Friday, November 07, 2025

Pentagon Directs All 50 States to Form National Guard Rapid-Response Units to Target ‘Civil Unrest’

 

Who’s on your Wi-Fi?

Just enter an IP range, click Start, and let the scan do its thing. When the scan finishes up, right-click any detected device to open its Windows shares or connect via FTP. 

Angry IP Scanner also shows MAC addresses, which are unique strings of numbers and letters used to identify each device, and gives you several options for managing or exploring your network.

Pentagon Directs All 50 States to Form National Guard Rapid-Response Units to Target ‘Civil Unrest’

The Hill: “The troops are to be trained in how to “form Squad-sized Riot Control Formation,” how to “employ a Riot Baton as a Member of a Riot Control Formation,” and how to “Supervise a Riot/Crowd Control Operation,” as well as de-escalation of force techniques, according to the memo…”

A link to the memo is here

@parnasperspective via ABCGo: “The Pentagon has directed all 50 states to establish National Guard rapid-response units aimed at addressing civil unrest, a move that has raised concerns about the militarization of law enforcement and the potential for abuse of power. Critics argue that this approach blurs the lines between military and civilian law enforcement roles. Overview of National Guard Rapid-Response Units.


National Guard in each state is ordered to create ‘quick reaction forces’ trained in civil unrest AP


Border Patrol takes lead role in Trump administration’s Chicago crackdown, carrying out more arrests than ICE CBS News


ICE Is Now Wandering the Streets, Scanning People’s Faces to Check If They’re CitizensFuturism

‘Synthetic’ identity theft blends real and fake data to fool lenders

Musk, Meta and IDF named “Press Freedom Predators” by Reporters Without BordersDagens.com


Trump White House limits reporters’ access to staff offices in latest move restricting press coverage Fox News

 

Miami investor used fraud to buy dozens of Boeing 737s, FBI says Seattle Times

 

‘Synthetic’ identity theft blends real and fake data to fool lenders Better Business Bureau





Serious concerns, widespread bullying': DPS staff demand answers from secretary 

Disgruntled staff from the Department of Parliamentary Services will have their concerns put to Secretary Jaala Hinchcliffe at a long-awaited Senate estimates hearing on Friday.


The Unholy Trio of Thinkers at the Heart of MAGA

Carl Schmitt, Antonio Gramsci and Samuel Francis each dreamed of destroying classical liberalism. That’s becoming a reality.

Thursday, November 06, 2025

Mamdani - Everyone Is Laying People Off This Week

Thank you, my friends. The sun may have set over our city this evening, but as Eugene Debs once said, 'I can see the dawn of a better day for humanity.'


New York Election Results Map: How Mamdani Got 1 Million Votes Across City


America’s Dumbest Billionaires Fail to Stop Zohran Mamdani. “…a bunch of rich guys who have been comically out of touch with normal people for many decades, and more recently have blowtorched their brains into a smoking pile of ash on Twitter…”


Eddie Obeid, Ian Macdonald and Moses Obeid appeal convictions over corrupt coal licence deal in High Court


What can Australia learn from Norway's approach to taxing resources?


Leaked: How British Intel Infiltrates Lebanon Kit Klarenberg


The Trump Doctrine: If We Don’t Like Ya We’ll Kill Ya Mark Wauck


How Bible Sales and Chipotle Explain the Economy Kyla Scanlon


Portland says ‘manufactured crisis’ spurred Trump’s National Guard bid as trial begins The Hill

 

The White House ballroom saga could be worse for Trump than he realizes CNN

 

Trump fires federal arts board in charge of reviewing White House ballroom and ‘Arc de Trump’ The Guardian

 

A new low for Trump approval, government spending, institutional trust, No Kings, and daylight time: October 24 – 27, 2025 Economist/YouGov Poll YouGov


Why Elon Musk could leave Tesla, and why it might actually happen The Street

 

How Elon Musk and JD Vance plan to ‘save civilization’ with more babies NPR

 

Grokipedia vs. Wikipedia: See how Elon Musk’s encyclopedia describes 5 hot-button topicsBusiness Insider


What Karine Jean-Pierre’s disastrous book tour exposes about Biden loyalism MSNBC

 

A lot of Americans think the Democratic Party is out of touch Tri-State Alert


Keeping up with 2025 executive orders and related litigation

Via LLRX – Keeping up with 2025 executive orders and related litigation – As of October 1, 2025, Donald Trump has signed a total of 210 executive orders during his current administration. 

