To live lightheartedly but not recklessly; to be gay without being boisterous; to be courageous without being bold; to show trust and cheerful resignation without fatalism — this is the art of living.
— Jean de La Fontaine, born in 1621 - to win world cup in 2018 MMXVIII ;-)
“I’ve got money!” Eve exclaimed in a frantic frenzy of hope, her eyes dancing wildly with the notion that there was some way out of this. “I mean, I don’t know what use money is to the Grim Reaper, but I’ve got a ton of cash! It’s in a hat box under my bed! I’ve got a bright red Lexus in the garage, I’ve got my engagement ring upstairs, it’s real gold… there must be something we can trade off with…”
“You can’t bribe me away, I’m afraid,” said Mr. Azrael. “Money means nothing where I come from.”
― Perfect Little Angel: A Short Story by Rebecca McNutt
A list of top economics influencers h/ t Deepbloggers webinar
All spin, no compassion: How the ATO handled a scandal
The endless reign of Rupert Murdoch The Monthly
If democratic socialism is so bad, why is Norway so great?
“I’ve got money!” Eve exclaimed in a frantic frenzy of hope, her eyes dancing wildly with the notion that there was some way out of this. “I mean, I don’t know what use money is to the Grim Reaper, but I’ve got a ton of cash! It’s in a hat box under my bed! I’ve got a bright red Lexus in the garage, I’ve got my engagement ring upstairs, it’s real gold… there must be something we can trade off with…”
“You can’t bribe me away, I’m afraid,” said Mr. Azrael. “Money means nothing where I come from.”
― Perfect Little Angel: A Short Story by Rebecca McNutt
NSW MP Daryl Maguire resigns after corruption hearing
NSW government MP Daryl Maguire is under pressure to quit politics altogether after being caught discussing a cut he and a local councillor could pocket from the multimillion dollar sale of a Sydney property to one of China's biggest developers.
Labor critical Philip Gaetjens appointment to Treasury
Treasurer Scott Morrison has hit back at the appointment of a longtime Liberal adviser as the new Treasury boss, saying Labor is misguided.
A list of top economics influencers h/ t Deepbloggers webinar
Four more nabbed in alleged ATO tax fraud
Four Sydney men have been issued court attendance notices
All spin, no compassion: How the ATO handled a scandal
After being caught in the crossfire of a public scandal into the Australian Taxation Office's treatment of ...
The endless reign of Rupert Murdoch The Monthly
If democratic socialism is so bad, why is Norway so great?
Jonathan Richman, Modern Lover
Lexus wins top spot in vehicle dependability for seventh straight year
ProPublica, Frontline identify defense contract employee as Charlottesville, Berkeley enforcer
One recent morning, in the front yard of a modest home outside
Los Angeles, A.C. Thompson confronted the man identified in videos as a white
supremacist group member who beat demonstrators in Charlottesville and
Berkeley.
“He looked utterly and completely unsurprised to see us.
Unshocked,” says Thompson, a staff writer for ProPublica and correspondent for
Frontline.
The story he and Ali Winston posted Thursday about Michael Miselis —
erstwhile systems engineer at Northrop Grumman with a government security
clearance — hit a nerve among readers. Thompson and Winston had tracked down
supremacists before — their piece on a neo-Nazi Marine at Charlottesville led to the Marine’s court-martial — but
Miselis represented a white-collar racist masquerading in corporate culture and
in a doctorate program at UCLA.
The Southern Poverty Law Center and readers expressed disbelief
that the violent Miselis could get a security clearance, could keep his
Northrop job, has not been expelled from UCLA. In a series of
tweets Thursday afternoon, Northrop said: "We do not tolerate
hatred or illegal conduct and we condemn racist activities in any shape or
form. We are taking immediate action to look into the very serious issues
raised by these reports."
Thompson said the Miselis story, posted ahead of a Frontline
documentary on Aug. 7, reflects how his team wants to report on the white
power movement. “We want to cast the spotlight on the people who want to stay
in the shadows, who are actually engaged in criminal activity.”
For more on how the ProPublica/Frontline reporters came to
identify Miselis, check out my separate story from
Thursday.
CATCHING THE PRESIDENT CHEATING: The New York Daily
News found that Donald Trump was set to take a $48,834.62 tax break this
month on his Trump Tower condo. One problem: The president claimed that New
York — and not the White House — was his primary residence, even though the
definition is the place where a person "actually resides and
maintains a permanent and continuous physical presence.” Once the Daily News
inquired, Trump lost the tax break.
HONORING THE LIVING: Journalists and press supporters took
a moment of silence for the victims of the Annapolis newsroom attack on
Thursday, but Capital Gazette editor Rick Hutzell is looking forward: “We will
continue to honor our dead. But we also will remember those who remain,” he wrote. “They were journalists. And so are
we.”
