Thursday, April 23, 2026

Billionaire Blues

 The White House Correspondents’ Dinner has always been a cringefest. Trump just makes it obvious. Poynter


Palantir manifesto described as ‘ramblings of a supervillain’ amid UK contract fears


Billionaire Blues Thomas Frank, Harper’s

 

New York doctor admits exploiting the Covid pandemic to steal at least $24 million from insurers Syracuse.com

 

SEC charges Bitcoin Latinum founder over alleged $16M investor fraud Crypto Briefing


Trump’s new budget signals the demise of ‘liberation day’ The Hill


New York Times Magazine (Gift Article): The View From Inside Trump’s D.H.S. “Dozens of agents and officials share their stories about working in the Department of Homeland Security during the harsh crackdown on illegal immigration…The government’s own records complicate that picture. Only about 5 percent of people booked into ICE custody in the last year have been convicted of a violent crime. The number of arrests of people with violent convictions has increased by 37 percent under Trump, while the number of arrests of those with no conviction of any kind has risen by 770 percent, according to ICE data. Many agents and officials we spoke to say the relentless pursuit of deportations is unsustainable and has compromised the department.”


They See Your Photos

“Your photos reveal a lot of private information. In this experiment, we use the Google Vision API to see how much can be inferred about you from a single photo. See what they see…”



INDIAN MED STUDENT DOING IT FOR THE MONEY:  Top MAGA influencer revealed to be AI — created by a guy in India who made a mint off lonely men online


RIP - James Matthew Valentine

James brought warmth, wit, and humanity to radio as an exemplar of radio craft.” 

“His style was never about confrontation or noise - it was always about connection. James turned his patch of the Sydney airwaves into a place of companionship, and his daily presence will be deeply missed by his significant audience, and all of his colleagues at the ABC.”

Former Drive presenter and and friend Richard Glover said he could not think of anybody else who “lifted the mood of a city over such a long time as James did”.

“It was a daily effort to get people to concentrate on life, ordinary life, and how important and beautiful it is, and he did that every day for 25 years,” Glover said on Thursday.

“So you end up sitting, listening to radio, thinking, ‘Gee, Sydneysiders are funny and lively and witty and gorgeous.

“He brought that out in people.”

“The joyous, irrepressible & unbelievably sharp James Valentine has left us. What a wonderful human to have worked with. Thanks for all the laughs James. Godspeed.X”

ABC's James Valentine swapped microphones — and found a new audience who loved him


ABC Radio Sydney presenter and musician James Valentine has died after a battle with cancer, bringing an end to a broadcasting career that spanned nearly 40 years. picture ABC
ABC Radio Sydney presenter and musician James Valentine has died after a battle with cancer, bringing an end to a broadcasting career that spanned nearly 40 years. picture ABC


    Valentine, 64, officially retired in February after almost 40 years in radio, for treatment for a recurring cancer


    Hey Taylor, welcome to our town: James Valentine

    Last week, ABC Radio Melbourne’s Sammy J wrote a song to welcome Taylor Swift to his city.

    Speaking to James Valentine, Sammy J challenged the ABC Radio Sydney afternoon presenter to do the same to welcome Taylor to Sydney.


    James moved to Sydney in 1984 and the rest is history. James was a renaissance man the way he played his saxaphone or chatted about travel  … 

    James with (l-r) Roy, Joanne and Ruby. Photo Lauren Trompp.




    James connections to Nowra & Shoalhaven
    • Live Performances: Valentine has performed multiple times at the Shoalhaven Entertainment Centre in Nowra
    • "Afternoons Tonight!" Tour: He brought his popular stage show, which translates his radio banter into a live theatrical experience, to Nowra during his 2018 regional tour
    • Regional Reach: As a long-time voice on the ABC, his programs—including Afternoonsand his jazz show Upbeat—were broadcast across New South Wales, maintaining a loyal listenership in the Shoalhaven area



    James Valentine ABC Radio Sydney presenter and former Models saxophonist

    James Valentine Dies At 64, ABC Broadcaster And Musician Remembered

    by PAUL CASHMERE on APRIL 23, 2026


    James Valentine, former Models and Jo Jo Zep saxophonist who later became a leading ABC presenter, has died aged 64 after a two-year cancer battle

    by Paul Cashmere

    James Valentine, the Australian musician best known for his work with Models and Jo Jo Zep before a long career in broadcasting, has died at the age of 64. Valentine passed away at home on April 23, 2026, surrounded by family, after choosing voluntary assisted dying following a two-year battle with oesophageal cancer.

