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Sleepless in Fulham: Rambling and gambling by David Young
Sunday, 27 February 2005
America gets it.
Topic: Politics
The US is to start a European-based Arabic language television station. The idea is to combat the one-sided anti-American bias of existing Arabic language stations like Al Jazeera.

From the source article:

"Obviously some of the people who are discontented and are recruitable for terrorism are Muslim minorities in Europe," said Harvard professor Joseph Nye, a noted soft-power advocate and former chairman of the National Intelligence Council -- the federal government's strategic intelligence think tank. "The idea of appealing to these people to try to attract them away from an oversimplified view of America-as-villain seems to make sense," he added.

It's a great idea. And it's also a good indication that the US understands Europe's future far better than Europe itself does.

Saturday, 26 February 2005
Me and the Hendon Mob.
Topic: Poker
Over at Andy Ward's Diary, I spotted a sideways comment about me from Big Dave D, regarding the fact that I post less about poker on this site since I started writing for Gutshot. David wrote this message to Andy:

You're fetish with Samuels is a bit of a leak...as is your continued posting on THM. I'm sure now that you are fully "pimp my ride" with a panoply of poker sites, all posts will strictly be Pay per View. And maybe, like DY, u can stop on that funny poker stuff.

Andy said he was going to stop writing on the Hendon Mob forum, but hasn't stuck to it. I said the same, but have stuck to it. It's been 14 weeks now. Amazingly I'm still second in the all time posting list after over three months of silence. Shortly before I stopped posting on there, there was a discussion on another blog somewhere in which either Dave or 'chaos' suggested that I was partly to blame for the deterioration in the quality of the forum, because of my many posts about politics. In my defence, while agreeing that I did write a lot about politics, I should stress that many of the actual threads in which I did so were actually started by other people. These threads were also very popular with many people and came at a time when the US, and indeed the world, stood at a crossroads, because of the November election.

So on Andy's site I wrote this:

"A few months ago, there was some talk on Big Dave D's blog to the effect that I was partly responsible for ruining the Hendon Mob forum by getting involved in lots of discussions about politics.

Shortly afterwards I grew disillusioned with the forum and stopped posting on it on the 17th of November. Since then, does anyone think it's gotten better? I don't. I now find it amazingly boring and look at it about one fifth as much as I used to.

The problem wasn't the offtopic discussion, I don't believe, as much as the endless abuse dished out from total nobodies at anyone who presented a view. Combined with adoration of people who never contributed anything to the forum (Devilfish, Surinder and half of the Hendon Mob themselves), I began to wonder why I bothered. The more you write, the more people think they have the right to insult you. The move was obvious. Do nothing unless someone pays you.

Why Pete Birks continues to give away free content I don't know. He's one of the only worthwhile posters there left. Save it for Stan James, Pete! The fact is that the forum exists to promote the site and the site exists to renew the Mob's amazing deal with Prima. You are basically working for free to get Ross and Ram into comps. And they don't even send you a thankyou note!

Such is the power of fame."


It only took a few hours for someone, under an alias, to write a post titled 'David Young calls the mob cun*s'. I don't recall using those words or any remotely similar, but the poster did at least provide a link to what I did say, so people can see for themselves that I didn't. He also added the short message 'Burn him'. It is very possible that this person has written this ironically, especially after Andy's excellent post on groupthink, which pointed out this exact phenomenon in poker. The next poster to the thread didn't make clear whether he actually bothered to read my original words and said:

"Everybody is entitled to their own views and opinions but I have to say that I think the HM have done more for British poker than most. Along with Devilfish and Dave Colclough (+ a few), these are the recognised faces of our UK game and they promote it in a very positive light. I think the biggest issue is they are at the top of thier "field" and as such, people seem to take fun in trying to run them down.

