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Sack Alan Jones
30 Sunday Sep 2012
Posted in Uncategorized
30 Sunday Sep 2012
Posted in Uncategorized
28 Friday Sep 2012
Posted in Uncategorized
Emmjay loves First Dog on the Moon’s cartoons, but the moderation has gone so harsh and so partial, that he’s posting the banned and horrendously offensive posts over at his favourite bastion of almost free speech – the Pig’s Arms. Does this sound so much like the ABC ? I think so.
So, recognising FDotM’s preference for Emmjay comment-free blogs and balls the size of raisins, and Emmjay’s desire to be heard, here is what Emmjay wanted to say on the topic of Live Sheep Exports:

Death on the Como Express – for a fair dinkum rundown. check out http://www.liveexportshame.com/articles/ships-of-shame-by-morna-wood.php
Scupper the Rats
There was movement at the export docks,
The townsfolk start to weep.
The livestock look so traumatised
Especially badly-treated sheep.
The pollies scan the recent poles
And worry about the votes
Of people in those marginal seats
And refugees in boats.
The live export trade has got no soul;
Nothing interrupts their sleep
Or stands in the way of making dough
By torturing the sheep.
We’ve all seen states like P a k 1 s ta n
Don’t give a toss about who or what they kill
Or how they dish out justice
And stone their hapless citizens for a disgusting public thrill.
So it isn’t hard to understand,
That coming a distant last
Is caring for our Australia sheep.
It’s not a product or a brand.
It’s now high time that we sort out
This bloody awful mess.
Remove some blood from all those hands
Of people who care less.
And stand together with resolve
So Australia makes the grade
By shutting down our country’s shame
The live sheep export trade.
—————————————————————
Bill Hilliger, the grazing community does support the live sheep trade, but not because they want to as a first principle. When local lamb demand is high and supply is low and grass is plentiful, nobody particularly wants to get bottom money by sending sheep to this cruelest fate.
But when the opposite is true – like in a drought, the price of sheep falls so low that it’s not economical to even shoot the starving creatures – much less ship them anywhere. So the poor creatures starve and drop like flies in the paddocks and the crows eat their eyes before they die.
The live sheep export trade falls somewhere between these two extremes.
So I dunno, which is worse. It’s a bastard of a life being a sheep either way.
And not great fun to be a grazier either.
28 Friday Sep 2012
Posted in Uncategorized
Editor’s note:
I have had the privilege of knowing John Sanburg and his family for over ten years and every year (even when the Maoist guerrilla uprising was in full cry) he has organised a team of surgeons and nursing staff to go to Nepal and offer free of charge cranio-facial reconstruction surgery for children with hare lips and cleft palates and plastic surgery for burns victims . The latter are more common than you might imagine because of accidents caused by indoor cooking over open fires and heating against the severe cold. Burns injuries can cause severe and very debilitating skin contractions – preventing the use of limbs. The surgeons train local doctors and other international volunteers as well.
Their work is truly amazing and a wonderful and generous act.
So I would ask patrons of the Pig’s Arms to support John and his family in their new venture into Cambodia. The smallest contribution will be very much appreciated – to each their own ability.
Thanks,
Emm.
Sept 26, 2012
Photos and Story by John Sanburg
There’s nothing quite like seeing someone else worse off to give perspective.
Research has shown that we are healthier if we own a pet.
…..So what do both these pieces of wisdom have in common??
In this era of looking after number one, I think we’re actually happier when we take the focus off ourselves.
To be brutally honest, I need a dose of this on an annual basis.
Years ago, as the head nurse of a busy surgical ward, I was invited to take part in a medical program in Nepal. It involved a team of surgeons & nurses who donated their time, and pay their way to operate on those who, by no fault of their own, were born with facial deformities. The event quickly became a regular fixture on my calendar.
That was in 1994. By 2005 I found myself leading the team. In close to two decades the team has provided life-changing surgery to over 1,000 Nepalese, as a free gift.
But don’t think for one minute that I’m some kind a hero. Those of you who volunteer to serve others will know what I’m talking about. It’s we who are blessed. It’s we who get to give, simply because we can, and are healthy enough to do so.
The team has always maintained a “no family” policy. That is, you can only bring them if they can offer clinical benefit. I guess I’m blessed on that front too, as my wife like me, is a registered nurse. Until our son arrived 8 years ago she accompanied me, to the little town of Banepa, an hour from Kathmandu where the team would operate on up to 80 people over 2 weeks.