Attorneys in many areas of practice need to know how to keep up with the latest EOs, as these orders may impact the funding, operations, staff or rights of the companies, individuals, and organizations they represent.

 Those who typically practice outside of federal administrative law may be less familiar with researching EOs, beyond what they learned in law school. Law Librarian, attorney and educator Michelle M. LaLonde’sguide pinpoints key primary and secondary sources to keep pace with this torrent of government documents.


Data Brokers Explained: Steps to protect your data

YouTube – Data brokerage is a billion-dollar industry built on selling your personal information without your knowledge or consent. In this video, we uncover the shady world of data brokers with investigative reporter Yael Grauer (Consumer Reports) to find out how they operate and what you can do about it. Timestamps as follows for specific topics covered


Everyone Is Laying People Off This Week. Researchers Say They’re Going to Regret It

Gizmodo: “The nation’s largest employers are doing a lot less employing lately. In recent weeks, Amazon announced it would cut 14,000 jobs, Paramount axed 1,000 peopleTarget let go of 1,800 employees, UPS said it will start a purge of 14,000 people with the aim of getting rid of 48,000 workers in total, and Meta laid off around 600 people from its AI lab. 



Why every website you used to love is getting worse

Vox: “TikTok and airlines have something in common with your search engine, your grocery app, and (increasingly) your car: They start out great, lock you in, and then quietly get worse while you keep using them. 


That very familiar decline now has a catchy name: “enshittification.” Cory Doctorow has been writing about this for decades as a journalist, activist with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and science-fiction author. His new book, Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It, is a field guide to how platforms decay, why they get away with it, and what it will take to reverse course.


 I invited Doctorow onto The Gray Area to map the lifecycle of a platform, explain the policy choices that made today’s tech feudalism possible, and outline the structural fixes that could make the internet (and the economy around it) less extractive and more humane. As always, there’s much more in the full podcast, so listen and follow The Gray Area on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora, or wherever you find podcasts. New episodes drop every Monday…”

Wednesday, November 05, 2025

Big four consulting firms targeted by new Senate inquiry

‘This may not end well for you’: The secret war behind the PwC inquiry -Neil Chenoweth Jun 3, 2024


Big four consulting firms targeted by new Senate inquiry

Anyone from a major firm listening to the Senate would have gasped in horror. Plus: Which firm exited 11 over their conduct, and who won audits from EY.

Welcome to Professional Life, our free weekly newsletter covering the latest news, moves, and partner promotions for consulting and accounting experts. Sign up here to get it direct to your inbox every Wednesday before it appears online.

Today, we look at the silent reading of a report that will have big four bosses screaming loudly; it’s seventh time unlucky for the ATO official who led the probe into the PwC tax leaks scandal; and EY exits 11 for misconduct. Finally, KPMG has a new phrase to help it avoid “doing a Deloitte”. In this week’s issue:
Gasps of silent horror from the Senate; tax scandal investigator sidelined EY exits 11 over misconduct; R&D tax breaks for pizza and pokies
Professional moves: Murdoch’s confidant cuts ties AI and the professions: 150 ex-consultants train AI models to do the job #REF!: “Building trust at scale” is the new buzzword Big four consulting firms targeted by new Senate inquiry

An inquiry will be held into a bill sponsored by Greens senator Barbara Pocock. Bethany Rae

Just after 11:20am last Thursday, Labor senator Karen Grogan stood up in the Senate to present the “seventh report for 2025 of the Selection of Bills Committee”.


