Category: Uncategorized
Chinese Tourists in Santorini, Greece
Apparently the Chinese love to spend their holidays in Greece.
How the Chinese fell in love with Santorini
Here is some of what Andrea writes:
” . . . . the ones who are most obsessed by the selfie in Santorini are the Chinese who are flocking here in unprecedented numbers.
“The Chinese have a lot of wedding competitions and if you win, the prize is often a trip to Santorini,” says Haris, my guide for the day.
He’s happy for the upturn in business too since he sells properties and with the Greek economy reeling on the verge of the Grexit ( leaving the Euro) it’s hard to persuade Europeans that it is safe to invest in Greece when their euros may become devalued drachmas.
The Chinese don’t care so much about the Grexit because they are not investing for capital gain or even rental returns; all they want is a Residency Permit which, thanks to a new law passed in 2013, can be acquired by spending around £200,000 on a property. The permit gives them free movement across to all the Schengen treaty countries of Europe. . . . . ”
My Diary
To be writing regularly, oh, I find it is not so easy to get around to it at all times. I always intend to write, write, write. I seem to have lots of things to write about in my head but somehow before I have a chance to write it down, it is gone again. Maybe I should at least take some notes, that is, get into the habit to write some notes down. Maybe, what is a bit of a diary to me, is, when I take some pictures of persons and places. Looking at the pictures, it is easier to remember some of the things in my life.
Recently we have been visiting Benalla in Victoria. Unfortunately, because of bad eyesight, I cannot drive anymore. So Peter had to drive to Benalla and back all by himself. We were driving to Benalla to visit our son Martin and to see his new place. Door to door it was about 600 km only, whereas when the son lived in Melbourne (Essendon) the distance was about 800 km.
Since we are in the midst of winter now here in Australia, daylight hours are only about for ten hours, namely from ca. 7 am to 5 pm. Well, Peter had no problem driving the distance within daylight hours. However, I suggested that on the way back we could stay in a motel in Holbrook for one night to interrupt the journey, and that would give us the chance to look around a bit and familiarize us again with some things in the area. But oh no, Peter insisted on driving straight home. I like to call it ‘homeritis’!

On our last day in Benalla, a Saturday, all of us went for lunch to the Art Gallery Cafe. We were very happy that our Grandson and his wife and two daughters could meet us there.





Son Martin took these pictures of Peter and me on the terrace of the Cafe.

It was a bit too cold to sit out there. It was better to have lunch inside.
Here is some of the food that we had.




After lunch we had a look at some of the pictures in the Art Gallery.
It was lovely to see great-granddaughters Kia and Jaki again as well as Tris and Steph. And now I include some more pictures from another park nearby that we took on another day.

