Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Vaclav Havel

my tendency to trust where inappropriate, my politeness, my silly faith in signs of good intentions on the part of my antagonists, my constant self-doubt, my effort to get along with everyone, my constant need to defend and explain myself.
- VH

Havel’s basic geostrategic instincts were sound. He was one of the first to warn that the Putin era “weds the worst of Communism with the worst of capitalism.”
Putin is worth $200M 

 Havel discovered—in the words for which he is best remembered—that hope “is not the conviction that something will turn out well, but the certainty that something makes sense, regardless of how it turns out.” Those are words you have to earn the right to say, and Havel did that, not just through endurance but also through failure and shame ..
- VH

A quarter century after the Velvet Revolution,Václav Havel's legacy is in disarray. His life illuminates a dissident generation's dreams and the revenge that history has taken on them.



HelloVon
Heroism is essential to politics. We live for the hour when a politician stands up in Theodore Roosevelt’s dusty arena and we recognize, with astonishment, that here is a person prepared to take risks, tell us what we don’t want to hear, face possible defeat for a principle, tackle insuperable odds, and by doing so, show us that politics need be not just the art of the possible, but the art of the impossible. 
By the mid-1960s, all along Národní Street in old Prague, a brilliant generation of artists, dramatists, novelists, filmmakers—Jiří Menzel, Milan Kundera, Miloš Forman, the philosopher Jan Patočka—had created an audience of young Czechs who were, in effect, living in truth, outside the propaganda bubble, in a prefiguration of what the dissident Václav Benda was to call a “parallel polis.” The authorities, with the condescension of the powerful, permitted this polis to emerge, because they never imagined that those in it might one day overthrow them.
In January 1969, Jan Palach, a philosophy undergraduate, burned himself to death in Wenceslas Square to protest the Soviet invasion. Unlike most of his fellow dissidents, Havel did not react to Palach’s death with tears, desperation, or hopeless rage. Instead, like the politician he was to become, he gave a television interview in which he declared, with strange—and up to this point uncharacteristic—bravado, “There is just one road open to us: to wage our political battle until the end … I understand the death of Jan Palach as a warning against the moral suicide of all of us.” Moral suicide—taking a job with the regime, informing on your erstwhile dissident friends—became a standard if depressing mode of collaboration in the 1970s. The parallel polis collapsed, leaving the few remaining dissidents to face the full pressure of the regime alone. Of that long decade, Zantovsky writes, “few … can imagine the twilight mood, the torpor, which resembled a state of semi-anaesthesia.”

Innovation : The money Jobs generated

“I, whose imperfection
Is evident and admitted
Needing further assurance
Must year-long be pitted
Against fool and trooper
Practising my integrity
In awkward places,
Walking until I walk easy
Among uncomprehended faces.” 
- CR

Apple wants to start making cars as soon as 2020 Sydney Morning Herald 

Media dragon loves the idea of thin Nikkons Paper-Thin Lenses Could Shrink Cameras and Holographic Displays MIT Technology Review

What pushes scientists to lie? The disturbing but familiar story of Haruko Obokata Guardian. Today’s must read. Buried in the middle is the most distressing part: how little scientific research is verified (“replicated”) and how many studies supporting the use of drugs are garbage (one effort to replicate cancer drug efficacy showed an 89% failure rate). This confirms my general, skeptical view of Western medicine. As a colleague who worked for the NIH and later in Big Pharma in a senior role put it: “Medicine is a medieval art.”


Professionals and professional firms provide a range of taxation-related services, from advising clients on their tax obligations to designing and implementing tax-reduction strategies. Provided that tax professionals respect the letter of the law, are all such tax services morally permissible? Tax advisors: TF noted how Steve Jobs of this world did not set out for Apple to Avoid Taxes
A crackdown on tax avoidance and evasion by people who HM Revenue & Customs call "mass affluent" netted 60% more money in 2014, a report says. HMRC's Affluent Unit covering UK residents on annual incomes over £150,000 - or wealth over £1m - raised £137.2m in tax, up from £85.7m in 2013 Affluent Units ; Pinsent Masons press-releases


Monday, February 23, 2015

Raw News

Be careful, as each choice has lasting consequences; throw a pebble in the pond, and its ripples will spread throughout the rest of the water.” The raw Cold River stories are weighted with bad corporate and parliamentary mischievous behaviours ...