My guess is they are big enough to take it. I was lucky enough to spend a fair amount of time with them at the Bellagio in December and each and everyone of them were great. Happy to talk, help and be all round good guys. My hat is off to them.
They were and still are, where most of us aspire to be."


Take fun in trying to run them down? How does he draw that conclusion? I'm also interested to know how Devilfish, Colclough and the Mob have "done more for British poker than most". Genuinely baffled in some ways. The Mob's greatest contribution by far, in my opinion, is the forum. It was fantastic a few years ago, but now seems populated with people who want to moan about online poker being rigged when their aces get cracked and er... er ... well I'm not sure, as much of it is so unmemorable now.

Is it so nasty to point out that the site was (I guess) built from the outset with the intention of getting a sponsorship deal? It seems fairly obvious to me. Now that the deal exists, it continues in order to get that deal renewed. Surely that's a statement of the obvious?

Meanwhile, what is Devilfish's contribution to British poker? I know that he's made British players seem more of a threat to the Americans and I'm not even sure that I'm grateful for that. But has he built a bricks and mortar cardroom, like Barry and Derek did with Gutshot? Has he negotiated a rake rebate for online players, like some others I could name? No! He hasn't even told Ultimatebet to get a sterling bank account, like I told Phil Hellmuth it should do. Nor, when I last looked, did UB seem to have taken the British market into account in scheduling its tournaments, with all the decent sized ones starting at 2am, to suit the Americans. Things may have changed, but I wouldn't know, as I gave up waiting for UB to be more British-friendly about a year ago and haven't looked at it since. It's not even downloaded on my new computer.

One person who has made a difference to poker in Britain and much of the rest of Europe, is the much maligned Nic Szerameta. Few realise that he's the one who came up with the format for Late Night Poker, which is what lead to the massive growth in the game. Nor that he's one of the founders of the World Heads Up championship, a real innovation that the Americans never thought of. And he was also involved in getting Europe's best structured tournament going - the E-WSOP, which for years ran with a two hour round structure!

But he gets abuse while Devilfish and Colclough get praise. Why? Well it doesn't help that Nic spends so little time in London or the South East meaning that many people never get to know him. But the real thing that gets you praised is winning a high profile tournament. When Surinder Sunar won the WPT event in Paris last year, I was stunned by the number of people who wrote in to praise him on the Hendon Mob forum, as though Surinder ever looked at it. Of course he didn't. He never even replied. My guess is that he's never looked at the site and never even found out that people were praising him on it.

Don't get me wrong. I like the Hendon Mob. I've been to two of them's houses. I like Surinder, Devilfish and Colcough. I've spoken on friendly terms with all of them. But I'm not going to credit them with doing much for the British game. That credit should go to others, many of whom you've never heard of.

In the meantime, if you think I'm being so hard on Ross and Ram, can you find anything that they have written on the forum in the last three months (Diary pieces don't count). And have any of them thanked Pete Birks for his many fantastic contributions, which stand head and shoulders above the general dross?

_ DY at 4:05 AM GMT
Updated: Saturday, 26 February 2005 4:36 AM GMT
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Friday, 25 February 2005
Has the worm finally turned in Germany?
Topic: Politics
It was bound to happen eventually, but I didn't think it would be this soon. A German magazine has published an article that considers the possibility that Bush is right about the middle east and that Europe is wrong. Before you say 'So what?', I should explain that the German media has been the most anti-Bush biased that I have ever seen - far worse than the Guardian, Independent, New York Times etc. In fact a whole blog has been devoted to exposing this bias:

http://medienkritik.typepad.com/

So it was refereshing to see this in Der Spiegel:

'Could George W. Bush Be Right?' (English Translation)

The article notes that Reagan's demand for the Berlin Wall to be torn down was considered far fetched in 1987 and he drew scorn from the German media then for being "inopportune, utopian and crazy". Yet he was proved right within three years.

