Sunday, 13 September 2009

When is John Howard going to realise he's dead and lie down?


I'm getting sick and tired of the way former Australian prime minister John Howard keeps popping up in the media giving his totally useless views on current Australian politics and world affairs.

He lost the last federal election for the Coalition - if they don't shut him up he will lose the next as well.
This media tart's irritation factor is 100+.

Maudie's Ex
Yamba

Guest Speak is a North Coast Voices segment allowing serious or satirical comment from NSW Northern Rivers residents. Email ncvguestpeak at live dot com dot au to submit comment for consideration.

Is Turnbull concerned about Australia's productivity or his own support base?


This is Leader of the Opposition Malcolm Turnbull at the end of this week's media cycle in The Australian:

MALCOLM Turnbull is open to reintroducing individual workplace contracts, insisting that Kevin Rudd's "inflexible" industrial relations laws have reduced national productivity.....
"By reducing flexibility in the workplace they have put, we would say, real constraints on productivity growth," Mr Turnbull said. "We believe that flexibility in the workplace is of enormous importance."

Real constraints on productivity growth looks rather impressive at first glance.
Except.........................................................












Click on images to enlarge

Now I recall that the Work Choices regime was introduced about March 2006 and continued through beyond the November 2007 federal election until July this year. Although certain arrangements made under its provisons will not expire until 2010-14.

Looking at the graphs it seems that a) Australia had enjoyed a steady historical rise in productivity prior to the introduction of the Howard Government's Work Choices (heavily reliant on the idea of individual employment contracts) and b) experienced no high productivity surge after Work Choices began and productivity actually levelled off in 2006-07, with the last growth peak occurring back in 2003-04 and the highest average increase in multifactor productivity recorded between 1993-99.


Once more Malcolm Turnbull appears to have put his mouth in motion before he considered known facts as he courts the Liberal Party heartland.

Indeed he offers no proof that the Rudd Government's industrial relations policy is having a marked negative effect or is likely to have such a negative effect on national productivity.

First graph from Australian Bureau of Statistics, Australian System of National Accounts, 2006-07
Second graph from the Commonwealth Treasury, Economic Roundup Winter 2007

Gulmarrad land clearing in the lower Clarence Valley


From The Daily Examiner letters to the editor on 9 September 2009

Gulmarrad land clearing

I found The Daily Examiner's report of the Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water's failure to prosecute those responsible for alleged illegal land clearing at Gulmarrad very disturbing.
Land clearing is a major contributor to global warming and the decline of virtually all native animal species in Australia and must be stopped.
However, while ever we continue to ignore the dollar value of the eco-services our forests provide, there are those who will continue to break the law for their own financial gain.
Ineffective government regulators who either let these breaches go unpunished or impose little more than a slap on the wrist are therefore complicit in the loss of biodiversity that, if not reversed, will threaten our own existence.

JOHN EDWARDS
South Grafton

Aussie business confidence up with employment prospects growing stronger - will the NSW Northern Rivers benefit?


Manpower Inc has joined Dun & Bradstreet in reporting some positive news for Oz on the business and employment front.
In fact both place this country in a pretty enviable position, with employers expecting profits to increase (Dun & Bradstreet) and the intent to hire employees still being weak but relatively strong when compared to the rest of the world (Manpower).
As zero growth was a common economic prediction at the beginning of 2009, it's good to see so many crystal ball gazers are so wrong.
Australian business confidence is now at a six-year high and job ads in the newspapers and online have started to increase.
Given that Kevin Rudd's popularity in the polls is still going strong, I guess the country credits Federal Labor and its economic policy with much of this good news.
The big question for us in the Northern Rivers is: will all this translate into more jobs in the region?
I suspect that national confidence levels aren't always mirrored locally and business is more likely to be asking if the present predilection for 'staycations' will result in more domestic tourism business in the hinterland and on the coast at Christmas 2009 and in the first quarter of 2010.

Manpower Inc press release
Dun & Bradstreet National Business Expectations Study article
Latest 8th September Newspoll graphic
NSW North Coast tourism industry facts & figures

Saturday, 12 September 2009

American multinational tries to lock the gate to is website? Happy little Vegemites around the globe must be laughing


I have to admit that I haven't tried the new Vegemite with added cream cheese. My traditional tummy churns at the mere thought of this almost blasphemous concoction.
However recent Core Economics and Boing Boing posts aroused my curiosity as to why U.S. multinational Kraft Foods doesn't want anyone to link to its official Vegemite website.
Kraft's site states:
Terms of Use, Disclaimer and Copyright Notice
This website (http://www.vegemite.com.au) (the "Site") is owned and operated by Kraft Foods Limited (ACN 004 125 071). Access to and use of this Site is subject to the following terms and conditions and all applicable laws. If you do not agree to these terms and conditions, you must not access or otherwise use this Site.
In this Notice, "KRAFT Australia", "we" and "us" means Kraft Foods Limited.
The Site is designed to be useful, informative and fun. We welcome any comments and inquiries in relation to the site.
Er...... I had to access the site to read this notice.
So who's going to knock me off the Internet instantanément?
Does Kraft have a 24/7 cyber bully out there with its finger on a get-outta-here button?
Is its 'competition' to name the new pseudo Vegemite throwing up some abuse from happy little traditionalists or have there been more than a few critics out in the blogosphere over the years causing this attempt to restrict access?
Is Kraft going to send a cease and desist notice to the Wikipedia for multiple linkings, The Vegemite Wife ex-pat for posting images of that spread jar, Australian Flavour for linking to its jingle audio or Rupert Murdoch's News Ltd Weekly Times for linking to the website in para 2 of its 28th August 2009 article?
Want to ask Kraft what this guff is all about - email
australia@kraftasia.com. G'arn!

