Saturday 3 May 2008

"Moggy Musings" [Archived material from Boy the Wonder Cat]

Furry musing:
Bernard Salt, a self-styled demographer, says that in a few years about 30% of all Australians will live alone and that many will have companion animals instead of kids. He calls these households fur families.
I like it. Pets rule, O.K.!
You're my Hero musing:
This week Tuffy the Queensland kitten was rescued from the fatal clutches of a large python by her human, Ruth Butterworth, who was bitten twice and had her arm broken during the rescue. Ruth was a real hero and Tuffy is one lucky cat in March 2008.
An adoption musing:
Every week on the NSW North Coast a number of cats and dogs find themselves without a home.
If you want to do your bit and give one bundle of joy a new family, contact Happy Paws on 0419 404 766

Friday 2 May 2008

Macklin concerned about people fleeing her policies

Federal Minister for Indigenous Affairs Jenny Macklin is reported across the media as being concerned at the number of indigenous Australians who are voting with their feet and fleeing the draconian Northern Territory Intervention.
 
Well the only surprise here is that it has taken so long to happen. This current small population shift is bound to grow bigger over time.
Nobody wants to stay in places where government agencies and personnel treat you like second-class citizens. Where everyone is reduced to using a form of ration card, stripped of what little dignity has been afforded them and handled as though they are idiots.
 
Last night Radio Australia told the world that part of the NT population is moving.
Embarrassing for the Rudd Government, but twice as embarrassing for all those who voted for a change in government attitude and behaviour.
 
So what are you going to do now, Ms. Macklin. Forbid people to move out of Northern Territory indigenous townships without a signed pass? Then you will truly earn the title Jackboot Jenny.
 
The NT Intervention used a model and strategies which were bound to fail because they were based on forms of coercion and racism.
The Rudd Government needs to pull out of this approach completely or lose credibility. Not next week, not next month - now.
There are better ways to address the well-documented problems in rural and remote communities.

Canberra show pony or prime minister?

So now the Prime Minister has backed away from his fulsome support of Morris Iemma's daft idea to privatise NSW power supplies.
Rudders, you should never have backed this nag in the first place.
It was wrong to open your mouth (for the sake of a media moment) and put this state's essential services further at risk by supporting privatisation.
Trying to straddle the electric fence now, by telling Iemma he should 'negotiate' with the unions, is nothing but show pony prance.
Mate - it's time you decided if you are going to be a Labor prime minister in the finest tradition or if you are going to be a closet Liberal with a well-to-do wife.
Just to jog your memory a bit. The electorate voted for a Labor man.

Thursday 1 May 2008

Is Obama experiencing donor fatigue or is the race thang starting to bite?

In the space of two days the Obama for America team offered two 'gifts' if I contribute to the senator's campaign.
  • To meet this deadline and celebrate our grassroots donors, we've created a special gift. Make a donation of $30 or more before midnight on Wednesday, April 30th, and receive a limited edition Vote for Change T-shirt
  • To meet this deadline and celebrate our grassroots donors, we've created a special gift.Make a donation of $15 or more before midnight on Wednesday, April 30th, and receive a limited edition Vote for Change car magnet
I have to wonder if Barak Obama's constant drive for political donations is starting to hit the wall.
Or is the constant race thread underlying Clinton and McCain campaigning starting to bite into Obama's support base?
 
On MSNBC last Sunday.
 
McCain spoke with reporters in Miami Sunday afternoon at a press conference that had been hastily arranged late Friday night. The ostensible purpose of the event was to allow the presumptive GOP nominee to continue criticizing Obama for not supporting his gas tax holiday proposal.

But what was seemingly meant as another chapter in an ongoing series of criticism quickly moved toward the issue of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright and the North Carorlina Republican Party's continued commitment to airing an ad referencing Wright's comments in connection with Obama. Over the course of an 18-minute press conference McCain used Obama's name an average of once per minute -- many times in response to direct questions but almost every time in a disparaging context.
 
McCain's feeble defence of his covert support of this advertisement reported from a Democrats perspective here.

Has the American Far Right found the Australian Left's perfect storm?

It is a constant source of amazement to find that the topics global warming and climate change can generate such vitriolic nonsense.

Yesterday, American journalist Don Feder in
Front Page Mag.

"Every newborn baby in Australia represents a potent source of greenhouse gas emissions for an average of 80 years, not simply by breathing but by the profligate consumption of resources typical of our society," Walters writes.
The left is incapable of viewing individuals as anything other than polluters, never as producers or innovators -- let alone seeing them in spiritual terms, as manifestations of God's goodness.
Global Warming is the left's perfect storm -- a force to demolish faith, family and freedom. There's no area of our lives that can't be invaded -- taxed, controlled, regulated or obliterated -- in the name of serving and protecting the planet.
Unlike food production and oil reserves, the myth of man-made Global Warming is resistant to factual analysis. The left treats it as revealed truth and skeptics are scorned as heretics and troglodytes -- the scientific equivalent of Holocaust-deniers. Al Gore, the movement's P.T. Barnum-cum-Grand Inquisitor, compares them to the cranks who believe the earth is flat.
If Global Warming didn't exist, the left would have to invent it. In fact, they did. As Nigel Calder, former editor of the British magazine New Scientist explains: "Twenty years ago, climate research became politicized in favor of one particular hypothesis, which redefined the study as the effect of the study of greenhouse gasses. As a result, the rebellious spirits essential for innovative and trustworthy science are greeted with impediments to their research careers."
Still, the evidence is there for those not blinded by dogma. Al Gore's brain is melting faster than the Arctic ice cap, which is making a spectacular comeback.

With a delicious touch of irony, a typical Australian response to the American far-right might be encapsulated in this picture found at Tim Blair's
climate change denialist blog.

Mrs. Iemma - do us all a favour and wash your son's mouth out with Sunlight soap

Little Morrie Iemma must be a constant shame to his mother.
His constant ducks and drakes approach to the truth would worry any parent.
It certainly worries NSW voters if the latest Newspoll survey, showing a 56% dissatisfaction rate for the Premier, is any indication.
Here is his
latest.

"PREMIER Morris Iemma's office gave written assurances via email to unions three weeks before the 2007 election that it had no intention of privatising the power industry and that it would remain in public hands.
The unions have now released the correspondence to accuse Mr Iemma of lying to workers - and voters - who had no idea the power sell-off was on the agenda ahead of polling day. With only one in eight delegates expected to back the power sale at this weekend's ALP state conference, the emergence of Mr Iemma's post-election switch will further damage his standing. An email from Mr Iemma's senior staff to a key power union in March last year categorically rejected any plans for the Government to privatise the electricity sector, claiming it would remain a "key service" of government."

Meanwhile up in the top paddock.....

According to ABC News
yesterday the Commonwealth Public Service Union thinks that "Mr Rudd is sending a clear message that he wants to return to a Westminster system in which public servants tell the Government what it needs to know, rather than what it wants to hear.
"Through a range of means it was made clear throughout the period of the Howard years and with some ministers in particular, not all of them, that it wasn't a career move to give certain sorts of advice on matters that didn't align with the Government's particular philosophy or view," he said."

But is that really what the Prime Minister is saying in his
Address to Heads of Agencies and Members of Senior Executive Service in Canberra yesterday.
In a quiet way Kevin Rudd is signalling that tenure remains uncertain for senior levels in the public service.