Thursday, June 19, 2025

Workers’ Rights Are Collapsing Globally. Canada Is No Exception

 “If there is no struggle there is no progress.”

~ Frederick Douglass quote for 19 June - try to explain this to Double five punj pät George Boulevard echo chambers



These Russian gangsters have been at it for years.’ ‘They’re not all like that.’ ‘Of course not.’ She was packing up her things. ‘You know the Russians paid for Brexit, right? It was their money that made the Tories believe London was invincible.
Andrew O'Hagan, Caledonian Road




Republicans Have a Revenue Problem - The wisdom of Nate Silver

“It isn’t always the fittest who survive, but the people who have the information, those who clock the exits. I could find in relentless occupation what I could never find in helplessness: a way through.”

~ Andrew O'Hagan

Governments don’t have a money problem—they have a “billionaires write the rules” problem. It’s like asking the fox to design the henhouse budget. And Germany? Still copying homework… badly.

Concrete consequences for GST crooks

Three individuals sentenced in June join the ranks of over 100 individuals sentenced to date under Operation Protego.

Tax parades custodial sentences for Operation Protego perpetrators

Convictions are finally coming for Australia’s biggest first-person tax con, with the ATO profiling GST fraud convictions.


AG Bondi and President Trump Violate Precepts of Criminal Justice that DOJ Tax Knows and Gets Right 

I write today on a basic premise of the criminal justice system that Trump and his minions have misrepresented in a malevolent way. I contrast those misrepresentations with the way DOJ Tax Division (and other DOJ components) act more responsibly.


Australia may be passing a tax on unrealized capital gains


The wisdom of Nate Silver


The full Tic Tac 2010 report.  Here is one summary.  Here is a Grok summary.  I will read it when back home


 Curtis Yarvin profile (New Yorker)


A new and different attempt to summarize Proust


 Jessica Crispin has reemerged with a book on Michael Douglas and the crisis of masculinity (NYT)


Wednesday, June 18, 2025

When We Are All Enemies of the State

Do security cameras deter thieves? 

She recalled that he’d once found a book of cloakroom tickets in the bin cupboard under the Rosemount Flats and started selling them for two pence each in the school playground, saying that David Bowie was going to give a concert at Alexandra Parade Primary School.
Andrew O'Hagan, Caledonian Road





Waging War in The Cloud: How Data Is The New Weapon Of Mass Destruction

Australia’s corporate regulator has launched an inquiry into the country’s stock exchange operator over “repeated and serious failures” that it says have undermined confidence in the public markets.
The Australian Securities and Investments Commission on Monday said it would examine the Australian Securities Exchange’s governance and risk management practices after a series of mishaps including a botched upgrade to its clearing and settlements systems and a prolonged outage in the run-up to Christmas last year

Australia probes stock exchange over ‘serious failures’


Milky Way-Andromeda crash? There’s now only 50 percent chance of this epic event Interesting Engineering


Waging War in The Cloud: How Data Is The New Weapon Of Mass Destruction Madras Courier


Caffeine Has a Weird Effect on Your Brain While You’re Asleep Science Alert


Ed the zebra captured after running loose for more than a week in Tennessee The Guardian


More than 50 high-level Trump administration officials have links to groups behind the Heritage Foundation-backed plan, a DeSmog analysis found




Tuesday, June 17, 2025

The heresy of Americanism

 

What we had that day was our story. We didn’t have the other bit, the future, and we had no way of knowing what that would be like. Perhaps it would change our memory of all this, or perhaps it would draw from it, nobody knew. But I’m sure I felt the story of that hall and how we reached it would never vanish.
Andrew O'Hagan, Mayflies


RAAF salutes corporal for painting up mercenary multinational rent seekers

RAAF salutes corporal for painting up mercenary multinational rent seekers

Disunited, ambitious, without discipline, unfaithful, and bold among friends but cowardly among enemies. A RAAF corporal’s award-winning essay warns of strategic risks tied to outsourcing Australia’s military edge. 
(Maddison Scott/Defence)

A humble Royal Australian Air Force corporal has collected one of the Australian Defence Force’s most prestigious writing accolades for a short but very sharp piece on the dangers of outsourcing at the pointy end of the mission.

Corporal Matthew Thornton has won the Corporal Margaret Clarke Award for writing on military affairs for his submission, “Multinational Mercenaries: The dangers of private sector operational environment”, which warns of the risks associated with divesting operational capability to the private sector and the consequences that could follow.

Thornton’s essay analyses the effects of the military abrogating its core capabilities to the private sector rather than retaining them internally, and how this could translate in a real conflict scenario.

The piece, published in May on Defence’s Air/Space Blog, overtly and critically questions the reliance on private military contractors by comparing similar historical precedents and analysis, not least “a reality that mirrors history, as described in the teachings of Niccolò Machiavelli, the 16th-century political theorist.”

