Friday, March 27, 2026

We must not underestimate the peril for democracy

 Dramatic day in Praha as Matej scored own goal 

A familiar tale of World Cup playoff agony awaited the Republic of Ireland in Prague, but this was no hard luck story. Heimir Hallgrímsson’s team twice had the Czech Republic where they wanted them, in normal time and in a penalty shootout, and twice they let them off the hook. Dreams of a first World Cup in 24 years evaporated as a consequence.

Jan Kliment - Češí žíjí, mistrovství světa je zase o

Czech Republic win 4-3 on penalties.



We must not underestimate the peril for democracy

Donald Trump’s America is a world leader in democratic decline

Democracy is in grave peril, worldwide. This is the message of two authoritative recent reports — one, from Sweden’s V-Dem, subtitled “Unraveling The Democratic Era?” and the other, from Freedom House in the US, subtitled “The Growing Shadow of Autocracy”. These make two fundamental points. The first is that what Stanford’s Larry Diamond has labelled a “democratic recession”, which began two decades ago, is beginning to look dangerously like a democratic depression. The other is that, in 2025, the Trump administration launched what turned out to be the swiftest decline in the health of any significant democracy in recent times.
Bar chart of Share of world population, by V-Dem country classification (%) showing The world’s democratic depression
According to Freedom House, “global freedom declined for the 20th consecutive year in 2025. A total of 54 countries experienced deterioration in their political rights and civil liberties, while only 35 countries registered improvements.” V-Dem measures this decline not only by the number of countries affected, but also by the number of people affected. It concludes that between 2005 and 2025, the proportion of the world’s population living in autocracies has risen from 50 to 74 per cent and the proportion living in true liberal democracies, which offer the full panoply of civil and legal rights, in addition to elections, has collapsed from 17 to just 7 per cent. Above all, argues V-Dem, the world has never before seen as many countries “autocratizing” at the same time. Freedom of expression is declining particularly quickly, with 44 countries registering a decline in 2025. Even torture is increasingly employed.
Most important, this has also been happening in the US. V-Dem’s aggregate index of the health of US democracy is back to 1965 levels, before the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Yet this time we see a classic example of an attempt by an executive to overthrow a liberal democracy from within. Legislative constraints on the executive — arguably, the most fundamental constitutional constraint of all — have, in V-Dem’s view, reached their lowest point in 100 years. Civil rights and equality before the law have fallen to the levels of the mid-1960s and, notwithstanding the blather about “free speech”, freedom of expression is at its lowest level since the early 1950s. Only the electoral components of democracy are, it judges, untouched, at least so far.
For those who doubt this, I recommend reading the Trump Action Tracker, which lists 2,816 actions taken since January 2025. Perhaps the most blatant aspect of what is happening is the brazenness of the corruption. The long-fought-for idea that public office is a trust, not an opportunity for personal enrichment, has been almost entirely abandoned. Some argue, plausibly alas, that insiders have even been able to trade profitably on prior knowledge of presidential announcements, such as that this week withdrawing threats against Iran.
What does this all add up to? According to Freedom House, the quality of US democracy is now at the same level as South Africa’s, though the latter’s has been improving, not deteriorating. According to V-Dem, the sheer speed of US deterioration in 2025 far surpassed those in Russia, India, Turkey or Hungary at the beginning of their decline. If a similar decline in V-Dem’s index of liberal democracy occurred in 2026, the US would be where Hungary was in 2018 and would have got there far faster.
Line chart of ‘Freedom in the World’ aggregate scores (0-100 scale) showing US democracy ranks with South Africa’s, according to Freedom House
Unfortunately none of these other declines have been reversed, so far. This is because these would-be autocrats know well that they cannot afford to lose elections and have achieved enough power to prevent it. The first motivation must already apply to Donald Trump, his family and many members of the administration. Does anybody doubt, then, that the administration will do whatever it can to “win” the midterm elections in November, no doubt claiming all the while that they are only trying to ensure “fair” elections? Will they succeed? We shall see.
In the history of humanity, democracy of any form is a rarity, especially in large powers. Far more common is autocracy, oligarchy, or some combination of the two. It is only in the late 20th century that democracy became some kind of global norm. The US played the decisive role in this success, by virtue of both its power and its example.
The power still stands, though the Trump administration is mounting an assault on its foundations in the rule of law, safe property rights, effective government, advanced science and freedom of the media. The example does not. To the world, the US is daily demonstrating its repudiation of the values people thought it represented. Particularly in developing countries, but also in many others, people are all too familiar with what Trump’s US stands for: despotism. The US was never close to being a perfect exemplar of democratic ideals. But they were what the world came to believe America stood for.
With the US led by people who despise the enlightenment tradition that created today’s western civilisation (which is not the one they imagine), where will we end up? We do not know. Maybe US democracy will manage to save itself. Maybe the sheer ferocity of the assault will create the needed response. Alas, Europe remains divided among and within its members and so today lacks the will to defend democracy worldwide. The remainder of the world’s true democracies are also too weak to do much in this age of autocrats.
Yet I refuse to despair. The notions that the state belongs not to an absolute ruler but to the people, that they must be allowed to speak and be heard, that the law exists to protect them, and that nobody can be entrusted with absolute power over them remain, in my view, the greatest in politics. But it would be folly to believe these are safe. They are, once again, in the gravest danger.
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Don Lemon is ready to stand up for press freedoms. Are the rest of us?