The hills of Coorabell



















Coorabell by Rodney Black

Return to Coorabell by Marc Rambeau

Only in America would an argument be mounted that receiving money from the government is bad for your health


A good-on-ya to Peter Martin for unearthing this little bewdy: The Short-Term Mortality Consequences of Income Receipt.
This is an argument for the basic proposition that people on low incomes are likely to die shortly after they receive welfare payments, one-off stimulus payments or tax rebate cheques, because being 'flush' with money they consume more or become more active.
Yeah, and starving people often died immediately after being fed by liberating troops in the Second World War too.
I particularly liked the last para which tends to stick in the craw; "Finally, we noted in the introduction that some health researchers have suggested that a way to reduce inequality in health outcomes across socioeconomic groups is to simply increase income transfers to low income groups. The results in this paper indicate that the benefits of such a policy regime shift are far from certain. There is little evidence to date that cash transfers increase health. In contrast, the results in this paper show that, in the short run, there is a pronounced negative consequence to cash infusions for a wide variety of groups."
This truly earth-shattering research comes from a couple of economists working out of Notre Dame and Maryland universities in America. Figures.

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


A grassy knoll musing: My little canine friend, Veronica Lake, says that humans she meets are starting to wonder about the number of Google searches coming out of Canberra which have the term "therese rein" plus "company", "ethics", "asic" or "problems".
Ronnie is wondering if Malcolm Turnbull's dogs are trying to dig up another mole for their master because his last one ran away. :-D

A bookish musing: Ashby cattle dogs Rolly, Trudy and Rose are about to join Clarence Valley local Steve Otton's old mate Tiny as the subject of a children's book due out in 2011, called RT and Rose: Three Dogs and a Beach Adventure.
Tiny: a little dog on a big adventure is in online bookstores now.

Humans aren't the top of the evolutionary tree musing:
Now as a bona fide Aussie moggy I think that cats are top of the tree, but I do realise that almost every species has the potential to equal humans when in comes to affection, loyalty and mateship.
Mickey the chocolate-coloured Kelpie pup from Nymboida who stayed for five days besides his injured companion dog Buddy. Bringing him wild-caught food and helping to chew through the fallen branch which had impaled him and, then when the older dog was freed leading this sick mate home to a worried owner and the splendid care of South Grafton Veterinary Clinic - well that is a dog who is the equal of humankind! Story here.


An all creatures great & small musing:
Monday 27 August 2009 is Cupcake Day for the RSPCA.
It's time to bake up a storm and raise money to help Australian animals who are experiencing hard times or abuse.
Go to this RSPCA link for details. Patty cake, patty cake....I know you all can!

Friday, 11 September 2009

And they're off! 2009 Grafton to Inverell Cycling Classic underway tomorrow, 12 September 2009


The 49th edition of the Grafton to Inverell Cycle Classic will be held tomorrow, 12 September 2009 starting from Market Square, Pound Street, Grafton at 8am through to 8.30am.

Billed as the toughest one day race in Australia, the category one event will have a record 272 cyclists in three grades contesting the nine hour long 228km course.
There prize pool contains a total $27,000 in cash plus prizes and random draws.

The race can be listened to online at www.2nz.com.au


Some of the elite men's teams already committed for the 228km event include Fly V Australia, Dixon Homes, Praties, Team Budget Forklifts, HYPE, Mace-McDonagh Blake and Shortis Cycle & Tri.
Cameron Jennings, Peter Herzig and Peter Ladd (all Team Budget Fork lifts) and Tour de Geelong winner Darren Rolfetheir and Bernard Sulzberger, Ben King, Jonathon Cantwell (Fly V) are among those registered. The race also sometimes draws talented off-road racers. World 24-hour solo mountain bike champion Jason English will try his luck on the road this year after cross country star Chris Jongewaard finished second last year.Whilst the focus may be on the pointy end of the race in the elite division, organisers were thrilled to receive 142 entries in the master categories. The Under 23s will also have strong representation with riders from as far away as New Zealand, Launceston, Hobart, Fremantle and Rockhampton.
As for women's competition, the numbers are also up in the second running of the Celtic Country Classic de Femme with 36 women from across the country competing in this year's 95km event.

For more information http://www.graftontoinverellcycleclassic.com.au/

Who won't be the 2009 Australian employer of the year? (Part Two)


Well this is a bit of a surprise! The employer referred to a Federal Parliament privileges committee by the Senate for allegedly threatening a witness to an inquiry according to A possible contempt in relation to a witness to the Committee's inquiry into Access to Justice: Report to the Senate:
1.25 The committee recommends that a possible contempt by the Aboriginal Legal Service Western Australia in relation to a witness who submitted evidence to the inquiry into Access to Justice be referred to the Standing Committee of Privileges.

