Friday, 25 January 2008

The real face of Japan's 'scientific' whale research

This is the real face of Japanese
whaling.
Domestic consumption of whale
meat as food.
Japan's Prime Minister Yasuo
Fukuda can protest about the
Australian attitude to
southern ocean whaling.
The fact remains that someone
eventually makes a commercial
profit from this annual
'scientific' whale kill.
Girl eating whale burger
Photo from http://www.bbc.co.uk/

Only seven weeks in office and already the Rudd Government is starting to beat up on the poor

For the last two weeks there has been a rumour on the NSW North Coast that the Rudd Government was contemplating a Centrelink shake up, and that this exercise wouldn't be a look at the agency itself but another free kick at those receiving pensions, benefits and allowances.
 
Today Minister for Human Services Joe Ludwig stated that he has ordered a crackdown on Centrelink fraud, the old Howard Government code phrase for 'let's see if we can make compliance conditions even harder for all welfare recipients'.
 
As "National Welfare Rights Network president Michael Raper said tax fraud was a bigger problem than welfare fraud.
"If they want to chase tax fraud, that's where the dollars are," he said. "There's some in social security but it's pretty tight and hard already. Less than half of 1 per cent of social security debt is fraud."
The Australian article today:
 
Tax fraud recovery had become a joke during the Howard era and most cases were not vigorously pursued because of legal costs. It was much easier to 'breach' welfare recipients for minor offences and run to the media with the few isolated instances of significant welfare fraud.
 
Senator Ludwig's statement is adding insult to injury here on the North Coast.
As contact with his office (and the offices of local members) clearly indicates that the Labor election promise to grant Disability Support pensioners the Utility Allowance is on the back burner and it is beginning to look as though the Rudd Government is hoping to delay implementing this promise during this fiscal year.
Apparently making the budgetary books look good may yet be considered more important than pensioners being able to meet their winter heating bills.
 
It had long been obvious that John Howard considered chronic illness or disability a moral weakness. It would be a great disappointment to many if Kevin Rudd was found to hold that same biased view.
 
 

176,000 Australian households on public housing waiting lists

The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare has found 176,000 households on public housing waiting lists.
The new Federal Housing Minister Tanya Plibersek says she is shocked.
After asking around, I think the shock will be even greater when she realises that these lists only show people who have been filling in forms for years and not the total number of those on low-incomes needing affordable accommodation.
I mean, whoever thought that we would need homeless shelters here on the North Coast?
Yet it is becoming a reality of life in the Lucky Country.

Thursday, 24 January 2008

NSW North Coast "ConVerge" ceramic art exhibition: January 25 to March 1


Compassion Virgins 2006 by Ishta Wilson
Photograph from The Northern Rivers Echo

The new exhibition ConVerge: The Northern Rivers Ceramic Exhibition, opens Friday, January 25 at the Lismore Regional Art Gallery and runs until March 1.
The exhibition features the works of 20 local ceramic artists and demonstrates how ceramic arts in the Northern Rivers have evolved over the last 20 years.
The Northern Rivers Echo today:

http://www.echonews.com/index.php?page=View%20Article&article=19665&issue=311

Japan's whalers descend to the ridiculous

It seems that Japan's whalers would even risk appearing ridiculous rather than accept a copy of the Federal Court judgment against them.
Surely, after similar antics when they were formally notified of the International Humane Society's application to the Court, they must realise that they will be considered to have been informed in this instance also.

"Conservation group Humane Society International has hand-delivered last week's
Australian Federal Court order to a Japanese whaling company in Tokyo.
The judgement demands it abandon its whale hunt in Australian waters.
As well as faxing and posting a copy of the Federal Court order, today Nicola
Beynon from the society hand-delivered the document to the head office of the

Japanese whaling company in Tokyo.
"They refused to accept them from us, they said they were aware of the orders
but they weren't accepting them and they handed the package back to us," she said.
"We had to leave the package at their feet and quickly leave the building so they
couldn't throw the package after us, but they told us they would throw the package
away after we had left, which demonstrates their disrespect for Australian law."
ABC News report yesterday:
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/01/23/2144854.htm?section=australia

Jesuits worried that Howard mandarins are capturing new Labor ministers

Last Monday Eureka Street.com.au, an online publication of Jesuit Communications Australia, was airing concerns that Immigration Minister Chris Evans is presenting a "worrying picture of a new minister out of his depth on the sensitive people-smuggling disruption issue, and at risk of policy capture by his department whose present secretary, Andrew Metcalfe, was himself the First Assistant Secretary, Border Control and Compliance Division, in 2000-2001." 
The Jesuits apparently fear that John Howard's policy on refugees will continue and so gave space to author Tony Kevin on the issue.
Labor ministers captured? As far as I can tell, most are being led though the nose like Murphy's bull at present and their staffers are not faring much better. 
The article is interesting enough for me to do one of my rare links.

Telstra rather sensitive about its Next G

My post on this blog and a letter to the editor regarding problems with CDMA and Next G mobile coverage must have hit a nerve with Telstra.
Yesterday I was telephoned by a rather nice man from this telecommunications company seeking to find out what the problem was.
This was passing strange, as mobile coverage in the Lower Clarence has been patchy for years.
Blaming handsets for problems with Next G network is rather disingenuous though, as in the instances I referred to these were calibrated by Telstra endorsed personnel.
Still he did promise to send someone out to check the local relay station, even if nothing can be done about its bad siting.