Thursday, February 12, 2026

How can we maintain the right to hold the powerful to account?


Write only if you cannot live without writing. Write only what you alone can write.
~ Elie Wiesel


Victorian CFMEU branch became 'hateful, greedy rabble' under John Setka, report finds

A redacted report into the Victorian branch of the CFMEU is among the documents released by Queensland's Commission of Inquiry today.

In it, author Geoffrey Watson SC alleged the branch descended into a "violent, hateful and greedy rabble" under former boss John Setka.

The Victorian government said it was not involved in the report, and defended its track record on the troubled construction industry.


$15b ‘poured into criminals’ hands’: Bombshell findings CFMEU tried to hide

An Albanese government-appointed official stripped politically explosive sections from a landmark corruption report, removing findings that Victoria’s Labor government turned a blind eye to CFMEU graft and organised crime on infrastructure projects, including federally funded sites, at a cost to taxpayers of $15 billion.
In an extraordinary development on Tuesday evening, after this masthead asked CFMEU administrator Mark Irving, KC, if he or his administration had whitewashed material damaging to Labor from the report, the senior barrister released the deleted chapters and criticised the corruption expert he hired to write them.
CFMEU administrator Mark Irving (right) and corruption-busting lawyer Geoffrey Watson.AGE/SMH
Irving’s decision to release the deleted material came after Queensland’s Commission of Inquiry moved this week to use its powers to discover the removed chapters of the report by anti-corruption expert Geoffrey Watson, SC, having been provided a different version of the “final” report last month.
The commission intended to publish the report this week.
In a two-line statement also sent late on Tuesday, Watson confirmed parts of the report detailing the findings of his 18-month probe into the CFMEU had been “removed”.
“I did not suggest the changes. I was directed to make the changes,” Watson said.
But a spokesperson for Irving said in a statement that “the administrator determined to remove the two sections … because he was not satisfied that they were well-founded or properly tested”.
The responses from the two senior barristers came after this masthead had earlier confirmed that the most politically incendiary conclusions of Watson were stripped from his 136-page report into CFMEU crime and corruption some time in January…



Mandelson, Palantir, Israel and you

For those not on Twitter, stories about the links between Mandelson, Epstein and Palantir, as well as Mossad, might not have been available yesterday. I share this one, posted in good faith …


The IRS improperly shared confidential tax information of thousands of individuals with immigration enforcement officials, according to three people familiar with the situation, appearing to breach a legal fire wall intended to protect taxpayer data.



How can we maintain the right to hold the powerful to account?

There is a slight sense of being overwhelmed this morning.

We have lived through a tumultuous week.

Through it all, attention has been paid to the wrong things.

Mandelson is not the victim here, as he implies in a notice issued to the press yesterday, which The National published despite explicit instructions not to do so. Mandelson enabled his own fate.

So, too, did Keir Starmer. His claim that he was conned is as laughable as Mandelson's demand for privacy. Starmer knew what he was doing. He showed indifference to the victims of Epstein by apppinintg Mandelosn. All the links were known. He revealed his indifference through his actions. Ignore his words.

Read the full article…


 Trump is FURIOUS Over MORE MASS RESIGNATIONS Talking Feds with Henry Litman, YouTube


Donald Trump Has Built a Clicktatorship

The Atlantic [no paywall]: Even the administration’s budget proposals read like Truth Social posts. “…No one better exemplifies the clicktatorship than the president himself. 

Trump routinely makes policy announcements via social media. Consider when, in August, he attempted to fire the Federal Reserve Board member Lisa Cook on Truth Social. When a government lawyer was questioned by the Supreme Court on the lack of an appeals option for Cook, he suggested that Cook could simply have made her case on Truth Social.

 In the clicktatorship, due process is reduced to the right to post. You can see it everywhere. The administration’s official social-media feeds pump out far-right xenophobic memes and celebrate deportations with ASMR videos of undocumented immigrants in shackles. Just days before the killing of Pretti, the White House posted an image of a woman who was arrested after a protest at a church in Minnesota. 

It had been edited, presumably using generative AI, to show the arrestee as weeping uncontrollably. The effect is to reinforce an impression of dominance and control. Truth matters less than attention. Reporters who pointed out the manipulation were mocked by a White House spokesperson who posted: “uM, eXCuSe mE??? iS tHAt DiGiTAlLy AlTeReD?!?!?!?!?!” 