The short submission from a Yawuru/Bard woman which started all the fuss.
Another version of the matter mentioned in the first submission.

Will someone buy that senator a ticket - pleeeze!


I couldn't believe my ears. Reading between the lines it looks like Steve Fielding wants to go Afghanistan - just think of the headlines he could generate and the multiple spellings he could try out for the name of the country and monikers of leading war lords.
"The chamber would not know this, but I have been speaking to Minister Faulkner and the previous minister for defence about some sort of delegation going to Afghanistan. I am deadset serious about this because this is a good opportunity." is the exact quote according to Hansard on 7/8/09.
Can someone buy this unrepresentative, attention seeking, political simpleton a one-way ticket before the next election?
Maybe we can get his citizenship revoked while he's gone.

Upriver Bill
Northern Rivers

Guest Speak is a North Coast Voices segme allowing serious or satirical comment from NSW Northern Rivers residents.
Email ncvguestpeak at live dot com dot au to submit comment for consideration.

Anti-Obama hysterics in Red, White & Blue Land



Google Trends actually has recordable data using the terms; obama is evil, obama is a socialist, obama wants to kill, obama wants to increase tax.
These terms began to get traction in late 2008 after Barack Obama's inauguration.
Google Trends also has enough data for President Obama's death and possible assassin to get a mention.
Can the U.S. anti-Obama hysteria get anymore frantic?


Thursday, 10 September 2009

Small investors' rights are better protected in countries such as Botswana, Romania, Ghana and Georgia than they are in Australia.

A World Bank study has ranked Australian laws and regulations on investor protection at 57th in the world. So low is Australia's ranking, it lags behind Botswana, Romania, Ghana and Georgia.

The top three nations are New Zealand, Singapore and Hong Kong.

The Sydney Morning Herald points out the Australian legal system is weak at holding directors liable for related-party transactions.

The report gave high marks to Australia's disclosure regime and shareholders' ability to sue a company, but it found laws on director liability were unusually weak. Overall, the Doing Business 2010 report ranked Australia the ninth-best place to conduct business of 183 economies, based on an assessment of 11 aspects of running a business here.

The report comes after several collapses have thrown the spotlight on related-party transactions. The failed finance company Octaviar (formerly MFS Limited) faces a potential litigation claim from IMF Australia, which has alleged MFS failed to disclose related-party transactions associated with its Premium Income Fund.

Administrators of the collapsed Allco Finance Group have also queried several related-party dealings, including a $50 million loan made to an investment vehicle owned by Allco directors and senior management.

Who won't be the 2009 Australian employer of the year? Senate witness allegedly threatened


In the Australian Senate Hansard for 9th September 2009:

PRESIDENT

(9.31 am)—The Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs References Committee has raised a matter of privilege under standing order 81. The matter is set out in a report by the committee to the Senate, which recommends that the matter be referred to the Privileges Committee.

The issue relates to the treatment of a witness before the committee in the course of its inquiry into access to justice. After she gave her evidence, the witness received a written warning of disciplinary action from her employer. The committee pointed out to the employer that threatening a witness with action as a result of the witness's evidence constitutes interference with a witness and a possible contempt of the Senate. The employer subsequently withdrew the warning, but in correspondence with the committee appeared to reserve the right to discipline its employees in respect of evidence given to a Senate committee. The witness resigned from her employment and there is the possibility that she suffered loss of employment as a result of her evidence to the committee.

The Senate's privilege resolution No. 6, in paragraphs (10) and (11), declares that any interference with a witness, and any imposition of a penalty on a witness, in consequence of the witness's evidence, and any threat or attempt of such actions against a witness, may constitute a contempt of the Senate. Such treatment of a witness may also be a criminal offence under section 12 of the Parliamentary Privileges Act 1987.

The Senate Privileges Committee has declared in its past reports that interference with and penalisation of witnesses are the most serious of all contempts, and the committee and the Senate have always regarded such actions as requiring rigorous investigation and firm remedial action. The committee has pointed out that actions which are otherwise lawful, such as the dismissal of an employee, may constitute contempts when taken against a witness in consequence of the witness's evidence.

The matter raised by the committee clearly meets the criteria I am required to consider. I therefore give precedence to a motion to refer the matter to the Privileges Committee. I table the letter from the committee. Other relevant documents are included in the committee's report.

A notice of motion may now be given.

NSW Royal National Park celebrates 130 years and still going strong in 2009




The heritage-listed coastal Royal National Park in Sutherland Shire, NSW celebrates its 130th birthday this year. It was established in 1879 and is the second oldest national park in the world after Yellowstone National Park in America which was created in 1872.
There are approximately 180 national parks in New South Wales and many of these are on the North Coast. Why don't you visit one this weekend?

Honest as the day is long....


Are you having trouble deciding what is 'honest' and 'dishonest' behaviour?
Take the Honesty Lab online test!

Wednesday, 9 September 2009

11-year-old girl tells Sydney Morning Herald tipsters Phil Gould, Roy Masters and Greg Prichard to eat their hearts out


11-year-old Chloe Lawrence has won the Illawarra Mercury's Footy Tipping Comp this a year.

