A giant of global journalism. If you’re a journalist trying to figure out how to be a foreign correspondent, watch the great George Negus
“Many of you will have uplifting and distinct memories of him, regardless of whether you met him, but especially if you did.”
I had the pleasure of organising an event for the NSW Parliamentary Public Accounts Committee back in late 1990s and George Negus, the sexiest man down under, agreed to give a speech. At only few days notice, George flew down from the Promised Land - The Never Never river - of Bellingen. He informed and entertained so many characters during his journalistic life and to boot generously donated his time to share his stories even when he was forced to face audiences from the bear pit.
As luck would have it I crossed paths with George at Dorrigo and in Brisbane there are these fond larrikin memories as I was fortunate to share an extremely long liquid lunch/dinner with fearless George back in September 2021 … the week of the tragic 9/11.
Hugh Lunn, 🐉 , George Negus (2001)
An icon of journalism. A legendary broadcaster. A friend to many
Tribute Video courtesy of the Project
He had the knowledge, exceptional communication skills and an easy friendly presence. And few of us wore a moustache as well as George did.
George had admires in so many men and women everywhere from Ian Leslie to Margo Kingston to Jana Wendt to Deb Richard.
George “balanced courage with empathy; tough when he needed to be, not shy of the truth of the story, and always fair. Now more than ever we need journalists with that level of integrity”
Veteran journalist and broadcaster George Negus has died at the age of 82 following a battle with Alzheimer's disease, his family said in a statement.
The statement said Negus "passed away peacefully surrounded by loved ones" and thanked Australian healthcare workers for supporting him "in the best possible way" during his final moments.
"Despite the challenges diseases like Alzheimer's inflict on families, we still shared beautiful times, laughter and happiness together in recent times.
"We also learnt a lot."
George Negus, founding host of Foreign Correspondent, dies aged 82
Legendary broadcaster George Negus is being remembered by his colleagues as a "great bloke" and "fearless" journalist after his death aged 82.
The veteran reporter and former 60 Minutespresenter died following a "gracious decline" with Alzheimer's, his family said in a statement.
Negus' colleague and friend Ray Martin paid a poignant tribute to the renowned presenter, describing him as "a very good mate".
When George Negus finished grilling then-British prime minister Margaret Thatcher in 1981, he thought he'd be locked up in the Tower of London.
"She demanded that the interview be used without any editing, which we refused to do," Negus told ABC News Breakfast.
In a 60 Minutes interview that would go on to become one of his most famous, Negus asked Thatcher why the British people thought she was "pig-headed" and "inflexible".
"Would you tell me who has stopped you in the street and said that?" Thatcher asked Negus.
"Ordinary Britons," he responded.
"Would you tell me who, and when and where?" she asked.
George Negus
George Negus on paying tax If tax is the price we pay for a civilised society, is tax evasion the
ultimate act of bad citizenship? We've all heard the adages - in the pub, at the footy, at smart
inner-city dinner parties and laid-back suburban BBQs. 'Avoiding paying tax? Not a crime until you get caught!' 'Death and
taxes, two things in life you can't avoid - well death anyway ...' And the
one with a curiously Shakespearian flavour: 'Tax? To evade or not to evade,
that is the question!' As we hear it from the experts, for thousands of money-conscious,
wealth-aware Australians, that double-edged sword is an annual dilemma, a
persistent temptation for even normally law-abiding
'digger-cobber-sport-mates'. Apparently, year-by-year, their pecuniary honesty and personal values
are challenged by tax integrity. So let's ask the critical question- what is this demon 'tax'? Is this
tiny three-letter conundrum a pain-in-the-butt bug-bear or the very
cornerstone of our daily existence? Is it a patriotic obligation or something
to be avoided, whatever the cost? You've probably noticed those unapologetically politically-driven 'Tax
is theft!' bumper stickers that turn up every now and then on the back-end of
cars around the country. Oliver Wendell Holmes, a man of the courts in the US in the early 1900s
had no such concerns and once stated 'I like to pay taxes. With them I buy
civilisation.' The ATO has no doubts about its veracity. 'We pay tax so the government
can provide services to the community.' They might have a point. Something
like 66% of Federal Government revenue and almost as much, 57% of the total
revenue across the three tiers of government comes from tax. By definition, paying the correct amount of tax the law demands of us
is, in fact, buying the community services and systems we depend on and that
a civil society expects to enjoy - including health, education and law
enforcement. Consciously evading tax, therefore, robs the community as a whole - not
just the 'tax man'. Which brings us to a critical point of difference in tax
terminology, evading tax and minimising tax are not one and the same. Wanting to minimise your tax bill is as human as not wanting to get up
and go to the office on Monday morning! And there are apparently many legal
ways to do this. Not wanting to pay any more tax than the laws of the land
dictates should not and does not make you a tax criminal. That said,
understating your taxable income and over-stating your tax deductions means
not only are you dodgy at arithmetic, but you could also find yourself the
target of the ATO! So, if tax is the price we pay for government to provide the society we
enjoy, is there a cost for not paying them? There certainly is and that's the
flip-side of the taxpayer's love-hate relationship with the tax-collector. We're not talking Monopoly here but 'Do not pass Go; do not collect
$200; go directly to jail!' pretty much says it all... |