reaches the poor and how much disappears in administration, executive pay packets etc?

Do you NOT sponsor a child because you’re suspicious about the charities organising such sponsorships?

* * *

Do you want to support a charity helping the genuinely poor whose administration costs are effectively zero . . . .

and whose CEO pay packet and other pay packets do not exist . . . .

because everything is done by unpaid religious and unpaid volunteers who help them?

* * *

If so, you might sponsor a student of Veritas Academy, Palayamkottai, India.

$20 per month will cover one student’s school fees.

Or sponsor an orphan in the Servi Domini Orphanage at $36 per month.

These charitable facilities are run by missionaries of the Society of Saint Pius the Tenth.

If you can’t trust them then you can’t trust anybody.

For more information, contact: The Indian Mission, c/o 20 Robin St, Woy Woy 2256, Australia

and visit: www.sspxasia.com/Countries/India/apostle22_pg2-3.pdf

Children like these need sponsors. Apologies re cutting off some heads.

21
Jul

AIDS PREVENTION: Are the experts barking up the wrong tree?

by Arnold Jago in Uncategorized

This week’s World Conference on HIV/AIDS, meeting in Vienna, has heard what some consider may be good news.

Research in South Africa seems to suggest that a gel containing an anti-AIDS drug may halve infection rates when used before and after “unprotected” sex.

United Nations AIDS program chief scientific adviser, Dr Catherine Hankins, describes this report as “exciting”.

* * *

Certainly a bit of good news on the HIV/AIDS scene would be welcome.

Here in Australia new AIDS cases per year doubled in the ten years 1997 to 2007 – and University of NSW researchers have predicted a further rise of 70 percent in the next few years. 

It seems that the more we focus on trying to develop technological fixes — gadgets, vaccines, and now this gel — the worse things get.

* * *

Everyone says that education must be the key to curbing AIDS.

But what is to be the content? What are we to teach at-risk people?

The answers must include the following:

* teach them that sex with multiple partners is out, because it is flirting with death.

* and that anal sex is out, because it spreads HIV/AIDS so efficiently.

* and that relying primarily on condoms is out. It doesn’t work. Its illusion of being “protected” encourages people into increased disease-spreading behaviours.

* * *

Those few African nations that have had some success in reducing HIV-infection rates — Uganda, Kenya, Zimbabwe — have made their central message “partner reduction”, i.e. faithfulness to husband or wife.

Nearby condom-promoting nations — South Africa itself being a tragic example — have high and un-improving infection rates.

Many people don’t like being told to improve their behaviour, even if it might save lives.

Presumably there are rich condom-manufacturing corporations able to influence policies in the world of HIV/AIDS politics.

* * *

Yet isn’t behavior-modification basic to a common-sense approach to every serious problem that exists in the world?

Just think . . . .

If a government focused its anti-obesity campaign on weight-loss pills — never mentioning eating-reduction — what would we call them?

Crazy, perhaps?

No such common-sense messages in Australia. Plans A and B don't turn us on. We prefer wishful thinking and, at best, plan C. We are reaping plenty of result D

15
Jun

ANTI-ABBOTT WITCH HUNT: Rudd types scrape the bottom of the barrel

by Arnold Jago in Uncategorized

Australian newspapers last week published a poll showing the federal opposition Coalition Parties’ popularity running ahead of the governing Labor Party by 53 percent to 47 percent.

Most Government ministers promptly issued statements — all tending all to use the same phrases, almost as if somebody’s flock of talking parrots had turned out to make the responses.

All the government seems to want to talk about is what a terrible fellow Opposition Leader, Tony Abbott, is — the last thing they wish to discuss is their own recent record.

So next week,  Australia’s National Union of Students will launch a campaign entitled “Abbott’s Heaven, Your Hell”, featuring feminists cauterising Mr Abbott’s alleged anti-women and anti-youth attitudes.

Clever name-callings like “Autocratic Abbott” and “Abbott the Mad Monk” will also be used.

Plus blasts from the past, featuring some of Mr Abbott’s more famous alleged boo-boos . . . .

* * *

Like his 2003 support for raising the age at which parents may access information about their child’s healthcare from 12 to 14. Mr Abbott said that perhaps it should be 16.

Modern research suggests that, in fact, he was right — 16 might even be too young.

A study at Dartmouth University, USA, followed a sample of freshman students through their first college year, comparing their brain function and imaging with that of a control group of students aged 25 to 35. *

Significant differences were found, specifically in brain regions linked to integrating emotion and cognition.

The researchers commented as follows: “The brain of an 18-year old freshman is still far from resembling the brain of someone in their mid-twenties . . . . When do we reach adulthood? It might be much later than we traditionally think.”

