Saturday, June 30, 2018

Playing Democratic Fairness Fields: Town Criers Bellmen

IT FEELS LIKE THE FIRST TIME: New research has uncovered a simple trick anyone can do that seems to breathe new life and enjoyment into activities we’ve performed countless times before, making old experiences seem fresh all over again

Wall Street Journal op-ed:  How Income Equality Helped Trump, by Phil Gramm & Robert B. Ekelund Jr.:
Frenzied rhetoric about income inequality was a larger theme in Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign than in any previous American election. When the ballots were counted, however, not only did income inequality fail to move voters, but a massive shift in voting preference among lower-middle and middle-income Americans led to the election of the wealthiest president since George Washington. Now, startling new data on government spending and taxes suggests a novel explanation for this voter shift: It was a backlash against rising income equality among the bottom 60% of American household earners.



From her:
By nature, a society that forgives and rehabilitates its people is a society that forgives and transforms itself. That takes a radical kind of love, a secret of which is given in the Lord’s Prayer: Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us.
And let us not forget the guiding principle of “the least among us” found in Matthew: that we are compelled to care for the hungry, thirsty, homeless, naked, sick and, yes—the imprisoned.

Former NSW premier Bob Carr: 'Even the Nazis weren't as isolated ...


Cities vs regions: why reforming cities must remain central ...


NSW Labor (@NSWLabor) | Twitter

twitter.com/NSWLabor



NSW Labor left paves way for make world safer

The NSW Labor left faction — which includes Anthony Albanese and Tanya Plibersek — wants ...

NSW Labor aims to use state laws to regulate gig economy 

Under the TWU resolution, NSW Labor would simply remove those exclusions so that it would apply to ...

We must stand with workers, says Wayne Swan

Rosie Jackson received a standing ovation on Saturday at the Town Hall with her speech about protecting the powerless workers and for her Tribute to her Mother:
Vale Liz Jackson: Storyteller, mentor and 'one of the greats of the ABC' - Women's Agenda 

Liz Jackson's legacy as one of the most important Australian reporters of her generation - Investigative journalism - ABC News

There no I in the Foley- Daley Team as they head towards the unlooseable election 2019 - MMXIX anno domino ...


LIVE: Luke Foley addresses the NSW Labor Annual State Conference #AFairerNSW #LabConf18 facebook.com/NSWLabor/video

*Luke Foley 

Luke Foley ready to step into the shoes of past Labor giants



NSW Labor Leader Luke Foley pledges to reinstate M4 cashback ...

NSW Labor leader Luke Foley has pledged to reinstate the M4 cashback scheme if elected in March ...

NSW Labor pledges to reinstate M4 cashback, votes against ABC ... ABC News


Labor conference: Bill Shorten commits $6b for Western Sydney rail ...

As a 15-year old school girl, Kaila Murnain ran a truck stop on the main road leading into her home town of Narrabri, working weekends and Thursday nights. She also helped out with her mother’s flower shop and assisted with chores on the small, often struggling family farm. 

By the age of 19, friends say, she was running the Labor party office at Wyong on the Central coast and coordinating a byelection campaign, while also enrolled full-time in a  social sciences course at the University of NSW. 
It's the kind of prodigious energy and work ethic that early in 2016 propelled her into one of the toughest and most powerful jobs in Labor politics: that of NSW party general secretary.
This weekend, the now 31-year-old will oversee her third annual party conference as state secretary, invevitably regarded as a curtain-raiser for next month’s five federal byelections and the state and federal campaigns to come.
Murnain will be responsible for ensuring that no major embarrassments await either state Labor leader Luke Foley or federal leader Bill Shorten during the carefully stage-managed event. Wanting to keep herself out of the frame, she turned down Fairfax Media’s interview request.
Kaila Murnain: the woman behind the NSW Labor machine - Sydney Morning Herald



The politics of Curry ;-)
"What is at the heart of the insistence on curry: the owning and the disavowing of it at the same time, in all its racialized legacies and imperial flavours, in all the ways that it searches for a genesis story and all the wonderful wanton ways in which it leads you astray in the detours of history." (The Conversation)

 

Friday, June 29, 2018

You Know I am No Good

Humour is a prelude to faith and laughter is the beginning of prayer.
— Reinhold Niebuhr, born in 1892


It's not those who write the laws that have the greatest impact on society. It's those who write the songs
 ~ Blaise Pascal, born in 1623



This was Bohemia! She glanced about. It was the explanation of the room. But it was impossible to imagine Trilby’s milk-call sounding at the door It was Bohemia; the table and chairs were Bohemian. Perhaps a big room like this would be even cheaper than a garret in St. Pancras. The neighbourhood did not matter. A bohemian room could hold its own anywhere. No furniture but chairs and a table, saying when you brought people in, “I am a Bohemian,” and having no one but Bohemians for friends.
coloradoranch

Before we can be truly happy we must gain control of our minds. How am I to do so?

I think that for some reason when a man is driving Lexus down that Stuart Highway of love, the woman he’s with is like an exit, but he doesn’t want to get off there. He wants to keep driving. And the woman is like, “Look, petrol, food, accommodation, that’s our exit, that’s everything we need to be happy… Get off here, now!” But the man is focusing on sign underneath that says, “Next exit 77 kilometres,” and he thinks, “I can make it.”


The answer is simple: by obeying the Greek maxim, ‘Know thyself.’ Good! We are almost, it seems, at the end of our inquiry. Only one question remains: how am I to get to know myself? Ah! Now you’re asking. Saints and philosophers have been engaged on this simple question for some thousands of years but, unhappily, the answer is not yet to hand.