    While widely recognised for his decades on radio, Valentine’s origins were firmly in music, emerging from the early 1980s Melbourne scene as a saxophonist with a grounding in jazz and pop. His death brings renewed focus to a formative period in Australian music when hybrid acts were blending soul, rock and new wave, and where Valentine’s playing became part of that evolution.

    Born in Ballarat, Victoria, Valentine moved to Melbourne to study before quickly shifting his attention to live performance. His early ambition was to become a jazz musician, but the reality of the local circuit drew him into more commercial settings. In 1982 he joined Jo Jo Zep, the band led by Joe Camilleri, known for its fusion of R&B, ska and rock. The group was already established, and Valentine’s role on saxophone placed him within a tight horn-driven arrangement style that demanded precision and restraint rather than solo excess.

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    That experience became a bridge to his next major chapter. Through connections formed on the circuit, Valentine became involved with a covers project that included members of Models. When that project ended, he was invited to join Models as they transitioned into their most commercially successful era. By late 1984, Valentine was a full-time member, relocating to Sydney with the band and contributing to a shift in their sound that leaned into polished pop production with a strong visual identity.

    Valentine’s saxophone work is featured on Models’ landmark album Out Of Mind, Out Of Sight from 1985, a record that delivered multiple hit singles and defined the band’s place in Australian pop. His playing added texture to the arrangements rather than dominating them, complementing the band’s synthesiser-driven direction. He remained with the group through Models’ Media in 1986, another key release in their catalogue, before departing ahead of the band’s eventual split in 1988.

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    Reflecting on that period, Valentine once noted the abrupt shift from jazz ambitions to mainstream success, describing how quickly he found himself embedded in a high-profile touring act. The transition required adaptation, both musically and visually, as Models embraced a stylised image that contrasted with his earlier training.

    After Models, Valentine continued to work within the Australian recording industry, joining Absent Friends in 1989. The group, formed by former Models members and collaborators, pursued a more atmospheric and layered sound. Their sole album Here’s Looking Up Your Address in 1990 sits as a distinctive entry in the post-Models catalogue, with Valentine contributing on saxophone and clarinet. The project, while short-lived, has maintained a level of critical interest for its songwriting and musicianship.

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    Around the same time, Valentine also contributed to Wendy Matthews’ debut solo album Émigré, further embedding him within a network of musicians who defined Australian adult contemporary and pop music at the turn of the decade. These collaborations highlight the interconnected nature of the scene, where players moved fluidly between bands and studio work.

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    Valentine’s musical career effectively spanned a decade, from the early 1980s through to the early 1990s, a period of transition in Australian music as pub rock gave way to more produced, radio-oriented sounds. His role across Jo Jo Zep, Models and Absent Friends places him within that shift, contributing to records that remain part of the country’s recorded music history.

    His later move into broadcasting did not erase that foundation. Instead, it informed his approach, with an understanding of performance, timing and audience engagement that mirrored the dynamics of live music. However, it is his recorded output and live work during those early years that define his direct contribution to the music industry.

    Valentine’s family confirmed his passing in a statement, noting he died peacefully at home. “James passed peacefully at home surrounded by his family, who adored him,” they said. “Throughout his illness, James did it his way, which lasted all the way until the end when he made the choice to do Voluntary Assisted Dying.” He is survived by his wife Joanne and children Ruby and Roy.

    His death also arrives at a time when there is renewed interest in Australian music from the 1980s, with reissues and retrospectives bringing attention back to artists of that era. Valentine’s work with Models in particular continues to be revisited as part of that broader reassessment, placing his contributions within an ongoing cultural conversation.

    Memorial details are expected to be announced in the coming days. Valentine’s legacy, while often associated with his voice on radio, is equally rooted in the recordings and performances that shaped a generation of Australian music.



    Wednesday, April 22, 2026

    Undocumented: A Brief Survey of Documents Related to Donald Trump That Have Yet To Be Released

    3D-Printed Homes, an Abandoned $590,000 Deposit, the FBI: What Really Happened in This Small Town?


