The Anonymous Widower

Has Justice Been Served by Bin Laden’s Death?

This is the header over the letter’s page of The Times today.

Of the seven letters they publish only one supports the execution of Osama Bin Laden.  Some are critical of a Times Editorial entitled Justice Served.

Even a Rear Admral is not happy about “rough justice” and states his military background does not stop him feeling uncomfortable about it. The last letter they publish, quotes that truly great American, Martin Luther King  as saying, “I mourn the loss of thousands of precious lives, but I will not rejoice in the death of one, not even an enemy. Returning hate for hate multiplies hate, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that.”

If you get a chance the letters are very much worth a read.  I think credit should also go the paper in publishing letters that take a different view to its leading article.  Surely, this underlines one of the planks of a good democracy and that is a free and constructive media.

May 7, 2011 Posted by | News | , , , | 3 Comments

Yesterday’s Person of the Day was a Woman

With all the elections and the referendum going on in the UK and Obama’s trimphalist vengeance in the United States it fell to a woman to add some sanity to the world.

Lady Justice Hallett’s handling of the inquests into the London bombings of the 7th July 2005 has been exemplary and shows how justice can be seen to be done and closure can be brought to a tragic part of British history. 

There will always be some who call for more enquiries to apportion blame, but in my view it is time for everybody to move on. I have lost two members of my close family to vicious cancers and can sympathise with those who have lost someone dear to them. Who do I have to blame?

Life is a perilous and risky business and it is only by means of luck that we live as long as we do!

May 7, 2011 Posted by | News, World | , , | 2 Comments

America Doesn’t Learn

America’s fight against crime and terrorism inside the country never seems to learn from its mistakes or build on things that have been proven in countries like the UK, Israel, Sweden, Germany and many others.

The worst home-grown example of terrorism in the United States was the bombing of the Federal Building in Oklahoma. It could be argued that if proper security precautions had been taken at the building, that things might have been different. In its piece on the bombing, Wikipedia contains this.

As a result of the bombing, the U.S. government passed legislation designed to increase the protection around federal buildings to deter future terrorist attacks. From 1995 to 2005, over 60 domestic terrorism plots were foiled due to preventive measures taken in response to the bombing.

So after various incidents in the years preceding the bombing, won’t these precautions taken.

Simple precautions, such as we’ve had on UK flights for years might have prevented some if not all of the perpetrators of the September 11th, 2001 attacks of even getting on the planes.

In the late twentieth century, I was always amazed at the lack of airline security in the United States.  In the end the good people of New York and Washington paid the awful price.

And then there are guns! The United States has the highest rate of gun crime and murder of any f the so-called civilised countries. There are now reports that those with guns are so irresponsible that many of America’s mammals are disappearing.

So what does the United States do?

It discloses that Osama bin Laden was planning an attack on a train to mark the 10th anniversary of september 11th, 2001.

Surely this small fact is a challenge to all of those idiots out there, looking for their five minutes of fame.

Be vigilant of course, but don’t give them ideas!

May 6, 2011 Posted by | News | , , , | 1 Comment

What is the Truth about Pakistan’s Links with Bin Laden and the Taliban?

I have said before that Pakistan’s Intelligence Services should have known more, but I have now read this analysis from Andrew North of the BBC.  Read it.

It is all very murky and if Pakistan doesn’t sort itself out soon, then I am afraid one of its neighbours may well do the job for it.

May 5, 2011 Posted by | News | , | 1 Comment

The Sellafield Five Are Released Without Charge

When I first saw this story a few days ago, I thought it was quite a waste of police time. So now the five, who were arrested have been released without charge.

How much did this all cost the taxpayer?

May 4, 2011 Posted by | News | , , | Leave a comment

Execution Is Not Justice

It would now appear that the death of Osama bin Laden was a deliberate execution under the orders of Barack Obama. It also appears that it might have been possible to bring the evil Bin Laden out alive, as he was unarmed.

As I have said before he should have stood trial for his heinous crimes in The Hague. 

Read this article entitled “Bin Laden’s summary execution maketh the man, martyr and myth”,  from the Sydney Morning Herald. It makes a lot of forceful points.  Here’s an extract.

The US resembles the land of the munchkins as it celebrates the death of the wicked witch of the East. The joy is understandable but, to many outsiders, unattractive. It endorses what looks increasingly like a cold-blooded assassination ordered by a president who, as a former law professor, knows the absurdity of his statement that “justice was done”.