Chloe's tipping, which netted her 141 points for the season, was so convincing she would have easily beaten The Sydney Morning Herald tipsters Phil Gould, Roy Masters and Greg Prichard.

Last year Chloe's seven-year-old brother, Daniel Moro, was the paper's top tipster.

The Mercury reports that Chloe and Daniel, who both won $3000, left thousands of experienced adult tipsters and bona fide footy experts in their wake. Their success has stumped their mother, Amy Taylor. But, according to Chloe there is method to her choices.

She avoids the Roosters and the Sharks and otherwise opts for teams based largely on home ground advantage and sidelined stars.

"I say, 'Who's out? Who's not playing? Who's at home?"' Chloe said.

"I don't like the Roosters. If Manly or Storm are at home I'll pick them because I like them."

Chloe plans to spend some of her winnings on her first mobile phone and will also donate a portion of the money to the Cancer Council in memory of her grandfather, who succumbed to cancer in recent years.

The remainder will be placed in a savings account.

For the record, Chloe predicts a Sea Eagles versus Dragons grand final, with the latter to win by about six points.


pic from The Illawarra Mercury

Repco Rally - Grimditch objects and promises boycott!


We can have democracy or we can have the Repco Rally.


It has been interesting watching the posturing surrounding this event. It seems like an ideological battle, with those wishing to exploit winning the day.


The Rudd Government won the last election on a platform of addressing climate change as a mater of urgency. Much as we are still waiting for some leadership on this, the ideological link to this is clear. Much of the electorate expects a responsible leadership to perhaps do things like mandate sustainable development in regard to climate change, slowdown use of fossil fuels and be pro-active in the development sustainable alternatives. Naturally the electorate could easily expect State Labour Governments to identify with these worthy ideals. The big problem here is obvious. Governments don't get re-elected by promising and delivering less. It is not the nature of capitalist democracy.


The Repco (WRC) Rally came to the Northern Rivers after the Western Australian Government decided that it was not good value in regard to employment, tourism and their economic returns. It seems the "planet's not dying quick enough for us" lobby would have to find another sucker to host the Australian leg of the tour. Apart from the planet, what can you lose from economic activity.


Fortunately there was Mike Rayner the general manager of Tweed Shire was also the director of World Rally Australia, the body responsible for staging the Australian leg of the event. Before anyone could get to excited about conflict of interest or will of the people, the State Government deemed it a special event and legislated away any obstacles to it not occurring. The meaning we can take from this is , It's not corruption if you don't have to explain anything. The big claim of increased tourism is unlikely to be enough to match the tax payer contribution. The electorate is saddled with a planet killing ideology and the electorate can not even question if we can afford it and expect an answer.


There is not a petrol driven competition anywhere that is designed to encourage people to use cars less. I have not done a survey, I just look at the companies that think they will profit from sponsoring such events. From an environmental point of view there is no future in such events. The industry should get over it and think of something that helps. This is where climate change denial is at it's strongest and the state government has teamed up with this lobby. There is much information about the impacts of the rally at Can Do Better . It is a good compilation of stories surrounding the event.


The north coast region is a destination for people who want to live a non mainstream lifestyle . They have gone to a lot of trouble to make sure their lifestyle choices do not affect the general population. Indeed Lismore highlights alternative lifestyles as a tourist feature of the district. To have their lifestyles threatened in their own back yards and not give them a say, is asking for trouble. Lismore knows how to increase tourism. Just open a hemp bar in Nimbin and call it alternative. Despite being far off the beaten track Nimbin has become the premier tour bus destination for backpackers in the country. It is a staple of the Byron Bay and Lismore economy. All on the back of hemp and freedom. Tweed Shire would see more economic benefit from opening a couple of Hemp cafés than a car race.


Hemp tourism happens all year around and does not require fossil fuel sponsorship to occur. It does not threaten the environment. In fact the state government spends lots of our money on stopping this happening and it still happens anyway. This is at the heart of the ideological battle. The conservative imagination would like the district to be internationally renown for something apart from hemp. Anything really, even climate change denial.


The race organisers will be very lucky if a few rocks is the only trouble they get. It is only a matter of time before the sponsors of the event are targeted. Like the race protests anybody interfering with Repco's right to exploit, will be victimized. Repco has the freedom to have a race and exploit the market, the only freedom I have in this is to bitch about it here and to let Repco know I will not support them in the market, probably about once a week for the duration of the sponsorship. Ah, freedom and democracy there is nothing like it and I hope this is nothing like it.


So what are the advantages to the area for having this event, that the Western Australian Government could not see? It is a bit hard to tell as the special events legislation shrouds any possibility of accountability. However it can not shroud the stench of unaccountable snouts hiding their troughs for as long as they can and how ineffectual our system is in meeting our needs for the future.


The lack of accountability confines this government to an unelectable future. They do however have the credibility derived from John Della Bosca doing his fly up.


Grimditch

Tweed Region


Guest Speak is a North Coast Voices segment allowing serious or satirical comment from NSW Northern Rivers residents.Email ncvguestpeak at live dot com dot au to submit comment for consideration.