Also, unlike Silicon Valley, the Stasi was regulated.
That is from Bryan Appleyard

Czech out the hand of fate relating to human remains ... Here is why your human resources department hates you

As The Telegraph exposes Jack Straw and Malcolm Rifkind for offering their services to a private company for cash, we monitor the political and media raw reaction

Jack Straw and Sir Malcolm Rifkind offered to use their positions as politicians on behalf of a fictitious Chinese company in return for payments of at least £5,000 per day. Cash for access scandal

Media Dragons like Deputy NSW police commissioner Nick Kaldas deserve an apology for being targeted with dozens of listening device warrants more than a decade ago, an upper house inquiry is expected to recommend Bugging Birriga Roads

Mr Wickremesinghe, who began his third term in office last month after former president ­Mahinda Rajapaksa lost the election, also hinted that Mr Packer’s cancelled casino licence was the subject of political favour Casino Hand of Fate

Made in China with Chemical Love ...

Kommunists know how to make fools living in so called kapitalism to part with their money Made in China with asbestos

Chinese products are poisoning the world

The dangers of China’s environmental degradation go well beyond the country’s borders, as pollution threatens global health more than ever. 
Choking on china

Provocative economies and Brooms Inside the German Army

How countries spend your money BBC (this story does not include Australia)
The German army has faced a shortage of equipment for years, but the situation has recently become so precarious that some soldiers took matters into their own hands.
On Tuesday, German broadcaster ARD revealed that German soldiers tried to hide the lack of arms by replacing heavy machine guns with broomsticks during a NATO exercise last year. After painting the wooden sticks black, the German soldiers swiftly attached them to the top of armored vehicles, according to a confidential army report which was leaked to ARD.
…To make matters worse, the broom-equipped German soldiers belong to a crucial, joint NATO task force and would be the first to be deployed in case of an attack Call to Arms
Guns really do change the way you think Mother Nature Network 
Waiting a bit can also make people more patient, by removing their attention from the immediate here and now and stretching out their time horizons. Some of these positive effects of waiting have been studied by Professors Xianchi Dai of the Chinese University of Hong Kong and Ayelet Fishbach of the University of Chicago in their paper “When Waiting to Choose Increases Patience.”

Czech out a new and provocative paper by James Edward Mahon Jr. of Williams College


“In 1991, there were 176 certified librarians in city schools. Now there are 11 – for 218 schools. Studies have shown that students who have access to a school library and librarian – particularly students who live in poverty and students of color – achieve more. Increasingly in Philadelphia, school libraries are regarded as a frill, and librarians even more so.”
~ Philadelphia Inquirer

Sunday, February 22, 2015

Pigeonholes of Universal Views

“Beware: we know that critics’ spite,
a boomerang, comes back to bite.”   

Industry insiders could probably make several lists of twenty-four secrets or misunderstood facts or contentious minutiae about publishing, but here's a good list on the writing life from Curtis Sittenfeld. I like this one most:  10. The goal is not to be a media darling; the goal is to have a career.

A white male writer is a writer. The rest are pigeonholed: female writer, black writer, African writer. But literature is a way to seek universality Media Dragon Imitation Games

“The wheels of fortune surely turn;
your book may be the next to burn.”

“Love shook my senses, / Like wind crashing on the mountain oaks.” Taylor Swift? No, Sappho. The love song is a timeless form Agape

Unless your site is about one thing, it’s about everything Fredrik DeBoer. “For a website, or a publication, or a magazine, or a natively advertising content vertical, there is no such thing as a sensibility.” Translation: Blogging is not dead.