Michael Patrick Kelly
It’s Not Just the Oil. The Middle East War and the Conquest of Natural Gas Reserves
I would like to study these maps a bit more. I wonder whether Oil and Gas Reserves are still so very important..
Oliver Stone Responds to Critics of Putin Series
This is what can be found in youtube:
Oliver Stone Responds to Critics of Putin Series
American film director and producer Oliver Stone disputed a question on whether Russian President Vladimir Putin had showed him fake news in an interview at Starmus International festival in Trondheim on Wednesday.
‘Why would he fake it?’ Stone asked, before going on to say, “the Russians did very well in terms of damages to ISIS [Islamic State] in Syria, they bombed the shit out of Syria, and they did destroy the financial ability of the ISIS Empire to run oil to Turkey.”
Journalists pressed the American director on his recent documentary, ‘The Putin Interviews’, asking specifically about a sequence in which Putin shows Stone footage on an alleged Russian aircraft attack on an alleged IS position in Syria.
“I researched it [the documentary], I did the best I could and I think that it proves the old adage that there are two sides of every story”, Stone said.
The American director warned of the dangers of taking a “tough” approach as a journalist, thereby pushing away interviewees, arguing that “you cannot break the news into black and white”.
“America in its media desires, has made it into a huge money making enterprise, huge, I mean the amount of money is beyond belief, and a lot is at stake”, he concluded. . . .”
I like it how Stone says that he thinks that it proves the old adage
“that there are two sides of every story.”
“What Alice Forgot” by Liane Moriarty
I, Uta, have already read the book and agree, that it is “infectiously good” and that this novel may be in my head months after I have finished reading it. So I am here going to copy what was published last year in the Huffington Post about this book “What Alice Forgot” by Australian author Liane Moriarty. This copied review was written by Julia Naughton. While reading this book, I thought all the time that it is very suitable for being made into a movie. I hope, I’ll soon have a chance to see the movie.
Here now is the copy taken from the above link:
“You mean, you haven’t read the book?!”
The anticipation of waiting for the film release of a book you cherish can sometimes be too much.
What if they cast the protagonist with an actor you hate? Or worse, they change the ending?
Blame it on the two-hour time limit or the soulless pursuit of box office cred, changing the plot happens all the time and sometimes, it’s really not fair.
The good news? These books are not only qualified to be on your cherished list, but you’ll only have to wait a few months for the movie, one year at most.
Sadly, we can’t vouch for how true they’ll stay to the book, but as far as we can tell, the actors already confirmed get our tick of approval.
What Alice Forgot
Amy Einhorn Books
By Liane Moriarty
Movie release: 2017
Imagine if you woke up one day only to realise you’d lost a big chunk of your memory from the past decade? Set in Sydney’s Northern Beaches, Liane Moriarty’s What Alice Forgot centres around Alice, whose last memory was being pregnant with her first child and completely head over heels in love with her husband, Nick. Now, years later Nick looks at her with disdain, she’s lost contact with her sister (who is going through her own infertility struggles) and is lost as to where it all went wrong. With hopeful vulnerability, Alice, who is living in the mind of her 29-year-old self surprises her husband, kids and later, even herself as she desperately tries to salvage her marriage. Infectiously good, this novel will be in your head months after you’ve finished it.
Peter’s Iphone Pictures from our Berlin Visit in June 2016
I want to start rebloggen some blogs from our visit to Berlin just one year ago! Looking at all these pictures brings back memories.
Haxenhaus in Tegel (Northern Suburb of Berlin)
Caroline in Klaudia’s apartment

Sakorn, Matthew, Caroline and Daniel in Alt-Spandau (Western Suburb of Berlin)
It had been Daniel’s birthday and he invited all his family for lunch in Alt-Tegel.
Some more pictures of that family lunch I’ll publish in another blog.
We had tickets for the Komische Oper in Berlin. We saw a modern production of the “Magic Flute”
This sign we saw outside a charity shop in Rubensstrasse.
We went with Martin to U-Bahnhof Rathaus Schoneberg.
Quite a collection close to where we came out of the underground station.
View down Innsbrucker Strasse towards Bayerischer Platz.
It was a rainy day. None the less we walked passed the duck pond through the Stadpark towards our destination: Die Pusteblume Cafe!
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Top 10 Countries With The World’s Biggest Oil Reserves
http://gulfbusiness.com/top-10-countries-with-the-worlds-biggest-oil-reserves/#.VT9R4tKqpHw

