Wednesday 22 January 2014

A Clarence valley voice in a wider forum


Clarence valley resident Charles Lincoln hold strong views on how the Abbott government regards pensioners. Mr Lincoln voiced his opinion in a contribution to the letters section of The Sun Herald (January 19).

Pension fears

 We have returned the Conservatives to power and as pensioners it appears that we may have done the wrong thing, as we now find that this government has openly stated that the pensioners are rorting the system with regards to concessional rebates on council rates (''Retirees furious over rate rort claim'', January 12).

This concession has not been raised with regards to the cost of living adjustments for seven decades.

So if this concessional rebate is a rort, in the eyes of the Federal Government, does it mean that all of the other pensioner concessions such as chemist prescriptions, doctor visits, transport and many more are also rorts?

Pensioners and all self-funded retirees must watch closely to make sure that the concessions that they have at present are not further eroded to improve the bottom line of the government, because increases in pensions are only 28 per cent of the average wage and each time that the CPI is increased we get further behind. 

Charles Lincoln, Gulmarrad

Cabs for hire?


While not quite being in the same league as John Mortimer of Rumpole of the Bailey fame, Aussie barrister Stuart Littlemore has shown he's more than just a pretty face with a clever way with the spoken word.

The third in Littlemore's Harry Curry series, Harry Curry: Rats and Mice, is as good as the first two instalments, The Harry Curry Collection and Harry Curry: The Murder Book.


However, readers must be disappointed with publisher Harper Collins declaring Rats and Mice is Littlemore's final instalment in the Harry Curry series. 


This reader was hoping Harry Curry's partner and mother of their child, Arabella Engineer, who has made exceptional progress in her career inthe legal profession was part of the legal team at the NSW ICAC when former, and disgraced, NSW MP Eddie Obeid and his associates were making their many appearances. That, especially the behind-the-scenes bits, sure would have made for interesting reading

A few of this reader's favourite snippets from Rats and Mice are:

(Harry's) mood when he got off the plane was not good. He clipped another car's mudguard backing the Landcruiser out of its parking space, but pretended he hadn't noticed.

David Surrey (Harry's instructing solicitor): I've volunteered to take the Legal Aid list ... A week or so of rats and mice, probably mostly guilty pleas. You just have to roll your arm over.  ...


... running inferior cases for inferior suburban solicitors who have yet to learn the fundamental rule of litigation: never believe your client.



Tuesday 21 January 2014

Ibbotson V Edwards: In which Ibbotson becomes desperate to land a blow, any blow


On 6 January 2014 Patricia Edwards had this article written on behalf of the Clarence Valley Conservation Coalition published in The Daily Examiner:

 

Moose call driven by cash worry

 

IN February last year the government in the American state of Minnesota cancelled its annual moose hunting season and surprised hunters by instead declaring its intention to track and study the animals with the aid of radio tracking technology.
At about the same time, the state of New Hampshire approved $695,000 for a four-year study of its moose population. The New Hampshire study also involved tracking individual animals fitted with radio collars.
What is the reason for this about-turn on American animal protection?
Moose are vanishing from the Canadian and North American landscape at an unprecedented rate.
The New York Times recently reported an almost complete disappearance of one of Minnesota's once thriving moose populations which in the 1990s numbered around 4000 animals. It also detailed a second population that had abruptly declined from around 8000 to fewer than 3000 animals in an equally short space of time.
The studies and tracking are expected to help identify the cause of the alarming decline by informing scientists about where and why the moose have died.
In the meantime there are already indications that shorter, warmer winters and hotter summers, with associated heat stress, increasing parasitic loads through altered climate-driven life-cycles, and forest defoliation and destruction through outbreaks of pine-bark beetles, are combining to bring about changes that the moose have been unable to adapt to.
In the way of the African elephants, moose, being large-leaf, flower, fruit and shrub feeding (browsing) animals, play an important role in the food chain lifecycle by creating and maintaining grassland habitat for grazing animals.
One concern raised by their deaths is what effect their disappearance will have on the natural ecosystem and the other animals that ultimately depend on them.
Another issue is that New Hampshire's moose-based tourism generates an annual income of $115m.
So naturally the looming inevitable loss of tourist dollars, if and when the moose cease to exist, is the main catalyst for the hunting ban by the government and the instigation of scientific research.
Sadly, always the human order.
The right moves, for all the wrong reasons.
The reader will note that the terms climate change or global warming are not used. Indeed this piece is based on a New York Times article on the same subject which begins; Across North America — in places as far-flung as Montana and British Columbia, New Hampshire and Minnesota — moose populations are in steep decline. And no one is sure why.

This didn’t pause the pen of the Clarence Valley’s climate change denier-in-chief John Ibbotson who ignored the balance in the New York Times article - I suspect because he sees red anytime he catches sight of an Edwards’ signature. 

