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Author: allen.pizzey

Did ‘Boomers’ Have it Better?

Did ‘Boomers’ Have it Better?

While on an ear­ly morn­ing pad­dle this week I watched a pair of young white-tailed deer lock antlers and shove each oth­er, prac­tis­ing for the upcom­ing strug­gle to find a mate. It made me glad I’m not a deer. In the ran­dom way that thoughts progress, it also brought to mind the ques­tion of whether “boomers” (like me) have had it bet­ter than sub­se­quent generations.Read the rest

THE DUMBEST WORD IN POLITICS

THE DUMBEST WORD IN POLITICS

It nev­er ceas­es to bemuse me that would-be lead­ers of coun­tries where peace and per­son­al secu­ri­ty are pret­ty much the expect­ed norm, reflex­ive­ly vow to fight on behalf of vot­ers, as opposed to work, which is what we actu­al­ly pay them to do. The upcom­ing Cana­di­an elec­tion is a case in point.Read the rest

TO TURN OFF A WORLD GONE MAD, FIND LOONS

TO TURN OFF A WORLD GONE MAD, FIND LOONS

Thus far, I’ve used my “perch” to  pon­der and com­ment (OK, pon­tif­i­cate) on strife, con­flict, suf­fer­ing and human fol­ly. Now it’s time for a break, to fol­low the dic­tum of “Desider­a­ta”, the ide­al­is­tic poem we ‘boomers’ taped on our bed­room wall: “Go placid­ly amid the noise and the haste…”.Read the rest

When Cultural Awareness is a Weapon Wasted

When Cultural Awareness is a Weapon Wasted

In con­ven­tion­al war­fare, cul­tur­al aware­ness ranks con­sid­er­ably low­er than supe­ri­or fire­pow­er. In uncon­ven­tion­al con­flicts, it’s the oppo­site side of the same coin. The U.S. mil­i­tary has ignored it three times in the last thir­ty years, with a vari­a­tion of the same neg­a­tive result each time.Read the rest

The Humans Giving Weasels a Bad Name

The Humans Giving Weasels a Bad Name

Among the many remark­able inhab­i­tants of the lake where the pho­to for this blog site was tak­en are weasels.
Resource­ful, fast noc­tur­nal hunters, weasels avoid humans. They also have the mis­for­tune to be a syn­onym for cun­ning or deceit, which unjust­ly asso­ciates them with the kind of peo­ple try­ing to “weasel” their way out of their share of respon­si­bil­i­ty for what is hap­pen­ing in Afghanistan.Read the rest

Will Afghanistan Prove Churchill Got America Wrong?

Will Afghanistan Prove Churchill Got America Wrong?

“You can always count on Amer­i­cans to do the right thing, after they’ve tried every­thing else.”
Had Sir Win­ston Churchill coined his famous phrase with the Afghan deba­cle as a bench­mark, he could have added that the learn­ing process invari­ably includes tuition fees paid by those with no say in the curriculum.Read the rest

The Afghans Have a Proverb for It

The Afghans Have a Proverb for It

The 19th cen­tu­ry strug­gle for dom­i­nance in Afghanistan was dubbed “The Great Game’.
The 21st cen­tu­ry ver­sion is look­ing increas­ing­ly like ‘The Grotesque Game’;  summed up neat­ly by an Afghan proverb: “While the butch­ers were argu­ing, the cow dropped dead.”Read the rest

THE SHREDDING OF MANDELA’S IDEAL

THE SHREDDING OF MANDELA’S IDEAL

“I have cher­ished the ide­al of a demo­c­ra­t­ic and free soci­ety in which all per­sons live togeth­er in har­mo­ny and with equal opportunities.”
Nel­son Mandela’s words on the day he was released from being the 20th century’s most famous polit­i­cal pris­on­er have been shred­ded by his successors.Read the rest

Pegasus ISN’T Spying for Israel? Really?

Pegasus ISN’T Spying for Israel? Really?

“I’m shocked, shocked, to find that gam­bling is going on in here.”
The iron­ic line by the cor­rupt police­man Louis as he accepts his win­nings in ‘Casablan­ca’, echoes in denials that Israeli intel­li­gence has access to infor­ma­tion gath­ered by users of  the Israeli-run NSO Group’s ‘Pega­sus’ spyware.
Israel’s spies tap even the most mun­dane poten­tial sources of intelligence.Read the rest

When Past Matters More Than Present…

When Past Matters More Than Present…

Syn­onyms for matur­ing in the Mer­ri­am-Web­ster dic­tio­nary include: devel­op­ment, growthmat­u­ra­tion, and ripen­ing.
Log­i­cal­ly, then, adults should be mea­sured not by what they start­ed out as, but what they have become.

In prac­tice, today’s yard­stick is best summed up by the reply the har­ried edi­tor in Eve­lyn Waugh’s “Scoop” used to counter his proprietor’s mad­cap ideas: “Up to a point, Lord Copper.”Read the rest