Lower Clarence man competes in ITU 2009 Triathlon World Championships


Credit: The Daily Examiner 27 July 2009

Ray Hunt of Yamba is pictured above demonstrating that retirement can be healthy, productive and just plain fun.

Ray will be competing between 9 -13 September 2009 on the Gold Coast, Queensland and the Lower Clarence Valley is barracking for their man as he swims, bikes and runs in the ITU Triathlon World Championships in both aquathlon and triathlon events.

Event schedule here.
Results of races will be posted after 7pm on the day at http://www.triathlon.org/

Update:


Ray finished the Aquathlon event on 9 September in 0:44.51 (with his first run coming in at 0:11:15, his swim at 0:20:30 and his second run at 0:13:05).
A mere 0:11.41 behind the elite athlete who took out first place.
Well done, Ray.

Further update:

Ray came fifth in his age group in the ITU 2009 Age Group Triathlon World Championships on 12 September, with an unofficial time of 2:30:56.
Just 0:9:31 behind the age group winner David Roadhouse (USA).
A sterling effort.

"Please sir, will you pay for this anti-ALP brochure". Now which MPs said that?


This week the Commonwealth Auditor General released a report on the Administration of Parliamentarians' Entitlements by the Department of Finance and Deregulation.
What this reveals is one long rort of the $100,000 MP printing allowance by the major political parties for campaign purposes and a very lackadaisical federal department which did not adequately police invoicing for this allowance.
Happy little pigs in mud abounded in the run up to the last federal election - what with at least $125,000 each to play with at the time.
A little snippet in the report reveals that four unnamed Liberal pollies put in invoices for printing brochures called "Labor can't manage money. You Pay for it", which failed to mention either their names or electorates and seem to have originally been labelled by these MPs as "anti ALP" material.
The report rated these as a real risk of being outside the printing guidelines.
Now Google shows there's a long list of possible suspects ranging from big players like Nick Minchin and Christopher Pyne through to tiddlers such as Michael Ferguson and perhaps Jamie Briggs.
An enjoyable hunt the pollie game for the truly bored and tired of life.

Forget genetic manipulation as the ultimate in useless innovation - look at food shape changing


Some orchardists in far-flung places obviously think that fruit needs a new look.
These pears have been shaped on the tree using plastic moulds during the growing period, while the watermelon became square by unknown means.
What on earth is happening to quality produce au naturel?
And as jaded appetites and ennui are obviously being catered for here - did anyone create a new shape for the 9th day of the 9th month of the 9th year of the 21st century?




Pics from U.K. Telegraph

Tuesday, 8 September 2009

Climate change largely irreversible for 1,000 years after excessive greenhouse emissions stop?


One of the distressing abstracts found online at the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America:

The severity of damaging human-induced climate change depends not only on the magnitude of the change but also on the potential for irreversibility. This paper shows that the climate change that takes place due to increases in carbon dioxide concentration is largely irreversible for 1,000 years after emissions stop. Following cessation of emissions, removal of atmospheric carbon dioxide decreases radiative forcing, but is largely compensated by slower loss of heat to the ocean, so that atmospheric temperatures do not drop significantly for at least 1,000 years. Among illustrative irreversible impacts that should be expected if atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations increase from current levels near 385 parts per million by volume (ppmv) to a peak of 450–600 ppmv over the coming century are irreversible dry-season rainfall reductions in several regions comparable to those of the “dust bowl” era and inexorable sea level rise. Thermal expansion of the warming ocean provides a conservative lower limit to irreversible global average sea level rise of at least 0.4–1.0 m if 21st century CO2 concentrations exceed 600 ppmv and 0.6–1.9 m for peak CO2 concentrations exceeding ≈1,000 ppmv. Additional contributions from glaciers and ice sheet contributions to future sea level rise are uncertain but may equal or exceed several meters over the next millennium or longer.

Full 2009 paper in PDF form here.

Political evolution NSW-style


I don't think anyone has missed the metamorphosis undergone in the media recently by one murder victim - from wealthy "property developer" to "loan shark and standover man" and worse.
But how many people have noticed that the person or persons allegedly named on that rumoured tape recording have now gone from the very vague "persons connected to NSW Labor" or somewhat vague "state government MPs" to the more specific "senior NSW politicians" or "NSW ministers"?
By yesterday the chatter mill had developed belt and braces, with bribed "senior NSW bureaucrat", "federal Labor politicians" and "police officer" thrown into the mix for good measure.
Seemingly without any print, radio or television journalists (or the NSW Opposition for that matter) having ever listened to this audio tape.
And I thought the local bowlo was good at gossip - the Aussie meeja leaves it for dead! One gossipy whiff and they're off like a Bondi tram.
Given the collective histories and conflicting stories of those non-journalists who have actually said that they heard the tape or knew details of the alleged recorded conversation; is it any wonder that I keep hearing the words 'hysterical beat-up' echoing in my head?

U.S. citizen and Islam convert Abdullah al-Kidd gets his day in court


U.S. President Barack Obama may wish it otherwise, but where government is slow or unwilling to address the former Bush administration's constitutional abuses then the courts are obviously prepared take on this challenge if people are willing to apply.
The quotes below are from a U.S. Court of Appeals opinion in Abdullah al-Kidd v John Ashcroft (former US Attorney General), filed 4th September 2009.

