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SELF HATING HOMOSEXUALITY AND ITS DANGERS

The following is an excerpt from the JUNE, 1968 edition of CITATION (The Northern Territory Police Magazine) pages 20-21 on the dangers of homosexuality.

Princess Gordon


The one thing I know for sure from reading this is that Detective Superintendent F. A. Gordon was a closeted homosexual.  It’s amazing how far societal attitudes have both changed and remained the same in the last 44 years.  It’s also interesting to compare Mr. Princess Gordons’ arguments to the ones being used by the modern bigots opposing same-sex marriage. Some people just refuse to admit they’re wrong and move on.

The full issue of CITATION from which this is taken can be found online RIGHT HERE

Homosexuality and its Dangers – A New Zealand View

By
 F. A. GORDON
 Detective Superintendent

We live in a community wherein a citizen is entitled to hold and to voice opinions, and some citizens will go to extraordinary lengths to voice theirs and at the same time resent others giving opinions that oppose or do not wholly coincide with theirs.

As Policemen we, too, can have our opinions, although we don’t often get an opportunity of expressing them; and I must make it clear that any opinions I express are mine and not officially those of the Police Department. I doubt if any serving Police Officer will disagree, with anything I say, or opinion I express, on the subject that follows.

The daily Press of 18 April last, under the heading “Sex Law Change Advocated”, published an account of a meeting held in Wellington, N,Z. A motion passed indicates that those present believe that the present law regarding homosexuality does not serve the best interests of the community, and they apparently subscribe to the view that homosexual activities between consenting males should no longer be a criminal offence.

In other words, these people would like homosexuality made lawful. The green light for perverts? There is one section of the community that would greet this item with joy, and a minority section at that – the homosexuals themselves. No person in possession of proper knowledge of the dangers and potentiality of homosexuality would support any relaxation in the laws that outlaw the sexual deviate. Why risk subjecting our youth of tomorrow to such degradation in a world already beset with more than sufficient other dangers? Have you thought what would happen if homosexuality became an accepted cult in society?

Do we want our cities overrun with pimps, ponces, pansies, pussyfoots and perverts? A nation of queers? No man of character, no parent, would wish for the pollution of youth, because if homosexuality were allowed, or made legal, condoned or encouraged (as apparently some would like to see), the danger would be as disastrous as a hydrogen bomb.

We know there are unfortunates who for some reason, medical or otherwise, have latent homosexual tendencies and characteristics. They are an unfortunate minority who fortunately are able to obtain some form of treatment, medical or otherwise, for their malady. We hear little of them and under the existing laws they can do no harm. They can be helped and treated and so long as they molest nobody, nobody, including themselves, can take offence. In other words this type of person who is a non-offending homosexual is harmless and can be helped by treatment if he so desires,

But surely our moral image deserves protection from the pervert whose depravaties revolt all normal standards of common decency. Is he to receive an open licence to practise and spread his depradations as he pleases and as he would prefer? I say no.

I hesitate to think what the effects of legalizing homosexuality would be. What is today regarded by decent-minded people as sordid, abhorrent and repulsive, and spoken of with caution and with much distaste, would suddenly become open and blatant. The homosexual in the pervert class would realize that he no longer has any fear of the law and would feel that he and his perversions have an accepted place in society.

To suggest that the perversions would remain exclusively to consenting males in private is utter nonsense. Today, with the law sufficient to keep their activities more or less in check, it does not prevent the pervert from occasionally operating in public and offending the innocent. So what must we expect if he obtains a licence to practise his wares openly?

What of the male prostitute? Don’t tell ,me there are no such creatures, because we know there are. As the law stands, we can cope with them, and he takes pains to hide his practice. But make homosexuality legal and the male prostitute would be in his element – open and unashamed. There would be nothing to stop him from practising male prostitution as the law defines a prostitute as a woman who permits her body to be given for gain. The male version would therefore be exempt. Would you prefer this? One could well ask why discriminate against the common prostitute – why allow male prostitution and not common prostitution?

I don’t intend to advocate prostitution as such, but if we were to carefully sift all the objections, all the dangers and all the moral issues that must be considered, I venture to say that there would be less evil in the common prostitute than in the condoning of male prostitution that legalized homosexuality would bring. Why not treat both the same and retain our moral standards by outlawing both?

Those people who advocate the relaxation of the law that makes homosexual acts criminal, should tread with care. It is known that active homosexuals would like to have their activities acceptable to others, and they present for themselves a coloured picture that tends to deceive those who have not bothered to check and investigate the dangers involved.