Top 10 Countries With The World’s Biggest Oil Reserves
South American nation Venezuela tops the list, followed closely by Saudi Arabia.
Insights
Brent crude oil spot price is expected to fall from an average of $112 per barrel in 2012 to annual averages of $108 per barrel in 2013 and $101 per barrel in 2014, according to report released by US-based Energy Information Administration (EIA) last week.
The price shift reflects the increasing supply of liquid fuels from non-OPEC (Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries) countries, it stated.
However, OPEC nations continue to overshadow the world in terms of reserves, holding more than 80 per cent of the world’s proven oil reserves, according to current estimates. The bulk of OPEC oil reserves – 66 per cent – are in the Middle East.
OPEC’s proven oil reserves currently stand at 1,199.71 billion barrels.
Here are the top countries with the biggest proven oil reserves, as reported by EIA.
1. Venezuela
Proven oil reserves in 2013 (billion barrels): 297.6
Total oil supply in 2012 (thousand barrels per day): 2,489.2
Venezuela surpassed Saudi Arabia last year to become the holder of the largest oil reserves in the world. However, annual oil production of the OPEC supplier is considerably less than the Kingdom.
2. Saudi Arabia
Proven oil reserves (billion barrels): 267.91
Total oil supply in 2012 (thousand barrels per day): 11,545.7
Saudi Arabia has almost one-fifth of the world’s proven oil reserves and ranks as the largest producer and exporter of oil in the world.
3. Canada
Proven oil reserves: 173.105
Total oil supply in 2012 (thousand barrels per day): 3,854.4
Canada’s oil sands are a significant contributor to the recent growth in the world’s liquid fuel supply and comprise the vast majority of the country’s proven oil reserves.
4. Iran
Proven oil reserves: 154.58
Total oil supply in 2012 (thousand barrels per day): 3,538.4
International sanctions have drastically impacted Iran’s energy sector – the country’s oil production fell dramatically in 2012, from over 35 million barrels per day in 2011 to just over 3.5 million bpd in 2012.
5. Iraq
Proven oil reserves: 141.35
Total oil supply in 2012 (thousand barrels per day): 2,986.6
Despite having large proven oil reserves, increases in oil production have fallen behind ambitious targets because of infrastructure constraints and political disputes, says EIA.
6. Kuwait
Proven oil reserves: 104
Total oil supply in 2012 (thousand barrels per day): 2,796.8
Kuwait boasts the second largest oil reserves in the GCC, behind Saudi Arabia and is also among the world’s top 10 largest exporters of total oil products.
7. United Arab Emirates
Proven oil reserves: 97.8
Total oil supply in 2012 (thousand barrels per day): 3,213.2
Enhanced oil recovery techniques continue to underpin strong crude oil production totals and are an important strategy for extending the life of the country’s aging oil fields, states EIA.
8. Russia
Proven oil reserves: 80
Total oil supply in 2012 (thousand barrels per day): 10,397
Russia, which also holds the world’s largest natural gas reserves and the second-largest coal reserves, is the second biggest oil supplier in the world after Saudi Arabia.
9. Libya
Proven oil reserves: 48.01
Total oil supply in 2012 (thousand barrels per day): 1,483
The holder of Africa’s largest proven oil reserves, Libya saw a disruption in oil production in 2011 due to conflict, but the country has recovered, and subsequently, has begun to increase supplies.
10. Nigeria
Proven oil reserves: 37.2
Total oil supply in 2012 (thousand barrels per day): 2,524.1
Nigeria’s hydrocarbon resources are the mainstay of the country’s economy, but EIA states that development of the sector is often constrained by instability in the Niger Delta
Colonialism Alive and Well, Better Say as Bad as Ever! Part 2 – Der Kolonialismus lebt und feiert fröhliche Urständ! Teil 2
Who controls the oil industry?
Deutsche Version unten
See also:
“Colonialism Alive and Well, Better Say as Bad as Ever! Part 1 – Der Kolonialismus lebt und feiert fröhliche Urständ! Teil 1”: https://wipokuli.wordpress.com/2017/05/27/colonialism-alive-and-well-better-say-as-bad-as-ever-part-1-der-kolonialismus-lebt-und-feiert-froehliche-urstaend-teil-1/
Colonialism Alive and Well, Better Say as Bad as Ever! Part 2
Soon the Monroe_Doctrine was interpreted by the US Power Elite the way: “all of the Americas belongs to the US (Power Elite)! Almost all countries of the Double-Continent experienced that interpretation, leaving even aside that one third of the US territory was stolen from Mexico. Especially the countries with a high majority of Indigenous Americans or Black people like in Haiti or Grenada got the least formal respect for their sovereignity. Haiti has been ruined not only by the US including the US directed UN but also by the Clinton_Foundation.

“Killing_Hope” was and still is the principle of the US Power Elite in general towards the…
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