KOCH MONEY: The people who in the past sought to scuttle the Affordable
Care Act, fight efforts to stop climate change, radically alter public
education and discredit critical journalists are now writing checks to journalism organizations,
Paul Farhi writes. Farhi begins by citing Charles Koch Foundation funding
to an event at his own paper. He then examines Koch funding to ASNE, the
Poynter Institute and the Newseum. Officials at the nonprofits say there was
vigorous debate, ensuring no strings were attached, before accepting the money
— and each said the Koch foundation has not tried to dictate to them.
NO THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE: AP's Garance Burke
and Martha Mendoza are on to a real military mystery: The U.S Army, built
by immigrants, is reneging on its promises to immigrant recruits. Once telling
them they'd have a path to citizenship if they signed, the Army is now purging
its ranks of dozens of these soldiers — and not telling them why.
NEW COMMUNICATIONS CHIEF: Driven from Fox News after a series
of sexual misconduct cases under his watch, Bill Shine has a new job — President Trump’s
deputy chief of staff for communications. Shine is Trump’s fifth communications
chief in less than a year and a half.
PATHETIC OR SMART?: Now we can tell which publishers are paying Facebook for
access to the FB audience that they helped build. But Digiday’s Max Willens
shows how three publishers focus their FB purchases:
The New York Times on subscriptions to the site and to its Crosswords vertical;
BuzzFeed on sponsored content; Fox News for its mobile site as it seeks
younger readers and viewers.
EXPLAINING WHAT WE DO: The Globe and Mail is beginning
“mini-explainers” — expandable boxes in stories that tell readers why and when,
for example, the news outlet uses anonymous sources. Is your outlet? By Spencer
Turcotte, for the Canadian journalism project J-Source.
DELETED: The Independence Day tweet by Fox News anchor Brit Hume in
which he said Democrats “sure don’t love” America. Here it
is, via Mediaite:
THE STRONGMAN COMETH: The editor of one of Venezuela’s last independent news outlets is struggling to publish after a lieutenant of the nation’s leftist president is pressuring him to close, The Washington Post reports. “Our plan? Not much. To survive,” says Miguel Henrique Otero, owner of the 75-year-old El Nacional. Over the past 18 months, 54 radio and television stations have been shut down. This year alone, five news sites and six newspapers have been silenced, and 22 journalists have been detained.
THE STRONGMAN COMETH: The editor of one of Venezuela’s last independent news outlets is struggling to publish after a lieutenant of the nation’s leftist president is pressuring him to close, The Washington Post reports. “Our plan? Not much. To survive,” says Miguel Henrique Otero, owner of the 75-year-old El Nacional. Over the past 18 months, 54 radio and television stations have been shut down. This year alone, five news sites and six newspapers have been silenced, and 22 journalists have been detained.
COMINGS AND GOINGS: I'm late to this for the roundup, but Jane Elizabeth, a former
Washington Post digital editor and co-author of Poynter’s weekly This Week in
Fact-Checking, is joining the Raleigh News & Observer and the Durham
Herald-Sun as managing editor, starting Aug. 6. Elizabeth
has run the American Press Institute’s project to improve and expand accountability journalism,
and she was a 2017 Knight Visiting Nieman Fellow at Harvard.
What we’re reading
YOU NEED A SCORECARD: The resignation of scandal-deluged
EPA chief Scott Pruitt is just the latest departure from an exit-clogged Trump
administration. Here’s a timeline, by The Washington Post’s
Kevin Schaul, Reuben Fischer-Baum and Kevin Uhrmacher.
GOING AFTER NATURALIZED CITIZENS: The Trump
administration plans to hire lawyers to go after some of the nearly 20 million
naturalized American citizens, going back decades to find inconsistencies in
citizenship applications, The Takeaway reports. These citizens represent
a good chunk of small business, healthcare, innovation and tech sectors,
fortifying the United States. The initiative, last used in the McCarthy period
nearly seven decades ago, will create fear, immigration experts say. It’s also ripe for abuse.
BAD TEACHER: A mom, crestfallen at hearing her son describe being bullied
by his kindergarten teacher, put an audio recorder in his backpack — and caught the teacher calling her 5 year old
"a loser," the Miami Herald reports. Once the boy was
transferred to another class, the mom says, "he went from having F's
to having excellent grades." An investigation of the teacher is underway.
FOLLOWUP: Walmart pulled “Impeach Trump” T-shirts from its
online marketplace after a threatened boycott by Trump supporters, Elizabeth
Segran reported.
New code of conduct for Queensland PS fuels conspiracy theory
A new draft code of conduct for Queensland public servants is already controversial ‒ but not because of what it says.
The 48 Laws of Power (Animated)
New code of conduct for Queensland PS fuels conspiracy theory
A new draft code of conduct for Queensland public servants is already controversial ‒ but not because of what it says.
The 48 Laws of Power (Animated)