Tag: Herald Sun

Herald Sun report on support for Zionist Federation letter “untrue” – Pearls and Irritations

Man Examining Fake News On Newspaper Through Magnifying GlassImage

While journalists and cartoonists are getting sacked for supporting Gazans will Murdoch’s News Corpse sack James Campbell for falsely propagandizing what’s clearly the political fakery of Australia’s Zionist Federation? Surely there’s a clear defamation case here against Liebler Campbell and News Corp by Keating. By the way it’s been reported that Friedenberg drafted the letter and roped in this ship of fools. Good on Paul Keating for seeing through the propaganda plot

Today’s Melbourne Herald Sun carries a story that, along with other former Australian Prime Ministers, I will be a signature to a statement drafted by The Zionist Federation of Australia, condemning the attack by Hamas on Israel. This report is without foundation and is untrue.

Mark Leibler contacted me earlier last week proposing the prospective joint statement for my agreement and signature.

I told Leibler in a written message that I would not be agreeing to join other former Prime Ministers in authorising the statement.

That remains my position.

Statement by PJ Keating,  29 October 2023.

Mark Leibler contacted Paul Keating earlier last week proposing the prospective joint statement by past PMs. Paul Keating declined.

Source: Herald Sun report on support for Zionist Federation letter “untrue” – Pearls and Irritations

Old Dog Thought- The making of once British American Australia Australia can’t be done. We simply aren’t Christian enough

Fighting Fake News with REAL 27/2/23, Slump in Christian Religion enrolments, Negative LNP, Herald Sun James Campbell, Rowan Dean, Rita Panahi,

The villain takes centre stage – » The Australian Independent Media Network

The LNP still believes it can manipulate the Australian public

My thought for the day We all toy with the idea of changing the world but never consider changing ourselves. ( John Lord )

Source: The villain takes centre stage – » The Australian Independent Media Network

Labor Votes For Something Most People Agree Is Right; Morrison Gets Bounce In Poll! – » The Australian Independent Media Network

 

I could go on. Free speech and 18C, leadership tensions,quotas… but then I’d just sound like I was in the Canberra bubble. So instead I’ll speculate on the Newspoll tomorrow.I predict that it will be interpreted as a great result for Scott Morrison even if it is moving closer to being the hundredth losing Newspoll for the Liberals. (Yes, we’ve still got a way to go, but I have faith that Scott will go a long way towards getting them there.) After all we’ve had the Cormann affair, Cash refusing to talk to the AFP, Paladin and other things that all make it hard for the Liberals to actually win one. In those circumstances, it’s amazing that Morrison is sitll doing so well. And the boats, we hardly mentioned the boats this week.This, we’ll be told, will be a close election.

TOMORROW’S MURDOCH HEADLINE: MORRISON STILL HAS LEAD OVER SHORTEN AS PREFERRED PM

via Labor Votes For Something Most People Agree Is Right; Morrison Gets Bounce In Poll! – » The Australian Independent Media Network

#CashOut: Is it ever okay for journalists to protect politicians who have lied?

To the best of my knowledge, this lie originated in a Herald Sun story by James Campbell and Matt Johnston on 20 April 2016. It was seized upon by Coalition MPs for its propaganda power and soon became a regular feature of news coverage. Seemingly nothing could stop the propagation of this lie. The CFA  –  which, at the time, was still in dispute with the union  –  refuted it on 20 May, but the lie lived on. On 1 June, the Fair Work Commission handed down a Final Recommendation that largely supported the union’s position and included clarified wording that left no doubt: volunteers would not have to wait for professional firefighters to arrive.

Source: #CashOut: Is it ever okay for journalists to protect politicians who have lied?

Furious George Pell demands Victoria Police investigation as ABC airs abuse claims

Speaking from Rome where he is based at the Vatican, Cardinal Pell said he refused to be put to a “trial by media” and said the ABC had “no licence” to destroy his reputation.