With little fanfare, the report was “read” into Hansard but not read aloud. If it had been, and if anyone from a major firm had been listening, they would have gasped in horror.
The report revealed yet another parliamentary inquiry into the major consulting firms.
This time, the inquiry relates to a bill from Greens senator Barbara Pocock – the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Amendment (Ban Unethical Contractors) Bill 2025.
A Senate committee will examine the bill, which seeks to ban dodgy contractors from Commonwealth work for up to five years, and report back by March 17 next year. The inquiry will accept written submissions until December 12 on its website.
The committee will have the power, but not the obligation, to call firm leaders to provide evidence as part of its inquiry. Given how these senior figures from PwCKPMGDeloitte and EY have struggled during past inquisitions, I can already hear the CEOs and their teams screaming into the void. These inquiries are costly, time-consuming and are often embarrassing for the firms and their leaders.
Pocock’s bill is directly related to the Department of Finance’s decision to lift its ban on PwC working for the government. It was a move opposed by Pocock, Labor senator Deborah O’Neill and Liberal senator Richard Colbeck (the three key senators who led inquiries into the PwC tax leaks scandal).
Pocock is unapologetic.
“When the government allowed PwC back into the tender process, it betrayed the Australian public who rightly expected they would be held to account for colluding with multinationals to dodge taxes,” she says. “This gutless decision seriously undermined confidence in government procurement.”
Pocock says the “inquiry will examine the current loopholes within government contracting that allow unethical contractors” to continue winning government work.
“It’s unacceptable that the government must rely on the wrongdoer to agree to banning itself from undertaking future government contracts,” she says.
There are no guarantees about the inquiry’s outcome, who will be called to give evidence, or whether the bill will ever become law. However, the topics likely to be canvassed will cover governance and other issues relating to the operations of the four firms.
That means possible lines of inquiry include the new multipronged investigations by the Tax Practitioners Board into PwC’s tax division; Deloitte’s AI report debacle; and EY’s 2023 decision to fire a partner who got into a bar fight.
EY’s recent energy report may also come up, as well as the work the firms, including KPMG, are doing for the university sector.
ATO official who pursued PwC over tax scandal moved to charities regulator
Tax Practitioners Board chief executive Michael O’Neillwill become a “specialist adviser” to the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission from November 24, according to an all-staff email sent by Tax Commissioner Rob Heferen last Wednesday.
O’Neill famously led the probe into the leaking of confidential government information by PwC partners, and had, until last week, survived six previous attempts to sideline or sack him while he led the tiny agency’s broader investigation into PwC, despite opposition from the Australian Taxation Office.
The attempts included claims that O’Neill was acting illegally in investigating PwC and three unsubstantiated bullying claims against him.
In a startling piece of timing, the executive move was announced the day after The Australian Financial Review revealed details of new investigations into PwC stemming from its scandal over the leak of confidential government tax information.
The new inquiries will now continue without O’Neill, one of the nation’s most experienced tax investigators. The inquiries include assessing whether PwC’s advisers misused legal professional privilege to stymie probes into their conduct, and allegations that the firm misled the Foreign Investment Review Board over whether company restructures were done to cut tax bills.
An ATO spokesman said executive changes were “a regular part of our strategy to build diverse experience and enhance leadership” at the agency. Tax Practitioners Board chairman Peter de Cure congratulated O’Neill “on his appointment to the important new role at the ACNC and for his significant achievements as CEO and secretary of the TPB”.
In a statement received after deadline last Wednesday, Assistant Treasurer Dr Daniel Mulino said the decision to move O’Neill was made entirely by the ATO.
“Senior staffing decisions for the ATO, Tax Practitioners Board and the Australian Charities and Not-for-profit Commission are the responsibility of the independent Commissioner of Taxation,” Mulino said.
“The Tax Practitioners Board has played a critical role in holding PwC to account and the government fully supports its work.
“We note this significant contribution of outgoing CEO Michael O’Neill in this regard and look forward to his ongoing contribution in his new position at the charities regulator – another important part of our regulatory architecture.
“The ATO will continue its longstanding practice of supporting the Tax Practitioners Board through the secondment of senior staff, including the CEO role, which reports directly to the chair of the independent Board.”

