Month: November 2014

Coal is good for humanity — or fossil fuel insanity?

View image on Twitterhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=4dEuyJJcv5M

Australia Institute data challenges claims coal industry drives economic growth, is a key element of alleviating worldwide ‘energy poverty’ and improves quality of life. Kieran Cooke from the Climate News Network reports.

THE COAL INDUSTRY has many friends in high places and none more so than Tony Abbott — prime minister of one of the world’s major producers of a fuel that earns the country billions from exports.

As Prime Minister Abbott said recently:

“Coal is vital for the future energy needs of the world. So let’s have no demonisation of coal coal is good for humanity.”

But a new report by researchers in Australia seeks to debunk what it considers to be myths promulgated by the powerful worldwide coal industry and its allies.

The report by the Australia Institute, an independent public policy thinktank, says claims by lobbyists that coal is a main driver of economic growth are false.

Slower growth

Data shows that coal use has grown much slower than global economic growth, says the report:

‘All Talk and No action: The Coal Industry and Energy Poverty’.

It points out that

‘…developed countries have reduced coal use while economic growth has been unaffected. Developing countries are now the major users, but with alternatives becoming cheaper, they are likely to reduce coal use much earlier in their development.’

 
(Click on the image above to access the report on The Australian Institute website)

The report also attacks industry claims that coal use increases life expectancy and quality of life:

‘On the contrary, coal use is often associated with lower life expectancy due to health impacts of indoor and outdoor air pollution and the global health impacts of climate change.’

The study says that, although access to electricity might initially improve quality of life, once basic electricity facilities are in place there is little correlation between increased electricity uptake and improved living conditions.

Talk in the coal industry about tackling energy poverty is just public relations spin, says the report, and it questions whether the coal industry itself believes its own claims.

It is significant, the study says, that coal concerns that choose to become involved in electricity and poverty alleviation schemes in poorer parts of the world support projects connected with solar technology or small hydro and gas-fired facilities, rather than with far more expensive coal-fired power installations.

Polluting gases

The report also takes issue with claims by the coal industry that coal is becoming cleaner. What is meant by clean coal varies widely: although many power plants and other enterprises have reduced coal-related emissions of sulphur oxide and nitrogen oxide, coal still releases into the atmosphere enormous amounts of CO2 — by far the most polluting of greenhouse gases.

Meanwhile, progress on carbon capture and storage (CCS) – the process through which emissions from coal-powered plants and other industrial concerns are captured and stored deep below the Earth’s surface – has been slow.

There are only 13 such projects in operation and, together, they are capable of sequestering only 25 million tonnes of carbon dioxide per year — less than one per cent of the world’s total annual emissions.

To put this in perspective, the report says, 33,376 million tonnes of CO2 were emitted worldwide in 2011, with the United States emitting 5,420 million tonnes, and Australia – which has a much smaller population − emitting 400 million tonnes.

The report concludes:

‘Addressing the challenges of energy poverty will become even more difficult if public relations campaigns are able to influence government policies away from genuine solutions towards spending that benefits the coal industry. The real solutions to energy poverty do not focus on coal.’

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Climate Denier Andrew Bolt this ones for you

Man Dehydrates After Discovering Water Is Halal Certified…a victim of Islamaphobia promoted by the intelligent media

A Brisbane man has died of dehydration today after refusing to consume water following the revelation that technically water is halal certified.

Forty two year old Brisbane local Keith Sheen, a noted opponent of what he believes Halal to mean, brazenly refused to consume water or any drink containing water to protest Halal certification. He also vocally expressed his outrage that two-thirds of the planet he inhabited was composed of what he called ‘the Muslim liquid’.

His body succumbed to dehydration earlier this morning.

Mr. Sheen had previously complained about products in his local supermarket containing dietary information such as Halal certification.

“Why should I have to look at that when it doesn’t apply to me,” Mr. Sheen once wrote to his local newspaper. “It’s the same with these peanut allergy warnings. I don’t personally have a peanut allergy so we should get rid of them for everyone. It’s only fair.”

“You know what harm it does me to look at Halal certification? None at all. But what if the answer was ‘some’? That would be unacceptable.”

Sheen insisted that his objection to Halal certification was not on the basis of racism or anti-religious bigotry, claiming he was not personally a racist but just “said racist things and acted in a racist way all the time”.

A statement released by his family praised Sheen’s commitment to his principles.

“Our father was a man of principle and his death is another sign that Sharia Law has gone too far or perhaps not far enough. We are not clear on what Sharia Law is or how far it should go.”

A memorial service will be held for Keith Sheen this Wednesday. The wake has been delayed due to complications in finding non-halal certified food to serve.

China free trade deal could ‘turn into disaster’ without safeguards, Liberal senator Bill Heffernan says

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-11-11/heffernan-says-china-free-trade-deal-could-turn-into-disaster/5880966

A senior Liberal senator is warning a free trade deal with China could “turn into a disaster” for Australia if appropriate safeguards are not put in place.

In an exclusive interview with the ABC, Bill Heffernan raised the prospect of China cutting its tariffs, but then manipulating its currency to come out ahead.

“How do you really have a trade agreement with a country that won’t put their currency on the market? I mean we should learn from our free trade agreement with the US,” Senator Heffernan said.

“When we signed that agreement we were at 65 cents, when we enacted it the following February we were at 67 cents to the US.

“We did away with 5 per cent and 15 per cent tariffs and within a few years we found ourselves at a huge trade disadvantage because we had a 45 per cent currency tariff against us because we went parity with the US and above parity at one stage.”

The Government is hoping to seal a deal with Australia’s biggest trading partner when the Chinese president Xi Jinping visits Australia this weekend.

At the present time… it’s a non-market currency which makes it very difficult for us [to] manage good times, bad times, high interest rates, low interest rates

Senator Bill Heffernan

“Thanks to a lot of focus from Australia and from China over the last 12 months, I think it is very much on track for success in the next few days,” Prime Minister Tony Abbott told reporters in Beijing on Monday.

“Still a few things to finalise, but I think very much on track for success in the next few days.”

While welcoming a possible breakthrough, Mr Heffernan warned Australia could still be a loser because of China’s currency.

“At the present time… it’s a non-market currency which makes it very difficult for us [to] manage good times, bad times, high interest rates, low interest rates,” he said.

“In code, it really means we can’t win until the currency comes on the market.”

Audio: Australia must toughen its tax laws to benefit from free trade: Heffernan (AM)

The Federal Agriculture Minister Barnaby Joyce rejected concerns from his Coalition colleague that China’s fixed currency will negate any benefits of a free trade deal.

Senator Joyce said Australia needs to step up its trade with China so national debt can be paid off.

“If we don’t do a deal with China, if we don’t trade with what is now our major trading trading partner, then our capacity to pay our bills and re-float our economy after the disastrous episode of the previous government, is going to be impinged,” he said.

“We have to make sure that our soft commodities – such as wheat, such as beef, such as cotton, such as wool – start flowing in a more formidable form.”

Government sources have told the ABC a deal is looking likely, but some key issues are still being negotiated.

Mr Abbott said the pact was not perfect and could be changed.

“We are trying to build a house,” he said.

“Let’s build the first storey and then in a year or two we can build the second storey and maybe even a third storey, but let’s get things done and I very much hope that we will be able to say that we have got things done within a few days.”

You know those photos stand alone shirtfronters nobody wants to know them. Putin’s Laughing

Vladimir Putin is Making Things Awkward for Tony Abbott at APEC

Prime Minister Tony Abbott has had his first encounter with horse-riding bad boy and #swoleasfuck Russian Vladimir Putin at the APEC leaders’ summit and … it did not go very well.

Abbott recently made headlines promising that he would “shirtfront” Putin if necessary to get some answers on the downing of flight MH17, but various sources, including SBS News, report that he has since “softened” his stance.

He said that he is now simply “looking for an assurance” from Putin that Russia will bring the perpetrators of the crime to justice. Putin, however, does not seem interested, and reports indicate that he has denied Abbott a face-to-face meeting.

The only time the pair have thus far crossed paths is when they were placed near each-other in APEC’s traditional “family photo”, which itself is already being mocked across the internet for its Star Trek-like qualities.

Allegedly, after the photo was taken, Putin completely iced Abbott, walking away while chatting with Chinese president Xi Jinping.

The two world leaders will meet again at the G20 in Brisbane, at which point, shirtfronting may be back on the agenda.

Print Email Facebook Twitter More Iran stripped of world championship volleyball tournament after jailing female spectator

British-Iranian law graduate Ghoncheh Ghavami

Iran says a decision by volleyball’s governing body to ban the country from hosting international tournaments as long as women are barred from watching men’s games is “unfair”.

The international volleyball federation FIVB announced its decision on Sunday, a week after a British-Iranian woman, Ghoncheh Ghavami, was reportedly jailed by a Tehran court for trying to attend a match.

An Iranian judiciary official denied on Monday that Ms Ghavami was sentenced to jail, saying her trial had not yet finished.

Ms Ghavami was detained on June 20 at Azadi (“Freedom” in Farsi) Stadium where Iran’s national volleyball team was to play Italy, after female fans and even women journalists were told they would not be allowed to attend, leading to a brief demonstration.

She was released within hours but was rearrested days later at a police station she had visited to reclaim items confiscated from her near the stadium.

The FIVB said it had informed Iran the country would not be able to organise the under-19 world championships in 2015, awarding the tournament instead to Argentina.

The FIVB will “not give Iran the right to host any future FIVB directly controlled events such as World Championships, especially under age, until the ban on women attending volleyball matches is lifted,” a spokesman said.

But the president of Iran’s volleyball federation said he had yet to receive any official confirmation of the ban.

“We haven’t received any letter from the FIVB concerning the change of host nation,” Mohammad Reza Davarzani said.

To make a connection between a non-sporting activity and our sport is unfair.

Iran volleyball federation president Mohammad Reza Davarzani

“We have had no official announcement on the decision to ban Iran from organising international competitions.

“If that is the case we will file an official complaint.”

The FIVB said in a statement that it had written to Iran’s president.

“The FIVB has been working, and continues to work, with the Iranian Volleyball Federation and other authorities in Iran to try to secure Ghoncheh Ghavami’s release,” the statement said.

“The FIVB does not normally seek to interfere with laws and cultures of any nation; however this sensitive incident merits particular attention.

“Therefore, the FIVB’s efforts in this area are ongoing in order to find a solution without putting the athletes and the fans of volleyball in the country at a disadvantage.”

Mr Davarzani said Ms Ghavami’s case was not related to volleyball and “to make a connection between a non-sporting activity and our sport is unfair”.

Iran’s volleyball team is one of the best in the world and very popular at home.

It finished 6th in this year’s World Championships in Poland and 4th at the World League.

Australian coal, oil and gas companies receive $4b in subsidies: report

LNG tanker offshore WA, close up with LNG printed on side of ship

A new report finds exploration by coal and energy companies is subsidised by Australian taxpayers by as much as $US3.5 billion ($4 billion) every year in the form of direct spending and tax breaks.

The report, “The Fossil Fuel Bailout”, by the Overseas Development Institute and Oil Change International estimates that G20 countries are subsidising oil, gas and coal explorers to the tune of $US88 billion ($100 billion) annually through grants, loans, and tax deductions.

The report said that the United States and Australia paid the highest level of national subsidies for exploration in the form of direct spending or tax breaks.

Overall, G20 country spending on national subsidies was $23 billion.

In Australia, this includes exploration funding for Geoscience Australia and tax deductions for mining and petroleum exploration.

The report also classifies the Federal Government’s fuel rebate program for resources companies as a subsidy.

The report said that the world’s top 20 private oil and gas companies spent $US37.4 billion on exploration in 2013, less than half the $US88 billion provided by government subsidies.

Saudi Arabia and Brazil gave the biggest amount of support to state-owned enterprises. Investment by state owned firms in the G20 accounted for $49 billion in subsidies.

Japan and Korea spent the most on public finance subsidies through loans or equity provided to government-owned financial institutions such as export credit agencies.

Public finance subsidies accounted for $16 billion in G20 subsidies.

The report estimates that $11 billion of the $44 billion Ichthys LNG project off the coast of Western Australia was provided by export credit agencies from countries including Australia, Japan and France.

Queensland’s three big LNG projects also received export credit agency funding.

‘Subsidising dangerous climate change’

One of the report’s authors, Shelagh Whitley from the Overseas Development Institute in London, said G20 governments are funding high carbon energy sources at the expense of renewable energy projects.

She said the exploration subsidies were just a fraction of the subsidies received by the fossil fuel industry every year in G20 countries.

“The fossil fuel industry writ large receives around $775 billion in subsidies,” Ms Whitley argued.

“So that’s much higher than what we are looking at here which is fossil fuel exploration.”

Ms Whitley said the report was calling on G20 countries to immediately end subsidies for fossil fuel exploration.

“The reason we are looking at fossil fuel exploration is that we’ve been told in this past week by the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) … that we have to actually keep two-thirds of fossil fuel reserves in the ground if we are to avoid dangerous climate change,” she said.

“These subsidies are the equivalent of subsidising dangerous climate change.”

The report also called for more transparency in budget reporting and for the elimination of public finance for fossil fuel exploration.

The authors looked at publicly available government data on exploration subsidies and used Bloomberg and Rystad Energy databases for company and commodity information.

They noted that limited transparency and wide variations in data availability “posed major obstacles to the identification and estimation of fossil fuel subsidies.”

The Minerals Council of Australia says Australian government funding and tax breaks for exploration are not subsidies but legitimate tax deductions for business.

USA 3000 AUS 200 the Devils Number 6.66% of our troops in Iraq. Only Baghdad

Australian troops ‘moving into locations’ in Iraq to assist with fight against Islamic State

Updated about an hour agoTue 11 Nov 2014, 10:56am

The Federal Government has left open the possibility of sending more troops to fight Islamic State (IS) militants, a day after confirming that special forces soldiers have begun moving into Iraq.

Australia sent a contingent of about 200 special forces to the defence base in the UAE in September, but they have been waiting there for a formal direction from the Iraqi government.

The troops have begun moving into the strife-torn country in the past week and will initially be placed in Baghdad in an “advise and assist” role.

US president Barack Obama said yesterday he is in talks with Australia and other coalition partners about how they can “supplement” their commitments.

Assistant Defence Minister Stuart Robert said no decision has been made about sending more troops and would not be made until the success of the current commitment could be gauged.

“The Prime Minister has not announced that and the Prime Minister has not made any statements to that effect – nor should we make any commitments further until we’ve actually bedded down what we’re putting into theatre right now,” he told NewsRadio.

“Our forces have now spent a number of days moving into locations. It will take more days to actually become effective in the advising and assisting.

“It will take weeks if not months for that training force to really come into effect.

“So let’s see what effect we can have on our ground before we jump further.”

Prime Minister Tony Abbott, who is in Beijing for the APEC summit, said yesterday that Australia continues to talk with its partners about fighting the terrorist group.

Ukrainian military kill children while they play football at school. Have we heard from Abbott? Oh yes “shit Happens”

Ukrainian military kill children while they play ftooball at school. 53903.jpeg

On November 5th, the Ukrainian artillery in the southeast of Ukraine violated ceasefire regime 18 times, the press center of the militia forces said. As a result of the shelling, two teenagers were killed and four others were wounded in Donetsk. The children were playing football in the school yard, when Ukrainian shells exploded there.

Two 120-mm shells exploded on a school stadium with a difference of a few seconds. The first one struck the school building, while the second damaged the football field. There were nine teenagers playing on the school stadium at the time of the shelling. Only three of them were lucky to avoid injuries. Two died on the spot – a school graduate and an eighth-grader; four were wounded.

Donetsk is mourning the killed children on November 6 and 7, the head of the government of the People’s Republic of Donetsk, Alexander Zakharchenko said.

Seventeen-year-old Vitali is one of the wounded children. The explosions injured his legs and the groin.

School No. 63 in the Kuibyshev district of Donetsk is a modern, recently built building. The school is located near the railway station and the airport of Donetsk. However, the school had not been damaged during the fighting before. Children would often go to the stadium to play football. The day before, the Ukrainian military shelled the entire neighborhood near the school. Four shells at once struck a residential building located nearby.

Two of the four injured teenagers are still in intensive care; doctors say their lives are out of danger.

A surgeon, who operated the injured children, said that the patients had severe shrapnel wounds.

Russia’s Foreign Affairs Ministry demanded independent investigation should be conducted into the tragedy in Donetsk, Russia 24 TV Channel reports. Commissioner of the Ministry of Human Rights, Konstantin Dolgov, wrote on his page: “The killing of children is a grave crime! Perpetrators must be severely punished!”

Children’s ombudsman Pavel Astakhov, in turn, expressed his condolences to the families of the victims. According to him, Kiev is running an inhumane policy in Donbass. The Ukrainian military have repeatedly violated ceasefire regime in the south-east. Astakhov demanded full and impartial investigation be conducted into the schoolchildren’s deaths.

Russia’s Investigative Committee opened a criminal case into the shelling of the school in Donetsk, were the schoolchildren were killed. The case was qualified as an international crime, TASS reports.

According to Vladimir Markin, an official spokesman for the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation, “the IC Central Directorate filed a criminal case into the shelling of the school in the city of Donetsk in accordance with Part 2 of Article 105, Paragraph 1 of Article 356 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation – murder committed in aggravating circumstances; the use of prohibited means and methods of warfare.”

The case was connected with the main criminal case about the use of prohibited means, methods of warfare, as well as genocide of civilians living in the breakaway People’s Republics of Donetsk and Luhansk.

“According to investigators, on November 5, at about 5 p.m., armed forces of Ukraine and the National Guard, following orders from commanders and officials of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, the Ukrainian Armed Forces and the National Guard of Ukraine, conducted artillery bombardment of School No. 63 located on  Stepanenko Street in Donetsk. Two minors were killed and three local people suffered injuries of varying severity as a result of the attack,” said Markin.

“As suggested by investigation, the above-mentioned officials conducted the ​​artillery bombardment of the school building to destroy a national group of Russian-speaking population living on the territory of the self-proclaimed People’s Republic of Donetsk. This came in violation of a number of international conventions, including the Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the protocol on the termination of the use of weapons in the south-east of Ukraine that was signed in Minsk in September,” said Markin.

The West’s mad, mad world

The West's mad, mad world. 53916.jpeg

It seems these days, not an hour passes where the Western vassal presstitutes regarding Russian President Vladimir Putin cannot contain themselves from attacking him. Neither do the MSM sock puppets have any compunction from heaping more vitriol on a principled man and the great leader of his people. Moreover, the Western backed purveyors have harangued both he and Russia with their outright lies and fabrications for nine months running. Their drivel now is tiresome.

By Montresor, November 8, 2014.

Of course, stooges that they are, at the butt of their non-stop anti-Russian rhetoric are the threat of more sanctions. Just what the wider world needs; doesn’t bother them a bit though that the accusers as well are all mired in a deep recession. The sanctions pendulum swings both ways!

No surprise either that the vast majority of the Russian people continue to support their President in this conflict between East-West perceptions for the world; some ‘experts’ call it the renewed ‘cold war’ or re-set. And despite what the West claims, Vladimir Putin’s approval ratings eclipse 80 per cent and continue to climb. Imagine that: Russians collectively on down from the President won’t capitulate to the Western propaganda!

Early on, some of that vitriol was to be expected given that Ukraine, long since a failed state after the bloody and murderous Maidan coup d’état in February had fallen deeper into the abyss after 298 lives were lost aboard the crashed civilian jet MH17 over East Ukraine during the genocidal and still ongoing civil war. Right on cue, the West was quick to blame Russia; even before an official, and international investigation was launched.

