Friday, 12 April 2013
Come on down, Luke 'Mañana' Hartsuyker!
The ever laid back Nats MP Luke Hartsuyker told The Coffs Coast
Advocate this month that "We're
not in fantasy land, a dream sci-fi world. We have to deliver affordable
broadband to people quickly" and the cost of bringing fast
broadband into the house will be "addressed
as time went by".
Come again?
Labor will give me free fast
broadband connection into my house by 2021.
Luke will give me slower
broadband to a junction box somewhere into my street by 2019 and I will have to
pay for every metre of cable laid from that box into my house.
If - and it’s a big if – I can
afford it.
And if I move house I bet I’ll
be paying again under Luke’s plan.
So till the day I win Lotto
Luke expects me to get his broadband to my PC via Telstra’s 100 year-old copper
wire phone network which in 2003 even that telco said was within "five
minutes to midnight" of its deathbed.
I could almost hear fellow voters
falling off their chairs when they read Hartsuyker’s comments.
No wonder many techies fell
about laughing when he said the Coalition broadband scheme was a win
for regional areas. They know
that sending broadband to a computer along old copper wire will never give the fast
download speeds of fibre optic cable.
What Hartsuyker is really offering the North Coast is a
souped up version of this:
Labels:
hoax,
information technology,
Internet,
Nationals
Thursday, 11 April 2013
When a newspaper sets itself up as a quasi-court meting out punishment
Every so often the Clarence Valley’s largest newspaper catches a bout of righteous indignation and does this:
The Daily Examiner will resume publishing the details of drink drivers who front Grafton and Maclean local courts.
The paper will collate the names, age and town of residence of the offenders, the location, time and date of the offence, the PCA reading and the penalty handed down.
This list will appear in the paper after local court hearings at Grafton or Maclean.*
Obviously ignoring the fact that NSW courts have rightly imposed specific legal penalties (which cannot include further public 'naming and shaming'), it wants to punish drink drivers a second time by further stigmatising the offender and, in the Clarence Valley’s small communities also potentially penalising or socially isolating the now easily identifiable innocent parents, partners, siblings or children of these offenders.
If as suggested His Honour Magistrate David M. Heilpern supports this secondary victimisation of persons not before the court (who quite rightly have an expectation of privacy) then I am seriously disappointed in both the man and his office.
That any community interest in naming and shaming has a less than noble side is shown by this remark by a NSW North Coast resident last year when the Coffs Coast Advocate broached the subject of drink driving:
Neither The Daily Examiner nor the magistrate appear to have considered that the newspaper’s actual print edition containing these name and shame reports is replicated on the Internet in perpetuity.
Additionally, I have yet to find any reputable study which demonstrates that naming and shaming drink drivers lowers the NSW drink driving rate or affects which convicted drivers reoffend, so there is no excuse for The Daily Examiner’s latest effort to boost newspaper sales.
I am not alone in believing that a return to primitive responses is no solution. Here is Dr Lauren Rosewarne from the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne:
* 10 April 2013 issue
Labels:
Australian society,
law,
Local Court,
media,
privacy
Looking back on Tony Abbott
Malcolm Turnbull in The Sydney Morning Herald 7 December 2009:
While a shadow minister, Tony Abbott, was never afraid of speaking bluntly in a manner that was at odds with Coalition policy.
So as I am a humble backbencher I am sure he won't complain if I tell a few home truths about the farce that the Coalition's policy, of lack of policy, on climate change has descended into.
First, lets get this straight. You cannot cut emissions without a cost. To replace dirty coal fired power stations with cleaner gas fired ones, or renewables like wind let alone nuclear power or even coal fired power with carbon capture and storage is all going to cost money.
To get farmers to change the way they manage their land, or plant trees and vegetation all costs money.
Somebody has to pay.
So any suggestion that you can dramatically cut emissions without any cost is, to use a favourite term of Mr Abbott, "bullshit." Moreover he knows it…..
Wednesday, 10 April 2013
Has the Australian small business community stopped listening to Opposition Leader Tony Abbott's doom and gloom?
It would seem that by the first quarter of 2013 Opposition Leader Tony Abbott’s scare tactics may have ceased cutting though when it comes to how people starting new businesses see the economy and their chance of success as they are still registering in high numbers.