The decision to lead the team was made after consulting the right people, well the wife in particular. I often think of “Sliding Doors” and reflect on how one small decision can have a huge outcome…. she had her chance to say no in 2005. Our baby was only 12 months old after all. She knew what lay ahead. There would be months of preparations before each trip, meetings, fund-raisers, and the risk. (In 1997 the Maoists bombed us, thinking we were Americans).
The ripple effect of these things is intriguing. Our team visits the local orphanage near the end of each trip. This year, an anaesthetist from the north shore of Sydney struck up a friendship with a young teen who had a passion for soccer. Realising this orphan played in bare feet Tony now sponsors this kid to attend school. A few weeks ago, a photo of a teenage soccer player arrived in my in-box. I showed my wife the photo….”Just think honey, if you had said no in 2005, this kid wouldn’t be wearing soccer boots now!!”
Jacob, my son is now 8 years old. Ok, he has a dog, but he, like his Dad needs a dose of perspective. Can’t take him with me to Nepal, but in a few months our family visit Cambodia, as part of ICC. Jacob, and my step-daughter, and wife will be part of a team making a small difference in the Light of Hope Children’s Village (a nicer term than orphanage). He’ll get a chance to make friends with 150 kids, help build a house for a refugee family and hopefully come home thinking how blessed we are to live in this awesome country.
This venture is part of small group from Central Coast Community Church, known as CCCC. But if you’re attracted to stained glass windows and pews you’d better steer clear of it!! Located in the struggling suburb of Wyong we meet at the Salvation Army Oasis building every Saturday.
A diverse range of people flock there every weekend. Many have been burned by religion. Recently I found myself praying with a methadone user, who has been struggling with his alcoholic Dad. What did he want me to pray for? His pet snake, “Rastus” was sick.
I guess you could say Cambodia for us will be a family vacation with a difference…… Disneyland can wait!!
28 Friday Sep 2012
Posted in Algernon
Playlist by Algernon
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sk6xLX-C7_U
Working for the Man – Roy Orbison
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RmZdvVnMXCc
Chain Gang – Sam Cooke
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jyHGUHbfRHQ
Blue Sky Mine – Midnight Oil
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njG7p6CSbCU
Working class Hero – John Lennon
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DaERHs8Q93E
9 to 5 – Dolly Parton
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ciK2n2MebTU
Cleaning windows – Van Morrison
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nSRg9GPfFgE
Welcome to the working week – Elvis Costello
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jZOrkPIZ1JU
Career Opportunities – The Clash
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=09ZSKE38lTU
She works hard for the money – Donna Summer
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Klzq3zpayeY
Workin’ for a livin’ – Huey Lewis and the News
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QeHsl_owrAk
Factory – Bruce Springsteen
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bW4y-9RoMFU
Maggies Farm – Bob Dylan
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yK8Bk__ENKU
Dead End street – The Kinks
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DwbzxemJZIc
There is power in a union – Billy Bragg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=559eWB93jW4
Finest Worksong – REM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h59mDlBSt7o
Working Man – Rush
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfp2O9ADwGk
Sixteen Tons – Johnny Cash
27 Thursday Sep 2012
Posted in Big M, Foodge Private Dick
Story by Big M
Merv had been standing behind the bar, absent-mindedly polishing the same glass, for about twenty minutes. Foodge was starting to get a little worried, as Merv had shown no interest in his plans to enter the 2016 Disabled Olympics as a caber tosser, nor had Merv even commented on Foodge’s new ‘Green ‘n’ Gold Oh-Limpic Tracksuit, which he now wore, as part of his tilt towards 2016. Foodge was loath to discuss another bloke’s feelings, but had an excellent opener for these sorts of discussions. “So…how are you feeling, mate?” Foodge enquired, as he struggled to balance a lump of egg white on top of an over-crispy fork full of bacon.
Merv continued to stare straight ahead, whilst the cloth in his hand risked wearing through the wall of the pint glass. He suddenly realised that someone was speaking, and jerked his head around to face Foodge. “Sorry, mate, a thousands miles away…another pint?” As he swept the empty glass away from the bar, and started to fill another, all in one deft movement.
“Mmmm…yes…ah.” Foodge had already forgotten what he was asking, as men often do where feelings are concerned. He was concentrating on the last mushroom that seemed to manage to evade being spiked onto his fork. “No, are there any more eggs? You see, this caveman diet is absolutely terrific, no bread, grains, eat as much as you like…goes with the training.” Foodge flexed a bicep.