Yet in the absence of real proof against Russian complicity in Ukraine’s internal affairs, one would hope that at least one courageous editor-chief had the modicum of intelligence to understand and report the truth: that continued U.S./IMF/EU/NATO meddling in Ukraine’s internal sovereign affairs was more the causative factor in the country’s slide into total collapse; more so than from any ‘perceived’ Russian involvement.

 

The naysayers here and elsewhere will be quick to trot out their usual suspect objections: Putin invaded Crimea, he did the same in East Ukraine, he has now targeted all of Europe, and his expansion plans for the Russian empire include the Baltic States. The new ‘Stalin’ has even set his sights on the Holy Grail: England. What nonsense! Let us examine the real context, shall we.

A revolution by any color pales when juxtaposed to the real truth: the Maidan Protests and subsequent coup d’état was hatched by America; and for America. Washington’s sole aim was to install a puppet government whereby the proxy illegal Kiev government would preside over Ukraine with only America’s (IMF/CIA/NATO) best interests at heart. How dumb is that!

Did these treasonous collaborators really think that Russia would stand idly by; watch their navy dislodged from the Black Sea Sevastopol port in Crimea? And did the Western scoundrels equally believe that Russia would grovel before this illegal junta to acquire a new lease? Why should America and the world be surprised that Crimea legally voted and quickly to secede and join Russia? Any real sovereign nation would have acted in similar fashion to Russia; full stop.November 8, 2014.

Well, many from America bought the lies; and still do. Senator John McCain (who will now probably chair the U.S. Senate Defense Policy Committee) is a prime example. After he returned from Ukraine while addressing colleagues and the press, warmonger McCain was dismissive of Russia. And his description possibly born of ignorance, ‘Russia is a giant gas station’ was altogether disrespectful. Uh, yes Senator, Russia is that now. What you are remiss to understand is that Russia is not Moscow. Neither is it St. Petersburg nor Sochi. Russia is however that vast tract of territory from the Polish border on the west to Vladivostok and Siberia in the east. In fact, Russia contains the world’s largest land mass replete with many natural resources.

And with the oil and gas proceeds, President Putin is committed to building the infrastructure for a better tomorrow; for all Russians. And in case McCain also forgot, Putin’s Russia, inherited from his predecessor Yeltsin was still antiquated and more so corrupted. The economy, barely free from the Communist era was in the throes of transformation to the Western, ‘capitalist’ model. Free markets and ‘privatization’ were all very nascent principles for not only the common people but for the bureaucrats and politicians as well; but not to the oligarchs. Criminals like Khordokovsky stole shares and then cashed in at expense of the people. Spot the difference?

Instead of lecturing Russia and its leaders on how to comport themselves in the real, broader multi-polar world, the decadent West should take some time to read more; learn the lessons of history.

William Shakespeare’s play Henry V would be a good start. The scene is Agincourt in northern France during the 15th century.

Yet, God before, tell him we will come on, Though France himself and such another neighbor Stand in our way. There’s for thy labor, Montjoy. Go bid thy master well advise himself: If we may pass, we will; if we be hinder’d, We shall your tawny ground with your red blood Discolor: and so Montjoy, fare you well. The sum of all our answer is but this: We would not seek a battle, as we are; Nor, as we are, we say we will not shun it: So tell your master.

Like England’s King ‘Harry’ who rallied his countrymen to help him lay claim to that which was rightfully his (French crown) but denied him by the bogus Salic Laws, President Putin’s cause, is equally just. What business is it of the West if he protects Russia’s own interests and people from foreign aggressors who have amassed their encircling military forces right at Russia’s borders?

The West though still doesn’t get it. Now the real question is ‘who blinks first’. Hard to believe let alone accept that the world’s at this juncture. Forget peace. The blast of war is in the air, everywhere; really, this is all too tragic.

Montresor

Harlem Pastor Exposes Starbucks Sinister Sodomite Semen Scheme. Bolt’s Featured guest on the Bolt Report

starbucks

NEW YORK (CT&P) – Last Wednesday during his online radio show, Pastor James David Manning of the ATLAH Worldwide Calvary Missionary Outreach of Our Lady of the Impure Latte Church, exposed yet another fiendish conspiracy perpetrated on the American public by the dark forces attempting to turn us all gay.

This week the unhinged pastor has convinced himself that Starbucks is adding “sodomite semen” to lattes in order to control American’s sexual preferences.

Harlem-pastor-James-David-Manning-YouTube-800x430

“My suspicion is that they’re getting this semen from sodomites,” said Pastor Manning. “That’s what my suspicion is. My suspicion is that semen, like cord blood, has millions and millions of little zygotes in it, and it flavors up the coffee. And it makes you think you’re having a good time drinking that cup of latte with the semen in it.”

He then claimed that the story was the reason he was criticized for calling the company “ground zero for Ebola,” calling their clientele “generally upscaled [sic] sodomites” who go there to “exchange a lot of body fluids.”

“Now I know why I don’t go to Starbucks,” Manning said. “But now I know why these other untoward types hang around that Starbucks. This investigation has not been closed as of yet.”

Indeed, the investigation is ongoing, and Pastor Manning has put some of his top woefully uneducated researchers in charge of the ongoing probe.

fred-phelps-sr-ap0603190293

“We postulate that the zygotes act on the nervous system and put you to sleep while a pod is formed nearby, and when you wake up, you’re a flaming fag with an insatiable thirst for lattes,” said Manning.

This is not the first conspiracy that the right reverend has uncovered. He was the first radio personality to reveal that aliens were urinating in McDonald’s soft drinks, and he also exposed the deadly plan by the Obama Administration to introduce Ebola to the nation’s food supply by contaminating Hardee’s breakfast biscuits.

Pastor Manning, also known as “that black kook from Harlem,” is scheduled to appear on the Bill O’Relly show next month as part of Fox’s ongoing coverage of the imaginary “War on Christmas.” He is expected to reveal the ringleaders of a nationwide conspiracy to ruin Christmas by contaminating the Strategic Eggnog Reserve (SER) with fecal material from atheists.

Designing capitalism’s successor. It’s becoming overly apparent even to conservatives like Murdoch changes are required.

We live in a world dominated by capitalism — yet capitalism itself is quite clearly not working well in its current form; Herman Royce suggests using its innate proclivities and talents to design its own replacement.

IT’S QUITE AN UNDERACHIEVEMENT. It hasn’t just been happening recently, though, it’s been going on for at least decades in one form or another. The Budget still being fought over with tenacity and ill-feeling, months after its announcement, and despite military distractions, is just a recent glaring example. But given the game rules, the dominance of monetary concerns should hardly be surprising.

I explained previously why an economic system built around the notion of profit guarantees instability,  because for someone to profit now, someone else must lose — now or later.

A side effect, however, is that game players inevitably find endless reasons for territorial disputes over entitlements, imagined or otherwise. Indeed, with the possibility of profit urging us on, with enough no longer ever enough and even more barely sufficient, the prospect of less – for whatever reason, whether justified or not – can only be highly objectionable.

Of course, the starting point for threats of less is always the claim that there’s not enough to go round, so we need to tighten our belts, cut back, pull our weight, and a host of other hoary clichés. Mind you, too often, the most cliché-ridden exhorters place little or no demand for sacrifice on themselves, only on those doing less well. But surely this is exactly what a competition of unequals must unleash, with some players more suited to the game by disposition, inheritance, luck, lack of empathy, and/or much else. Competition for profits, after all, is supported and motivated by the pursuit of self-interest, which is sanctified by the game rules.

So, no wonder winners expect losers to pay — or, to use an example frequently reported by Independent Australia, why too much of the media often pedals interests and opinions as news and tries to influence the public and even elections (by shamelessly barracking for one candidate or party and deriding others), as to do otherwise would be to not pursue self-interest.

The net result of our game rules must be perpetual battling, periodic swapping of austerity with expansion for its own sake, endless ebbing and flowing. And as long as we accept the game rules and look at it always from the same basic perspective ‒ the same givens ‒ the longer it will all go on, the more entrenched will be the instability and the ebbing and flowing, and the more extreme and hard fought will be the disputes.

Redecorating the shop window won’t be enough.

The only way to avoid the consequences of game rules as flawed as those of our economic system is to change them, but that is not under discussion except by aberrant types like myself. You certainly won’t hear talk of it in circles of authority or prestige — I doubt it even enters their heads. But it is, above all else, what we need to start thinking about. And to do that properly, we need to take a long view, not one of the self-interested short views currently dominant.

My long view is that nothing lasts.

Civilisation as we know it will not stay forever as it is. Everything has a successor of some sort, even if only entropy. But if capitalism will sooner or later be replaced, then it at least has the choice of determining to help or hinder its successor and the transition to it.

Why waste capitalism’s innate proclivities and talents?

Why not have capitalism design its own replacement, one meant to preserve and enhance the best of what it has produced, yet go further and do better? Why not a competition between corporations (they can afford it) — feasibility studies, design and development, prototypes? It might even be good for the economy. You can still call it capitalism if you want – if you must, if you can’t accept it has moved on – or you can even treat it as the last gift of capitalism.

Whatever, just get over it. It’s had its day.

The basis of any decent replacement for capitalist competition for profits, I suggest, would have to be cooperation for mutual benefit. A lot of what we take almost for granted in modern times would work really well, if only we could trust it to work (and the people behind it). We don’t really trust anyone if we’re in competition with them and that’s what we all are, economically at least. We’d have to cooperate to really change anything — and vice versa. And for that to ever happen, we need to clearly envisage the sorts of social and economic and political systems that would foster and support cooperation.

The good news is that there are plenty of ideas out there already, including participatory economics, inclusive democracy, and a free lunch. But hardly anyone knows about them. Many people – especially those most committed to the status quo or preoccupied with self-interested quibbling and power struggles – would undoubtedly dismiss the ideas without properly considering them, would treat them as impossible by default. But if change is really wanted, true alternatives have to be properly considered, with open minds.

It’s not like the alternatives aren’t attractive. To give one example, the free lunch ideas I’ve previously explained offer not just a one-day working week, but free home ownership without mortgages.

In contrast, the current arrangement forces most people to spend much of their lives slaving away to repay mortgages to banks, a process that funnels money to those who clearly have more than they need, on their terms, from those who actually earn it. And because interest functions like profit, it adds to the system’s innate instability.

Instead, and prevented only by vested interests and lack of imagination, we could all have the equivalent of interest-free credit cards to use for spending as we need, and repaying as we can manage.

Undoubtedly, account balances would shift back and forth between credit and debit as circumstances change, but only in a competitive economy might we expect the arrangement to be abused. In a system based on cooperation, and freed from financial stress by this very method of accounting and other innovations, the vast majority of people would surely act responsibly to stay in credit most of the time. And then, society might finally start working properly, more to its capacities.

Until attention is given to these sorts of possibilities, ideas for genuine change, we will keep quibbling, and repeating history.

It’s the world we live in.

Abbott’s respect for Diggers is dead and buried. Heaven help the troops in Iraq because Abbott wont

Murray (l) and Eric Maxton, two brothers from Albany who flew in the same bomber in WW2 1 November 2014

No free lunch for WWII bomber brothers who won France’s highest honour

Two Western Australian World War II veterans who received honours for bravery have been invited to a lunch with the Australian and British prime ministers, but will have to pay their own way to Canberra and meet all expenses for the trip.

Now in their 90s, the brothers will need support from their wives to make Friday’s lunch, thrown in honour of Australian airmen who fought in Bomber Command and attended by Britain’s David Cameron and Australia’s Tony Abbott.

The expected cost of transporting each to the capital is $2,000.

Murray and Eric Maxton flew together in 460 Squadron in 1944, bombing Hitler’s factories in Nazi Germany.

They were the only brothers to fly combat missions in the same aircraft, a practice forbidden at the time but excused by RAAF Bomber Command because of a shortage of skilled air crew.

Their father and uncle served in World War I, with the uncle killed at Gallipoli.

The brothers had received no recognition or acknowledgement for their war service up until November this year, when the French Defence Minister presented them with his country’s highest honour for bravery, the French Legion of Honour.

The Maxtons received their medals during the Albany Convoy Commemorations, exactly 70 years to the month that they finished their tour of duty in Europe.

The Department of Veteran Affairs has been contacted for comment.

AFP on the ball Scott Morrison may instruct my citizenship cancelled after 66 years and paying taxes for 58 years. This country has certainly changed. Abbott’s documentation is flawed but that’s ok it’s vanished.

Matthew Flannery

Australian Federal Police methods under question after ‘LulzSec hacker’ claims he was wrongly accused

A man described by the Australian Federal Police (AFP) as being the leader of the notorious international hacking group LulzSec says the AFP’s claims are based on a single joke Facebook message.

A 7.30 investigation has found a teenage accomplice was actually responsible for the hack and was raided by police but never charged.

Late last month 25-year-old Matthew Flannery was sentenced to 15 months’ home detention when he was convicted of five hacking charges.

When he was arrested in April last year police called him a self-described leader of LulzSec, a claim that shocked Flannery when he was bailed.

“I went to a computer in the library because, you know, they’d taken mine, and I started Googling [sic] and to my shock and horror I found that not only was I being reported by Australian news agencies, but also internationally,” Flannery told 7.30.

A detailed examination of his court documents showed only one reference to LulzSec, which Flannery said was a joke Facebook message to his friend.

“I would like to know if that is solely what they are basing their claims off of and, if so, then why did the AFP – in a press release in front of the world – state that I had made claims in online chat communities that were frequented by LulzSec members that I was the leader of LulzSec?” Flannery said.

The AFP’s national manager of cyber crime Commander Glen McEwen said police were unsure if Flannery was ever a member of LulzSec but his boasting attracted the attention of police.

“That’s something I cannot confirm,” Commander McEwen said.

“As you’d appreciate, the virtual world and the anonymity as such, people come together for certain reasons and move away.

“I cannot categorically say that the individual was part of LulzSec but I definitely can’t discount that.”

Commander McEwen said he did not back away from his comments that Flannery was a risk to Australian society.

“I don’t make any excuse or apologise for the activity of the AFP in relation to this matter,” he said.

Secret internet chat logs also show the hack announced by the AFP was carried out by a teenage accomplice.

It involved placing an offensive image on the Narrabri Shire Council website in the early hours of the morning.

Hacking sources said Flannery asked for the hack to be carried out because, far from being the leader of LulzSec, he lacked the technical skill to carry out a basic attack.

“Why were people raided as a result of my arrest – because they were associated with me? Why were they raided?” Flannery asked.

“And saying this serves no benefit to me, it’s more a question of the AFP’s integrity.

“Why were those people raided and arrested for much more serious offences and yet saw no charges or any kind of media attention whatsoever?”

Commander McEwen likened virtual crimes to break and enter and robbery and said the AFP stands by the arrest.

“I still don’t understand where people believe that breaking in and stealing from others is harmless fun,” he said.

“I’m sorry maybe I’m old school, but I just don’t agree with that.”

Tasmania touted as humane, cost-effective, productive asylum seeker solution. The only resource this government sees is political.

Panorama of Hobart, Tasmania

Tasmania would become Australia’s asylum seeker processing centre, with newcomers living and working freely in the community, under a plan developed by local leaders and human rights activists.

The Tasmania Opportunity Leaders Summit in Launceston heard that the case for making the state an asylum seeker processing centre went beyond the natural security it afforded as an island.

Speakers, including human rights lawyer Julian Burnside QC, said Tasmania offered an alternative to the Federal Government’s Sovereign Borders policy, one that was more humane, better value for the Australian taxpayer and of benefit to the local economy.

It would deliver enormous economic benefit to the state in infrastructure spending, education and training and in business opportunities,

Dr David Strong

The proposal included allowing people to live and work in the community, receive Centrelink benefits and live where the Government determined their money would have the greatest benefit for the local economy.

Mr Burnside, who won this year’s Sydney Peace Prize, told the summit the Federal Government spent $5 billion a year on asylum seekers, and that Tasmania was a much more cost-effective option.

“If you can reduce that cost dramatically to one-tenth of what it is at the moment, and in the process avoid doing harm to frightened people and do some good for the Tasmanian economy, that seems a good thing all round,” he said.

Asylum seekers could boost Tasmanian economy

Mr Burnside told the summit that asylum seekers should be seen as a resource, not a threat.

“They would be bringing in to the community not only their courage and their initiative but also the income that they can earn,” he said.

He said there were some conditions that should be attached to any planned move to make Tasmania a refugee processing centre.

Asylum seekers would still be detained on arrival for one month only, for health and security screening.

Following that, Mr Burnside said further conditions needed to met under the plan.

These included:

  • The asylum seekers had to stay in touch with the Immigration Department;
  • They should be engaged in education, training and work; and
  • They must live in a region designated by the Government – for example, Tasmania.

A summit co-ordinator, Launceston paediatrician Dr David Strong, said the plan had the potential to be “the biggest, most far-reaching project in Tasmanian history”.

“It would deliver enormous economic benefit to the state in infrastructure spending, education and training and in business opportunities,” he said.

“It would further enhance Tasmania is the eyes of the nation and the world as a welcoming place that warmly embraces those seeking a better life.”

Cut ADF wages but fight yes fight for ‘Gold Card’ Perks for former MP’s. Simply Cut Perks for Former MP’s. In the interest of justice!

Parliamentary entitlements: Former MPs fight to keep lifetime ‘gold pass’ travel perks

Former federal MPs are fighting to keep hold of their lifetime “gold pass” travel perks, warning of a High Court challenge if the Government pushes ahead with changes.

The Association of Former MPs warns that retrospectively stripping members of that entitlement would be unconstitutional, because it amounts to “unjust” acquisition of property.

Labor backs moves to abolish pass another bipartisan move. So so unlike  Abbott in opposition. So unlike Abbott tearing down the house.

Alarmists, Technologically ignorant, False god worshippers, According to Andrew Bolt and Tony Abbott Germans are just dumb

Feldhaim boasts solar panels and wind turbines to create a enough energy for the whole community

German village Feldheim the country’s first community to become energy self-sufficient

The rural village of Feldheim, 80 kilometres south of Berlin, is at the vanguard of Germany’s energy revolution, boasting a wind farm, solar plant, biogas and biomass facilities.

Germany is undergoing an energy transformation called Energiewende, which aims to reduce carbon emissions, increase the use of renewable energy, and stop all nuclear power.

Feldheim is the country’s first community to become completely energy self-sufficient.

The village now attracts thousands of ecotourists every year and has set up an educational group to spread the word.

The New Energy Forum’s Kathleen Thompson told the ABC it all started back in 1995.

“A student by the name of Michael Raschemann decided as part of his studies he’d like to install some wind farms,” she said.

With the support of local council, Feldheim’s 145 residents were quickly convinced of the wind farm’s merits.

One of those residents is 73-year-old Joachim Gluck, who has lived in the village his whole life.

Germany’s energy transition

  • 80 per cent of electricity from renewable sources by 2050
  • Nuclear plants shut down by 2022
  • Carbon emissions cut by up to 95 per cent of 1990 figures by 2050

“There wasn’t much headwind … the project was done in open discussions at resident’s meetings. Everyone was allowed to voice his or her opinion,” he said.

Residents were invited to join a limited company to manage the wind farm in which they contributed 3,000 euros each.

Mr Raschemann founded a company, Energiequelle, which planned and implemented the project.

The wind farm now has 47 turbines, which produce 175 million kilowatt hours of electricity every year.

