<body><iframe src="http://www.blogger.com/navbar.g?targetBlogID=14058325&amp;blogName=The+Croydonian&amp;publishMode=PUBLISH_MODE_BLOGSPOT&amp;navbarType=BLUE&amp;layoutType=CLASSIC&amp;homepageUrl=http%3A%2F%2Fcroydonian.blogspot.com%2F&amp;searchRoot=http%3A%2F%2Fcroydonian.blogspot.com%2Fsearch" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" height="30px" width="100%" id="navbar-iframe" title="Blogger Navigation and Search"></iframe> <div id="space-for-ie"></div>

Shameful. Just shameful.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008
WorldPublicOpinion.org has polled the population of these parts, the US, France, India, South Korea and Indonesia on the opening stages of the genocidal campaign of the Chinese government against the Tibetan people, and less than two thirds of Britons manage to sign up to this, extraordinarily mild, statement:

"Critics of China say that it should allow Tibet to have autonomy, to preserve its traditional culture and to allow the Dalai Lama to return to Tibet".

In contrast, 19% go along with this, "China says that Tibet has long been part of China, that Tibet has benefited from modernization, and that the Dalai Lama should not be allowed to return because he aims to split Tibet from China". And the mouth-breathing remainder (18%) have no opinion.

Meanwhile, top marks to South Korea, with 84% supporting the first statement, and shame on the 63% of Indians who either support the 'People's Republic' or have no opinion. I imagine that the Koreans are well aware of how Beijing used to regard Korea as being its own private plaything too.

Labels: , , ,

Denunciation watch

Friday, March 16, 2007
Although no sane person could regret the fall of the Eastern Bloc, it does deny us the minor pleasures of denunciations from Moscow, Warsaw, Tirana etc. However, the 'Democratic People's Republic' of Korea is keeping the flag flying, and here are some extracts from a corking communique on Japan:

"The Japanese authorities like to talk about the building of a "beautiful country." But they are becoming more vulgar and shameful in their behavior quite contrary to their motto. This is evidenced by the fact that the suppression of the General Association of Korean Residents in Japan (Chongryon) and phobia about Koreans in Japan have become evermore pronounced throughout Japan since Abe's assumption of premiership....The attempt made by the Japanese authorities to block even a legal protest meeting, not content with suppressing Chongryon, only betrayed their sinister design to force the Koreans in Japan into slavery in violation of their elementary rights. This is nothing but a repetition of the gangster-like logic that Koreans should sacrifice their lives and properties for the sake of the "Great Empire of Japan" and a revelation of the brazen-faced intention to dominate other nations...History goes to prove that the more black-hearted intention a country entertained, the more glossy words it used and the fiercer the fascist junta got, the more loudly it trumpeted about "democracy" and "human rights."...It, at the same time, glaringly shows what base and wicked country Japan, which claims striving to build a "beautiful country," is."

Classic.

However, Pyongyang might be intent on ending this nonsense, as "North Korea hopes to become friends with the United States and Japan and become a responsible member of the international community, the North Korean officials said at a nuclear negotiations working group in Beijing yesterday". Source

Labels: , ,

A war that did not happen

Wednesday, February 21, 2007
The Japan Times has made an interesting find in the UK archives: an intelligence briefing note the Americans sent to us arguing that the USSR, and the 'People's Republics' of North Korea and China were intent on invading Japan in 1951, right at the point of their high tide in South Korea.

The reaction at the time was one of doubt, with a contemporary expert also unconvinced. Intriguing though.

Labels: , , ,

Oh for the love of God, Buddha, Krishna, YHWH etc etc

Thursday, January 18, 2007
Remember 'the Doomsday Clock'? Well, its back. And this time it isn't just thermonuclear war they are factoring in, but climate change. More here.

My highest scientific qualification is a 'C' at O level biology, but suggesting that the nuclear arsenal of the 'Democratic People's Republic' of Korea and what the Iranians might be able to knock up if they do not get Osiraq-ed (fingers crossed it will...) would be enough to set off a nuclear winter? Puh-lease. I seem to recall that we have had a nuclear war of sorts in 1945, and the ice caps did not expand to cover Yorkshire, the Sahara is still remarkably hot and sales of Ambre Solaire continue to impress.

Labels: ,

And now for something completely different.

Wednesday, January 17, 2007
I offer up a video supposedly hailing the military prowess etc of the 'Democratic People's Republic' of Korea (They've got Mig 21s....), the song to which puts me in mind of the Village People.

Anyway, enjoy.

Labels: