'They are distressed:' trio linked to alleged $100m money laundering syndicate face court
All three were targeted over their alleged role in using a Sydney security business as a "front" to launder money in Australia and abroad.
Immediate reforms: Triguboff's Meriton wants building industry change
The perception of a crisis in Sydney’s residential apartment market snowballed this week after the Herald revealed another evacuation of a unit block at Zetland.
Immediate reforms: Triguboff's Meriton wants building industry change
MUNGO MacCALLUM. Flat earthers and ‘The Australian’.
About sixty years ago, as an undergraduate of Sydney University, I met a flat earther on the campus. … Continue reading
PRESS FREEDOM
Australia leads the Western world on media restrictions: UN rapporteur
Governments need to concede that journalism is “special”, says the UN press freedom rapporteur, because protecting them protects the public’s right to information.
'Limited information available to me': Attorney-General walks away from AFP claims
Christian Porter has backed away from earlier assurances journalists aren't being targeted by police, as News Corp hits back at Peter Dutton.
Top Assange Defense Account Deleted By Twitter Caitlin Johnstone
Lesson From The Tax Court: When Does A Business Start?
It takes money to make money.Andrea Curcio (Georgia State), Dean Gerken’s Vision Versus Malcolm Gladwell’s Experience:
When we decide who is smart enough to be a lawyer, we use a stopwatch. Malcolm Gladwell
Law
school should be a time to luxuriate in ideas, to test their
principles, and to think critically about the law and the profession. Dean Heather Gerken
HUGH WHITE. With China’s swift rise as naval power, Australia needs to rethink how it defends itself (The Conversation, 2 July 2019)
Visiting Wellington in April 1996, I fell into conversation with a very wise and experienced New Zealand government official. We talked about the still-unfolding Taiwan Straits crisis, during which Washington had deployed a formidable array of naval power, including two aircraft carrier battle … Continue reading
Former ATO deputy commissioner Michael Cranston has
suggested that tax practitioners should develop an early relationship with tax
officers and where necessary remind them of their obligations under the
Taxpayer’s Charter.
Calvin H. Johnson (Texas), No Orchard, No Capital Gain, 72 Tax Law. 501 (2019):
As
a matter of principle, capital gain is the gain from invested capital
or basis. If the taxpayer has no basis in something of value it sells,
there is no capital gain.
The
principle that capital gain is gain from capital is embedded in the
ordinary English language meaning of “capital gain,” which reflects the
long history of the English property system going back into feudal
tenures. Property purchased by expenses charged to the income interest
remains part of the income interest and does not become capital gain
reserved for the next heir.
Ellen P. Aprill (Loyola-L.A.), 2019 Overview of Tax Issues for Synagogues and other Religious Congregations:
The
attached revises the guides for synagogues and other religions
congregations that I posted in 2010. These new versions reflect
applicable law as of June, 2019. They summarize the rules I have been
most often asked in the many years I have given advice on these matters,
primarily with the Jewish community. One guide is directed specifically
at synagogues; the other to religious congregations generally. (I use
the term “religious congregations” rather than “churches” to be more
inclusive.)
Wall Street Journal op-ed: How Much Do Coaches Matter?, by Sam Walker (author, The Captain Class: The Hidden Force That Creates the World’s Greatest Teams (2018)):
In
1979, Bill Campbell quit his job as head coach of Columbia University’s
chronically dreadful football team. He moved to California to work for
Apple and eventually became chief executive of Intuit.
The
decision that made Mr. Campbell a Silicon Valley legend, however,
involved a return to his roots. When he died in 2016, he was, according
to a new biography, “the greatest executive coach the world has ever
seen.”
Mr.
Campbell, who shunned publicity, compiled a stunning roster of mentees
that included Apple’s Steve Jobs, Google’s Larry Page and Facebook ’s
Sheryl Sandberg. The book, Trillion Dollar Coach, was written by a trio of former pupils, including Google’s one-time CEO, Eric Schmidt.
Diane Ring (Boston College), A Path to International Tax Reform and Improved Wealth Distribution Across the Globe (JOTWELL) (reviewing Tarcísio Diniz Magalhães (International Bureau of Fiscal Documentation), What Is Really Wrong with Global Tax Governance and How to Properly Fix It, 10 World Tax J. (2018)):
Thomas Piketty’s work brought the reality of unequal distributions of wealth into mainstream media and popular discourse. In the tax world, the conversation now regularly turns to a consideration of whether and how the international tax regime contributes to existing patterns of
wealth and income distribution across nations. Certainly, the tax norms
and rules that shape the basic roadmap of international tax (including
source, residence and permanent establishment provisions) contribute to
existing distributions of wealth—and relatedly taxable income—across
jurisdictions. Why do these patterns persist? And perhaps more
importantly, what would it take for change?
A recent article by Tarcísio Diniz Magalhães aims to develop answers to both questions.
Chronicle of Higher Education, What Happens When Women Run Colleges?:
Democratic, communal, inclusive. That may be the future of college leadership.
Tom Steyer 2020 Presidential Run Looks Closer Atlantic. UserFriendly: “Seriously, if you don’t shoot me I’m going to have to do it myself.”