The town of Feldheim uses just one per cent of that, the rest is sold back into the wider grid.

Residents and businesses now pay a third less for their electricity than other German communities, at 16.5 eurocents per kilowatt hour.

The biggest local business is the agricultural cooperative which produces milk, pig meat and grains.

After the success of the wind farm, the cooperative, in partnership with Energiequelle, built a biogas plant to use manure and silage to heat the village.

The plant cost nearly 2 million euros and much of that was provided by government subsidies.

It has cut heating costs and saved the import of 160,000 litres a year.

The partnership has also built a solar farm with 10,000 modules, which has an annual output of 3,000 megawatts.

The town does not waste a thing, with a small woodchip heating plant burning timber by-products from nearby forests.

Mr Gluck said the big energy groups fought against Feldheim’s transformation.

“The permit process took longer than the actual building process,” he said.

But that has not deterred the villagers from new projects.

They are now spending 13 million euros on battery storage, which will help with consistency of supply.

Berlin citizens looking to buy back electricity grid in aim of using more renewable energy

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-11-05/citizens-of-berlin-move-to-return-power-to-the-people/5868236

Islamaphobia is promoted in our ‘free market’ economy. Do we create anti-Islamic trade policies, education, live meat export to or do we just threaten all small business. Bolt would have us do nothing with Islam as part of his part of his ‘free speech’ in a ‘free economy’ drive unless Tony told him otherwise. That’s Team Australia

Fleurieu Milk Company

Fleurieu Milk and Yoghurt Company loses $50,000 Emirates deal after bowing to pressure to drop Halal certification

An aggressive social media campaign pushing for a boycott on Halal products has forced a South Australian company to drop the accreditation and ditch a deal that was worth $50,000 a year.

The Fleurieu Milk and Yoghurt Company came under fire last week on its social media page with people suggesting the fee it paid to become Halal-certified was being used to fund terrorism.

Sales and marketing manager Nick Hutchinson said because of the campaign and a wish to avoid negative publicity the company decided to end its yoghurt supply deal with Emirates on Friday.

“The publicity we were getting was quite negative and something we probably didn’t need and we decided we would pull the pin and stop supplying Emirates Airlines,” Mr Hutchison said.

“Ninety per cent of it has been social media, but I have received calls from people that are quite unhappy, I guess, about our decisions and so forth, and [we have also received] a lot of emails.”

While many of these complaints came from interstate, and overseas, Mr Hutchinson said the company was worried the negativity would affect local customers.

“When our small customer base in South Australia are reading this and starting to question us we thought, yeah maybe the negatives outweigh the positive,” he said.

Our farmers, they are just trying to be viable. They don’t deserve this hate mail, and neither do a lot of the other businesses that are getting it.

Nick Hutchinson, Fleurieu Milk and Yoghurt Company

The company began about eight years ago, and about two years ago was presented with the opportunity to begin supplying Emirates with yoghurt.

But in order to secure the contract the company had to pay a $1,000 fee to become Halal certified.

“We thought this was a great coup for the company, it would bring great publicity, great advertising and we decided to go ahead with it,” Mr Hutchinson said.

“It’s been quite successful for the company, but unfortunately over the last few days, a lot of negative publicity has come in about this Halal certification and where this money, where we are paying fees is being spent.”

Mr Hutchinson found the criticism quite harsh and said local businesses did not deserve to be bullied by these social media compaigns.

“The social media laws are quite hard to police,” he said.

“You can get on there and say whatever you like in fake accounts, but what we are trying to put across is these business that you are approaching, in our case, our farmers, they are just trying to be viable.

“They don’t deserve this hate mail, and neither do a lot of the other businesses that are getting it.”

Losing Emirates deal will have financial impacts

Losing the Emirates deal will impact on the business financially and Mr Hutchinson said some employees may lose some hours.

However he hoped the company could save its deal with Emirates, as its products do not contain gelatine.

I’ve received a lot of feedback to say they’re disappointed we’ve caved in to this kind of thing. We understand that, people are going to have their own opinion I guess, unless you’re in the shoes we were in.

Nick Hutchinson, Fleurieu Milk and Yoghurt Company

“Milk as a dairy product does not have to be Halal certified by law, and neither does yoghurt, which we were supplying, unless it contains gelatine,” he said.

“Now our yoghurt doesn’t contain gelatine so we can definitely argue the fact that it doesn’t need to be certified for Emirates [but] they play it safe. Anything that goes on their planes needs to be certified, so if they’re asked, they can automatically answer ‘yes’.

“What we are going to try and do is get our products tested, get some certificates that prove that our products don’t contain gelatine and try to continue to supply Emirates, if they’ll give us permission without the certification, but I mean that is unlikely.”

Now that the company has announced it will drop its Halal accreditation, Mr Hutchinson said he had received feedback from people who were disappointed the company had “caved in” to social media bullying.

“I’ve received a lot of feedback to say they’re disappointed we’ve caved in to this kind of thing,” he said.

“We understand that, people are going to have their own opinion I guess, unless you’re in the shoes we were in.”

Attacks fall under ‘Islamophobia’

The Islamic Society of South Australia, which provides companies with Halal certification, say the attacks against Halal products fall under the banner of “Islamophobia”.

The society’s Dr Waleed Alkhazrajy believed more explanation of Halal would ease the negativity.

“We are happy as well to help these companies engage in discussion or explanation for these members of the community that send these negative remarks and we say ‘look this is what it is, this what the process is’ and I’m sure that will alleviate their concerns or misunderstanding,” Dr Alkhazrajy said.

Dr Alkhazrajy said he did not think the attacks would take hold, and had not seen many companies drop their accreditation because of the anti-Halal campaigns.

“In fact, to a certain extent there is a boom because of the export of Australian products to south-east Asia, especially to Indonesia and Malaysia,” Dr Alkhazrajy said.

“Malaysia is taking a lot of food products from Australia and the companies that are exporting to these regions, they have increased their request for certifying their products.

“I don’t think there has been an increase in negative sentiments to these companies.”

Halal, in reference to food, is the dietary standard set out for Muslims in the Koran.

It governs food preparation techniques, as well the foods and ingredients that can be consumed under Islamic rules.

Abbott plays musical chairs. A bit of revenge served cold.

View image on Twitter

Seating bitter political foes Julia Gillard and Kevin Rudd next to other was far too tactless to be accidentally done by a PM’s ceremonial and protocols mandarins, says Michael Galvin.

ON FORMAL OCCASIONS, seating arrangements are important. Anyone who has ever organised a wedding, or been to one, knows that.

Few events are more formal than a state memorial service for a former prime minister. In fact, there is a special section of the PM’s Department ‒ the Ceremonial and Protocols section ‒ whose job it is to make sure all the niceties are observed.

At the Sydney Town Hall memorial for Gough Whitlam last week, the responsible officials decided to seat Julia Gillard next to Kevin Rudd. An absurd decision.

You could probably count on the fingers of one hand the number of people in Australia who would make such a tactless and inappropriate decision if they were organising the event. It is wrong on so many levels only a fool would do this knowingly.

It is safe to assume public servants in the PM’s Department know this, so I think we can rule out the clumsy incompetence explanation some journalists have offered — although in the case of this Abbott Government, incompetence is not as implausible as might be normally assumed.

Why, therefore, did it happen?

I will offer three possible explanations. None of them reflect well on Tony Abbott.

If there is a more charitable explanation, I would like to hear it, because it makes me feel ill to know we have a PM of such a base nature.

The first possibility is that it was meant as a strategic political decision — a way of creating a story that would distract from the main event, to remind people just how bad Labor Governments can be.

Certainly, the objective of getting a major “negative” news story out of the ill-fated Gillard/Rudd rendezvous was achieved. If it was hoped that some of the gloss off Whitlam and his achievements, however, it failed — and the irony is that the speeches last week have probably shifted the historical record permanently in Whitlam’s favour.

The second option is more personal and visceral than this. It is that Abbott simply cannot pass up an opportunity to embarrass or humiliate Julia Gillard.

We know Abbott is pugnacious, but is he also the type of manic fighter who keeps on punching, long after his opponent has been knocked out? In short, did Abbott authorise this seating arrangement simply to enjoy seeing people he hates put in an embarrassing public situation? I hope not, but the frat boy prankster never feels far below the surface in the case of this man.

To readers who might find such an insinuation silly or far-fetched, universities are home to many professors who do this sort of thing to one another without a second’s thought, especially if they are real or imagined rivals.

The third possibility is that it was question of the culture of government under Abbott. After all, Abbott has made it clear that the public service is not there to do what it wants — it is there to do what his government wants.

About the last thing that would enthuse Abbott would be an event that honoured Gough Whitlam and all that he stood for. We know this from the boorish behaviour he displayed when Margaret Whitlam died. He had to put the boot into Gough, on probably the saddest and most devastating day in Gough’s life.

Not only is it likely that Abbott gave very little time or attention to this memorial service. This message probably went out to the mandarins organising it. Low priority; the boss is not keen. Like Murdoch’s lapdogs, they don’t need Rupert telling them what to write; they know the line and can parrot it quite well once they work it out for themselves.

In this context, which public servant was going to speak up and make sure this seating fiasco did not happen? Self-evidently, no-one did. Abbott would seem to have got the public servants he wants.

Some may say that I am making a mountain out of a molehill, but I believe it is the little things that often point to the bigger picture. Graciousness, or the lack of it, suggests far bigger issues.

Depressingly, what happened to Gillard and Rudd last week is a cameo that shows the true colours of this government — a variable mixture of incompetence, unceasing political warfare, boorishness, and the intimidation of others

New powers for Scott Morrison . He can make Abbott a non citizen. But not Bolt

scott-morrison

The following is a post from November 7 from the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre (ASRC)

#‎BREAKING. Scott Morrison has introduced another new draconian Bill called “Australian Citizenship and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2014″. It gives him the unreviewable power to cancel the citizenship of any Australian without any criminal conviction at all. Think about that. Being able to lose your Citizenship despite not having been found guilty of a criminal offence. (P.S This is not just for refugees but EVERYONE not born in Australia). Just 6 days was given for the public to make submissions (closed yesterday). Good news is we made a submission & will be appearing before the committee reviewing it on Monday, to fight the good fight to stop it!

This is an excerpt from the second reading of the Bill by Paul Fletcher on October 23.

“On occasion, the minister makes personal decisions under the act. The bill makes it clear that the minister can specify that such a decision is made in the public interest. As it is not appropriate for merits review to be available in respect of decisions that have been made by the minister personally the bill protects them from merits review. Judicial review will remain available.

The bill also provides the minister with a power to personally set aside certain decisions of the AAT if it is in the public interest to do so. The Minister for Immigration and Border Protection is concerned that some decisions made by the AAT have led to outcomes that are outside the community standards that citizenship policy is intended to meet, including recent occasions where the AAT found that people were of good character despite having been convicted of child sexual offences, manslaughter, people smuggling or domestic violence.

These amendments to protect the minister’s personal decisions from merits review and to allow the minister to set aside decisions of the AAT in certain circumstances will bring the minister’s powers under the Citizenship Act in line with similar powers under the Migration Act.

The bill also provides the minister with a power to make legislative instruments.”

As Susan points out, “This is causing an enormous amount of fear and polarising the community. Idiots are posting that we should be trusting of our government’s intentions, that it is a good thing to behave to prevent certain communities from damaging Australia. This is further frightening all those that were not born here.”

Article 15 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states

(1) Everyone has the right to a nationality

(2) No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his nationality nor denied the right to change his nationality

which brings into question the legality of these new powers.

One by one, the Ministers of this government are changing the laws to give themselves personal power bypassing review – Scott Morrison, George Brandis, Greg Hunt – all are winding back our rights and removing avenues to have their decisions reviewed.

This is NOT democracy.

F.U.D. Fear Certainty and Doubt

Commie

Fear, uncertainty and doubt (“FUD”) is a strategy used in marketing, propaganda and politics that has its modern origins in precursors dating back to the 1920s. It is based upon the following principles:
• Know the people you are targeting.
• Feed them misinformation that will create in them a state of fear, uncertainty and doubt.
• Suggest that you, and you alone, have the solution.

the greatest FUD campaign of modern times must surely be the conjoined ‘Stop the Boats’ and ‘Our Borders Under Threat”. The LNP initially claimed that terrorists would choose the risky maritime option over the routinely safe arrival by aircraft. When the manifest stupidity of this claim became the object of public ridicule, the terrorist scare was replaced by the ‘uncontrolled hordes of queue-jumpers’ claim with more than a few dog-whistles to the still disadvantaged outer suburb voters. Of course there are no queues which do not measure their waiting list in years, and no places where people on those queues can survive while they wait. Typically, boat people have no travel documents because the governments from whom they seek refuge will not issue them. This means that they cannot travel by air and a leaky boat is their only option. They know they may die at sea, but they are prepared to take that risk in the certain knowledge that they will die if they return to their country of origin.

The ‘Stop the Boats’ part of this FUD is supported by both the LNP and ALP on the faux humanitarian claim that it will prevent drownings at sea. Both have aligned themselves with this FUD, in reality, for political reasons. Neither have addressed the issue of the fate of refugees who are forced back to their countries of origin. Neither have addressed the immorality of using the thinly disguised torture of children, women and men as a state sanctioned instrument of policy administration. Neither have addressed the option of regional cooperation using the money spent on ‘Stop the Boats’/’Sovereign Borders’/’Offshore Detention’ to fund additional resettlement programs for refugees in transit.

Of course, when a FUD works the way this one has, you will always find the main-chancer who will see it as a means to grasp even greater power and create an even greater empire. Scott Morrison is the exemplar. From the beginning of his tenure, his demeanour, language, and obsessive stair, conveyed an innate lack of empathy for the plight of the refugees whose suffering and fear had cause them to risk their lives in the pursuit of refuge and whom he now proposed to consign to the torture of indefinite detention in his makeshift tropical hellholes. This multilayered inhumane FUD constructed upon a fundamental abuse of human rights has enabled Scott Morrison to create his new, all-powerful, mega department. Should the ALP ever find a leader whose moral compass points at the principles of social justice rather than the last poll results, and should that leader one day hold the office of Prime Minister, it is to be hoped that Morrison’s most egregious breaches of human rights are investigated and if proved that his was the guiding hand, he is prosecuted to the limit of the law.

The recent death of Gough Whitlam, the State Funeral for him, Noel Pearson’s oratory, my personal recollections of the impressions Gough made upon me as a young man, what he stood for and fought for, and the sight of Tony Abbott in the front row of the Sydney Town Hall, sparked a memory of a particular English period at school. The richness of the language, it seemed to me and many in the class, was never more evident than in the word “bathos”: that English had a single word to convey such a complex, multi-layered concept applicable to such a multifarious range of human events. And my memory of the discovery of “bathos” was, of course, revived for me, as I’m sure it was for many, when we contrasted the sublime, FUD-free Whitlam and the political descent we must now endure to the ridiculous Abbott

Government and White collar crime good for our health

cyniciam

Richard Nixon

I, like many others, was bemused by our government’s tardy response to the Ebola crisis.  I know they were advised that infected health workers might not survive a 30 hour plane trip back to here but they seemed to do little to find a solution.

Australian Medical Assistance Teams (AUSMAT) are multi-disciplinary health teams incorporating doctors, nurses, and allied health staff.  They are designed to be self-sufficient, experienced teams that can rapidly respond to a disaster zone to provide life saving treatment to casualties, in support of the local health response.

Instead of deploying these teams, we sat back as the infection rate grew exponentially, and brave volunteers who recognised the necessity of rapid response chose to go and help without government support.

Belatedly, Abbott announces a deal has been made (more than a fortnight after it was offered), but outsources our response effort to Aspen Medical without going through any form of tender process.

Call me cynical, but whenever this government begins outsourcing, I start wondering who will make money out of the deal.

SMH November 7, 2014

Canberra-based Aspen, with a workforce of 2200, has become a regular recipient of government contracts, particularly from Defence.

In 2009, it signed three contracts worth $130 million to provide assistance to the regional mission in the Solomon Islands. This year it received another $26.5 million for regional assistance.

The company was officially opened in 2004 by the then Howard Government Health Minister Tony Abbott.

Electoral records show it donated $11,000 to the Queensland LNP last year.

Meanwhile, the World Health Organisation has asked Australia and Canada to justify their decisions last week to suspend migration from Ebola-hit countries.

“These are measures that go beyond the recommendations of the WHO’s emergency committee,” said Isabelle Nuttall, who heads WHO’s alert and response department.

Australia on October 27 became the first Western nation to suspend migration from Ebola-hit West African nations, and Canada followed suit four days later.

Lateline November 7, 2014

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade awarded the $20 million contract to Aspen, bypassing Australian medical assistance teams or AusMats who are specifically trained to deal with this kind of crisis.

EMMA ALBERICI: So was this an open and competitive tender process?

GLENN KEYS: I can’t really talk to that because I’m not inside government, but I can say that because of our background in previous experience in deployments, as well as our experience in Liberia, I think we’re really well suited for the provision of these services to the Australian Government.

EMMA ALBERICI: Is there any level of Australian Government logistical support for your efforts?

GLENN KEYS: No, they’ve contracted us to provide all of the services.

EMMA ALBERICI: What I’m asking you, I guess is that you’re the people who are recruiting and providing the supports and the Government of Britain is giving you that logistical backup. What I’m asking you is beyond the money, the Australian Federal Government isn’t really providing anything else, is that correct?

GLENN KEYS: Well, they’re providing us, and I think that’s the thing that is important because we will be and have been already canvassing Australian health worker whose will help, as well as logistics officers and environmental health officers, and we will be putting that team together as part of that delivery of service.

And I think that’s going to be great, that there will be Australians helping deliver care to the people of Sierra Leone.

EMMA ALBERICI: So what proportion of Australians compared to overseas people will you be employing to man this treatment centre?

GLENN KEYS: It will be 10 to 20 per cent

A visit to the Aspen Medical site provides the following information:

“Founded in 2003 by Glenn Keys and Dr. Andrew Walker, Aspen Medical is an Australian-owned, multi award-winning, global provider of guaranteed and innovative healthcare solutions across a diverse range of sectors and clients including Defense, Mining & Resources, Oil & Gas, Government and Humanitarian.

Our competitive advantage lies in superior project management and the quality of our team. We pride ourselves on a customer-centric approach and a ‘can do’ attitude.”

So I decided to look into “the team”.

Aspen Medical co-founder and Managing Director, Glenn Keys, has been appointed to the board of the National Disability Insurance Agency (NDIA), formerly known as DisabilityCare Australia.

Glenn is the only appointment from the ACT. The NDIA is an independent statutory agency, whose role is to implement the national disability insurance scheme (NDIS), which will support a better life for hundreds of thousands of Australians with a significant and permanent disability and their families and carers.

SMH April 16, 2014

“Medical entrepreneur Andrew Walker has been accused of defrauding creditors by hiding $15 million worth of shares in tax haven the British Virgin Islands.

The liquidator of Dr Walker’s investment company, Apsara Capital, on Friday launched legal action against Dr Walker and Singapore-based businessman Georges Daniel Mercadal over the transaction.

He alleges Dr Walker ”improperly used his position to gain an advantage for himself or someone else, or cause detriment to Apsara”.

Mr Mercadal either ”wilfully shut his eyes to the obvious” or, together with Dr Walker, was part of ”a dishonest and fraudulent design” to divert the shares, he said.

The liquidator asked the court to order Dr Walker and Mr Mercadal to pay damages and return the proceeds of the alleged diversion.”