Amoral diplomats and triumphant politicians join in applauding the summary execution of Osama bin Laden because they claim that real justice – arrest, trial and sentence – would have been too difficult in the case of public enemy No. 1. But should it not at least have been attempted?

This execution might bring closure and even vengeance to many, but it could turn out to be just a small victory in the struggle to defeat Al Qaeda. After all the death of people like Bobby Sands, was very good for recruitment to the IRA.

It was Churchill who said.

Battles are won by slaughter and manoeuver. The greater the general, the more he contributes in manoeuver, the less he demands in slaughter.

Barack Obama is no great Commander-in-Chief, but he might just have done enough to win the next Presidential election.

May 4, 2011 Posted by | News | , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Terrorism Arrests at Sellafield

There have been arrests under the Terrorism Act at Sellafield.

I have been over nuclear facilities in both the UK and the United States and am pretty sure, that untrained people without the right technical background could learn anything of use, that they couldn’t get from something like Wikipedia or Google. They certainly wouldn’t get inside.

In fact all they’ve done is draw attention to themselves and get arrested.

I’d do them for wasting Police time.

May 3, 2011 Posted by | Computing, News | , , , | 1 Comment

Always Listen to the Taxi Drivers

Taxi drivers are usually those who know most about what is going on, although it does often come over with a certain slant.

So should we take too seriously, an interview I heard on the BBC, where a reporter talked to taxi drivers in Bradford?  To a man, they said the United States was the terrorist.

May 2, 2011 Posted by | News | , , , | 1 Comment

America’s Gleeful Vengeance

Osama Bin Laden was a truly evil man to many, or was he just someone who saw an opportunity to make a name for himself and just took it in a very evil way.

In some ways it is a pity he is dead, as he should be in a Court of Law on trial for his crimes. And when after due process, if the verdict was guilty, he should have not been given a death sentence.

We have had enough martyrs that have inspired evil movements in history. They’ve inspired some good ones too, but I can’t see this happening in Bin Laden’s case.

At least though Osama bin Laden is dead and we won’t get the sort of speculation that we did after the Second World War about whether the truly evil Hitler was really dead.

Incidentally, I have read somewhere that Hitler’s biggest fear was that he would be captured and exhibited in somewhere like a zoo.  He would have been tried at Nuremburg and if found guilty would have been executed.  Judging by the way we have dealt  with the various African, Croatian and Serbian war criminals, who have been found guilty at The Hague, we have moved on in the last sixty or so years.

But has America, where the death penalty is still a major part of the punishment system, as it is in Iran, China and North Korea?

I am also rather worried about the almost gleeful celebrations in the United States.  This is sending the wrong message around the world and in my view it is rather disrespectful to all of the good people killed in the attack on September 11th, 2001 and all the other attacks inspired by Bin Laden. I know we celebrated in a similar way after the Second World War, but that was only after the war against Germany and Japan had been brought to a conclusion. We have not completely defeated the terrorists.

It will be interesting to see how Muslim groups and people around the world react to Bin Laden’s death.

I will be holding my breath, but hoping that the good Muslims who just want to get on with their lives in a peaceful manner have more effect, than those who want to carry on Bin Laden’s evil ideology.

As Rachel Harvey has just put it on the BBC, “Bin Laden may be dead, but his ideas are not.”

May 2, 2011 Posted by | News | , , , , | 7 Comments

Carrots on the Train North

Yesterday, I went to see Ipswich play at Burnley and took the 7:30 Virgin train from Euston, changing at Preston.

I was surprised to see a large police presence on the station at Preston and as I had arrived there on time at the early time for football fans of 9:38, it seemed rather odd, unless Preston were playing one of the usual suspects in a lunchtime derby.

On asking one of the many police on the station, I was told it was members or should that be carrots of the English Defence League going to a protest in Blackburn.

There was no trouble on the train and they all got off at Blackburn and the carriage was rather empty as we crossed to Burnley.

I don’t like those who hate others and I’m rather glad that the EDL protest passed without any serious trouble. But that protest was rather put in proportion by the murder of a Catholic policeman by probable Republican terrorists in Northern Ireland.

April 3, 2011 Posted by | News, Sport, Transport/Travel | , , , , , | Leave a comment