Thursday, February 19, 2026

Renaissance Tours celebrated 30 years in 2025 - How $40-a-Pack Cigarettes Pushed Australians to the Black Market

 “When they say no one is coming to save you, they don’t mean nobody will help you with the challenges you face. They mean no one can save you from yourself.”


LOUIS XIV’S FINANCE minister, Jean-Baptiste Colbert, famously declared that “the art of taxation consists in so plucking the goose as to obtain the largest possible amount of feathers with the smallest possible amount of hissing.” When it comes to taxing companies, a modern finance minister might rephrase this as “the largest possible amount of revenue with the smallest possible amount of economic and political damage.”


 Extractive taxes were indeed a major force behind the French Revolution



How $40-a-Pack Cigarettes Pushed Australians to the Black Market

Tax hikes made cigarettes in Australia the most expensive in the world. They have also helped fuel a multibillion-dollar criminal enterprise in bootleg tobacco.

A retired math teacher descended into an underground parking lot in search of her dealer, cash in hand.
Headlights flashed from the far end of the garage in a beachside, middle-class neighborhood in suburban Melbourne, Australia. She walked up to an unmarked van and soon was back above ground with the illicit goods.
A carton of cigarettes.

Australia has the most expensive cigarettes in the world, a pack of midmarket cigarettes costing on average about 55 Australian dollars, or almost $40, nearly double what it will set you back in New York City. A series of steep tax hikes — eight in 10 years — were put in place to reduce the rate of smoking, which has steadily declined. But the high prices have also given rise to a thriving black market now estimated to be a multibillion-dollar industry that accounts for as much as half of all tobacco sales in the country…


 Inside the Debacle That Led to the Closure of El Paso’s Airspace
NYT
 OpenAI is Making the Mistakes Facebook Made. I quit.
Zoe Hitzig
 America Isn't Ready for What AI Will Do to Jobs
The Boston Globe
 ChatGPT's Memory Feature Supercharges Prompt Injection
DarkReading
 Lawsuit against Tesla reveals harrowing 911 call as driver trapped in burning car
The Boston Globe
 Hackers Publish Personal Information Stolen During Harvard, UPenn Data Breaches
Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai
 European Commission Breached
Tom Allen
 When Prison Body Scanners Mistake Tampons and Piercings for Contraband
NYTimes
 Look for a citation
WSJ
 Risks of naive AI
Rob Slade with picky PGN comments
 Re: New Site Lets AI Rent Human Bodies
Martin Ward
 Dave Farber passed away at 91
sundry
 Info on RISKS (comp.risks)
 => SUBMISSIONS: to risks@CSL.sri.com with meaningful SUBJECT: line that
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 Info on RISKS (comp.risks)

Western countries see World War III coming

If you have more than you need, build a longer table, not a higher fence.


Open source intelligence (OSINT) uses publicly available information, such as social media posts, online marketplace listings, and corporate filings. Investigators compare this material with statements made in tax returns and benefit applications.


The mega-rich are giving up on luxury assets. Forget fine wine, great art and glitzy mansions. The Economist’s senior economics writer, Callum Williams, explores the growth in ultra-luxury services: econ.st/4s0ptKT


The author is Brendan Greeley, and the subtitle is 500 Years of the World’s Most Powerful Money.  A very well-timed book, excellent on the history of the dollar as it spans the centuries, I was happy to write a blurb for it.


John Fabian Witt, Allen H. Duffy Class of 1960 Professor of Law and Professor of History at Yale brings us The Radical Fund: How a Band of Visionaries and a Million Dollars Upended America, which tells the tale of how a young heir, Charles Garland, used his fortune to found the American Fund for Public Service




If ICE Pulls You Over, Say These 4 Words Immediately (LAWYER Explains) YouTube. Sadly, news you can use. There are others in this genre, but this one is short and hammers in what to say.


Website that leaked thousands of ICE agents’ personal information is down after huge ‘Russian cyberattack,’ 

founder says Founder of ICE List believes the ‘sophisticated’ cyberattack could have originated in Russia



Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Please stop asking me when I’m going to retire’

 

Please stop asking me when I’m going to retire’

Sixty-year-old Celine Egan says her executive career is shifting into high gear – so why is everybody asking her about when she plans to leave?

“I look at my next decade as being my best ever”, says Celine Egan. Chris Elfes

When Celine Egan was appointed chief of dietary supplement company Juice Plus in her late 50s, she felt like she was hitting her stride. She had four decades of experience behind her in the direct sales industry and a fresh perspective on life as a new grandmother.

But instead of being asked what her growth strategy was, people began to ask her a different question: “When are you going to retire?”

“People’s expectations of you as a woman seem to be that as you get older, you’re going to retire and stay home and be the grandmother,” says Egan, who is now 60. “It annoys me. I don’t believe a man would be asked the same questions because they hit a certain age.”

The data indicates she’s correct. Despite the retirement age gap narrowing between men and women over the past two decades, women are still exiting the workforce earlier than men. This departure often occurs when many women are hitting their peak professionally, resulting in a substantial revenue and productivity leak for the economy.

Analysis by investment firm Challenger shows the average age for exiting the workforce in Australia has climbed for both genders since 2000, rising from about 59 to 64 for women and from 61 to 65 for men.

But even as Australians stay at their desks longer, the age at which companies perceive you to be “old” has dropped by a full decade over the past five years. An Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) report on age discrimination in the workforce last year suggested 51 was the new age at which hiring managers would clock a prospective recruit as “old”.