The article goes on to say

“Since founding healthcare group Aspen Medical in 2003, Dr Walker and school friend Glenn Keys have built the company into a profitable enterprise that employs 2200 people and boasts former health minister Michael Wooldridge on its board.”

SMH December 13, 2013

A Federal Court has found the directors behind failed nursing home empire Prime Trust, including former federal health minister Michael Wooldridge, breached their corporate duties by overseeing a $33 million fee to the trust’s founder.

Justice Bernard Murphy ruled on Thursday that Dr Wooldridge and four other directors, including former Places Victoria chairman Peter Clarke, failed to act in members’ best interest by approving the fee to founder and director Bill Lewski.

Prime Trust collapsed in 2010 owing $550 million to investors. The managed investment scheme owned retirement villages in Queensland, NSW and Victoria.

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission has asked the court to disqualify the five men from being company directors and order them to pay a penalty.

Dr Wooldridge is a director on a number of company boards, including Aspen Medical, Oral Health Australia and Australian Pharmaceutical Industries, owner of Priceline.

Penalty hearings for the directors will begin early next year.They face fines of up to $200,000 and bans from company boards.

ASIC Commissioner Greg Tanzer said the Federal Court’s decision was a significant outcome for investors. ”The conduct of the APCHL board was unacceptable and today’s judgment reflects that,” he said.

SMH December 9, 2013

The tax office is deciding whether an anti-wind farm group linked to former Liberal MPs should retain its favourable tax treatment.

The Waubra Foundation has been classified a ”health promotion charity” by the tax office, meaning its ”principal activity is promoting the prevention and control of disease in humans”.

It has also been granted deductible gift recipient status by the Australian Taxation Office, and donations of more than $2 to it are tax-deductible.

Donations to Waubra have helped fund legal challenges against wind farm developments.

Former health minister Michael Wooldridge is a director of Waubra, and former MP Alby Schultz is its patron.

The foundation says its main aim is to ”educate others about the known science relating to the adverse health impacts of infrasound and low-frequency noise.”

The Age June 27, 2012

A lack of timely access to doctors is a common complaint these days as waiting times blow out and people must go further afield or to bulk-billing clinics in search of medical help. This shortage of doctors can partly be traced to a 1996 decision by the Howard government, under then health minister Michael Wooldridge, to reduce funding for medical education places and to cut Medicare rebates for some doctors. The government relied on figures that forecast an oversupply of doctors by 2015.

Dr Brian Morton, a Sydney GP and chairman of the Australian Medical Association’s Council of General Practice, says: ”The information that the [Howard] government had was grossly inaccurate and shortsighted. Despite the [contrasting] figures that the AMA had at the time, the government wasn’t listening. The community is paying for that now.”

One consequence of the cuts in the ’90s has been that overseas-trained doctors have been brought in to fill the gap. A quarter of doctors practising here were qualified overseas.  In 2009-10, 4700 visas were granted to medical practitioners – double the number of medical students who graduated from Australian universities. Health Workforce Australia found that by 2025 there will be about 2700 fewer doctors than Australia needs. (The shortage of nurses will be even more dramatic, with a gap of 110,000 in the same period.)

So, in summary, our Government is still doing nothing about the Ebola crisis except paying $20 million to a private company (who is a party donor and who was officially opened by Tony Abbott) who will give local Africans a ten day training course. The company’s co-founder stands accused of “improperly using his position to gain an advantage for himself” and of “defrauding creditors” by using tax havens to hide shares.  Their company director, a former Liberal Minister who is largely responsible for the acute shortage of doctors in Australia and who is the director of a charitable organisation devoted to campaigning against wind farms, is now facing a ban from being on company boards for breaching his corporate duties and failing to act in members’ best interests by overseeing huge kickbacks to mates.

And they wonder why I am cynical

Opinion » Columnists November 10: World Science Day for Peace and Development

November 10: World Science Day for Peace and Development. 53915.jpeg
Some bastard murdering a rhino

What a wonderful title and what a noble goal to aim towards, at a time when the world should already be pulling together, pooling resources, spending on development and not deployment, respecting cultural differences and celebrating universal values in the beautiful home we all inhabit as brothers and sisters.

November 10 is the World Science Day for Peace and Development and the theme for this year is “Quality Science Education: Ensuring a sustainable future for all”. This day was proclaimed in 2001 by UNESCO Resolution 31C/20 and its purpose, in the words of UNESCO, is: “to renew the national, as well as the international commitment to science for peace and development and to stress the responsible use of science for the benefit of society. The World Science Day for Peace and Development also aims at raising public awareness of the importance of science and to bridge the gap between science and societies”.

How many World Days do we have? And what difference do they make? The answer to the first question is many, and to the second, they serve to keep the flame alive, at the very least. They are flag carriers in a world in which civilization and goodwill is being constantly challenged by those who wish to impose their values over others to feather their nests, to further their interests and to pander to the whims of the lobbies which aim to make a profit at the expense of the citizens of the world.

The World Science Day for Peace and Development was proclaimed at the beginning of the new millennium before the outrage against Iraq, before the ensuing outrages against Libya and Syria and the Ukrainian Putsch which sparked off the unrest in that entire region: if President Yanukovich were still in power, as agreed, there would have been no such Fascist massacres and the following uprising and indignation of Russian-speaking Ukrainians.

The idea of World Science Day was noble, namely to pool resources, respecting cultures and creeds and proving that the more we pull together, the more we advance as a People and the stronger we become, respecting the beautiful Home Mother Nature has given us and helping out those brothers and sisters living around the shores of our common lake, the Seas, who have less resources. The idea was a multilateral approach, an egalitarian and fraternal one, over a top-down, unilateral and selfish focus.

This, in a world in which the supply of food has become an exercise in criminal manipulation by those who control the food supply lobbies, mainly meat, in a world in which despite the fact that the Americans have to knock on Russia’s door every time they want to get into space, the same USA is orchestrating sanctions and bad will against Moscow. Talk about biting the hand that feeds you. Antagonism, belligerence, chauvinism. Business interests over the common good, Excel sheet governance over welfare.

The question is, do we really have time for this model of international relations? Was this the model we envisaged for the third millennium of the Christian era? I think not.

At the Millennium Summit, it was hoped that the developed world would act like an older brother or sister for the developing nations, making sure that sustainable development and basic services were a birthright for all. Equal opportunities for every child born on this planet. An end to sexism, racism, exclusion, marginalization.

Gender equality. Rights for all, respect for our environment, including its inhabitants, our fellow brothers and sisters, the animals we share our home with. Social awareness programs pushing noble ideals and lifestyles such as Veganism as part of our respect for our planet and those we share it with. Universal education, universal healthcare.

Heads nod in agreement. For a second. But then again, Humankind, the abortion that Nature failed to eliminate when it could, when a tree shrew came down to Earth and developed a freakish thumb, is not about cohabitation, common values and equality, fraternity and liberty.

It is about symbolic control, it is about imposing the will and power of a group over others, it is about skullduggery and subversion and manipulation, a cynical exercise in so-called friendship when what really happens behind the scenes is the opposite, as we collectively murder our cohabitants of our planet, pollute its land and air and seas, destroy species before we meet them, desecrate vast areas, rendering the habitat of so many animals and plants unusable, and therefore consigning them to extinction.

The same approach, unsurprisingly, is practised among fellow humans. It therefore comes as no surprise to discover that we are losing at least 10,000 species of animals and plants every year, some of which could provide us with cures for the world’s worst diseases, or rather, could have provided. It comes as no surprise to learn that collectively, we spend 1.7 trillion USD a year on weapons systems, 1.2 trillion of this accounted for by NATO.

The motto of the World Wildlife Fund is “Building a future in which humans live in harmony with nature”. That is not going to happen. Humankind is incapable of any World Days for Peace and Development. I would argue that in terms of claims for the right to inhabit this planet, or any other, its claim is the least valid of all. Ask the millions of species this abomination has rendered extinct.

I, personally, feel disgusted to be a human being and an inhabitant of this planet at this time. The only reason I stay here is to try to network and find others who are sincere about making this a better place for all of us, and those we cohabit out beautiful home with.

To Mr Abbott from Iraq President Abadi

Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi (C) speaks during a press conference in the Shiite shrine city of Karbala in central Iraq on October 23, 2014

Iraq says foreign military trainers welcome but “a little late”

Iraq said Saturday that foreign military trainers heading to the country are welcome but “a little late”, after US President Barack Obama unveiled plans to send 1,500 additional troops.

“This step is a little late, but we welcome it,” a statement from Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi’s office said.

The Baghdad government had requested members of the US-led international coalition battling Islamic State group (IS) jihadists to help train and arm its forces, the statement said.

“The coalition agreed on that and four to five Iraqi training camps were selected, and building on that, they have now begun sending the trainers,” it said.

IS spearheaded a major military militant offensive that has overrun much of the country’s Sunni Arab heartland since June, and Iraqi federal and Kurdish forces backed by tribesmen and militiamen are fighting to regain ground.

Multiple Iraqi divisions collapsed in the northern province of Nineveh in the early days of the jihadist offensive, leaving major units that need to be reconstituted.

Experts say Iraqi security forces suffer from serious shortcomings in training and logistics, hampering their performance in the conflict

“Analyses tend to misuse the references to the Qur’an, often only citing single verses”

Praying in Damascus (archive photo)

Following the advent of the murderous Islamic State (IS), the need to scrutinize the relationship between Islam and violence has proved necessary. Several attempts have been made towards this aim, some even arguing for the revision of the Holy Qur’an itself. Others request that believing Muslims turn away from the particular texts with content of violence. To a devout Muslim however, it is not easy to ignore the scripture that is in fact believed to be the word of God. I believe none of this is necessary; instead, these passages of violence may be reinterpreted with the help of the Qur’an itself.

WHILE THE VIOLENT character of the Qur’an is now broadly publicised in articles, interviews and various publications around the world, these analyses tend to misuse the references to the Qur’an, often only citing single verses like the following (translation by M.A.S. Abdel Haleem):

“Those who wage war against God and His Messenger and strive to spread corruption in the land should be punished by death, crucifixion, the amputation of an alternate hand and foot, or banishment form the land: a disgrace for them in this world, and then a terrible punishment in the Hereafter, unless they repent before you overpower them- in that case bear in mind that God is forgiving and merciful.” 5:33-34.

The central theme of this specific section is about gruesome revenge and hostility, showing little mercy.  Unquestioned, it paints a dark picture of what is otherwise called the Holy Qur’an. The Qur’an shares this fate of single citation with its sister religions, Judaism and Christianity. Often, in a wide variety of circumstances, we see the Bible and the Tanakh being cited verse-by-verse – both by religious people themselves and people outside the religions. Single citation of Holy Scripture is of course most often harmless. However, it becomes dangerous when it makes claims to explain the religion to which it refers.

“To a devout Muslim however, it is not easy to ignore the scripture”

The Bible was not divided into themes and verses until the middle of the fourteenth century. Thus, to read the Bible verse-by-verse hardly follows the intention of the authors. The Qur’an was divided into verses much earlier but it was never meant to be read verse-by-verse. The Qur’an was revealed to the Prophet Muhammad sura-by-sura (chapter), meant to be read in their entirety. The Qur’an was thus not a book to be read from cover to cover, but rather from sura to sura. The following citation, 5:32, clearly shows how mindless it is to cite the preceding 5:33-34 without contextual comment:

“On account of (his deed), We decreed to the Children of Israel that if anyone kills a person- unless in retribution for murder or spreading corruption in the land- it is as if he kills all mankind, while if any saves a life it is as if he saves the lives of all mankind. Our messengers came to them with clear signs, but many of them continued to commit excesses in the land.” 5:32.

IN 5:32, we meet one of the most beautiful verses of peace the Qur’an has to offer. At the same time, the text tells us that there are certain people who never cease to commit excesses on the earth, and in the following verse, 5:33, some are even waging war while trying to spread corruption and murdering. In this context, these are the ones whom the reader is allowed to fight, no one else. And even then, if “they repent before you overpower them- in that case bear in mind that God is forgiving and merciful”. Thus, this allowance to use violence is extremely limited, with emphasis on the importance of human life before verse 5:33, and then appealing to show mercy right thereafter. The allowance can furthermore be understood in relation to the historical context in which the Qur’an was revealed. Muhammad and his first followers were persecuted and killed and thus needed to defend themselves from an overpowering enemy.

This is a theme that recurs on every occasion when violence is mentioned in the Qur’an. God would never mention violence without mentioning mercy, peace and respect for human life. This is revealed if you read the suras in full extent, not verse-by-verse.

Islamic State jihadists execute more than 200 tribespeople who fought them. Why don’t the Iraqi’s want us? They don’t trust us when they read we are the to train them and to give them arms. We just TALK

THE Islamic State group has carried out a fresh wave of mass killings, executing more than 200 members of an Iraqi tribe which took up arms against the jihadists.

Women and children were said to be among scores of Albu Nimr tribespeople executed over the past 10 days in western Iraq’s Anbar province.

Reports of the killings came with the country on edge as hundreds of thousands of Shiites prepare to travel to shrine city Karbala this week for a major annual pilgrimage.

IS, a Sunni extremist group that has seized large parts of Iraq and Syria, is expected to target Ashura pilgrims, and 19 people died in attacks on Shiites on Sunday.

The executions in Anbar came after Sunni Albu Nimr tribesmen took up arms against IS in the province, large parts of which have been overrun by the jihadists.

Accounts varied as to the number and timings of the executions, but all sources spoke of more than 200 people murdered in recent days.

Police Colonel Shaaban al-Obaidi told AFP that more than 200 people were killed, while Faleh al-Essawi, deputy head of Anbar provincial council, put the toll at 258.

The killings are probably aimed at discouraging resistance from powerful local tribes in Anbar.

IS also detained dozens of members of the Jubur tribe in Salaheddin province, north of Baghdad, officials and a tribal leader said.

Jubur tribesmen and security forces have been holding out for months against IS in the provincial town of Dhuluiyah.

Pro-government forces have suffered a string of setbacks in Anbar in recent weeks, prompting warnings that the province, which stretches from the borders with Jordan and Saudi Arabia to the western approach to Baghdad, could fall entirely.

Security forces who wilted before a lightning IS offensive in June are fighting to retake territory seized by the jihadists in Iraq’s Sunni Arab heartland.

IS has declared an Islamic “caliphate” in territory it controls, imposing its harsh interpretation of sharia law and committing widespread atrocities.

Like other Sunni extremist groups, IS considers Shiites to be heretics and frequently attacks them, posing a major threat to the Ashura religious commemorations which peak on Tuesday.

Two car bombs targeting Shiites in Baghdad ahead of Ashura killed at least 19 people on Sunday, officials said, while a city centre car bombing near a police checkpoint killed at least five.

Caliphate ... IS militants parade in a commandeered Iraqi security forces armoured vehicl

The death of a visionary and the decline of Australian democracy

The political malaise currently gripping Australia is made all the more poignant when an iconic leader of the past leaves us.

Whatever your political bent, the passing of Gough Whitlam reminds us of a time when leaders helped shape what the country would become and what it meant to be Australian.

The visionary jingoism of Gough’s time is now a relic of the past. The benefits and complexities of living in a globalised, multicultural world is giving rise to two conflicting ideologies.

The first is a new kind of humanist consciousness, which is often at odds with national policy making and the second, an ever more insular hyper capitalism in which organisations shape policy and democracy ‒ of, by and for the people ‒ takes a back seat to capital markets.

For any nation looking to prosper in a world becoming more connected ‒ where nations are increasingly dependent on one another ‒ forging your own path, living to your own values is sadly seen as politically dangerous and diplomatically reckless regardless which party you represent.

In the past twenty years, Australia has moved from being the envy of the world ‒ a strong, free, principled, fair and welcoming society ‒ to becoming a more mean-spirited, intolerant, arrogant and crude sidekick of Westminster and the Oval Office. This transition was intended to endear us to larger, richer, stronger nations thought to be in the best position to protect and support us . From whom I still have no idea.

It is true that Australia’s relationship with the United States and Britain provides us with benefits, but does it deliver enough value to compensate for the damage it has and continues to cause to our freedom, our democratic rights and our national identity?

I am not yet forty years old, but in my lifetime we have gone to war in Iraq three times. We have destroyed a nation on the other side of the world that never threatened nor attacked us.

Confusingly, however, we allow the genocide of impoverished people in Africa without raising an eyebrow. We stand silently as a generation of people fight for freedom and democracy in Hong Kong and Tibet and we say nothing.

Our diggers went to war in Europe, Korea and Vietnam, fighting for the principles of democracy, fighting for freedom of all people — and yet now, when others want to secure that very same right, we remain silent; the aggressor is a major trading partner and heaven forbid we offend the golden goose.

It seems our moral conscience has a price and our federal politicians have been under instruction to sell, sell, sell!

The reason Australia teeters on the edge of a moral identity crisis is that we have allowed the slow, steady erosion of our democracy. The leadership required to turn the ship around ‒ visionary leadership and political courage like that provided by Whitlam ‒ simply cannot exist in today’s political system. A system which has nothing at all to do with delivering the will people and everything to do with power and partisanship.

In 2006, the ABS counted political party members at just 1.3% of the Australian adult population — yet political parties are required to deliver the outcomes sought by their members.

But what about the other 98.7% of voting aged Australians, who want their politics, sans entrenched ideology?

There is no other environment in the world in which the selection of a leader based on capacity, merit and intelligence could install Tony Abbott ahead of Malcolm Turnbull.

Only political party politics ‒ a system that relentlessly protects its base, operates with factions and is driven by powerful ideology ‒ could provide Australia’s current Cabinet.

Change is not just inevitable, it is vital for our survival.

Everything in your world has been innovated in the last forty years — your technology, entertainment, job, food, medical support, transport, travel, telecommunications and a thousand other things. My grandmother is 98 years old and today’s world is unrecognisable from the world she was born into, just as it is unrecognisable from the world she lived in when she was the age I am now.

Everything has changed, been innovated, evolved and been improved.

Yet, our system of government ‒ which is older than my grandmother and is intended to serve our entire society ‒ has remained unchanged. Real democracy requires a complete overhaul of what we the people are prepared to accept from our representatives.

Real democracy that will deliver nation building demands an informed constituency, accountability of representatives, transparency and removal of all corporate donations and lobbyists; a system based on merit, an agnostic non-partisan approach to all issues, a fact based solutions oriented commitment from all sides of politics and equality of opportunity for those willing to participate and commit themselves to civic duty.

Many people across the globe are exploring what Democracy 2.0 might look like and it is time Australia joins the conversation.

 

Fossil fuel industry’s dirty tricks campaign exposed

A leaked tape from an oil and gas industry conference shows how Big Carbon uses dirty tricks to undermine science, vilify its critics and discredit journalists who criticise the use of fossil fuels, writes Sharon Kelly via DeSmogBlog.

Leave it to Washington’s top attack-dog lobbyist Richard Berman to verify what many always suspected: that the oil and gas industry uses dirty tricks to undermine science, vilify its critics and discredit journalists who cast doubt on the prudence of fossil fuels.

In a speech at an industry conference in June, surreptitiously recorded by an energy executive, Rick Berman ‒ the foremost go-to guy for Republican smear campaigns ‒ gave unusually candid advice to a meeting of drilling companies.

Think of this as an endless war,” he told executives in a speech, which was leaked to the New York Times by an attendee at the conference who was offended by Berman’s remarks. And you have to budget for it.”

He said the industry needs to dig up embarrassing tidbits about environmentalists and liberal celebrities, exploit the public’s short attention span for scientific debate, and play on people’s emotions:

Fear and anger have to be a part of this campaign. We’re not going to get people to like the oil and gas industry over the next few months.”

