• Well it’s just over one month to go and I’ve had a couple of exciting last minute changes to my trip.   I’ve also decided to take 2 weeks off right now to relax before the big trip (and organise the little things I’m sure I’m forgetting about).

    I was lucky enough to get a ticket to a World Cup soccer match in Munich on 24 June.   While I’m going to have to backtrack in Europe to attend I felt this is a once in a life time chance.   The match is in the 2nd round knockout phase and features the winner of the Germany group versus the 2nd in the England group.

    A very good chance the host nation will be involved.   Unbelievable if it happens to be Germany vs. England!   I’m catching one of those budget airlines (return) from Nice to Munich, should be very interesting.  The second change is I’m going to do a side visit to England from Paris for 2 1/2 days to catch up with my good friend Jon.   I’ll be flying over on British Airways but catching the Channel train (Eurostar) on the way back that should be a good experience.   This means I’m now visiting 23 countries.

    It will be good to catch up with Jon one month into this trip and not be staying at a hostel for a few days.  Four weeks and three days to go!

  • Well in the past 24 hours I’ve seen heaps of friends and family.   It reminds me just how good life can be, sometimes you feel like the only one alive and days like today you know just how lucky you are.

    So it started with briefly seeing my friend Jacqueline in the CBD (unfortunately she was working but we’ll catch up again soon), then Jon surprised me with an international phone call just after midnight (thanks for that Jon!).   The next day I meet up with Natalie & Adrian for lunch and later my sister and her family came again for dinner.

    What a surprising 24 hours with nothing planned.   We all have more people in our life’s than we sometimes realise during the bad times.   Thanks friends and family!

  • Well it had to eventually be bought up again, the Attorney-General Philip Ruddock has suggested that we need a National ID Card.   While it is interesting that the Liberal’s stopped a similar idea in the 1980s when Labour wanted to bring it in it is more interesting how the Government treats our personal details.

    Now I actually don’t think introducing the ID card is really a big issue (or even linking it to terrorism, like that is really going to stop anyone).   We already basically have an id card, be it a driver’s license, passport,  Medicare Card or  concession card  (student or otherwise).

    No Mr Ruddock is missing the real point, or at least hiding it in plain view:  A lot of people say an ID card would be dreadful, that this would enable the Government to have access to a wider range of information and you wouldn’t want to trust government with all of that information.   I would simply say that government obtains all that information . . . now.

    The government already has all this information on you!  In the past government departments didn’t share most of their data, they protected it (sometimes more by ineptitude than design) however now with better technology and ‘special’ agreements your information is widely available.

    The real issue is not the ID card but the information that is already been held and its use.   Maybe the ID card isn’t such a bad idea if we get real safe guards.   For example shouldn’t we be able to see who accessed our information (and not under a costly Freedom of Information request).   Shouldn’t we be able to at any time request to see all data held on us?   You’d be surprised how much is wrong, the Depart. of Immigration uses police databases and based on this locks citizens up.

    No the real issue isn’t the ID card.   I’d even support the ID if we had real safe guards and remove the need for the other id cards while you are at it, we might as well get something out of this.  

  • While this site won’t normally become a political commentary forum, my good friend Adrian has inspired me to put down some of my thoughts about what is really happening in the international world.    A lot of people have linked the war in Iraq with oil, WMDs or even to the failure of George Bush Snr in the first Iraq war however I think there is something much more straight forward going on.

    As a rule the powerful like to stay powerful and in the modern world that is achieved by two things economic and military might.   And while I feel the invasion was to show the world they had the will and the means to invade anyone they don’t like (sending the terrorist a message just like did after the Munich Olympics murders) there is a greater economic reason.  Most people are aware that the USA has incredible deficits.   The country is only saved from a major financial crisis by the fact everyone else in the world is willing to invest in their country but most importantly buy their dollars.

    In November 2000 the Iraq Government decided to stop using the US dollar for it’s international purchases or to sell it’s oil (under the discredited food for oil problem).   This decision was mostly made for political reasons however it showed the world that there was an alternative to the US dollar, the European dollar (or euro).   This decision actually made the Iraq people a lot of money because as a consequence the US dollar fell (see UK Guardian article).

    Unfortunately for the Iraq government just as the US government would later make a military example of them under the same principle the US could not afford to let make an economic example for the rest of the world.   This could lead to the new domino effect of other OPEC countries doing the same.     The consequences of all OPEC nations suddenly changing to the euro is summed up in this quote:   “..the effect of an OPEC switch to the euro would be that oil-consuming nations would have to flush dollars out of their (central bank) reserve funds and replace these with Euros.  The dollar would crash anywhere from 20-40% in value and the consequences would be those one could expect from any currency collapse and massive inflation (think Argentina currency crisis, for example). You’d have foreign funds stream out of the U.S. stock markets and dollar denominated assets, there’d surely be a run on the banks much like the 1930s, the current account deficit would become unserviceable, the budget deficit would go into default, and so on. Your basic third world economic crisis scenario.

    The United States economy is intimately tied to the dollar’s role as reserve currency. This doesn’t mean that the U.S. couldn’t function otherwise, but that the transition would have to be gradual to avoid such dislocations (and the ultimate result of this would probably be the U.S. and the E.U. switching roles in the global economy).”     This quote is included in the excellent essay written by William Clark in January 2003 and revised in March 2003 which I strongly recommend people read to understand the major reasons for interference around the world.     By all rights the US should not be able to live the life it currently does, it’s major export is US dollars and it’s citizens current living standards are based on the rest of the world underwriting it.   It’s also worth noting that while the US has supported the European Union in the past they did not support the common currency.  Any country that could affect trade volumes that tried to move away from the US dollar will face very serious consequences.   The moment that Venezuela moves to the Euro this democratically elected government will be removed.

    If it was all about WMDs North Korea would have been invaded first.  A war is been waged right now and it is very much about economic power and ensuring that the US stays on top.   It’s a war that affects all countries including Australia (watch what would happen if we tried to introduce a pacific dollar).   If the free market really ruled China and India would now be running the place as they have the most productive goods the rest of the world wants.   Other more recent articles on this issue include:

    War is Money by Mark Radulich

  • Well tonight I got my first set of vaccinations for the upcoming 2006 World Trip making it seem like I‘ll be leaving the country very soon.   Going overseas starts you thinking about health issues, especially with all the hiking activities planned, I might have to push someone in front of me when the lion starts running!

    Unfortunately after being a good boy since New Year’s Eve and even having my first vegetarian dinner at, which was very good BTW (thanks Nat & Adrian), I fell off the wagon with my birthday this week and basically lost the good start I had.  However sometimes you need to go backwards before you can go forwards.   Feeling really bad today I got rid of all the bad temptations and hopefully I’ll be back on schedule again.   At least my bicycle riding is going well.   I managed a sub 30 minute ride to work and on Wednesday managed to do a sub hour ride return, so I’m fitter just not losing weight.