A person of average intelligence today would have been exceptionally intelligent a century ago. We're getting smarter. Are we getting more moral?... 
The OED defines “the black ox” not as depression but as “adversity, hardship, misfortune; the cares of life.” A black dog might tear our flesh. A black ox may trod on our foot and gore us. Ben Jonson writes in A Tale of a Tub (1633), though not of Larkin or Murray: “The black Oxe never trod yet O your foot.” 
 Are we wiser?

Oliver Sacks has months to live. There is no longer time for anything inessential – just himself, his work, his friends. 
“In my depravity, I have even been known to savor the smell of beer from a workman’s tavern at eight o’clock in the morning and the smell of a crowded movie house (hot buttered popcorn, mostly) at eight o’clock at night. And I am curiously moved by that old (and doubtless deleterious) city smell of soft-coal smoke bellying upward from apartment buildings on a snowy morning.” 
And some silliness

What the story of one dead man pulled through the snow by another man says about history, historical fiction, and the human imagination... Coldest Stories

A writer at The Economist pulls off a sort of Oulipian stunt, except this one has a point. “Out with the Long” is devoted to the virtues of one-syllable words and is written exclusively in monosyllables. After a few sentences, the cadence plods along like a spavined nag, but the author knows what he is doing: 

“I started looking into whether lead degrades in water, trying to find out why fisherman use lead weights and researching the composition of lead type, as I didn’t really know anything about the chemistry of it and wanted to make sure I wasn’t going to start looking for something that had rotted away.”
~ Recovering A Lost Typeface From Its Watery Grave Creative Review (UK)  

The next installment in NY Mag's series of horrifying interviews from which you can't look away: you've seen it, you've felt deeply unsettled by it, you've proclaimed its deeply unsettling nature to all of the people you gchat: "What It's Like to Date Your Dad"

Unusual “review” of 50 Shades of Grey
 

“The point is that to get a range of step, stride and gait means you have to use some long words, some short and some, well, just run of the mill, those whose place is in the mid range. What’s more, though you may find you can write with just short words for a while, in the end don’t you have to give in and reach for one of those terms which, like it or not, is made up of bits, more bits and yet more bits, and that adds up to a word which is long?”

Saturday, February 21, 2015

The Great Tax Robbery

In the last century the famous American Judge Oliver Wendell Holmes, in one of his judgements, argued that ‘Taxes are what we pay for civilised society.’
Quoting Holmes President F. D. Roosevelt in a speech in 1937 added: ‘Too many individuals, however, want the civilisation at a discount’.

The art of socialising loses (discounts) and the craft of privatising profit..Labour's biggest non-union donation is from PwC – a firm accused of "promoting tax avoidance"  


 Source: Treasury 2013/14 data for HICL-owned schools and hospitals
Many of your treasured public infrastructure assets, paid for by UK taxpayers, are now in the hands of the super-rich and the bankers. They are held in PFI “special purpose vehicle” shell companies registered ‘offshore’ for maximum ‘tax efficiency’ in the tax havens of Guernsey and Luxembourg Fifty shades of tax avoidance: what are bankers doing with our schools and hospital

The problem for the ‘ little people ‘ who pay their taxes as Prem Sikka the Professor of Accounting at Essex University points out is the ‘ cosy arrangement between big business and those who are supposed to be collecting our taxes.’

Brooks first effort “Plundering the Public Sector” and latest book “The Great Tax Robbery” set out in jaw-dropping detail the culture of a “revolving door” of staff secondments between the ‘Big 4’ accountancy firms (such as PwC), HM Treasury and HMRC to set up and run schemes like PFI, simultaneously acting as advisors to both the public, and private sector partners of PFI deals, and then being rehired to clean up their own mess

‘Too much carrot and not enough stick’ in the words of one commentator.

