Ramblings of an Old Man

I reckon it is very interesting to see how past generations grew up. These are wonderful memories by Devon Texas. I very much enjoyed the read. Have a look and enjoy! 🙂

DevonTexas's avatarLegacy Tales

Cherry BombI come to this blog site when I’m done with all my other work.  In spite of being retired, I find I’m busy every day.  It might be nice, I speculate, to be back working where I could spend some time resting!  LOL   But, it’s the way I’ve always been.  I’ve worked most of my life and that’s the way I like it.  I don’t like being idle.  

When you’re young, you don’t think of much beyond what you see.  I didn’t anyway.   When I’d take a moment to speak with the old man that ran the store near the highway, I didn’t think to ask him to tell me something about his life.  I just spoke to him long enough to gain his confidence that I wouldn’t turn him in for selling me Cherry Bombs and M-80’s.

coke chest 1On a hot summer day about 50 years…

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8th Sunday after Trinity

I find there is a lot of truth in this blog. I reckon it is worth thinking about the issues that Berlioz raises.

berlioz1935's avatarBerlioz1935's Blog

Today is Sunday. It is supposed to be a day of rest and recuperation. They used to say, it is the Lord’s Day. A day that belonged to something other than ourself. And, in a roundabout way it is for our renewal.

We have to get away from the daily grind and our struggle for existence. That was the idea of the Sabbath of the old Jewish calendar. Even God needed a day of rest after the Creation; and he saw, all was good. Was it really?

When I was a child and looked out a window I noticed straight away when it was Sunday.  The streets were quieter and  emptier. People were dressed differently than they were on weekdays. Today I can’t see the street. I look at the bush as it always looks. It is green and the birds are flying from tree to tree as they always…

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Two Articles in the Sydney Morning Herald about the Value of Human Life

All Israel wants is to live in peace with its neighbours

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/comment/all-israel-wants-is-to-live-in-peace-with-its-neighbours-20140729-zy5jn.html#ixzz392M0QFvW

 

Yair Miller is president of the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/comment/all-israel-wants-is-to-live-in-peace-with-its-neighbours-20140729-zy5jn.html#ixzz392MIL5AW

 

MH17, Gaza and the value of human life

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/comment/mh17-gaza-and-the-value-of-human-life-20140724-zw8jn.html#ixzz392MhnNGX

 

Waleed Aly is a Fairfax columnist. He hosts Drive on ABC Radio National and is a lecturer in politics at Monash University.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/comment/mh17-gaza-and-the-value-of-human-life-20140724-zw8jn.html#ixzz392Mp5dxZ

Wanting to understand what is happening in Gaza

Rabbi Mordecai Finley, PhD is the spiritual leader of Ohr HaTorah Synagogue in Los Angeles.

Read more: A letter to friends who want to understand what is happening in Gaza | Mordecai Finley | Ops & Blogs | The Times of Israel http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/a-letter-to-friends-who-want-to-understand-what-is-happening-in-gaza/#ixzz390RRFCVk
Follow us: @timesofisrael on Twitter | timesofisrael on Facebook

 

”  . . . .

The martyring of civilians in war is not that uncommon either. Thousands of Japanese committed suicide instead of surrendering to the Americans. Civilians are often proud to die for their country. Gazans, however, are not given the opportunity to choose. By hiding rocket launchers in civilian neighborhoods, by declaring war on Israel without building bomb shelter for their people, means only one thing: Hamas wants to martyr their civilians. It makes an uninformed world blame Israel. This is a very smart tactic. Just don’t fall for it.

My heart breaks for the suffering of the Palestinian people. I pray that they get their state soon, and will live peaceably alongside Israel. There will be lots of wounds to mend in this process on both sides.