The homosexual can choose for himself whether he indulges in criminal activities. He, like any normal person, can seek medical advice and treatment. He can also exercise self-control, self-discipline and self-respect just as can the heterosexual, and he can live in society without resorting to criminal acts if he chooses. The decision is his. It is society as a whole that should be considered, not the homosexual at the expense of society and the damnation of tomorrow’s youth.

Homosexuality can lead to other forms of criminal activity. The pervert by the very nature of his degrading mind is prone to mix with anti-social people and this forms a nucleus of the criminal element. Drugs and homosexuality are a common companion. If we are to allow the homosexual special privileges and legalize his activities, why not also remove all restriction on drugs like marijuana, heroin and opium? Each presents damnation to our youth so if one is relaxed, why not both? To go even further, for instance, to champion the cause of a safe blower would be less likely to pollute our way of life. It would be just as ridiculous to make rape legal, to allow robberies, to repeal the law making it a crime to have sexual relations with girls under sixteen. Would you like that? It would be no worse than legalized homosexuality with its perverts, its pimps, its ponces, its pansies and its pussyfoots.

Well, there you have it. Everything old is new again.

GGtMC – Best films of 2011

You listen to The Gentlemen’s Guide to Midnite Cinema right? Of course you do. Anyone who doesn’t is a monster; a soulless damaged husk of a human being, a gibbering shadow, less than a man, a mere beast.  Well, the gentlement have just put out their highly anticipated episode listing their favourite films of 2011.  Go and listen to it now, then come back here.

OK, now you’ve heard the episode, go and donate all your spare cash to their kickstarter page.

Now , mostly for my own reference, is the list of films they chose.

Big Willy’s Top 30

# Title Director Stars
30 Swordsmen (Wu Xia) Peter Chan Kara Hui, Wu Jiang, Takeshi Kaneshiro
29 Certified Copy (Copie conforme) Abbas Kiarostami Juliette Binoche, William Shimell, Jean-Claude Carrière
28 Attack the Block Joe Cornish John Boyega, Jodie Whittaker, Alex Esmail
27 These Amazing Shadows Paul Mariano, Kurt Norton Jeff Adachi, James H. Billington, Robin Blaetz
26 Elite Squad: The Enemy Within
(Tropa de Elite 2 – O Inimigo Agora É Outro)
José Padilha Wagner Moura, Irandhir Santos, André Ramiro
25 Beats Rhymes & Life: The Travels of a Tribe Called Quest Michael Rapaport Q-Tip, Phife Dawg, Ali Shaheed Muhammad
24 Take Shelter Jeff Nichols Michael Shannon, Jessica Chastain, Shea Whigham
23 The Yellow Sea (Hwanghae) Hong-jin Na Jung-woo Ha, Yun-seok Kim, Seong-Ha Cho
22 Meek’s Cutoff Kelly Reichardt Michelle Williams, Bruce Greenwood, Paul Dano
21 Tyrannosaur Paddy Considine Peter Mullan, Olivia Colman, Eddie Marsan
20 You’re Next Adam Wingard Sharni Vinson, Ti West, Barbara Crampton
19 Memphis Heat: The True Story of Memphis Wrasslin’ Chad Schaffler Jim Blake, Jerry Calhoun, Guy Coffey
18 Le quattro volte Michelangelo Frammartino Giuseppe Fuda, Bruno Timpano, Nazareno Timpano
17 Bullhead (Rundskop) Michael R. Roskam Matthias Schoenaerts, Jeroen Perceval, Jeanne Dandoy
16 Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy Tomas Alfredson Gary Oldman, Colin Firth, Tom Hardy
15 Black Bread Agustí Villaronga Francesc Colomer, Marina Comas, Nora Navas
14 Hugo Martin Scorsese Asa Butterfield, Chloë Grace Moretz, Christopher Lee
13 Moneyball Bennett Miller Brad Pitt, Robin Wright, Jonah Hill
12 The Last Ronin (Saigo no chuushingura) Shigemichi Sugita Jun Fubuki, Masatô Ibu, Nizaemon Kataoka
11 Snowtown Justin Kurzel Lucas Pittaway, Daniel Henshall, Louise Harris
10 Kill List Ben Wheatley Neil Maskell, MyAnna Buring, Harry Simpson
9 The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975 Göran Olsson Angela Davis, Stokely Carmichael, Bobby Seale
8 Nostalgia for the Light Patricio Guzmán Gaspar Galaz, Lautaro Núñez, Luís Henríquez
7 We Are What We Are (Somos lo que hay) Jorge Michel Grau Francisco Barreiro, Adrián Aguirre, Miriam Balderas
6 The Skin I Live In Pedro Almodóvar Antonio Banderas, Elena Anaya, Jan Cornet
5 Drive Nicolas Winding Refn Ryan Gosling, Carey Mulligan, Bryan Cranston
4 Biutiful Alejandro González Iñárritu Javier Bardem, Maricel Álvarez, Hanaa Bouchaib
3 Senna Asif Kapadia Ayrton Senna, Alain Prost, Frank Williams
2 Incendies Denis Villeneuve Lubna Azabal, Mélissa Désormeaux-Poulin, Maxim Gaudette
1 The Tree of Life Terrence Malick Brad Pitt, Sean Penn, Jessica Chastain

