Daily Dose of Dust
Jozef Imrich, name worthy of Kafka, has his finger on the pulse of any irony of interest and shares his findings to keep you in-the-know with the savviest trend setters and infomaniacs.
''I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can't see from the center.''
-Kurt Vonnegut
Powered by His Story: Cold River
Friday, March 01, 2024
Thousands of millionaires haven’t filed tax returns for years, IRS says Julie Zauzmer Weil
Accidental diarist’s ashes
The relation between poetry and awe is intimate and absolute. Any poet who loses that capacity for wonder—the Biblical sort, which includes fear—is done. One of the most important theologians in my life is Abraham Joshua Heschel, whose whole theology is built around awe or wonder. (“Wonder rather than doubt is the root of all knowledge.”) It’s not a bouncy castle kind of wonder, though. In one of his poems, Heschel hints at the cost: “I prayed for wonders instead of happiness, Lord / And you gave them to me.”
The life of every man is a diary in which he means to write one story, and writes another; and his humblest hour is when he compares the volume as it is with what he vowed to make it.
There are two types of encryption: one that will prevent your sister from reading your diary and one that will prevent your government.
The Metsquare debacle is not an isolated incident but a symptom of a pervasive issue within the construction sector, where subcontractors grapple with the pressure of underquoting in tenders, leading to insurmountable tax debts. The case sheds light on the ATO's uphill battle in clamping down on tax evasion and fraud within the industry, with other construction entities like Dalma and Titan Cranes also under the microscope for tax fraud schemes.
Despite Metsquare's insistence on fair pricing and the non-existence of phoenix activity, the circumstances surrounding the transfer of operations to M2 and the familial ties between the entities raise critical questions about corporate governance and ethical standards in business practices.
Reflections on Governance and Tax Compliance
Richard Las CBE’s attended an evidence session on behalf of HMRC as part of the Home Affairs Committee inquiry into fraud along with my fellow panel members Andrew Penhale and Stephen Smart. I spoke about what HMRC is doing to combat fraud and non-compliance, including the exchange of information and collaboration with a wide range of partners.

Independent valuations of all assets were obtained and those assets transferred were sold at above market value and at full consideration.”
Director hit with $11m penalty notice
Return ‘minimal’: ATO
Expert advice for getting ahead in the new world of work left by COVID-19
Professional bodies ‘need a rocket under them,’ senator says
The TPB was grilled over its governance of professional bodies following CA ANZ’s wrongful acceptance of PwC partner’s resignation.
In a Senate hearing on Thursday, CA ANZ was criticised for wrongfully accepting the resignation of a former PwC partner before beginning disciplinary proceedings. The mistake was partly attributed to a failure of co-regulation between the TPB and the professional accounting body.
“We’ve heard evidence from the accounting professional bodies, all of them, saying that accountants across the country are very dismayed by their professional organisations’ lack of taking action on clear misdemeanours," said Senator Barbara Pocock.
"I think a lot of them, and I certainly, need to look to the leadership of CA ANZ,” she added.
As a partner at PwC, Mr Collins leaked confidential information from the ATO and Treasury and was subjected to an investigation by the TPB. Though Mr Collins informed CA ANZ of the investigation against him, the agency failed to 'flag' his membership before allowing him to resign.
CA ANZ's by-laws prevent it from investigating former members, though a spokesperson told Accountants Daily it began a review of its resignation processes when the matter came to light.
In a letter to the joint committees, CA ANZ chief executive Ainslie van Onselen admitted the body had been informed that Mr Collins was under investigation by the TPB before accepting his resignation despite earlier telling the committees otherwise.
Mr Collins had failed to make use of the body's formal notification system, instead notifying the CA ANZ via a 'generic email.' Mr Collins forwarded this initial email to Ms van Onselen on Sunday evening.
“It remains true that at the time of the resignation there were no flags on Mr Collins’ record,” wrote Ms van Onselen.
