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sydney alternative media - non-profit community independent trustworthy
Wednesday, 27 June 2007
Character questions for 'Desalination Minister' Rees and Treasurer Costa getting serious
Mood:  sharp
Topic: nsw govt
The Hon. Nathan REES,  MP

Minister Nathan Rees has been conspicuous in the news defending Premier Morris Iemma's decision to build a super sized desalination plant. His boss Iemma is sounding like the proverbial buyer of an extra set of steak knives at a cheaper price from the big multinationals worried about all this rain ruining their project too.

There was Nathan Rees on the Trioli radio 702 show earlier today 27th June swearing blind the green energy scheme neutralises any greenhouse implications and talk back callers were thus misinformed. And we heard Premier Iemma 26th June same show argue the green energy component further helps on climate issues by cranking up the renewable energy sector with a chunky client.

.................................................advertisement.................................................


Celebrate Aboriginal Australia: 

 Linda Burney MP launches NAIDOC week action at Addison Gallery Marrickville 2pm Sunday 8th July 07

.............................................................................................................. 

But as Jeff Angel, Director of the Total Environment Centre in strained tones made clear on Trioli yesterday 26th June, all new green energy to be generated should be going into retiring dirty energy already streaming into our economy. In other words there is no net reduction in greenhouse gases.

(Though to be fair there is a premium in public policy terms in building the critical mass of the renewable energy sector in order to achieve more actual substitution in the future ...maybe. That much we concede to Iemma.)

But Nathan Rees was sounding too cute by half this morning airbrushing this reality, scolding the public along the way, always a risky move for a politician in the media.  It's a green energy lite sort of justification for this much bigger desalination plant compounding the broken 30% water storage threshhold election promise.

It's a population and higher consumption type of future this ALP is planning for, thus No stopping desalination even if dam spills over

But if Nathan Rees has a political character trait that glosses this situation involving some $1.7B in public funds expenditure, what other issues of character might he be accountable for too? Have we been here before?

Today there is also this devastating story about his former boss Minister Milton Orkopoulos:

Minister did not act on abuse - adviser

As this Lateline programme notes Nathan Rees was the chief of staff to Orkopoulous in 2006, broadcast 10/11/2006:

Iemma vows minister scandal will not affect govt

to quote reporter Simon Santow:

"SIMON SANTO: Long-term Labor MPs in the Hunter are promising to cooperate with any police investigations. Morris Iemma says he's avoiding contact with anyone who may end up as witnesses in court cases.

MORRIS IEMMA: What I am not going to do is interfere. There will be no interference in police investigations or court process.

SIMON SANTO: But he has quizzed his staffer, Nathan Rees, who was Milton Orkopolous' chief of staff until a few month ago.

MORRIS IEMMA: He gave me that assurance and he, in what was stated yesterday, if he can assist the police he'll make himself available to do so, as is proper.

SIMON SANTO: The Opposition says the Premier is applying double standards.

PETER DEBNAM: He has questioned a member of staff but refuses to question MPs. you've got to ask why."

We don't claim Rees is covering up for anything. But the very real public interest question arises, what did he know, and what role if any did he play in Orkopoulos's portfolio failure alleged in the Herald article above?

This very same question was raised in a phone conversation with a shadow minister to this writer 2 weeks ago when I initiated some lobbying.

If Rees was a mere flunky it would perhaps be an easier question. But Simon Benson who is often a conduit for praiseworthy stories for the NSW ALP govt

[the way Glenn Milne is for Peter Costello and Adam Spencer was described to be for the Iemma Govt (in a bitchy sledge by retired Fairfaxer Alex Mitchell)]

writes today:

Explosive battle of Right and Left looms or the web headline Opinion: Left and right do battle

where Benson states:

"Nathan Rees (emergency services) has emerged as a bull-terrier with an intellect to match his aggressiveness."

Clearly veteran state political reporter Simon Benson does not think Nathan Rees, Orkopoulos's former chief of staff is a fool or a flunky. On the contrary.

So what did Rees know and when did he know it, if anything? More on the whole grim affair before the courts now here Sex abuse: MP approached - National - smh.com.au

An otherwise popular MP Bryce Gaudry was damaged indirectly by the Orkopoulos affair if only by unlucky association and again not claiming any wrongdoing on Gaudry's part. Bryce was deselected causing a real controversy in the state election seat of Newcastle.

Yet Rees has sailed on and is now doing Iemma's misleading rhetoric on green energy allocations in an economy already up to its eyeballs in coal fired dirty energy. Character indeed.

...................

Postscript #1 5.30 pm 27th June 2007

The NSW Govt has pulled on a dirty plume in Warragamba Dam story, which is a non story because they already admit there is no threat to water supplies. But it seems to be working with this leading the Herald web news page:

Warragamba pollution threat

ANDREW CLENNELL 4:15pm | Heavy rain over the past week has triggered a massive plume of pollution in Sydney's main dam.

This despite National Party leader Stoner via 4pm and 5pm ABC radio news reports having been booted from parliament on the Rees character question of the Breaking the Silence report while he was chief of staff in the relevant portofolio but Glover ABC 702 for instance are studiously ignoring the much more sinister scandal as above. 

Unlike the Daily Telegraph here

Nationals MP thrown out of parliament

NSW Nationals MP Andrew Stoner says he is happy to be ejected from parliament if it brings attention to the abuse of children in the state's indigenous communities.  Read more

Ironic given it was Rees dissembling on the desal green energy with Glover yesterday that got us riled up over his character, as it did with Glover actually at the time in the interview. Rees deserves no favours.

Postscript #2

This editorial last Saturday about Treasurer Costa and the NSW Iemma Govt having alot to be embarrassed about over lack of credible response to the Breaking the Silence report resonates: Editorial: Iemma Government must follow Howard's cue. What a shame it takes a cynical Howard Govt shamelessly playing the angles to expose another shameful State Govt on Aboriginal child welfare. Disgusting really.

It was Iemma soon after March 07 election that confidently asserted this was "a good government" and to ignore claims otherwise.

No we didn't buy it either. Notice this quote last weekend in It's the economy, stupid: Costa's tough stand - National - smh.com.au by Andrew Clennell, chief state political reporter for the Sydney Morning Herald, regarding power drunk Treasurer Michael Costa

"[Costa] defends a decision last year not to hand over $20 million to $40 million to three ministers who wanted it for a program to tackle Aboriginal child sex abuse, saying his policy and that of the Premier was that ministers needed to find savings in other areas if they wanted new initiatives. "I haven't knocked anything back," he says. "I said, as I say to all ministers, these are important initiatives; when you come up with important initiatives you ought to look at the initiatives that are not working and see whether you can transfer resources."

This is the same Michael Costa who, as then NSW Labor Council secretary of the union movement was making real gains on the issue of workers compensation insurance levels when he suddenly was appointed to the financially comfy Upper House to replace an ALP vacancy of the Carr Govt.

This was Costa's stirring clarion call via Workers Online in 1999 until he got a new job offer:

"The NSW Labor Government was also sent a blunt message: 'Fix up the crisis. Make employers comply with no cut back to benefits.'

Addressing the rally outside Parliament House, NSW Labor Council Secretary Michael Costa said: 'Workers comp is got to be put back on track. It's got to be put back into a form which does what it was originally set up for. And that is to protect workers rights, to protect workers interests and to ensure they get fair compensation if they are injured.' "

The campaign struggled on and was making serious headway by 2001. Then just as it was getting sticky for Carr's govt on this big financial issue Costa sold out that campaign and joined the NSW Upper house Nov 2001. Not for him any public anxiety or hedging like Greg Combet most of 2007when he was urged to go into federal Parliament from the ACTU. No Costa jumped in a flash as we recall.

Here is Costa vowing to carry the torch for the workers in his new comfy job 20 April 2001

"Costa To Join Della’s List


Labor Council secretary Michael Costa last night added his name to Della's List and vowed to continue his fight for fair workers compensation ahead of his move to the NSW Upper House in August.

 

 
 

 

 

Costa formally announced his resignation from his position at Labor Council to take effect from August 30. He will move to the NSW Legislative Council to fill the vacancy left by ALP stalwart Johnno Johnson.

His departure come after 13 sometimes turbulent years at the Labor Council. He rose to notoreity first as a Wollongong activist, then as a rank and file official with the then AFULE rail union.

Costa survived Presidential inquiries and a stint as General Manager at 2KY to become an activist secretary.

He earned the eternal ire of Friends of Currowong, the hatred of the Daily Telegraph, the respect of the Carr Government and the joyful bemusement of his trade union colleagues.

"Former secretaries have told me that this is the best job I could ever had," Costa told delegates, "and they're right.This is a fantastic job and I have loved every minute of it,"

Costa has vowed to continue fighting the workers compensation campaign and has been asked to be placed on the List of MPs supporting amendments to protect injured workers "provisionally". " [bold added]

In reality the gathering Union campaign momentum for strong workers compensation levels and legal system fell apart from the time Costa was bought out to the benefit of the NSW budget. John Robertson struggled on manfully but was too new and unknown to cut through.  The legal integrity of the system was smashed at the expense of injured workers as per this "devastating" report here by The Australian's legal editor Chris Merritt May 18th 2007 page 24 whereas Costa jumped ship to a cosy seat, and now as Treasurer. Betrayal of trust and public duty? We think so.

