Shoot To Kill by Michael Asher

August 18th, 2008

Shoot To Kill by: Michael Asher
Publisher: Cassell
Autobiography

After  the first book of his that I read this was a bit refreshing. The story is about the military groups he joined up after graduating high-school. No slacker here, he joined the paratroops right from the start. He had his eye on becoming a commissioned officer. Soon, however, his mind set changes and he wants to continue going through the ranks. You follow his training and first mission to Ireland.

Here he gives you a brief histrory of the Irish conflict as he progresses through the story. I remember reading of some of the events that he covers and took a part in. It is not a pretty story and there is nothing noble in its execution. Simply a story of soldiers who were wired to kill and then sent into a civilian area with civilian fighters.

He later joins the SAS and hones his killing skills further. The time of these events was from ’72 onward and I doubt if it covers one decade of his life. The Vietnam war was over for the US but Britain had its hot spots and interests. There was a certain wildness trained into the men and it reflected in their actions. At that time Political Correctness hadn’t yet manifested. It is a stark look at what men can become.

Don’t expect flowery praise and well turned phrases. It is a rough and gritty read. There is no character developement. Just a hodge podge of confusion and pain in a young man’s life. It was a much better read for me than “Get Rommel” but one shouldn’t expect to be entertained in the reading. It is, after a fashion, interesting.

Olympics… Snooze…

August 11th, 2008

I usually ignore the Olympics. During my channel surfing (which isn’t an Olympic event for some reason) I’ll come across some part of a sporting event. Snooze…

I also went looking for some events to see a Canadian athlete compete… haven’t seen one yet. Though I have seen many others from many obscure little countries. Snooze…

Nope, what really intrigued me was seeing a couple of children playing “Olympics” in our church parking lot. One boy about six would pretend to run in a race (he always ran as either a Canadian or Chinese athlete. His older brother, about nine, was the sports caster and Olympic official, color commentator and more. I watched as the little lad ran four heats. By the fourth heat the poor little guy had a red face and his little legs couldn’t pump with the enthusiasm he started with. After the last race he collapsed on the ground as only a child can (or a professional athlete) with a great show of his exhaustion. Somehow, in their version, Canada won every heat. His older brother was relieved when he could finally stop with the commentary and get on with playing some other game.

I found watching those two children more enjoyable than any Olympic event I surfed to on television.

WordPress change

August 9th, 2008

I am changing how and who can comment on my blog. Anyone who has blogged in the past… no change. Anyone new trying to post a comment… it will be held until I approve it.  Just trying to cut down on the spam posts that keep appearing.

I wish wordpress would come up with that verification program that is availlable with some other blogs like blogger. That would really cut down on the spam.

Get Rommel by Michael Asher

July 30th, 2008

Get Rommel by Michael Asher
Cassel Publishing
Historical

My wife bought me a box set of three books. The author is Michael Asher, ex-paratrooper and special forces in the British Army. One of the books I will be reading is a best seller. This book, Get Rommel, isn’t a best seller. At least not by what I have read.

The book covers the creation of special forces during the second world war. They mention their first attempt at using the forces… or should I say the mis-use of forces. He only included this story so that he could introduce some of the players in the “Get Rommel” mission.

Some characters? My gosh, no such luck. It seems to me that anyone who may of had even a small part to play in the mission had their brief history given. I don’t mind getting some background on the major characters but Asher gave little histories on dozens. So much so that I was wondering at points was this supposed to be an exciting historical novel or some dry thesis for a masters diploma. In the end I would say it was a thesis not a novel.

When you think of special forces you think of highly trained, highly motivated professional soldiers. Perhaps in the future they have become that model. In this book it was more like the mis-adventures of Spanky and the Gang.

After reading this book I was tempted to shelve the other two books in some dark corner of the basement. I guess I will try one more book to see if his delivery of a story improves. Though I have to admit, after that first one it has been weeks since I even wanted to read anything at all. If I had to rate this book, one star is bad and five stars was excellent, I would be hard pressed to give it a half star.

Here is my sketch of Rommel.

Commander of the Africa Corps - General Erwin Rommel

Commander of the Africa Corps - General Erwin Rommel

Location, Location, Location

July 14th, 2008

Ah, that is a familiar phrase when wanting to sell products, from ice-cream cones on a city corner to estate homes on well treed lots in the suburbs.