(“The success of the White House’s social media pages speak for itself,” Abigail Jackson, a White House spokesperson, told me in an email. “Through engaging posts and banger memes, we are successfully communicating the President’s extremely popular agenda.”)

Aspects of the clicktatorship existed during Trump’s first term, when the president used Twitter as a bully pulpit. But it has ratcheted up to new levels in his second go-round. His appointees are more likely to be keyboard warriors. They are obsessed with spectacle, and every government decision presents a potential opportunity to own the libs. Our government lost 10,000 STEM Ph.D.s last year, but seemingly has more posters than ever…”


 

On Russia’s New Official Dictionary and the Language of Authoritarianism

Literary Hub: “Russia has a new official dictionary. The Explanatory Dictionary of the State Language of the Russian Federation, compiled by St. Petersburg State University, with the assistance of the legal department of the Russian Orthodox Church, has joined the list of official reference materials within the Russian Federation. 

The dictionary, which defines authoritarianism as “the most effective form of governance in difficult times” and bans the word жопа (ass), is (as is frequently the case in such situations), less a catalog offering a description of the Russian language as it is spoken in 2025 than it is a prescriptive ideological document.

 The dictionary’s compilers make no secret of the fact that they operated under the directives of Vladimir Putin’s 2022 Presidential Decree that made the “protection of traditional Russian spiritual and moral values, culture and historical memory” a national strategic priority. Vladimir Putin, along with his allies in the Russian Orthodox Church, has for nearly two decades now weaponized “traditional Russian spiritual and moral values” not only as means of squashing dissent at home but also as a powerful element in Russia’s aggressive, expansionist geopolicy.

 In Africa, the United States, and Europe, Russia has sought to portray itself as a defender of traditional values and Christian civilization, paying particular attention to squelching/rebuking[?] progressive policies related to gender and sexuality, and in doing so courting the sympathy and support of reactionaries abroad. This means that Russia’s new values-based dictionary is a problem for us all…”

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

As it happened: what you missed from day three of Senate estimates

Senate Economics Legislation Committee [Part 1] video  | 11/02/2026 - 8


Staff at $1trn debt agency blew whistle to Treasury


Sky News host Peta Credlin sits down with former AFP detective superintendent David Craig to analyse “stunning revelations” on the ISIS brides issue.


As it happened: what you missed from day three of Senate estimates

Lucinda Garbutt-Young
Ray Athwal
Eleanor Campbell
February 11 2026 


 Top defence officials faced questions about the Albanese government's $3 billion defence estate overhaul during Senate estimates hearings on Wednesday. 



The Triumph of Europe’s Social Democracy

My books are water; those of the great geniuses is wine. Everybody drinks water.
- Mark Twain, 

Hacker gets into Epstein’s personal email after password ‘exposed’ in files


The 1817 table that reveals how words manipulate our thinking


Watch as this opera-singing doggo tackles famous arias


The Triumph of Europe’s Social Democracy

Economist Thomas Piketty, writing for Le Monde (archive) on the success of Europe’s social democratic model and countering “the narrative of a ‘declining’ continent”:

If someone had told the European elites and liberal economists of 1914 that wealth redistribution would one day account for half of national income, they would have unanimously condemned the idea as collectivist madness and predicted the continent’s ruin. In reality, European countries have achieved unprecedented levels of prosperity and social well-being, largely due to collective investments in health, education and public infrastructure.

To win the cultural and intellectual battle, Europe must now assert its values and defend its model of development, fundamentally opposed to the nationalist-extractivist model championed by Donald Trump’s supporters in the United States and by Vladimir Putin’s allies in Russia. A crucial issue in this fight is the choice of indicators used to measure human progress.

For these indicators, Piketty mentions some of the same factors that economist Gabriel Zucman detailed in his Le Monde piece I posted in December:

More leisure time, better health outcomes, greater equality and lower carbon emissions, all with broadly comparable productivity: Europeans can be proud of their model, argues Gabriel Zucman, director of the EU Tax Observatory.


New Database Maps the Politics of America’s Workplaces

PHYS.org: “Researchers, including Professor of Management and Organization Reuben Hurstat the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business, have produced VRscores, an unprecedented public database for understanding the partisan lean of different employers in the United States. 

Hurst, with co-authors Justin Frake (University of Michigan) and Max Kagan (Columbia University), developed VRscores over three years of data work, outlined in their working papers “VRscores: A New Measure and Dataset of Workforce Politics Using Voter Registrations” and “Political Segregation in the US Workplace.” 