Postscript #1

Big Media follow our story here 29th June 2007

Minister rues remark about 'kiddie fiddlers' - National - smh.com.au


Posted by editor at 12:44 PM NZT
Updated: Tuesday, 3 July 2007 1:33 PM NZT
Tuesday, 26 June 2007
APEC Sept 2007: Civil society groups sleep walking into a law and order federal election trap
Mood:  rushed
Topic: election Oz 2007

 

Pictures in this story: Anti Forbes protest in Sydney August 2005 unless otherwise indicated.

 

The new police commissioner for NSW Andrew Scipione has identified the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum to be held in Sydney Australia  as his main focus in the short term:

 

"Deputy Commissioner Scipione also says he will take an inclusive leadership approach and will build on current successes.

He will face his first challenge just days after he takes the reigns, with 21 world leaders gathering in Sydney for the Asia Pacific Economic Forum (APEC). " New NSW police head 'will build on successes'

Scipione is being reported as seen as a “yes man” on the 7 tv news network tonight 26th June, a suggestion also made about Commissioner “Uncle” Ken Maroney he replaces criticised by some, says ABC radio, for being “too close to the NSW government”. Scipione reportedly also has alot of expertise in surveillance.

 

We submit both the NSW and federal government are bearing down on the NSW and Australian civil society non government sector at September’s APEC in the lead up to the federal election. Both levels of government, NSW and federal, are respectively desperate to alternatively prevent/exploit a Law and Order electioneering strategy to provide a premium to this Howard Coalition Govt prior to the federal election.

Picture: Spot the third helicopter, hovering over crowd listening to speeches in Customs House square, Circular Quay Sydney.

We wrote recently of 6 political synergies feeding into the converging law and order federal election recently: The new 'Tampa' emerges: Howard ploughs broad law and order theme for 2007 federal election here 23rd June 2007.

These are:

 

  1. Our troops ‘police action’ in Iraq (and probably Afghanistan)
  2. alleged union thuggery
  3. murder of good Samaritan solicitor in Melbourne
  4. child abuse of Aboriginal children
  5. Palm Island violence, death in custody, acquittal of police, ongoing serious social violence
  6. APEC anticipated protester violence, property damage

The seventh political synergy is a sub text of point 4 to boost in the short term Howard's own ‘leadership’ credentials in the polling vis a vis his ambitious deputy Costello, pre federal election.

 

There is no doubting the potency of the Laura Norder agenda with the NSW election a dress rehearsal earlier this year which fortunately fizzled rather exploding into significance for the Coalition opposition at NSW level in March 2007.

 

But what about the upcoming federal election in November 2007?

 

Civil society leaders and centre left political parties have some very very serious political calculations to make right now about how to not sleep walk into an APEC public relations disaster that feeds into the Howard re-election agenda in a tightly contested election.

 

What responsibility will the organised civil society groups play in controlling, sidelining and indeed excluding images of violence and property damage from the voting public but so beloved of the commercial tv and newspapers, and the Right wing of politics?

 

How indeed will the organised non govt sector organise to affirm and promote freedom of speech and the right to protest that avoids feeding the re election of a warmonging Howard Govt who will exploit any media imagery he or his supporters can generate?

 

We at SAM news site (the editor has been arrested 6 times for peaceful protests, court 3 times no convictions) believe the right to protest also includes the choice not to protest. To seek other methods of communicating to the public. We take seriously the stern nostrum of Nelson Mandela against vandalism and crime of no real political utility.

 

Sun Zzu famous for strategy in a book The Art of War - and given politics at best is war without violence - as we understand advises avoiding fighting on your enemies territory.

 

In the lead up to APEC what are the Big Corporations and Big Government territory?

 

The territory of the Right of politics includes:

 

-         the Big Corporate media who will embarrass and exaggerate any adverse imagery.

-         The proximity to the conference in Sydney’s CBD which will have all legal and govt security force in place to totally control movement and protest

-         The critical mass of foreign govt and corporate leaders who will naturally attract the interest of the voting public.

-         The disorganised untrained protester cohort who have not had the opportunity for, or reject the Gandhi non-violence philosophy of public protest. The proverbial angry young men and women who have not learned constructive way to channel their energy.

 

It must be noted APEC is not another S11 in Melbourne in the year 2000 of which we at SAM have a 6 inch thick lever arch file of cuttings.

 

 

It is not a Forbes in Sydney CBD in late 2005. It is not another G8 again in Melbourne in late 2006 with valid concerns but also absurd vandalism which appalled most thinking Australians and tarnished the vast majority of peaceful protesters. These were big international meetings too but not proximate to a very close federal election or on such a big world stage or with such loaded Laura Norder agenda of this Australian Prime Minister.

 

Picture: This writer's wall poster above our desk.

 

APEC Sept 07 is more like a Madrid just before the Spanish national elections of March 2004 when a terrorist train bombing changed the result of the election to the Centre Left Party from the Right wing Govt. In that case the Basques were falsely accused, the truth came out and voters were so angry at the dishonesty of the govt as to the real cause (most directly Islamofascists, and the related hornets nest in Iraq), they turfed the conservative government out.

 

But it all turned on who was seen to be blamed for the violence.

 

In a close federal election in Australia the same may well apply in Sydney if there are wanton property damage, staged futile tedious unproductive conflicts with NSW police at barriers etc or horse charges to clear streets of no particular value to civil society groups except our own pride.

 

At all costs the leadership of the civil society groups must avoid such a PR trap. The best way to achieve that is to organise alternative activities that free us from the reactive psychology that actually feeds and empowers and promotes the status of the APEC clowns and pompous fools of Big Capital. To define and locate our own territory and political strategy. To decline the cliched victimhood of massive superior force held by the State.

 

We submit there is a false psychological dynamic of  the civil society sector being drawn into a massive waste of money on security, the extreme quarantining of the CBD, and great public disruption to the functioning of the city. We simply ask why bother?

 

We submit civil society should assert it’s own dynamic. It’s own geographical focus at say Addison Rd Centre Marrickville or similar open space. It’s own conference agenda parallel and better than the rubbish APEC event. It’s own celebrations of democracy. It’s own constructive action agenda. Information exchange. Workshopping. Training. Empowerment. Alternative media.

 

In short we submit that the civil society movement in Australia should choose to not confront APEC in the Sydney CBD. Rather to do our own thing. Our way. In our own space and to start promoting that separate agenda.  It will be better fun. It will have much better energy. It will achieve a lot more. And it will deny John Howard what he wants more than anything: A big likely mindless conflict on the doorstep to the federal election.

 

It will avoid the Right's agent provocateurs.

 

We submit call the whole APEC protest in Sydney CBD off and do something better.

 

That is not to say not engage with APEC. Our proposal would be to send delegations as ambassadors of the civil society sector, our representatives as observers and messengers. But no more than that.

 

We just don’t see why our lives in the community sector should be driven by or defined by a meeting of over fed corrupt crooks who are literally decaying from inside themselves with no answers to the huge ecological and economic equity questions of our age. So why do that? How about doing something else in our own space? And by doing so help unelect John Howard's Coalition government.

 

..........................................Advertisement....................................................

 

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The author's peaceful protest arrest 'credentials'

 

1992

- tree sits against woodchipping Nalbaugh SF SENSW - no arrest, too high

- climbed Opera House with no nukes weapons banner - arrest, released

 

1993

- forest protest Coolangubra arrest, conviction overturned on appeal NSW CCA

- forest protest Badja SF - no arrest - tree sit

- paddlers for peace, rescued by police launch from ship screw no arrest

 

1994 - forest protest Croobyar, no arrest due to pre election sensitivity

 

1995 - M2 tollway destruction - arrest, no conviction recorded Hornsby

 

1997 - Eastern Distributor tollway - arrest, no conviction Downing centre

 

1999 - red paint on Newcastle woodchip pile, arrest, no conviction recorded

 

2006 - Forbes - dragged out from under police horses hooves approach to Opera House, no arrest

 

 


 

Picture: conservationists at approach road to Eden chip mill July 1992, including Fiona McCrossin (centre right figure under cross bars, black top) ex wife of News Ltd's Tony Wilkins referred to here 26th June 2007 News Limited to spread climate message | The Nation | The Australian "

Tony Wilkins, head of the company's environment and climate change department, said cost-savings would help the company invest in renewable energy. News Limited's carbon footprint last financial year was 146,466 tonnes - about 22 per cent of parent company News Corporation's total footprint - but Dr Wilkins said readers and viewers emitted 10,000 times as much.

"I think the single biggest influence that we can have as a company is the influence that we have on the public," Dr Wilkins said. "If we succeed in inspiring our audiences to reduce their own impact on climate change by 5 per cent, it would be like turning off the state of California for a year."

 

Postscript #1 Big media (and NSW Police?) follow our story here  

Cages on wheels: APEC plan to keep the peace - National - smh.com.au

 

 


Posted by editor at 10:59 PM NZT
Updated: Wednesday, 17 February 2010 9:05 PM EADT
Stephen Dupont's lovely photographs on show at Redfern gallery till July 14th
Mood:  smelly
Topic: culture


Picture: Stephen Dupont photographer (centre left) is framed by a pregnant Liz Tardic of SBS Dateline [we first met supporting the Timbara gold mine protests in 2000 including our donation of some $2K for expert's airline ticket from USA] last Saturday afternoon at Byron McMahon Gallery, 88 George St Redfern, and in turn by the SAM news reporter's camera.