MILAN D. SMITH, JR., Circuit Judge:

According to the allegations of his first amended complaint, Plaintiff-Appellee Abdullah al-Kidd (al-Kidd), a United States citizen and a married man with two children, was arrested at a Dulles International Airport ticket counter. He was handcuffed, taken to the airport's police substation, and interrogated. Over the next sixteen days, he was confined in high security cells lit twenty-four hours a day in Virginia, Oklahoma, and then Idaho, during which he was strip searched on multiple occasions. Each time he was transferred to a different facility, al-Kidd was handcuffed and shackled about his wrists, legs, and waist. He was eventually released from custody by court order, on the conditions that he live with his wife and in-laws in Nevada, limit his travel to Nevada and three other states, surrender his travel documents, regularly report to a probation officer, and consent to home visits throughout the period of supervision. By the time al-Kidd's confinement and supervision ended, fifteen months after his arrest, al-Kidd had been fired from his job as an employee of a government contractor because he was denied a security clearance due to his arrest, and had separated from his wife. He has been unable to obtain steady employment since his arrest. Al-Kidd was not arrested and detained because he had allegedly committed a crime. He alleges that he was arrested and confined because former United States Attorney General John Ashcroft (Ashcroft), subordinates operating under policies promulgated by Ashcroft, and others within the United States Department of Justice (DOJ), unlawfully used the federal material witness statute, 18 U.S.C. § 3144, to investigate or preemptively detain him. Ashcroft asserts that he is entitled to absolute and qualified immunity against al-Kidd's claims. We hold that on the facts pled Ashcroft is not protected by either form of immunity, and we affirm in part and reverse in part the decision of the district court. (my emphasis)

In its conclusion the court quoted Blackstone:

"To bereave a man of life, or by violence to confiscate his estate, without accusation or trial, would be so gross and notorious an act of despotism, as must at once convey the alarm of tyranny throughout the whole kingdom. But confinement of the person, by secretly hurrying him to gaol, where his sufferings are unknown or forgotten; is a less public, a less striking, and therefore a more dangerous engine of arbitrary government."

WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES ON THE LAWS OF ENGLAND 131-32 (1765)

Monday, 7 September 2009

Mischief's bad utterances cost him a date with Max

It seems the Northern Territory is the place to be if one wants to meet a talking feline.


After the news about Mischief the talkative cat broke another NT cat's owner declared that her cat Max was also a talking cat.

Mischief, who featured previously on this site, was all set to meet and have a chat with Max. Well, that's what Mischief's owner Robert "RJ" Duncan thought was on the cards.

However, Max's owner Mrs Snowball put a stop on any dalliance involving Mischief and Max.

The Northern Territory News reports that Mrs Snowball declined Mr Duncan's invitation because she doesn't want her cat picking up Mischief's bad habit of swearing.

According to Mrs Snowball, her cat Max can pronounce all her family members' names. Clever Max can even pronounce names with double syllables.

Sadly, there are no pics of Max - he's camera shy.

pic of Mischief from NT News

The staff of life: one man's dissent against his government


On 13 September 2009 (with little advance fanfare) it becomes mandatory to add folic acid to Australian wheat flour product at source, excepting organic flour.

An 110 year-old family run South Australian flour mill is firmly refusing to comply and on 28 August issued this letter to all its customers.

Which by an old 1960s yard stick means that civil war has broken out in Australia.

NSW public hospitals once more becoming thought of as a place you go to die?


When I was a nipper a hospital was considered a place you went to die.
By the time I became an adult hospitals had become places where you went to be treated and maybe if you were lucky, cured.
Now as I get even older and read the growing litany of medical errors, I begin to wonder if perceptions are swinging back again and we're once more becoming afraid of hospitals?
Take this old man left on a bedpan for so long in a public hospital that he had to have surgery for the ulcers this disgusting neglect created.
NSW Health Care Commission media releases over the last twelve months don't instill a lot of confidence either. Neither does the growing list of doctors, nurses, pharmacists, psychologists etc. who are either reprimanded, suspended or deregistered in this state.
If you want a real scare - just read this May 2009 Medical Journal of Australia article which looked at the chances of survival if a baby is born in a public hospital:
"After adjusting for the same maternal variables, serious adverse neonatal outcomes showed similar differences between the two hospital groups.
Term babies born in public hospitals were more likely to require high levels of resuscitation, to have an Apgar score < 7 at 5 minutes, and to require admission to a neonatal intensive care facility or special care nursery (Box 3).
Perinatal death was twice as likely for babies born in public hospitals.
Even using a composite for adverse perinatal outcome (patients with at least one adverse outcome), the unadjusted OR was 1.30 (95% CI, 1.28–1.33) for public hospital deliveries.
When the adverse perinatal outcomes were compared individually by method of birth, the differences between public and private hospital sectors persisted for all the adverse outcomes studied (data not shown).
For example, for spontaneous vaginal births, the rate of Apgar score < 7 at 5 minutes was 0.9% in the public group compared with 0.6% in the private group.
The differences for forceps deliveries (1.6% v 1.1%), ventouse deliveries (2.1% v 1.4%), and caesarean sections (1.3% v 0.5%) showed a similar pattern.
The rates of perinatal death were similarly lower in private hospitals for each method of birth: spontaneous vaginal birth (0.2% v 0.1%); forceps delivery (0.5% v 0.2%); ventouse delivery (0.2% v 0.1%); and caesarean section (0.3% v 0.1%)...
Conclusion: For women delivering a single baby at term in Australia, the prevalence of adverse perinatal outcomes is higher in public hospitals than in private hospitals."

