Kiama, Sunday 12 March 2017

Today, Sunday, was a perfect day for a drive to Kiama. The Jazz Festival music was very pleasant. We could hear it in all the streets where we walked along. It was a bit like country music at times. The band was actually in the park, but we did not venture there. Instead we tried out the Licked GELATERIA. We liked what we purchased: Peter chose chocolate and rum/raisin ice-cream, I had lemon sorbet and green apple sorbet. For six Dollars each we thought it was very good value.

 

George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four

The following is a copy of one of my blogs from October 2014. You can find the blog with the above title here:

https://auntyuta.com/2014/10/11/george-orwells-nineteen-eighty-four/

I still did not finish reading the whole novel on ‘kindle’. Today I thought about it that we once watched a film version of the book. I wanted to see, whether wikipedia said something about the movie. I did find quite a bit about different movie versions. I also found the following entry about the book in wikipedia.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nations_of_Nineteen_Eighty-Four#Airstrip_One

Here is a bit of what it says on the above page of wikipedia:

Ambiguity
Almost all of the information about the world beyond London is given to the reader through government or Party sources, which by the very premise of the novel are unreliable. Specifically, in one episode Julia brings up the idea that the war is fictional and that the rocket bombs falling from time to time on London are fired by the government of Oceania itself, in order to maintain the war atmosphere among the population (better known as a false flag operation). The protagonists have no means of proving or disproving this theory. However, during preparations for Hate Week, rocket bombs fell at an increasing rate, hitting places such as playgrounds and crowded theatres, causing mass casualties and increased hysteria and hatred for the party’s enemies. War is also a convenient pretext for maintaining a huge military–industrial complex in which the state is committed to developing and acquiring large and expensive weapons systems which almost immediately become obsolete and require replacement.
Because of this ambiguity, it is entirely possible that the geopolitical situation described in Goldstein’s book is entirely fictitious; perhaps The Party controls the whole world, or perhaps its power is limited to just Great Britain as a lone and desperate rogue nation using fanaticism and hatred of the outside world to compensate for political impotence. It’s also possible that a genuine resistance movement exists, or that Oceania is indeed under attack by outside forces.”

I say all this sounds pretty ambiguous. But what I remember about the novel and the film and what I’ve re-read this far this is the sort of picture I do get from this novel. All in all some pretty scary ideas about an imagined world. Sometimes these things do sound a little bit too true for comfort!

With the following link you can find a piece about what our Orwellian destiny might b e written in the AIM Network by By Ad astra:

https://theaimn.com/twenty-twenty-four-orwellian-destiny/

Twenty Twenty-Four – our Orwellian destiny?

 

George Orwell

https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/153313-nineteen-eighty-four

 

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2009/may/10/1984-george-orwell

 

It is very sad that writing “1984” took all the strength out of Orwell and in the end killed him as Robert McCrum wrote in The Guardian in 2009.  (S. the link above!) That he did write this book despite being critically ill, is  a tremendous and totally amazing achievement! This book is a masterpiece that is being discussed now all over the world. Many people are trying to work out the exact meaning behind it. But do you and do I, that is the average person, understand it sufficiently, I wonder. Also, there may still be some people who have never heard of that book and would not have a clue about it how it might help us to understand the world better and what we could learn from it.

After all this book, 1984, is fiction. But is it really? I do wonder why, why, why does it seem to come horribly close to the truth in real life!

 

 

Bus Trip, Monday 6 March 2017

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CPSA DAPTO SENIORS

Dapto Branch of Combined Pensioners and Superannuants Association of NSW Inc

Bus leaves at: 8.15

We will first visit the ever popular Cobbity Winery followed by a short tour of the area.

Morning Tea:

The bus will call in for a short stop for morning tea/or toilet break.

Lunch:

We will visit Campbelltown Catholic Club for lunch and light refreshments (at your own expense)”

I am a member of the CPSA and bought a ticket to go on that bus trip. So last Monday was the big day for me. Peter did not want to come along. But he drove me to the departure point. Some seven hours later he picked me up again. I enjoyed the bus trip quite a bit. Meeting some new people was great. They were all very friendly. As usual, I took a lot of pictures.

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This is where the bus came in again to pick us up after our lunch break.

I was happy to show off a bottle of empty booze at the Cobbity Winery!

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Who wants to eat “Käsekuchen?”

 

Peter did bake a cheese-cake. It just came out of the oven. Instead of cottage cheese he used “Quark” and “Käsekuchen Hilfe”. The “Quark” came in little containers. We bought it at ALDI’s. Sometime soon we are going to cook a “Schokoladen Pudding” with that chocolate powder that is in the other packet. (“Schokoladen Pudding” is similar to a thick chocolate custard.)

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OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA At the back of the packet can be found the English translation about the Cheese Cake Aid.

We hope we get soon some visitors to help us eat the cake!

