Wednesday, July 16, 2025

No 10 warned against gagging officials from speaking in public

 How SpaceX is blocking astronomers’ view of spaceMusk Watch


No 10 warned against gagging officials from speaking in public

Government guidance has been criticised as “chilling” by think tanks, while former cabinet secretaries have also raised concerns
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Sir Keir Starmer’s ban on public officials speaking at open events without prior vetting has been condemned in a letter to The Times

Sir Keir Starmer is facing growing demands to ditch a new government edict that bans senior health officials, military leaders and even the head of the civil service from speaking openly in public.

In a letter in today’s Times the leaders of more than a dozen think tanks, including the Royal Society, the Nuffield Trust and the Institute for Government, warned the prime minister that the new rule was having a “chilling effect on public discussion” with some events already being cancelled.

In private, several former cabinet secretaries are understood to have made their concerns clear to Downing Street.

The new rules have even been condemned by Alastair Campbell, Tony Blair’s former head of communications, who was himself not shy about controlling the messaging of No 10

The edict, issued across Whitehall by Downing Street last month, orders public sector officials not to talk at open events where their comments have not been vetted in advance. They have also been barred from taking part in any public question and answer sessions even if they are part of an industry event.

The rules apply to media briefings on issues such as public health, carried out by senior figures such as the chief medical and scientific officers. While these can go ahead they must be cleared in advance by Downing Street and have a minister or special adviser in attendance.

Those affected include public sector officials working for arm’s-length bodies such as Ofcom, the media regulator, and Ofsted, the education inspectorate, which have operational independence from the government. The rules also apply to senior health leaders, diplomats and military officers.

The edict has already led to cancellation or curtailment of public events where senior government officials were due to speak.

In their letter the think tanks describe the new rules as a “mistake”, saying that “effective government” relies on public servants hearing directly from businesses, charities and citizens to help them make better policy. They warned: “They should be able to explain government activity to those same groups. It [the guidance] is causing confusion and a chilling effect on public discussion. The government should withdraw it.”

Baron Robin Butler of Brockwell who served as cabinet secretary under the Thatcher, Major and Blair administrations told The Times it was “an important part of the job of senior civil servants and public sector leaders to inspire people and set a direction for the organisations that they run.

“It is ridiculous to suggest that these people should not be allowed to answer questions and take responsibility for what they say,” he added.

A government source said that Butler’s concerns were shared by other former cabinet secretaries including Lord Simon Case, who held the job until last year. They are understood to have made their concerns clear to Chris Wormald, the current incumbent.

But Baroness Anderson of Stoke-on-Trent, the Lords minister, said the rules were not about gagging civil servants. “As the civil service management code released in 2016 makes clear, civil servants must clear in advance material for publication, broadcast or other public discussion which draws on official information or experience,” she said. “The government continues to approve public activity by civil servants on a case-by-case basis, and civil servants, such as permanent secretaries, continue to be accountable to parliamentary select committees in the usual way.”

The cabinet office said it had been a “core principle, under successive governments, that ministers are publicly accountable for government decisions. This is why ministers answer for the government in the media and parliament.”

They said they were tweaking the new rules to give more flexibility to departments. “If the department feels there is a strong case for them to proceed with the activity fronted by civil servants, then they should be gridded through the usual process.”

No 10 warned against gagging officials from speaking in public


Who Goes MAGA? “His Substack has 10,000 subscribers and a name like ‘Uncomfortable Truths’ or ‘Against the Grain.’ He has an advanced degree & a career in academia or journalism. He positions himself as a truth-teller willing to say what others won’t.”

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Aussie threatened with a $740,000 council fine after he built a cubby house for his daughter on his property

How the spy game will work when there’s no place to hide


Aussie threatened with a $740,000 council fine after he built a cubby house for his daughter on his property


Exclusive: DOJ, FBI conclude Epstein had no “client list,” died by suicide Axios


What is a micro-retirement? Inside the latest Gen Z trend Fast Company


To Understand the Economy, This Fed President Is Ditching His Desk WSJ. “…businesses raising prices not because they have to, but because they think they can get away with it.”

 

Implicit coordination in sellers’ inflation: How cost shocks facilitate price hikes Structural Change and Economic Dynamics

 

What Does It Mean To Be a Working Class Writer at Iowa Writers’ Workshop? Lit Hub

 

Plague Poems – The Two-Hundred-and-Seventy-Seventh Week Librarian Shipwreck


A Defense of Joy The Marginalian

Blood in the Water, Blood on the Beach: History of Naval Warfare

 “A friend is someone who gives you total freedom to be yourself-and especially to feel, or not feel. Whatever you happen to be feeling at any moment is fine with them. That's what real love amounts to - letting a person be what he really is.”