“You won’t be needin’ this, then.” As Merv took back the freshly poured pint of Trotter’s Best, slopping a little onto the old, hardwood bar. “I don’t think cavemen drank much beer, do you? Besides, I’ll bet they didn’t sit around inside eatin’ bacon ‘n’ eggs, an’ drinkin’ pints!”
Foodge was suddenly desperate for a conversation change, and then remembered his previous question. “Sorry, Merv, I was asking before, how do you feel?”
Merv sat the pint back down in front of Foodge, who eagerly picked it up, and skulled half of its contents. “How do I feel? I’m glad someone asked. A little bit empty, at the moment, Foodge. Not depressed, or nothin’, but, as I get older I just wonder what the heck I’ve done with me life. I know, you may look at me, and think, ‘there’s a man with everything’, and you’re right, I’ve got the pub, Granny’s like a mum to me, and I’m clearly punching above me weight with Janet, she’s bloody gorgeous, and much easier to live with now that she’s topped screamin’ all of the time, and the twins are great, an’ I don’t mind the three hourly feeds, every night, no, you’d be right to envy me, mate.”
Foodge shifted uncomfortably on the timber bar stool, painfully aware that there was still room in his caveman-like digestive tract for a couple more eggs and bacon, but not for any of those little mushrooms. “Empty plates here, Merv.” As he nodded towards the plate. “Wouldn’t be a bit more bacon, and a couple of eggs left in the kitchen?”
“Sorry, mate.” Merv took up the plate, and cutlery, slipped them into the dum waiter behind the bar, and wrote out a chit for another round of bacon and eggs ‘for our Olympian’. Foodge’s latest craze hadn’t gone un-noticed by Granny, who’d laughed until she was hoarse when she’d heard of Foodge’s plans to become a caber tosser. She reckoned he couldn’t throw a walking stick, let a lone a great lump of wood. Merv turned back to the bar to continue his monologue. “I just can’t help thinkin’ that I coulda done something big, you know, like if I’d stayed with the coppers, I’d probably be a DCI by now.” Merv rarely mentioned the pleece, as he’d left in disgrace.
“Or, perhaps I shoulda kept me boxin’ career goin’, you know, turned professional, and all that?” Merv had failed to remember that he’d left boxing after being cheated out of more that a few victories. “I used to be a bloody good ballroom dancer!” Merv’s eyes lit up, as he stepped out from behind the bar to waltz elegantly around the room, expertly navigating his way around a couple of Bowling ladies, who’d wandered into the Main Bar to ask Merv if he could put the urn on, and get the sachets of International Gold Roast, and little packets of sugar out from behind the bar. “Certainly, ladies.” Merv grabbed Beryl and took her for a quick spin.
Merv returned to the Main Bar, having filled the urn, put out the coffee cups, and associated bits and pieces. Foodge was just finishing his third plate of bacon and eggs, and once again, had an empty glass in front of him. Merv filled another pint, and took away the plate and cutlery. “Ah. Yes. Dancing lightens the heart.” Merv missed his ballroom dancing, and really wished that Janet would give it another try. He’d never really worked out why she fell over every time she tried to dance. Was it her left eye, that unsettled her whilst it continued to ‘do it’s own thing’, seemingly disconnected from the right?
Merv sighed, as he ran a cloth over the bar, more out of habit, than need. “Pity I never ‘ad the edjacashun, you know, ‘avin’ to leave school when I was fifteen, an’ all that.” Merv had always been painfully aware of his lack of formal education, in spite of the fact that, as a weight lifter, he knew every bone and muscle in the human body, and had a natural gift for mathematics, eschewing modern cash registers, ‘because I can work it out in me noggin’’.
“You know it’s not to late.” Foodge took a sip from his fourth Trotter’s, grateful that Merv seemed to have forgotten to limit his intake of alcohol during his discourse.
“Too late for what?” Merv was surprised to be interrupted, as he had taken centre stage all through lunch.
“Education.” Foodge retorted. “You could do something through TAFE, or a Community College, or Open Foundation at one of the unis.”
“Nah.” Merv shook his head, and took up a pint glass, which he began to rhythmically polish. “That’s for kids, not for us old blokes.
“Well, I was just reading on the weekend about a ninety year old who has just completed his second Master’s degree. He didn’t start any formal learning until he was sixty five!”