Source: Furious George Pell demands Victoria Police investigation as ABC airs abuse claims

2 + 2 = 5. AKA: The Dumbing Down of Australia – » The Australian Independent Media Network

By Christian Marx Australia is rapidly heading towards a completely stupefied populace. This is no accident! Rather, it is a concerted effort by the vested corporate interests that own all our mainstream media, and control the LNP, via their hardline, crypto Fascist organisation, the Institute of Public Affairs. If one believed the media narrative, one…

Source: 2 + 2 = 5. AKA: The Dumbing Down of Australia – » The Australian Independent Media Network

Andrew Bolt projectile vomit in print

Turnbull dines with pet Muslims

Muzzling the watchdogs

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  • February 17, 2015
  • Written by:

The purpose of journalism is to serve the community and the purpose of political journalism is to give citizens the information they need to participate in civic affairs.  Political journalists should serve as watchdogs to assure honest governance and campaigns.

Politics is often portrayed as a “game.” Indeed, sports and metaphors pepper political writing. Unlike other “games,” political ones have real world consequences: war or peace; high taxes or low; jobs or unemployment; health care or not; tackling climate change or pursuing unfettered mining.  Considering the ramifications, political journalists bear a heavy responsibility to present the facts to the electorate.

The Herald Sun is a Murdoch tabloid newspaper based in Melbourne.  It is the highest-circulating daily newspaper in Australia, with a weekday circulation of 515,000 and readership of 1,500,000.

Two days before the 2013 Federal election the anonymous editorial gave this ‘astute’ pronouncement which read more like a paid advertorial than insightful analysis:

“TONY Abbott stands ready today to become Australia’s new prime minister with a set of economic and social policies to take the nation into a safe and assured future.

Mr Abbott and the Coalition have shown they are more than ready to govern whereas another three years of Labor will condemn the nation to more destructive class-war politics and policy on the run.

We believe Mr Abbott stands ready to seize the day. His has been a disciplined performance in a bitter and deeply divided Parliament. He has proved himself a man of principle.

Tony Abbott has matured as a leader. He has gained people’s trust to do a tough job in tough economic times.

The Herald Sun believes Mr Abbott should be given the opportunity tomorrow to restore Australia for Australians.

We urge Australians to vote for Mr Abbott and elect him as our 28th prime minister.”

Righto then.  (Note to self: Do not rely on The Herald Sun’s judgement)

Fast forward to February 2 this year.  Also in the Herald Sun, Tony’s most ardent supporter, Andrew Bolt, is forced to concede:

“The LNP defeat [in Queensland] also damaged Abbott because the analogy between Newman’s fall and Abbott’s own decline is so powerful.

Newman broke promises, picked too many fights, rammed decisions down voters’ throats and carried on at times like an autocrat, making idiosyncratic decisions such as appointing an underqualified magistrate his chief justice.

He just seemed arrogant and beyond voters’ control — a fatal flaw.

Australian voters can’t be commanded, tricked, bullied, surprised, taken for granted or treated like fools. How many leaders have learned that already? Abbott, too, has broken promises — on spending cuts and tax rises. And, like Newman, he picked too many fights, announced radical schemes without real consultation and made several idiosyncratic decisions, such as reinstating knighthoods.

He now seems out of touch, unpredictable and too self-willed. One who imposes, not persuades.”

Oh? Do tell.

Abbott, in his all-encompassing search to blame others, has suggested that we have been too generous in giving “benefit of the doubt” to bad people.

I could list countless examples where that is true in domestic violence and child abuse cases.  If you look at the history you wonder why those entrusted to protect us failed so badly.

In politics, it is up to the media to protect us but, with some notable exceptions, they have failed to see the pattern and to warn of the risk.

The mainstream media, along with the Liberal Party, are like a victim of political abuse, wanting to believe that their abuser truly loves them and will change.

“I have listened.  I will change from now on.  I’ll be better…..promise.”

How many times do you listen to this before you decide to leave?

Look at the examples of violence and aggression over the years that Abbott has either denied, defended, skited about, or, as a last resort, apologised for.

In 1976, while at University, Tony kicked in a glass panel door after a narrow defeat in the University Senate elections .

There was the 1977 charge of indecent assault where Abbott argued that Helen Wilson “was speaking about me in a highly critical way”.