    Trump puts the FBI on case of missing NASA and nuclear research scientists: ‘No stone will be unturned’ The Independent


    UFO-linked scientist who warned ‘my life is in danger’ before she was found dead at 34 becomes ELEVENTH mysterious case Daily Mail


    Revealed: Mandelson failed vetting but Foreign Office overruled decision The Guardian


    White House Plans To Give Federal Agencies Access To Claude Mythos, The A.I. Model Making Everyone Nervous Reuters


    Drugmakers raised prices on hundreds of drugs despite Trump deals, Senate Democrats report finds NBC News


    US panel approves Trump’s design for massive arch in Washington, DC Al Jazeera


    RFK Jr once cut penis off ‘road-killed raccoon’ in New York, new book reveals The Guardian


    Undocumented: A Brief Survey of Documents Related to Donald Trump That Have Yet To Be Released – “Troves of records, correspondence, deposition transcripts, NDAs, contracts, translator notes, intercepts, photographs & videos exist that would expose Trump for what he is. We still haven’t seen them…At the risk of opening with the “Webster’s defines a document as…” cliché, it is instructive for our purposes to explain just what document refers to.
     The federal government offers this expansive definition [and to my colleagues who have been librarians in any sector – we know this, but the majority of readers on all platforms, do not]:

    The term “document” means any written, recorded, or graphic matter of any nature whatsoever, regardless of how recorded, and whether original or copy, including, but not limited to, the following: memoranda, reports, expense reports, books, manuals, instructions, financial reports, data, working papers, records, notes, letters, notices, confirmations, telegrams, receipts, appraisals, pamphlets, magazines, newspapers, prospectuses, communications, electronic mail (email), contracts, cables, notations of any type of conversation, telephone call, meeting or other inter-office or intra-office communication, bulletins, printed matter, computer printouts, teletypes, invoices, transcripts, diaries, analyses, returns, summaries, minutes, bills, accounts, estimates, projections, comparisons, messages, correspondence, press releases, circulars, financial statements, reviews, opinions, offers, studies and investigations, questionnaires and surveys, and work sheets (and all drafts, preliminary versions, alterations, modifications, revisions, changes, and amendments of any of the foregoing, as well as any attachments or appendices thereto), and graphic or oral records or representations of any kind (including without limitation, photographs, charts, graphs, microfiche, microfilm, videotape, recordings and motion pictures), and electronic, mechanical, and electric records or representations of any kind (including, without limitation, tapes, cassettes, disks, and recordings) and other written, printed, typed, or other graphic or recorded matter of any kind or nature, however produced or reproduced, and whether preserved in writing, film, tape, disk, videotape, or otherwise…Trump himself recognizes the danger of certain documents seeing the light of day. That’s why he’s been at war with the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) since he left office in January 2021. As the non-profit American Oversight notes in its 2025 investigative report “Trump’s Hostile Takeover of the National Archives — and Our Nation’s History,”NARA…”


    Tuesday, April 21, 2026

    Stephen Dametto - He’s the most powerful crime fighter in NSW. For him, no one is off limits


    Obeid family loses control of $30m worth of Sydney properties after one of NSW's 'most brazen acts of corruption' 



    He’s the most powerful crime fighter in NSW. For him, no one is off limits 
    Riley Walter April 21, 2026

     In the days after Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 was shot down over Ukraine, Stephen Dametto grappled with the scale of the tragedy. By then a seasoned organised crime and counter-terrorism investigator with the Australian Federal Police, Dametto had spent years preparing for worst-case scenarios.

    Even still, this was uncharted territory; 298 passengers and crew had been killed, 38 of them Australian citizens and residents. As the gravity of the situation became clearer, Dametto, the AFP’s most senior officer deployed to Kyiv to respond to the disaster, wrestled with questions about the path forward and how anyone could fathom such loss.

    Newly appointed NSW Crime Commissioner Stephen Dametto.STEVEN SIEWERT

    The four months Dametto spent posted in Ukraine to oversee the AFP’s response to the downing of the Boeing 777 – and a subsequent posting in The Hague working as a senior investigating officer on the multi-country probe into the tragedy – is a point of pride across almost 30 years of policing.

    But his time in the country and his contribution to Operation Arew is one part – significant as it was – of a varied policing career that has led to Dametto’s appointment to one of the state’s most powerful law enforcement positions: NSW crime commissioner.