Honourable Mentions:
Villain, A Separation, Boy With a Bike, Steak land, Submarine

The Samurai’s Top 30

# Title Director Stars
30 Beautiful Boy Shawn Ku Michael Sheen, Maria Bello, Kyle Gallner
29 The Last Mountain Bill Haney Susan Bird, Don Blankenship, Ron Burris
28 The Devil’s Double Lee Tamahori Dominic Cooper, Ludivine Sagnier, Raad Rawi
27 Melancholia Lars von Trier Kirsten Dunst, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Kiefer Sutherland
26 Hugo Martin Scorsese Asa Butterfield, Chloë Grace Moretz, Christopher Lee
25 Martha Marcy May Marlene Sean Durkin Elizabeth Olsen, Sarah Paulson, John Hawkes
24 Buck Cindy Meehl Buck Brannaman, Robert Redford
23 50/50 Jonathan Levine Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Seth Rogen, Anna Kendrick
22 Midnight in Paris Woody Allen Owen Wilson, Rachel McAdams, Kathy Bates
21 Hanna Joe Wright Saoirse Ronan, Cate Blanchett, Eric Bana
20 Beginners Mike Mills Ewan McGregor, Christopher Plummer, Mélanie Laurent
19 Catching Hell Alex Gibney Moises Alou, Steve Bartman, Bill Buckner
18 We Are What We Are (Somos lo que hay) Jorge Michel Grau Francisco Barreiro, Adrián Aguirre, Miriam Balderas
17 The Trip Michael Winterbottom Steve Coogan, Rob Brydon, Paul Popplewell
16 Win Win Thomas McCarthy Paul Giamatti, Amy Ryan, Jeffrey Tambor
15 The Tree of Life Terrence Malick Brad Pitt, Sean Penn, Jessica Chastain
14 Stake Land Jim Mickle Connor Paolo, Nick Damici, Kelly McGillis
13 Warrior Gavin O’Connor Tom Hardy, Nick Nolte, Joel Edgerton
12 Memphis Heat: The True Story of Memphis Wrasslin’ Chad Schaffler Jim Blake, Jerry Calhoun, Guy Coffey
11 Rango Gore Verbinski Johnny Depp, Isla Fisher, Timothy Olyphant
10 Snowtown Justin Kurzel Lucas Pittaway, Daniel Henshall, Louise Harris
9 Senna Asif Kapadia Ayrton Senna, Alain Prost, Frank Williams
8 Tyrannosaur Paddy Considine Peter Mullan, Olivia Colman, Eddie Marsan
7 Take Shelter Jeff Nichols Michael Shannon, Jessica Chastain, Shea Whigham
6 Moneyball Bennett Miller Brad Pitt, Robin Wright, Jonah Hill
5 Attack the Block Joe Cornish John Boyega, Jodie Whittaker, Alex Esmail
4 Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy Tomas Alfredson Gary Oldman, Colin Firth, Tom Hardy
3 Drive Nicolas Winding Refn Ryan Gosling, Carey Mulligan, Bryan Cranston
2 The Skin I Live In Pedro Almodóvar Antonio Banderas, Elena Anaya, Jan Cornet
1 Eurocrime! The Italian Cop, Gangster Films That Ruled the ’70s Mike Malloy Franco Nero, John Saxon, Fred Williamson

Honourable Mentions:
Tron Legacy, A Better Life, Super 8, Shaolin, Contagion, Kill List, George Harrison: Living in the Material World, Hobo With a Shotgun, Rubber, Trust, Kidnapped

Adiós!

Happy Birthday To Linux

I remember being 20.  Not very well, admittedly.  Oh, all right – that whole year is a blur of drink, sleep deprivation, music and vomiting house-mates.