 

We were first alerted to Stephen Dupont, whose name sounds to us like a chemical company CEO, after catching this on Channel 9 Sunday programme

......................

Dangerous angles
June 17, 2007


Dili
Watch video

If you've ever wondered what sort of person risks their life going to the wildest and most dangerous places on Earth to snap those photographs we see in our newspapers, then you'll want to hear from Stephen Dupont.

This renowned Australian photo-journalist started out as a teenager who just wanted to travel and maybe learn how to take pictures along the way. So far, he's spent 20 years of living dangerously: Afghanistan, Iraq, Rwanda, Somalia — he's been to them all. Along the way he's won a swag of top international photography awards and has seen his pictures printed in almost every leading magazine and newspaper.

SUNDAY caught up with him after a new exhibition of his work opened in Sydney.

You can catch Stephen Dupont's exhibiton at the Byron McMahon Gallery in Sydney's Redfern. Call 02 9318 0404 or visit
www.sandrabyrongallery.com.au

Or visit Dupont's website at www.stephendupont.com

.................................................advertisement.................................................


 

Celebrate Aboriginal Australia: 
 Linda Burney MP launches NAIDOC week action at Addison Gallery Marrickville 2pm Sunday 8th July 07

.............................................................................................................. 

It was a bitter sweet experience dropping in to coincidentally find the place filled with appreciative fans receiving a walk through and talk by the good photographer himself.

By chance before proceedings, having recognised SD from the tv I complimented him on the "great grab" he got on Sunday. "Did you see yourself broadcast?" Puzzlement then "yeah I watched it".

"I notice the photo with all the people looking toward your camera. Just goes to show the power of the camera. The West Wing calls it the Heisenberg Principle". No reply.  The first communication disjunction.

Okay so I had just had a coffee and was blathering a bit trying to be smart about what is actually more accurately known as the observer effect ie what you monitor is changed by the act of observing.

As we went around listening to his light hearted and soft patter an older guy with an expensive long lens camera came in with a coffee coloured slender beauty. As these two merged with the strolling audience I was so entranced by the talk and pictures we bumped shoulder tips lightly.

Big Camera called out a question but SD didn't hear it even though he had invited questions as we went.  Communication disjunct #2.

In a pause I repeated it "How much did they [the fixers - ie local interpreters/logistics specialists] cost?"

 "In Indonesia it can be US$100 per day which is alot of money for them." Them and me both.

The gallery itself is in a gutsy location just off tricky Redfern St. A conversion of the Redfern Hotel where we used to deliver street press, once a month part of that 6 year slog.  One of the last rough and ready Sydney pubs all tiles and faded fittings a bit like the County Clare in Broadway.

The photos were on sale, beautifully presented framed in glass, large format, at $2,500. All in artistic black and white which was the cause of my diplomatic downfall, but more of that below.

Picture: In Romania, 2nd largest single building structure after the Pentagon says Stephen Dupont. Says he took this late morning with only 3 cars in view. Robbed but kept his cameras and film.

At this photo I ventured "Yet there are no other cars" to which he corrected me "There are two other cars". Yep, quite right. 3 cars. Communication disjunct #3.

Picture: SD. "I don't read Arabic, I have no idea what this reads"

I had asked him whether he had any other languages. And he confirmed he didn't. So when we came to this picture above I was in mind of Philip Ruddock the federal Attorney General reported in large format article in the Daily Telegraph recently cracking down on any publication that "praises" terrorism. The absurdity of that law for an artwork like this photo seemed obvious to me. I alerted Liz Tardic to this line of thinking too for her show. Here is the article:

Plan to block terror recruiting websites | The Daily Telegraph

And I quote: "Mr Ruddock will today [21 June 2007] introduce legislation making it an offence to produce or disseminate material that "advocates" terrorism, such as offensive books and DVDs."

So the talk finished and SD took questions.

Someone: Why black and white? 'Grew up with it, makes you think more'. It took a veteran in the audience to suggest it carried more emotion which rang true to me. Disjunct #4?

(I was musing about this later and recalled there is much greater variable shadow play without colour and that this in fact is indicative of much non western life where electric light is the exception rather than the generality at early morning and dusk.)

After waiting politely I ventured: "I'm totally untrained [which was a lie but meant by comparison], but from western eyes the images suggest poverty. And quite gritty. Is that why you like black and white?" His answer, somthing like:

"Well colour can give you gritty too. I don't know about poverty, that's not really ao, there isn't really poverty depending on what you mean."

Definitely disjunct #4. It was clear as day many of these folks envied or hated western affluence and I was talking from experience in Morocco, Santiago with their stray dogs everywhere, other parts of Chile, back slum lanes of Barcelona, Falls Rd Belfast, Port Moresby dust with buses overflowing, 20 Toya for an egg no haggling.  Indeed what his western face and camera really symbolised to those viewed. The observer effect indeed which SD virtually acknowledged himself as the "fuck you" look.  Or was it the accusation look?

I was similarly not really interested in pandering even to the artist himself. It just seemed trite to be lectured on concepts of cultural and emotional richness as distinct from western materialism. As if I didn't know about that at 43 and reasonably travelled. Still I couldn't blame him. He didn't know me at all. But he also seemed to airbrush the underlying aggression to the West these days for the incredible inequality in this world.

So I shouldn't have but I couldn't resist responding to this fine published photographer's spiel to potential purchasers

"But you weren't "alone" really. You have your camera which is very powerful and it was Tony Blair the other day who made it clear the media is so powerful it intrudes on everyone's life". (Not to mention fixer nearby?).

[The Blair speech is instructive actually for just how powerful the media are, even a small share to this little micro SAM news website, or we suggest travelling photographer, including this quote:

"I am going to say something that few people in public life will say but most know is absolutely true: a vast aspect of our jobs today - outside of the really major decisions, as big as anything else - is coping with the media, its sheer scale, weight and constant hyperactivity. At points, it literally overwhelms." Things to chew on in Blair's parting gift June 21, 2007]

I was on a roll but it was the wrong place, wrong people, fish in a barrel stuff. Self indulgence. Stephen had suggested a relaxed question and answer, or conversation but he didn't really want a challenge. Pandering was much more in order. In my own defense there was another fiesty questioner in the audience, and Tadic had her camera on me which was a little surprising. But then I was getting bored and running out of time for the Islamic exhibition at the NSW Art Gallery.

This now middle aged, travel obsessed rolling stone slightly paunchy and maybe punchy photo artist with a proud air published in New Yorker and New York Times was being what he is, a wet Democrat and a brilliant photographer. I even agreed with him mostly, but it just didn't seem relevant. Where was my respect?

"I don't get that much work these days because I prefer large format black and white. I do work for books mainly now."

Meaning uncompromising artist. Admirable stuff. But maybe also because he an old media dinosaur compared to rude new media bloggers like this writer? We left quietly for the next (free) show closing in less than an hour.

Communication disjunct #5. I left a web address in the message book and  I called back the next day, left a message. No reply. 


We hope Stephen Dupont has alot of good sales from his show open until 14th July 2007. He has good politics and a likeable nature. But also something else we have tried to reflect above, perhaps from all those years out of the comfort zone not least with Massoud, assassinated leader of Afghanistan's Northern Alliance, and Big Media pride. He's gone native I would say, and a little defensive. He's definitely earned the sales after 20 years of expertise and risk. I hope he finds some time for the new media too. You can't be a rolling stone forever which suggests SD confronting the modern tastes of Australia or similar western country eventually as per this liftout in The Australian June 26th 07.


Or maybe he will settle outside of his home country? Sticking to his dark room and black and white stills forever? 

We also felt a little concerned. Which of course sounds foolish for a big tough war photographer but everyone has their limits. We are reminded of a chapter, if memory serves, from an old Australian 60 Minutes book alluding to a similar character who strides manfully through the newspaper to the editor's office all machismo and daring seemingly invincible and full of vigour, only to die on yet another battle ground. It doesn't have to be that way.

Show finishes July 14th 2007, closed Sunday and Mondays.


Posted by editor at 3:14 PM NZT
Updated: Tuesday, 26 June 2007 9:33 PM NZT
Monday, 25 June 2007
NT Traditional owners speak out in Sydney against Canberra's nuke waste dump
Mood:  special
Topic: nuke threats

 

 

Joint Media Release -

Traditional Owners from NT and Ian Cohen MLC 

25 June 2007


“From the bush to the harbour, we say never never” Concerns grow
over Canberra’s nuclear waste plan

After years of being ignored in the bush, Traditional Owners and
community representatives from four sites in the Northern Territory
targeted by the Federal Government for a radioactive waste dump have
brought their concerns to the heart of Australia’s biggest city.

The group is in Sydney at NSW Parliament House today, as part of a
national tour to highlight the growing issue of radioactive waste ahead
of the federal election.

“People in the NT know about this issue, now others need to hear the
story. This concerns all Australians, especially people living along the
roads leading from Sydney to the NT,” said Audrey McCormack, whose
homeland is four kilometres from the proposed Mt Everard dump site.

“Nuclear waste is to be deposited out of sight and out of mind on
Aboriginal land. Half a century of the nuclear era and still we are no
closer to effective disposal of nuclear waste”, said NSW Upper House
Greens MP Ian Cohen.