So I was taking my late night walk one evening and came across a lady of the night looking for her next white knight to come along and whisk her away for a ten minute engagement. Alas, we all do what we have to do to survive. Keeping in mind that location is king when “advertising” a product I found it a little funny and a little sad where this woman stood to show her wares. Perhaps it was to make the next “John” believe that she was really ok. A person safe to be with. Or perhaps just bad placement? Here… you decide for yourself. Here is a drawing of what I saw:

lady of the evening: location, location, location

Now for you women out there with wandering husbands? There was another sign across the street to her right. It was an animal hospital and the sign outside said: “Have your pets neutered.” I am quite certain there are a few of you who would like to bring their husbands in for a consult.

😉

Oh Oh Canada

July 9th, 2008

I like my country. I like what it use to stand for in a world going crazy. Yet over the years I have watched as my country leapt to the front of the line. Follow us, my country cried, to the other nations as we blazed the back-sliding trail away from God. There used to be a sweet fragrance coming from our political flower. The flower has changed and so too the aroma. The seeds we sow now are for our own eventual destruction. When a person like Dr Henry Morgentaler can be given the Order of Canada medal and inducted into their ranks something has gone awfully wrong. Perhaps it is time to change the direction and name of the medal. Here is my idea of what it could be now…

Too harsh? Give it another twenty years and you may not think so.

Danger in the Park

July 2nd, 2008

So I take my bike out for a ride. It was nice ride out towards King’s Forest. I don’t really go all that far because my back is in bad shape. It wasn’t long then before I decide to turn around and head back home. I like bike rides. I get to see places that I normally wouldn’t go to.

So as I get closer to home I decide to travel through Gage Park. Just skirt the northern section where all the flowers are laid out in large plots. Today I see police officers and several vehicles in the park. I thought they were there as part of some practice maneuver. Not quite. They were getting ready to handle a real emergency.

I was stopped by one of the officers and informed that I had to make a detour around the area I was travelling through. You see, someone set up something in the trees. I was told that they are treating this odd looking device as a potential explosive threat. I rode around and grabbed my camera and took a long range shot of the device.

 

Guess I will have to wait for the news tonight to find out if the device was a working bomb. What kind of a person would put such a device in a public park? Even if it turns out to be something else… it takes a weirdo to do such a thing.

Freedom of Thought

June 25th, 2008

A few weeks ago I was listening to a TV program from Canada Christian College. The topic for the evening was a discussion on the movie “Expelled: no intelligence allowed” starring Ben Stein. They were talking about the hypocrasy of the education establishment that supports freedom of thought… intellectual inquiry… scientific research… yet at the same time automatically throw out any idea of intelligent design or even its discussion.

The scientific community now suffers from the same narrow-mindedness that was once heaped upon the Christian who believed in the biblical creation account. Christians on a whole have grown in their understanding of science by embracing scientific discovery. Yet today the scientific community… actually those who fund them… will not tolerate a different point of view. Intelligent design does open the door to further discussion and further exploration life.

Sadly, the scientific community has become so narrow minded that they are impeding the progress of discovery. They must bend themselves so far that they end up looking up a dark tunnel expecting to find the truth. They should stand up straight and look about the grand universe God has given us. Solomon said that it is the task of man to understand the world around them. That takes ideas and differing views. Science seems to have forgotten that.

Here is an image of the modern science teacher in a university seeking the origins of life…

 scientific tunnel vision

I’m Back????

June 20th, 2008

This has been the strangest 24 hrs on my website. I upgraded my WordPress blog and then couldn’t get it to work. Tried all kinds of things… no luck. Today I came back and nada… not a thing. So I decided to take a drastic step and dump the database and see if I can re-install. Then somehow, someway, something happened and I got my site back… upgraded and ready to go with the database intact. Mysterious happenings…

So, thanks for your patience.

Lengthening Silence

May 30th, 2008

As I commented in the last topic I have been undergoing some changes. I wrote that I am waiting for God to breathe something new into my life rather than trying to fill it myself. Thanks Doug for your comment. In the past two weeks I have spent less than eight hours on the computer. I use to spend eight hours a day. I don’t quite understand what I am going through. Perhaps God has been priming the pump. It isn’t a good place where I am at… except when I go out and talk to God. This is the reason for the lengthening silence on my blog.

I ask for your prayers, though I don’t know what particularly to request. All I do know is that your prayers will help. Thanks.