Merv suddenly felt like he was standing on a high diving board, both exhilarated and frightened at the same time. “I’d need some ‘elp, you know, me spellin’s no good…”
“I’d help.” Foodge quietly smiled.
“You, how could you help?”
“Merv, you seem to forget that I wasn’t always a shamus, I had to do a couple of degrees to get to be the Deputy Director of Public Prosecution. Yes, humble reader, Foodge’s fall from grace has been quite spectacular. “I could help with English, and essay writing, used to be pretty good.” Foodge took a long pull on his fifth pint. ”Ended up doing an honours degree in English Literature, even got invited to do a doctorate, but, you know, the pull of the law, public office and all of that.”
They were suddenly interrupted by a slightly red faced Beryl. “Oh…err… Mr Merv, the Ladies and I were just wondering, if…you know…. well, you’re so light on your feet…”
Merv took up the challenge, kicked the jukebox into gear and started foxtrotting with Beryl around the bar; whilst the other Bowling Ladies lined up, ready to ‘cut in’. Merv had a grin from ear to ear. Foodge shifted himself around on the barstool so he could watch the spectacle, but managed to miss the footrest, and found himself in a crumpled mess on the floor, again!
26 Wednesday Sep 2012
Posted in Uncategorized
26 Wednesday Sep 2012
Posted in Uncategorized
26 Wednesday Sep 2012
Posted in Lehan Winifred Ramsay
Tags
4b, 6b, Pencils, teaching kids
Story by Lehan Winfred Ramsay
I used to teach these disabled kids. They lived in a hospital. Really I didn’t teach them, because they couldn’t learn. I just did things with them, and they learned because they did things. After that I taught these street kids. I had to teach them something real, something important; that was my job. But I had to do this with them in a way that they would accept. So we made stuff together.
These kids didn’t have a future, and people who don’t have a future don’t have a reason. An investment, a motivation. There’s a real difference in fronting up to a room full of kids in a school and teaching them. The whole system is on your side. And theirs. Does that mean it’s easy? School is not easy. We forget as we grow up how hard school is.
I used to teach these primary school kids. I really, really wanted them to learn. So I gave them each a set of really good pencils. 6B. 4B. 2B.
25 Tuesday Sep 2012
Posted in Gregor Stronach
Tags
COPS, Crime, Life, Parenthood
Story by Gregor Stronach
I have two children.
I can remember a time when I had none. It was a blissful time of late nights, binge drinking and being glued, zombie-like, to the TV watching COPS with the sound down so as not to wake my wife.
These were Good Times.
But now, I have two children. My life is now overtaken with late nights spent feeding Son No. 2, and scoffing whisky in the Golden Hour between Son No. 1 being placed comatose in his cot, and my own bedtime, only to be woken a few precious hours later with the beginnings of the dreaded Scottish hangover, so I can sit on the couch like a zombie, and watch COPS with the sound down so as not to scar Son No. 2 for life.
So… nothing much has changed.
I like watching COPS. Actually, I love it. It’s not the gritty realism, nor is it the unbridled machismo of the heavily-armed “men and women of law enforcement” dealing with the life and death situations that they call ‘work’.
It’s the elevated feeling of self-worth that comes from watching the slack-jawed denizens of the US of A as they show the world precisely what a vacuum of infinite stupidity and hopelessness looks like. Black holes of idiocy, so tremendously dumb that not even irony can escape their gravitational pull.
COPS isn’t a TV show. It’s a funeral procession – a 30-minute long parade, casket held aloft on the shoulders of police and sheriff’s uniforms. And in that casket is the Great American Dream, embalmed in a blend of 40-ounce bottles of rot-gut liquor, cranked up by a liberal sprinkling of crack cocaine and methamphetamine shards.
From the shambling, mumbling hookers who hawk their tawdry wares along the hard shoulders of the interstate, to the inevitable Angry Young Man with a bad haircut and a drug habit that would put Elvis to shame, it’s a free-wheeling circus of violence and crime.
Gap-toothed, and desperate, they are. You can see the fear, and occasionally rage, in their eyes as they gawp gormlessly at the camera, before breaking every single cardinal rule about being arrested. Not only do they speak openly about their crimes to the police, but they do so on camera – filmed to be broadcast, and have their immeasurably dim brains beamed into the living rooms of people around the world.
People like me. People who watch them for entertainment. People who watch them for sport. I feel like a Roman, watching slaves being put to the sword in a coliseum. And I feel no regret.