The same year saw the ‘alleged’ physical intimidation of Barbara Ramjan.  After she beat Mr Abbott for the presidency of the Sydney University Student Representative Council, he put his face close to hers and punched the wall either side of her head.

There was also the proven charge of destruction of public property.  In celebrations after passing his final year economics examination, Abbott was challenged to bend a street sign. As he did so two policemen spotted him.  The offence was proven but no conviction was recorded.  Look how strong I am, nobody punishes me.

Lindsay Foyle, a former deputy editor of The Bulletin and a past president of the Australian Cartoonists’ Association, revealed that Tony Abbott once threatened to punch him because of a disagreement over abortion.

“Greg Sheridan, the education writer on The Bulletin, arrived with some people who did not work with us.  The interlopers were soon identified as radicals involved in student politics at the University of Sydney.

They quickly explained how the world went around and why they had to extinguish their opposition at the university and the rest of the country. Unfortunately, I did not agree with everything that was said and a few feathers got ruffled. The main point of contention was a woman’s right to control pregnancy, either via contraception or abortion. My view was that it was something those involved should settle on, not people like me who didn’t have to live with the consequences of the decision. To the activists that view was just as unacceptable as abortion.

The largest of the lot was a person named Tony Abbott. He decided the quickest way to settle our differences was to take me downstairs and demonstrate how I was wrong by punching my head in.”

Abbott loves to speak about his sporting past which is more renowned for aggression than talent or finesse.

After being swiftly dumped from the rugby union team at Oxford, Tony entered the boxing ring where he got his much wanted blue for hitting people.

In the 80s, Abbott punched team mate Joe Hockey at football training leaving him unconscious and with two black eyes.  The angst was caused by Hockey’s disapproval with Tony’s captain’s picks for team selection.  How ironic.

Tony has skited about his point scored in the best and fairest awards for landing a good punch on an opponent suggesting that “sometimes, to be the best and fairest, you have to throw the first punch”.

He has admitted that his only skill at cricket was sledging.

This same ‘skill’ was on display in his threat to “shirtfront” Vladimir Putin.  What leader of a democratic nation speaks this way?

Throughout his public career, Abbott has expressed his dislike of outspoken women and his mistrust of homosexuals, finding both “threatening”.  His attitude to feminists and gays has changed little over the years.

During his time in the Howard Government, Tony Abbott was once escorted out of Parliament because he moved in a threatening manner towards the Opposition benches just after Labor’s Graham Edwards, a Vietnam Veteran who had lost both his legs during the Vietnam War, had interjected: “You’re a disgrace”.

Tony has admitted to ‘mistakes’ over the years, like when he personally attacked terminally ill campaigner, Bernie Banton.  These admissions only happen after public outrage and outing by the media.

After Abbott became leader of the Liberal Party, he encouraged his followers to attack Julia Gillard in the most personal vile sexist manner that I have ever viewed in politics.  And this is how the Abbott government has proceeded.  Watch how Christopher Pyne tries to shut down Kate Ellis on Q&A.

When the executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, Christiana Figueres, suggested we were already seeing the results of climate change and criticised Abbott’s Direct Action Plan as inadequate, he dismissed her saying she was “talking through her hat”.

Tony will not tolerate being questioned.

When asked about his “shit happens” comment about the death of a soldier in Afghanistan, Tony went into catatonic meltdown where the suppressed violence was palpable.

When asked why Peter Slipper was facing prosecution when Abbott had incorrectly claimed far greater expenses for his book signing tour, Abbott repeteadly says “the matter has been fully dealt with” before telling the female journalist to “calm down”.

When asked about corruption in the NSW government, Abbott attacked the female journalist.

“Prime minister, do you trust this government – the state government – which is proving to be corrupt, to deliver your major infrastructure plans?”

Abbott reacted angrily to the question, lecturing the woman who asked it and demanding that she “withdraw” the question.

“That is an entirely unjustified smear,” said Abbott.  “Let me not mince my words, madam, an entirely unjustified smear and frankly, I think you should withdraw that and apologise because there is no evidence whatsoever for that.”

