Sunday, 27 January 2008
Australia Day weekend in the Lower Clarence - rain broken by bouts of sunshine
It's been good to see Hughie sending down enough rain to give the Mighty Clarence a full belly, but it's getting rather damp around the house.
La Nina is doing us proud this year.
Parts of the coastal fringe received between 50 to 99mm in the 24 hours up to 9a.m. yesterday morning.
The frog chorus during the evening and night hasn't been this loud in years, and one large green treefrog has taken up residence in one of my gumboots parked outside the door onto the front verandah.
It's a bit rich when even the frogs are looking for somewhere dry.
Keep it coming, Hughie, there's a good fella - but leave enough fine days so that the NSW North Coast doesn't flood again and the beach dunes have time to recover.
Labels:
Australian society,
environment
Saturday, 26 January 2008
swamp musing
Sitting in the bath last night watching the moon rise over the swamp I was listening to the radio and some presenter was talking about the Japanese whaling fleet in the southern ocean. A spokesperson for the whaling industry came on and was emphasising Japan's traditional reliance on whaling, this started me thinking if somehow I was transported back in time let's say over 200 years and was standing on Iluka Bluff I would not have seen Captain Cook sail passed but a fleet of Japanese row boats heading south to the Antarctic for the annual whale hunt?
This brings up the question of how far back in time does a practice have to be set to become a tradition?
The type of whaling that the Japanese currently espouse only came into existence after World War II, is that long enough to be a traditional practice?
If the traditional whaling methods were used only whales in the northern hemisphere and close to the Japanese islands would be killed.
On the second glass of wine the questions arrived.
Do the Japanese public know where and how the whale meat sold in their markets gets there?
Are they just told that this is their tradition and some green fanatics are trying to limit their enjoyment of a traditional dish?
I would like to know the answers to these questions, but the bath water is getting cold and it is a busy day tomorrow. I have to mow the pumpkins, they are taking over the ancestral homeland of the tomatoes and eggplants.
Just how much is an old prime minister worth?
Well, we are all now aware that John Winston Howard is offering himself as an international speaker for hire.
The Liverpool City Champion in England has just given us an idea of how much The Washington Speakers Bureau might be charging to hear The Great Man's pearls of wisdom.
How much do you think a tired old neo-con is worth on this fee scale?
"The website does not say how much eager audiences will have to cough up to hear Mr Howard but its billing code offers six categories, in US dollars: $1000-$7500; $7501-$10,000; 10,001-$15,000; 15,001-$25,000; 25,001-$40,000; and $40,001 and over."
The Liverpool City Champion article:
The Liverpool City Champion article:
Now The Sydney Morning Herald informs us of at least four US speaking engagements next month.
If John Howard were to fall in the mid-range of the billing code he might potentially be earning US$60,000 over those four weeks.
Subsidised as well by the Australian taxpayer who is paying for that research/personal assistant.
While Howard is overseas talking up his place in history, let us hope that he will refrain from sour grapes.
Because, behind the fine public words of those close to the Bush Administration, there lies a basic lack of comprehension concerning the Australian Labor Party which makes Americans nervous.
The fact that John Howard's visit appears scheduled to closely precede Kevin Rudd's first official visit as Prime Minister leaves Howard with an opportunity for some private political mischief-making.
The Sydney Morning Herald today:
Happy 100th Birthday, BOM
The Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) has been in existence for one hundred years this month.
I may have stood watching the sky and sniffing the air to get a feel for the weather in my youth, but it was to the Bureau's reports that I turned to see if I needed to bring the cattle into sheltered paddocks when winter was at its worst.
Now the Bureau keeps me informed on everything; from when it's unwise to put a foot in the water at North Coast beaches, to when I should batten down the hatches because an east-coast low is on the way.
Town or country - it is a part of daily life.
So Happy 100th Birthday, BOM, and many more to come.
Labels:
Australian society
Senator Heffernan loses baby
You almost have to feel sorry for Bill Heffernan.
Out of government and now losing chair of the Northern Australia Land and Water Taskforce.
A position and body which John Howard appeared to have created just to keep him happy in the sandbox.
Although five other Coalition pollies were booted from the taskforce along with Bill, he must be disappointed that he can no longer chase after his dream of either overpopulating and overdeveloping the north of the continent or stripping it of water.
I guess it's back to allegedly impersonating public servants and spooks.
Anyone seen 007 Heffernan lately?
Labels:
environment,
politics,
water
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/
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.
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