EY exits 11 over conduct

EY exited 11 individuals for misconduct after receiving almost 100 complaints in 2024-25, according to the firm’s “Value Realised Scorecard”.
The report, released last week, said “seven complaints resulted in the respondent exiting the organisation, with four of these exits being involuntary”. The complaints included 29 about interpersonal conflict, 22 for bullying and 17 related to sexual harassment.
This brings the total number shown the door at the big four consulting firms to 46, according to their most recent disclosures.
The big firms began disclosing misconduct complaints, with different reporting methods and varied transparency, after a series of reports in The Australian Financial Reviewdetailed how they handled sexual harassment and other issues.
In 2023, EY published a landmark report into its workplace following the suicide of a staff member, which found staff felt overworked, bullied and harassed and were too scared to report bad behaviour.
The firm has now “embedded 21 of the 27 recommendations from the review”, Jenelle McMaster, EY regional deputy CEO and people and culture leader, said in the new scorecard report.
“Formal workplace complaints decreased to 96 from 126 in the prior year, suggesting a positive shift towards earlier, informal resolution,” she said.
EY did not supply comparable exit data in the scorecard report. The firm had 8986 staff as of 2024-25, down from 9665 in the previous year.

KPMG audit wins, R&D tax breaks

KPMG has replaced EY as corporate auditor for two notable listed companies.
Wesfarmers, a conglomerate whose retail businesses include Priceline, Officeworks and Target, has selected KPMG to replace EY as its corporate auditor from July 2027, subject to shareholder approval. The 2025 Wesfarmers audit was worth about $7.4 million in fees for EY.
In addition, shareholders of Magellan Financial Group have approved moving its audit from EY to KPMG. EY earned $1.3 million for the company’s 2025 audit.
Also, be sure to check out the new explainer about the research and development tax break by deputy newsletter editor (and former big four R&D tax expert) Daniel Arbon.
The piece dives into why taxpayers are subsidising gambling, alcohol and Domino’s novelty crusts amid a national innovation crisis.
In other news, The Australian Financial Review won the people’s choice award for “Accounting Industry Media of the Year” at the 2025 Australian Financial Industry Awards on Friday.
On my table at the event, run by the Institute of Financial Professionals Australia, was Above Advisory’s Molly Lim, who won the award for female financial professional of the year, and GDA Group Pty senior financial planner Michael Driessen, who took home three awards, including “Australian Financial Professional of the Year”. Lim has previously spoken to me about her love of accounting.
Finally, last week’s newsletter misspelt the name of Alice Yang, a senior manager at PwC Australia. Apologies.


Dating the boss found to boost pay (especially for men)



 

Dating the boss found to boost pay (especially for men)

Having a relationship with a higher-up in the workplace can increase income by 6 per cent, thanks to promotions, pay rises and other perks awarded due to nepotism.

Many a CEO has been ousted by an office romance.

As well as the infamous Coldplay “kiss cam” moment, which exposed the clandestine relationship between Astronomer boss Andy Byron and his head of human resources, Kristin Cabot, there seems to have been an inordinate number of red-faced resignations this year.


The then chief executive of Astronomer Andy Byron and its chief people officer at the time, Kristin Cabot, at the Coldplay concert. Aresna Villanueva


Nestlé chief executive Laurent Freixe lost his job in September after an investigation found he failed to disclose a romantic relationship with an employee. Only a year into the role, he was pushed out for violating the company’s code of business conduct.


According to workplace compliance-training platform Ethena, his departure is the eighth unexpected exit of a CEO in the European consumer sector since last September.
Closer to home, Anthony Heraghty, the boss of Super Retail, which owns Rebel Sport, was fired for lying to the board about an alleged relationship with his company’s former head of human resources, Jane Kelly.
Aside from the broken hearts and families, the fallout from sexual indiscretions, whether they are related to workplace sexual harassment or a relationship with a subordinate, can be pricey for shareholders, too.
A study of 219 examples of management misdeeds from 1978 to 2012 found that when the CEO was implicated, it could cost shareholders up to $US226 million ($348 million).