“We may find eventually that Muckaty or another region in the
Northern Territory will be a repository of global nuclear wastes. It is
a horrific scenario for those who live there, the environment, and for
small vulnerable communities along the transport corridor”, Mr Cohen
said.

In 2004 a NSW Parliamentary committee examined the transport and
storage of nuclear waste in NSW and highlighted serious and unresolved
safety concerns, particularly for NSW regional communities on the
primary transport corridors.

“The NT is not no-where and we are not no-one. There are communities
living close to all of the proposed sites. We collect bush tucker and
bush medicine and water from underground,” said Mitch, an
Arrernte/Luritja woman representing Engawala, the community closest to
the proposed Harts Range site.

“This dump plan is the thin edge of the wedge and opens the door to
an international waste dump in the NT. The federal government has lied
to us about this dump not being in the Territory, so why should we
believe it won’t become an international dump?” concluded Margie
Lynch, an Arrernte woman from Central Australia.

Contact: Natalie Wasley (speaking tour coordinator) 0429 900 774
              Nic Clyde (Adviser, Greens MLC Ian Cohen) 0417 742 754


Posted by editor at 1:46 PM NZT
Updated: Monday, 25 June 2007 1:55 PM NZT
Dopey Telegraph shoots the Media Watch messenger, panders to rednecks?
Mood:  down
Topic: big media

 

 

How brazen and gormless are the Sydney Daily Telegraph editorial? Very we would say. This article above is hopelessly contradicted by ....the respected News Ltd columnist in their own haughtily named The Media bible for their sector in The Australian weekly liftout every Thursday:

Mark Day By rowboat or at light speed, news is no free for all June 21, 2007

and these words direct quote, bold added:

"The net has not only changed the nature of news, but it has also provided a two-way conversation. The rise and rise of blogs has contributed to a great rise in interaction between newspapers and their consumers.

Around the world editors are seeking to increase reader involvement with their mastheads as a way of extending their reach.

This has brought growing pains, as highlighted this week on the ABC's Media Watch.

If Blair deplores the kind of "impactful" language used by newspapers, what does he make of some of the public reaction?

Media Watch highlighted a problem for all newspaper bloggers: how far does the notion of free speech extend?

Most newspaper bloggers moderate their reader responses and remove any material that is defamatory, abusive, vilifying, discriminatory or racist.

When confronted by borderline material I find myself often yielding to the temptation to let it through, because to do otherwise is to invite rancid criticism.

It's a no-win situation: if you allow such material through, chances are you'll be in court sooner rather than later; if you edit the posts those who find their remarks modified frequently complain that they have been censored. Well, maybe, but the criticism of an aggrieved blogger is preferable to a million-dollar lawsuit in my book.

Media Watch singled out the Sydney Daily Telegraph for special attention because of what it claimed was a large number of racist or otherwise offensive online comments.

In response, editor David Penberthy declared he was in favour of free speech, and what Media Watch was advocating was censorship.

He also pointed out that in the online argy-bargy, excess on either extremity of a debate was usually leavened by plenty of sensible balance in the middle.

Like Penberthy, I am in favour of free speech, but it does come with a price. We have laws that define the limits of our freedoms - like you're free to drive your car, as long as you keep it on the left side of the road.

Defamatory online comments can be just as dangerous and costly for a media owner as libels in print. Racist commentary online can breach anti-vilification laws which are designed to establish community standards.

Like them or not, these laws are enforceable, and are ignored at your peril. "

O foolish, proud Daily Telegraph here in their editorial bully pit today. Guilty as charged, now dissembling and trying to cover its tracks with a counter attack on the credentials and performance of Media Watch as the messenger. The Telegraph is proud of being the biggest and the most influential which means it has higher standards of responsibility with that power. It's as simple as that. Lift your game and pay for the blog moderation time of your staff. It's as simple as that. God forbid we ever have the cult of extreme free (read hate) speech in a civil society.

Sad to see the grubby, dopey Telegraph seeking to leverage their lower standards to chip at Media Watch with the ABC setting the standards, whether they also slipped or not (highly debatable). Certainly they will care, while the Telegraph hypocritically flout legal standards. Shame David, shame. This is not the USA, and we believe in cricket still to some degree. If you want to play Big Media that way then move to North America, land of bizarre constitutionally guaranteed hate speech and Rupert Murdoch citizenship. We can manage quite okay without, thanks, here in little old Galilee to their modern Rome under the perverse Republican heel.

On the other hand we do appreciate this from the Sydney Daily Telegraph today:

Warren the cartoonist at the Sydney Telegraph has an inspired cartoon about the gruesome nature of high level adversarial contest over the very serious "above politics" issue involving the life abuse and death of our young Indigenous citizens: Leveraging another evocative picture story on page 7 "Like bats out of hell - Endangered creature swoops on park land" (offline for now), combined with the fact of end of Parliamentary sessions in Canberra for the next 6 weeks or more, Warren offers this:

Postscript #1 we posted a similar sentiment here on this message board.

Postscript #2 This came through on the lists today with one of many reactions in the last 3 days to the Howard law and order agenda:

Dear Mr Howard, As  concerned citizens of Australia, We are responding to your approach to the child abuse crisis in the Northern Territory. We believe that your concerns are sincere, but the measures to be undertaken are  completely invasive, draconian, arrogant and condescending. This type of hard-line attempt at "SAVING THESE COMMUNITIES FROM THEMSELVES" reekes of past injustices and misinterpretations of  proper solutions. Your approach is disempowering, unacceptable to the broader community; and reminiscent of Apartheid policies.

There is absolutely NO GROUP WITHIN AUSTRALIA, who would allow such intrusion of their democratic liberties. If you are to introduce COMPULSORY HEALTH CHECKS, BANNING OF ALCOHOL AND PORNOGRAPHY- FOR THE INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES-  are you willing to introduce the SAME controls over the broader community where Sexual Abuse/ Domestic Violence/ Paedophilic activities is rampant and possibly reaching crisis point as well ?!!

Efforts to stamp out child abuse stem from targetting the perpetrators (That is  ANGLO and NON-ANGLO PAEDOPHILES!) not targetting social benefits and introducing invasive health checks on children who have already been traumatised ! 

Has the government had the decency to debate, LISTEN and consult with the community elders and those directly affected in regards to possible solutions?

Mr Howard, any intelligent Australian would be ashamed and appalled at this "so-called" concerned solution, to a problem that the government has closed their eyes to for a number of years.
WHY  NOW MR HOWARD ?
Concerned Citizens of Australia:
 
 
 
Postscript #3 26th June 2007

The penny has dropped today regarding the latest Media Watch episode last night (fell asleep, read it today) that this writers' penchant for talk back on the ABC is probably drawing to a close given the SAM website is promoting a low level of advertising sales to keep this essentially non profit show on the road. If you take the time to see MW here in four parts

First Family
Balancing Nine's Budget
The High Price Of News
Juggling The Finances

(and it was another cracker in our humble opinion) you will see it's mainly about financial advisers leveraging profile on the public's ABC for indirect private profit. Whoa - what a can of worms. And well overdue really. From book writers who are also staff there getting a plug, to other privately invested folks. Even saintly Alan Kohler got a good jabbing in the ribs. ABC coverage and private profile benefit is not always incompatible but it's a sensitive area of public ethics to be sure.


Posted by editor at 9:58 AM NZT
Updated: Wednesday, 27 June 2007 8:26 AM NZT
Sunday, 24 June 2007
Sunday tv political talkies - law and order federal election, Rudd's masterful chat with veteran Oakes
Mood:  caffeinated
Topic: election Oz 2007

Picture: Interview: Kevin Rudd Watch video at Sunday 9 show.

 

Author’s general introductory note (skip this if you know this regular weekly column):

 

 

This is not a well packaged story. It’s a contemporaneous traverse of the Sunday television free to air political talkies indicating the agenda of Establishment interests: Better to know ones rivals and allies  in Big Politics and Big Media.

 

 

Indeed it’s the tv version monitoring task similar to what Nelson Mandela refers to here in his book Long Walk to Freedom (1994, Abacus) written in Robben Island prison (where he was meant to die like other African resister chiefs of history in the 19C), at page 208

 

 

“..newspapers are only a shadow of reality; their information is important to a freedom fighter not because it reveals the truth, but because it discloses the biases and perceptions of both those who produce the paper and those who read it.”

 

 

Just substitute ‘Sunday tv political talkie shows’ for "newspapers" in the quote above.

 

 

For actual transcripts go to web sites quoted below except with Riley Diary on 7. And note transcripts don’t really give you the image content value.

 

 

 

Media backgrounder:

 

Gittins in business smh takes spin out of productivity debate. Productivity should be a spin-free zone - Business - Business ...

 

Marcus Padly instructive – China's boom too good to last - Business - Business - smh.com.au

 

Refer our traverse on SAM re Brendan Keilar high public awareness of rights of children and criminal violence. With one omission: the killer Hudson was quietly noted in the coverage out of Melbourne as being “a blue collar worker from a building family”.

 

The law and order theme rolls out direct, and indirect, in the Sunday papers at the expense of the ALP (fed and state) governments, eg Sun Telegraph in Sydney, leavened with general culture of complaint about ALP governance

 

-         page 2 union blues embarrass Rudd again

-         Eddie Murphy immorality claim in story page 3

-         These mask much bigger scandal of Lib MPs facing fraud charges p2 also quite big on the tv last night

-         Rape test scandal victim story p4 blames NSW Health p4 and 5

-         Another law order story Howard with family cabbie victim shocker p7

-         Another lousy rail service price rise NSW Railcorp p7

-         Derisory postage stamp bottom left p11 on federal health story.

