Monday, December 08, 2025

The Politics of Big 4 Businesses: Tom Stoppard’s Language Blazed With Urgency

The only force more ruthless and cynical than the business of big politics is the politics of big business

~ Gregory David Roberts, Shantaram 

 

We’re pleased to welcome Andrew Orme as TPB Secretary from mid-January 2026. Andrew joins us from the Australian Taxation Office (ATO), and brings a wealth of experience, having spent 25 years working in the tax system. His career spans roles as a lawyer, policy analyst, and senior ATO leader, including Deputy Chief Tax Counsel. We also acknowledge and thank our outgoing Secretary, Michael O’Neill for his leadership and the significant reforms delivered during his tenure as Secretary.


St Valentines Day 2024: ATO chief denies trying to sack the man who led PWC investigation


ATO sidelines official who pursued PwC over tax scandal


The actor, who starred as a Marxist academic in the acclaimed 2006 play at the Royal Court, remembers an astonishing writer of ideas and elegance



Tom Stoppard’s Language Blazed With Urgency

“He loved his words to the point of mania and yet fretted over their inadequacy, making the mere act of speech seem somehow both heroic and doomed. He caused words to explode like fireworks, dazzling us with their bright, multicolored patterns.” - The New York Times

In Turbulent Times, An ‘Uneasy Book’ Might Be The Perfect Thing


Tessa Hadley: "Storytelling was the most powerful magic I knew: it got expressed first in the games I played out with my friends. Written down though, words were puny for such a long time.” Then came Henry James. - The Guardian (UK)

Major Studios Turned Down ‘Stranger Things’

And it’s become, essentially, Netflix’s Star Wars, “that anchor series that drives customer acquisition and helps define the original programming.” - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo)


From ChatGPT to strength training: Here’s how 100-year-olds are thriving NPR


The Super Weird, Remixed Way People Are Watching Old TV Shows

“People are sitting through one-to-two minute, out-of-order clips of TV shows and movies on social media, awkwardly cropped for the vertical format and often with terrible music blaring in the background.” Okaaaaaay. But the people who love them really love them. - Washington Post (MSN)

Actor Jason Schwartzman Loves The Library

“Everyone else is so calm, and everyone’s working or researching or something. It’s almost like a movie set, and I have to pretend I’m working, too. Everyone should have a library card. It’s like a bicycle but for your brain.” - The New York Times

Duo Decade of Nulla: A Sad Event for the Country’s Criminal Tax Enforcement System

Memories of living in the shire 20 years ago as the daughters used to swim at the Sutherland pool and boxing with Ian Thorpe … who is even taller than I am …


Cronulla riots 20 years on: have attitudes changed since that hot December day when racial tensions exploded?

Some say Australia still has not tackled racism, and fear social media is a more powerful tool than text messages and talkback radio that stirred up rioters in 2005



     "All is lost" narratives are popular because people generally do not want to take action. Taking action is tiring so if all is lost, you are off the hook. Nothing is more seductive than not having to do anything.

    India arrests nine in tech support call center targeting Australia


    Report Shows How Recycling Is Largely a ‘Toxic Lie’ Pushed by Plastics Industry

    More confirmation that recycling is no solution to relentlessly rising plastics use and health damage.


    Welcome to the jungle: Raids, arrests, and a crisis of EU credibility Euractiv


    Trump invites America’s wealthiest to fund his presidency Axios. Not news per se but good to have some tallies

     

     Chinese and Japanese Boats Have Standoff Near Disputed Islands as Tensions Increase


     Whistleblower accuses Foreign Office of ‘censoring’ warning of Sudan genocide The Guardian

     

    Hope on the Horizon: Farmers Anticipate ‘Bridge Payment’ Announcement AgWeb


    Lawmakers warn Trump administration against heavily redacting ‘Epstein files’

    Republicans in Congress privately made fun of Donald Trump only to come around to support him when he won their party’s 2024 White House nomination, outgoing GOP House member Marjorie Taylor Greene said on Sunday


    Maher jokes about Trump-Greene feud amid Epstein controversy: ‘Marjorie, welcome to the club’





    Lawmakers warn Trump administration against heavily redacting ‘Epstein files’

    They fear justice department could seek to withhold sections of documents as deadline approaches


    Stefania Palma in Washington 
     Published 7 Dec 2025

    Lawmakers and legal experts have warned the US Department of Justice against heavily redacting files linked to late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein as a Congressionally-mandated deadline approaches for their release. 

    The Epstein Files Transparency Act, enacted last month, ordered US attorney-general Pam Bondi to hand over all unclassified material in the Epstein case by December 19. It contains a provision for “permitted with-holdings”.

    “If her motive is to protect Trump either from embarrassment that his name is in the files in ways that still haven’t been revealed, or to protect him from criminal exposure . . . she’s got some leeway based on the exemptions that the law allows to continue to protect him,” said Paul Butler, professor at Georgetown Law.