On 11 Jan 2014 he replied on The Daily Examiner letters to the editor page:

 

Moose population
IN Voices of the Earth (DEX 6/1) there was an article on North American moose, based on a NY Times article (14/10). It was a misleading green article from the world's greenest major paper.
It effectively said that across the US and Canada, experts have reported that moose populations are dwindling at alarming rates and global warming and its many side effects are responsible.
Not quite so. And overall the moose population is increasing.
There are problems with some moose populations but it is a patchwork of ups and downs across the continent and it has nothing to do with AGW.
For example, there are problems in Minnesota, Montana, and in Colorado too, but Colorado has been restocking with excess moose from next door in Utah. On the other hand, in Maine, with 76,000 (3/4 of the lower 48 total), they're increasing, while in New Hampshire they have nearly disappeared, although that is a special case because the moose had been hunted to extinction there.
Starting in the 1970s a new population had been built up but it is hard to say what is causing its demise this time. Quite likely it has been hunted to "extinction" again.
And blaming AGW is wrong as we need to remember that global warming, by definition, means the whole world, not just cherry picked hotspots selected to "prove" a particular point of view.
In the Canadian moose provinces, the populations in the Yukon 70,000, the NW Territories 50,000 and Ontario are stable, while in Quebec the population has doubled to 120,000 since the 1990s. Further north in Alaska, which has the most moose (200,000), the population fluctuates but is stable.
So why does it vary so dramatically from area to area and year to year?
The best research has been by Alaska, which has been doing it for more than 50 years. Not only does it have the largest population of the biggest moose, which are twice as big (2m at the shoulder with 2m wide racks) as those seen in Yellowstone, but it is an important food resource for the bush population.
Alaska has found that the biggest factor affecting populations is snowfall. The second is wolf predation and the third hunting and road/rail kill. (In heavy snow years the moose walk along the railroad tracks and try to butt the trains out of the way. They never win but they have derailed trains.) In other US states, man outhunts the wolves.
Man may even be the major cause in the northern US states. When jobs are scarce, like they have been since the GFC, poaching becomes a bigger problem.
As for the ticks. They do occur over most of the moose's range. They are significantly worse in states that have large white tailed deer populations.
They don't have much effect on the deer, which groom themselves and each other, something the moose don't do. And for states such as Minnesota, which has 1,000,000 deer and less than 4000 moose, it is hard to blame the moose for the tick numbers, particularly as in "no deer" areas there are few, if any, ticks.
This makes one a little leery of the final piece of advice in the NY Times article by a biologist (really?): "The solution to the tick problem might be, paradoxically, more moose hunting. ...We should kill more if we want healthy moose." Talk about not understanding the problem.
And all this sounds like a replacement for the non-disappearing polar bears, which have doubled in numbers since the AGW fiasco started.
John Ibbotson
Gulmarrad

Needless to say Mr. Ibbotson is attempting to mislead yet again by decrying the 162 year-old New York Times as a ‘green’ newspaper, building an unnecessary straw man from the article in order to immediately knock it down with ‘dodgy’ facts and, arguing from a classic misunderstanding of the dynamics of global warming leading to long-term climate change.

BACKGROUND


On February 6, the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources announced they were suspending their moose hunting program in the state indefinitely. The decision was made after the state’s strongest population in the northeast corner of the state saw a 35 percent decline from 2012 to 2013 (4,230 to 2,760) and a 70 percent decline since 2006 (8,840 to 2,760). Just weeks earlier, the DNR had initiated an aggressive moose mortality research project to determine just what is killing the animals. The $1.2 million project will focus on collaring 110 moose and tracking their activity. As of February 13, the agency had reported that they lost the signal for three of the collared moose – if the animals have died, the researchers may have the first opportunity to recover the carcasses and assess cause of death.
While Minnesota is reporting the most dramatic declines, other states throughout the animals’ southern range are also seeing declining populations. In New Hampshire, there are now estimated to be 4,600 moose when the population was once around 7,000 animals. In the Rocky Mountain west, Montana and Wyoming have reported population declines as well and have reduced hunting tags as a result. Montana reported a 40 percent drop in available tags from 769 to 463 between 1995 and 2010. In addition, the Jackson Hole, WY moose herd is at 919 animals, about a quarter of the state’s objective of 3,600 animals. Only Maine has shown a growing population of moose with a recent aerial study estimating more than 75,000 animals, mostly in the more isolated northern part of the state.