-     Drunk driver crashes through home p13

-         Sunken wharf NSW Ferry joke p20-21

-         Vic minister misuse claim p20

-         Oil leaks on high voltage wires p23

-         Parking metres by local councils p27

-         Air pollution Sydney road p31

-         Hacker 4 year jail term p39

-         Aboriginal kids p79, 81

-         Iemma fudging the figures, sultry Sharri Markson p83

 

Sun Herald in Sydney

 

- lead story Drug tests for all MPs - cheap headline, little substance p1, 5

- Devine promotes Howard action page 4

- sledge on bleeding heart lefty actor in Peru straight out of the Karl Rove file

- Howard with dead cabbie wife p7

- sledge of Iemma p9

- Devine again p15

- [more ...]

 

..........................................Advertisement....................................................

 

.....................................................................................................................

 

10 Meet the Press 8-8.30 am

 

Prime Minister, long time, is on with compere Paul Bongiorno.

 

Warren cartoon shown, we used yesterday in our piece.

 

PM – “law and order is the first step” echoing our analysis headline yesterday on SAM news site.

 

Heffernan drug tests. It’s been discussed before and only where there is evidence of a need, in effect a cheap headline. MPs 'should be drug tested'

 

High level panel: Jennifer Hewitt AFR

 

Peter Hartcher SMH – goes back to IR economic justice, debate about rollback. Howard as if he didn’t expect this topic. Deliberate question choice away from law and order? And brave.

 

JH asks on work choices too. A failure?

 

PH asks again in quiet soft tones – age of HCA judges is 72 for retirement, what about you?

 

JH chips in supplementary. You will retire next term? Makes it very clear HE IS NEVER GOING TO RETIRE, refers to USA president in his LATE 70ies.

 

Nicholson from The Australian – Iraq Statue of Liberty blown to bits on departure of USA. Grim, very grim.

 

Amazing footage from April 2007 of Australian troops meeting with defence minister Nelson, strong fit looking experienced soldier, why are we being withheld compared to other Coalition troops. [The answer surely is 500K protest marchers in Hyde Park Feb 2003].

 

PM says always a limited role. Short q on broadband.

 

The subdued look on Peter Hartcher’s face says it all. Look out there is a big political law and order shark in the water.

 

Transcript in due course www.ten.com.au/meetthepress

 

 

 

 

 

7 Weekend Sunrise, 8.35-40 am Riley Diary  -

 

Congratulations 7 for streaming this on your website (2 week delay?)

 

News headlines run Heffernan cheap headline first.  

 

Fantastic scoop on Play School using a pretend family of John Jeanette kids Melanie and Richard.

 

Very amusing, well worth a watch if they stream it.

 

Q and A on hard fought electioneering from now. No mention of Parliament resuming.

 

Thinks Aboriginal child welfare will resonate, get traction, it’s time (now that’s a culture jam of sorts on the it’s time to remove John Howard vibe).

 

Notes they raised $200K for burns unit at charity ball – that’s admirable. [It’s good to be alive, no doubt about that, even with the hole in my tooth.]

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.seven.com.au/sunrise/weekend

 

 

 

 

Sunday 9

 

Ray Martin of Aboriginal Reconciliation Council in past years, with Ellen Fanning. Rife abuse.

 

Senator Allison Democrats with hair dye, Fred Chaney on the panel too.

 

Health story – shock of the new about depression?

 

Oakes interview with Kevin Rudd Opposition leader. Shows he’s getting busy again with the challenge into the election.

 

Billion dollars on health? Missed answer.

 

Only 3 questions on health. More to do, waste questions on Abbott not helpful – good answer, Roxon working on policy in pipeline to come.

 

Rudd says Stanhope wrong to say racist. Racism turns on whether positive measures under the Act terms. Wait for detail. Not opposition for opposition sake.

 

[echoes flip flop of Beazley for then against Tampa measures?]

 

Work with him. Take the politics out of it. Stabilise of law and order – agrees.

 

Huge deficiency in numbers of police – big numbers increase needed Police Federation of Australia. Shortfall of about 700 officers in federal police.

 

“our friends in the police federation”, “counter terrorism for APEC” international paedophile on the internet etc.

 

Robbing Peter to pay Paul in recruitments.

 

Sounding and looking fit relaxed focused fluid bright affable. Quite an impressive response interview to the growing political storm. A younger better looking Howard. If he doesn’t win, it will be a tragedy.

 

Take the politics out of this. How? If we win, war cabinet together both sides, echoes Fran Kelly call for unity. Nation is fed up. Bipartisan. Measure against real targets. NT start. Many varied stories Aboriginal and Torres Strait.

 

Beyond mindless partisan fight. Not what sounds cute to right or left hairy chested.

 

Iraq topic. Gordon Brown in days – some indications. Much nuanced talk, sounds damn good and uplifting and balanced. Refer transcript at link below. Sounds even happy. Chirpy laugh at unionism gaffes on video.

 

Candidate for Franklin.

 

Laurie is asking in soft tones perhaps because Rudd is so responsive and probative in his answers. Rudd draws his distinctions. Quick disagrees re Harkin. Has to operate on facts not passion. Very diplomatic.

 

Howard next 3 years. Not his age. Up front – if elected will you stay. Is he being honest who they will get.

 

Website question – State premiers take up PM intervention on Aboriginal Affairs.

 

Harry Kewell in Howard's sphere with Big Media Pic Fac. Got to hand it to Howard. He is a hard working electioneering freak (or his team is) who will appear in the sports pages today or this week.

Transcript, webcasts here http://sunday.ninemsn.com.au/sunday/default.asp

 

 

Insiders 2

 

Aboriginal welfare

 

Headline news runs Meet the Press grab, law and order ethic.

 

Mal Brough federal minister driving this.

 

Only one attempt to contact Claire Martin – she appears later in the show.

 

15 of 90 males charged with abuse in Columbaroo (where is that, NSW?). Ends.

 

Every person focus group – Abuse as law and order is short sighted, can’t just be punitive. Natural shelf life of a govt, beyond paternalism to racism, no, one politely disagrees -  need intervention no delay.

 

Panel is Fran Kelly RN ABC, George Meglogenis Australian, Gerard Henderson Sydney Institute.

 

Cynicism about the Govt motives here. Kelly agrees based on history. But PM genuine reasons too.

 

Meglo notes PM actually driving this. Hendo

 

Laura Tingle – AFR for Paul Kelly overseas (Ireland?). Thinking man’s beauty. Looks typically drawn like Clints first wife. Agrees cynical view, time will tell. Business community cute to say not politics to enter PR fray on IR esp via Textor agency.

 

Henderson says its not a wedge – how bogus is that. Totally. Have to be more mature says Fran than treat disagree as wedge but its all about choice of prominence and process and rhetoric. Meglo picks it up too. No serious consultation so it is tainted with politics eg Pearson 15 min before PR.

 

Fran scathing on lack of Claire Martin involvement. Hendo points out 8 weeks delay to feds. Both playing nasty politics. Hend has a point, though bogus to say feds would respect an embargoed copy from Martin. It’s a poisoned well on all sides.

 

Emerging consensus Kelly and Hend.

 

Claire Martin listened to panel. Early draft to her, then finalized copy went to Federal Govt – rejects sat on it. Beyond financial capacity of the NT govt. She has changed so much to one of  frowning anxiety, voice is still strong and appealing but looking old before her time and it damages her credibility (smoking, drinking?).

 

Fran Kelly takes on Henderson point and puts the critical question of time delay to Martin. She filibusters and alludes to wedge politics – clearly should have crusaded to get that federal intervention but wouldn’t - paralysed.  Says she was set up waited half an hour at her desk to talk to PM.

 

A lot of alcohol bans in NT [long list of bans in crikey.com late last week].

 

Kelly makes plea to utilize the existing expertise of the political rivals like the Dodsons, and allow people in the debate. Meglo points out lack of articulate leadership with Aboriginal People last 10 years is this Govt’s responsibility.

 

Henderson parades his HR Nichols credentials, run footage of chubby twin Joe McDonald, who truth to tell has a degree of honesty about him, in a tough milieu. Bad language or not. If Joe does the biggest loser and goes big PR he could do the union movement a great help.

 

Talking pictures: Reference to Bjelke on 31%, implying Howard is similar? Great Moir cartoon here:

 

52% locked in says the poll via Newspoll CEO Martin someone with his collection looking way too comfortable and relaxed with the world and polished like our politics are actually irrelevant to his grand hierarchy. A circus master.

 

Footage of Turnbull on dam in SE Qld clever rhetoric.

 

Heffernan needs psychological testing says Henderson for calling posing as asio and Barnaby Joyce to Cubby and local constituent respectively. Reign him in says Kelly.

 

 

Home page is http://www.abc.net.au/insiders/

 

 


Posted by editor at 11:01 AM NZT
Updated: Monday, 25 June 2007 9:34 AM NZT
Saturday, 23 June 2007
The new 'Tampa' emerges: Howard ploughs broad law and order theme for 2007 federal election
Mood:  loud
Topic: election Oz 2007

Picture: John Howard as the Washington Post chose to present him earlier this year 2007 with tongue poking out, around the time our PM sledged Barak Obama, coloured presidential candidate.