The one thing we need more than hope is action. Once we start to act, hope is everywhere.

Trump hit a new low — and the usual suspects in the media stay quiet or defend him

Trump’s comments on Robert Mueller’s death drew swift condemnation, while some allies ignored it or offered cover


Don Lemon is ready to stand up for press freedoms. Are the rest of us?

The former CNN anchor and independent journalist spoke about attacks on the free press while advising student journalists


ICE Seeking Office Space in Over 40 States

Project Saltbox: An RFI released today details ICE’s plans to rent co-working space for over 300 personnel nationwide

ICE is seeking co-working space for over 300 personnel nationwide, according to market research released earlier today. In the request, the agency outlines their need for flexible workspace (private offices and/or workstations). 

DOGE goes nuclear: How Trump invited Silicon Valley into America’s nuclear power regulator

Ars Technica: “Assume the NRC is going to do whatever we tell the NRC to do. Last summer, a group of officials from the Department of Energy gathered at the Idaho National Laboratory, a sprawling 890-square-mile complex in the eastern desert of Idaho where the US government built its first rudimentary nuclear power plant in 1951 and continues to test cutting-edge technology.


How the Daughter of a Russian Intelligence Officer Became a Recruiter for Epstein’s Trafficking Network

Important Stories tells the story of Lana Pozhidaeva — an MGIMO graduate, model, and daughter of career intelligence officers — who for many years was involved in Jeffrey Epstein’s network and recruited women for him from the former Soviet Union


Rubin: The Tax Nerd Who Bet His Life Savings Against DOGE

Richard Rubin reports on a young economist who staked his “life savings”—$342,195.63—on federal spending increasing during the first year of the Trump Administration, compared to the final quarter of the Biden Administration. And he won.

More on the intersection of prediction markets, herd wisdom, and mandatory spending—plus the economist’s winnings—below the fold.


What is the cost to Americans of the War in Iran?

Via Ben Amata, Government Information Librarian, University Library, California State University, Sacramento: “Neither DOD nor the Whitehouse are providing budgetary information at their websites, to Congress, or to the public on the Iran war costs. Some in Congress are commenting.