The Standard Examiner 30 October 2013:

OGDEN -- Although moose populations are on the decline in many parts of the northern United States, here in Utah, the animals seem to be holding their own -- for now.
"Our populations are not particularly declining, but they are stagnant in some areas," said Phil Douglass, Northern Region outreach manager for the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources.
However, this population stagnation concerns DWR officials enough that they have biologists looking into it.
"We've initiated some studies here in Utah to try to get a handle on what's happening with moose mortality," Douglass said.
"Some parts (of the state) are doing OK, others we're concerned about, so we're studying it right now, trying to find out what's happening."
One of those places where moose are doing particularly well is the Ogden area. The moose population here has been so robust that, three or four years ago, wildlife officials relocated about 40 of the animals out of the area.
"We thinned the population here to what the surrounding habitat can support," Douglass said. [Utah has been involved in a moose transplant program since 1973]


Moose have wandered into Colorado occasionally, but there was no breeding population until animals were introduced to North Park from Utah and Wyoming in 1978 and 1979. Populations have expanded to nearby counties (and Rocky Mountain National Park), and animals have been transplanted to the Upper Rio Grande drainage and Grand Mesa. Individual moose may also wander widely from their usual mountain haunts, to the edge of the plains, for example, where they sometimes graze alongside cattle. [There are an estimated 2,300 moose in Colorado]

The Star 16 October 2013:

Moose populations are thinning out in certain parts of Ontario, mirroring a disturbing pattern across other parts of North America....
Brant Allison, senior northwest regional biologist with Ontario’s Ministry of Natural Resources, says that moose “are important to the biodiversity of the province.”
Allison said he is seeing declines in Canadian jurisdictions near Minnesota, including Manitoba and the northwestern and northeastern parts of Ontario.
“We are definitely concerned,” he said, adding that biologists in Ontario have been in touch with their counterparts in Minnesota and Manitoba to see what the current research reveals.
“We are watching. They’re still trying to figure it out,” he said.
In the southeast part of Manitoba, some of the moose hunts have been closed for roughly past year....
In the Cariboo Mountains of British Columbia, a recent study found that an epidemic of pine bark beetles led to a loss of trees and left the moose more exposed to human and animal predators.

CBC News 15 October 2013:

According to B.C.’s Ministry of the Environment, moose populations have dropped by 50 per cent since 2005 in the Prince George region.
Other regions in B.C. have seen declines of almost 70 per cent in the same time.

Liberal Senator Corey Bernardi attracts critics by the score


“Cory is deluded,” says a Liberal Party colleague.
“He is one of the least effective or important members of the parliamentary team.
Cory is a person without any intellect, without any base,
and he should really never have risen above the position of branch president.
His right-wing macho-man act is just his way of looking as though he stands for something.”
[The Monthly December 2011]


January 2014 is turning into a cruel month for that notorious Liberal Party political wingnut and former Shadow Parliamentary Secretary Assisting the Leader of the Opposition Tony Abbott, Senator Cory Bernardi.

First he found himself satirized and criticized in citizen book reviews on Amazon, then he was publicly attacked by colleagues.

The Sydney Morning Herald 9 January 2013:

Liberal senator Sue Boyce has accused Cory Bernardi of lacking compassion and ''genuine Christianity'' in his attacks on ''non-traditional'' families and women who have abortions.
The Guardian 8 January 2013:
...the north Queensland Liberal MP Warren Entsch, who has a record of advocating on behalf of same-sex couples, has since offered a more vigorous response, raising concern over Bernardi’s “obsessions” with gay people. He asked whether Bernardi would advocate sterilisation if a member of his family turned out to be gay.
“It worries me,” Entsch told Fairfax Media in a story published on Wednesday. “You've really got to watch out for those that have these obsessions. He who protests the loudest …”
Entsch also said that as a stepfather he was offended by Bernardi's comment that a biological mother and father who were married represented the ''gold standard'' for children's development.
News Corp Australia quoted Bernardi as saying he had no comment about Entsch’s criticism “as the lawyers are having a look at it”.
“I have learned never to have public spats with colleagues who speak of books they haven't read,” he told a journalist via text message. "It's generally a waste of time."

However, it doesn’t end there for this senator from South Australia - a website exists, Sorry About Cory, on which his fellow South Australians apologise for Bernardi’s activities in advance:


Then there is a Facebook account solely dedicated to those who have offended Bernardi, People Blocked By Cory Bernardi's Page:
This boy -- let's call him Troy -- grew up with hopes and dreams, believing Australia is a free society, where we all had a right to express our opinions unfettered by those in power and by those who seek it.

But then, years later, he came up against Senator Cory Bernardi.

The boy, now a man, asked Cory innocently: "If free speech is for all, then why have you blocked my friend?" Cory's response? He banned Troy from asking Cory a question ever again.

Tragedies like this have become all too common. Don't let this happen to you. Do whatever Cory tells you. Believe whatever Cory believes. Before we're all banned from asking questions

  • Senator Bernardi must be longing for 11 February to arrive - when all MPs and senators return to Parliament House and he can rely on his colleagues to find even more outrageous ways to offend voters.
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