The article notes: "Europeans today -- just like the Europeans of 1987 -- cannot imagine that the world might change. Maybe we don't want the world to change, because change can, of course, be dangerous. But in a country of immigrants like the United States, one actually pushes for change. In Mainz today, the stagnant Europeans came face to face with the dynamic Americans. We Europeans always want to have the world from yesterday, whereas the Americans strive for the world of tomorrow."

That's revolutionary talk coming from a German print magazine!

Thursday, 17 February 2005
Appeasement be upon him.
Topic: Religion
Am I the only person shocked by this?

Oxford Cambridge and RSA Examinations policy statement

It states:

"OCR will always put 'peace be upon him' after Muhammad in the form of an Arabic colophon as a mark of respect. However we do not expect candidates to do this. A reference to this can be found on page 13 of the OCR GCSE Religious Studies Notes for Guidance.

Why is a UK examination board paying respect to Muhammad? Where is the objectivity in this?

Wednesday, 16 February 2005
Islands for sex criminals?
Topic: Misc.
I don't believe that sex criminals, in particular those who molest children, are like other criminals. I don't suppose it's their fault that their urges are the way they are. I don't see how they can reform. A man who steals from a shop can be made to see how his actions are wrong, but what can you do with someone who has a sex drive that requires that others be harmed?

So I've been thinking recently that they should be placed on some remote island where they can do no harm to others once they have completed their time in prison. Conditions need not be harsh. They would not be there for extra punishment, merely to prevent further harm to others.

Would this be immoral?

Thursday, 10 February 2005
Royal madness
Topic: Misc.
Apologies if you came here to read about something other than the forthcoming marriage of Charles and Camilla, but this made me laugh. It's from the BBC's 'Have your say' page:

Never should Charles be allowed to re-marry - especially to a divorcee. This is a good reflection of our country today. He also should forfeit the right to be king, as the rules are rules. If the law is changed to accommodate this, then we will riot.

Tim Cross, Reading, Berks


Somehow I doubt this.

_ DY at 9:31 PM GMT
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Saturday, 5 February 2005
The threat from Saddam
Topic: Politics
A writer in the comments to an earlier piece, named 'R We Safer now in sunny kent?' tells me:

"this wasn't an imperitive war like ww2"..."there was a case for the war, but did this justify the cost?"

For a moment, I would like to set aside my conviction that the war was justified in terms of regime change and reform of the middle-east and instead focus purely on the threat that Saddam posed, which many people wrongly assume to be non-existent, merely because no stockpiles of nuclear weapons have been found.

I suggest that everyone has a look at the Iraq Survey Group's findings. They are a damming indictment of the philosophy of containment.

The section titled 'Regime Strategic Intent' explains:

Saddam Husayn so dominated the Iraqi Regime that its strategic intent was his alone. He wanted to end sanctions while preserving the capability to reconstitute his weapons of mass destruction (WMD) when sanctions were lifted.

In order to end sanctions, Saddam used the 'Oil for Food' programme not only for personal gain, but also to bribe foreign politicians to campaign for an end to sanctions. Once that was achieved he would then restart his WMD development. In other words, a system that was designed to contain Saddam was actually being used by Saddam to contain the free world. Those who argue that there was no threat from Iraq resemble the man who falls from the Eiffel Tower and as he passes the second floor on the way down observes 'So far so good!'.

Check out this page from Wikipedia for summary of the findings. Note the last one, which makes clear that Saddam convinced his own military commanders that Iraq did have WMD in order to prevent a coup. This explains why so much of the intelligence coming out from the country reported that WMD did exist.

_ DY at 1:57 AM GMT
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Friday, 4 February 2005
Drug-related madness.
Topic: Politics
A study in Scotland has found that heroin users can lead normal lives. Glasgow Caledonian University's study of 126 users found many were holding down normal jobs and relationships and passing exams. On the surface this ought to be considered a good thing, but the discovery seems to have caused more anger than relief. Social workers and politicians have instead rushed out to stress that the report did not state that herion was safe.