  1. https://www.congress.gov/119/crec/2026/03/18/172/49/CREC-2026-03-18-pt1-PgH2587-4.pdf
  2. https://www.congress.gov/congressional-record/volume-172/issue-50/house-section/article/H2609-6?hl=iran+war&s=1&r=1
  3. https://www.congress.gov/congressional-record/volume-172/issue-42/house-section/article/H2452-5?hl=iran+war&s=1&r=18
  4. See also – NPR – How much is the Iran war costing us? It’s really hard to estimate the total cost of war in the middle of one. Over the first six days of the Iran war, an estimated $11.3 billion was charged to the public purse. But long-term costs take years to manifest. Even daily costs are fuzzy. Take munitions: the Department of Defense hasn’t budgeted for many of the bombs it’s dropping. One more time. The bombs – the bombs! – are not totally priced in.
  5. TIME – How Much the War in Iran is Costing Americans
  6. National Priorities Project – Hegseth’s Request for $200 Billion for Iran War Should Go To Needy Americans
  7. CSIS – Iran War Cost Estimate Update: $11.3 Billion at Day 6, $16.5 Billion at Day 12


The Economist no paywall: “…In this war, Israel’s aim is clear: to demolish the threat posed by Iran’s regime. By contrast, Mr Trump and his cabinet have offered a mess of shifting assertions—about Iran’s missiles, nuclear weapons, regime change, following Israel’s lead, a “feeling” Iran was about to attack and settling scores after decades of enmity. Politically, vagueness gives Mr Trump room for manoeuvre. Strategically, his failure to say what Epic Fury is for is its biggest vulnerability. The result is a split-personality war.

  • One face is operational. America and Israel have destroyed Iran’s navy and grounded its air force. They are wrecking its missile capability and its arms industry and targeting the regime and its brutal enforcers. Dominance of the skies means that America and Israel can fight on at will. Interceptor missiles are meanwhile defending bases and cities in Israel and the Gulf countries, even as Iran strikes at more targets than it did during the conflict last June. So far, at least, there are enough interceptors to keep going. The other face of this war is political, and it emerges from Iran’s strategy, which is about sowing doubt and confusion. To survive would count as victory for Iran’s regime. So far, it is succeeding. Far from falling apart, it is rushing to escalate horizontally—a fancy way of saying it is lashing out in all directions. This has a number of consequences.
  • One is that other countries are being sucked in. Iran has attacked the Gulf states, which have bet their future on being havens from the chaos gripping the rest of the Middle East. Fighting has also erupted in Lebanon as Israel smashes Hizbullah, Iran’s main proxy. France and Britain will defend their bases from attack. On March 4th NATOair defences shot down an Iranian missile bound for Turkey. Another consequence is economic. Iran has tried to shut the Strait of Hormuz, cutting off perhaps 20% of global oil supplies. It has also struck energy infrastructure, including the world’s biggest gas-liquefaction complex and Saudi Arabia’s largest refinery. The price of Brent crude is up by 14% since February 27th, to $83 a barrel. A megawatt-hour of natural gas in Europe costs €54 ($63), over 70% more than last week. As Asian buyers scramble for supplies, prices could go higher. The global economy could yet suffer a hit. If oil reaches $100 a barrel, GDP growth could be lowered by 0.4 percentage points and inflation raised by 1.2 points.
  • The third potential consequence is chaos inside Iran. Roughly 40% of its 90m people belong to ethnic minorities, including Arabs, Azeris, Baluchis, Kurds and Lurs. The Arab spring showed how countries can fall apart. America and Israel are putting pressure on the regime by backing Kurdish insurgents—a reckless idea that could end up stoking Persian nationalism or civil war. Mr Trump may not care about this, but he could not ignore the effects spilling over Iran’s borders into the Gulf states, Iraq, Syria and Turkey…”



After eight years in this mad house, I’ve seen it all – including surprising friendships

Alexandra aka Sasha reflects on eight years at the Bear Pit


When I became the Crown Employee at the Bear Pit Johnny Johnson suggested that you do not have to be mad to work at NSW Parliament House, but it helps… I survived 21 years 


Librarian and Committee apparatchik, Catherine Watson, in her emails in early 2000s  confirmed that it helped to be crazy to thrive in the Parliamentary corridors of power ;-) 


After eight years in this mad house, I’ve seen it all – including surprising friendships