“However, since providing our evidence it has come to my attention that Mr Collins had disclosed he was subject to an investigation from the TPB via an informal channel.”
CA ANZ said all members are made aware of the correct notification procedure when becoming a member and that relevant information is available on its website.
Senator Deborah O’Neill said the failure to flag Mr Collins’ record at CA ANZ was “gamed to provide him with a quiet cover.” Senator Barbara Pocock said it was “particularly disappointing” that Ms van Onselen’s letter focused on human error and “allocates responsibility to staff.”
On Thursday, only two days after Ms van Onselen informed the joint committees of CA ANZ’s mistake, the TPB was grilled over the co-regulatory approach it employs alongside professional associations.
Senator Deborah O’Neill said the timeline presented in Ms van Onselen’s letter was “of great concern...It’s not just a failure at the point where the interaction with Mr Collins occurred, it’s a long failure over a period of time in which there should have been much greater awareness."
"It sounds like [the professional associations] need a rocket under them," she concluded.
While TPB CEO secretary Michael O'Neill acknowledged the lapse in time between TPB opening its investigation of Mr Collins and CA ANZ being notified raised “governance questions,” he assured that the professional association would have been notified when TPB issued its board sanction.
Collaboratory efforts between the TPB and approved professional bodies to reform the latters governance structures have been ongoing, said TPB chair Peter de Cure, adding that "most have taken those things quite seriously."
When asked whether the TPB had inquired with CA ANZ as to whether more professionals might have escaped being flagged by CA ANZ, TPB CEO secretary Michael O'Neill said the professional body had refused to do so on the grounds it would require a breach of CA ANZ by-laws.
CA ANZ cannot share details of ongoing review cases until they reach the end of their disciplinary process, said Mr O'Neill, adding in certain cases this would not be allowed even upon the closing of a case. When asked what he made of those rules, Mr O'Neill said they "don't give us the transparency that is proposed."
Until they reach the end of their disciplinary process, said Mr O'Neill, adding in certain cases this would not be allowed even upon the closing of a case. When asked what he made of those rules, Mr O'Neill said they "don't give us the transparency that is proposed."
Head of PwC tax leaks investigation has ‘no future career’ at Tax Office - Neil Chenoweth
Head of PwC tax
leaks investigation has ‘no future career’ at Tax Office
Neil Chenoweth
Tax Practitioners Board chief executive Michael O’Neill was told he should
look outside the ATO for his future career because of the investigation he led
into the PwC tax leaks, he testified to the Senate ethics inquiry on Thursday.
Greens senator Barbara Pocock read a letter from a retired senior ATO officer,
Ian Bartley, who said O’Neill’s actions in relation to PwC had “beyond doubt
diminished to zero” his careers prospects at the Tax Office.
Tax Practitioners Board chief executive Michael O’Neill. Alex Ellinghausen
“He’s saying, well, I should look elsewhere for my future career,” O’Neill
said. “And other people within the ATO have said that same thing to me.”
However, O’Neill said he still felt secure in his employment, as a tax
officer seconded to the TPB.
“I’m in a senior and privileged position, I haven’t always felt secure as I
do today but I do. I do feel for other people who are in very difficult legal
and ethical situations, that they don’t have the sort of supports that I do
have.”
Pocock said one of the issues for the Senate was to establish “whether and
how and who applied pressure to the TPB board and staff”.
In response to questions, O’Neill confirmed that repeated complaints from the Tax Office had led to an
internal review by board members of his work leading the PwC investigation, a
bullying complaint, and an external review of the same matters, all of which
cleared him.
In addition a request was made for the ATO’s fraud officers to investigate allegations that O’Neill had leaked information to The Australian Financial Review, but he had been told the request was declined.
What a Murdered Russian Dissident Can Teach Us About Moral Courage:
The government’s deliberate policy of prejudicing the poorest in our society is imposing destitution on millions
Posted on February 27 2024
A number of related themes are apparent in commentary on the economy this morning. One is poverty. As the Guardian notes: Millions of people –
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What a Murdered Russian Dissident Can Teach Us About Moral Courage:
Alexei Navalny was willing to stand alone—knowing he’d never be alone in the bigger story.