    The furore intensified after emails released last month by Democrats on the House oversight committee included a note by Epstein saying Trump “spent hours at my house” with a woman later identified as a victim of sex trafficking. Trump has vigorously denied any involvement in Epstein’s crimes and has accused Democrats of having ties to the financier.


    Trump has been criticised by some in his Maga movement for failing to release the so-called Epstein files after pledging to do so during his campaign. Bondi in February told Fox News the financier’s client list was “sitting” on her desk
    The furore intensified after emails released last month by Democrats on the House oversight committee included a note by Epstein saying Trump “spent hours at my house”with a woman later identified as a victim of sex trafficking. Trump has vigorously denied any involvement in Epstein’s crimes and has accused Democrats of having ties to the financier. 
    The 30-day deadline to release the DoJ files is a test for the Trump administration as it tries to contain dissent among its most loyal backers. The issue led to the resignation of Republican congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, once one of the president’s loudest supporters. 
    The pushback came to a head last month when Congress passed the Epstein bill almost unanimously after Trump reversed his opposition to the release of the files to avoid an embarrassing congressional defeat.
    “The bill requires DoJ to declassify information to the fullest extent possible,” Ro Khanna, the Democratic lawmaker who co-sponsored the bill, told the Financial Times. 
    “Anything that is redacted has to be accompanied by a written justification published in the Federal Register and submitted to Congress. We will be watching this closely.”
    Pressure grew this week when Khanna and other supporters of the bill, including Republicans Thomas Massie and Lisa Murkowski, sent Bondi a letter seeking to discuss new information she said underpinned recently announced investigations into Democrats linked to Epstein.
    A spokesperson for Murkowski said the senator had signed the letter “to help ensure compliance with the legislation”.
    “The senator and her colleagues clearly outlined their expectations,” the spokesperson said. “They trust the Justice department will follow the law and fully release the files, while protecting the names and identities of any survivors.”
    According to the statute, Bondi may withhold or redact records that identify victims, contain child sexual abuse material or images of death. 
    She can also withhold information that, according to an executive order, should be “kept secret in the interest of national defence or foreign policy”. 
    Trump has signed a flurry of orders since returning to the White House in January, including sweeping tariffs implemented via emergency powers whose use the administration has justified on grounds of national security. 
    There are international links to the Epstein affair. The former Prince Andrew, brother of King Charles, has given up his royal titles over his relationship with Epstein and a woman who claimed she was abused by both men, an accusation he denies. 
    But issuing an order to limit a disclosure that received near-full congressional support may be politically thorny for the president.
    The White House said in a statement that Trump “has been consistently calling for transparency related to the Epstein files — by releasing thousands of pages of documents, co-operating with the House Oversight Committee’s subpoena request, and . . . recently calling for further investigations into Epstein’s Democrat friends”.
    The law also exempts material that would harm ongoing federal investigations or prosecutions — a provision some fear may be exploited after Bondi, at Trump’s directive, last month launched investigations into ex-president Bill Clinton, his Treasury secretary Lawrence Summers and others.
    “It’s not far-fetched to think that Bondi could find an argument that even materials that specifically pertain to Donald Trump might be included [in this exemption] as an active federal investigation of others,” said Butler.
    Even some Republicans are sounding the alarm. 
    “For anyone hoping to use ‘ongoing investigations’ as a reason to withhold Epstein files, please read the language of the bill,” Massie warned in a social media post, quoting the provision that orders these with-holdings be “narrowly tailored and temporary”.
    When asked whether the new investigations targeting Democrats would affect the files’ release, Bondi last month stressed she would comply with the statute: “So we have released over 33,000 Epstein documents to the Hill and we’ll continue to follow the law and to have maximum transparency . . . while protecting victims.” 



     The DoJ did not respond to a request for comment.


    Trump Is Allegedly Designing The Oval Office 'Almost Identically' to Epstein's House to 'Make It Feel More Like 'Home'


    Elon Musk and Trump Officials Go to War With E.U. Over $140M Fine for X



    Sunday, December 07, 2025

    In defense of clichés

     “Here with a Loaf of Fresh Bread beneath the Bough,

     A Flask of Wine, a Book of Verse—and Thou

    Beside me singing in the Wilderness—

     And Wilderness is Paradise enow.”

    Researchers find heart benefits in tea, coffee, nuts and berries.


     Our Brains Have Five Major Eras In Our Lifetimes

    The study mapped neural connections and how they evolve during our lives. This revealed five broad phases, split up by four pivotal “turning points” in which brain organisation moves on to a different trajectory, at around the ages of nine, 32, 66 and 83 years. - The Guardian


    A reader asks a science-fictiony question: “Who is your idea of the Ideal Writer? Either a real writer from the past or a list of characteristics that describes the Ideal Writer.” It’s a silly question, probably related to the “Desert Island Books” gambit, and almost irresistible, though any informed answer would have to be heavily qualified. 