Wednesday Afternoon, March 2017

This morning I managed to publish some food pictures of the meals we had not so long ago. One morning I took the above pictures. It had been raining quite a bit these last few weeks. So, on that morning, surprise, surprise, these little mushrooms had appeared in our backyard. Of course, we did not dare to eat them for we had no idea whether they were poisonous or not. Peter said, there is great danger that people may die when eating unknown mushrooms. These mushrooms did not last for very long. The next day  they had all disappeared.

This morning Peter had an 11,40 appointment with his eye specialist. The eye specialist is in Figtree. Peter went there by bus.  It turned out, Peter’s eyes are just a little bit better than last time, meaning that no laser treatment was needed at this stage.

Peter had dropped me off near  Dapto Shopping Centre, parked his car there, and  went to catch his bus. We had agreed, that he should pick me up from the library once he returned from Figtree. I liked being able to spend some time at the library. I took out three large print books. Before that I had gone for a very much overdue haircut. To be able to at last fit this haircut in made me very happy! I also fitted in a cup of coffee at McDonalds, I mean I asked for a proper cup, not a take-away one!

A friendly girl was waiting to help customers to use one of the newly established ordering machines. She offered to do it for me. Alas, I had a 5 Dollar note to pay my coffee with. But paying with a 5 Dollar note somehow did not work. So the girl went to a service counter to get my order through there. Maybe the machine prefers credit cards. I think paying by credit card and using ordering machines is a bit too much of an innovation for me. At my age it is very difficult to get used to such new things!

More and more large print books are available at the Public Library. Residents can get a loan of these books for free. I reckon, this is a very good thing that the council still provides this free service apart from all the other things that are available at the Library. You can borrow all sorts of books and magazines and videos. You pay only for overdue items. If you return the borrowed items on time, there is no charge, none whatsoever.

By the time Peter and I were home to eat  our home cooked lunch it was nearly two o’clock. Peter had some peppermint tea with his lunch, and I had some black tea with skim milk. We had been very hungry when we got home and quite tired as well!

Yesterday Peter had to see the cancer specialist in Figtree as a follow up to his operation from two weeks ago. Apparently his bladder is free of cancer at the moment, but there is a chance some more growth might come back. This is why some follow up treatment in Wollongong Hospital is recommended. I may write a bit more about some details  after Peter has spoken to another doctor who is going to give him some more advice about the recommended treatment.

After having been at the the Urology Clinic yesterday, we drove to Figtree Shopping Centre and treated ourselves to some coffee and cake at the Gossips’ Coffee Lounge! It was a huge piece of cake with nuts, which we shared, and we were each given some ice-cream as well as fresh cream with it. Delicious! And the coffee out of proper cups was quite good too.

Uta’s Diary, March 2017

Keine Zeit, keine Zeit, Keine Zeit!

Why do I always run out of time? I wished instead of 9 am it was only 6 am now and I would have at least two ours to write something. I have the feeling that I have now only about half an hour left to post something. Then I have to get ready to go out.

How many pictures can I still download withing the next few minutes? About 50 pictures that I took recently are still unpublished. So which ones should I choose right now? Maybe I just start with some of the oldest pictures and leave the rest for some other day.

Looking at these pictures I remember some of the meals we had recently. For instance with the ‘Knödel’ (Potato Dumplings) we had some ‘Goulash’ which turned out to be very tasty.

We love salad leaves with our meals. A fried egg is always welcome too. I love our homegrown hot chillies. But Peter does not want to eat these. They are a bit too hot for him.

So long then.

Hidden Figures

 

Published on Dec 12, 2016

Members of the media were invited to NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida to participate in a news conference Dec. 12 with cast members from the 20th Century Fox motion picture Hidden Figures.

The film is based on the book of the same title, by Margot Lee Shetterly, and chronicles the lives of Katherine Johnson, Dorothy Vaughan and Mary Jackson — African-American women working at NASA as “human computers,” who were critical to the success of John Glenn’s Friendship 7 mission in 1962.

Ismaïl Omar Guelleh

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isma%C3%AFl_Omar_Guelleh

 

Ismaïl Omar Guelleh

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ismaïl Omar Guelleh
إسماعيل عمر جليه
Ismail Omar Guelleh 2010.jpg
2nd President of Djibouti
Assumed office
8 May 1999
Prime Minister Barkat Gourad Hamadou
Dileita Mohamed Dileita
Abdoulkader Kamil Mohamed
Preceded by Hassan Gouled Aptidon
Personal details
Born 27 November 1946 (age 70)
Dire Dawa, Ethiopia
Political party People’s Rally for Progress
Spouse(s) Kadra Mahmoud Haid
Religion Sunni Islam

Ismaïl Omar Guelleh (Somali: Ismaaciil Cumar Geelle; Arabic: إسماعيل عمر جليه‎‎) (born 27 November 1946)[1] is the current President of Djibouti, in office since 1999. He is often referred to in the region by his initials, IOG.

