Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Trump FBI and IRS Team Up


Trump FBI and IRS Team Up to Probe US Nonprofit Groups for ‘Domestic Terrorism’ Links

Trump had threatened independent voices via revoking IRS non-for-profit status. He is upping the ante with FBI and terrorism probes



 “In today’s new Gilded Age, the 900-plus billionaires in the US have far too much influence over our elections, our economy, our government policies and our news media, and it’s urgent for Americans to create a movement to curb their power…”


The ongoing migration of Kiwis


FBI is buying location data to track US citizens, director confirms TechCrunch


Government Registers Aliens.Gov Domain 404 Media


Palantir Faces Growing Backlash in UK Following Mandelson-gate Scandal

But is it already too late to reverse course?


Joe Kent says he was told ‘you need to stop’ investigating Charlie Kirk assassinationWashington Examiner



Donald Trump’s Racism Mirrors Jeffrey Epstein’sTomDispatch


Trump says Iran is ‘based on disinformation.’ Experts say its influence operations go far beyond that.

Experts say Trump’s framing understates a broader system of propaganda, covert influence and censorship


Freedom Path v. IRS Amicus Brief

Professor Donald Tobin (Maryland) just filed an amicus brief in Freedom Path, Inc. v. IRS, where the D.C. district court determined that the IRS regulation regarding 501(c)(4) and the primary purpose standard are unconstitutionally vague. From the brief’s summary of argument



War in the Age of the Online “Information Bomb”

The New Yorker – no paywall – “Memes such as “monitoring the situation” reflect a deluded belief that we can be more than just passive, confused bystanders to a spray of digital shrapnel. 

On TikTok, the war against Iran began with a series of videos from influencer types in Dubai, Doha, and elsewhere in the Middle East. They sat on restaurant patios or on hotel-room balconies and pointed their phone cameras skyward to document missiles flying through the air of their respective cities, then disappearing into puffs of smoke as they were shot down. Once you’d watched one video—say, a poolside clip from the British fitness influencer Will Bailey, narrating a nearby explosion over the beat of house music—more followed in an algorithmic deluge. 

After footage of the airborne violence came video diaries of travellers scrambling to exit various countries and recording frustrated monologues at jammed airports amid cancelled flights. Next, the lucky ones who got out posted relieved dispatches from the air en route elsewhere. This is war as professionalized social content: well-lit selfie videos, shot skillfully while casually driving a car or riding a horse, recounting pilates classes, matcha in hand—only this time in the middle of air-strike zones.

Global conflict has played out over social media for many years now, dating back to the Twitter-based organizing of the Arab Spring, but the current warfare in the Middle East marks a new level of saturation. Personal footage mingles with official releases from state militaries that are now proficient in the language of the internet. Any clear hierarchy of trustworthy information remains elusive as on-the-ground videos come from all directions, and government agencies are as likely to post memes as anonymous online trolls. The White House X account posts a montage that splices video-game simulations of warfare with seemingly unclassified footage of real-life missile strikes in Iran. The Israel Defense Forces X account publishes a clip of fighter jets in the air with the caption “On our way to make history ✈️” set to strains of “Fortunate Son,” by Creedence Clearwater Revival. (Never mind that the song was an anthem of opposition to the Vietnam War.) It took days for footage from more traditional news outlets to emerge, showing black rain falling from the sky in the aftermath of strikes on oil depots. Even that looked bizarre and surreal—a nightmare generated by A.I.? Each new video encountered online requires a moment’s scanning for signs of fakery.

Many of the fragments spreading through the digital panopticon comprise real footage of real events, but their cumulative effect is far from a cogent portrait. Instead, it’s something like what the French philosopher Paul Virilio, in his 1998 book “The Information Bomb,” labelled a coming “visual crash”: a “real-time globalization of telecommunications” in which any significant event in the world is live-streamed and broadcast, and the overflow of detail causes a “defeat of facts” and a “disorientation of our relation to reality.” 