    The obvious response is Shakespeare, as universal a writer as one can imagine. Or Dante. Or Tolstoy. Or Proust. You see the dilemma. How to define “ideal”? What balance of stylish flair, moral heft and gravitas qualifies? Something that entertains (in the broadest sense, not just escapism -- Dickens, for instance, or Shakespeare, for that matter) and educates. Such thoughts remind us how ephemeral most writing is, though one of the great consolations of literature is its vastness and variety. Something for everyone. Think how our tastes change across time. Let me make an admittedly whimsical nomination.



    Articles of Note

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    New Books

    Talk “unclever, unsophisticated, simple goodness,” advised Robert Frost, aka Mr. New Hampshire, spokesman for the old Yankee ways

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    Essays & Opinions

    In defense of clichés. They are democratized wordplay, metaphors for the masses, ways to connect to readers with warmth... more »


    Nov. 28, 2025

    Articles of Note

    Rising auction prices are an illusion. Collectors, dealers, and institutions prosper at the expense of working artists... more »


    New Books

    Werner Herzog, “the strangest of all living directors,” has also directed several operas and written more than a dozen works of prose... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    Why is close reading having a moment? Because it asks students to take their own thinking seriously... more »


    Nov. 27, 2025

    Articles of Note

    Ernest Hemingway owned 9,000, Thomas Jefferson 6,487, and Hannah Arendt 4,000: How to understand the urge to harbor more books than you can read?... more »


    New Books

    Malcolm Cowley, who made American literature an identifiable movement, shaped a canon based on his tastes and convictions... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    Dogs have a strict notion of fairness; tigers exact revenge. To hone our senses of virtue, egalitarianism, and morality, we can learn from animals... more »


    Nov. 26, 2025

    Articles of Note

    For one underpaid, up-and-coming author, the chance to write a literary biography promised to make her career. There was just one problem... more »


    New Books

    Updike on Updike: “I have fallen to the status of an elderly duffer whose tales of suburban American sex are hopelessly yawnworthy period pieces.”... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    Psychedelics had an unusual effect on Justin Smith-Ruiu. They became a gateway drug to Catholicism... more »


    Nov. 25, 2025

    Articles of Note

    Viewpoint diversity” has become a glib euphemism, a way of smuggling conservatives through liberalism’s squeaky back door... more »


    New Books

    Leah Libresco Sargeant argues that feminism should recognize “women as women,” not demand that they imitate men. What does it mean to treat “women as women”?... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    Christian Wiman: “If consciousness precedes matter, it’s a pretty good bet that it survives it”... more »


    Nov. 24, 2025

    Articles of Note

    Who wrote the gospel of witches? Ancient Italians, a 19th-century Tuscan fortune teller, or a well-heeled Brit with family ties to Queen Victoria... more »


    New Books

    Peter Singer’s “shallow pond” is less a thought experiment and more an extended gotcha exercise: “Caught you out, didn’t I, you bourgeois oaf”... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    Few great visual artists are especially good writers. Eugène Delacroix was one of the exceptions... more »


    Nov. 21, 2025

    Articles of Note

    Maurizio Cattelan’s golden toilet, supposedly the crown jewel of a major Sotheby’s art auction, received only one bidder: Ripley’s Believe It or Not!... more »


    New Books

    For guidance on 21st-century conundrums like polyamory and burnout, turn to the wisdom of 16th century nuns... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    Invention of the foodie. He “sits at the intersection of necessity and privilege, with the potential to bridge this divide—or to further entrench it”... more »


    Nov. 20, 2025

    Articles of Note

    Why would a woman with children she loved, writing at the peak of her powers, want to die? Revisiting Sylvia Plath's suicide... more »


    New Books

    To understand modern individualism, consider late-18th century tea consumption and the engraved portraiture of French revolutionaries... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    "For a long time now, the signature style of the contemporary art world has been something like real estate aestheticism — growth for growth’s sake"... more »


    Nov. 19, 2025

    Articles of Note

    Sickly, ambitious, and entirely unknown, young Robert Louis Stevenson moped around graveyards for the specific purpose of being unhappy... more »


    New Books

    The reactionary radical Paul Kingsnorth fears a future in which the realities of human life — sex, death, environment — are negotiable... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    William Blake, Marxist revolutionary? His call to cast off the “mind-forged manacles” was one step toward utopian socialism... more »


    Nov. 18, 2025

    Articles of Note

    A decade ago, things changed for the worse at colleges, says Jill Lepore, who looks back with “considerable shame at my unwillingness to really speak out"... more »