- Jim Morrison

Updated ‘PLUM’ book offers deeper look at Trump administration officials working governmentwide

Federal News Network – “There is now a public list showing the names, agencies and salaries of more than 9,000 Trump administration officials and career federal leaders currently working across government. The Office of Personnel Management on Wednesday updated the PLUM book — a digital employment roster listing virtually all senior federal leaders governmentwide. 


Maine police department apologizes for AI-doctored evidence photo Boston.


Blood in the Water, Blood on the Beach: History of Naval Warfare, Part 11 Big Serge


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 Take chances, make mistakes. That's how you grow. Pain nourishes your courage. You have to fail in order to practice being brave.

~Mary Tyler Moore

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Martin Wolf on the Coming Fall of the U.S. Economy Yascha Mounk


Trump’s Schizophrenia Cannot Hide the US Lack of Strategic Depth Larry Johnson


How to make work more fun

Leaders can bring joy to the office and boost productivity


In the fight against foreign information manipulation, the US can’t afford to disarm

Atlantic Council: “As its adversaries wage an information war, the United States is retreating from the front lines. Washington has dismantled key programs for countering foreign information manipulation and interference (FIMI), such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Foreign Influence Task Force. This leaves a dangerous vacuum in the US national defense posture. If left unaddressed, this vulnerability will degrade public trust, fracture civil society, and threaten US military cohesion.


 Because conflicts between states increasingly occur in a gray zone—involving actions that fall just short of war—the United States must treat foreign information manipulation as an act of hybrid war and build societal resilience to match the threat. Feeding false narratives – The Trump administration’s 2025 Annual Threat Assessment from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence makes clear that China, Russia, and Iran are using evolving information warfare tactics to sow dissension and conflict among Americans. TikTok accounts linked to a Chinese propaganda apparatus targeted candidates from both political parties in the 2022 midterm elections

Monday, July 14, 2025

‘A big fishing expedition’: Tax office launches probe into case with devastating outcome

ATO review lands with surgical precision: staff praised, but cultural avoidance and governance clutter raise questions.


‘A big fishing expedition’: Tax office launches probe into case with devastating outcome

 By Dan Nolan and Georgia Done July 14, 2025 

The Australian Tax Office has launched an independent review into its handling of a case where a businessman was arrested and jailed over a legal battle that he ultimately won.

The review comes after Jae Jang, who had sought all necessary approvals for a new alcohol product, was pursued by the ATO for alleged fraud.
It took Jang more than a decade to prove his innocence. During the process, he lost his sister Deannah, who took her own life after also being targeted by ATO action. Jae Jang, who had sought all necessary approvals for a new alcohol product, was pursued by the ATO for alleged fraud.
Jae Jang, who had sought all necessary approvals for a new alcohol product, was pursued by the ATO for alleged fraud.
“When [the ATO] come for you, it’s absolutely relentless,” Jang said. “I barely survived. My sister obviously didn’t.”
Jang’s business, Divas, planned to launch a new line of flavoured, wine-based products. Because the beverages were made entirely from grape-related ingredients, Jang believed they would be taxed as wine without the much higher excise applied to spirits.
He followed the necessary steps, seeking an ATO private ruling about the innovative drinks before starting production, which was granted.
Debbie Ingleton worked alongside Jang.
But his products were seen as a threat to the big players in the alcohol industry who lobbied the tax office. What followed led to an agonising dispute that almost destroyed him, his family and his staff. Debbie Ingleton and her husband, Bill, worked alongside Jang when the ATO turned its attention to his tax affairs. Debbie Ingleton’s husband, Bill, who also worked with Jang.
The Ingleton family home was raided as part of what became a criminal investigation, and at the time, they received around 10 to 12 calls a day from the ATO.
“They went through everything. They went through personal stuff, my underwear drawer,” Debbie told A Current Affair.
“They kept asking my husband, Bill, where the money was, and he said, ‘I don’t know what you’re talking about. There’s no money here. We rent, we struggle.’”
Debbie had a history of cancer and had severe mental health issues at the time. A letter from her psychologist stated she was suffering from “severe depression with suicidal tendencies” and her “symptoms are being exacerbated by ... the ATO”.
She claimed the ATO continued these practices after receiving her psychologist’s letter.
“I would lock myself in the home bathroom and think of ways to kill myself, because I was so desperate,” Ingleton said.
She suffered a nervous breakdown and was hospitalised. One tax officer was removed from the case, allegedly due to “non-compliance with ATO guidelines”.
Jang’s sister Deannah, an academic at Bond University, decided to help her brother as his companies battled to survive.
She helped finance a New Zealand operation when the ATO decided to apply the higher spirit excise to the products in Australia before the Federal Court could adjudicate on the new tax rate.
The ATO then made her a target too, raising an unexpected new tax assessment and immediately garnishing her wage from Bond University.
“It totally destroyed her mentally. After all, she’s not a businesswoman. She’s an academic assisting the family to ensure we survive through our business,” Jang said. Deannah took her own life on November 1, 2017, for which Jae Jang blames the ATO. Six weeks after his sister’s death, Jang was arrested outside his Sydney home with his eight-year-old son upstairs.
He was held in jail overnight and charged with two counts of conspiracy to defraud the tax office, which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years jail.
Jang’s criminal charges were eventually dropped after 2½ years. Court records reveal the prosecution had “no evidence to offer.”
“I felt relief, but also I felt very angry,” he said. “Why did this ever take place?”
Debbie and Bill Ingleton were also criminally charged. Bill was cleared at the same time as Jang, but Debbie was forced to wait another 13 months with a jail sentence hanging over her head.
“Bill had said to me to stay home and just let the lawyer handle it. And I said no, I have to hear it for myself. I have to hear the judge say, ‘you’re dismissed of all charges,’” Debbie said.
“It was just, in my opinion, a big fishing expedition.”
Two months after the charges were dropped, Bill Ingleton was diagnosed with stage four pancreatic cancer.
“I blame the ATO for killing my husband – well, contributing to it,” Debbie said. An ATO spokesperson said it “always welcomes scrutiny against its administration of the tax system” but declined to answer the majority of 33 questions sent, citing confidentiality obligations.
The spokesperson later stated it would be “initiating an independent review to examine the issues in full” and the review will “thoroughly consider the issues dating back over a decade”.
“We recognise the unfortunate circumstances and appreciate the seriousness of the issues that have been raised,” the spokesperson said.
“The findings of this review will guide what actions are required.”
If you, or someone you know, needs support you can call Lifeline on 13 11 14 or Beyond Blue on 1300 224