“Tell me if you’ve heard this one,” Thornton posits.

  • “An ADF unit finds itself facing a five-member understaffing issue;
  • It contracts civilian support to fill the gap;
  • Five members of the unit transition into those positions, privately hired to perform a military role for pay (e.g. mercenary (Merriam-Webster, n.d.)) and come to work wearing polo shirts;
  • The unit is now down 10 members, and the process begins again.

In particular, the RAAF finds itself most deeply becoming trapped in this dynamic, as Australia has modernised its fleet — acquiring advanced platforms — and suffered the same recruitment and retention problems during the late 2010s and early 2020s as other militaries,” Thornton wrote.

Ouch.

Here’s another burst of fresh citrus.

“It (the RAAF) has increasingly turned to private contractors to fill capability gaps. First, I would like to acknowledge the undeniable benefits to arrangements with these entities. They are, however, well outlined in other articles on the Forge (Brown, 2021). That being said, a reliance on corporate soldiers also comes with significant drawbacks.”

“Consider the role of defence contractors in air power. These organisations are not just suppliers of equipment; they increasingly provide maintenance, training, and even operational capabilities,” Thornton wrote.

“Take, for example, a program within RAAF to provide kinetic capability but exclusively operated by a multinational contractor, which includes proprietary software that requires company support to maintain and a ‘just-in-time’ logistics system that is managed exclusively by the contractor’s office.

“RAAF’s partnership with the contractor keeps costs down during peacetime, and during asymmetric operations such as strikes on ISIS, where the mission was to degrade and destroy an organisation (without breaking the bank). During wartime, however, it creates a dependency that erodes Australia’s sovereign control over critical Defence functions if it’s the contractor, not the user, that prioritises who gets supplies or support, and when they get them (Trevithick & Rogoway, 2023).”

The TLDR [or ‘too long, didn’t read’] version of that is that private contractors serve different masters than a sovereign force does and thus there is a different decision tree. And that’s before morality is involved.

“A reliance on military contractors creates political, strategic, and social vulnerabilities. In a hypothetical conflict scenario, private firms might prioritise shareholder interests or allegiance to their home nation over Australian national security,” Thornton wrote.

“Consider a situation where a contractor withdraws support due to financial or political considerations. The result could be catastrophic, leaving military assets grounded or operationally compromised. Additionally, contractors often operate under different accountability standards than national forces, raising ethical and security concerns.”

That rationale explains, quite lucidly, why firms like Huawei were excluded from critical infrastructure like the National Broadband Network and 5G mobile rollout.

Thornton argues that a nation’s ability to defend itself shouldn’t be “contingent on private interests,” adding that “Machiavelli’s warning” resonates on this issue: “A prince must lay solid foundations for his power, for otherwise he must necessarily be destroyed.”

Thornton argues that “in the context of air power, such foundations must include a robust and self-sufficient air force that can both collaborate and act independently of external actors if required.”

“Australia now stands at a crossroads. After years of budget cuts and personnel shortages, the RAAF is on the road to replenishment. Recruitment initiatives are gaining momentum, and technological advancements are making platforms more user-friendly,” Thornton wrote.

“This period presents an opportunity to reassert sovereign control over air power by reducing, not removing, the reliance on private contractors.”

There are four common-sense recommendations, but the first and most poignant one is to staunch the blood supply to leeching firms.

“By scaling back contracted workforces, there is an incentive for ADF members to remain in, or return to, enlistment. This has the potential to reduce the lucrative incentives for the same roles, minimising competition for personnel (these positions are ultimately funded by the Defence budget),” Thornton wrote.

That sounds like exactly the problem Defence’s contractor poaching moratorium is seeking to address.

As the references to Machiavelli denote, the thinking may not be all that new or novel, but Thornton’s approach is clear, compelling and concise. And he’s happy to credit the riff.

“Machiavelli’s scorn for mercenaries is well documented in his works. In The Prince, he describes them as “disunited, ambitious, without discipline, unfaithful, bold among friends, cowardly among enemies.” Though his critique was aimed at the condottieri of Renaissance Italy, the parallels to modern private military contractors are striking.

That’s the kinetic effect of striking, rather than the industrial or commercial one. It’s an SLA kinda thing.

READ MORE:

Anxious and confused: Australia, Russia and Indonesia’s flexible politics

Tyranny is never far from America’s or Australia’s front door

 

He knew nothing about policy and taxes or what makes a people, and now, God help him, he was like those kids who think their country is Google. ‘You’re just not going deep enough,’ Luke said. ‘Money has imploded. Religion has gone mad. Privacy is disappearing. The ice-cap is melting and children are starving to death. And you want to sing an old song about national togetherness.