Berman also advised that executives continue to spend big:

“I think $2 to $3 million would be a game changer. We’ve had six-figure contributions to date from a few companies in this room to help us get to where we are.”

But always cover your tracks, he suggested, adding that no-one is better equipped at doing so than his firm:

“We run all this stuff through non-profit organisations that are insulated from having to disclose donors. There is total anonymity. People don’t know who supports us. We’ve been doing this for 20-something years in this regard.”

Berman, whose tobacco ties were profiled yesterday by DeSmog contributor John Mashey, is the founder and chief executive of the Washington-based Berman & Company consulting firm. He attended the conference in Colorado, hat in hand, looking to raise money from energy companies for an advertising and public relations campaign he started called Big Green Radicals.

The campaign has already placed a series of intentionally controversial advertisements in Pennsylvania and Colorado, heavy drilling states. The firm has also paid to place its media campaign on websites aimed at national and Washington D.C. audiences.

The event where Berman spoke was held in Colorado Springs and was sponsored by lobby group Western Energy Alliance.

The crowd included executives from drilling firms like Chesapeake Energy and EnCana Oil and Gas, along with energy services companies like Halliburton, industry trade associations, law firms and banks, according to a scheduled attendee list also provided to The Times.

He told them:

… wherever possible, I like to use humour to minimise or marginalise the other side.”

Berman was joined at the conference by Jack Hubbard, a vice president at Berman & Company, who described the P.R. firm’s approach for targeting what they labelled “radical” groups like the Sierra Club, Natural Resources Defense Council and Food and Water Watch.

Hubbard explained:

So we thought, how are we going to kick off this campaign? Take the typical Berman and Company model, in terms of undermining these folks’ credibility and diminish their moral authority.”

He added that they had done “a whole bunch of intense opposition research into their board of directors”, but ended up with nothing more than a campaign based on the gas mileage of the directors’ personal vehicles.

As an example of their effectiveness at changing the public’s perception of an issue through personal attacks on advocates, Hubbard explained how their campaigns worked:

…one of the things we are really focused on is how do we take the message, put it on a bumper sticker, and get it out to the public so it gets coverage and you break through the 24/7 news cycle.”

The team’s tactics include taking advantage of people’s short attention spans, especially where ballot initiatives and issues of local control are concerned.

The next thing you know, you’re trying to play defense against multiple public initiatives that are very different and very complex. And the public, frankly, doesn’t have the time or the brain to understand them all. So what we wanted to do is that we wanted to brand the entire movement behind this as not being credible and anti-science.”

Berman described the job of convincing people as he sees it — introducing just enough doubt that even if people don’t support an issue, they’re confused enough to write it off.

Instead of getting the ‘he said she said’ debate, what you will get with the factual debate, often times, you’re going to get into people get overwhelmed by the science and ‘I don’t know who to believe. But if you got enough on your side you get people into a position of paralysis on the issue. You get into people’s minds a tie. They don’t know who is right. And you get all ties because a tie basically ensures the status quo.”

It is unclear whether people have the stomach for more of this type of behaviour. Even the pro-drilling Denver Post editorial board has criticized the tactics that Berman suggested and which industry public relations outlets like Energy In Depth have been using for years, calling one ad:

“… a cheap shot at fracking foes.”

But the industry itself is desperate as public concerns about climate change increase and popular sentiment turns against more drilling. And desperate times mean desperate measures.

The recording is by no means the first evidence of these aggressive and ad hominem tactics.

Last month, DeSmog described how the industry’s attack machine has gone after major foundations and endowments, attempting to frame their donations to environmental groups as an insideous conspiracy to undermine American energy production instead of a response to the growing number of problems related to fracking.

Back in 2011, CNBC revealed that Range Resources was taking military psy-ops skills and applying them to political battles in Pennsyvlania and across the U.S., with an official from another shale gas company, Anandarko, telling attendees at a Houston shale conference that

“… we are dealing with an insurgency.”

They’ve also claimed that the media is waging a “war on shale gas” at times when reporters started asking tough but vital questions, surrounding dubious financial practices and how toxic waste from fracking is handled, for example.

The industry famously targeted the New York Times itself back in 2011 when that paper ran Drilling Down, an award-winning investigative series about fracking.

In the recorded speech, Berman and Hubbard provided detailed public relations advice to those gathered:

“If you want a video to go viral, have kids or animals.”

Mr. Hubbard added, describing a series of billboards deploying personal attacks on Yoko Ono and Robert Redford, both of whom have spoken out against fracking:

There is nothing the public likes more than tearing down celebrities and playing up the hypocrisy angle.”

Berman is also known for having created the American Beverage Institute in 1991, which lobbied against tougher restrictions on drunk driving, while protecting its donors.

He is also especially notorious among labor unions, another of his favorite adversaries. Berman created the so-called Center for Union Facts, which led a $10 million anti-union campaign, without disclosing its donors.

As he said:

I get up every morning and I try to figure out how to screw with the labor unions — that’s my offense. I am just trying to figure out how I am going to reduce their brand.”

Suppose They Gave A War and Nobody Came?

Image: dailymail.uk

If there was one thing our former PM Julia Gillard was passionate about it was education, but like so many other great reforms of the previous 6 years, the Abbott government seems determined to vandalise our education system as well. As if its well publicised attacks on higher education weren’t enough, the coalition has just published a report recommending greater emphasis on ‘morals, values and spirituality’ and ‘the contribution of western civilisation’ in the national curriculum. As a student of history this fills me with dread. The word ‘fascist’ is often used loosely, but the early indoctrination of children is quite literally straight out of Mussolini’s playbook

Not only Mussolini’s but akin to the Islamic Madrasas of today that simply teach a heaven based ideology that requires little more than rules to achieve Nirvana.

Of course moral crusaders of the calibre of Bernardi and Abetz probably see themselves as having a mission to uphold the moral standards of our society, even as they go about trying to degrade our real values. Tolerance, understanding, generosity, and egalitarianism are things of which we all should be proud, both as a nation and as individuals. These are the true moral standards we should be teaching our young. Instead we have a government which encourages bigotry, divisiveness, racial hatred and fear. Pathetic, ignorant and cruel are but a few adjectives which come to mind.

If we could rid ourselves of war within a generation by giving children everywhere a sound, publically funded, secular, science-based education which promotes humanist values. While social engineering on this scale is well out of the ambit of this (or any) government’s short sighted vision, it’s wholly unsurprising that Abbott, Pyne and co should want to shift the emphasis in education away from critical thinking and back to the ‘three r’s’, anyway from human geography and back to physical geography, away from multiculturalism and back to Judeo-Christian orthodoxy.

Some will argue that wars are always waged by the rich and fought by the poor, and certainly there is evidence that the military industrial complex exists to serve its own ends anyway (or that of the bankers). But what happens when soldiers refuse to fight? Notwithstanding the horrors of a war which claimed 10 million lives and left 20 million casualties, it’s worth remembering that WWI might have been fought to the last man had the Kaiser’s troops not mutinied. Imagine if they’d all refused to go to war in the first place? There is no greater threat to tyranny than a well informed and educated populus.

Extreme politics warning as climate changes

More to come?

Recent developments on the climate change front (both from scientists and politicians) prove the issue is still vexed, but there are signs voters are warming to the scientific view, write Peter Lewis and Jackie Woods.

If there’s one thing settled on climate change, it is that the debate inevitably leads to extreme emotions, opinions and warnings of doom, be it the national economy or the global ecosystem.

Years of divisive politicking around the issue has culminated in a policy with little public support and an electorate split over an issue that scientists warn us we need to confront in the here and now.

The extremes have been on display this week, with a new report from the IPCC warning the window to act is closing, while the Abbott Government managed to finally shut the gate on a deal to enact its policy of “Direct Action” with the support of mining magnate and sometimes environmental activist Clive Palmer.

This week’s twin developments neatly sum up the debate in Australia – a scientific community calling for urgent action for the future and a political response focused on minimising impact on the here and now.

Our Essential Report shows that voters aren’t overly surprised by scientific predictions of more frequent extreme weather events.

Of those who think extreme weather events will increase, three quarters believe the increase is likely linked to climate change.

But a significant proportion, 16 per cent, still believe a link between extreme weather and climate change is unlikely.

This finding reflects a continuing divide in the community about the science of climate change. Our polling has shown a fairly consistent pattern over the last few years of about half believing climate change is real and human induced and a third believing any unusual climate antics are a normal fluctuation.

Most recently we’ve seen a decline in the “normal fluctuation” camp – down nearly 10 points since the start of the year, suggesting a swing could be on to greater acceptance of the scientific view put so forcefully by the IPCC.

The Coalition was highly effective in exploiting divisions about climate science and policy and tearing down Labor’s climate scheme, but it now faces the challenge of putting up its own credible alternative.

Direct Action has never appealed much to voters and has been consistently less popular than various options involving pricing carbon.

Support for Direct Action as the best means of tackling climate change has bounced around between 5 and 15 per cent over the past year, coming in at 10 per cent when we most recently asked at the end of September.

Adding to the complexity – as we’ve found before Direct Action gets the limited support it does from people who are less likely to believe that climate change is real and caused by human activity. In other words, Direct Action is the policy of choice for climate change deniers.

This picture suggests the Abbott Government is set to get tangled up in a political mess on climate policy in the same way Labor did – in large part because of its own determination to exploit the issue for political gain rather than work co-operatively towards a policy solution that could gain broad support.

But while Abbott has played hard on climate politics, he’s hardly the first.

The Greens have been roundly criticised for failing to make the compromises necessary to close the deal with Labor to secure the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme mark 1; while Labor wouldn’t have had to negotiate with the Greens if Kevin Rudd had prioritised getting a deal with Malcolm Turnbull over exploiting the political divisions on climate within the Coalition.

As it stands, Australians see a future of more frequent and extreme weather events caused by climate change, with a climate policy they’re not convinced by.

And if the expected long, hot summer eventuates, the only thing for certain is the loud voices on both sides of the debate will lock in behind their preconceptions.

Where is Team Australia when you really need it?

Claims ISIS ‘Caliph’ al-Baghdadi critically injured in US air strike

Unsubstantiated ... Middle Eastern news service Al Arabiya is reporting the self-declared

Unsubstantiated … Middle Eastern news service Al Arabiya is reporting the self-declared caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi has been ‘critically injured’ in an air strike. Source: Getty Source: Getty Images

MIDDLE Eastern media is reporting the leader of the Islamic State, self-proclaimed Caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, has been critically wounded in an air strike.

The Al Arabiya news channel is reporting sources have told it that the Caliph was “critically wounded” during an air attack in the Iraqi town of al-Qaim.

US officials have stated a convoy of up to 10 armed Islamic State vehicles, believed to be carrying Islamic State commanders, was hit yesterday Australian time.
“We cannot confirm if ISIL (Islamic State) leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was among those present,” a US military statement reads.

Islamic State affiliated Twitter accounts have rejected the reports.

THIRD AUSSIE KILLED: Another Australian has died fighting for ISIS

However, the US has confirmed it conducted a series of airstrikes targeting Islamic State leaders near the northern Iraqi city of Mosul.

The airstrikes yesterday destroyed a convoy of 10 armed trucks, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity to describe military operations.

OF KNIGHTS AND CALIPHS: Understanding the Islamic State

Iraqi news services report an Anbar Province politician as saying the strike was conducted against a meeting of IS leaders in al-Qaim, which is west of the regional capital of Anbar.

Dozens of deaths and injuries have been reported.

“(It) caused severe confusion among ISIS members who then cut off all roads in Qaim in order to transport their wounded to the hospital that was packed with the wounded and body parts,” member of parliament Mohammed al-Karbouli reportedly said.

Reuters news agency quoted two witnesses as saying an air strike targeted a house where senior ISIS officers were meeting, near al-Qaim.

Witnesses said ISIS fighters had cleared a hospital so that their wounded could be treated. ISIS fighters then used loudspeakers to urge residents to donate blood.

Unconfirmed reports also state several other regional Islamic State leaders were killed or injured in the blasts

Al-Baghdadi has declared himself the caliph, or supreme leader, of the vast areas of territory in Iraq and Syria under IS control.

This is not the first time al-Baghdadi has been declared dead. In September social media circulated images of a body said to be that of the caliph. Then, as now, his death was supposed to have been the result of an air strike.

US PUTS MORE BOOTS ON THE GROUND

AUS-led coalition, which includes Australia, has been launching airstrikes on Islamic State militants and facilities in Iraq and Syria for months, as part of an effort to give Iraqi forces the time and space to mount a more effective offensive.

The Islamic State had gained ground across northern and western Iraq in a lightning advance in June and July, causing several of Iraq’s army and police divisions to fall into disarray.

CALIPH’S EUNUCHS: Will ISIS fighters get ‘the snip?’

Yesterday, US President Barack Obama authorized the deployment of up to 1500 more American troops to bolster Iraqi forces, including into Anbar province, where fighting with Islamic State militants has been fierce.

Sun Six Conspiracy: News Corp sacrifices journalists to save itself. It’s the man that Bolt trusts so much

Brooks was cleared of paying public officials for information

Rebekah Brooks in new email mystery: Police were not given email showing former editor of The Sun signed off all payments, court told

A criminal trial in London for six News Corporation reporters and editors has heard shocking new evidence that the company ‘shopped’ its own journalists to prevent corporate charges. Rodney E. Lever reports.

NEW EVIDENCE HAS PRODUCED SHOCKWAVES IN LONDON during a hearing of charges in the Kingston-Upon-Thames Crown court against six reporters from Rupert Murdoch’s The Sun newspaper in Britain.

Defence counsel representing the reporters is claiming that the reporters were “dobbed in” by their employer, News Corporation.

There is evidence of hundreds of cash payments signed by Rebekah Brooks, the former editor of The Sun and later the chief executive of News Corporation in England, who was acquitted of any wrongdoing relating to phone hacking.

Even more surprising, the details were found in a Memoranda of Understanding provided to the Metropolitan Police by the management and services committee set up by News Corp in 2011 to investigate the phone hacking.

The former managing editor of The Sun, Graham Dudman; the deputy news editor, Ben O’Driscoll; photo editor, John Edwards; Chris Pharo, head of the news department; and reporters Jamie Pyatt and John Troup are all on trial.

Lawyers for the defence say these men were shopped to the policeto avoid charges being laid against News Corp. The court was told that making payments to public officials would have provided corporate charges which could destroy the company.

The parent company of The Sun and the now defunct News of the World, including Rupert Murdoch, had worked fully with the police; but as more reporters were arrested, the company became less enthusiastic as the threat of corporate charges emerged.

A lawyer working for News accused the police of attacking the freedom of the press. Another News Corp lawyer described the prospect of a corporate charge as “devastating” and “apocalyptic”.

Author Peter Jukes, author of a book covering the earlier hacking trials, has been covering the case in London for various publications, including Independent Australia. He says that News Corporation set up a Managing Standards Committee (MSC) in 2011 to investigate its business practices following the phone-hacking scandal.

Detective Superintendent Mark Kandiah was involved in Operation Weeting that year, which brought a criminal case against former News of the World editors Rebekah Brooks and Andy Coulson.

He was appointed senior investigating officer on Operation Elveden and said the MSC had been helping police by providing them with information.

“At that stage, it [Operation Elveden] was just confined to police officers,” Dt Supt Kandiah told the court.

Kandiah continued:

Later the MSC began adducing emails that tended to show that the royal correspondent at the News of the World might have been paying royal officers.

When I took over [Operation Elveden] I became aware that the MSC was also conducting a review of other newspapers, such as The Sun.

I knew that they were conducting their own investigation into this paper.

A small amount of material was provided to Operation Elveden from the MSC about one of the defendants, Jamie Pyatt.

Pyatt begins his interview by asserting:

“For a start I have not paid police officers for any information.”

He is then interrogated about various cash payments and procedures around reporting crime, particularly in the Thames Valley.

One Sun memo from 26/04/02 appears to throw in question his earlier statement about not paying police, noting that a payment of £500 to

‘… pay contributor/police officer for assist on Millie body in river article.’

Pyatt again denies he paid police.

From the transcript of the police interview:

PYATT: Again I didn’t write this I have never seen this document I just don’t see it and whether that is a catch or phrase contributor/police officer because it’s a police orientated story I don’t know but I can tell you that was paid to the …… if you go back to the story as it says on page 2 of the Sun we offer stories for cash, now we had a guy ring in who saw a police operation in progress, there were frogmen in the water, the area was all taped off, he had spoken to an officer there and asked what’s it all about and the guy said to him well it’s when they were all looking for Millie DOWLER, so we thought we might have found Millie we found a body of a teen girl he then calls the news desk and says that you pay cash for stories, yes we do pay cash for stories what have you got, I think I know where Millie DOWLER is there is a big police operation on at the moment, where is it, well am I going to get paid, yes you will we will send someone down to come and talk to you, I go down to talk to him find the scene and it all turns out we have got .… if you turn over the page a little bit …. it made a 1-4-5 for us anyway [SNIP]

OFFICER: And that sort of information is worth £500 is it

PYATT: It’s worth a lot more actually

OFFICER: A bargain for you then

PYATT: Yes it was a bargain and we agreed more, if he is giving us a 1-4-5, cash we would have probably if he had asked for it we would have paid him £1,500 for that

OFFICER: I still don’t understand the expression 1-4-5

PYATT: Page 1 and the 4-5 is the spread you have page 1 …

Pyatt goes on to describe his disappointment about being thrown to the wolves by News Corporation management:

PYATT: I would like to say that I spent nearly 25 years with them I have been in a situation in Ibiza, I have been driven out in the middle of a desert by a police officer who put a gun to my head to try and find out a photographer, I have been chased down the Khyber pass by rebels, I have been all across Africa in really difficult situations, I have done so much for the Sun and I do feel a little bit disappointed that I have been accused of this and that they have …… the Sun newspaper sends me out to do things they tell me where to go what to do and for them to then be turning around and saying why not investigate one of our guys he might have done something wrong, I just find I feel basically very let down by them for deciding to do that when at the end of the day I am the person that does what they’re told

…. there is an overall feeling that News International is basically … I don’t know what the word is …… but we just feel that we are being investigated and we haven’t done anything wrong I mean there is quite rightly an investigation into News of the World, allegations have been made of all the phone hacking and a number of people have been arrested but there has been no such allegations made at the Sun, the Times or the Sunday Times yet despite the fact that the police aren’t investigating those newspapers we are all being investigated by our own company, they have brought in a firm of solicitors to go through all our emails and all our stories trying to find stuff on us to hand over to the police and I think most of the guys’ views is hang on a minute the police aren’t investigating we haven’t done anything wrong, if we have done something wrong then by all means come and investigate us but it’s like they are going through everything we have got trying to find things and tossing them out, I think there is a view …. we have done nothing wrong yet we are being investigated by ourselves for stuff that we have been told to do, I mean this is what we do for a living I don’t suddenly decide to go off and do this or do that I am being sent there and I am being told to pay this money it’s not me making this up it’s not coming out of my bank account, the person rings the news desk want’s x for it I am told to go out get the story and do it then they send the money out to me because I am the local person and I pay

The plot thickened further in court as new light was shed on the alleged three million missing News Corp emails News Corp emails, as reported by The Guardian yesterday:

Three million emails at News International are missing after Rebekah Brooks changed the company’s email deletion policy, a jury heard.

Brooks ordered the change in June 2010, which resulted in a large quantity of emails being deleted, including those “covering her entire period as editor of the Sun”, Kingston crown court was told.