For women, age discrimination hits differently than for men. Separate research by the AHRC found peers perceived older women as “having outdated skills, being slow to learn new things, or doing an unsatisfactory job” at a far greater rate (51 per cent) than older men (38 per cent).

The C-suite squeeze

The age bias is perhaps most visible at the very top. The average age for a male ASX 50 chief executive in 2025 was 56.4 years; the average age of a female chief executive in that group was 55.1 years. And while male chief executives were spread across a broad range of ages, from their late 40s to early 70s, the women were much more tightly clustered around 55.

The tenure for women is also shorter. Analysis from The Australian Financial Review shows female chief executives of ASX 200 companies average four years and one month in the top job, compared to nearly six years for men.

Egan, who moved to Australia in her twenties from Dublin as a direct seller of Tupperware and built a career while raising a family, grandchildren and balancing a marriage, is pushing back.

She says her age and experience are her biggest assets.

“I have literally worked from the ground up to be where I am now,” she says.
“I’m probably at the stage of life where I look at my next decade as being my best ever. I’m looking at now turning the decades of experience that I’ve had into my greatest advantage, and actually leveraging that rather than walking away from it.”

Christine Khor, the founder and chief executive of executive coaching firm Peeplcoach, says women at Egan’s age are often at their most powerful professionally because they had reached a radical stage of self-acceptance. They typically also no longer have young children to raise.

“So it’s a stage of, ‘You know what? I’m not putting up with this. I’m going to say what I need to say. I’ve earned my stripes now. I don’t need to be liked any more,’” Khor says.

However, she notes that many women still struggle with internal criticism that stems from societal expectations, which can hold them back from life-altering decisions, such as going for a promotion.

Khor said the key for women who want to push themselves further in their careers but are grappling with internal voices or self-doubt is to ask themselves: “Who said that?”

“We make up things in our heads. ‘Oh, I can’t do this because my friends will judge me. My husband will get upset with me, or my children will somehow miss out.’

“I always say to my clients, both men and women, what role modelling do you want to show? How do you want to turn up in the world? How do you want to be seen?”

The challenges for women aren’t just confined to career progression.

The workplace wealth gap

Jonathan Kearns, Challenger’s chief economist, says women in opposite-sex couples often retire prematurely to match an older partner’s timeline or are forced out of work at multiple stages to look after children, grandchildren or ageing parents.

Coupled with longer life expectancies, the result is women spending, on average, 20 years in retirement compared with 15 years for men.

“So that’s a significant challenge for women, who are spending more time in retirement, and yet many of them have fewer years in the workforce, and so less opportunity to save for retirement and less in their superannuation balances,” says Kearns.

According to data from the Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA), women had an average super balance of $313,360 by the time they reached the ages of 60 to 64, compared to a man’s $395,852.

A Workplace and Gender Equality Agency report released last year found that women, on average, earned about $1.5 million less than men over the course of their careers, representing a substantial loss in potential tax revenue.

Jess Brady, a money educator, says women should take stock of their finances, such as determining when a mortgage or any other outstanding debts will be paid off, as early as possible to give them the maximum amount of flexibility later in life.

“We want people to work because they want to, not because they have to,” she says.

Egan, who started taking her own finances seriously when she was in her thirties, has introduced financial literacy training for her own employees.

“For the women, especially the older ladies, the men in their lives typically took care of all the finances, and whether they’re now dead or they’re divorced, now suddenly they’re needing to look at it,” she says.

As life expectancies climb, Brady says the traditional approach to retirement is being reimagined, with more retirees opting for part-time consulting, charity work or board roles.

She says this means people entering retirement age can afford to be a little bit riskier with their investing, despite conventional wisdom arguing for a conservative approach.

“Most people have decades of life expectancy left, and so looking at what we call a bucketing style approach to allocating your money into short-, medium- and long-term investments might be more appropriate.”

Older workers present a productivity opportunity

As outlined in Treasury’s 2023 Intergenerational Report, as Australia’s population ages and the labour participation rate decreases, the economy will need a greater utilisation of its most experienced workers.

Australia’s median age rose from 33.4 in 1994 to 38.3 as of June 2024, and by 2071 is projected be as high as 47.6 years. While the prevailing narrative suggests that workforces become less productive as they age, one recent study found the opposite.

A survey of 1450 workers conducted by the London School of Economics and global consulting firm Protiviti across the finance, technology and professional services industries in Britain and the US found that Gen Z and Millennials self-reported the highest levels of “low productivity” at 37 per cent and 30 per cent, respectively, compared to only 14 per cent of Baby Boomers.

The study concluded that workplace productivity isn’t about age, but rather whether a company knows how to bridge the gap between generations.

Egan says she’s witnessed first-hand the benefits of a multi-generation workforce across her organisation’s more than 3500 employees in Australia and New Zealand, which she says is intentional about breaking down age barriers through its hiring processes.

She says her company has everyone from young mothers in their early twenties to franchisees in their mid-seventies on its books.

“The younger employees will lean into the older ones’ experience, while the older ones will lean into the younger ones’ newer ways of doing things. Both cohorts learn from each other,” she says.

Egan says she herself plans to work for as long as her mind and body will allow her.

“I’m planning on living to 102 because my grandmother lived to 102, and I told her I would beat her. I’m planning to be around for a lot longer,” she says.