Russian president Vladimir Putin murdered another Christian this week. It was just another day in Putin’s supposed project of protecting “the Christian West” from godlessness. After all, they tell me, one can’t create a Christian nationalist empire without killing some people.
Before the world forgets the corpse of Alexei Navalny in the subzero environs of an Arctic penal colony, we ought to look at him—especially those of us who follow Jesus Christ—to see what moral courage actually is. ...
Navalny repeatedly referenced his profession of Christian faith. My Christianity Today colleague Emily Belz discovered a 2021 trial transcript at Meduza, in which Navalny explains, in strikingly biblical terms, what it means to suffer for one’s beliefs.sus Christ—to see what moral courage actually is.
Of course people are angry: we have totally useless politicians whose sole aim is to destroy government services. Why wouldn’t people be angry?
Posted on February 26 2024
There is a very strong feeling of ‘do we have to go through all that again?’ At the start of this week. Last week brought
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Here’s Robert De Niro’s full statement about how Donald Trump should NEVER be president again: “I’ve spent a lot of time studying bad men. I’ve examined their characteristics, their mannerisms, the utter banality of their cruelty. Yet there’s something different about Donald Trump. When I look at him, I don’t see a bad man. Truly. I see an evil one. Over the years, I’ve met gangsters here and there. This guy tries to be one, but he can’t quite pull it off. There’s such a thing as “honor among thieves.” Yes, even criminals usually have a sense of right and wrong. Whether they do the right thing or not is a different story — but — they have a moral code, however warped. Donald Trump does not. He’s a wannabe tough guy with no morals or ethics. No sense of right or wrong. No regard for anyone but himself — not the people he was supposed to lead and protect, not the people he does business with, not the people who follow him, blindly and loyally, not even the people who consider themselves his “friends.” He has contempt for all of them. We New Yorkers got to know him over the years that he poisoned the atmosphere and littered our city with monuments to his ego. We knew first hand that this was someone who should never be considered for leadership. We tried to warn the world in 2016. The repercussions of his turbulent presidency divided America and rattled New York City beyond imagination. Remember how we were jolted by crisis in early 2020, as a virus swept the world. We lived with Donald Trump’s bombastic behavior every day on the national stage, and we suffered as we saw our neighbors piling up in body bags. The man who was supposed to protect this country put it in peril, because of his recklessness and impulsiveness. It was like an abusive father ruling the family by fear and violent behavior. That was the consequence of New York’s warning getting ignored. Next time, we know it will be worse. Make no mistake: the twice-impeached, 4-time indicted Donald Trump is still a fool. But we can’t let our fellow Americans write him off like one. Evil thrives in the shadow of dismissive mockery, which is why we must take the danger of Donald Trump very seriously. So today we issue another warning. From this place where Abraham Lincoln spoke — right here in the beating heart of New York — to the rest of America: This is our last chance. Democracy won’t survive the return of a wannabe dictator. And it won’t overcome evil if we are divided. So what do we do about it? I know I’m preaching to the choir here. What we’re doing today is valuable, but we have to take today into tomorrow – take it outside these walls. We have to reach out to the half of our country who have ignored the hazards of Trump and, for whatever reason, support elevating him back into the White House. They’re not stupid, and we must not condemn them for making a stupid choice. Our future doesn’t just depend on us. It depends on them. Let’s reach out to Trump’s followers with respect. Let’s not talk about “democracy.” “Democracy” may be our holy grail, but to others it is just a word, a concept, and in their embrace of Trump, they’ve already turned their backs on it. Let’s talk about right and wrong. Let’s talk about humanity. Let’s talk about kindness. Security for our world. Safety for our families. Decency. Let’s welcome them back. We won’t get them all, but we can get enough to end the nightmare of Trump, and fulfill the mission of this “Stop Trump Summit.”