 

Crikey.com ezine yesterday:

Charles Richardson: This ain't no Tampa ,Friday, 22 June 2007

argued the Aboriginal child welfare policy announced by PM Howard late arvo on Thursday is not the new Tampa, that is an all trumping federal election strategy as per 2001. We agee. But we also disagree. It's one of the decks of the new Tampa. Read on.

We well remember the footage of Treasurer Costello shaping up fists in the air in a mock gesture of boxing it to the ALP Oppositon despite the adverse polls. A defiant image from their Liberal Party national conference, and no doubt with knowledge of the big dollars to flow in the budget he designed. And perhaps reprising the real history of colleague Tony Abbott a sporting boxer, but also a student thug who punched my friend Peter Woof and was forced to weasel out of it in the Glebe Magistrates Court in the mid 70ies.

But the polls didn't bounce after the budget. And the great 'game' of the 2007 election has increased another 100m of water pressure on the deep diving submarine aka Coalition Government already a kilometre down in the polls.

They need some "torpedoes" to borrow PM Howard's metaphor. While dodging the depth charges.

One depth charge was the precocious attack by Rudd as PM in waiting on the economics of productivity. We read closely Wayne Swan here Wayne Swan: Howard, Costello in state of denial | Opinion |

 in the conservative The Australian and rather unconvincing, at times trite, selective and sleazy riposte of Costello here:

Peter Costello: Productivity all Greek to Rudd | Opinion | The ...

[We notice Ross Gittins has a leading headline in the press today too - Productivity should be a spin-free zone which should make for an excellent read.]

This attack by the ALP on economic competency, making inroads in traditional Coalition territory had their MPs squealing and snorting with staged ridicule and indignation rearing up on their born to rule horseback last week in the Parliament. At risk of falling off backwards, we thought.

So now media expert Howard has been forced to take revenge on the impertinent ALP bearing down  on him where he lives in the polls. Having been accused by the headline in The Australian of being 'in a state of denial', Howard has in effect sought revenge for the alleged ALP States 'state of denial' (boom boom) on Aboriginal child welfare. And he may yet get the traction he needs to wedge the ALP. He is already talking of recalling the parliament. Warren is calling it a rabbit out of the hat in his Friday cartoon in the Sydney Daily Telegraph - see following 2 cartoons in a series with the latest at bottom:

 

It has taken us a day or two to really absorb the political synergies in this latest surprise policy foray. But here it really is - with experience of the NSW state election Coalition driven ethnic version of Laura Norder to inform us, a strategy that severely shook up NSW society, but ultimately failed for Peter Debnam, Alan Jones, Tim Priest, and Malcolm Kerr in Cronulla etc. In John Howard's home state.

"Tough on crime and tough on the causes of crime".

This was Tony Blair's famous winning election dictum apparently.

Most victims of crime are lower and middle class folks who probably do vote Labour/Labor unless they are so alarmed about law and order they want the "Father Party" [US Republicans equivalent of Coalition here] to take over for a bit and restore control, order and presumably peace, more than they want kindness and love from Mommy [The Democrats like our ALP] meaning job creation and social welfare and environment.

We are seeing this Law and Order theme breaking out everywhere now:

1. the biggest is Iraq of course a sort geo political huge law and order policy, first v Saddam, and now versus the Insurgents, Islamofascists, USA haters and probably Iraqi economic patriots, Iranians etc;

2. Child sexual assault in Aboriginal communities - in the news everywhere since the Howard policy coup late Thursday this week eg today:

Black or white bad parents face penalties

3. The death by criminal violence in Melbourne of my school mate from Warrnambool CBC, successful solicitor and public hero Brendan Keilar. On front of all the press this week and again today in the Sydney SMH Saturday edition in a heart wrenching tragedy including for this writer. Iindeed the SMH page 1 juxtaposes the Laura Norder topics 2 and 3 in my list. And note significantly the editorial in the Saturday Daily Telegraph in Sydney also juxtaposing topics no.s 2 and 3 here: Editorial: Action Howard had to take

But the original coverage in Melbourne early in the weak dwelled on how could this Hudson criminal bloke be roaming free to do this? How could the State Police let it happen? Why did it take Joe Public to locate his car a block away 24 hours later? That's Laura Norder pure distillation. The police and we suspect not just in Victoria but NSW and Qld were under the hammer for various prior offences by this crazy. They were lucky he gave himself in, having tried to kill himself (as we predicted actually on the SAM news site).

Brendan, a commercial lawyer married with 3 kids to a merchant banker of obvious Liberal Party leaning. Country town boy made good, saves a young woman assault victim. Shot dead for his Christian act and courage last Monday. A fellow who connects by 3 degrees of separation probably with virtually every person in south east Australia. Via Aussie rules, cricket, law, regional Victoria, CBD Melb, developer/construction industry, an exemplar of high achieving Liberal Party connections, even to this greenie.  Everyone who believes in fairness. Everyone with kids. Lawyers like Melbourne based Peter Costello, and PM John Howard here.

His mother says in the Warrnambool Standard owned by Fairfax last week, that when he got married in 1992 'everyone in Warrnambool and Denniliquin was there'. It was a huge funeral yesterday Friday 22nd (this writer's birthday in fact). The ripples just go out and out from this horror and the Coalition know it.

And here is a shocking sleeper - the gun. Was it a NSW police glock? A colleague, who spoke to a source, who presumably knows someone else told me yesterday that the LA Police had their USA military design and manufacture a 15 bullet rapid fire glock, and then 10 bullet version  for the NSW police. They are dangerous rapid fire things apparently that even the cops had trouble preventing accidents. The story goes a crate of these went missing on the docks and turned up in Lakemba. The sinister version I was told involved corrupt police inserting these weapons into the drug cartels they didn't control (unlike Kings Cross) implying it was to promote intercine violence for some racist agenda. Sounds incredulous. But where did the gun come from that killed Brendan and was it a stolen NSW police glock?

4. Union alleged thuggery, like the NUW v TWU conflict in Sydney, but also the bad language and melodrama of Joe McDonald and lesser degree Kevin Reynolds. Never mind

- fascist $20K individual fines for striking.

- tax rorting by developers.

- OH&S shocking risk levels. Indeed we still shake our head recalling one Saturday this year in Sydney CBD a crane on a site in George St CBD lowering and flipping a dumpster filled with scaffolding which duly bounced and spun missing a worker by 12 inches maximum. We were slowly driving by in traffic, jaw dropping in amazement. That's got to be illegal I thought to myself.

5. The multi billion dollar security industry and their political proxies shadow boxing with civil society groups over feral protests or worse at APEC come Sept 2007. Never mind the real threats of missing rocket launchers as a result of corruption involving

Guns and the military ,

and corrupt airport security problems

Copping out on airport security | The Australian Gotcha with Gary Hughes 

and failed intel in the bombing in Bali 2002 

Two face ASIO Act charges | National Security | The Australian

 

6. Posture and counter posture over the acquittal of policeman Hurley on a Black death in custody case, on Palm Island infamous for seriously dangerous domestic violence and alcohol abuse, gving momentum to the extraordinarily political police union back lash, in sensitive election state of Qld. Those radio attack adverts of the police union may not be a return to Bjelke's corrupt days but we think they are an electioneering agenda.

[7. to this list we belatedly add the last political synergy: 'Leadership' symbolism in this first week of the Parliamentry Break helps shore up his own situation vis a vis the depresssed polling for the Coalition under his guidance, and vis a vis in particular any wandering loyalties to Peter Costello pre election.]

.......................

Who would have thought we were heading to a Laura Norder federal election? As another famous politician said: "Events dear boy, events" seem to be informing John Howard's political strategising and we are in the grip of real time adversarial engagement with each party shifting and parrying. And Howard has just crystalised a serious counter multi pronged synergistic political if not sustainable policy strategy for the 'next 6 months'. We know now that he made his move with the latest rabbit from hat policy after a cabinet meeting only this Thursday last 21st June 07.

It doesn't seem a coincidence to this writer that Vic Attorney General Hulls is moving on a micro law and order issue in the radio news this morning about digital perverts filming women, and Minister Linda Burney in NSW is moving on a fair trading issue of some kind, also being a prominent Aboriginal lady in politics here.

Nor that Rudd has taken the advice echoed in crikey.com recently to stay above the fray but have attack dogs bite back on the govt from the centre left: Stanhope, Iemma, Beattie and others are all fully engaged in public rhetoric on their aspect of the list above.

A cunning precious is our PM Howard and a profound adversary he proves to be. The ALP get it as per the advert on SBS tonight for the child with basketball waiting for their dad to get home safely from work paid for by the NSW Govt. That's Brendan Keilar's murder merging into federal political atmospherics.

Indeed the apologist for all things Right, Tim Blair (a $2 version of Will Bailey character in West Wing?) has an amusing but still perverse attack on climate change science again today Holy climate change, Mr Blair  in the Sydney Daily Telegraph, showing the Right and no doubt Howard will stubbornly fight tooth and nail to keep power, flying in the face of this sober expert warning:

UN accused of underestimating sea change, The World Today - Wednesday, 20 June , 2007  12:34:00 Reporter: Karen Barlow

The best world scientists way ahead of the UN politically constrained IPCC report are formally giving us fair warning as per this quality report on ABC World Today programme.