It's distressing that this is the level of thinking. I certainly have no interest in drugs and I would strongly counsel anyone against taking them. But if it's possible for a heroin user to go to work and earn their keep, pay tax and maintain a semblance of normality then this has to raise the question of why we leave the drug to the black market where prices are high and impurities are added to the product. Where is the fresh thinking on this matter?

Drug laws are killing people. Most heroin addicts would not inject if the price were cheaper and thus would not catch infections from needle-sharing. They would also have more money in their pockets if the price were lower and if they chose to go into rehab in order to quit once and for all, would be more likely to have the money to pay for it themselves, instead of the state picking up the tab. They wouldn't turn to crime. Your insurance premiums would be lower. And we wouldn't be exporting money to criminal gangs.

This last point is more important than most people realise. Many third world countries are impossible to govern because of the power of drug gangs. The money they earn allows them to buy weapons and bribe law enforcement officials. This is notable in Mexico and Columbia to pick just two examples. The situation in Columbia is particularly tragic, since the US insisted that the country be sprayed with chemicals to prevent the cultivation of coca leaves. In a tragic illustration of the law of unintended consequences, the effect has been to aid the drug growers at the expense of everyone who is honest. The drug cartels have developed spray-resistant strains of the coca plant and the spraying now merely serves to kill weeds and other competing vegetation. The result is a bumper cocaine harvest. Meanwhile honest farmers who grow other crops are suffering when the spray reaches their crops, resulting in ruin.

Those of us on the right who believe that 'you can't beat the market' should insist that an end be put to this madness.

Sunday, 30 January 2005
Historic day for the middle-east.
Topic: Politics
Iraq votes today, under circumstances that are far from ideal. Nevertheless, it looks like turnout will be not much different from the turnout in the UK's election in 2001 (59 per cent). I was hoping to make a forecast that Iraq's turnout will be higher than ours was, but I don't know enough about how it's calculated. Excluding the Sunni areas, it will be higher for sure.

Given that some Iraqis have been killed at polling stations, it puts our political apathy to shame. Violence will continue for some time, but if the turnout is respectable, the terrorists who want Iraq to be a theocratic dictatorship will know that they have lost.

Sunday, 23 January 2005
Vicky Coren gets an ear full of cider.
Topic: Misc.
It's time I updated readers regarding the third annual Young-Quance chess challenge. Julian and I normally hold this in Amsterdam but this year neither of us went for the festival, so we agreed to play in a pub in London. Also in attendance were Neil Channing and Victoria Coren.

Dear reader, I am gutted to report that despite winning by clear majorities in the first two years, I lost 3-0 in 2004. I am sure that drinking before play rather than afterwards had something to do with it. I can't believe I've got worse at the game.

It was a good natured gathering. The highlight of the evening was watching a sidebet between Vicky and Neil. As the game was played in late December, the pub was playing various christmassy songs, one of which was the 'Fairytale of New York'. On hearing it, Neil said: 'I hate this version. Why can't they play the one with Shane McGowan. This is the cover version by the kid from the boy band'. On hearing this, Vicky said 'Don't be ridiculous. This is the original version with The Pogues and Kirsty MacColl'. Neil was insistent: 'No it's not. I have listened to the original about five times a day this week. This isn't it.'

'What?' said Vicky, 'You're saying someone else has recorded the song the same way with the same harmonies? Don't be ridiculous'. The argument got more heated until one of these sickos suggested a bet. I guess it was inevitable really. It was initially set for #100 at evens each, but Vicky felt like being generous and reduced it to #50. That done, she marched over to the bar and demanded to see the disc that was being played. The barman brought it over a short while later and she was astonished to see that the song was recorded by:

Ronan Keating and Maire Brennan

She spluttered 'But what is the point of recording a cover that is exactly the same?' Too late. She had done her money. Neil was very nice though and told her to put it in the pub's charity collection tin. She returned and announced 'Well there's a charity for the blind that's #50 better off'. Never one to miss the bright side, Neil replied 'Oh that's good. I know you were gutted about that Blunkett thing'.