The results “strike us that the workplace could be distinct in terms of creating an environment where Democrats can interact with Republicans in ways that would make people less affectively polarized,” says Hurst, who adds that he has always been interested in the intersection between business and politics. “People spend more time at work than at any other part of life. I think it leads to the question, ‘How do experiences at work relate to the political behaviors and attitudes outside of work?’” 

The dataset covers 2012 through 2024 and brings together data on 534,000 employers and 24.5 million workers by linking U.S. voter registrations to electronically available worker profiles. Hurst says one of the project’s main goals was to figure out to what extent people were exposed to people who were politically different from them at work. “There’s a lot of work in social psychology suggesting that for intergroup interactions to decrease animosity or prejudice, there must be certain conditions. 

Those interactions are much more likely to decrease animosity when you are working together for a shared goal but under the same leadership,” he says, noting that the workplace is one of the only places where people who have different political beliefs consistently work together with a shared goal.

  • The data can be visualized and downloaded on the Politics at Workwebsite, where the researchers break down partisan data by geographic region, industry and occupation, as well as by organizations. 
  • The data shows that some industries tend to lean more Republican, like the oil and gas industry. Hurst also notes that more pilots tend to be Republican while professors, museum curators and writers tend to have a more liberal lean. Referencing visualizations on the website, Hurst points out the field of finance leans more toward the Democratic party, “which I think is kind of surprising to people.”

 

Trump Team to Hold Daily Meetings on Getting Revenge

Journalists can be infuriating. They simplify. They exaggerate. They sometimes get things wrong. They are disproportionally university-educated, middle-class and a bit left-wing, so their attitudes often jar with the rest of the population. When they act unethically—for example, when the bbc’s Panorama programme aired clips of President Donald Trump that had been spliced together in a misleading manner—people are rightly outraged. Trust in the news media has declined across the rich world, especially since the advent of social media allowed errors in reporting to be more widely reviled. So some people may not care much when they hear that journalism is in trouble. Yet it is in their interest to care.

Less scrutiny, more booty

As global press freedom dwindles, corrupt politicians rejoice


Protesters chant ‘we have the right to demonstrate’ at rally outside Sydney police station – as it happened


Trump Team to Hold Daily Meetings on Getting Revenge New Republic 


‘Just doesn’t look good for him’: Why Trump and those in his orbit are untouchable 

The Epstein files unveiled a litany of wealthy, smart, powerful men apparently unbothered by the exploitation of women and girls. But as far as the Trump administration is concerned, the saga is now effectively over.


The Crypto-Hoarding Strategy Is Unraveling Wall Street Journal. We warned about this when Saylor first got wobbly…


Reverse Palantir: Inside The Online War to Identify ICE Agents (Exclusive) Migrant Insider. Important


How to Film ICE Wired 


Clintons agree to testify on Epstein as vote looms to hold them in contempt of Congress BBC


Epstein and Ukraine: a match made in hell RT 


Epstein Occupied A Structural Position, So Who Has Replaced Him? Ian Welsh 


Follow the Changes: 9 Ways Web Archives are Used in Digital Investigations

Internet Archive Blogs: “Digital journalists increasingly turn to web archives like the Wayback Machine to follow how things on the Internet break, change or disappear – from deleted posts to quietly edited pages. 

The web has become not only a source of informationbut also the subject of media investigations, prompting journalists, researchers and activists to use digital archives to reconstruct timelines, verify claims, uncover hidden connections and hold powerful actors to account. As online materials grow more fragile and prone to disappearance, the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine has been critical in making “lost” web pages available – recently celebrating archiving over a trillion pages.

 As we’ve previously written about on this blog, the Wayback Machine is an important resource for our work as media researchers, helping us to trace histories of digital media objects (for example, changes in ad tracker signatures of viral “fake news” sites over time). We are also interested in how others use web archives across fields, and what we can learn from each other. 