* * *

Mr Abbott knows all this from common sense observation. So do most parents.

If some experts do not, then they are wrong.

The Labor Party seems to have it wrong.

The Greens definitely, as always, have it wrong.

Brain imaging confirms common sense on age of brain maturity. Scorecard reads Abbott 1. Rudd etc. 0.

 *  Source: “Anatomical Changes in the Emerging Adult Brain”, online edition of the journal, Human Brain Mapping, at www.dartmouth.edu/~news/releases/2006/02/06.html

12
May

VANDALISM, PARASITISM AND OTHER NASTIES: Becoming ever more prevalent?

by Arnold Jago in Uncategorized

On Anzac Day 2010, the dawn service at the Arncliffe Cenotaph had to be moved indoors after teenage vandals had damaged the monument the previous evening.

“The whole club was horrified,” said Arncliffe RSL president, Peter McIntosh. “We were all pretty angry; and amazed, more than anything. They must know what Anzac Day means to Australians. They just have no respect.”

Police believe the vandals swung on the flagpoles until they snapped at the base, then emptied a wheelie-bin of rubbish over the site.

* * *

Vandals are parasites. You can’t vandalise a building unless there are builders building them.

You can’t be an iconoclast unless somebody is making icons.

Perhaps you can’t be an atheist unless there are believers providing you with a safe society in which to make your brave noises.

How about Richard Dawkins, now reportedly saying, “I am not aware of any Christian suicide bombers . . . . I have mixed feelings about the decline of Christianity insofar as Christianity might be a bulwark against something worse.”

Colour change, mate — from red-rag radical to yellow-livered rat with white flag — all in the space of one panic-attack.

* * *.

A lesson from history:

If your lifestyle ignores, flouts and disregards marriage, you vandalise the foundation underlying the society whose benefits you enjoy.

Domestic violence contributes 10 percent of deaths among Australian women aged 15 to 44 — mostly in families where there is no marriage, but some kind of casual, defacto-style coupling.

Children need to grow up learning that Mums and Dads are normally married — committed to staying together for life . . . .

Otherwise the cycle of shacking-ups and beating-ups will continue forever.

A society not cherishing marriage as unique and special will get the domestic violence it deserves.

* * *

The Church must proclaim marriage as a Sacrament — part of the Natural Law, written into human nature and our universe. Some “churches” don’t.

The (Catholic) Second Vatican Council (1960’s) weakened the supernatural aspects of religion. That was, arguably, spiritual vandalism.

Soon after, in Australia, the 1970’s Whitlam government legalised “no-fault” divorce.

And now we’re menaced by the prospect of legalised “same-sex marriages”, threatening — if they eventuate — to make things worse.

Vandals, physical or spiritual, destroy what is good out of twisted self-indulgence.

4
Apr

HAPPY EASTER: Happy Catholic Easter.

by Arnold Jago in Contemplation, Jesus, Prayer, Uncategorized

If you went to midnight Mass last night, you have been through a very meaningful experience.

First a fire was lit and blessed — in the dark outside — creating light where there was no light.

The Mass readings  included the full-length Genesis account of the Creation, when the light was switched  on in our universe.

At Creation, man was given light for his soul, God’s grace. Within days, the Bible says, disobedience took over, and that light was gone.

* * *

Anyway, the fire at the church was used to light a candle to be venerated because it represents Jesus Christ, “the Light of the World”.

The light of the world is the Sun, you say? Clang. That’s wrong. The Sun will be a black hole soon enough, sending out no more life-giving rays.

Human beings are immortal, soul-wise. We need a light for our souls that will be there forever.

That means God.

* * *

God is an interventionist God. What other kind of God could there be? He intervened by entering our world in the flesh in the person of Jesus Christ.

But Christ isn’t here now, you say?

Isn’t he?

At Mass, we can receive the Body and Blood, the Soul and the Divinity of Christ.

The Roman Catholic Church is, in fact, is the continuing incarnation of God upon earth. We must be careful when we feel tempted to criticise the Church.

Yes, people in it have molested children. Yes, there are others who could have done more to stop it happening, and didn’t.

The fact remains that it is God’s will that we come to him through that same Roman Catholic Church. If it is an unworthy Church in many ways, that should just suit us. We ourselves are unworthy of God’s goodness.

* * *

The Christian gospel is perfect. The Sacraments are perfect.

If you think the Church is not good enough for you because of appalling things happening in it, then you are suffering from a disease called “pride”.

You would do well to get down on your knees and stay there until God has removed it from your heart.

The Easter Candle.