And the moral of the story. Don't be on facts! Certainly not against Lord Channing.

_ DY at 6:35 PM GMT
Updated: Sunday, 23 January 2005 8:01 PM GMT
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Thursday, 20 January 2005
Thanks to Fred Titmus
Topic: Politics
No this is not a post about cricket. I want to express my gratitude to 'Fred Titmus' for responding to one of the most misinformed posts I've ever seen about politics. I refer to the one on the HM site that says:

"ha ha ha Poor old DY can't reply here, cos of his deal with gutshot. Any way he attacks me on his blog, he trys to bring the budhists into the argument.?? But he doesn't address the point of the programme-the fact that neo-cons will always look for a bogeyman (soviet union or muslim fundamentalists) to maintain their grip on power. Luckily old ronnie reagan didn't buy their bull****...otherwise we wouldn't have had detente.
Can you imagine the cretinous bush dealing with Gorby and the cold war thaw in the 80's?"


I'm glad this person (who effectively admits to being 'DY delusions') wrote this, because it shows how breathtakingly ill-informed he is. Firstly there is the small matter of the fact that I'm not prevented from writing on the site at all. I choose not to because I have found it less and less rewarding for some time now and it was consuming too much of my mental energy when I used to post. There is a growing trend of sheer nastiness, lately directed at Ulliott, Vicky Coren and Roland, that makes it less pleasant to read. Where did all these sad vicious people spring from?

As far as bringing buddhists into the argument, I did that because if I can show that Islamic extremists are active in parts of the world that are not Christian, then it utterly undermines the argument that they need 'Bush conservatives' to flourish. I also showed that they were active long before the 'neo-cons' came to power. So the basic tenet of his argument falls to pieces.

I don't know whether to laugh or cry when he writes: "neo-cons will always look for a bogeyman (soviet union or muslim fundamentalists) to maintain their grip on power". Is he honestly saying that there isn't or wasn't a threat to freedom from either of these groups? Does he know about Hungary 1956, Prague 1968 or the many terrorist outrages at the hand of islamic terrorists?

To suggest that Reagan followed a policy of detente beggars belief. We are talking about a man who joked about bombing Russia on radio! Reagan didn't bring down the Soviet empire through talks alone. He did it by accelerating an arms race that the weaker Soviet economy couldn't match without destroying living standards.

So thanks again to 'Fred' for telling it like it is:

"It was precisely because Reagan rejected detente with what he called the "evil empire" that the process of disintegration of the Soviet Union occured when it did. Reagan emphatically rejected the Nixon/Kissinger detente policy."

Amen to that!

_ DY at 1:42 AM GMT
Updated: Thursday, 20 January 2005 12:36 PM GMT
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Wednesday, 19 January 2005
Oh dear, here we go again.
Topic: Politics
A writer on the Hendon Mob (anon of course) using the alias 'DY delusions' praises a BBC production titled 'The Power of Nightmares' thusly:

"The BBC are repeating this great programme over the next 3 nights. A fantastic examination of the crazy neo-con philosophy of DY. And how fundamentalist islam and bush conservatism actually flourish together, feeding off fears of the people."

How many times do I have to explain this? Let's take a trip to the real world:

1993 First Attack on the World Trade Centre
1996 Attack on the Khobar Towers.
1998 Twin Embassy bombings.

Guess who was president during all of this? If you say Bush, get a new history book. It was Clinton. And what about the Bali bomb that killed so many Australians in 2002? Were they all neo-cons? Is my critic aware that there are dozens of terrorist conflagrations involving militant Muslims around the world: Thailand, Philippines, Russia (re Chechnya), India (re Kashmir), Indonesia (Bali bomb).