Alexandra Smith State Political Editor March 26, 2026

In the dead of night, an MP turned up to NSW Parliament House in his underpants. He’d forgotten his house keys, apparently. The most popular premier in recent memory had a secret dodgy boyfriend who ruined her political career at the height of a global pandemic. Her replacement, it emerged, had worn a Nazi uniform to his 21st. He survived the scandal, despite the best efforts of his own party colleagues who were behind the salacious leak.
If I were to write a memoir of my eight years as state political editor of the Herald, I reckon a publisher would class it as a piece of fiction. There is simply no stranger, more dysfunctional workplace than NSW Parliament House. As I hang up my hat this week and move to a new role at the Herald, I have been reflecting on some of the greatest hits in my time in the mad house.
A wild ride: Former premier Gladys Berejiklian and her ex-partner Daryl Maguire, centre. Clockwise from top left, short-lived Labor leader Jodi McKay, former premier Dominic Perrottet, ex-Labor leader Luke Foley, jailed former Liberal MP Gareth Ward, Fred Nile with Alex Greenwich, and 90-minute upper house president Natasha Maclaren-Jones. GRAPHIC: MONIQUE WESTERMANN
I swear all tales are true.
It was 2020 and NSW Labor had a year earlier been embroiled in a corruption scandal involving a Chinese developer and wads of cash in an Aldi shopping bag. Shaoquett Moselmane, the party’s little-known upper house MP, caused an almighty stir when his Parliament House office and Rockdale home were sensationally raided by ASIO and federal police. A spy for China in Macquarie Street? You can imagine the shock. Moselmane was swiftly booted from the ALP, although he was almost as swiftly returned to the fold when it emerged it was his staffer John Zhang – not Moselmane – who was of interest to security officials. Neither has been charged. Onwards and upwards.
Jodi McKay was Labor leader at the time. The one-time newsreader had replaced Michael Daley after his infamous racist gaffe weeks out from the 2019 election when he claimed young Sydneysiders were fleeing the city and being replaced by “Asians with PhDs”. He apologised profusely, but the damage was done. Labor lost that election.
Daley had been parachuted into the job because a drunk Luke Foley was forced to quit politicsafter putting his hand down the dress of then ABC journalist Ashleigh Raper. Eventually, Chris Minns took on the Labor leadership, although it took three attempts, including one ill-fated shot when a senior party figure quipped the now premier had so few supporters they “could fit into the front seat of a Suzuki Swift”.
The Liberals have churned through leaders, too. Gladys Berejiklian became a beloved figure after her handling of bushfires and COVID. But the state was shocked when it emerged she had been dating fellow MP Daryl Maguire. The announcement of an ICAC investigation into whether the premier breached the public trust by keeping the relationship a secret forced her resignation.
Heir apparent Dominic Perrottet replaced Berejiklian, although he had a scare just before the 2023 election when fellow Liberals turned on him and threatened to release a photo from his 21st birthday, at which he dressed in a Nazi uniform. Said photo never materialised. Perrottet lost the 2023 election and Mark Speakman took over. Speakman lasted less than two years in the job before he was replaced by Kellie Sloane. 

