Wednesday, June 19, 2019

Little Knowledge of history is dangerous: High time for Australia to understand and embrace the EU

Real question is how far NSW economy will fall 
via Ross Gittins
If you’ve ever got a dodgy proposition you want spruiked, see if you can get  Dominic Perrottet to do it. 

NSW Budget: Winners and losers for the year ahead 



Regulators are also increasingly focused on unreported capital gains related to cryptocurrencies.
The top financial crime enforcement official at the Internal Revenue Service is placing a higher priority on data analytics in the investigation of potential wrongdoers.
Don Fort, the chief of the agency’s criminal investigations division, said his office is relying more on advanced data analytics to spot suspicious behavior. One area where the unit is using data is in investigating noncompliance with payroll tax laws, he said Tuesday during a discussion at The Wall Street Journal’s CFO Network Annual Meeting. ...


The idea of prosecuting prostitutes’ clients is spreading, including possibly to the Netherlands (The Economist).
“Online, sobriety has become “the new black,” asserts a recovery site called, yes, Hip Sobriety.” (NYT. link here)
Isn’t this abuse of Haitian orphans a way bigger scandal than most of what comes out of universities these days?

HAJO DUKEN. High time for Australia to understand and embrace the EU



*Vice-chancellor's lucrative dealings with university Bruce Downton



It has been said that in the world order of the 21st century, countries will end up as a colony of either the US or China or be a member of the EU. This may sound overly simplistic but one thing appears to be clear: whilst the US and China are headed for a new cold war, the Brexit saga and the recent European elections have strengthened the EU. For Australia, who is dangerously exposed not only by the US/China conflict but also by losing the UK as its gateway to Europe, it would be inexcusable to not give top priority to the ongoing free trade negotiations with the EU and use the opportunity to seek the closest possible ties with it. However, this requires a much better understanding of the EU.

NIALL McLAREN Broadening the Base 



Allan Patience argued cogently for a substantial change in left-wing political economy:Labor has been trying hitherto to interpret the neoliberal world in various ways; the point however is to change it. A robust public sector is urgently needed to compete against a rapacious private sector. He suggested a number of ways this could be done but we need to make sure we have the financial means to do it. ..The whole art of Conservative politics in the 20th century is being deployed to enable wealth to persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power.