So Prime Minister Rudd - when are you going to fix this appalling state of affairs?

Sunday, 6 September 2009

The one liner doing the rounds in the Emerald City


Events in Macquarie Street - and elsewhere - last week
produced this gem:


"The NSW Government is like IKEA - one loose screw and the whole cabinet falls apart."



Thanks goes to The Fitz Files in
The Sun Herald for that ripper!

A WTF moment for NSW Health


Last week if you were placed on hold by the Maclean District Hospital switchboard, along with the canned Musak you would have heard a voice tell you that this hospital had three rooms with en suite and Austar television available for in-patients with private health insurance.

Now Maclean District Hospital is a public hospital in the North Coast Area Health Service and it is sometimes stretched for beds, so it is not unknown for wards to be culled for people to send home so that new (and sometimes more urgent) cases can be admitted.

Which makes one wonder - if a well-off retiree whose insurance is paying out to the area health service and an old-age pensioner on Medicare were to be assessed in such a cull, which one would be sent home?

If you picked the retiree as the patient most likely to be sent home I suspect that you wouldn't get the cigar - human nature and hospital bottom lines just don't work that way.

These three beds are not a good look for NSW Health and definitely not a good look for a Rudd Government seeking to work cooperatively with the states towards a better public health care system.

Mungo doesn't mess about when it comes to L'l Johnnie Howard


This classic Mungo MacCallum phrasing turned up in Crikey last Monday:

"And speaking of past leaders ... John Howard bobbed back up in the bowl last week to give us a bit of advice on, of all things, human rights. Truly the man has no shame.

The Prime Minister whose government incarcerated innocent children behind razor wire until they literally went mad and abandoned its own citizens to illegal imprisonment and torture by a foreign power now warns us that judges and lawyers should not be allowed to tamper with decisions made by politicians elected by "ordinary" people. Any attempt to change our unsurpassable current arrangements would represent the final triumph of elitism and be an abrogation of the very idea of the sovereignty of the people."

Saturday, 5 September 2009

Australian society: two faces of the young today


It has ever been thus, that members of the ruling generation think the generation following is less than they were when young.
The truth of the matter is that the best and worst aspects of any society are often mirrored in the behaviour of children.

Here are two examples in the local media on the same day.

The Daily Examiner, 31 August 2009 Click image to enlarge


Good work, lad

ON July 6, my mother aged over 70 years, was walking along Little High Street, Yamba. Her mobility is restricted, and while negotiating the uneven path she fell to the ground, her head striking a parked car on the way down.
She is alright, however was sore for a number of days and had to receive ongoing; treatment to her injured arm.
I grew up on the Lower Clarence, but have not lived there for over 20 years. I am penning this letter to show my family's appreciation of an unknown teenager who came to her aid.
According to my mother the boy was in about Year 9 (14 or 15 years of age). The boy physically lifted my mother from the ground, despite my mother telling him that he would not be able to lift her.
He escorted her to a nearby chemist, being the Yamba Pharmacy, where the staff treated her.
The boy stayed with her while she was treated, and would not leave until he knew that she was alright. For the days following, staff at Yamba Pharmacy treated my mother's wounds. We thank those staff members for the assis
tance and care they have shown for our mother.
That is not all. What has really impressed me and my family is the boy repeatedly apologised for not being quick enough to catch my mother as she was falling.
If the young boy happens to read this letter, we want you to know that we are very grateful for your help on that day.
Further, you and your family should be very proud of your actions. Thank you.
This comes at a time when the youth of today regularly bring themselves under notice in all communities, for the wrong reasons, but not this lad.
Well done, you have a bright future.

JOCK HENRY,
Mudgee.

[The Daily Examiner, letter to the editor,31 August 2009]

2009 Grafton Jacaranda Festival Queen Candidates


Click on poster to enlarge

Top row: Matron of Honour Christine Hackett & Kim McClymont
Second row: Lorelela Abele & Abbey Browning
Third row: Samantha Dive & Keira Ellingwood
Fourth row: Mackenzie Harvison & Miranda Predo
Bottom row: Alison Smith & Amanda Finucane

The Jacaranda Festival runs from 30 October to 8 November 2009 at Grafton in the Clarence Valley NSW

Friday, 4 September 2009

Water raiders still after Clarence River water and now looking to NSW Government


Obviously worried about the fact that the Rudd Government stands firmly behind the Northern Rivers and Clarence Valley opposition to damming and diverting environmentally sensitive coastal rivers, the Murray Darling Association is hedging its bets by also looking at twisting the arm of the NSW Government.