This same attack mode is used against those within his own party who dare to speak up as shown by the violent verbal tirade directed against Wyatt Roy for suggesting that honesty might be a better way to deal with their broken promises.

“Abbott was furious. He rounded on Roy, yelled at him, then directed his remarks to all of them that there were no effing broken promises and no one should concede there had been.”

And if any further proof was needed, Tony Abbott’s reprehensible response to the report on children in detention shows exactly what sort of person we are dealing with.

“The Australian Bar Association and Law Council of Australia agree that personal attacks deflect attention from the very serious findings of the report and place an individual office holder under significant pressure – we cannot tolerate our public officials and institutions being subjected to this barrage for fulfilling their statutory duties,” ABA president Fiona McLeod and Law Council president Duncan McConnel said.  “To do so is to compromise the integrity of those institutions charged with holding the government to account.”

Tony Abbott is an aggressive controlling man who has been encouraged to believe his abilities are greater than they are.  He is a serial abuser.

What sort of message are we sending if we tolerate and reward this sort of behaviour?

Are we going to continue to be taken for mugs by this bully?

Are the Liberal Party and the media going to give him “the benefit of the doubt” yet again?

Will the people of Australia believe that a man whose natural reaction is aggression has “listened and changed”?

As Tony Abbott himself pointed out, “we need to have decent standards in this country. We need to have decent standards from the media, if I may say so as well as decent standards from politicians.”

Hear hear.

Murdoch is turning the screws again, this time he has Abbott in his sights. When, Andrew Bolt, Nicky Savva, and Team Murdoch turns on him. you just know he is in trouble, and Team Australia is abandoning him in their droves. Must be driving Brian Loughnane quite mad, having his wife being asked to step down, I wonder who and how many phone calls he is taking these days?

Illustration: Eric Lobbecke

NORMALLY, opposition parties are forced to cope with life in the wilderness. Not now. Today, and for almost 18 months, we have endured, enjoyed or been bewildered by government in the wilderness.

More disturbingly, the man in charge, so brilliant as opposition leader, so flawed as Prime Minister, shows few signs he is capable of leading his government out of it, and every sign the job is beyond him: that he is not up to it and might never be up to it.

The situation is that dire. Not because of a hostile media, a restless backbench or an effective opposition leader brimming with conviction or ideas, but because of the Prime Minister’s own actions.

Frontbenchers as well as backbenchers are realising it’s time to stop criticising staff and start directing the blame for the government’s predicament where it really belongs. With him. They now accept they have to convince him to change and if they can’t they will be forced to consider changing him. If their survival depends on his elimination, eliminate him they will. Count on it.

That is because ultimately Tony Abbott is responsible for all of it. He decides what is done, as well as who does it, he signs off on it or cedes the authority which ­allows it to happen, or simply turns a blind eye to it.

There is no guarantee the Prime Minister will perform better if he is forced to sack his chief of staff, Peta Credlin. Government insiders fear he has become psychologically dependent on her, a view supported by the private comments of friends who worry he would feel bereft without her.

Publicly his colleagues grappled with formulations to distance themselves from him after his decision to award a knighthood to Prince Philip without stabbing him in the front. Privately there was sorrow, anger, humiliation and as one said “utter utter disbelief” that he could do this to himself and to them. It will never be forgotten nor readily forgiven. Some were already doing ­numbers, apparently intending to impress upon him how much trouble he was in. After Monday, it acquired a deeper, more urgent focus.

According to one Liberal MP, the most obscure backbencher game enough or riled enough to put their hand up today would get 15 to 20 votes. Imagine what Julie Bishop could do if she wanted to.

Despite Kevin Andrews saying it has cost nothing, it could ultimately be the costliest decision Abbott has ever made because it encapsulated for sensible Liberals, including the monarchists, everything which is wrong with Abbott’s conduct as Prime Minister: his failure to consult; his failure to gauge the mood of the electorate; his failure to concentrate on issues mainstream Australians deem paramount; his failure to live up to repeated promises to do better.

Yesterday, his preparedness to accept responsibility, cop it on the chin and again undertake to consult more fell on increasingly deaf and hostile ears. They have heard it all before. Often.