But I don’t blame Israel for the civilian suffering of Palestinians that you see. It is a deliberate tactic of war intended to make you feel exactly what you are feeling: sympathy. I feel sympathy as well, but I know who has the responsibility for this suffering: Hamas.”                                                                   ‘

Read more: A letter to friends who want to understand what is happening in Gaza | Mordecai Finley | Ops & Blogs | The Times of Israel http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/a-letter-to-friends-who-want-to-understand-what-is-happening-in-gaza/#ixzz390Qacb2y
Follow us: @timesofisrael on Twitter | timesofisrael on Facebook

 

I CAME ACROSS THIS BLOG BY Rabbi Mordecai Finley. I FIND THIS BLOG VERY THOUGHT PROVOKING. WHAT INDEED DO YOU DO WHEN YOU ARE CONSTANTLY AFRAID SOME TERRORISTS IN YOUR NEIGHBOURHOOD ARE OUT TO KILL YOU AND ALL YOUR PEOPLE?

THE LAST FEW PARAGRAPHS OF THE RABBI’S BLOG I COPIED ABOVE. THE RABBI REFERS TO HISTORY SAYING THAT the martyring of civilians in war is not that uncommon.

Displaced Persons

The other day when I was awake in bed for a while, my thoughts went to the refugees from the Eastern Ukraine. I remembered pictures of women and children in Russian refugee camps. One woman had said she wanted to stay in Russia for a limited time only so that when the fighting stops she would be able  to go back to her home town in the Ukraine. Some people may have dual citizenship. These people are of course allowed to stay in Russia indefinitely, others would have to apply for permanent residency if they want to stay in Russia.

For sure it is not a very pleasant experience to have to live in a refugee camp for weeks on end. Who knows when there is going to be peace again in these places where Ukrainians are fighting the insurgents?

TIME FOR UKRAINE TO DIVIDE? The following is an extract of an article by Paul Sheehan in the Sydney Morning Herald from 2014, July 20th:

It is more than 20 years since the orderly, democratic, bloodless dissolution of Czechoslovakia took place on January 1, 1993, when the Czech Republic and Slovakia came into being as two sovereign nations. Like Ukraine, this was a nation divided with geographic neatness between language and ethnicity.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/comment/time-for-ukraine-to-divide-20140720-zv19c.html#ixzz38LX5O0Np

 

Here is another example where a two state solution ought to be possible and why this did not happen so far:

This is taken from an ABC Australia National program called Rear Vision.

 

 

 

Israel, Palestine and the problem with the two-state solution

Tuesday 22 July 2014 4:51PM
Annabelle Quince

With Israeli troops on the ground in Gaza and casualties rising, international attention is once again focused on the Middle East peace process. The two-state solution is generally accepted as the blueprint to end the decades-old conflict, but intractable issues and deep mistrust remain on both sides, writes Annabelle Quince. 

If it wasn’t clear before this week, the Middle East peace process is in tatters. Israel has launched a ground invasion of Gaza, resulting in the deaths of more than 500 Palestinians and around 20 Israelis.

. . . . . .

 

‘The majority of the people in Israel do accept the notion of a Palestinian state, but we suspect that most Palestinians don’t accept the notion of a Jewish state. This is the problem,’ says Eiland.

‘Everybody understands that what Clinton proposed nine years ago is probably the only practical solution if we are based on the two-state solution. In other words, it is not only that the concept is well known, but also the details are well-known. So if it is so important to solve the problem, if the concept is acceptable and if the details are so well-known, what is the problem? Why both parties don’t sit together and sign an agreement, and here is the paradox, both parties don’t do it because this solution is not really desired by both sides.’

‘The maximum that the government of Israel, any government of Israel, can offer the Palestinians, is less, much less, than the minimum that any possible Palestinian leader can accept. The gap between both sides is much bigger than the way that it is perceived. Everybody is committed to say that he is committed to this solution, but no-one really, really means it.’

Which leaves the peace process where it is today, mired in mistrust and nearly a century’s worth of grievances, with the blood of both soldiers and civilians flowing once again.

Rear Vision puts contemporary events in their historical context, answering the question, ‘How did it come to this?’