John Miller, formerly a senior partner in audit firms and head of the accounting industry peak body that is now CPA Australia, said the leadership of the profession no longer had the same clout as it did 30 years ago, when he and the Institute of Chartered Accountants collaborated with the government to stamp out the widespread corporate rorting. Miller said the infamous "bottom of the harbour" tax schemes back then were "no more scandalous" than some of the aggressive tax minimisation strategies used by multinational companies today Corporate wolves dressed up as sheep : sophisticated bottom of the Sydney Harbour type schemes

Tax justice activists have promoted this idea to great effect in the campaign against tax havens, or secrecy jurisdictions as I helped rename them from 2008 onwards, with some success. What we began to argue from the time that the Tax Justice Network Financial Secrecy Index was launched (the first iteration of which I directed) was that it was not tax per se that induced people to use tax havens, it was the secrecy that did. No one would use tax havens for cheating if they could be found out to be doing so was our point. And therefore, we argued, transparency was the answer.
The result, and I think we can fairly argue it flowed pretty directly from our work, has been the massive change in culture on this issue where the USA and OECD have in combination lead a significant change in government approach to tax havens, away from the information exchange on request approach to such places adopted as recently as 2009 towards automatic information exchange of data on accounts held by persons in such places where the beneficial owner is resident in another place with data on that account now to be automatically sent to that person’s home jurisdiction, starting in 2016  How to beat tax evasion in the UK 

According to The Australian Financial Review, he church said in a submission to the Senate committee inquiry into corporate tax avoidance that it had hired a former Australian Federal Police and AUSTRAC officer on a short-term contract to map Glencore’s structure in Australia Tax structures: Mark Zirnsak

Great Poets Musing on Lazy Sundays

INK BOTTLE“It always seems to me amazing that we had such flawless poets among us in our youth. But for that very reason I also keep wondering, with a kind of secret anxiety: can such artists sworn entirely to the art of poetry exist in our own times, in our new way of life, which chases people out of their own peace of mind like animals running from a forest fire?” 
~ Stefan Zweig, The World Of my Father and Mother under Austro Hungarian Empire The World of Yesterday (trans. Anthea Bell)
Writers are given an advantage over their fellows. Following the 7 of 7 1980 AD, daily, we practice death like an unending audition, and some of what we love most survives us. When the times are brutal and the news is all lies, great poets experience our loneliness for us. Without breaking a sweat, poets, those sensitive plants, turn like spoiled toddlers into envy-fueled savages. Andrew O’Hagan explains in simple terms ... so even Media Dragons understand

grass blue butterfly links

My generation is on the way out, and each death I have felt as an abruption, a tearing away of part of myself. There will be no one like us when we are gone, but then there is no one like anyone else, ever. When people die, they cannot be replaced. They leave holes that cannot be filled, for it is the fate — the genetic and neural fate — of every human being to be a unique individual, to find his own path, to live his own life, to die his own death
There Is No One Like Anyone Else, Ever

Loving literature. Our relationships with books are emotional. We read certain authors as an act of devotion, even if unrequited... History of Emotions

0215-little-girl-reading-sm
“Fiction offers many pleasures – we may enjoy its capacity to make the world anew for us through its descriptions, or to advance our understanding of science or philosophy through its application of ideas to examples of human behaviour, but although it does – on examination – seem so faint as to be numinous, nonetheless it’s our conviction that fictional characters’ hopes, fears and desires matter that allows fictions to become facts on the ground – a ground we sympathetically traverse alongside them.”


“Della and Tatum, Sweet Pea, Imrich and Packy, Ida and Cal. You met a lot of unpretentious people in Philip Levine’s spare, ironic poems of the industrial heartland. … Mr. Levine’s death is a serious blow for American poetry, in part because he so vividly evoked the drudgery and hardships of working-class life in America, and in part because this didn’t pull his poetry down into brackishness.”
~ New York Times

“Annoyed because I had declined
to print his poems—two frail barks,
unseaworthy, I thought—he whined,
included out-of-place remarks 

“alleging my incompetence,
then added that I was too old
to be an editor. What sense
he may possess should tell him, `Hold 

“your pen! That’s agism! You’re daft!’
Why burn a useful bridge? Instead,
acknowledge that the poet’s craft
is hard, success unsure. Ahead

“new chances lie; but talk goes round—
Friends, patrons, publishers might hear,
Concluding that you’ve run aground.
Miranda rights for this aren’t clear. 