We laugh at, not with, Tim Blair because he unintentionally confirms what we always say about the Daily Telegraph. That it is a cartoon book and therefore wholly unreliable as a news source in terms of weight or prominence. Indeed the premise of the cartoon is totally skewiff - it was a US Bush White House aligned spin doctor Frank Luntz, a Republican Party strategist, who invented the replacement of the term 'global warming' to 'climate change' in an exercise in spin as explained in his extensive Wikipedia entry here . But actually there seems to be quite a bit of debate who first used the term global warming too, scientists or anti science spin doctors:  Cleantech Blog: You Say Climate Change, I Say Global Warming

Here is the Tim Blair sleaze conflation of climate scientists with his own barrackers, the big fat coal and oil pimps of big business in cartoon parody form, and like we said it is sleazy (and may Raymond Chandler author of the Big Sleep have mercy on his soul for stealing his Phillip Marlowe detective character - yet another echo of the Laura Norder theme, eh? Talk about cunning communication strategy/tactics):

Postscript #1 26th June 2007

To our list of 6 law and order type political synergies converging with the PR around Aboriginal child welfare is this internal domestic concern for John Howard:

7. 'Leadership' symbolism in this first week of the Parliamentry Break may help shore up the PM John Howard's own situation vis a vis the depresssed polling for the Coalition under his guidance, and vis a vis in particular any wandering loyalties to his Treasurer Peter Costello pre election.


Posted by editor at 10:10 AM NZT
Updated: Tuesday, 26 June 2007 7:30 PM NZT
Friday, 22 June 2007
Aboriginal children, and the perfect political storm moves Howard to more action/revenge?
Mood:  hug me
Topic: indigenous

Picture: Jimari aged 4 picture of this writer, we've kept this last 10 years. A child dearly loved and as I understand is at a selective school here in Sydney (?) these days. He misspels my name as LOM and draws me with black skin and a beard. I like that. He asked me once "Why is my skin brown?" I told him without blinking that's normal for an Aboriginal boy and that was what he needed as we went on with things.

I keep coming back to the Brendan Keilar picture as a child in another story here on SAM news blog, his gorgeous children with their silent accusation - why didn't you help save our dad from violence, and now this story about beautiful Aboriginal children at risk.

This is why: Those healthy loved children beaming out of their class photo year 6, 1975 we pictured in an earlier story including Brendan Kielar and  this writer aged 11 or so) shows child raising done right. We were the social echo 30 years ago of the healthy kids of Brendan, the next generation, he raised well and strong till his outrageous death Monday this week when evil trespassed on this natural cycle. Brendan, a perfect exemplar of the Liberal Party faithful philosophy of life cut short by foul murder.

What power all those innocents, including front and centre of the major Fairfax press here in Sydney 20th June 07 and many other places in Australia?


Exactly this: Brendan died a successful lawyer, and an admired one by the profession left "numb" by the foul violence in Melbourne. The federal govt and many in Opposition are filled with lawyers that we expect shuddered at BK's disgusting death, not least John Howard ever the student of Big Media.

The Keilar family can believe the anger and frustration will be huge. Indeed we posed the question here "Where does the evil come from?" noting the cyclical nature of violence and the instinctive urge for revenge. We suggested a better Christian way somehow not the same old base aggression.  Today page 3 the Daily Telegraph today 22nd June in a comment by veteran Mal Farr, that paper states "PM leads the way against evil".

Not the evil that struck the Keilar family exactly causing their desperate searing loss, especially those kids well caught from falling into a crack by State Govt public intervention. (Bravo Victorian ALP Govt.) No, the PM is moving to catch the beautiful Aboriginal children falling in the cracks now, also victims of criminal violence. Will it work? We can only hope so.

See what I'm saying? The public awareness of duty to children is high. The challenge is very great on Black kids, and the reports are in again.

And to top it off the ALP federal Opposition have performed strongly on the federal govt's territory of the economics of productivity. Democracy really engaged, a real adversarial contest as here Wayne Swan: Howard, Costello in state of denial | Opinion | A moral victory for the Opposition in the conservative The Australian.

So the federal govt in this hard fought election year contest have moved in turn in reaction to poach the traditional territory of the traditional ALP being social welfare and support for Black Australia.

It may not be the most pure political motivation to shift the focus off the economics of productivity, or climate change debates the govt is surely losing, but the bipartisan general support to save child victims (demonstrated in Brendan Keilar's case above), must happen, for them but  for our own society's sake too. These damaged Aboriginal kids are the prison population of 5 and 10 years from now. The suicides. The petrol sniffers. The bank robbers.  It's as simple as that. The Howard govt want's to break the cycle the Left traditionally worry about too.

We feel all this is facilitated by the huge communication impact in the Big Media around Brendan's white kids as victims in a ripple effect from criminal violence, and the terrifying conundrum "Where does the evil come from?". The answer to that, we submit, is that it's all around us like benign bacteria and viruses that only become really dangerous in unhealthy environments turning toxic like the common cold into pneumonia this winter, we notice sending people in the political community to their sick bed.

It's the healthy social and general environment that we all as citizens have to work so hard at to nurture Australia's children. The kind of incredible endeavour and discipline demonstrated in Brendan Keilar's life for his kids.

You just keep achieving stuff don't you Brendan by your example and death. A life's work which is still travelling, and how.

We've seen this before - the transmutation of one semi related concern to another big concern in Big Politics: The angst and disgust at the hanging of a reformed Van Ngyuen in Singapore, resulting in huge public awareness and this Federal Govt reaction with hundreds of million$ in aid for other victims of circumstance in Asia - the Pakistan Earthquake in that case, and other initiatives. To prove to the voters our Govt does have a heart. They do of sorts, in a political context at least.

Those in the Big Media without these insights of the synergistic nature of morality with self interest in Big Politics are displaying understandable cynicism at the Howard Govt 'ambush' of the States and Territory Governemnts and 11 years of delay. Sure all reasoned suspicion but a bit narrow.

Last night on ABC PM Mark Colvin tested Minister Brough what had changed between an interview last Friday and yesterday afternoon only 6 days?  A Cabinet meeting was the response. A Cabinet meeting this week. Was it on Wednesday 20th June when those white children stared out of the front pages in silent accusation as victims one step removed from ultra criminal violence? Because if you care for them you must care for all children the victims of criminal violence regardless of race colour or creed.

Did those childish eyes one way or another bring the killer Hudson in to surrender? We suspect so. They certainly closed doorways to escape.

The key to understanding this big announcement is the PM's choice of rhetoric - 'what if it was in Dickson (a suburb of Canberra) or Melbourne or Sydney?' he asks. That's the picture of Brendan's kids articulated by the Prime Minister on my radio today. Howard's a father and he knows the power of those innocents with just a look or a word or a picture above. Indeed Howard was a city lawyer like Brendan with kids like him and he might well have recognised himself.

Claire Martin the NT First Minister for the ALP knows this is a road train sized political juggernaut of huge moral and legal proportions and she is right to say time to act bigger. The federal opposition leader too. If it's a legacy pride thing as one talk back caller says well I don't care a jot one way or another.

Let's see how the detail and cross cultural cooperation pans out including existing expertise in the sector. Maybe we Australians can make it better for a change?

..........................

Postscript #1 25th June 2005

Warren the cartoonist at the Sydney Telegraph has an inspired cartoon about the nature of high level politiking over this serious "above politics" issuem involving the life and death of our young Indigenous citizens. Leveraging another story evocative picture story on page 7 "Like bats out of hell - Endangered creature swoops on park land" (offline for now), combined with the fact of end of Parliamentary sessions in Canberra for the next 6 weeks or more, Warren offers this:


Posted by editor at 10:08 AM NZT
Updated: Monday, 25 June 2007 11:09 AM NZT
Thursday, 21 June 2007
Top scientists give fair warning on sea rise, what about politicians?
Mood:  don't ask
Topic: globalWarming

Picture: Environment Minister Malcolm Turnbull and his shadow minister Peter Garrett argue today on global warming action.

The best world scientists way ahead of the UN politically constrained IPCC report are formally giving us fair warning as per this quality report on ABC World Today programme:

UN accused of underestimating sea change

The World Today - Wednesday, 20 June , 2007  12:34:00

Reporter: Karen Barlow

 

ELEANOR HALL: A group of climate scientists from some of the United States' most respected institutions has further raised the alarm about global warming.

While sceptics have criticised the United Nations scientific panel for being too extreme, these scientists are warning that it actually downplays the threat.

The scientists, including Dr James Hansen from NASA, say the United Nations reports have grossly underestimated the scale of sea-level rises that are likely this century.

Writing in the peer-reviewed British journal, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, they predict that sea levels will rise not by 40 centimetres by the turn of the century, but by several metres, as Karen Barlow reports.

KAREN BARLOW: The UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is being charged with grossly underestimating the impact of global warming.

The international grouping of scientists and policymakers predicted in February that sea levels would increase between 18 and 59 centimetres this century.

The Director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies, Dr James Hansen, reports in a peer-reviewed paper that the IPCC report left out vital information in its calculations.

JAMES HANSEN: They actually only give a prediction for the thermal expansion of the ocean and the contribution of alpine glaciers, but the big issue is the ice sheets on Greenland and Antarctica, especially West Antarctica, because that's beginning to lose mass, and it is situated on bedrock, which is below sea level, so it's potentially unstable and could give a very large sea level rise.