From A Clarence Valley Protest today:

Murray Darling Association members may be bickering at their annual conference but they are still fixed on the idea of Clarence River water diversion

The 65th Murray Darling Association annual conference is drawing to a close at Playford, SA and today at its annual general meeting the association will vote on not one but two motions concerning Clarence River water diversion.

Although association members are throwing around vague accusations about water theft and abuse within the Murray Darling Basin, they seem oblivious to the fact that this is the intent behind their motions concerning the NSW North Coast Clarence River catchment.


According to the Playford AGM Agenda:

13.2 Clarence River Region 2
For many years, Region 2 has been raising the issue of a feasibility study to dam part of the
Clarence River and divert some of the water inland to the Murray-Darling Basin to help alleviate water shortages. The Federal Government has made it quite clear that it will not support any such project but the NSW Government has not been as clear on the issue. Some years ago, the Association supported a feasibility study into the idea.
RECOMMENDATION: That the NSW Government be asked to respond directly to community requests over the years that part of the Clarence River be dammed to minimise flood damage and to divert some of the water inland to the Murray-Darling Basin.

13.3 Clarence River diversion Region 6
This proposed diversion of the Clarence River was first discussed in the 1930s. The Fraser
Government allocated $4 million to fund a feasibility study into the scheme. The Hawke
Government discontinued this. The proposal, if feasible, would involve the construction of a
headwater dam on the Clarence River, with a 22km tunnel under the Gibralta Ranges in Northern NSW. This tunnel would emerge on the Murray-Darling Basin side of the ranges and feed into the Beardy River, then the McIntyre River and, ultimately into the Basin. The Gibralta Ranges are situated in one of the highest rainfall areas in Australia. Benefits of the scheme include:
• The dams would have storage capacity approaching that of the Snowy Mountains
Scheme.
• The capacity of the headwater storage would provide flood control to the Clarence Valley.
• The diversion would only require 24% of the total maximum storage volumes of water to
provide similar volumes of water to the Basin as the Snowy Mountains Scheme.
• The generation of hydro-electricity is another major benefit.
This motion is not a request to build the scheme, but to revisit it in the context of recent climatic
events and over-allocations in the Murray Darling Basin.
RECOMMENDATION: That the MDA requests the Federal Government, as a matter of urgency, to commission a report on the Clarence River Diversion Proposal relative to water flows through the Murray-Darling system and to make that report widely available.

Howzaat!


I must say that my understanding of cricket matches is limited to memories of forming part of a backyard team each summer school holidays.
This exchange in The Australian 's First Byte between Ashes tragics tickled both fancy and memory.
  • 27 August 2009
After 24 hours of careful consideration, I have come to the conclusion that the reason why Australia lost the Ashes was because England made more runs.
Tom Rundell
Warana, Qld
  • 28 August 2009
Sadly for Tom Rundell (First Byte, 27/8), here's the basic truth of the matter. Australia lost the Ashes because England won more Test matches. Overall, England managed a meagre 2869 runs, while Australia scored a mammoth 2886. And, to rub more salt into our wounds, England lost a staggering 84 wickets in achieving its tally, while Australia lost just 71.
Col Shephard
Yamba, NSW

Sharing a thought on Internet censorship which landed on my desk.....



Oi! Senator Conroy - it's September already. Where's that promised report on your Internet filtering trial?

Colin Jacobs in The Australian this week Conroy won't tame 'wild west' web

A brief history of Australian Internet censorship proposals at Libertus.

Thursday, 3 September 2009

If Frank Sartor becomes the next NSW premier......


If 'Cranky Frankie' Sartor were to become Premier of New South Wales then I would seriously have to consider voting for a (gulp) Nat at the next state election!

Nonimouse
James Creek

Guest Speak is a North Coast Voices segment allowing serious or satirical comment from NSW Northern Rivers residents.
Email ncvguestpeak at live dot com dot au to submit comment for consideration.

Iluka hotel denies donation purchased jetty rights


Sedgers Reef Hotel emphatically denies a rumour that its $50,000 dollar donation to Clarence Valley Council gives it mooring rights for hotel patrons on the jetty being built adjacent to this hotel.

The Daily Examiner, 28 August 2009, p.3

Baby Boomers: keeping dementia in mind


On Tuesday Alzheimers Australia released a report by Access Economics Keeping Dementia Front of Mind: Incidence and Prevalence 2009 - 2050.

This report highlights the fact that by 2050 1.1 million Australians are expected to have been diagnosed with some form of dementia and by 2020 there will be an estimated 75,000 baby boomers with dementia.


Probably time we baby boomers started thinking of the best way to avoid becoming one of these cited statistics and learn all about those health measures which can be adopted to lessen the possibility that it will be us who will suffer from Alzheimers or another dementia of old age.

'Keystone' Keelty goes out on the heels of yet another bungle


AFP Commissioner Mick Keelty must wonder why his last day as head of the Aussie federal police will not be remembered for praises sung in his honour, but instead for the fact that a national security breach became very public and his force was placed in the position of trying to deny that it had a surveillance plane with heat seeking technology.
It seems no-one in the AFP thought to tell Vic police that this small plane was a s-e-c-r-e-t.
Just another blunder to remind us all of the many which occurred under his watch.

Over to you, Tony Negus....

The Herald Sun has all the laughs here.