“Envoi 

“You’re doubtless waiting for my death.
Write on, Sir, but don’t hold your breath.”


“But only in youth does coincidence seem the same as fate. Later, we know that the real course of our lives is decided within us; our paths may seem to diverge from our wishes in a confused and pointless way, but in the end the way always leads us to our invisible destination.”
~ Stefan Zweig, Via Wes Anderson Praise The World of Yesterday (trans. Anthea Bell)

The thing we’ve done that no one else has is match worldwide genetic populations to their languages, so that you’re looking at a comparable set, … showing that language and genes do in fact share similar geographic fault lines.”
-The Atlantic

"If a more provocative book has been written in the last 10 years, I haven’t read it," states Collin Hansen. "But that’s not because David Platt rejects biblical teaching, as we’ve seen with some other young pastors. And that’s not because Counter Culture advances any particular sectarian theological agenda that would repel other evangelicals. Counter Culture is the most controversial book I’ve seen in at least the last decade mostly because he restates the teaching of Jesus and his Word without any qualifications, with little attempt to cast such demanding beliefs in a way that would appeal to modern readers."  

Friday, February 20, 2015

Iceland convicts bad bankers and says other nations can act

Le Monde owner’s criticism of HSBC leak coverage lays bare fragility of press freedom Guardian 

Iceland convicts bad bankers and says other nations can act Reuters

Tax haven explosion puts hole in corporate tax

Two J. P. Morgan Executives Connected to Asia Probe Pushed Out Wall Street Journal

Benjamin Alarie (Toronto ), The Challenge of Tax Avoidance for Social Justice in Taxation

Paris passes vote to sue Fox News Associated Press

Experts: Unaffordable rents here to stay Housing Wire

Sweden cuts rates below zero as global currency wars spread Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Telegraph

Why Putin’s Days Are Numbered Foreign Affairs Not sure about this assessment - Valdimir is cunning like no ones else I know...

Here’s how a $50 Drop in oil prices affects every country in the world Business Insider

In an attempt to regulate the multi-billion dollar tax preparer industry — which employs hundreds of thousands of employees — the Internal Revenue Service (Service) began developing rules pertaining specifically to non-professional tax return preparers, previously unregulated by the Service. However, the Service’s attempt to expand its regulatory reach over non-professional tax return preparers was short-lived. It resulted in a severely damaging decision in Loving v. IRS, in which the court concluded that the Service had only limited statutory authority to regulate non-professional tax preparers. While the Service focused its attention on additional ways to rein in tax return preparers, tax professionals took notice of the Loving I and II decisions as they might apply in a broader context, and an important question arose: to what extent can the Service regulate those tax professionals, such as lawyers and certified public accountants (CPAs), if the tax professional only provides tax advice or mere tax preparation services but does not “represent” taxpayers before the Service?

Swiss prosecutor raids HSBC premises Financial Times. This is major.

A senior writer at the Daily Telegraph has dramatically quit the newspaper after accusing its owners, the Barclay Brothers, of suppressing reports about the HSBC scandal out of fear of losing advertising revenue.  Peter Oborne resignation: Senior writer dramatically quits Telegraph over HSBC allegations Independent 
PETER OBORNE QUITS TELEGRAPH Guido Fawkes. Richard Smith: “Torygraph earthquake”.

Thursday, February 19, 2015

New Aristocracy

The Atlantic, Stripping a Professor of Tenure Over a Blog Post

The Economist, America’s New Aristocracy: As the Importance of Intellectual Capital Grows, Privilege Has Become Increasingly Heritable:
When the robber barons accumulated fortunes that made European princes envious, the combination of their own philanthropy, their children’s extravagance and federal trust-busting meant that Americans never discovered what it would be like to live in a country where the elite could reliably reproduce themselves. Now they are beginning to find out, because today’s rich increasingly pass on to their children an asset that cannot be frittered away in a few nights at a casino. It is far more useful than wealth, and invulnerable to inheritance tax. It is brains.
Screen Shot 2015-02-12 at 07.23.30
Nouveau riche And Nouveau aristocrate  FT and Economist are following the money of Novo Rich

Susannah Camic Tahk (Wisconsin), The Tax War on Poverty, 56 Ariz. L. Rev. 791 (2014):
In recent years, the war on poverty has moved in large part into the tax code. Scholarship has started to note that the tax laws, which once exacerbated the problem of poverty, have become increasingly powerful tools that the federal government uses to fight against it.