In a report on his blog last night, Peter Jukes said that the agreed facts from the hacking trial show that number to be closer to 13 million [Jukes’ emphasis].

161. Between 11/12/2007 and 16/05/2010, a total of 9,244,111 emails were “purged” from the archive. These “purge” events were linked to scheduled maintenance tasks that occurred routinely.

162. In August 2010, a “purge” task was carried out within NI’s email archive, which resulted in the deletion of 1,119,478 emails. This purge was necessitated by a disk failure, which had corrupted data.

163. Any email message deleted or lost for any of the above reasons cannot be retrieved and is no longer available to the parties. This is because the above events pre-date the earliest available back-up tape of NI’s email archive system.

164. In addition to the above losses of data, in September 2010, NI instructed an IT firm, Capax, (contracted in January 2010 to support NI in managing its email archive system) to purge e-mails which were dated before 2005. As a result, on 30 September 2010 4,480,902 emails were deleted from NI’s email archive system. A system back-up dating from August 2010 was identified by NI in September 2011. Therefore: (a) between December 2007 and August 2010, a total of 10,363,589 messages were purged or deleted and are irrecoverable; and (b) in September 2010, a further 4,480,902 messages were purged or deleted of which records suggest that 1.49 million have been recovered.

Disk failure? Corrupted data? It all seems rather convenient.

The question is, did these emails include information that might implicate executives and not just soldier ant journalists and editors at News Corporation.

View image on Twitter

The News Corp Stable and it’s distorted madness

The ‘Cut and Paste’ section of The Australian on October 8 had the following headline:

So who’s in denial now about what the science is saying about global warming?

It was followed by the sub-heading:

Here at the sheltered workshop we’re enjoying reading the reports from NASA and the IPCC.

‘Cut and Paste’ was principally devoted to attacking my review of Paul Kelly’s Triumph and Demise. The plain suggestion of the headline and the sub-heading is that I am in denial about what the science is now saying about global warming and that both NASA and the IPCC have joined the ranks of the climate change sceptics.

In the age of the internet anyone can discover the current position of NASA and the IPCC on global warming in a matter of moments.

Here are some statements of the current position of the IPCC, all taken from the Summary for Policymakers of the first volume of the IPCC’s Fifth Report published earlier this year:

Warming of the climate system is unequivocal, and since the 1950s, many of the observed changes are unprecedented over decades to millennia. The atmosphere and ocean have warmed, the amount of snow and ice have diminished, sea level has risen, and the concentration of greenhouse gases have increased.

Each of the last three decades has been successively warmer at the Earth’s surface than any previous decade since 1850…

Ocean warming dominates the increase in energy stored in the climate system, accounting for more than 90% of the energy accumulated between 1971 and 2010 (high confidence). It is virtually certain that the upper ocean (0-700 m.) warmed from 1971 to 2010…and it likely warmed between the 1870s and 1971.

Over the last two decades, the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets have been losing mass, glaciers have continued to shrink almost worldwide, and Arctic sea ice and Northern spring snow cover have continued to decrease in extent (high confidence).

And here is the current position of NASA. All of the following quotes come from its website:

Certain facts about Earth’s climate are not in dispute:

Sea Level Rise—Global sea level rose about 17 centimeters (6.7 inches) in the last century. The rate in the last decade, however, is nearly double that of the last century.

Global Temperature Rise—All three major global temperature reconstructions show that the Earth has warmed since 1880. Most of the warming has occurred since the 1970s, with the 20 warmest years having occurred since 1981…

Warming Oceans—The oceans have absorbed much of this increased heat, with the top 700 meters (about 2,300 feet) of ocean showing warming of 0.302 degrees Fahrenheit since 1969.

Consensus—Ninety-seven percent of climate scientists agree that climate-warming trends over the past century are very likely due to human activities, and most of the leading scientific organizations worldwide have issued public statements endorsing this position.

It is one thing for The Australian to publish the opinions of dozens of people without scientific knowledge or capacity, like the stockbroker, Maurice Newman, who think they have a firmer grasp on the question of global warming than ninety seven per cent of climate scientists.

This is merely risible.

It is another thing for The Australian to try to lead its readers to believe that the climate scientists represented in the reports of the IPCC or at NASA are now climate sceptics.

This is quite simply an outrageous lie.

It is little wonder that The Australian is now waging a war against the Australian Press Council, the body empowered to expose unethical and unprofessional behaviour of this kind.

Hawke gives Abbott a rocket for vindictive schoolboy prank of PM Office seating Julia Gillard next to K Rudd

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Hawke gives Abbott a rocket for vindictive schoolboy prank of PM Office seating Gillard next 2 Rudd

Your confused look when you were so soundly booed was perfect — confusion trying to look as though it was funny. Join the real Team Australia, mate.

‘World’s Poorest President’ Explains Why We Should Kick Rich People Out Of Politics

Uruguayan President José Mujica

People who like money too much ought to be kicked out of politics, Uruguayan President José Mujica told CNN en Español in an interview posted online last Wednesday.

“We invented this thing called representative democracy, where we say the majority is who decides,” Mujica said in the interview. “So it seems to me that we [heads of state] should live like the majority and not like the minority.”

Dubbed the “World’s Poorest President” in a widely circulated BBC piece from 2012, Mujica reportedly donates 90 percent of his salary to charity. Mujica’s example offers a strong contrast to the United States, where in politics the median member of Congress is worth more than $1 million and corporations have many of the same rights as individuals when it comes to donating to political campaigns.

“The red carpet, people who play — those things,” Mujica said, mimicking a person playing a cornet. “All those things are feudal leftovers. And the staff that surrounds the president are like the old court.”

Mujica explained that he didn’t have anything against rich people, per se, but he doesn’t think they do a good job representing the interests of the majority of people who aren’t rich.

“I’m not against people who have money, who like money, who go crazy for money,” Mujica said. “But in politics we have to separate them. We have to run people who love money too much out of politics, they’re a danger in politics… People who love money should dedicate themselves to industry, to commerce, to multiply wealth. But politics is the struggle for the happiness of all.”

Asked why rich people make bad representatives of poor people, Mujica said: “They tend to view the world through their perspective, which is the perspective of money. Even when operating with good intentions, the perspective they have of the world, of life, of their decisions, is informed by wealth. If we live in a world where the majority is supposed to govern, we have to try to root our perspective in that of the majority, not the minority.”

Mujica has become well known for rejecting the symbols of wealth. In an interview in May, he lashed out against neckties in comments on Spanish television that went viral.

“The tie is a useless rag that constrains your neck,” Mujica said during the interview. “I’m an enemy of consumerism. Because of this hyperconsumerism, we’re forgetting about fundamental things and wasting human strength on frivolities that have little to do with human happiness.”

He lives on a small farm on the outskirts of the capital of Montevideo with his wife, Uruguayan Sen. Lucia Topolansky and their three-legged dog Manuela. He says he rejects materialism because it would rob him of the time he uses to enjoy his passions, like tending to his flower farm and working outside.

“I don’t have the hands of a president,” Mujica told CNN. “They’re kind of mangled.”

Luddite

Isis: Tony Abbott welcomes extra US troops but says he won’t send more He hasn’t sent any yet they are in UAE

US Navy F-18E Super Hornets supporting operations against IS, after being refueled by a KC-135 Stato

The US president authorises the doubling of troop levels in Iraq to 3,000, but PM says Australia’s plans have not changed. I thought he was under USA command not an independant. Don’t you just get the feeling that after 3 months no help to those who have been begging, Not wanted by those we call allies that Abbott is just doing it for himself?

Barack Obama’s approval of additional troops in Iraq is welcome but Australia’s current commitment remains, the prime minister, Tony Abbott, has said.

The US president has authorised the doubling of US troop levels in Iraq for the war against Islamic State (Isis) militants, further straining his pledge against “boots on the ground”.

Obama ordered an additional 1,500 troops to Iraq on Friday to bolster the performance of Iraqi and Kurdish forces fighting Isis in ground combat. The training, the Pentagon said, is expected to last the better part of a year, raising questions about when the Iraqis will be able to wrest territory away from Isis.

Speaking to reporters in Melbourne on Saturday, Abbott welcomed the US announcement but said there were no plans to change Australia’s commitment. The government announced in October it was sending special forces to Iraq and Australian war planes have led international air strikes, destroying key Isis targets.

“Obviously we work in very close partnership with the United States, with the United Kingdom, with a number of other countries,” Abbott told reporters. “This is a very broad coalition, it’s not just the United States.  Isn’t it strange that Iraq government doesn’t rate a mention?

“Our commitment is clear, it’s up to eight Super Hornet strike aircraft … it’s up to 200 special forces. We have made a strong commitment to disrupting and degrading the ISIL death cult and we continue to talk with our partners and allies about how this is best achieved.” I guess sloganeering is one way.

The new US troops, the Pentagon emphasised, would not be used in a combat role, joining roughly the same number of “advisers” who have been performing a similar role in Iraq since June. Troop levels in Iraq will soon stand at about 3,000.

US warplanes will continue their near-daily bombardment of Isis targets from the air.

To finance the expanded effort, the White House has asked Congress for an additional $5.6bn, which will sustain operations like the air strikes and associated logistics. The money includes $1.6bn as a “train and equip fund” for Iraqi and Kurdish units to enable them to “go on the offensive”, said budget director Shaun Donovan.

An additional $3.4bn will be used “to support ongoing operations” including military advisers, intelligence collection and ammunition. The rest would go to the State Department to support diplomacy and to provide aid to neighboring countries including Lebanon and Jordan.

But the Pentagon said that none of the additional troops would arrive in Iraq unless and until Congress approves the funding package.

US officials rejected the assertion that the additional troops represented “mission creep”.

“Even with these additional personnel, the mission is not changing,” a senior administration official said. “The mission continues to be one of training, advising and equipping Iraqis, and Iraqis are the ones who are fighting on the ground, fighting in combat.”

Despite this the Australian Greens leader, Christine Milne, said the US decision to increase ground troops in Iraq confirmed her fears that Australia was involved in mission creep.

“It started off with a humanitarian response, then it moved to dropping weapons, then it moved to committing to air strikes and special forces,” she told reporters on Saturday. “Now we have the Americans significantly increasing their contribution of boots on the ground.”

Milne called on Abbott to rule out increasing the number of Australian special forces. “The effort has to go into cutting off [Isis’s] financial and other supplies,” Milne said.

Abbott is Mad but he isn’t a Dr. He’s Catholic but doesn’t believe in big government. The Vatican is too left for him. So the Dr is a shoe in for President.

ben-carson-300x210

Mad Scientist To Announce Candidacy For President

THE CABIN ANTHRAX, MURPHY, N.C. (CT&P) – Dr. Ben Carson, former neurosurgeon and current right-wing kook will announce his intention to run for the Republican presidential nomination this weekend, according to his long-time aide and press secretary Igor.

igor

At a press conference on the steps of Carson’s underground laboratory in rural Virginia, Igor told a group of reporters that Dr. Carson will release a 40 minute video that will outline his policy stances and beliefs so that voters will be able to “get to know him better.” Igor said that Carson hopes that those voters who are not taken aback, shocked, or downright terrified by what they see and hear on the video will go to the polls and support him during the Republican primaries.

Dr. Carson rose to fame within the batshit crazy wing of the Republican Party after an appearance at the National Prayer Breakfast during which he compared Obamacare to slavery, showing a grasp of American history roughly equivalent to that of an average house cat.

jesus-dinosaur4

Dr. Carson, who does not believe in evolution, is a strong supporter of the group of raving lunatics who support “Young Earth” creationist theory, a concept with absolutely no scientific fact to back it up. Carson has also referred to abortion as “human sacrifice,” and has compared homosexuality with bestiality and pedophilia.

Carson also wants to abolish Medicare and Medicaid, replace welfare with private charity, and institute a flat income tax, presumably because Jesus was such a strong critic of the poor and less fortunate.

Times-Picayune reporter Bruce “The Coyote” Becker phoned Professor Toichi Hikita of the Banzai Institute in Holland Township, New Jersey for more insight into Dr. Carson’s troubled psyche.

bride_of_frankenstein1254576511

“Anyone with a fully functional pre-frontal cortex will no doubt be shocked and disgusted with Carson’s vision of America,” said Hikita. “I really fail to understand how any respectable medical school would loose this madman on the American public. I mean, how can you actually graduate from university and medical school and not believe in something as obvious as evolution?”

Professor Hikita was even more perturbed by Carson’s insane ideas regarding the age of the earth.

“Dr. Carson is one of those ignorant twits that believes the earth is about 6,000 years old,” said Hikita. “That’s the same bunch of hucksters that want us to believe that Jesus and the disciples cruised around Palestine on the backs of dinosaurs. It’s insane. The next thing you know that creepy ass Ken Ham will be running for political office in Kentucky. It may be time to start making sure your passport is in order. If this group ever gains the White House civilization could grind to a halt overnight.”

Although most pundits give Carson roughly a snowball’s chance in Hell of being elected president, stranger things have happened. After all, the normally lucid citizens of Minnesota’s 6th District actually elected a barely functional android, Michele Bachmann, to represent them in Congress.

Universities to regain hundreds of millions of dollars if Senate blocks bill

Education protests

Opposition and Greens won’t support legislation to enforce Gillard government’s university ‘efficiency dividend’ cuts, which were part of the Gonski reforms

The Abbott government could be forced to repay hundreds of millions of dollars it has withheld from universities if legislation for an “efficiency dividend” does not pass the Senate by early next year.

Most of the public debate about university funding has focused on the 20% average cut to course subsidies that would coincide with the Coalition’s deregulation of tuition fees from 2016.

But the government has already reduced payments to universities to reflect a separate Labor-initiated efficiency dividend that has not yet been put to a vote in the Senate.

Department of Education officials have justified reductions in 2014 “advance payments” on the basis the Coalition intends to proceed with the legislation. Officials admit the government will have to correct the amounts owed to universities if the bill has not passed by the time of the standard “reconciliation” of payments in the first half of 2015.

The former Gillard government proposed efficiency dividends on university funding of 2% in 2014 and 1.25% in 2015 as part of a plan to fund the Gonski school reforms. It was estimated to raise about $900m over four years.

But when the Abbott government sought to legislate the measure late last year, Labor decided to join with the Greens in opposing it, saying the Coalition had undermined Gonski.

The bill remains “before the Senate” – meaning it is yet to be formally rejected or passed. In the meantime the government has made payments to universities assuming the efficiency dividend will pass.

A spokesman for the education minister, Christopher Pyne, said the government intended to proceed with the legislation. “The Higher Education Support Amendment Bill 2013, which covers commonwealth grant arrangements for 2014 and 2015, remains before the Senate as a monument of Labor’s hypocrisy in not passing their own bill and rectifying the debt and deficit legacy the previous government left behind.”
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Labor’s higher education spokesman, Kim Carr, said Labor was “adamant” in its decision to oppose the bill because the government had reneged on school funding.

Carr said the Senate’s decision in July to strike down an associated regulation indicated the will of the upper house was against the higher education cuts.

The government would have to correct any underpayments in the funding reconciliation process in March or April next year, he said.

“The government has claimed that the legislation allows them to withhold the money, legislation-pending. The point is that there comes a time when that cannot be sustained,” Carr said.

“While the government can delay, they can’t in the end refuse to pay [the funds] without a deliberative vote of the Senate.”

The Greens senator Lee Rhiannon said universities were firing staff and shifting to a more casualised workforce and the government was “egging them on by stripping back funding”.

“Despite lacking parliamentary support for his $900m cut to university funding, Mr Pyne has gone ahead and implemented the cuts anyway – hurting universities, students and staff this year,” she said. “It displays a fundamental lack of respect for the democratic process and for the university sector.”

In January this year, after Labor and the Greens opposed the efficiency dividend legislation, Pyne’s office said the government had told universities it was “considering its options” but in the meantime advance payments would be made “without the efficiency dividend yet applied”.

National Tertiary Education Union’s policy and research coordinator, Paul Kniest, said the government needed to explain why it ended up applying the efficiency dividend to advance payments, without seeking to put the legislation to a vote.

He said: “Why has it left universities high and dry, not receiving the money this year?”

How Surveillance Turns Ordinary People Into Terrorism Suspects Wiley Gill did nothing wrong. How did he get on a list of suspected terrorists?

This story first appeared on the TomDispatch website.

It began with an unexpected rapping on the front door.

When Wiley Gill opened up, no one was there. Suddenly, two police officers appeared, their guns drawn, yelling, “Chico Police Department.”

“I had tunnel vision,” Gill said, “The only thing I could see was their guns.”

After telling him to step outside with his hands in the air, the officers lowered their guns and explained. They had received a report—later determined to be unfounded—that a suspect in a domestic disturbance had fled into Gill’s house. The police officers asked the then-26-year-old if one of them could do a sweep of the premises. Afraid and feeling he had no alternative, Gill agreed. One officer remained with him, while the other conducted the search. After that they took down Gill’s identification information. Then they were gone—but not out of his life.

Instead, Gill became the subject of a “suspicious activity report,” or SAR, which police officers fill out when they believe they’re encountering a person or situation that “reasonably” might be connected in some way to terrorism. The one-page report, filed shortly after the May 2012 incident, offered no hint of terrorism. It did, however, suggest that the two officers had focused on Gill’s religion, noting that his “full conversion to Islam as a young [white male] and pious demeanor is [sic] rare.”

The report also indicated that the officer who entered the house had looked at Gill’s computer screen and recalled something “similar to ‘Games that fly under the radar'” on it. According to the SAR, this meant Gill “had potential access to flight simulators via the Internet.” Gill suspects that he was probably looking at a website about video games. The SAR also noted earlier police encounters with Gill, in his mosque and on the street. It recorded his “full beard and traditional garb” and claimed that he avoided “eye contact.”

In short, the Chico Police Department was secretly keeping tabs on Gill as a suspected terrorist. Yet nowhere in the SAR was there a scintilla of evidence that he was engaged in any kind of criminal activity whatsoever. Nevertheless, that report was uploaded to the Central California Intelligence Center, one of a network of Department of Homeland Security-approved domestic intelligence fusion centers. It was then disseminated through the federal government’s domestic intelligence-sharing network as well as uploaded into an FBI database known as e-Guardian, after which the Bureau opened a file on Gill.

We do not know how many government agencies now associate Wiley Gill’s good name with terrorism. We do know that the nation’s domestic-intelligence network is massive, including at least 59 federal agencies, over 300 Defense Department units, and approximately 78 state-based fusion centers, as well as the multitude of law enforcement agencies they serve. We also know that local law enforcement agencies have themselves raised concerns about the system’s lack of privacy protections.

And it wouldn’t end there for Gill.
The Architecture of Mass Suspicion

The SAR database is part of an ever-expanding domestic surveillance system established after 9/11 to gather intelligence on potential terrorism threats. At an abstract level, such a system may seem sensible: far better to prevent terrorism before it happens than to investigate and prosecute after a tragedy. Based on that reasoning, the government exhorts Americans to “see something, say something”—the SAR program’s slogan.

Indeed, just this week at a conference in New York City, FBI Director James Comey asked the public to report any suspicions they have to authorities. “When the hair on the back of your neck stands, listen to that instinct and just tell somebody,” said Comey. And seeking to reassure those who do not want to get their fellow Americans in trouble based on instinct alone, the FBI director added, “We investigate in secret for a very good reason, we don’t want to smear innocent people.”