These are the active Australian Business Numbers in 2013, of which 3,557,412 are individual/sole traders, 1,354,105 are private companies and 513,116 are family partnerships:
Here are the number of new business numbers registered so far this year, of which 74,574 are individual/sole traders, 24,596 are private companies and 3,578 are family partnerships:
This is the number which also registered for the Goods & Services Tax for the first time:
Click on tables to enlarge
Labels:
Australian society,
business,
economy
O'Farrell Government to launch CSG propaganda website in mid-April 2013
Should readers find misleading/inaccurate information concerning coal seam gas or broken links etc. on this new O’Farrell Government website www.csg.nsw.gov.au, coming online sometime in April 2013, then you can complain to the following:
Hon. Andrew Stoner MP
Deputy Premier and Minister for Trade and Investment
Level 30 Governor Macquarie Tower
1 Farrer Place
SYDNEY NSW 2000
1 Farrer Place
SYDNEY NSW 2000
Phone (02) 9228 5209
Fax (02) 9228 5970
Mr Mark Paterson AO
Director General
Department of Trade and Investment
MLC Centre
Level 47, 19 Martin Place
SYDNEY NSW 2000
Level 47, 19 Martin Place
SYDNEY NSW 2000
Phone: (02) 9338 6600
Fax: (02) 9338 6950
Malcolm Rofe Digital Project Manager at NSW Trade & Investment
Phone: (02) 9338 6600
Fax: (02) 9338 6950
Fax: (02) 9338 6950
John Pavey Strategic Communications at Department of Premier and Cabinet
Phone: (02) 9228 3437
Email: domainadmin@dpc.nsw.gov.au
Phone: (02) 9228 3437
Email: domainadmin@dpc.nsw.gov.au
Andrew Callahan Digital Services
Phone: +61.0402849352
Domain Name: csg.nsw.gov.au
Last Modified: 24-Jan-2013 02:39:00 UTC
Registrar ID: Finance
Registrar Name: Department of Finance and Deregulation
Status: ok
Last Modified: 24-Jan-2013 02:39:00 UTC
Registrar ID: Finance
Registrar Name: Department of Finance and Deregulation
Status: ok
Registrant: NSW Trade and Investment (DTIRIS)
Eligibility Type: Other
Registrant Contact ID: GOVAU-PAJO1213
Registrant Contact Name: Malcolm Rofe
Registrant Contact Email: Visit whois.ausregistry.com.au for Web based WhoIs
Tech Contact ID: GOVAU-PAJO1211
Tech Contact Name: Andrew Callaghan
Tech Contact Email: Visit whois.ausregistry.com.au for Web based WhoIs
Tech Contact ID: GOVAU-PAJO1212
Tech Contact Name: John Pavey
Tech Contact Email: Visit whois.ausregistry.com.au for Web based WhoIs
Name Server: maitproddns.dpi.nsw.gov.au
Name Server IP: 203.11.159.13
Name Server: oranproddns.dpi.nsw.gov.au
Name Server IP: 148.145.48.70
Eligibility Type: Other
Registrant Contact ID: GOVAU-PAJO1213
Registrant Contact Name: Malcolm Rofe
Registrant Contact Email: Visit whois.ausregistry.com.au for Web based WhoIs
Tech Contact ID: GOVAU-PAJO1211
Tech Contact Name: Andrew Callaghan
Tech Contact Email: Visit whois.ausregistry.com.au for Web based WhoIs
Tech Contact ID: GOVAU-PAJO1212
Tech Contact Name: John Pavey
Tech Contact Email: Visit whois.ausregistry.com.au for Web based WhoIs
Name Server: maitproddns.dpi.nsw.gov.au
Name Server IP: 203.11.159.13
Name Server: oranproddns.dpi.nsw.gov.au
Name Server IP: 148.145.48.70
Tuesday, 9 April 2013
In the days when Rupert didn't pretend he wasn't about regime change
2. MURDOCK [sic], BY SWINGING HIS NEWSPAPER CHAIN BEHIND THE ALP, PLAYED A SUBSTANTIAL ROLE IN THE LABOR VICTORY OF DECEMBER 1972. HE IS SATISFIED THAT HE TOOK THE CORRECT POSITION AT THAT TIME, SINCE IT WAS ESSENTIAL TO HAVE A CHANGE AFTER 23 YEARS. LIBERAL/COUNTRY LEADERSHIP HAD BECOME INCREASINGLY WEARY INTELLECTUALLY. HOWEVER, MURDOCK IS DISAPPOINTED BY LABOR'S PERFORMANCE. HE EXPECTS TO SUPPORT THE OPPOSITION IN THE NEXT ELECTION.
Full U.S.Embassy cable text here.
Labels:
elections,
murdoch,
News Limited
What Australian Opposition Leader Tony Abbott told his true believers at the Institute of Public Affairs
Labels:
right wing politics
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