Virilio was writing at the turn of the century, when the globalization of financial markets had created a risk of sudden, worldwide economic collapse. Witnessing the Asian financial crisis of 1997, during which sinking Thai currency prices kicked off a contagious decline in economic confidence across the continent, Virilio foresaw a similar phenomenon in globalized media—a bankrupting of our trust in the information we receive. Virilio was making observations during the era of television and the early internet, before social media, MAGA lies, and A.I. further undermined the authority of the media ecosystem. 

The current feeling of incoherence is intensified by President Donald Trump’s unwillingness to explain his military campaign, and Republicans’ mealy-mouthed acquiescence: “We’re not at war right now,” House Speaker Mike Johnsonsaid. This week, Trump has both proclaimed that the war is “very complete” and declared that “important targets” remain. (A post on Xon March 9th from the Department of War promised “no mercy.”) We can find the conflict everywhere on the internet, but no accompanying theory of the case…”

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Hot-button’: Report to Waverley Council proposes $300 driveway tax in new parking plan

 

Hot-button’: Report to Waverley Council proposes $300 driveway tax in new parking plan

A draft parking strategy is calling on a council to charge residents for parking permits, and for their own driveways in an attempt to manage high demand in the area.

Thomas Sargeant
March 24, 2026
Wentworth Courier
A report to Waverley Council has proposed charging 
residents for parking permits as well as for their 
own driveways. Picture: Thomas Sargeant.
    Residents of an eastern suburbs council could be charged up to $300 to have a driveway and $150 for a parking permit under a draft strategy which will be up for debate.
    Waverley councillors on Tuesday evening will discuss a new plan for parking in the area, with a report recommending residents begin paying for street parking permits and to park in their own driveway.
    The report to council notes the strategy “remains at a conceptual level,” and Mayor Will Nemesh said he opposed any plans to charge residents for the use of their own driveways.
    “I will be seeking to remove this option for consideration at the council meeting,” he told the Wentworth Courier.
    “I want to see parking within Waverley be fair, equitable and sustainable. The ideas put forward to council, with the exception of the kerb protection proposal, seek to achieve this balance.”
    Mayor of Waverley Council Will Nemesh is set to 
    oppose the driveway charges. 
    Photo: Gaye Gerard /NewsWire
    The proposal is part of a broad review of resident parking in the council area, which has found an ongoing reduction in publicly available kerb space as a result of growing vehicle sizes and additional driveways being added.
    The report to council found growth in vehicle size had effectively reduced street parking by 6 per cent in the 10 years from 2014, and the number of driveways in the region had increased by about 100 annually.
    A home in Bondi where a driveway was added, 
    an example cited in a report to Waverley Council. 
    Picture: Google Maps
    In an example cited by the council report, a driveway was added to a property which appeared to be subdivided. 
    According to council documents, all regions of the council besides Queens Park and Bronte had oversubscribed parking permits compared to actual availability on local streets, with Bondi Beach at double its own capacity.
    The report proposed parking permits be capped at two per household, with residents to be charged between $100-$150 for their first pass and $300-$400 for a second.
    “It is not a secret that most users prefer not to pay for parking,” the report reads.
    The report to council noted other comparable 
    LGAs required residents to pay for 
    their first residential parking 
    permit. Picture: Supplied
    “Yet over time and in line with the overarching intent of the (resident parking) review, it is anticipated that existing and future parking challenges would moderate, leading to better outcomes for all.”
    Cr Nemesh said parking in the area was “a hot-button issue”.
    “Council has not undertaken a comprehensive review of its parking framework since 2017,” he said.
    “We are well overdue.”
    Comparable Sydney councils including Woollahra, City of Sydney, Randwick and Mosman require residents to pay for their first residential parking permit.
    The permits in Waverley Council were paid prior to 2018, with car ownership rates increasing in the years since.
    Illegal parking blocking a driveway in Bondi Beach. 
    Picture: Snap Send Solve
    It is understood council revenue raised from the permits would go towards other parking programs, including enforcement of their on-demand towing policy.
    A council spokesperson said no changes have been approved, and they are seeking input from residents around any proposed changes based on “concerns about the current approach to parking across Waverley”.
    “As the second-highest density LGA in New South Wales, parking in Waverley is a significant issue for residents and visitors,” a council spokesperson said.
    “Council is committed to investigating ways to improve the situation for residents, to cater to existing and future increases in demand.
    “Any changes require further analysis, community consultation and Council approval.”