Let's have a look at South East Asia. A terrorist network called 'Jemaah Islamiah' is thought to be responsible for many terrorist outrages in Indonesia and the Philippines.

The BBC tells me: "Forged in the late 1980s and early 1990s by a handful of Indonesian Islamic extremists, the network now stretches across Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand. Smaller cells might also exist in Cambodia, Vietnam, and even Australia."

That's funny. Not a lot of Bush Conservatives there for them to 'flourish together' with. The Beeb goes on to explain:

"JI's principal goals are the establishment of Islamic governments across the region followed by the formation of a unified, South East Asian Islamic state. This state would stretch from southern Thailand, through the Malay Peninsula (including Singapore), across the Indonesian archipelago and into the southern Philippines."

So that's Buddhism finished then. How interesting. I thought it was Christian conservatives and Zionist Jews who were supposed to be inflaming Islamic extremists. What have the Buddhists ever done to them? I would love to hear from 'DY delusions', as I'm dying to know what the Buddhists have done wrong. My guess is nothing. But no doubt some kind documentary maker will appear to explain how it's all the victims fault, as usual.

_ DY at 12:29 AM GMT
Updated: Wednesday, 19 January 2005 9:32 AM GMT
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Sunday, 16 January 2005
Reasons to love the internet, continued.
Topic: Television
In my latest piece for Gutshot I mentioned the Six Million Dollar Man, which for the benefit of any reader under 30, was an action hero TV adventure series in the mid-seventies. If you were a child, as I was, it was pure delight.

I always had a faint recollection from that time that at one point the hero met someone called 'The Seven Million Dollar Man' in one episode. But as he was never mentioned again, I began to wonder whether I had imagined the whole thing. I've just looked for it on Google and found that lo and behold, there was such a character who appeared in one episode only. Years of self-doubt have just been erased. Oh joy!

Separately, sorry for the long break. I was planning to research the history of Indonesia but the topic bores me now. I will return to it if I can summon the energy.

_ DY at 1:18 PM GMT
Updated: Tuesday, 18 January 2005 8:31 PM GMT
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Tuesday, 4 January 2005
Some intelligent criticism at last!
It's refreshing to have some intelligent feedback for a change, rather than the moronic rantings of the last few days. In the comments section to my last piece, Jamie takes the trouble to do some homework and find facts that either undermine or appear to undermine my argument. Can we have more responses like this, please? For those who are too lazy to click on the comments section, here is what he says:

==========================================================================================================

David, Indonesia (the worst affected country), with an abundance of natural resources, a plethora of US energy companies working overtime to extract said resources, a democratically elected government and the backing of Bush for its role in the war on terror, is presumably your idea of neo-con heaven. Moreover, Bush is so enamoured of the country that he even intervened to prevent Exxon-Mobil being sued for alleged complicity in the abuse of human rights by the Indonesia military in the Aceh region - the area devastated by the tsunami. Incidentally, in the past decade alone, Exxon-Mobil (number one contributor to Bush campaign funds) has extracted some $40 billion from its operations in Aceh. I'd imagine that would more than cover the expense of an early warning system.

And don't get me started on the 1 million+ killed during the 1965 CIA-backed coup which brought General Suharto to power. Nor on the 1975 US-backed invasion of East Timor which resulted into 200,000 civilians being killed. In case you think this is just another anti-US rant, it's worth pointing out that fellow democracy, the UK, was the biggest arms provider to dictator Suharto and another, Australia, his biggest ally.

I know, I know, the Bush administration should not be held responsible for the sins of previous administrations. But, in May 1997, a year before Suharto was driven out of office, everyone's favourite neo-con Paul Wolfowitz (who served as the US ambassador to Indonesia) told Congress of "the significant progress" Indonesia has made under the "strong and remarkable leadership of President Suharto".

Another of your quotes:

"I should like to stress that the reason that I'm a neo-con free-marketeer is not because I'm heartless, but precisely because I'm not."