I only share the surge of adrenalin that the officers clearly feel, as they huff and puff like unfit wolves in pursuit of society’s little pigs. Miked up for the camera, they produce noises not unlike poorly stuffed punching bags, accepting punishment at the hands of Ju-Jitsu masters. Oof oof oof, with a staccato jangle of handcuffs that mimick the chains that hold Everlast bags aloft in gymnasiums throughout the world.
Invariably, the pursuit ends with a wrestle. A solid, manly, no-holds-barred-and-definitely-not-gay struggle for freedom. The police fight with tactical weapons – they fell the felons with long-range electrical probes, tenderize those fallen with night sticks and batons, before flavouring them with capsicum spray and trussing them up with metallic adornments designed specifically to deny freedom, and steal dignity – like a Thanksgiving turkey bound for the oven of justice.
Those hell-bent on decamping the scene fight like cornered wolverines, amped up by alcohol and whatever pharmaceuticals their dealers have managed to cook in the bathtubs and bottle-labs, bagged up and sold. Their eyes roll wildly in their sockets, arms pinwheel and legs flail.
The script is more often than not, the same.
“Stop hurting me!” they will shriek.
“Stop resisting!” comes the reply.
“I’m not resisting! You’re breaking my arm!”
“Stop. Resisting.” – this is universally uttered through gritted teeth, often punctuated by insistent grunts that signify the landing of a non-fatal blow to a part of the body known for being both soft and exquisitely painful when tampered with.
The police then stuff their prey into the back of their vehicle with the care and attention of a postal worker stacking a warehouse of boxes marked “Fragile” – indeed, if the felons bore stickers crying “This Way Up”, they too would be cheerfully ignored.
And then suddenly, it is over. A strange calm befalls the living room, while the officer in charge drones on about how much he loves his job. The magic, like the drugs that fuel one half of the combatants, wears off – the spell broken by the sudden and shocking insistence of a white-toothed, well-groomed idiot practically begging me to purchase not one, but two steam mops that I know I will never use.
Then the bottle clamped between the rosebud lips of my infant son makes a sound: Pfuff Pfuff Pfuff, it goes. That tells me he’s done. The bottle is dry.
I hoist him to my shoulder, and through a semi-conscious limp satiety he lets roar a thunderous belch, blasting foul, milky air past my ear and depositing the glug of half-digested breastmilk down the shoulder of my only clean pyjamas.
I wrap him – swaddle him like an infant messiah – and gently, oh-so-quietly, we tiptoe together to his room.
I place him with all of the care and love I can muster. My precious, precious cargo. A brush of my lips across his forehead to let him know I love him. One last glance stolen as I creep from the crib.
A sly shot of whisky. A warm bed awaits.
I remember when I didn’t have children. They were, indeed, Good Times.
But nothing – absolutely nothing – will sway me from the understanding that my life, right now, is blessed beyond belief by the presence of my two little boys.
And on the days I feel run down – neglecting myself, and feeling near death through fatigue, the antidote is simple.
“I’ll feed Tobias tonight, my love,” I’ll say. He’s a well-trained boy.
He wakes for his feed when COPS is on. And the circle of life turns once more.
21 Friday Sep 2012
Posted in Algernon, Bands at the Pig's Arms, Entertainment Upstairs
Tags

Playlist by Algernon
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7wfYIMyS_dI
Only Time – Enya
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MYiahoYfPGk
Time –Pink Floyd
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FGBhQbmPwH8
One more time – Daft Punk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oqeSUAlI5uI
No time – The Guess Who
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oc7b62El_fk
The time of the season – The Zombies
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VdQY7BusJNU
Time after time – Cyndi Lauper
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vV8FfWYJTEw
Clocks – Coldplay
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XzcWwmwChVE
Time Is On My Side – The Rolling Stones
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2CPC0cCagOE
Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is? – Chicago
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ichO7gAeOGE
Time In a Bottle – Jim Croce
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2L2T7bWQzEs
Time For Me To Fly – REO Speedwagon
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RbMS0BzOMV0
Love Me Two Times – The Doors
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4KXUr9JVng
Wednesday Morning, 3AM – Simon & Garfunkel
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjaAD9JW4mY
Just Who Is The 5 O’Clock Hero? – The Jam
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpK0zDJE4qs
5:15- The Who
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aizCMO-mI1Q
Time Warp – From the Rocky Horror Picture Show