NY Times: Conservatives Are Prisoners Of Their Own Tax Cuts

 “If a man hasn’t discovered something he will die for, he isn’t fit to live.”

~ Martin Luther King, Jr


NY Times: Conservatives Are Prisoners Of Their Own Tax Cuts


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


Free CourtListener Docket Sheet and Documents for Major Tax Crimes Case (Also Major White Collar Crimes Case) 

I write to inform principally students and young lawyers of a case with documents that can educate in both tax crimes and white collar crimes. The case is United States v. Goldstein (D. Md. No. 8:25-cr-00006), with free access to docket entries on CourtListener, here. CourtListener has the docket entries but offers free access to a document only after the first CourtListener member retrieves the document from PACER, a paid service. For a case of this notoriety, most of the important documents will have been so retrieved and are available free.

Although I have only looked at some of the documents that interest me, I think the quality of lawyering is very good. Furthermore, tax crimes are white-collar crimes in a tax setting. Hence, the documents (which are many) are often hashing out themes that will be of interest to lawyers and students of white -collar crimes.

Trump admin scrambles to shut down Epstein talk — but MAGA isn’t having it

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Sunday, July 13, 2025

In Defense Of Rachel Zegler’s Balcony Scene In The New West End “Evita”

When in doubt, go for a walk. “Walking won’t solve everything. But it won’t make anything worse. That’s more than you can say for most things we do when we’re stressed, tired, or lost.”


Among Friends — a betrayal beyond repair Hal Ebbott’s powerful debut novel shatters our expectations when the comfortable world of two families is blown apart in one reckless moment

So, the stage is set and we’re in what feels like the patrician, male-centric world of an Updike novel. Yet Ebbott, while writing with the grace of the old masters — “trees poured along the sides of the road. The car seemed to swim through them” — subverts our expectations by exploding the calm order of things with a moment of unexpected violence.

Among Friends — a betrayal beyond repair



In Defense Of Rachel Zegler’s Balcony Scene In The New West End “Evita”


Many people who paid exorbitant prices to see the show in person are miffed that they’re watching “Don’t Cry for Me, Argentina” on a screen as Zegler sings it to crowds on the street. Writer Ellise Shafer argues that “this divisiveness is exactly the point (director Jamie) Lloyd is trying to make.” - Variety

Oscar Wilde’s Forgotten Play About Russian Revolutionaries

The 1879 play Vera; or, The Nihilists is about a young woman and her band of radicals who plan to kill the tsar. Its 1881 London premiere was cancelled after Tsar Alexander II was actually assassinated, and the play has been neglected ever since. - The Guardian

Richard Greenberg, Tony-Winning Playwright of “Take Me Out,” Has Died At 67

“(He) was one of America’s most established dramatists, responsible for about 30 plays staged on or off Broadway since the mid-1980s. His work was wry yet tender, nipping at the divide between comedy and drama, and delved into questions of family, love and friendship.” - The Washington Post (MSN)

Son of Ty - Tiny Desk Concert by the cast of Buena Vista Social Club, a hit Broadway musical about the Cuban musical ensemble

Only those who dare to fail greatly can ever achieve greatly.