You may not be, but the architect of neo-conservatism is happy to endorse a man responsible for not one, but two genocides. Perhaps you'd like to reconsider your slavish devotion to these cunts.

Other than that, happy new year.

Jamie


==========================================================================================================

I'm going to take my time before responding to this. I would just like to say now that CIA activity of the 60s and 70s is the very opposite of what I understand by the term 'neo-con'. Furthermore, it's possible that the CIA was in the past responsible for fueling America's drugs problems, though I will withhold judgement on that until I have researched it further.

_ DY at 11:35 PM GMT
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Monday, 3 January 2005
Reality Check.
Topic: Politics
A writer on the Hendon Mob forum (anonymous of course) says: "For the height of tastelessness, go to DY's blog. There he argues that neo-con inspired democracies are sooo much better at handling natural disasters."

Well, well. Whatever could give me that idea? Let's have a look at the real world:

1994 - Los Angeles Earthquake - Magnitude 6.7, Death toll: 51

2003 - Bam Earthquake (Iran) - Magnitude 6.6, Death toll: 43,000

Iran, a nation with about six decades worth of known oil reserves, is now spending BILLIONS on a nuclear power programme. Might not a casual observer wonder whether this money would be better spent on improving the quality of the nation's buildings to make them better capable of withstanding the next earthquake? It hardly seems uncaring to say this. Quite the reverse. I actually care enough to want to see something done before the next quake, rather than afterwards. I hope the regime there collapses as soon as possible and if this can be made to happen with a push from the West, that's fine by me.

Update

Another pompous and anonymous moron has pounced on me on the HM forum for this view. To show you how stupid this person is, I shall quote him in full:

"Unlike the Camel, DY is not man enough to apologise for inappropriate comments on this tragedy in south East Asia. Indeed he continues to maintain that the death toll is so high because these countries aren't American enough.

Unfortunately they were not as prepared as the Californians because there hasn't been an earthquake there for 500 years. Also they commit the crime of not being rich. Using this tragedy to pontificate on silly neo-con arguments is tacky and a little sick."


How do I start to pick apart the loose thinking here? Well for a start, the reason I'm not apologising is because I've done nothing to apologise for. I have stated what I believe to be the best way to prevent future deaths. I've also provided some reasoning and some facts to back that up. The line 'he continues to maintain that the death toll is so high because these countries aren't American enough' is especially odious. I have no desire to make the whole world into a replica of the US, but there is no shame in wishing that it had the same or better protection from natural disasters.

For another example, Japan is a wealthy democracy that from 1981 introduced tougher standards for earthquake protection. It could afford to. As a consequence, the country was able to restrict its losses to about 5,000 when a very powerful earthquake struck in the Kobe/Osaka area where the population density is extremely high.

His phrase 'Also they commit the crime of not being rich.' is particularly silly. Does he actually think that the majority of people in poor countries choose to be poor? They are that way usually because their leaders either steal the national resources for themselves or impede trade for ideological or selfish reasons. He fairly points out that the Indian Ocean region had not seen such an earthquake for centuries but this hardly undermines my point about Iran, does it? His parting shot 'Using this tragedy to pontificate on silly neo-con arguments is tacky and a little sick.' is most odd, as it seems to suggest that politics and saving lives are somehow unrelated. I hold the foreign policy views that I do precisely because I believe that they will save lives in the long term. It is entirely consistent that I should wish for Asians to be governed by those who best provide them with security and prosperity. I have no personal gain to make from this, other than knowing that others are living as comfortably and securely as possible.

If my anonymous and cowardly critics can't understand that, then that's their problem not mine. I don't intend to go back to writing on the Hendon Mob forum, so if people want to pursue this with me they can comment in the box below.

_ DY at 3:44 PM GMT
Updated: Tuesday, 4 January 2005 4:33 AM GMT
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