This essay was the basis for the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Lecture at the Villanova University School of Law on January 27, 2014. It examines economic justice from a tax perspective.
“Skin in the game” – some thing that the interested party has at risk – has become a part of everyday American political discourse. Personal financial risk – some personal stake – is demanded of all “players.” The implications are clear: no skin, no play. The requirement for “skin in the game” in the context of ongoing fiscal debate along with the “concern” that in 2011 almost fifty percent of Americans paid no federal income tax is the latest version of the ongoing “cut-taxes/reduce governmental size” wrangling. It is also another play on the high political salience of the federal income tax as an institution.


Nicholas Carey (J.D. 2014, Rutgers), Note, Taxing E-commerce: An Abundance of Constraints, 40 Rutgers Computer & Tech. L.J. 156 (2014)

Bugging Sagas



Nothing surprises any more about the depths to which NSW bureaucracies can sink. 

It was around August, 2012, when a retired NSW police officer telephoned and asked to meet. "I might have something for you," he said. He did indeed.
The former detective superintendent walked into the Rozelle cafe with a small suitcase. Stuffed into the bag were hundreds of pages of secret and confidential documents from the vaults of the NSW Police Force and the NSW Crime Commission relating to allegations, stretching back a decade, of illegal bugging by some of the 'white knights' of the NSW Police Force Bugging revelations stun journalists as inquiry unfolds

NSW Police bugging informant known to be corrupt

Academic historians condemn the past to somehow reform the present. The tendency isn’t new, says Gordon Wood. But it’s getting worse ...

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Doodling Currents and Slogans

~ Politics of contaminated rasp-berries

“Don’t slogan at them, don’t pretend problems don’t exist.”
Mr Turnbull described (sacking of chief whip, Philip Ruddock) as a "captain's call", a cheeky reference to the autonomous decision-making that nearly ended Mr Abbott's prime ministership.
Iceberg of Bondi fame Malcolm Turnbull shows how to swim in icy waters of Q and A


In Briitish born Tony Abbott’s Australia, a young woman faces jail because word got out that one of his daughters was given a $60,000 scholarship to study at the Whitehouse Institute of Design. This scholarship was never advertised. Students at the college in Sydney had no idea such largesse was available. 
Freedom Abbott

Prime Minister Tony Abbott has been hit by another embarrassing leak from within his party, forcing him to deny a media report he came up with a plan to unilaterally invade Iraq with a force of more than 3000 Australian troops to confront Islamic State New wave of leaks forces Tony Abbott on to back foot


Vintage Lisa Wilkinson delivers assessment Tony Abbott


Alessandro Volta’s 270th Birthday Google Doodle
Alessandro  Volta's of battery fame, 270th Birthday Google Doodle
Google on Alessandro Voltas 270th birthday

It has been a source of amusement for NSW politics tragics but the fake Eddie Obeid Twitter account has now been suspended. The brains behind the @HonEddieObeid account, which boasted just over 1500 followers before it was removed, had been posting the satirical tweets as recently as January 20 Fake Eddie Obeid twitter account suspended


Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Politics and Sacrifice: ANZAC

One hundred years after the Gallipoli campaign was marked by terrible casualties, the Channel Nine mini-series is also suffering extensive losses. 
Gallipolis ratings fail highlights Australia's inferiority complex