 Horses remember if you smiled or frowned when they last saw you New Scientist




In blogosphere why a man becomes a poet is a question not to be asked ...










How Music Gets Into Our Brain And Messes With It


Understanding the mechanisms of violated expectations in music elucidates some of the basic functions of learning, memory, and our perception of time. Along with enhancing our understanding of music, the study of how we process expectations, and learn to revel in ambiguity and uncertainty, is important in understanding how we appreciate many aspects of art and life that involve solving puzzles and deciphering codes, from poetry to painting, science to math

NPR Best Music of the Year: “The best songs from the first half of 2018 serve many functions. Some reveal pain, others relieve it. Some guide us forward through the darkness, others eradicate it like a firework. Here are 35 favorites that put in work for us, each one the personal choice of one person at NPR Music or one of our partner stations around the country. (If you’re into playlists, there’s one here.) 



Most public servants do face the music — even when given an out
VERONA BURGESS: The trouble with elephants in the room is that they don’t just go away of their own accord.



As Stephens points out, Elvis Presley, Little Richard, James Brown, Johnny Cash, B. B. King, and Jerry Lee Lewis (cousin of Jimmy Swaggart, the now-defrocked televangelist) all grew up under the influence of Pentecostal or holiness churches. In those settings, religious experience for congregants of all colors was defined by its deep emotionality, submission to otherworldly forces, and all-consuming, overwhelming physicality. It shakes your nerves, and it rattles your brain. It breaks your will, but ooh, what a thrill. Goodness gracious, great balls of hellfire!

Hatreds are the cinders of affection


Hatreds are the cinders of affection.” Walter Raleigh, letter to Robert Cecil (May 10, 1593) ... read more



Prescription for writer’s block: fear of poverty
— Peter Mayle, born in 1939
 

When I am not desperate, I am worthless.     
~Ivo Andric

Time is, perhaps, little more than a flimsy curtain, which under the least pressure of intensity gives way.

To know beforehand where you are going is to be going nowhere. Because it means you are nowhere to begin with. If you know where you are you can go anywhere, and it will be the same place, and good.
These are lines truly worth painting on a virtual rock...



ROSEMARY O’GRADY. Meanings of War.

As war memoirs go, the horrors of the conflict concluded by the Treaty of Westphalia, 1648, have long stood in a class of their own. They are also the subject of the autobiographical, first novel of the German language. … Continue reading 

"On current trends, over 80 per cent of Australia’s population growth to 2050 is projected to occur in capital cities — so how cities operate now and in the future is integral to both the quality of people’s lives and national prosperity." (Productivity Commission)

CRACKS IN TWITTER’S LEGAL WALL? Like Facebook, Twitter has been able to avoid any First Amendment claims of those banned (or shadow banned), but a California judge has kept alive claims from a guy named Jared Taylor (his account was disabled), noting that allegations that Twitter’s policy of suspending accounts, in the judge’s words:
“[A]t any time, for any reason or for no reason” may be unconscionable and that the company calling itself a platform devoted to free speech may be misleading and therefore fraudulent.”

JOHN MENADUE. How and why corporate regulators have failed us.

The failure of corporate regulation and regulators is in plain sight for all to see. And it is not just in banking. Political ideology and corporate conceit has enabled the powerful to tilt the ‘market’ in their favour at the expense of the less privileged. The result is growing inequality and insecurity.V
The Liberal Party branch offices,the BCA,News Corp and the Australian Financial Review also failed to uncover corporate failure and malfeasance on a grand scale.Was this deliberate or were they just asleep?
It is unlikely  that the regulars were wilful .. It is more likely that they just wanted to please the big end of town.   Continue reading 

Priceless History, Intangible Richness: The Millions Interviews Lillian Li





Without writing, I wouldn’t be less lonely. I’d be Qestranged from my loneliness. Or worse, I’d be ashamed of it. To be an individual is to be lonely. 




Since the Charleston massacre, 110 Confederate symbols have been removed. Approximately 1,728 still stand. 

↩︎ Southern Poverty Law Center


What Mark Textor, Australia's most famous pollster, did next



There is a “father absence crisis in America,” according to National Fatherhood Initiative, and the results are sobering. 
Studies have found that children raised without a father are:
At a higher risk of having behavioral problems.
Four times more likely to live in poverty.
More likely to be incarcerated in their lifetime.
Twice as likely to never graduate high school.
At a seven times higher risk of teen pregnancy. 
More vulnerable to abuse and neglect.
More likely to abuse drugs and alcohol.
Twice as likely to be obese.
From education to personal health to career success, children who lack a father find themselves at a disadvantage to their peers raised in a two-parent household.  


George Orwell Predicted The Difficulty Of Writing When Truth Has Been Undermined



Orwell was right. The totalitarian regime rests on lies because they are lies. The subject of the totalitarian regime must accept them not as truth—must not, in fact, believe them—but accept them both as lies and as the only available reality. She must believe nothing. Just as Orwell predicted, over time the totalitarian regime destroys the very concept, the very possibility of truth. Hannah Arendt identified this as one of the effects of totalitarian propaganda: it makes everything conceivable because “nothing is true.”

"Some place warm, a place where the beer flows like wine, where beautiful women instinctively flock like the salmon of Capistrano. I’m talking about a little place called Maroubra." 

Little has been heard from the famous pollster since the disastrous results of his campaigns for Theresa May and Malcolm Turnbull.


What Mark Textor, Australia's most famous pollster, did next