Linux is certainly in a more dignified place than I was!  Happy 20th.

I'll be celebrating 20 years of Linux with The Linux Foundation!

Here’s an infographic walk down /proc/meminfo lane.

 

The Happiest Pervert

What is this buffoon grinning about? Caught out by police, booked and facing court, yet he can’t wipe the smile off his face.  If that’s the effect oral sex has on people I’m glad no one has ever offered to do it to me.

Pervert of the Week

Yes we’re back. So much PERVERSION in the world, so little time. I try to ignore the perverts, but they continue to streak across my path and invoke my ire.

This weeks pervert is the worst kind of pervert: an outwardly anti-pervert pervert. Of course, you let him loose near a park full of kiddies and he drops his pants faster than Charlie Sheen drops pills. And what sort of name is Grant Storms? Sounds like a z-grade James Bond rip-off.

Why, oh why is it always religious leaders.  Won’t somebody think of the children and ban these paedos from our schools?

For the love of God, iRiver – please, just use Rockbox

Exactly one year ago today I bought an iRiver E150 MP3 player to replace my beloved E100 which had a cracked LCD screen. I’m fairly hard on technology in general, so over the years I’ve owned quite a few MP3 players, twelve devices total, of seven different models at last count, but none has ever frustrated em the way the iRiver E150 does. Up until now I have always really liked iRiver gear, it was always my first preference in MP3 hardware. The T10 was my favourite MP3 player ever: small, very rugged, played just about any format (at the time), and it would get over 50 hours from a single AA battery – if your rechargeable battery ran out you could get an AA from anywhere to keep you going.  Even Voldemort couldn’t stop the rock.

The E150 changed everything. The main problem is the player firmware. Sure, it still plays lots of formats but it is by far the slowest interface on any device I’ve owned. Even the $20 Aldi specials we got the kids perform better. So here are my pet peeves:

  1. Slow Interface. Pressing a button and holding it takes forever to scroll through menus, folders etc.  The ones that fit on the screen are OK, but as soon as you have to scroll off the bottom of the screen it takes almost a second per line. I subscribe to 64 podcasts, each of which goes into a subdirectory. Scrolling through this list is frustrating. Its also half the speed of the previous model, the E100.
  2. Folder management. While we are on the subject of folders, I can’t find a setting anywhere to go to the next folder once it is finished the current one. Pain in the having to go back up a folder then select the next one.
  3. Slow Fast-forward/Rewind. Even though there is a setting to allow you to set the Scan Speed up to “32X” it doesn’t work very well. It seems to Skip about 15 seconds of audio, then play half a second, then skip forward another 15 seconds. When you have a 3 hour podcast to get through you end up with a severely cramped thumb.
  4. It forgets part of it’s state after power-off, or when attaching the charger.  Sure, it remembers what file you were playing at the time, but if you want to navigate to a different file you have to start from the root directory again – you can’t just go up one folder from your current position to find the next one.
  5. Stupid controls. This is annoying.  On every other MP3 player the left and right buttons move you forward and back. On the E150 the Up button is “Previous track / Scan backward”, the Down button is “Next track / scan forward”.
  6. Pointless Video feature. If you have to re-encode your video into a very specific video format, then what is the point?
  7. Physical buttons. This is hard to explain without a photo.  The Up/Down/Left/Right buttons are hidden under the front plate of the case. In order to register a button press you need to push hard enough to deform the front of the player.  This makes for a completely smooth front on the player, but you sacrifice some functionality for this style.
  8. Slow boot. 14 seconds from pressing the power button. FOURTEEN SECONDS!  Sit down with your watch and time that – it’s a long time for an MP3 player. I have songs shorter than that.
  9. No “auto resume” feature. If it’s going to take FOURTEEN SECONDS to boot, it would be nice to have a feature to automatically resume playback after powering on. There isn’t. In fact it takes two additional button presses to get back to the last track you were playing.

On the plus side, it’s well constructed, sounds good, and plays everything the advertising says it says it will. iRiver has upgraded the firmware regularly to fix known problems (though not to enhance the user experience).

Sansa hardware is far shonkier – I don’t think I’ve had one that has lasted more than 8 months.  I’m sure I can hear the Sansa player explode as I walk past them in the shop, simply from my physical proximity. However, they have now become my preferred player. Why? Simple – the ones I buy support the Rockbox third party open source firmware.  Basically this is an MP3 player operating system developed by enthusiasts.  The usability issues are all solved. All the problem above (with the exception of the buttons) have all been solved long, long ago. Some old “H series” iRiver MP3 players can use Rockbox, but nothing for the last few years.