His Excellency General The Honourable David Hurley AC DSC (Ret’d), Governor of New South Wales, officially opened the State Parliament’s Centenary of ANZAC Exhibition – ‘Politics & Sacrifice: NSW Parliament and the ANZACS’, at Parliament House.
In the late afternoon, the Governor, as Patron, accompanied by Mrs Linda Hurley, recited the Ode of Remembrance at The 2015 Mateship Trek - Commemorative Ceremony, at the ANZAC Memorial, Hyde Park, Sydney Politics and Sacrifice;

A unique exhibition exploring the role that Parliament, members and staff played in the Great War.The exhibition will shed light on many long forgotten, but important stories linking the Parliament, Parliamentarians, and the community during the First World War
Politics & Sacrifice: NSW Parliament and the Anzacs will explore the remarkable accounts of the members and staff who fought for their country including Lt Gen George Braund (Member for Armidale) and Edward “Teddy” Larkin (Member for Willoughby); debates on issues such as recruitment, conscription and the treatment of enemy subjects; and the impact of the war on our political party system. It will feature a number of artefacts, artworks and objects from the Parliament’s significant and historic collection such as photographs, Hansard and official communications. Items from the State Library and Australian War Memorial will also be on display Anzac

This paper chronicles the 125 Commonwealth Members of Parliament (MPs) identified as having served during the Colonial wars and/or the First World War. It includes those who engaged in or were in transit to active service and those who fought for allied countries.
The paper does not include reservists or members of the defence force without active service. Eight such MPs who enlisted but do not appear on the Australian War Memorial’s Embarkation Roll database are listed in Appendix 1.
MPs War Service

Opposition Leader Andrew Fisher (ALP) famously declared that ‘should the worst happen, after everything has been done that honour will permit, Australians will stand beside the mother country to help and defend her to our last man and our last shilling’.
AustRalians to War 1914 last man standing

 In 2014 Andrew Tink presented this lecture on Menzies, Curtin and Conscription. He is the author of several books and has lectured widely.
Although Robert Menzies and John Curtin were fit enough to fight in World War I, neither enlisted. With two older brothers in the trenches, both of whom suffered serious wounds, Menzies’ mother Kate, insisted that her youngest son remain behind. For Curtin, it was a matter of conscience. And at one stage, he was jailed for failing to register. During the referendums of 1916 and 1917, Curtin was a leading anti-conscription campaigner. Menzies, however, spoke out publicly in favour of compulsory service. His lack of war service was, nevertheless, a key factor in his undoing as prime minister at the beginning of World War II, his immediate predecessor having accused him of cowardice. And when Prime Minister Curtin introduced conscription later in that war, he was bitterly attacked by his own side. “You are putting young men into the slaughterhouse”, one Caucus member said, “notwithstanding 30 years ago you wouldn’t go there yourself”.


THE graves of Gallipoli Diggers and other Australian war veterans are being reused at Adelaide cemeteries, prompting an emotional campaign to preserve them forever.

Graves of Gallipoli Diggers are being use

MAKING STORIES WITH AUSTRALIA

“…we have made innumerable books

To please the Unknown God. Time throws away
Dead thousands of them, but the God that knows
No death denies not one: the books all count.” 
~ Sydneyonly experiences

Writing Is Nothing Like A Dream Job, But It *Is* Like A Horror Film
It plays havoc on relationships – because most writers are extreme introverts, who, when in the middle of a work, barely notice the rest of the world exists. When you are successful, you can quickly become vain and narcissistic. When you are not, depressed and despairing.” The Guardian (UK)
A Film Studio for the Age of Virtual Reality MIT Technology Review 
 
MAKING STORIES WITH AUSTRALIA
Czech out Screen Cold River ;-) or Screen Australia’s latest video showcasing Australia’s world class talent.   It features Cate Blanchett, Dr George Miller, Emile Sherman, Alex Proyas and Joel Edgerton talking about the benefits of making screen stories with Australia Watch it now

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www.altitudefilment.com
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How to option Cold River

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Hemingway would be proud: a beer proven to boost creativity ;-)
New Beer Developed to Maximize Creativity


Creative Elen Show Geman magician perform ipad magic