    Polymarket hosts a future hellscape

    Decades of data suggest people who stick to a couple of brews fare better in terms of gray matter


    I'm not eloquent enough to write well about complex tax landscapes, but we live on one planet and the price of civilisation is taxation …

    Norway's Wealth Tax Unchains a Capital Exodus


    Pope questioning Elon Musk's massive wealth, saying, "If that is the only thing that has value anymore, then we're in big trouble."


    10 Hacks Every Bluesky User Should Know

    Lifehacker: “If you’re tired of X and Threads, it might be time to move to greener, or perhaps bluer, pastures. Lifehacker’s own Joel Cunningham moved to Bluesky way back in 2024, and since then, a lot of our writers and editors have followed suit and are living it up over on the butterfly site. 

    It turns out that, with the right platform, it’s possible to like social media again. Bluesky is quite unlike most other social media networks. You have a lot of control over who sees your posts and how they reply to them, plus you can block and mute users en masse and tweak moderation settings just so. If you’re new to Bluesky, or if you’ve just been using the default settings, it’s time to dig deeper into all the ways you can customize your experience



    Polymarket hosts a future hellscape 

    Protos – “Polymarket, a prediction market platform owned by New York-based company Blockratize, currently has open assassination markets on its website. They’re easy to find because they’re some of the most heavily traded markets on the platform. Among these markets are:

    • Iran leader by end of 2026? (the current Ayatollah is on the list)
    • Will the Iranian regime fall by (numerous dates available to bet on)?
    • Will the Iranian regime survive US military strikes?

    So-called “assassination markets” are some of the most heavily traded markets on Polymarket. Despite the death of Ayatollah Khamenei being among the most popular prediction markets, Kalshi, as per its terms and conditions, didn’t pay out when he died. Polymarket, however, did, and half a billion dollars changed hands in the process..

    Donald Trump and US politicians noticeably absent. Polymarket seems to purposely avoid including US politicians or the current US president in any possible assassination markets, but the same cannot be said for nearly every other major leader in the world…it’s almost certainly down to the fact that Polymarket is based in the US, that its founder, Shayne Coplan, is a US citizen, and that Donald Trump Jr. is an advisor to and investor in the companythe Biden administration had effectively stopped Polymarket from advertising to or onboarding US citizens. These hinderances to the platform’s growth came to end in 2025 thanks to the Trump administration dropping multiple probes into its practices, which could have led to lawsuits and possible criminal prosecutions. Instead, Polymarket now finds itself at the forefront of a world where leaders of countries have public hits put on them via vague market questions that leave murder open as an interpretation and solution.

    Bloomberg: UK Yields Record £3.4 Billion from Transfer Pricing Cases

    When Karoline Leavitt belittled Pope Leo XIV on live television, mocking him as "just a religious figure living in privilege who doesn't understand the real world," no one could have predicted what would happen next.