Leadership rumblings have always featured on Macquarie Street. In 2021, Liberal MLC Natasha Maclaren-Jones stormed the president’s chair in the upper house, staging a sit-in, after an unedifying five-week spat over the rightful successor to retiring Liberal president John Ajaka. Maclaren-Jones lasted 90 minutes as president, the shortest tenure in history, before she was booted from the chair amid unruly scenes. She was replaced by a Liberal bloke, Matthew Mason-Cox, who was promptly expelled from the party for having the audacity to run against premier Berejiklian’s pick, Maclaren-Jones.
There have been one-hit wonders, too. The first and only time anyone had heard of ex-Liberal MLC Lou Amato was when he tried to team with like-minded conservative MPs Tanya Davies and Mason-Cox to overthrow Berejiklian, who was popular but had not yet hit the highs of her COVID era. It was 2019 and Berejiklian was in Europe on a trade trip, with press gallery journalists in tow. Back in NSW, with the boss out of the country, the Coalition government was tearing itself apart over laws to decriminalise abortion. Amato, Davies and Mason-Cox declared Berejiklian’s support for the laws was so outrageous that they would move a spill motion against her. It failed before it started. Amato was forever after known as “Lou who?”
There have been spectacular own goals, too. Blue Mountains Labor MP Trish Doyle accused a Nationals MP of texting a sex worker during question time to offer her $1000 to come to Parliament House. Michael Johnsen named himself as the accused MP and resigned amid allegations, which he denied, that he had raped the same woman. Police investigated those claims but the Director of Public Prosecutions found insufficient evidence to proceed with charges. Johnsen’s departure forced a byelection in his seat of Upper Hunter. Labor expected to win. It didn’t. The Nationals held the seat – and it ended McKay’s leadership.
In 2024, Gareth Ward, the once-popular Liberal member for Kiama, arrived at Parliament House at 4am in his underpants, explaining that he was there to collect keys because he had locked himself out of his home. Ward is now serving time in jail for sexually abusing two young men. Former Pittwater MP Rory Amon, meanwhile, is awaiting news on whether he will face a retrial after a jury cleared him of eight of 10 charges relating to the alleged sexual abuse of a 13-year-old boy.
However, amid the crimes and corruption, the political machinations and dirty tricks, I have also seen the best in people. One of the longest serving MPs in this place was the moral crusader Fred Nile, who had been known for praying for the heavens to open on the night of the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras – literally to rain on its parade. Nile’s nemesis was the gay independent member for Sydney, Alex Greenwich, who led the campaign for same-sex marriage. They agreed on nothing. Until 2022, when the pair formed the most unlikely alliance through a shared passion for Indigenous rights and reconciliation.
After the 2023 election, former federal Labor leader Mark Latham, now in the NSW upper house, tweeted a vile, homophobic remark about Greenwich. Nile jumped to the defence of his former foe and declared “Alex is loved”.
Despite its quirkiness and eclectic characters, NSW Parliament is too often seen as the poor, unsophisticatedcousin to Canberra. The B-team, if you like. In reality, state parliament has a massive impact on our lives. Macquarie Street keeps the trains running, the schools open and the hospitals operating. We could not survive without it. It’s been a wild, wonderful ride.
Alexandra Smith is state political editor.

Thursday, March 26, 2026

IRS agent, Frank Wilson

 Shoot, he wasn't even the most important agent in the fight against Al Capone. The man we SHOULD be lionizing is IRS agent, Frank Wilson


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


ICE Turns to Private Industry to Track Down 100,000 Unaccompanied Children

Project Salt Box: [March 11, 2026], “ICE ERO released a request for proposals (RFP) on SAM.gov requesting contractor support to “conduct safety and wellness checks of an estimated 100,000 unaccompanied alien children (UAC) across the US.” Labeled as the “Safety Verification Initiative,” this RFP is the latest development in a year’s long campaign by ICE to track down UAC who were encountered by DHS and subsequently released from the care and custody of the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Refugee Resettlement. While the initiative is framed as a way to ensure the safety and well-being of this subset of children by performing wellness checks, immigrant advocates warn that it functions as yet another loophole to reinstate backdoor family separation. ICE officials have already been carrying out so‑called welfare checks nationwide with the stated goal of protecting children, but reporters and advocates have documented that these operations are being used to locate children for deportation and to target their sponsors for immigration enforcement or criminal prosecution. In practice, this means visits that are presented as “safety” checks can end with children removed from their homes and returned to federal custody, or with parents and caregivers arrested while children are left behind…”