Collapse: Revisiting the Adam and Eve Myth

A very interesting book review about how previous civilisations fared. Maybe we could learn a bit from that when we compare it with where humankind is at at present. 🙂

stuartbramhall's avatarThe Most Revolutionary Act

short history of progress

A Short History of Progress

by Ronald Wright (2004 Caroll and Graf)

Book Review

The theme of A Short History of Progress is social collapse. In it, Canadian historical archeologist Ronald Wright summarizes humankind’s biological and cultural evolution, as well as tracing the role of ecological destruction in the collapse of the some of the most significant civilizations (Sumer, Mesopotamia, Greece, Rome, Easter Island and the Mayan civilization). Exhaustively researched, the book advances the theory that many of colossal blunders made by modern leaders are very old mistakes made by earlier civilizations. Wright starts with the mystery of the agricultural revolution that occurred around 10,000 BC, when Homo sapiens ceased to rely on hunting and berry-picking and began growing their own food. Twelve thousand years ago, the global population was still small enough that there was more than ample wild food to feed…

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On the Eve of my new Century

Berlioz filed this under the “Betty and Jack” stories. So he presumably is Jack and his wife is Betty. Really, nothing to do with me then!. 🙂
Reading this story again, set in the year 2035, I notice that Betty does spend a lot of time writing blogs, just like Aunty Uta likes doing! 🙂

berlioz1935's avatarBerlioz1935's Blog

2035

Tomorrow is my birthday. I will be 100 – yes, a one  with two fat zeros. They told me the telegram from King Charles is on it’s way. We still are a monarchy. Australians don’t dare to offend the English. Now is not the time, is the slogan.

That I’m still alive is just a miracle. When I was born I had a live expectancy of only sixty-four years. Against all expectations, and daydreaming by my wife, I’m still here. She has been a strong blogger for a long time and in 2007 forecast that in 2017 I will be dead and buried. Her wishful thinking never came true. I’m still around and she is still blogging to her heart’s content. Mind you she is blind but she knows were the keys on the keyboard are. The other day she pronounced with heightened optimisms that I wouldn’t last forever…

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Photos from Ilse’s Visit in 1999 (continued)

I just noticed this blog with photos from Ilse’s visit in 1999. I reblog it here just to refresh our memories a bit more about this visit.

auntyuta's avatarAuntyUta

I found some more photos from Ilse’s visit in 1999. They bring back so many memories. And I am sure that there are still some more photos from that visit somewhere. The photos that are available cover quite a few things we did during Ilse’s two months stay here with us. I never kept a diary at the time. And of course within the two months we did more things than what is shown via the photos. Gaby used to keep an awful lot of photos. We ended up with all of Gaby’s photos after she passed away. To go through all of these photos would be an immense task. I do not feel like doing this right now. But I do believe that amongst all of Gaby’s photos there would be some mote photos of Ilse’s visit.

The Chinese Gardens in Sydney are very beautiful. The Chinese Gardens in Sydney are very beautiful.

I mentioned in my…

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Gaby, die Unvergessene !

I want to reblog this, dear Peter, even though maybe not many of my followers understand much German. Thank you for this very well written post. Love, Uta

pethan35's avatarPethan35's Blog

Gaby - Hopla, hier bin ich Gaby – Hoppla, hier bin ich

Heute vor zwei Jahren hat unsere Tochter Gaby uns vollkommen unerwartet verlassen. Sie verstarb so plötzlich, dass der Gerichtsmediziner bis heute nicht fähig war eine Todesursache.festzustellen.

Ihre Flamme war erloschen.   Und wie hatte sie geleuchtet?  Unermüdlich, mit  einer  Ausdauer die andere erschöpfte, meisterte sie ihr Leben. Sie liebte ihr Leben und ihr eigener Tod war ihr nicht vorstellbar.

Am Tage saß sie in einem Rollstuhl, von dem sie stolz erzählte er war  ‘Made in Germany’. Nachts schlief sie in einer Eisernen Lunge für fast ein-und-fünfzig Jahre.  Das Schicksal hatte sie, am vierten Geburtstag, mit der Kinderlähmung überrascht.

Vor diesem Geburtstag  war sie ein lebhaftes Mädchen, kannte keine Ruhe. Sie erlaubte sich nur kurze Augenblicke der Besinnung, zum Beispiel,  überlegend in die  Ferne schauend. Wenn ich sie so beobachtete, dachte ich, sie könnte es einmal schwer in ihrem Leben haben.

Sie war nicht der akademische Typ.  Aber sie wandelte…

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