    New Books

    Philosophers have often fastened on animals as emblems of the unknowable. Then there’s Kafka and dogs... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    Is the right path a full embrace of AI or a radical set of precautions against its widespread use? Both. Yascha Mounk explains ... more »


    Nov. 17, 2025

    Articles of Note

    Forty years after Peter Singer’s “Famine, Affluence, and Morality,” the effective altruism movement took off. What happened to it?... more »


    New Books

    When Virginia Woolf met Gertrude Stein: "wheres the harm in this stupidish, kindly, rather amusing woman”... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    “What matters on a visit to Vegas is how much money you have, how much more you want, and how much you are willing to set on fire”... more »


    Nov. 14, 2025

    Articles of Note

    Linguists are parsing a new mystery: What explains the baby boomers' penchant for ellipses?... more »


    New Books

    For Leah Libresco Sargeant, feminism should treat “women as women" rather than demanding that they imitate men... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    Are ants sentient, and thus worthy of our moral concern? Objective answers are lacking — and so we turn to probabilistic approaches... more »


    Nov. 13, 2025

    Articles of Note

    From spycraft to starting a magazine. Was the Paris Review started as a CIA cover for Peter Matthiessen?... more »


    New Books

    Seamus Heaney rarely struck a note of inspired weirdness. Then again, he was never as boring as some canonical poets... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    “How dumb are we?” asked an episode of Oprah in 1988. Part of the show’s offering: a debate between Gerald Graff and Allan Bloom ... more »


    Nov. 12, 2025

    Articles of Note

    Upon publication, The Picture of Dorian Graywas condemned as “vulgar” and “poisonous.” It’s now a modern classic... more »


    New Books

    Not only nature, but human nature, is being redefined by an anti-limit culture. Is this progress?... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    Today roughly half the countries in the world have a below-replacement fertility rate — and so David Runciman asks, “Are we doomed?”... more »


    Nov. 11, 2025

    Articles of Note

    "There’s a vastness in Woolf, an inexhaustibility and an eagerness, that in turn sparks procreativity in others"... more »


    New Books

    Wittgenstein’s self-recriminations: He was an ambivalent Jew, a brutal teacher, a bad soldier, an occasional masturbator... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    To Harold Bloom, he was an “American Proust.” To New York magazine, he was “THE GENIUS.” To himself, Harold Brodkey was a writer set for posthumous discovery... more »


    Nov. 10, 2025

    Articles of Note

    Mahmood Mamdani is ready to talk politics, culture wars, and the academy. But not about his son, Zohran... more »


    New Books

    For too long, Shakespeare has been regarded as a kind of minor deity. He was, in fact, a laboring writer... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    "Globalization, among other things, is about people from anywhere reading about people from nowhere"... more »


    Nov. 7, 2025

    Articles of Note

    The newspaper industry, again and again, has flubbed its chance to propel itself into the future”... more »


    New Books

    Why do paranormal phenomena like precognition, telekinesis, and clairvoyance keep popping up in the most rational-seeming places?... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    John Searle was a leading light of American philosophy. He was also one of the sharpest analysts of campus revolts... more »


    Nov. 6, 2025

    Articles of Note

    "There are good reasons to think that we will soon inhabit a world in which humans still write, but do so mostly for AI"... more »


    New Books

    As an editor and writer, Malcolm Cowley had one aspiration: to raise the status of American literature... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    The late 1980s to the early 2010s, the post-theory and pre-wokeness period, was a golden age for the humanities... more »


    Nov. 5, 2025

    Articles of Note

    "The male gaze" turns 50. The theory’s origins were modest, its meaning long misunderstood... more »


    New Books

    Under continual assault by technology and mass culture, our inner spaces — intimacy, privacy, the unconscious — are shrinking... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    Thomas Pynchon’s latest, Krasznahorkai’s Nobel win, Helen DeWitt and Ilya Gridneff’s collaboration — it’s a glowing season for postmodernism... more »


    Nov. 4, 2025

    Articles of Note

    Remembering Jonathan Lear: "He wanted to understand what it meant to be human, and he simply followed that question wherever it took him"... more »


    New Books

    The most widespread vampire panic ever documented took place in the mid-17th-century Moravian bishopric of Olomuoc... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    That Plato was hostile to poets is dogma. But it is untrue, and the consequences have been severe. Elaine Scarry explains... more »


    Nov. 3, 2025

    Articles of Note

    Even if the Stoicism bubble bursts, the publishing industry will have no trouble continuing to recycle ancient philosophy into advice manuals... more »


    New Books

    Every era produces its own forms of memoir, shaped by its cultural preoccupations and oversights. Enter Arundhati Roy... more »


    Essays & Opinions

    Americans spend about 17 minutes a day reading. As our literary culture deteriorates, repetition and cliché take hold... more »