See also Project Salt Box: The federal government has purchased a Salt Lake City warehouse for $145.4 million to house an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facility, property records show — completing a deal that the building’s owner had publicly and emphatically rejected less than two months ago. The deed, recorded with Salt Lake County on March 11, transfers ownership of the Gardner Logistics Center on the city’s west side from RREEF CPIF 6020 W 300 S, LLC — an entity connected to the Ritchie Group, a family-owned Utah real estate developer — to the United States Department of Homeland Security. ICE is listed as the acquiring federal agency. The sale is a stunning reversal. In January, after roughly 100 protesters gathered outside the warehouse and Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall warned the facility would violate city zoning codes, the Ritchie Group declared it had “no plans to sell or lease the property in question to the federal government.” Salt Lake County Mayor Jenny Wilson called the announcement a relief, saying “a facility that potentially houses 7,500 detainees has no place in an urban area.” At the time, a combination of public pressure and bureaucratic maneuvering appeared to have killed the deal. It had not. The property, located near Salt Lake City International Airport and surrounded by Amazon and Walmart distribution facilities, would add 7,500 beds to ICE’s national detention network — one of the single largest expansions of the agency’s capacity in years…”



Archive directory unlocks secrets of world’s knowledge repositories

“For the first time, journalists and researchers have a searchable directory of over 1,500 of the world’s knowledge repositories. 

The new publication is from Newsjunkie.net, the data-journalism resource known for its “Who’s Behind the News” reporting. Guide to Public Archives II, a fully revised and expanded directory of the world’s artifact and document repositories, is designed to help journalists and scholars quickly and easily locate essential research materials. 

The updated guide now includes a full representation of essential archives from major institutions such as the Library of Congress and the Vatican Apostolic Archive to regional and specialized collections devoted to particular communities, disciplines, and eras, such as the Timorese Resistance Archive. Each entry has been significantly expanded, with richer descriptions, improved structure, and more detailed information on collections, access policies, and contact points. The Guide to Public Archives II has never been more necessary. 

It arrives at a moment of heightened urgency around the preservation of public records. As federal agencies remove datasets, government websites are compromised by misinformation, and historical records whitewashed, archivists, researchers, and journalists need a destination untarnished by ideology. The Guide to Public Archives II is a permanent, free reference to the world’s institutions that hold the record of human activity not altered by prejudice or partisanship…

The current system for carving up the GST is busted - Michael Hudson: Iran, Israel, and World War III

This is the first comment to the Productivity Commission’s inquiry into how GST revenue – about $100 billion a year  is shared among the states and territories.
“WA already pay more GST contributions than all of Australia. We desperately need more GST to fix our critically ill hospital and health system, our schools are crumbling, lacking the funding to fix them and infrastructure including house [sic] is desperately lacking,” the West Australian resident notes.

The GST is broken, and hurting NSW and Victoria badly


The NSW treasurer wants to “stop the rip-off” of GST arrangements, calling for wholesale changes to the way the tax revenue is distributed each year.

Commenting on the state government’s submission to an inquiry into GST reform, led by the Productivity Commission, Daniel Mookhey said current settings were complex and opaque.

The treasurer proposed a per capita distribution, which he said would remove a possible drag on the productive capacity of the national economy.

“The current system for carving up the GST is busted.

Mookhey calls for GST formula reset, end to NSW ‘carrying the Federation’


Dr Cope is pleased as he always argued that more professional women should be in Librarian Leadership
A public servant who began Alison’s career with the National Library of Australia as a graduate 20 years ago has been chosen as the institution’s next director-general.


BBC and NWA: the day ABC staff went on strike – and left Aunty looking ‘a bit different’

Triple J signed off with the hip-hop anthem Express Yourself while other radio and TV networks filled the air with BBC broadcasts, re-runs and soothing music


Federal Cyber Experts Thought Microsoft’s Cloud Was “a Pile of Shit.” They Approved It Anyway.


A year after Trump administration cuts, Voice of America and its sister outlets are mostly shadows of their former selves

Layoffs, lawsuits and lost trust have left US-funded global news outlets diminished, creating openings for authoritarian leaders abroad


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


Michael Hudson: Iran, Israel, and World War III

Michael Hudson provides a deep dive into US foreign policy and its use of dollar dominance.


The Epistemic Break of the Iran War

The Iran War is shattering the U.S. illusion of power, breaking truths that are being replaced by AI models and creating an epistemic collapse


2026 World Cup Tax Implications

Bloomberg Law: FIFA 2026 World Cup Blows the Whistle on Complex Tax Risks