“ATO likes acronyms like your great-aunt likes porcelain cats”
-Overheard in the corridors of happy hour
via NSW Parliamentary library: Goethe had an uneasy relationship with money, yet he
anticipated the economics of the mid-20th century. Where markets are
concerned, he realized, information is
Power
Fish out of water are more common than thought Science Daily
Indonesia Is Fighting Illegal Fishing By Blowing Up Boats Motherboard
"Blood, Breath and the Fourth Amendment": Law professor Noah Feldman has this essay online today at Bloomberg View
German nudists outraged at new rules ordering them to wear swimwear as refugee shelter arrives on lake Independent
The Ghosts of Fukushima New Republic
"[N]o amount of window dressing or pretence can disguise or conceal this unpleasant reality."
"Personally, I don't give a damn," he told the media in June 2014 after being found corrupt once again. He threw in for good measure that there was only a "one percent" chance he would ever be prosecuted for hiding his family's interest in lucrative café leases at Circular Quay. Kate McClymont on Eddie Obeid
In writing a lengthly book about a deeply corrupt politician whose
tentacles extended throughout New South Wales, and beyond, Kate
McClymont and Linton Besser have had to rely on assistance from almost
every quarter of the nation. This includes a swag of sitting and former
state and federal politicians who spoke to the prize-winning journalists
on and off the record.
HE WHO MUST BE OBEID
Fairfax Media can now reveal the legal wranglings behind the scenes
that delayed Obeid's conviction, and the evidence that derailed his
first trial. Lawyers for the corrupt former Labor kingpin worked furiously to shut
down the trial, originally slated to begin on October 19 last year. In
January, after the trial had been moved to February 10 owing to
preliminary legal battles, Obeid asked the High Court to delay the trial
yet again.
( Obeid’s suppressed High Court application )
His lawyers had advanced the surprising argument that the Supreme
Court had no jurisdiction to hear a misconduct in public office case. They
said only the NSW Parliament – specifically the upper house, where
Obeid warmed the red leather benches for 20 years – could determine the
case. They also argued Obeid, an upper house MP, did not hold
"public office" for the purpose of the offence of misconduct in public
office, and accordingly he could not stand trial for the offence. Those
arguments were rejected by the Supreme Court and the Court of
Appeal. Obeid's defence team sought a High Court order temporarily
delaying the trial pending the court's decision on whether to grant
special leave to appeal on the legal points.
Eddie Obeid: notorious life and times of a crooked ex-minister...
What the Eddie Obeid jury didn't hear
They don’t seem to believe in heroes as much as their
male counterparts, which in some ways makes their storytelling a better
fit for the times.
Nellemann,
C. (Editor in Chief); Henriksen, R., Kreilhuber, A., Stewart, D., Kotsovou, M.,
Raxter, P., Mrema, E., and Barrat, S. (Eds). 2016. The Rise of Environmental Crime – A
Growing Threat To Natural Resources Peace, Development And Security
Note some of the thoughtful questions raised in the discussion paper, asking if these are enough or are there other ways of preventing the current ‘rorts’ that have become the centre of this national VET scandal. Continue reading →
If you are not already supporting organizations that are planting and replanting trees in cities and towns across the country,
please consider doing so. I support
Casey Trees
here in DC and have also in the past obtained low cost young trees from
the department of transportation to replant in areas where expanding
highway systems have removed vast swaths of trees. In the spirit of
encouraging you to think about how much trees mean to our lives and or
ecosystem, here is a new study highlighting key actionable facts:
Structure, function and value of street trees in California, USA
Sad News:
Bill Cunningham, Legendary Times Photographer, Dies at 87 NYT
We only talk about people who are doing something in their lives, good or bad. If someone is living a plain boring life with no activity, we don't have anything to discuss. No gossip. So, only an unnoticed, uneventful life is not worth discussing.So, what wild Oscar meant was that if there is nothing to talk about you, chances are you are living a boring, unworthy life that nobody thinks is interesting enough to talk about...
Jozef Imrich (
Via Kold Corpse ... ) The Real and Next James Bond:
Miranda Kerr Teaches Little Jozefs How to Nail the Perfect Australian Accent
Daniel Craig has said No Más – no more 007 – and turned down £68 million for a two movie deal. So save your money guys and watch The Night Manager – the best mini-series of 2016 to date. A John le Carré invention (much deeper than Mr Fleming’s plots and characters). Tom Hiddleston is the perfect Bond for Millennials. I'm 007Craig tells Bond movie bosses
“i would like to measure my breath in relation to the air between"
Alcohol makes people impulsive, vain, and uncharitable—and it just might help them maintain committed relationships.
Making a Killing New Yorker
“Trial lawyers’ pecuniary interests have shifted our focus toward
termination decisions, instead of
hiring and
promotion practices” [
Merrily Archer]
Speaking of billionaires with vendettas against speech: Tom Steyer of
San Francisco pushes New Hampshire attorney general to join probe of
wrongful climate advocacy [
Mike Bastasch, Daily Caller, earlier
here, etc.]