    “My whole career has been, more or less, targeting organised crime and counter-terrorism, and when this job came out it just seemed like a perfect fit for me,” Dametto says.

    With coercive powers that extend beyond the reach of state and federal police, the Crime Commission can garner information its law enforcement partners can’t.

    For anyone compelled to appear in one of the commission’s secretive hearings, answering questions is a non-negotiable, regardless of whether the information they share could incriminate them. Refuse and they risk prison.

    AFP officers search the MH17 crash site in Ukraine. KATE GERAGHTY

    Last financial year, the commission, led by former boss Michael Barnes from 2020 until Dametto’s appointment early this year, compelled dozens of witnesses to appear across 55 hearings. Barnes’ tenure is regarded among law enforcement officials as a period of success for the commission.

    What’s discussed in the hearings is confidential. Only a handful of people – Dametto, a counsel assisting him, the witness, their lawyer, and, occasionally, an investigating police officer – are allowed in the room during a hearing.

    “It’s quite a strong power, making people answer questions,” Dametto says.

    Like matters under the scrutiny of the Independent Commission Against Corruption, who and what the Crime Commission investigates is closely held. Who is compelled to give evidence is guarded even more tightly.

    The Crime Commission has long faced criticism for its secretive operations – a perception Dametto hopes to shift. Like any other public office, the Crime Commission must be transparent and accountable to maintain the trust of the NSW taxpayer, he says.

    “The danger is, I think, if we abuse that process, or if the process is abused … then the public will lose trust in it.”

    Still, he says, the work the commission does must stay confidential to preserve the integrity of its investigations. “Hearings are very secretive for a reason,” he says.

    “The NSW parliament has given us these special powers and we need to really focus on those to make a difference.”
    NSW Crime Commissioner Stephen Dametto

    Maximising that unique power by holding more hearings is one of Dametto’s top priorities, as is increasing the number of crime types the commission investigates.

    “The NSW parliament has given us these special powers and we need to really focus on those to make a difference,” he says.

    While the commission has traditionally focused on organised crime, Dametto hopes to use the agency’s powers to target offences such as child abuse and exploitation, including by stripping offenders’ assets.

    “We need to punch above our weight in many ways,” he says.

    In the last financial year, the Crime Commission restrained a record $160 million in assets it says was the proceeds of crime, including luxury properties, cash, cars, jewellery, clothing and other goods. Its previous record was just over $50 million worth of seizures in a single year. Since July, it has restrained almost $150 million.

    A large portion of the commission’s seizures in the past two years have been of assets linked to the Penthouse Syndicate, a group that has allegedly defrauded the country’s major banks of more than $250 million with the help of corrupt finance industry insiders. To date, the commission has restrained almost $100 million worth of assets, including several properties police say are crucial to the group’s frauds.

    That investigation, led by NSW Police’s Financial Crimes Squad under Strike Force Myddleton, is an example of the commission’s successful partnerships, Dametto says.

    The Crime Commission’s role in terrorism investigations will probably only increase during Dametto’s tenure at the helm.

    For almost a third of his career he has worked in counter-terrorism. From a year-long secondment to the Metropolitan Police in the United Kingdom, Dametto says he picked up methods that formed the basis of some of the work he would lead in Australia, particularly in terrorism financing. With those skills, he helped establish the AFP’s Terrorism Financing Investigations Unit, since renamed the Joint Threat Financing Group and run in partnership with the country’s financial crimes watchdog, the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre.

    Stephen Dametto, pictured in 2023 during his time as the Australian Federal Police’s acting deputy commissioner.DOMINIC LORRIMER

    The commission, alongside the AFP, NSW Police and the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation, comprises the NSW Joint Counter Terrorism Team (JCTT) – investigating the Bondi Beach terror attack. Ensuring it plays a key role in responding to major incidents like the December 14 massacre is crucial, Dametto says.

    Dametto never expected an attack of such scale in Australia. But an increase in “lone wolf-type” terrorist attacks in the past decade, compared with bigger, planned attacks has shifted the focus for counter-terrorism investigators.

    “It just shows how much harm can be caused just by two individuals,” Dametto says.

    “How are they being radicalised? Where is their thinking coming from?”

    Dametto’s goal is using his powerful position to keep the community safe.

    “If I play a small role in that, then that lets me sleep at night quite well.”

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