There are any number of problems with this approach, starting with its premise. Predicting who exactly is a future threat before a person has done anything wrong is a perilous undertaking. That’s especially the case if the public is encouraged to report suspicions of neighbors, colleagues, and community members based on a “hair-on-the-back-of-your-neck” threshold. Nor is it any comfort that the FBI promises to protect the innocent by investigating “suspicious” people in secret. The civil liberties and privacy implications are, in fact, truly hair-raising, particularly when the Bureau engages in abusive and discriminatory sting operations and other rights violations.

At a fundamental level, suspicious activity reporting, as well as the digital and physical infrastructure of networked computer servers and fusion centers built around it, depends on what the government defines as suspicious. As it happens, this turns out to include innocuous, First Amendment-protected behavior.

As a start, a little history: the Nationwide Suspicious Activity Reporting Initiative was established in 2008 as a way for federal agencies, law enforcement, and the public to report and share potential terrorism-related information. The federal government then developed a list of 16 behaviors that it considered “reasonably indicative of criminal activity associated with terrorism.” Nine of those 16 behaviors, as the government acknowledges, could have nothing to do with criminal activity and are constitutionally protected, including snapping photographs, taking notes, and “observation through binoculars.”

Under federal regulations, the government can only collect and maintain criminal intelligence information on an individual if there is a “reasonable suspicion” that he or she is “involved in criminal conduct or activity and the information is relevant to that criminal conduct or activity.” The SAR program officially lowered that bar significantly, violating the federal government’s own guidelines for maintaining a “criminal intelligence system.”

There’s good reason for, at a minimum, using a reasonable suspicion standard. Anything less and it’s garbage in, garbage out, meaning counterterrorism “intelligence” databases become anything but intelligent.
When the Mundane Looks Suspicious

The SAR program provides striking evidence of this.

In 2013, the ACLU of Northern California obtained nearly 2,000 SARs from two state fusion centers, which collect, store, and analyze such reports, and then share those their intelligence analysts find worthwhile across what the federal government calls its Information Sharing Environment. This connects the fusion centers and other federal agencies into an information-sharing network, or directly with the FBI. Their contents proved revealing.

A number of reports were concerned with “ME”—Middle Eastern—males. One headline proclaimed, “Suspicious ME Males Buy Several Large Pallets of Water at REDACTED.” Another read, “Suspicious Activities by a ME Male in Lodi, CA.” And just what was so suspicious about this male? Read into the document and you discover that a sergeant at the Elk Grove Police Department had long been “concerned about a residence in his neighborhood occupied by a Middle Eastern male adult physician who is very unfriendly.” And it’s not just “Middle Eastern males” who provoke such suspicion. Get involved in a civil rights protest against the police and California law enforcement might report you, too. A June 2012 SAR was headlined “Demonstration Against Law Enforcement Use of Excessive Force” and reported that “a scheduled protest” by demonstrators “concerned about the use of excessive force by law enforcement officers” was about to occur.

What we have here isn’t just a failure to communicate genuine threat information, but the transformation of suspicion into pernicious ideological, racial, and religious profiling, often disproportionately targeting activists and American Muslims. Again, that’s not surprising. Throughout our history, in times of real or perceived fear of amorphously defined threats, government suspicion focuses on those who dissent or look or act differently.
Counterterrorism Accounting

Law enforcement officials, including the Los Angeles Police Department’s top counterterrorism officer, have themselves exhibited skepticism about suspicious activity reporting (out of concern with the possibility of overloading the system).

In 2012, George Washington University’s Homeland Security Policy Institute surveyed counterterrorism personnel working in fusion centers and in a report generally accepting of SARs noted that the program had “flooded fusion centers, law enforcement, and other security outfits with white noise,” complicating “the intelligence process” and distorting “resource allocation and deployment decisions.” In other words, it was wasting time and sending personnel off on wild goose chases.

A few months later, a scathing report from the Senate subcommittee on homeland security described similar intelligence problems in state-based fusion centers. It found that Department of Homeland Security (DHS) personnel assigned to the centers “forwarded ‘intelligence’ of uneven quality—oftentimes shoddy, rarely timely, sometimes endangering citizens’ civil liberties and Privacy Act protections… and more often than not unrelated to terrorism.”

Effectiveness doesn’t exactly turn out to be one of the SAR program’s strong suits, though the government has obscured this by citing the growing number of SARs that have triggered FBI investigations. However, according to a report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO), the FBI doesn’t track whether SARs uploaded into the domestic intelligence network actually help thwart terrorism or lead to arrests or convictions.

You are, of course, what you measure—in this case, not much; and yet, despite its dubious record, the SAR program is alive and kicking. According to the GAO, the number of reports in the system exploded by 750%, from 3,256 in January 2010 to 27,855 in October 2012.

And being entered in such a system, as Wiley Gill found out, can prove just the beginning of your problems. Several months after his home was searched, his telephone rang. It was a Chico police officer who told Gill to shut down his Facebook page. Gill refused, responding that there was only one reason he thought the police wanted his account deleted: its references to Islam. The phone call ended ominously with the officer warning Gill that he was on a “watchlist.”

The officer may have been referring to yet another burgeoning secret database that the federal government calls its “consolidated terrorism watchlist.” Inclusion in this database—and on government blacklists that are generated from it—can bring more severe repercussions than unwarranted law enforcement attention. It can devastate lives.
Twenty-First-Century Blacklists

When small business owner Abe Mashal reached the ticket counter at Chicago’s Midway Airport on April 20, 2010, an airline representative informed him that he was on the no-fly list and could not travel to Spokane, Washington, on business. Suddenly, the former Marine found himself surrounded by TSA agents and Chicago police. Later, FBI agents questioned him at the airport and at home about his Muslim faith and his family members.

The humiliation and intimidation didn’t end there. A few months later, FBI agents returned to interview Mashal, focusing again on his faith and family. Only this time they had an offer to make: if he became an FBI informant, his name would be deleted from the no-fly list and he would be paid for his services. Such manipulative quid pro quos have been made to others.

Mashal refused. The meeting ended abruptly, and he wasn’t able to fly for four years.

As of August 2013, there were approximately 47,000 people, including 800 US citizens and legal permanent residents like Mashal, on that secretive no-fly list, all branded as “known or suspected terrorists.” All were barred from flying to, from, or over the United States without ever being given a reason why. On 9/11, just 16 names had been on the predecessor “no transport” list. The resulting increase of 293,650%—perhaps more since 2013—isn’t an accurate gauge of danger, especially given that names are added to the list based on vague, broad, and error-prone standards.

The harm of being stigmatized as a suspected terrorist and barred from flying is further compounded when innocent people try to get their names removed from the list.

In 2007, the Department of Homeland Security established the Traveler Redress Inquiry Program through which those who believe they are wrongly blacklisted can theoretically attempt to correct the government’s error. But banned flyers quickly find themselves frustrated because they have to guess what evidence they must produce to refute the government’s unrevealed basis for watchlisting them in the first place. Redress then becomes a grim bureaucratic wonderland. In response to queries, blacklisted people receive a letter from the DHS that gives no explanation for why they were not allowed to board a plane, no confirmation of whether they are actually on the no-fly list, and no certainty about whether they can fly in the future. In the end, the only recourse for such victims is to roll the dice by buying a ticket, going to the airport, and hoping for the best.

Being unable to board a plane can have devastating consequences, as Abe Mashal can attest. He lost business opportunities and the ability to mark life’s milestones with friends and family.

There is hope, however. In August, four years after the ACLU filed a lawsuit on behalf of 13 people on the no-fly list, a judge ruled that the government’s redress system is unconstitutional. In early October, the government notified Mashal and six others that they were no longer on the list. Six of the ACLU’s clients remain unable to fly, but at least the government now has to disclose just why they have been put in that category, so that they can contest their blacklisting. Soon, others should have the same opportunity.
Suspicion First, Innocence Later… Maybe

The No Fly List is only the best known of the government’s web of terrorism watchlists. Many more exist, derived from the same master list. Currently, there are more than one million names in the Terrorist Identities Datamart Environment, a database maintained by the National Counterterrorism Center. This classified source feeds the Terrorist Screening Database (TSDB), operated by the FBI’s Terrorist Screening Center. The TSDB is an unclassified but still secret list known as the “master watchlist.” containing what the government describes as “known or suspected terrorists,” or KSTs.

According to documents recently leaked to the Intercept, as of August 2013 that master watchlist contained 680,000 people, including 5,000 US citizens and legal permanent residents. The government can add people’s names to it according to a shaky “reasonable suspicion” standard. There is, however, growing evidence that what’s “reasonable” to the government may only remotely resemble what that word means in everyday usage. Information from a single source, even an uncorroborated Facebook post, can allow a government agent to watchlist an individual with virtually no outside scrutiny. Perhaps that’s why 40% of those on the master watchlist have “no recognized terrorist group affiliation,” according to the government’s own records.

Nothing encapsulates the post-9/11, Alice-in-Wonderland inversion of American notions of due process more strikingly than this “blacklist first, innocence later… maybe” mindset.

The Terrorist Screening Database is then used to fill other lists. In the context of aviation, this means the no-fly list, as well as the selectee and expanded selectee lists. Transportation security agents subject travelers on the latter two lists to extra screenings, which can include prolonged and invasive interrogation and searches of laptops, phones, and other electronic devices. Around the border, there’s the State Department’s Consular Lookout and Support System, which it uses to flag people it thinks shouldn’t get a visa, and the TECS System, which Customs and Border Protection uses to determine whether someone can enter the country.

Inside the United States, no watchlist may be as consequential as the one that goes by the moniker of the Known or Appropriately Suspected Terrorist File. The names on this blacklist are shared with more than 17,000 state, local, and tribal police departments nationwide through the FBI’s National Crime Information Center (NCIC). Unlike any other information disseminated through the NCIC, the KST File reflects mere suspicion of involvement with criminal activity, so law enforcement personnel across the country are given access to a database of people who have secretly been labeled terrorism suspects with little or no actual evidence, based on virtually meaningless criteria.

This opens up the possibility of increased surveillance and tense encounters with the police, not to speak of outright harassment, for a large but undivulged number of people. When a police officer stops a person for a driving infraction, for instance, information about his or her KST status will pop up as soon a driver’s license is checked. According to FBI documents, police officers who get a KST hit are warned to “approach with caution” and “ask probing questions.”

When officers believe they’re about to go face to face with a terrorist, bad things can happen. It’s hardly a stretch of the imagination, particularly after a summer of police shootings of unarmed men, to suspect that an officer approaching a driver whom he believes to be a terrorist will be quicker to go for his gun. Meanwhile, the watchlisted person may never even know why his encounters with police have taken such a peculiar and menacing turn. According to the FBI’s instructions, under no circumstances is a cop to tell a suspect that he or she is on a watchlist.

And once someone is on this watchlist, good luck getting off it. According to the government’s watchlist rulebook, even a jury can’t help you. “An individual who is acquitted or against whom charges are dismissed for a crime related to terrorism,” it reads, “may nevertheless meet the reasonable standard and appropriately remain on, or be nominated to, the Terrorist Watchlist.”

No matter the verdict, suspicion lasts forever.
Shadow ID

The SARs program and the consolidated terrorism watchlist are just two domestic government databases of suspicion. Many more exist. Taken together, they should be seen as a new form of national ID for a growing group of people accused of no crime, who may have done nothing wrong, but are nevertheless secretly labeled by the government as suspicious or worse. Innocent until proven guilty has been replaced with suspicious until determined otherwise.

Think of it as a new shadow system of national identification for a shadow government that is increasingly averse to operating in the light. It’s an ID its “owners” don’t carry around with them, yet it’s imposed on them whenever they interact with government agents or agencies. It can alter their lives in disastrous ways, often without their knowledge.

And they could be you.

If this sounds dystopian, that’s because it is.

Indonesia’s cabinet, female power and us. 8 Women ministers and we say women aren’t respected in Islam

Joko Widodo's new cabinet

What do we take from the fact that yet another Muslim country has more female representation in its cabinet than Australia? The reality is both the Muslim world and the West remain contradictory places for women, writes Ruby Hamad.

Yesterday, recently elected Indonesian president, Joko Widodo, unveiled his new cabinet. Out of a cabinet of 34 in the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation, eight appointees are women.

While this is by no means a veritable paradise of gender equality, it once again serves to highlight just how poor gender inclusivity and representation is in Australian politics. When Prime Minister Tony Abbott revealed his own cabinet last year, the inclusion of just one woman, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop, led to many jokes of the “Even Afghanistan has more women in cabinet” variety.

Not only do both Afghanistan and Indonesia have more diverse gender representation in the upper echelons of power, but, as academic and religious scholar Reza Aslan recently noted, seven Muslim democracies have elected women as their heads of state.

This, however, does not mean women are more equal in Muslim societies. Rather, it shows the complicated relationship between gender oppression and political representation, and highlights the dangers of using only one index by which to measure gender inequality. The rise of some of the Muslim women leaders, for instance, was in some cases more a result of nepotism than gender equality.

Pakistan’s Benazir Bhutto, for example, was regarded largely as an extension of her father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. Like other female leaders in overtly patriarchal South Asian societies such as India’s Indira Gandhi and Bangladesh’s Sheikh Hasina and Khaleda Zia, Bhutto attained power following the death of a close male relative.

In the immediate aftermath of her father’s execution following a military coup in 1979, Pakistan’s Peoples Party assigned a “safe” seat in a deliberate move aimed at keeping his legacy going.

I’m not saying that Muslim women can only achieve political success in these circumstances. Indeed, other Muslim women such as Turkey’s Tansu Ciller gained power in vastly different circumstances. What I am saying is political success neither negates nor proves gender oppression. What it does show is that women in all societies can – and do – navigate sexist structures in their everyday life to varying degrees of success.

In the case of South Asian countries such as Pakistan and Indonesia, these women’s success was made possible by their family connections, which as CBS reports, is “no coincidence in a corner of the world where family often dictates one’s occupation, be it as a street sweeper or a prime minister.”

In other words, religion is not the only factor that leads to either the oppression or the success of women. We associate Islam with the most egregious abuses of women’s rights. Indeed, despite the fact that Islam has a long history of women leaders, going right back to Aisha, one of Mohammed’s wives who often fought alongside him in battle (and indeed led at least one battle of her own), Muslim countries are regularly over-represented in the annual “worst places to be a woman” lists.

However, also as noted by Reza Aslan, what we often put down to religion is actually regional influence. Indeed Muslim women in Malaysia and Indonesia (with the possible exception of the increasingly fundamentalist Aceh province) enjoy far more freedom than their Middle Eastern and African counterparts.

And yet, even in the most repressive Middle Eastern societies, such as Iran and Saudi Arabia, women are able to achieve career heights that western women struggle to attain. Saudi Arabia has seen a recent surge in women entrepreneurs, who run their own successful businesses even as they need their husband’s permission to travel. Meanwhile, Iranian women make up the majority of law students and work as lawyers and judges, who must nonetheless submit to enforced dress regulations in their own courtrooms.

In other words, the Muslim world, like the West, and indeed the rest of the world remains a contradictory place for women.

Earlier this year, Mariam al-Mansouri became the UAE’s first female fighter pilot and led a strike against Islamic State. Regarded as a hero by Yousef al-Otaiba, the UAE’s ambassador the US who boasted about her on American television, she was also referred to as “Boobs on the ground” by Fox News presenter Eric Bolling.

The derisive sexualisation of al-Mansouri by a white, male media personality highlights how Western societies also marginalise and dismiss women, even as they revile Muslim countries for doing the same. The West is no less sexist, it’s just that the sexism manifests differently. The western tendency to conflate sexualisation with empowerment mistakenly assumes that because women are not legally restricted in their clothing choices or their everyday movements, then our liberation is complete.

Unlike Muslim women, we can wear what we like, hence we are free and equal and therefore the lack of women’s representation in parliament isn’t a failing of our political system or a sign of continued oppression, but due to “merit”. When questioned about the single woman in his cabinet, Tony Abbott claimed to be “disappointed” (as if it wasn’t solely his doing) and essentially blamed women for their own exclusion by arguing that if only women were better, then they too would hold more positions of power.

So what do we take away from the fact that yet another Muslim country has more female representation in its cabinet than Australia? While it would be wrong to assume this is automatically a sign of greater gender equality, it is no less of a mistake to dismiss the lack of women in power as unrelated to women’s oppression.

Indeed, the more Australia insists – and believes – it is an equal society, the easier it is to mask the deliberate exclusion of women from the corridors of power behind the façade of meritocracy.

Partisan Politics of the AFP. Surely it’s inappropriate

Police address the media over terror raids

The AFP’s worrying foray into politics

One of these men still has a head on his shoulder

Tony Abbott and John Key at Parliament House in Canberra

Politics in a different key

On economic reform and now on national security, New Zealand can see beyond scare campaigns and political opportunities – unlike their cousins across the ditch, writes Barrie Cassidy.

There’s no doubt about the Kiwis. Sometimes – well often in fact – they show a political maturity streets ahead of their cousins across the ditch.

Just this week Prime Minister John Key delivered a speech to the Institute of International Affairs on national security and the IS threat.

In that speech he talked about his obligations to secure the country and to support stability and the rule of the law internationally, and that’s just as you would expect.

But Key – the leader of the conservative National Party – and prime minister since 2008 – spoke at length as well about a longer term strategy; dealing with the root causes of extremism; and that’s something that gets precious little attention from the major parties in Australia.

Key said defeating IS (also known as ISIL) “will mean winning the hearts and minds of those vulnerable to its destructive message.”

“There is little doubt,” he said, “that a lack of movement towards a two-state solution in relation to Palestine, and the recent high number of civilian casualties in Gaza, serve to make the task of recruiters to extremist causes a significantly easier one.

“The unresolved issue of Iran’s nuclear capabilities hangs over the region as well.

“We also need to redouble efforts towards reaching a political solution to the violent stalemate in Syria. This has been another cause of ISIL’s rise, and has seen almost 200,000 killed, and led to more than three million Syrians fleeing their country.”

He went on to say that “the seeds of ISIL’s success lie in the failure of the Maliki regime to adhere to acceptable standards of governance, and to treat all citizens, regardless of ethnicity or religion, with respect.”

Key emphasised that military support is one thing, but the new al-Abadi government will need significant international backing if they are one day to fight their own battles.

In Australia, Tony Abbott talks incessantly about a “death cult”, or if you’d prefer, just this week, “an apocalyptic millennial extremist ideology”, that essentially beheads and crucifies people simply because they don’t like us. He likes to keep it simple. And the Labor opposition too steers away from sophisticated discussion about root causes for fear something they say might be interpreted as a lack of bi-partisanship. That could cost votes.

But then again, New Zealand is the country that introduced a GST at 10 per cent in 1986, increased it to 12.5 per cent in 1989, and then finally to 15 per cent with big personal tax cuts as compensation. And then Key got re-elected. In Australia, a GST was introduced in July 2000, at 10 per cent, and both the base and the rate have stayed the same since.

The debate in New Zealand was not particularly acrimonious and the public broadly, if not grudgingly, embraced each increase. Why? Partly because the politics being played out was not as self serving and destructive as that experienced here whenever the issue is raised. The electorate apparently understood they were not being asked to pay more taxes; but rather to accept a more efficient and sustainable mix of taxation.

On economic reform – and now on national security – they can see the issues beyond scare campaigns and political opportunities. The New Zealanders somehow manage to find a place in the world that is commensurate with their size and influence, and at the same time, retain a strong degree of independence.

And just by the way, the threat of a terrorist attack in New Zealand is officially “possible but not expected

Wattle on green attacks

Wattle on green attacks

Australian governments are deliberately contributing to the deaths, suicide, homelessness, domestic violence and mental illness of Australian Defence Veterans — both young and old.