SHOULD REPUBLICANS
“Man Up” On Fatherlessness?
DON DRAPER:
DAD OF THE YEAR
15 Things My Father Taught Me
The War on Stupid People: American society increasingly mistakes intelligence for human worth
As recently as the 1950s, possessing only middling intelligence was
not likely to severely limit your life’s trajectory. IQ wasn’t a big
factor in whom you married, where you lived, or what others thought of
you. The qualifications for a good job, whether on an assembly line or
behind a desk, mostly revolved around integrity, work ethic, and a knack
for getting along—bosses didn’t routinely expect college degrees, much
less ask to see SAT scores. As one account of the era put it, hiring
decisions were “based on a candidate having a critical skill or two and
on soft factors such as eagerness, appearance, family background, and
physical characteristics.”
The 2010s, in contrast, are a terrible time to not be brainy. Those
who consider themselves bright openly mock others for being less so.
Even in this age of rampant concern over microaggressions and
victimization, we maintain open season on the nonsmart. People who’d
swerve off a cliff rather than use a pejorative for race, religion,
physical appearance, or disability are all too happy to drop the s‑bomb:
Indeed, degrading others for being “stupid” has become nearly automatic
in all forms of disagreement.
Austin launches sting operations against informal ride-sharing services
Nothing gets past the AP — in their Drudge-linked column,
“DIVIDED AMERICA: Constructing our own intellectual ghettos,” columnist David Bauder suddenly notices that Americans like having choices where to consume their news and opinion:
In a simpler time, Albrecht and Dearth might have
gathered at a common television hearth to watch Walter Cronkite deliver
the evening news.
But the growth in partisan media over the past two decades has
enabled Americans to retreat into tribes of like-minded people who get
news filtered through particular world views. Fox News Channel and
Talking Points Memo thrive, with audiences that rarely intersect. What’s
big news in one world is ignored in another. Conspiracy theories
sprout, anger abounds and the truth becomes ever more elusive.
I’m not sure if Cronkite is your go-to guy for a callback to a purer, better age, considering that at various times
during his lengthy career as anchor at CBS,
he claimed that Barry Goldwater was a crypto-Nazi, America had lost the
Tet Offensive in Vietnam, and that a new ice age was on the way. After
he stepped down as anchorman, he gave yammered about
one-world government and told Larry King on CNN in late October of 2004 that
George Bush had Osama bin Laden on ice
in order for him to dial-up speeches near the end of the election
cycle, perhaps kept in the basement of the Ministry of Defense next to
Austin Powers, Evel Knievel, and Vanilla Ice.
The month before Cronkite’s on-air meltdown with Larry King, his
successor Dan Rather famously self-immolated over George Bush’s Texas
Air National Guard service. But Rather also did his best at the start of
his presidency
to make it seem illegitimate:
“Florida’s Republican Secretary of State is about to
announce the winner — as she sees it and she decrees it — of the state’s
potentially decisive 25 electoral votes.”
“The believed certification — as the Republican Secretary of State sees it.”
“She will certify — as she sees it — who gets Florida’s 25 electoral votes.”
“The certification — as the Florida Secretary of State sees it and decrees it — is being signed.”
All the while claiming:
media bias — who me?!
Fortunately, technology began increasingly to allow for alternatives.
Alvin Toffler was writing about the “demassification” of mass media and
how it might impact our culture during the very early days of cable TV
in his 1980 book,
The Third Wave. In 2006, I wrote an article for the
New Individualist titled
Atlas Mugged on how the Blogosphere was born due to bipartisan loathing of how newspapers and network TV news report the news.
As I wrote, neither side of the political aisle was happy with an
“objective” media, which was a necessary fiction for radio and
television to maintain for the first three quarters of the 20th century.
This was a time when the first radio, and later TV networks were a
massively expensive proposition, hence only three over-the-air national
commercial networks. However, as a byproduct of their dramatic cultural
influence, most cities were gradually reduced after WWII to only being
served by a couple of newspapers. By the 1970s, the amount of news
services producing content was remarkably small, despite an era that had
no shortage of crises to report.
The arrival of first Rush and then in rapid succession Fox, Drudge,
and the Blogosphere were a necessary and long overdue counterbalance to a
left-leaning media posing as “objective.” Speaking of which, note that
the AP still holds itself out as being objective, despite a howler such
as this in Bauder’s column:
By 2002, Fox had raced past CNN to become the top-rated news network.
This was the beginning of a golden age of partisan media, though Rush
Limbaugh had started a boom of conservative talk radio in the early
1990s.
There wasn’t anything to compare on the left, at least until summer
2006 when MSNBC host Keith Olbermann read about a speech where Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld equated Iraq War opponents to pre-World War II
appeasers. The next night, Olbermann angrily denounced Rumsfeld.