In this piece we draw on the Internet Archive’s News Stories collection to surface practices and use cultures of the Wayback Machine amongst journalists and media organisations. We analysed a dataset of about 8,600 news articles, assembled by the IA via daily Google News keyword searches since 2018. Drawing on a combination of digital methods, machine learning and lots of reading – we surfaced nine ways that journalists use the Wayback Machine in their reporting…”


Shuming Zou’s Melbourne apartment seized by ATO over $27m tax debt

 registered-breach-pixel

Shuming Zou’s Melbourne apartment seized by ATO over $27m tax debt

The tax office is set to auction a Melbourne apartment to recover some of the $27m in unpaid tax after its owner fled overseas, as authorities continue a years-long pursuit.
Sarah PerilloSarah PerilloExclusive

February 10, 2026 - 2:23PM
The Australian Business Network
The ATO is set to auction a Melbourne apartment 
to recover nearly $27m in unpaid tax after its owner fled overseas. Picture: realestate.com
    The Australian Tax Office has spent years chasing nearly $27m in unpaid tax from a Chinese national who fled Australia and vanished overseas, leaving authorities scrambling to claw back the money.
    A string of documents seen by News Corp reveal the ATO has been locked in a high-stakes game of cat and mouse with Shuming Zou, 72, who quietly left Australia for China in November 2019 and never returned.
    The pursuit has now culminated in the seizure and forced sale of Mr Zou’s Docklands apartment in Melbourne, which is set to go under the hammer on Thursday.
    Investigators allege Mr Zou secretly funnelled $24m into Australia from offshore and failed to declare the funds in his tax returns, prompting a major investigation.
    Property records show Mr Zou and his wife once held at least five properties across Sydney, including a sprawling Burwood home that sold for $4.5m in 2017.
    The sprawling Burwood home 
    was sold for $4.5m in 2017
    Mr Zou’s spouse, ‘Xiao’, is listed as the current registered owner of a property on Murrell St in Ashfield, inner west Sydney.
    He is also listed as a former director of companies Restwell Investment, Z & X Development, Jincheng Investment and HYT Investment, all of which have since been deregistered, according to ASIC records.
    Mr Zou loaned more than USD$2m to then ASX-listed Kimberley Diamonds in September 2016, according to historical annual reports.
    That same year, Restwell Investment agreed to acquire USD$6m worth of diamonds from the company.
    The Burwood property was located 
    on Eurella St. Picture: realestate.com
    Kimberley Diamonds was an Australian-based explorer and miner with assets in Australia, Botswana and Spain. 
    Its flagship Ellendale mine in Western Australia was the world’s leading source of rare yellow diamonds, with output sold to Laurelton Diamonds Inc, a Tiffany & Co subsidiary.
    The company was delisted from the ASX in March 2017 following financial collapse, the closure of Ellendale, and problems at its Lerala mine in Botswana.
    In December 2020, with Mr Zou already overseas, the ATO issued a formal demand requiring him to secure a future tax bill estimated at $24.7m by handing over a first-ranking mortgage on his Docklands apartment.
    He ignored the demand.
    Fearing Mr Zou would offload his assets and leave Australian taxpayers footing the bill, the ATO rushed to court.
    The apartment is located on 888 
    Collins St, Docklands. 

    2 min readIn April 2021, the Federal Court froze the Docklands property, blocking any sale after finding there was a real risk the asset would disappear. 
    The apartment was unmortgaged and had already been listed for sale.
    Justice Davies found Mr Zou had “grossly understated his income” over a number of years.
    “Mr Zou appears to have business interests in China and the ability and motive to sell the property and move funds offshore,” she said when handing down her judgement in 2021. 
    “He has also … been uncooperative with the Commissioner … and demonstrated a lack of willingness to comply with his obligations.”
    By August 2022, the debt had ballooned into a $26.97m judgment, covering unpaid tax, penalties and interest for the 2016-2018 financial years.
    In April 2021, the Federal Court 
    froze the Docklands property. Picture: realestate.com
    Mr Zou, who was born in Hangzhou, China, did not appear in court and filed no defence.
    The original freezing orders meant the Sheriff couldn’t legally sell the apartment, forcing the ATO back to court yet again.
    In March 2025, a judge finally cleared the way, ruling the property sale was the “intended outcome” of enforcing the debt.
    The apartment, on Collins St, is now scheduled for auction on Thursday, despite Mr Zou still owing more than $1300 in council rates, documents lodged with Sheriff’s Office Victoria show. 
    Mr Zou’s accountant was listed as Electronic Taxation & Accounting, which lists its principal place of business on Sussex St in Sydney’s CBD, formerly on Hercules St in Ashfield, and its director as Tak Bo Cheng. 
    An ATO spokesman told News Corp they were unable to comment on the tax affairs of any individual or entity due to their obligations of confidentiality under the