     Pope Leo XIV didn't flinch. Calm, composed, his gaze sharp yet controlled — he looked straight into the camera and spoke slowly, emphasizing every word: "You don't represent everyone.' 
    The studio fell silent. Not a sound. No interruptions. Leavitt looked momentarily rattled, forcing a smile as she tried to respond - but the Pope leaned forward, his voice low yet firm:
     "You only represent temporary power and self-interest. That is not the voice of the people, and certainly not of future generations. When you truly understand what it means to live in a changing world — where responsibility is no longer a political or personal slogan but a shared duty of humanity - then you will understand what we are fighting for." 
    When Karoline Leavitt belittled Pope Leo XIV on live television, mocking him as "just a religious figure living in privilege who doesn't understand the real world," no one could have predicted what would happen next. Pope Leo XIV didn't flinch. Calm, composed, his gaze sharp yet controlled — he looked straight into the camera and spoke slowly, emphasizing every word: 
    "You don't represent everyone.' The studio fell silent. Not a sound. No interruptions. Leavitt looked momentarily rattled, forcing a smile as she tried to respond - but the Pope leaned forward, his voice low yet firm:
     "You only represent temporary power and self-interest. That is not the voice of the people, and certainly not of future generations. When you truly understand what it means to live in a changing world — where responsibility is no longer a political or personal slogan but a shared duty of humanity - then you will understand what we are fighting for." 
    Then Pope Leo XIV ended with the line that set social media on fire: "Sit down. Listen. We don't have time for puppets of power anymore." 
    The audience erupted - murmurs, shock, and applause echoed throughout the room. Within minutes, the clip spread rapidly across every platform. Millions praised Pope Leo XIV for his composure, clarity, and courage, calling it "an iconic live television moment of global responsibility." 
    Commentators agreed that this wasn't just a comeback — it was a wake-up call. 
    The Pope didn't shout or resort to personal insults. He spoke with truth, with responsibility, and with a vision for the future. One user wrote on X: 
    "Pope Leo XIV didn't attack Karoline Leavitt — he exposed her role. That's the power of calm truth." 
    In an era where propaganda and power often drown out the voices of science, ethics, and responsibility, Pope Leo XIV reminded the world that real influence doesn't come from titles or politics - but from integrity and duty to humanity. 
    The man once dismissed as "just a pope" now stands on the global stage, representing the spirit of a generation. That's the power of an icon — someone who dares to speak, dares to confront, and refuses to bow to power. Pope Leo XIV didn't just silence a "puppet of power" — he forced the world to listen.

    Speaking truth to common sense


    The web of offshore companies that allowed Chelsea to cheat the system

    As FA chairman at time of rule breaches says club got off lightly with sanctions, we take closer look at £47m secret payments that helped secure star players such as Eden Hazard


     Gullible, Cynical America. “They’ll insist that you can’t trust scientists, because they’re part of the conspiracy. The podcaster selling you his special creatine gummies, though? He seems trustworthy.”


    Mega Yachts trapped in Dubai As War Rages | SY News YouTube 

     

    Warriors’ Casino: The People Making A Killing Gambling On War Racket News


    Wyden Sounds Alarm as DAG Blanche Intervenes to Conceal Details of Mystery Epstein InvestigationUnited States Senate Committee on Finance


    The Morally-Challenged In Charge. Aurelien


    Bloomberg: UK Yields Record £3.4 Billion from Transfer Pricing Cases

    Bloomberg, Bloomberg: UK Yields Record £3.4 Billion from Transfer Pricing Cases:

    The UK’s transfer pricing revenue almost doubled to £3.4 billion ($4.6 billion) in 2024-25 from a year earlier, reaching the highest annual level ever, official data showed Wednesday.

    Tax revenue raised from settling transfer pricing cases rose from £1.8 billion in 2023-24, as the number of settled inquiries rose to 143 from 128, according to His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs’ annual data. The jump is mainly attributable to a small number of very high-value cases completed last year.

    The average age of settled transfer pricing inquiries during the latest period increased to 41 months in 2024-25 from 33.1 months in the previous year.

     

    Larsen & Oats: Crossing Borders, Sharing Burdens

    Lotta Björklund Larsen & Lynne OatsCrossing Borders, Sharing Burdens: Rethinking Taxation and Migration as Fiscal Belonging (2026) (open access pdf/ePub):

    Tax matters. It structures our societies, influences our choices, and reflects our values. Yet the meaning and impact of taxation are constantly changing in step with a world marked by climate transitions, demographic shifts, digitalisation, globalisation, and migration.



    Did Trump Official Go Too Far?

    First Amendment Watch reports how the Office of Disciplinary Counsel of the D.C. Bar has accused Ed Martin, the former interim U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, of potential misconduct based on a letter he sent to Georgetown Law Dean William Treanor threatening not to hire any Georgetown students unless Georgetown ceased all DEI initiatives. Mr. Martin is now the DOJ pardon attorney.