If it was an isolated incident, he might have got away with it. If everything else was going swimmingly he might have got away with it. But it is not. Far from it. Unfortunately it is only the most recent of a very, very long line of blunders and miscalculations which have undermined his authority and diminished his capacity to prosecute the government’s case for tax reform, workplace changes or budget repair.

Take the Medicare rebate debacle. Abbott announced it after parliament rose, without backbench consultation, against the advice of Treasurer Joe Hockey and then health minister Peter Dutton. Days later as Christmas approached, he unveiled a ministerial reshuffle, including a new Health Minister, Sussan Ley.

Everyone went on holidays ­assuming it would automatically proceed as they had announced just because they had announced it.

Not bloody likely. Complicated, contentious policies have to be properly sold and explained ­before, during and after announcement.

Back in their electorates, MPs were confronted by irate GPs.

Queensland backbencher Mal Brough, flexing his muscles, was unhappy with the policy, as well as its plopping into the middle of the state election campaign, and orchestrated the campaign against it. Finally Ms Ley was called off the Titanic (or whatever cruise ship she was on), to declare the government would not proceed with the changes.

Unfortunately her cabinet colleague Bruce Billson was still strapped into his deck chair declaring, despite the icebergs, that it was full steam ahead. Another triumph for the internal communications of the government.

Abbott won the leadership five years ago as a result of a policy contest. If he falls as prime minister, policies will be a contributory factor, but it will be mainly because of the now fully exposed personality or character flaws.

The question is what next. The gloom will deepen and the resolve to act intensify if Queensland goes worse than expected, especially if Campbell Newman loses his seat. Abbott’s warnings to remember the consequences of the Rudd- Gillard battles and to consider that Ted Baillieu’s removal did not help in Victoria hold little sway. His faults are more pronounced and better known to voters than were Rudd’s, while the problem with Baillieu was not that he was removed, but that he was left there too long.

Liberals are evaluating the qualities of potential replacements, mainly Bishop and Malcolm Turnbull, with Scott Morrison on the periphery.

As Foreign Minister Bishop has performed very well, however, while she remains quarantined from them, she is also untested on domestic issues.

Turnbull is hated inside the party as much as he is admired outside it. His prospects would ­improve if he undertook not to push for an Emissions Trading Scheme until the rest of the world moved.

As one senior member of the government put it, choosing a leader is not so much about deciding who is the best candidate, but who is the least worst.

That is how Abbott got there and if he doesn’t improve, he will go out the same way.

Christianity, is the foundation of our freedoms according to Andrew Bolt the man who maintains I’m not a Christian. 6/10/2014

 

 

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/opinion/islams-violent-tendencies/story-fni0ffxg-1227080641770

The man with bilge for  brain gives yet another one of his interpretations of the history of the world. A thumbnail sketch that wouldn’t fit on the back of a stamp. Freedom had nothing to do with Christianity the concept of citizen was Greek the separation of  church and state had a much greater impact. Bolt seems to have overlooked the influence of the French Revolution.

The idiot says the “the names of organizations  tell the story” is he for real? Does the KKK spell Christian Racists? Did the Branch Davidians  tell their stories? Did Jones Town represent Bolt’s Christian ‘s ideal of freedom? They and many others like them made claims to the true Christianity. Where was the freedom in any of it? The Church of Scientology according to Bolt it’s in the name. The Boers in South Africa justified the lack of freedom  in their version of Christ message. So a mix Sunni radicals calling themselves Daesh, IS whatever they  aren’t representative of Islam.

Oh ISIL claiming to have a mandate means fuck all crazies throughout history claim mandates shit Tony Abbott claims a mandate for all sorts of things strange who amongst the Islamic world believe IS has a mandate ” Some non-Muslims might believe they  have a mandate and have converted. Some Muslims might as well however the majority don’t. Sunni and Shia  in India aren’t slaughtering each other. In Indonesia homosexuals, transvestites and transgender persons aren’t killed or stoned to death. Women are educated run for the highest office in the land and run businesses more so than here.

