
At the heart of the nation’s housing crisis is a tax rort that sees thousands of liveable homes left unoccupied, Tim Evans reports.
Source: Here’s a fix for the housing crisis – end the great Airbnb tax rort – Michael West

At the heart of the nation’s housing crisis is a tax rort that sees thousands of liveable homes left unoccupied, Tim Evans reports.
Source: Here’s a fix for the housing crisis – end the great Airbnb tax rort – Michael West

Jen rejected Grace Tame but preferred her Qanon besties instead and even employed them, so we have been told. Qanon isn’t known for being “polite” or truthful. Grace is and wasn’t being paid to “help”. We do know that 60 Minutes generally pays for comment. If they didn’t have to pay Scott and Jen in this instance and got a “freebie” Might that arrangement be called a “political donation”?
If the prime minister’s wife is going to play a role in the nation’s affairs — including advising Scott Morrison on how to understand the impact of sexual assault on a young woman by imagining it was one of his girls — then it seems only fair to know what Jenny Morrison brings to the job. If Jen Morrison is to be a de facto member of the cabinet, what are her qualifications?
uble strikes call Jenny Morrison — but what does she stand for?
“There’s pretty much nothing to get scared of. It’s not the Spanish Flu that killed 15 million people just after the First World War … I’m 80, I should be really scared. Guess what? I’m not really scared.”
Mr Harvey was pleased to note revenue across his national chain of electronics stores up sharply amid huge consumer demand in recent weeks.
“You know, this is an opportunity,” he said.
“Our sales are up in Harvey Norman in Australia by nine per cent on last year. Our sales in freezers are up 300 per cent. And what about air purifiers? Up 100 per cent.”
Never let a chance go by – » The Australian Independent Media Network
Key points:
Some Islamic State inmates have already escaped
One doctor says prisoners are dying at a rate of about one each day
There are at least seven Australian IS suspects in Kurdish prisons

Top 10 most under-reported crises in 2017:
via The forgotten crises: the humanitarian emergencies the world ignored in 2017
n the many occasions over the last five months where President Donald Trump demonstrated his deep ignorance, his alarming impulsiveness, his bottomless need for praise, or his tendency to lash out when criticized, one common response has been to ask, “What happens when he faces a genuine crisis with the need to make difficult decisions and lives at stake?”
Source: Ready or not, Trump may be about to face his first full-blown international crisis
UN humanitarian chief says 20 million people in Yemen, South Sudan, Somalia and Nigeria face starvation and famine.
Source: Famine ‘largest humanitarian crisis in history of UN’ | News | Al Jazeera
Amid a crisis that has poisoned the water supply of an entire city, authorities in Flint, Michigan are under renewed fire on Friday for sending out shut-off notices to residents who are behind on paying their water bills. Slammed as “ludicrous, the move comes as Republican Governor Rick Snyder finally asked President Obama to step in and declare a federal state of emergency.

We have two separate humanitarian crises looming, quite apart from the devastating Ebola Virus Disease outbreak in West Africa, with its tentacles reaching far and wide; Islamic State in the Middle East, spreading terror, hatred and death…with its tentacles reaching far and wide. So where is the story on two different potential catastrophes?
A Putsch takes place in Ukraine, Fascists are among those taking power, anti-Russian and anti-Jewish slogans are chanted, Russian-speakers are tortured and attacked, massacres take place against Russian-speakers. The West backs the perpetrators and imposes sanctions against Russia. Russia tries to broker a peace deal and a ceasefire in a foreign country, in which according to its “Government”, Russia has no jurisdiction. The West increases the sanctions and continues to back those who committed massacres. Just like they did in Syria, until their little darling (ISIL/ISIS/Islamic State) turned into a monster.
So rather than imposing sanctions and spreading division, sowing the seeds of hatred, why doesn’t the West use its energy concentrating on development, instead of deployment, and why doesn’t it use its political clout to pull the world together instead of tearing it apart?
While everyone is speaking about the spread of Ebola Virus Disease (now that it has started to make inroads into Western countries), where is the story on the impending food crisis in West Africa? Kanayo Nwanze, the President of the International Fund for Agricultural Development, has warned that urgent action is needed to stave off an impending food crisis.
Speaking on World Food Day on October 16, in an interview with the UN News Center, he stated that eighty per cent of the food eaten today in the developing world is produced by smallholders on family farms. Here, he claims, is the danger because these farmers are most at risk from cycles of hunger and poverty. “We should actually decide to take action beyond words,” he warns.
He said that unless we start to invest in the real infrastructure which supports agricultural production, which means people, there could be a shortage of food in the coming years.
Fast forward a few thousand miles to the East, the UNO is warning of “an immense humanitarian crisis” this Winter in Iraq, the country destroyed by, who else, NATO back in 2003, when it was invaded illegally, outside the auspices of the UNO, in a murderous invasion causing the deaths of some one million people, in which military hardware was deployed against civilian structures.
In the words of Rashid Khalikov, director of the UN Office in Geneva for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, “an immense humanitarian emergency is unfolding in front of our eyes”.
Officials from the UNO and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation found a potentially calamitous situation in the areas they visited, ravaged by the conflict caused by Islamic State, created in the void caused by the invasion led by, who else, Washington and poodle in chief, the top lapdog, London. They found 850,000 people displaced in Kurdistan, they found 90,000 people living in the open in Dohuk Governorate. As a harsh winter approaches, nearly one million people are in urgent need of food and shelter, while 5.2 million Iraqis need assistance, 1.8 million of these being children.
Those responsible are not only Islamic State, it is the United States of America and the United Kingdom, who in one of their imperialist ventures, destabilized a State and did not think the consequences through. The onus lies on these two countries, the ones who have been the motor behind the sanctions against Russia, to take a good look at their own foreign policy, man up to their responsibilities, and change tack.
Next story: a humanitarian crisis in Libya. Caused by guess who?