Guelleh was first elected as President in 1999 as the handpicked successor to his uncle, Hassan Gouled Aptidon, who had ruled Djibouti since independence in 1977. Guelleh was re-elected in 2005, 2011 and again in 2016; the 2011 election was largely boycotted by the opposition amid complaints over widespread irregularities. Guelleh has been characterized as a dictator, and his rule has been criticized by some human rights groups.[2]

Background[edit]

Guelleh was born in Dire Dawa, Ethiopia, into the politically powerful Mamassan subclan of the Issa clan.[3] When Guelleh was younger he attended a traditional Islamic school. In the late 1960s, Guelleh migrated to Djibouti before finishing high school. He later joined the police, becoming a junior non-commissioned officer. He entered the service in 1968. After Djibouti became independent, he became head of the secret police and chief of the cabinet in the government of his uncle Hassan Gouled Aptidon. He received training from the SomaliNational Security Service and then from the French Secret Service, and was intended to become his uncle’s successor. “The key to Guelleh’s success is the skillful way in which he has played the cards in his strong hand”, according to PINR.

Presidency[edit]

Ismail Omar Guelleh meets U.S. President George W. Bush, January 21, 2003.

On February 4, 1999, President Gouled Aptidon announced that he would retire at the time of the next election, and an extraordinary congress of his party, the ruling People’s Rally for Progress (RPP), chose Guelleh as its presidential candidate.[4] As the joint candidate of the RPP and moderate wing of the Front for the Restoration of Unity and Democracy (FRUD), Guelleh won the presidential election held on April 9, 1999 with 74.02% of the vote, defeating his only challenger, the independent candidate Moussa Ahmed Idriss.[5][6] He took office on May 8.[7] Moussa Ahmed Idriss was arrested the following September for “threatening the morale of the armed forces” and detained at an undisclosed location.[8]

In December 2000, Guelleh sacked the chief of staff of the National Police Force, Yacin Yabeh; policemen loyal to Yacin unsuccessfully rebelled following his dismissal.[9]

Guelleh was nominated by the RPP as its presidential candidate for a second time on October 7, 2004, at an Extraordinary Congress of the party. He was backed by several other parties[10] and was the only candidate in the presidential election held on April 8, 2005.[11]Without a challenger, he won 100% of the ballots cast and was sworn in for a second six-year term, which he said would be his last, on May 7.[12]

However, in 2010, Guelleh persuaded the National Assembly of Djibouti to amend the nation’s Constitution, allowing him to stand for a third term.[13][14] This cleared the way for him to place his name on the ballot in Djibouti’s 2011 election. It also resulted in large protests beginning in 2010 similar to the larger movement for democracy in the Arab countries. The protests were quickly put down.

Opposition parties boycotted the election, leaving only one little-known candidate against him on the ballot. Guelleh won almost 80% of the vote.[15] Human Rights Watch questioned whether the election could be called fair when opposition leaders were jailed twice prior to polling.[16] He again said that he would not run for another term.[17]

Guelleh was also the winner of the 2016 election with about 87% of the popular vote.

References[edit]

  1. Jump up^ Biography at Presidency website (French).
  2. Jump up^ The world’s enduring dictators“. CBS News. May 16, 2011.
  3. Jump up^ “Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2007”, report to Congress, U.S. Dept. of State, August 2008 (on Issa in Djibouti)
  4. Jump up^ “Djibouti: President Gouled Aptidon to retire in April after 22 years in power”, AFP, February 4, 1999.
  5. Jump up^ “Proclamation du Président de la République de Djibouti par le Conseil Constitutionnel”, Journal Officiel de la République de Djibouti (French).
  6. Jump up^ Elections in Djibouti, African Elections Database.
  7. Jump up^ “Sudan: President holds weekend talks with Ethiopia”, IRIN, May 11, 1999.
  8. Jump up^ “Horn of Africa, Monthly Review, September – October 1999”, UN-OCHA Archive (accessed 23 February 2009)
  9. Jump up^ “Witnesses describe ‘coup attempt'”, IRIN, December 8, 2000.
  10. Jump up^ “Le RPP plébiscite son candidat”, La Nation, October 11, 2004 (French).
  11. Jump up^ “No challengers for Guelleh as presidential campaign kicks off”, IRIN, March 29, 2005.
  12. Jump up^ “Guelleh sworn in for second presidential term”, IRIN, May 9, 2005.
  13. Jump up^ “Djibouti lawmakers remove term limits”, Reuters, April 11, 2010.
  14. Jump up^ “Djibouti politics: Issa job?”, Economist Intelligence Unit Report, April 20, 2010.
  15. Jump up^ “Djibouti: President Ismael Omar Guelleh wins third term”, BBC News, April 9, 2011.
  16. Jump up^ Djibouti: Allow Peaceful Protests”, Human Rights Watch statement, April 4, 2011.
  17. Jump up^ “Djibouti president vows third term would be last”, AFP, April 7, 2011.

https://auntyuta.com/2017/03/04/djibouti/