KAREN BARLOW: Ice sheet instability was mentioned briefly in the IPCC report, but Dr James Hansen says it wasn't calculated as it is difficult to predict.

He says he has no such misgivings.

JAMES HANSEN: We know enough from the Earth's history to say that if we follow business as usual path, with C02 emissions, that we guarantee instability of the West Antarctic ice sheet, with sea level rise eventually of several metres. And I would be very surprised if we didn't get one or two metres at least of sea level rise this century.

KAREN BARLOW: Three other scientists from the Goddard Institute were also involved in the paper, as were David Lea of the University of California and Mark Siddall from Columbia University.

They stand with Dr James Hansen in warning a point of no return will be reached in 10 years if world governments fail to seriously curb greenhouse gas emissions.

JAMES HANSEN: Imminent peril is perhaps an unusual phrase to have in a scientific paper, but it's, I think, very appropriate.

KAREN BARLOW: In the 1980s, Dr James Hansen became the first scientist to warn the US Congress about global warming, and he remains a vocal critic of the Bush administration's policies on climate change.

He has claimed that US Government figures have tried in the past to muzzle him.

Labor's Environment Spokesman, Peter Garrett, says today's paper is a serious warning.

PETER GARRETT: What they're clearly saying now is that we're getting perilously close to dramatic climate change that could run out of our control in the future.

KAREN BARLOW: But the Federal Environment Minister, Malcolm Turnbull, says he prefers to stick to the IPCC's version.

MALCOLM TURNBULL: Well, Dr Hansen is a controversial figure in climate change science. The vast majority of scientific opinion is in line with the IPCC's forecasts, which are, however, very serious indeed, and we all recognise that the impact of global warming is a very grave challenge, social challenge, political challenge and economic challenge.

KAREN BARLOW: Dr James Hansen defends his work as solid science.

JAMES HANSEN: I'm just saying that the implications of the kind of warnings that they talk about for business as usual are enormous, and they imply changes in the world which the public surely would not be willing to accept if they have anything to say about it.

ELEANOR HALL: And that's NASA scientist Dr James Hansen speaking to Karen Barlow.
...................
Similarly the latest report is that China's rate of emissions is expanding massively with 2 new coal fired power plants per week, using amongst others, our coal to make products to sell back to us, as SBS tv news reported last night, but also here: 
www.smh.com.au - Battle to clean up King Coal
Coal and Climate Change Facts
 
And quite a story on Today Tonight on free to air 7 on or about Thursday 21st June 07 featuring the editor of science magazine Cosmos here.

Posted by editor at 5:58 PM NZT
Updated: Monday, 25 June 2007 12:12 PM NZT
Wednesday, 20 June 2007
Cracked commentators as Rudd grasps Coalition nettle on so called economic expertise?
Mood:  energetic
Topic: election Oz 2007

Picture: Question time today 20th June 2007 in federal parliament with the PM and Costello looking and sounding just too sure of themselves on the economic issue of productivity?

 

First they laugh at you. Then they hate you. Then you win?

We are certainly in the first stage in the last 2 days of question time in Federal Parliament with the Govt full of scorn for the Opposition Leader Rudd on the issue of downward long term trend in productivity. 

And two monkeys of Coalition tradition in the commentariat seem to have bought the govt line like naive cheering schoolboys at a playground punch up.

We heard some howlers today which tell us things aren't quite as the Govt would have the electorate and the Big Media believe:

1. In the big productivity debate (read punch up) I heard Peter Costello, once a practicing lawyer, that "a lost" document wasn't stolen from the Opposition Leader Rudd. Trouble is as every policeman in the country knows there is actually an offense of "steal by find". Well I do anyway as a solicitor. Think about it. If you find the neighbours wallet - you can't just honestly keep it. Nor their house deeds.

Nor if you are a politician, your rival's confidential document, particularly if it is not a public or public service funded document as such: A journo could have read the document but had no legal right to take them or copy them. They should have been returned. And the fact no one admits who took it shows the truth it was indeed stolen.

The exactly same situation of exploiting documents stolen by finding them was covered in that pseudo gospel of modern politics - The West Wing tv series # 146 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two_Weeks_Out

"With the election two weeks out and both candidates polling even in California, both the Santos and Vinick campaigns scramble to the state to try and gain free media from public events. Vinick, whose hand is broken by constant handshakes, catches a break when Bruno discovers Santos' briefcase in a holding room. Vinick and Bruno must make a difficult decision; Do they open the case and use its contents against the owner or take the high road and give it back to Santos? In the briefcase: evidence which suggests that the Congressman may be supporting an illegitimate child. Vinick asks to meet with Santos where the Congressman denies the allegation, stating that he was making up for the mistakes of his brother. "

So it wasn't Santos's illegitimate child. The Republican side [like Coalition here] didn't use it, and the briefcase was returned. That would have been ethical.

Nor do we think the Australian govt are actually comfortable talking about long term trend of productivity despite the bluster. Could it be they are playing catch up? We think so.

In any case a lost document can be stolen. Funny that a Rodent Coalition doesn't understand that, prosecuting an ASIO officer for leaking a document (allegedly) and a Mr Kessing on leaking (convicted) an airport security report. More credit to Rudd for not insisting on the legalistic approach.

 2. On the substance of the productivity debate itself what we seem to be seeing is a govt that has never experienced an ALP daring to really challenge the govt on their so called superiority on economics. No wonder the govt are so filled with confected outrage. They know if they lose their last great advantage on economics they are really "dead in the water".

Yet even this writer knows that there are real problems in our economy:

A. long term trend in productivity is down no doubt over the 10 years of this govt. Chris Uhlmann oft referenced in this debate noted specifically this reality when Costello tried to bluster his way through with confected ridicule here on AM ABC radio yesterday:

"CHRIS UHLMANN: Now, to another issue, Labor has consistently criticised the Government over one aspect of its economic performance, and that's productivity growth. Isn't the core of Labor's argument unassailable that there has been a clear down trend in productivity since the late 1990s?

PETER COSTELLO: Here's the interesting fact, Chris, .....[bluster for 7 lines]

That appears on page four, as you can see. Continue using false figures ?

CHRIS UHLMANN: All right.

PETER COSTELLO: ? even though they are now inaccurate, because they suit your argument, because to use the right figures would not actually help your argument.

CHRIS UHLMANN: But you know, Treasurer, that these figures are volatile and that's what this paper says, that if you use year-to-year figures or quarter-to-quarter figures, you're going to get a lot of bouncing around.

People who look at these figures look over five-year averages, and it does show that there's been a clear downward trend, doesn't it, since the 1990s in productivity, and that does matter to the Australian economy.

Federal Treasurer jumps on Labor leak            TRANSCRIPT 19th June 2007 http://www.abc.net.au/am/content/2007/s1955095.htm

Costello seems to be arguing that productivity can only peak and trough, and that it's limited to narrow sectors of a broadly based economy across sectors. That does seem pretty strange line of argument, or very self serving. Maybe lazy even.

B. We distinctly remember reading about the lack of improved volumes of minerals mined. Prices have jumped yes, but quantity has not:

Australia riding high on resources hog cycle - Business - www.smh ... If world demand for resources has been strong and the prices we can get have shot up so far, why has the volume of our resource exports shown no growth ...

 

C. The record levels of casualisation/stripping of conditions in the workforce, and big jump in UNDER employment as well as lack of skills training, undermining both loyalty and morale, seems to us just as likely a mechanism of depressing productivity over the last 10 years, as the drought for causing the same. No doubt all these factors are involved and only the last one is an act of God.

Costello's answer that mining capital investment and high employment has a time lag rings quite hollow to this listener observing question time on the tv and now webcast after 3pm. Especially when all these high status Reserver Bank Governors and OECD reports agree with Rudd's point on the five-year averages as Uhlmann puts it.

3. There is some weird barracking going on in the commentariat. Christian Kerr gets top spot in Crikey.com ezine today mis interpreting we suspect the debate in Costello's favour and not realising I think that Rudd is actually grasping the economics nettle as he must while he has extra time to get up to speed.

Similarly Dennis Shanahan here with a shocking record on biased observation and application of real polling data results is quoted by Kerr in eager terms. You would think Kerr would be a little more circumspect and realistic based at least on his own critique of such as Shanahan in the past. Seems Coalition traditionalists fall in together here after all when the grind gets a bit tougher.

We simply think Kerr and Shanahan are wrong, or overly generous to the Coalition/Costello spin on conservative record on productivity.

We notice other main papers and Michelle Grattan on Radio National this morning are exactly that. Far more circumspect of the Govt line, and even a bit dismissive in Grattan's case on how it plays to the average Joe and Mary referring to the debate as "arcane" 7:35: Michelle Grattan - Wednesday. But what is very real is the territoriality of the Coalition on the issue after 10 years in power. 

Fairfax today for instance reports instead another major political economic news being the favourable NSW state budget broadly helpful to the ALP reputation on financial management, allowing for signficant increased public debt financing:

20th June 2007 Michael Costa rides his luck for federal Labor http://www.smh.com.au/editorial/index.html

and Ross Gittins here also Strike me lucky, this one is different

Ross Gittins Ross Gittins: MICHAEL COSTA is either a miracle worker or he's very lucky. I'd say the latter. Sometimes lucky is the most you can hope for in a politician.


Posted by editor at 4:24 PM NZT
Updated: Wednesday, 20 June 2007 5:59 PM NZT

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