Again Bolt’s fact three  is totally meaningless. It’s strange that Bolt a professed non-Christian believes in  and quotes the bible as fact. The fact of  Christs  life. He sounds like a Dutch Calvinist a Reformationist. The bible is the word. That book has been interpreted and reinterpreted over the years so much it has people dancing with snakes in the name of god. Speaking in tongues in the name of god. Justifying violence against the state in the name of god ( Timothy Mcveigh).  Christians have slaughtered apostates throughout history and found it biblically justified. Here we have Bolt a declared non believer telling us the word. What a bullshit artist the man is and such a bad one at that

The Nazi’s had an ideology maybe not god at the centre. Social Darwinism the natural order the evolution of things. It was an Ideology nevertheless  to justify their existence. Eugenics was their proof. God wasn’t a central tenet  so it had no guilt breaking any agreements it made with the Catholic church. Science ,Eugenics were nominated as their god

“Islam’s violent tendencies” is Bolt’s unsophisticated figment and simplistic justification for his Ultra Racism

 

Andrew Bolt is not only Lazy by repeating last weeks Blog in the Herald Sun today. He is as dangerous as any terrorist propaganda.

Bolt is a Troll a lazy one at that he ran  same blog on Noel Pearson  last week. It was moronic then and is today. It was made up nonsense then and still is today. It was lies then and still is specious today.

Jackie Lambie represents an electorate not any Aboriginal community. Bolt speaks of her as if she is some representative. He gives her voice he gives her attention so he can knock her down. Bolt needs space a fatuous filler for his meaningless argument about parliamentary representation. . He is not only lazy but a danger he is constructing an argument about  Noel Pearson, the constitution which is self-serving,  narcissistic, racist bullshit.

Noel Pearson unlike Lambie does represent some Aboriginal communities not all but some, so he does have a legitimate voice. Nowhere does he argue what Bolt attributes to him, that a separate parliamentary voice is needed.  Bolt is a liar, a coward protected in his Murdoch tower.

He and Pearson agree on the constitution. They agree that race is a non issue. Pearson isn’t asking for a separate parallel parliament nor any special place in the current parliamentary  structure.  Bolt is just needs us to believe it for his argument’s sake. He constructs the  lies to  knock them down and attributes them to Pearson. Bolt’s whole blog is  a wank nothing to do with reality other than to say “look at me aren’t I a clever prick”

We live in a differentiated society. Representative associations act as advisers to the government on all sorts of matters ANIC ,AHA, IPA etc they lobby and advise  the government ministers on all sorts of issues. To say we are a society of individuals alone with equal influence is crap. Newscorp is a lot more than just a bunch of  individuals with varying opinions. Bolt is part of that corporate tribe.

Aboriginal people are a number groups (mobs)which have both common and separate interests 13 different clans are meeting the PM as we speak. Bolt always refers to them as one amorphous whole it suits his lazy simplistic argument. He does it with Islam and the left and any number of people. It’s taken over a year for these 13 clans to have this broken promised meeting with the Abbott who also happens to be their current minister and whose department is non functioning  shambles at the moment. Warren Mundine is his Abbotts personal adviser on Aboriginal affairs one man. Mundine is not representative of Aborigines at all.

Pearson is Advocating an inclusive representative organization a body of Aboriginals to advice the minister. What Andrew Bolt  is racist in that? He is not talking colour he is talking common and separate interests of varying communities both isolated and urban . Pearson is talking about representational and inclusive government isn’t that our current democratic system?. If Bolt suggests there is something nefarious in that he is self-serving scum whose running a polemic for polemics sake.  This country is divided into interest groups political parties, womens groups etc etc etc the Abbott government listens to them through their representative organizations and notthrough a single adviser like Mundine or Noel Pearson. Gay groups, Right wing think tanks and even Newscorp have a voice. Tony Abbott has dinner with Murdoch because their friends, pigs arse. Singling out Noel Pearson and using him to run your inane  specious argument is racist and a self-serving offering of crap. I bet you wouldn’t dare  run this shit by Noel Pearson face to face  Bolt only from the safety of your  Murdoch tower. Ask him to talk to you on the Bolt Report in the studio you gutless media troll.