These sustained and bureaucratically controlled ‘Wattle on Green’ attacks are as treacherous to Diggers on home turf, as the infamous ‘Green on Blue’ attacks on Coalition forces in the Middle and Wider East.

Time and again, in rapid fire betrayal, pensioner veterans have been promised paltry pension increases and time and again in our name, they have been publicly humiliated and their begging bowls filled with soiled matter and rotting promissory notes.

Worthless IOUs for risking stepping on IEDs

We might as well bury alive our returned service personnel.

Wednesday morning’s gut-wrenching report by Ashley Hall on the ABC’s AM program is a shameful indictment on how Australia treats its returned soldiers with blatant contempt.

It makes a mockery of the political expediency and duplicitous hollow words of successive political leaders who deliver sonorous and patriotic eulogies on the likes of ANZAC Day, during Turkish dawns and over the flag-draped coffins of those killed in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere, whilst basking in the stolen heroic glories of those who lay down their lives for this country in squalid wars mounted upon squalid lies.

Afghanistan War veteran Geoff Evans, now working with the Returned and Services League, RSL’s LifeCare told Hall that Australian diggers were suffering from epidemic rates of homelessness, with some of them sleeping with their families in cars

He said a lot of parallels could be drawn with Vietnam:

…There’s a lot of parallels we can draw here with the Vietnam generation because everyone in Australia knows what happened to Vietnam veterans.

If you look at mental health, suicide and alcoholism – including in their families – well we’re seeing that play out again in my generation.

We must not capitulate to the will of successive governments and ignore our older veterans in favour of younger veterans.

Both groups must be treated as the first among equals.

Just as there is no space for a generation gap amongst the dead, none must be allowed amongst the living.

I urge everyone to stand shoulder to shoulder on this.

Post-traumatic stress is an insidious and parasitic worm that can, if left unchecked, entirely consume the body, mind and soul of its host.

Because some of our diggers are older, does not mean that their illnesses and horrible predicaments are less real or less worthy than those of younger diggers.

It is clear that successive governments are holding off on compensating older diggers in the hope they will die off and thus avoid any payouts of illnesses contracted through exposure to Agent Orange and other poisonous toxins — as well as giving them fair and honourable increases in their pensions.

We should note that Agent Orange affected military personnel as well as civilians.

On next week’s second Tuesday in the month, long after the hooves of The Melbourne Cup are stilled, some permanently, millions around the nation will again hold their breath on Remembrance Day and observe a minute’s silence on the 11th day of the 11th month to acknowledge the 96th Anniversary of the Armistice of the First World War as well as the sacrifice made by the dead, the living and the living dead who walk amongst us, in all wars and conflicts.

For several years, Independent Australia has campaigned and written about the shameful plight of our veterans.

On Monday, the Defence Force Welfare Association (DFWA) in conjunction with the Alliance of Defence Service Organisations (ADSO) issued a media release condemning the outrageous and pompous decision of the Defence Remuneration Tribunal (DFRT) to endorse the Abbott Coalition Government’s crude and unforgivable decision to limit veteran pension increases to an insulting 1.5% per annum – wait for it – thinly spread over three years — barely half the expected annual inflation rate.

National President, David Jamison said:

It is a strange way to reward ADF members for their dedication and hard work especially as the Government has just dispatched a new contingent to the ongoing Middle East conflicts.”

It is time that DFWA Patron, His Excellency General, the Honourable Sir Peter Cosgrove AK MC (Retd), now Governor General, did what he should have done when he was chief of the Army and when he was chief of the Defence Force — publicly recommend that Australia’s returning defence personnel be accorded pensions worthy of their sacrifice and commitment.

There is fresh blood on the yellow wattle, spilling onto the green of our national colours and national returned veterans.

From wounds and heartbreak caused by successive and callous home-grown Australian governments, whose continuing war against our veterans is such that they are taking no prisoners; dead or alive.

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Why Men Are From Mars, Women From Venus And Many of Abbott’s Front Bench From A Different Planet Altogether!

Image by theaustralian.com.au

“A self-proclaimed pick-up artist who promotes choking women has left the country and had his visa cancelled by the Federal Government.

Julien Blanc, 25, was due to give a talk at Melbourne’s Como Hotel on Wednesday night advising men how to “pick up women from open to close”.

His tactics, which include choking women and pulling them into his crotch, were criticised online as misogynistic and abusive.”

ABC

There is a popular theory that an infinite number of monkeys typing on an infinite number of keyboards would produce the play “Hamlet”. There is a reality that three or four monkeys taking turns could have been responsible for the Liberals “Real Solutions” document…

However, it’s Friday night and I’m being a little distracted. ‘Twas  going to be about Julien Blanc. Just to get you up to speed with this:

Mr Blanc, from US-based group Real Social Dynamics (RSD), was forced to hold his event on a boat on Melbourne’s Yarra River last night.

He was also due to deliver a seminar in Brisbane next week.

Immigration Minister Scott Morrison has told Sky News he decided to cancel Mr Blanc’s visa.

“This guy wasn’t pushing forward political ideas, he was putting a view that was derogatory to women and that’s just something that our values abhor in this country,” he said.

Ok, let’s just forget Voltaire’s “I may disagree with what you say, but I’ll defend to the death your right to say it”, or as George Brandis put it so much more eloquently, “People have the right to be bigots, otherwise we wouldn’t have picked up so much of the One Nation vote”.

Mm, perhaps I shouldn’t have put the quotation marks around it because I was quoting it from memory and – like John Howard – my memory can be faulty whenever it suits me.

Anyway. Julien Blanc…

Strikes me as a nasty, little pathetic man who must have attracted an audience with the sort of losers who’d normally spend their Friday nights striking out at venues that are considered pick-up joints.

Mind you, I’m the sort of man that would have gone to his event and asked if he’d give the same advice to gay men who were having trouble with men who didn’t realise that they may be bi-sexual…

Anyway, let’s ignore someone who just wants to be noticed because how the fuck does someone get so far basing his whole persona on the Tom Cruise character in “Magnolia”. (Great film, btw, watch it, if you’ve never seen it!)

But, well, I just sort of have this problem with Scott Morrison just cancelling his visa like that. I mean, as Scotty said, he wasn’t pushing a “poltical agenda”  – if it had been a “political agenda” would it have been ok? Or was it that he held his seminar on a BOAT?

Will Andy Bolt have a front page headline about the whole freedom of speech thing?

Will Abbott attempt to mirror Howard? “We will determine the misogynists who come into this country and their right to support our agenda…”

Whatever happened to that idea people have a right to be bigots? And why don’t I get my chance to rub my crutch against Mr Blanc and choke him?

Anyone who isn’t a feminist shall have their comments removed…

And anyone who is.

Yep, just agree with me and you’re visa’s safe. Unless there’s a backlash on social media.

Mm, why do I feel that I should say something about people from being discouraged from reporting sexual abuse in detention centres?

Oh, that’s right. Not in Australia. So the fact that it’s not part of our values means they should have just stayed where they came from…

Words are cheap, but Direct Action sure isn’t.

hunt-direct-action

In an interview on Lateline in October last year, Greg Hunt said that the carbon price “doesn’t work”, “doesn’t do the job” and is “a just hopeless means of achieving the outcome.” The primary scientific agency is the Bureau of Meteorology. 1,700 staff.The CSIRO also backs those up.He then proceeded to cut $10 million from the BoM, with an anticipated loss of 80 jobs next year, and he cut CSIRO’s funding by $111 million over four years, which will result in 500 job cuts at the nation’s peak scientific organisation.

While the cost of living increase may have slowed, two new studies show that brown coal and black coal generation has jumped sharply in the four months since the carbon price was dumped by the Abbott government. The share of coal has gone up from 69.6% of sent out electricity in June to 76.4% in October. Emissions have also jumped sharply,10%

The Government, of course, hasn’t yet put anything out about how the penalties will work or the baselines will work which will be a challenge for the Government and they’re the two, you know, most difficult issues for the Government to deal with. But I guess we’ll get to see what the form of the penalty is going to be.

”Market analysts Reputex suggest the $2.5 billion fund may get Australia about a third of the way to our low 5% target, but not much more.At the start of his prime ministership Tony Abbott said, “We hope to be judged by what we have done rather than by what we have said we would do.Leading carbon market analysts and brokers including Bloomberg New Energy Finance, SKM-MMA and RepuTex suggest that the government has Buckley’s chance of reaching its target of 421 million tonnes with the allocated budget.

Should the West withdraw from the world to win its love?

Soldiers from the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st rest as they wait to pack their weapons for shipment back to the United States at Camp Virginia, Kuwait

In his original and argumentative history of the Anglo-American domination of the past three or more centuries, Walter Russell Mead writes that both the UK and the United States believed their imposition of a world order served the highest interests of humanity. From Oliver Cromwell’s denunciation of Spanish cruelty in the 1650s to Ronald Reagan’s characterisation of the Soviet Union as an evil empire in the 1980s, the two main Anglophone states have seen their global expansionism as a blessing for the world: what’s good for us is good for everyone.

But where has that got us? In the doghouse of world opinion.

I passed some time in Egypt recently, and it’s remarkable how much the intellectual class says it dislikes America. That’s in a country where the United States gives its army and government – which are the same thing these days – $1.5 billion in aid annually. The only place educated Egyptians spit on with more venom is Israel, which they see as an American appendage.

In fact, the same is true throughout the Middle East, whether the country’s leadership enjoys amicable relations with America (Jordan) or sees it as an unrelenting enemy (Gaza). In Israel — the one place where the United States was held in generally high esteem — support is shrinking because many Israelis think Obama is lukewarm about U.S. support. One could call that even ranker ingratitude than in Egypt, given the $3.1 billion of aid the United States pumps into Israel every year, mainly for defence.

And it’s double-plus-unremarkable for a European to disapprove of America, since the default position of many highly educated Europeans throughout Europe is at least that the Americans may be well intentioned, but blunder; more often, the well-intentioned bit gets left out. That critique is easily turned against their own governments when they collude with the United States on some world-dominating project: Tony Blair, the former UK prime minister, is held in low esteem by the thinking classes for his enthusiastic cooperation with the United States in the invasion of Iraq. There’s a simple formula for European governments: bash America and win over your intellectual elite.

So suppose the United States, and The West in general (the concept is italicized because it includes easterners like Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand) said: we’d like to stop being unpopular, so let’s give up on this world domination thing we’re accused of. Let’s not intervene: at all. We’ll continue to pay our dues to the United Nations, which everyone loves  – the United States pays over $5 billion annually – but that’s the limit. The UN is in charge now.

There wouldn’t be much aid to the poor of the world: in any case, many economists believe that aid doesn’t really work, because it’s poured down holes labelled No Property Rights, Endless Conflict and Vast Corruption. There wouldn’t be any more money for the stricken countries of Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea to assist with their fight against the ravages of Ebola – like the six Ebola centers the British have just funded. That’s what the UN’s World Health Organization is for.

Least of all would there be any more of these interventions condemned round the world. The Western states have taken or are taking their troops out of Iraq and Afghanistan, and nobody will put boots on the ground in Syria or Libya – so Western leaders, including the notoriously warlike Americans and British, seem to have already gotten the message, here. But the air strikes in Syria and Iraq against Islamic State, and the assistance to anti-Assad forces in Syria, would also cease.

Last week, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, General John Campbell, said he was going to take “a hard look” at the preparedness of the Afghan forces to take over, bit by bit, until all American forces leave at the end of 2016 – and suggested he might recommend a slower drawdown. Insurgent attacks are ever more frequent, the Afghan army has taken large losses and the new president, Ashraf Ghani, has asked the Americans to stay on for longer. In the new, hard-edged dispensation, that would be “Sorry, Mr. Ghani,” and Campbell would be reassigned.

In the Middle East, not only is Islamic State still besieging Kobani in Syria, but Iraq is descending into open civil war. Gangs of Shi’ite militia, put together to take on the Sunni-led Islamic State, now roam the country looking for battles to win – often against Sunni civilians. Tirana Hassan of Human Rights Watch reported that an area near the Iraqi city of Kirkuk had been cleared of residents by a Shi’ite group called the Khorasani Brigade: “Former (Sunni) residents told us that those who tried to return are accused of being Islamic State members or sympathisers; some were held by the militia for days, blindfolded, questioned and beaten – or simply disappeared.”

Well, so be it. The Arab world has been a place of chaos for decades, some will argue, just look at Libya. French, British and US war planes and military supplies removed the dictator, Muammar Gadhafi – and now the recognised government which replaced him has had to flee the capital, Tripoli, and is holed up in a hotel in Tobruk near the Egyptian border. A rival government holds court in Tripoli and government forces fight Islamists in Benghazi. You see where supporting those who want to dispose of their tyrants gets you? An Islamist government followed by another military autocrat, as in Egypt – that’s where.

If the West stopped humanitarian, or military, interventions, it’s likely that Ebola would sweep West Africa more quickly, the Taliban would return to rule Afghanistan, Islamic State would take Iraq, Assad of Syria would win more quickly and Libya would continue its civil wars, then get a new dictator. But the West wouldn’t have intervened: it wouldn’t be our fault.

Many, if not all, of these things might happen anyway. Because the West has no more stomach for facing down terrorism; or dictators, and is gently sliding towards the position of absolute non-intervention. What, after all, has it got to do with us? Let it be, hope for the best…. and be popular.

World’s First Solar Cycle Path Installed In Amsterdam

Although there is some overlap in design features, Solar Roadways’ panels are perhaps more innovative than SolaRoad’s. The US couple’s hexagonal panels are studded with LED lights to make road lines and signs, and also feature heating elements to melt ice and snow.

For the next three years, SolaRoad will test out the path in order to gauge how much energy it is capable of producing and assess safety under different weather conditions. Because it can’t be adjusted to the position of the sun, the panels will generate approximately 30% less energy than those placed on roofs. However, the team anticipates that eventually it should be sufficient to power traffic lights, road lights, houses and electric cars. TNO’s Sten de Wit had a chat with the Guardian about the project, and he believes that up to 20% of the Netherlands’ 140,000 kilometers of road is suitable for conversion into solar roads, which could rake in a lot of energy.

As it’s still early days, production costs are unfortunately rather hefty. The pilot cycle path came with a $3.75 million (€3 million) price tag, which was mostly put up by the local authority. However, as the technology develops and production gets scaled-up, the price should drop.

Democracy in the hands of idiots. Part III

Democracy in the hands of idiots. Part III. 53898.jpeg

Okay world, that ritualistic, vacuous exercise in futile optimism, known as an “election” in America, is over, and the idiots again have spoken.

But how could they not?  After all, the entire concept of “democracy” in America’s corrupt, two-party system is nothing more than a farcical illusion, and the extent of this corruption has only been magnified by the Koch brothers controlled majority on the United States Supreme Court, who, in recent rulings, gave billionaires and corporations unbridled power to buy politicians of their choice.

In previous Pravda.Ru articles, I have argued that history is nothing more than a pendulum incessantly swinging back and forth between overreaction and regret, and the recent elections in America have vividly confirmed this thesis.

The coup of 2000, for example, that-thanks to a heavily politicized Supreme Court-saw George W. Bush steal the election from Al Gore, forever shattered the myth that politicians are concerned about “public service.”  If this were the case, then Bush, and indeed any person with a modicum of integrity, would have conceded defeat instead of defying the will of the people.

If there is one reality that slimy politicians can count on in America, it is the fact that Americans are notoriously devoid of long-term memories.  Although Bush entered office amid great outrage, the (conveniently timed?) attacks on 9/11/2001 quickly elevated him, and likeminded filth like Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, to almost godlike status.

Segueing off of this deification, these kleptocrats decided to both ensure Bush’s reelection and further enrich themselves and their cronies in the military-industrial complex by manufacturing fictitious reasons to invade Iraq.

After all, history has shown that American voters are loath to change presidents during wartime, and, as Bush’s reelection demonstrated, it doesn’t matter who instigated the war, or for what reasons.

By the time the Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld lies were exposed, it was too late.  But the regret it caused did result in the election of Barack Obama.

And, once again, optimism reigned supreme, especially amongst progressives who, for decades, were compelled to hold their noses while voting for Democratic candidates who championed none of their interests, but who represented the lesser of two evils.

It didn’t take long for Obama to prove that his campaign promises of progressive reform were empty words.  In many ways, with the increased spying on American citizens, the targeting and imprisonment of reporters and whistleblowers, the extrajudicial executions of American citizens, and the zealous defense of Bush-era abuses and abusers, Obama demonstrated that his administration was no better than the previous one, and, in some cases, perhaps even worse.

This disillusionment with Obama recently caused American voters, who just a few years ago were incensed by the lies, venality, and racism exhibited by the Republican party, to put Republicans back into power.

It would be laughable if it wasn’t so pathetic!

After all, America’s two-party system is designed for nothing more than stagnation, and politicians schmoozing with lobbyists to obtain lucrative jobs after leaving the political arena.

In America, the strategy for political victory of one party over the other is simple.  Even without a majority in one or both Houses of Congress, there are usually enough minority party members (especially in the Senate) to foment obstruction and delay.  While this would seem to be a formula for political suicide, the reality is the President usually gets the blame for failing to “get things done”; therefore, Republicans simply blocked anything Obama attempted to do, despite the best interests of the people they supposedly represented.  This, in turn, gave them the ability to denounce Obama for the very stagnation they created.

Now that Democrats are the minority party in Congress, they will assume the role as architects of obstruction and delay, so, in 2016, they can castigate the Republican-controlled Congress for failing to get anything meaningful done.  

And the pendulum of idiocy swings on.

I realize I may sound harsh for condemning the idiocy of American voters, because the reality is that oftentimes they really have no choice.  Politics is a loathsome, dishonest, and corrupt business that repels decent human beings; therefore, only the loathsome, dishonest, and/or corrupt aspire to become politicians.

For example, a prank telephone call made by a disc jockey to governor Scott Walker of Wisconsin proved Walker is firmly in the pockets of the billionaire Koch brothers.  He was reelected anyway.  And Greg Abbott won the governorship of Texas, even though, while serving as attorney general, he went to extraordinary lengths to impede investigations into whether a man named Cameron Todd Willingham had been wrongfully executed.

Still, voters cannot be absolved from blame.  Political appeals to the basest instincts in human nature; the creation of contempt for the poor and working classes to obscure the economic inequalities that are causing the middle-class to vanish while the rich get richer; negative campaign ads that attack opponents instead of promoting a candidate’s own merits; and the exploitation of hatred and bigotry that causes people to act against their own economic interests are only effective because voters have habitually and predictably allowed them to be.

This is why many critics of American-style democracy have argued that voting as a means of social change is nothing more than an illusion.  Some have even argued that the only way to create a nation where human rights are more important than corporate rights; where being “pro-life” does not just focus on birth and death, but also on enhancing the quality of life during the years in between; where “natural” and “human” are viewed as more than just resources; and where the Bill of Rights applies to everyone, not just the rich and powerful, is through a revolution.

Unfortunately, it is too late.  Tactics that have been rubber-stamped by America’s so-called “justice” system-the indefinite detention, torture, and extrajudicial execution of American citizens; GPS, cameras, drones, and satellites tracking everyone’s movements; facial recognition technologies; and the unrestrained spying by the NSA, CIA, and FBI-will cause any revolutionary overtures to be decimated in their infancy.

So here America stands, a rudderless ship occupied by idiots elected or appointed by idiots.  And when it sinks, Americans will only have themselves to blame.