If only I could get the best of the iRiver world (solid hardware) with the Sansa world (Rockbox comparability), I would be a happy boy.

Installing Wiithon in Fedora 14

Wiithon is an excellent WBFS disk manager for Linux, but it only includes instruction for Debian/Ubuntu (BOO!). I have tested the following method in Fedora 14, and it worked for me 😉

Open up a terminal and enter the following commands:
su -c 'yum install gcc gcc-c++ glibc glibc-devel glibc-headers glibc-devel.i686 ImageMagick pygtk2 glade2 libglade2 python-sexy python-sqlalchemy gnome-icon-theme gettext bzr'
# this installs the prerequisites for Wiithon – most of these will probably be installed already.

bzr branch http://bazaar.launchpad.net/~wii.sceners.linux/wiithon/trunk wiithon1.2
# Install the Wiithon 1.2 source code using Ubuntu “Bazaar” source code management tool.

cd wiithon1.2
su -c 'make'
# Wait for it to finish. It should return a “Compile OK”

su -c 'make install'
# Wait for it to finish. It should return a “Wiithon Install OK”

su -c 'gpasswd -a $USER disk'
# Add current user to the “disk” group. You need to Logout of Fedora then log back in after this.

Now if only I could get it to download cover-art via my bizarre work proxy I’d be happy 😉

UPDATE 05 SEPT 2011:

Just checked under Fedora 15 and this method still works perfectly 😉

Fedora 13 to 14: Aaah, that’s beter

Wow.  Thanks Fedora dudes!  The Fedora 14 upgrade was possibly the easiest yet.  After the horrible time I had upgrading last time, The version 14 upgrade was a dream!!  DVD Media booted, and installed. Everything still worked, as far as I can tell.

Of course shortly after the upgrade, a power surge blew up two of my hard drives (smoke and everything!). I can’t really blame that on Fedora though.

Fedorable!

Fedora 12 to 13: Worst upgrade ever.

Some people think I’m strange for running Fedora as my primary operating system at home, but I’ve always liked it.  The stuff I need to be stable is always rock-solid, and if there is a new feature in a program I use, I’ll get it a year before it goes into Ubuntu or RHEL. Poking, prodding, and breaking stuff occasionally is half the fun.

BUT in my history using Red Hat Linux 6 through all the Fedoras, I have never had upgrade problems like I had going to Fedora 13.

  1. The DVD media wouldn’t boot. Something to do with my motherboard I think. Same media and DVD-drive work fine if plug it in via a SATA-to-USB adapter cable.
  2. Upgrading existing installation did not work.  The installer didn’t see my Fedora 12 installation and wanted to re-partition my drive.
  3. When I installed Fedora 13 on a blank HDD, I had problems using the NVIDIA driver.  I’m sure Nouveau is coming along leaps and bounds, but until it can beat the NVIDIA proprietary drivers, I don’t want it.  Probably could have fixed this, but I gave up.
  4. I re-imaged back to Fedora 12, then tried using “preupgrade”.  It downloaded 1.5 Gigabytes of data then failed to work. Told me it couldn’t find my /root.
  5. I finally resorted to the non-recommended option – upgrade via “yum”.  This worked pretty well. I had a few small issues (all my USB devices worked in Virtualbox except my printer) but nothing more than the usual upgrade quirks. I am typing this on a working Fedora 13.

I guess it could have been worse, I could have installed Windows 7 😉

Internet to Prince: You’re completely over!

Former rock-star and pervert of note, Prince has been recording and performing now for 30 years, the last 20 of which he has been completely irrelevant.  We’ve known the guy was deluded for some time now, the best example being found on the highly recommended “An Evening with Kevin Smith” DVD.

Now the Pint-sized Purple Pariah has explained to English newspaper The Mirror that the Internet is deader than his career.

“The internet’s completely over. I don’t see why I should give my new music to iTunes or anyone else. They won’t pay me an advance for it and then they get angry when they can’t get it.

“The internet’s like MTV. At one time MTV was hip and suddenly it became outdated. Anyway, all these computers and digital gadgets are no good.”

You know why Prince wants payment in advance for his music?  Because no one will pay for it after they hear it. That’s why The Mirror is giving away his new album for free; you get what you pay for.

Prince, shut up and go away. The world doesn’t need any more of your dreadful music, or the poisonous spouting about the Internet, religion, or anything else.  Shut the hell up and let someone who’s NOT an idiot speak.