Olbermann half-expected his boss to fire him, but management instead saw
viewers had responded.
“The next day he came into my office and said, ‘could you do one of those every night, buddy?'” Olbermann recalled.
His show became home for disaffected liberals in the Bush
administration’s final years. MSNBC hired Maddow and eventually made the
entire network left-leaning. It didn’t really stick: Low ratings forced
a turn to straight news in daytime the last two years, but vestiges of
partisanship remain.
“There wasn’t anything to compare on the left” – other than NBCABCPBSCBSCNN, the
New York Times, the
Washington Post,
and NPR. Not to mention, by 2006 a host of leftwing magazines,
Websites, blogs and Internet forums. Plus Air America, which ran from
2004 to 2010 and served as MSNBC’s farm team.
But wait, there’s more:
Liberals like Jeff Cohen, communications professor at
Ithaca College, believe that conservatives will always dominate mass
media because of corporate ownership.
“Conservatives…dominate mass media,” despite the fact that journalists have been a reliably monolithic Democrat voter block
since at least 1964.
And speaking of posing as objective when you’re really a group of
Democrat activists with bylines, note the headline on this post, which
is also a favorite leitmotif of James Taranto of the
Wall Street Journal’s “Best of the Web” column.
It was an AP headline in June of 2008,
Democrat propaganda pretending to be news. Perhaps if AP had truly been
worried about readers departing to “intellectual ghettos,” they
wouldn’t have worked so hard to drive them away in the first place.
THE MEDIA’S TWISTED “BLAME THE RIGHT” NARRATIVE.
Mindy Alter of the
Rebel’s article includes the audio of my interview with James Piereson on his essential 2007 book,
Camelot and the Cultural Revolution.
As she notes, Piereson’s book is worth reading both as a reminder of
how the media switched immediately into “no evil on the left” mode to
muddle the Cold War implications of Kennedy’s assassination, and the
long term cognitive dissonance Kennedy’s murder caused for the left in
general, which would be echoed again and again in birth of the “Truther”
movement in the aftermath of 9/11, all the way to how the MSM and the
Obama administration has reacted to the [REDACTED] shooter’s pledging
allegiance to [REDACTED] in Orlando.
“
More older Americans – those ages 65 and older – are working than at any time since the turn of the century,
and today’s older workers are spending more time on the job than did
their peers in previous years, according to a new Pew Research Center
analysis of employment data from the federal
Bureau of Labor Statistics
There is no evil. Life is a blessing. If it is not, then know that you are at fault. And you have been given time to correct your error, to have the joy (the highest blessing) of correcting your fault. That is the only reason for time. If you do not correct your fault, it will be corrected against your will — by death. Yes, life is a blessing. There is no evil. There are only our faults, faults in general and our personal ones, and we have been given the joy through time of correcting them. And there is the greatest joy in correcting them.
The Baird government will spend $12.6 million spruiking the Sydney Metro to the public, signing contracts with five consultancy firms to manage community relations ahead of a wave of compulsory property acquisitions and demolitions. The attempt to win public support for the disruption set to engulf the city and south western suburbs as it builds Australia's biggest rail project ranges from "classroom-ready" lessons for schools to traditional "spin" Bad governments love spin doctors
Three governments are currently consulting their constituents. Two are offering them a significant choice about future foreign policy: one is not. The US asks delegates to decide between a President Donald Trump who would expel Hispanics, bar entry to Muslims, and flatten parts of the Middle East, and a President Hillary Clinton who would take a tougher line against states which challenge the US. The UK has asked citizens to decide if Britain should separate from the European Union and, presumably, tie itself more tightly to the US. Australian leaders are asking voters almost nothing about what foreign policy initiatives would differentiate Prime Minister Turnbull from a Prime Minister Shorten ... via Dr Alison Broinowski is Vice-President of Honest History and Vice-President of Australians for War Powers Reform Proccess or Policy Elections 2016
Two independent
research firms have confirmed an assessment by the Democratic National
Committee that its network was compromised by Russian government hackers. The
firms’ conclusions come several days after someone going by the moniker
“Guccifer 2.0” claimed responsibility for the hack in an apparent attempt to
deflect blame from the Russian government.
Renters Are Making More, And Landlords Get It All Bloomberg
Failure is not an option
Pleasure of diaries
Sex writing
Is the brain training industry just a placebo?
Underneath Five-Star Veneer, High-End Restaurant Employees Get Worked Over American Prospect
Two US Air Force members and a number of Australian Border Force (ABF)
officials have allegedly been recruited by international criminal
syndicates attempting to smuggle goods into Australia. The United States airmen, Jarvis Cobb and Christopher Paul, were
allegedly recruited by a Middle Eastern criminal syndicate last year.
US Air Force members and Border Force officials allegedly involved in smuggling syndicates
Elite travellers skip the airport security line – for a price Bloomberg