Monday, June 18, 2018

REMEMBERING PUTIN: The information that democracy needs

The former Cold Warrior and KGB agents, Vladimir Putin, is playing a game of chess with the West and he's always thinking a few moves ahead ...
Putin's 'trail of breadcrumbs from Trump Tower': Spies issue warning to West

Four Corners investigates Russian interference in US election - ABC

Mueller warns of Russian midterm attack, while Trump attacks Mueller The Hill. UserFriendly: “At least we’ll know who to blame when literally anyone loses.​


REMEMBERING TIM RUSSERT: He died a decade ago yesterday. Betsy Fischer Martin and Erin Fogarty Owen said they have carried these lessons from their former NBC colleague: Read voraciously, be prepared, simplify what you're saying and send personal notes. Your morning columnist adds: Read "Big Russ & Me," Russert's memoir about his father and the lessons "Big Russ" taught him about life. 

Muslim prof made students praise Allah before entering office.

From cultural appropriation to clean eating: Lionel Shriver's most controversial quotes

Stephen King: Master of Almost All the Genres Except "Literary" | Literary Hub.


The information that democracy needs
Without a decent flow of information in this popular democracy, how can we have anything like our 'equal share' in its power, asks Bret Walker SC


The Meeting Culture 

South Australian Liberal senator Lucy Gichuhi has told a Kenyan television program that her $200,000 salary is "not a lot of money" in Australia.
$200k bizarre case

<strong>North Coast Scenes</strong>


JOHN MENADUE. Continuing corporate failures.



There is a growing and unfortunate litany of corporate failure in Australia – and not just the banks and wage theft on a large scale. One continuing failure has been an unwillingness by our corporate sector to equip itself for the Asian Century and beyond. Instead of addressing their serious failings ,business executives  invariably respond by accusing critics of business bashing. Continue reading 

A tribunal has implored the Tax Office to reconsider a "catastrophic" penalty that stripped retired postal truck driver Colin Ward of $209,000 – the entirety of his superannuation savings.
Administrative Appeals Tribunal deputy president Gary Humphries said if Tax Commissioner Chris Jordan would not afford 71-year-old Mr Ward and his wife Joan some leniency, the responsible government minister should intervene to provide an "act-of-grace payment".

ATO's own research raises SME concerns

The tax office has questioned the need for a bill to enforce tougher litigation obligations, despite it spending almost $1 million on internal research that identified ..