What happens when you date the boss?

But a new report flips the narrative from focusing on the reputational and financial fallout for a company and its CEO, to look at what happens to the subordinate in a workplace relationship, financially and career-wise.
It finds that dating someone in a superior position in the workplace can increase a subordinate’s earnings by 6 per cent, because of promotions, pay rises, and other perks awarded by the person in the higher role.
The nepotism also extends to skills attainment – the subordinate partner is found to gain extra mentoring and work support that might lead them to advance in the workplace based on merit.
The Impacts of Romantic Relationships with the Boss report, published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, is based on a study of cohabiting couples in Finland.
The study mostly focused on women in relationships with male managers, as these were found to account for the vast majority of manager/non-manager relationships, according to the report, but it also included a small sample of men who had entered or ended a relationship with a female manager. Same-sex couples were excluded from the analysis because the data was limited.
The study found that males who dated female managers experienced a larger boost to earnings than the other way around.
The study also looked at the decline in earnings experienced by a subordinate once a break-up occurred and found that this could trigger an abrupt 18 per cent earnings decline for women, which was found to persist for at least four years after the separation.
The estimated decline in earnings was found to be twice as large for men who broke up with a female workplace manager.
The reasons for the sharp decline in salary are that the subordinate worker is more likely to exit the place of employment once the relationship has ceased, and once they leave, they tend to make less advantageous firm-to-firm moves, the report says.

The spillover effect

The study also examines the spillover effect of manager-subordinate workplace relationships on the broader workforce and finds that many employees feel discomfort or resentment upon learning about a relationship at work.
They often attribute pay increases to favouritism rather than merit, which undermines morale and even leads to increased turnover rates.
“Every promotion, assignment, or disagreement can be viewed through the lens of favouritism or conflict of interest,” the authors write. “Higher earnings gains for those in relationships with a workplace manager could lead to resentment among coworkers who might (rightly or wrongly) view this as preferential treatment.”
According to the Society for Human Resource Management, more than two-thirds of HR professionals say the perception of favouritism or unfair treatment is their top concern regarding workplace romances.
“When we talk about the ripple effect, it’s not just people leaving. It affects productivity, team stability, and that’s a big cost to the bottom line,” says recruitment specialist and author Roxanne Calder.
“Even when it is out in the open, [the person in the relationship] might be privy to information that’s not fair, or be exposed to private conversations and confidential matters. They could have the heads-up on something that could be influential to the sharemarket, to pricing, to promotions, redundancies – anything that is sensitive in nature.
“Relationships are going to happen at work, but if people are aware of the risks, they can manage them, instead of it being an after-effect.”
In Australia, a study by employment website Seek found that one in four workers had been in a romantic relationship with a colleague, and office romances were most prevalent in white-collar industries.
In 2018, then prime minister Malcolm Turnbull introduced a policy prohibiting ministers from having sexual relationships with their staff, following a scandal involving then deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce and his staff member Vikki Campion. The aim of what was soon dubbed a “bonk ban” was to establish a more respectful workplace culture.
Gazelle Kalk, a legal adviser and head of content for employment law specialist Peninsula Australia, says that although organisations cannot prohibit or stop romantic relationships developing between colleagues, they should have a personal relationship policy in place, which workers are familiar with.
“As soon as an employee starts, they should be given an employee handbook, and within that, they should have some sort of office romance or personal relationship policy in place, so they understand what is expected of them,” Kalk says.
That should extend to sexual harassment and bullying as well, she adds.
“Making sure that there’s some sort of disclosure requirement to avoid any sort of conflict of interest that may arise, and in particular, if there is a power imbalance.
“If a manager is dating a subordinate, making sure everyone is treated fairly regarding the application of that policy is key and making sure there’s a culture of disclosure and transparency – and that can only be done through the use of a policy.”