— Robert F. Kennedy

 You were born, and the world became a better place. Happy Birthday, man!


Royal commission staff expect you to be calm, composed, dignified, and sober at your age. Disappoint them. 

Have a fan-cake-tastic day!




There is nothing better than a friend, unless it is a friend with chocolate.

-Linda Grayson


A long-time member of organised crime falls in love with Diana, prompting him to reevaluate his life and contemplate a future beyond his criminal activities.


The series, which chronicles the battle for control over a cocaine-trafficking gang, filmed some scenes in Spain and will be sold to foreign broadcasters.

The saga also won viewers' hearts with lighter moments that included Sean Bean, as gang leader Ronnie Phelan, leading a charge of golf buggies to the theme from the film Apocalypse Now.

A scene featuring the cast line-dancing to the 1950s song The House of Bamboo has led to various imitations that have gone viral online


Expect Shades of Walter White, Tony Soprano in Sean Bean Liverpool Crime Epic ‘This City Is Ours’

Stars James Nelson-Joyce, Hannah Onslow and Julie Graham discuss chemistry and dialects, while writer Stephen Butchard explains his use of humor in the show from 'The Crown' producer Left Bank.




Get published for $20, co-author with a Nobel Prize-winner for $700: With academic paper mills, anything seems possible — for a fee... more »


Best sellers were once written by authors like Mary McCarthy and J.D. Salinger. Now they’re written by those like James Patterson. What changed?... more »


NPR Tiny Desk Concert by the cast of Buena Vista Social Club, a hit Broadway musical about the Cuban musical ensemble.


What to eat to protect your aging muscles The foods you choose are as important as exercise for getting and staying strong

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Who’s your daddy? These days, who isn’t?
Mack daddy, leather daddy, sugar daddy, Daddy Trump: The fraught and Freudian journey of a domineering archetype.

In his social media series “Trump Was Born to be a Gay Man,” actor Bransen Gates lip-synchs to real recordings of President Donald Trump saying things that — with a few wrist flicks and come-hither eyes — gain an entirely new interpretation. Gates has acted out the president’s monologues about his “beautiful” pole (for a flag), his declaration that he would “kiss every man” in a 2020 rally audience and his assessment of Arnold Palmer’s body. (He “was all man,” said Trump in October.)

Saturday, July 12, 2025

Lidka - Salt Path scandal: the juiciest literary scams, from James Frey to JT LeRoy

 Greek - the Apollo


Rooms with the views


Salt Path scandal: the juiciest literary scams, from James Frey to JT LeRoy




As accusations around Raynor Winn’s bestseller come to light, our critic rounds up the greatest scams, hoaxes and frauds in publishing history


Why do writers write? For pleasure, meaning, money, fame – and for no reason at all. Lydia Davis explains... more »


It's never been easy to "make it" as a musician. These days it's easier to make music but harder than ever to earn a living from it... more »


Reims and Amiens

Both cities have significant war histories, but they are very different to visit, even though they are only two hours apart by car.

Reims was largely destroyed in World War I, and so the central core was rebuilt in the 1920s, with a partial Art Deco look.  The downtown is attractive and prosperous, the people look sharp and happy, and it is a university town.  You arrive and feel the place is a wonderful success.  If you had to live in a mid-sized French city, you might choose this one.

The main cathedral is one of the best in France, and arguably in the world.  The lesser-known basilica also is top tier.  There are scattered Roman ruins.  French kings were coronated in Reims from early on, all the way up through 1825.

Amiens is on the Somme, and the 1916 Battle of the Somme, followed by a later 1918 offensive, was a turning point in WWI history.  The town is a melange of architectural styles, with many half-timbered homes but also scattered works from different centuries.  The town also has France’s “first skyscraper,” renowned in its time but now a rather short and out of place embarrassment.  The main Amiens cathedral, however, is perhaps the best in all of France.

The town itself feels like visiting a banlieu, with large numbers of African and Muslim immigrants.  It is lively, and it feels as if a revitalization is underway, though I do understand opinions on these matters differ.  Real estate prices are at about 3x their 1990s levels.  That to me is strong evidence that things are going well.

Restaurant Momos Tibetian has excellent Chinese and Tibetan food.  The Picardy museum has some very good works by Boucher, Balthus, Picabia, El Greco, and Chavannes.

Both cities are radically undervisisted.  They do attract some tourists, but for the most part you feel you have them to yourself.


The most expensive meat in the world: Aged Wagyu beef $3200/lb pic.twitter.com/KOIddhY2lt


35,000 square feet sky-penthouse.
The most expensive apartment on the planet.
Priced at $387 million. pic.twitter.com/TvyJ3ijucf