     

    Bessent’s Term as Acting IRS Commissioner Expires

    Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s 210-day stint as Acting IRS Commissioner expired in early March 2026. The Federal Vacancies Reform Act precludes Bessent from continuing in that specific temporary role.

    Monday, March 23, 2026

    How the APS is navigating the rise in WFH surveillance

     How the APS is navigating the rise in WFH surveillance

    Some of the biggest government agencies have rejected a new tracking feature that automatically updates a worker's location when they leave the office, with an expert warning a rise in tools being used to monitor employee productivity. 
    Services Australia, the ATO, the NDIA, the Department of Defence, and the Department of Social Services confirmed they will not enable automatic location tracking on Microsoft Teams.
    The software giant is expected to roll out a new feature next month that updates a worker's location when connected to their workplace's WiFi to reflect the building they're working in, but only if an admin enables it and obtains an employee's consent. 
    Microsoft signed a five-year deal with the federal government in February, making the company's desktop, cloud and AI products the standard for most public service agencies. 
    The company argues the automatic location feature is not a tracking tool and can provide executives with critical information about their teams. 
    Remote work has skyrocketed in the public sectorwith 80 per cent of public servants using some form of flexible working arrangement last year, up from 71 per cent in 2020.
    The number of public servants working from home has doubled since before the pandemic. Picture by Keegan Carroll.
    The number of public servants working from home has doubled since before the pandemic. Picture by Keegan Carroll.
    Bosses are legally keeping an eye on their remote employees in many ways, including keystroke tracking, screen capturing, monitoring email accounts, and data collection when working from home. 
    Senior policy specialist at the UTS Human Technology Institute Sarah Sacher said there has been an "explosion" in the uptake of worker surveillance tools after Covid-19.
    She said employers needed stronger guidelines around workplace surveillance, pointing to "out-of-date" and "confused" state and federal laws that do not account for newer technologies such as artificial intelligence. 
    "There's a lack of transparency around these tools in general. When workers are consenting, it's generally not spelled out to them what they are consenting to," she said. 
    "Because technology is moving so fast, there are ways you can be monitored in ways you didn't think were possible."
    Decisions about whether to use specific Microsoft products "sit with individual agencies, based on their operational needs and procurement processes", an Australian Public Service Commission spokesperson said. 
    "APS agencies have consultation frameworks in their enterprise agreements to support engagement with staff and unions. Individual consultation processes are a matter for each agency," they said.
    MORE PUBLIC SERVICE NEWS: 
    More than 2000 Services Australia staff working in the ACT have some form of a working-from-home agreement, according to figures provided during Senate estimates.
    A Services Australia spokesperson said its policy on the surveillance of remote workers is set through "existing workplace policies, which focus on performance, safety, security and wellbeing, and apply regardless of where work is performed."
    "Staff can manually update their displayed work location in Microsoft Teams and Microsoft Outlook or manually add a weekly schedule of location and hours for their convenience," they said. 
    About 40 per cent of Defence employees told the latest public service census they worked away from the office "some of the time" as part of a regular arrangement. 
    A department spokesperson said Defence "continuously monitors the cyber worthiness of networks as part of its daily functions", in response to questions about its current policies on staff surveillance.
    Victoria and NSW recently introduced legislation to establish controls around how workers are monitored online to protect against excessive surveillance or allocation of work as a result of AI.
    Ahead of enterprise bargaining set to begin later in 2026, the federal public sector union has called for stronger protections against intrusive employermonitoring.
    CPSU deputy secretary Rebecca Fawcett said the union held a "very firm" position that AI should not be used in surveillance or monitoring of the workforce, either remotely or in the office. 
    "It is important that there are strong protections in place in the APS, locked into enterprise agreements, that prevent the use of AI in this way now and into the future," she said. 
    Do you know more? Eleanor.campbell@thecanberratimes.com.au