Monday, 1 December 2014

The Australian Parliament may be in recess by 5 December, but the Abbott Government will be coming after us all again in February 2015


There are only three more sitting days until the 44th Australian Parliament goes into recess until February 2015.

While we all may breathe a sigh of relief that the horrible fascination that is parliamentary question time is no longer occurring and The Speaker has gone to that dank, dark place biased and confused speaker’s go in recess, now is not the time to be idle.

Because it is almost inevitable that the Abbott Government will return in the first quarter determined to force the states into 'voluntarily' requesting increases in the Goods & Services Tax (GST).

It is highly likely that a call will come from Liberal and National party sock puppets to both increase and widen this consumption tax.

The argument for a tax increase will probably be along the lines of; any increase can be kept down to a reasonable level if it is accompanied by a widening of the tax base.

There are no prizes for guessing that taxing goods under $1,000 purchased overseas via the Internet will be mentioned, as this has been a favourite with local business for some time.

However, using the Abbott Government’s past performance as a guide, perhaps we all should be preparing to hear these puppets raise the possibility that educational course material purchased as a prerequisite of participation, along with certain health services and off-the-shelf medications, should all now attract the GST.

By the same token it is highly likely that all cooked or processed meats and some fish will be on any new taxed food wish list; such as BBQ chickens, ham on the bone, whole salamis etc. and smoked fish.

As of 23 October 2014 food in the groups listed below currently attract the GST according to the latest legislative compilation:

Prepared Food
Quiches, sandwiches (using any type of bread or roll), pizzas, pizza subs, pizza pockets and similar, food marketed as a prepared meal, but not including soup, platters etc. of cheese, cold cuts, fruit or vegetables and other arrangements of food, hamburgers, chicken burgers and similar, hot dogs.

Confectionery
Confectionery, food marketed as confectionery, food marketed as ingredients for confectionery or food consisting principally of confectionery, popcorn, confectionery novelties, muesli bars or health food bars, and similar foodstuffs, crystallised fruit, glace fruit and drained fruit, crystallised ginger and preserved ginger, edible cake decorations.

Savoury snacks
Potato crisps, sticks or straws, corn crisps or chips, bacon or pork crackling or prawn chips, seeds or nuts that have been processed or treated by salting, spicing, smoking or roasting, or in any other similar way, caviar and similar fish roe, other snack foods.

Bakery products
Cakes, slices, cheesecakes, pancakes, waffles, crepes, muffins and puddings, pavlova and meringues, pies (meat, vegetable or fruit), pasties and sausage rolls, tarts and pastries, doughnuts and croissants, pastizzi, calzoni and brioche, scones and scrolls, bread (including buns) with a sweet filling or coating.

Ice-cream food
Ice-cream, ice-cream cakes, ice-creams and ice-cream substitutes, frozen confectionery, frozen yoghurt and frozen fruit products (but not frozen whole fruit), flavoured iceblocks (whether or not marketed in a frozen state), any similar food.

Biscuit goods
Food that is, or consists principally of, biscuits, cookies, crackers, pretzels, cones or wafers.

Sunday, 30 November 2014

Speaker Bronwyn Bishop's head count grows



The Sydney Morning Herald noted on 27 November 2014 that:

The total number of MPs removed by Ms Bishop in the life of the current Parliament is 285 – 280 of them Labor.
Ed Husic, Nick Champion, and Melissa Parke – who had never before been sent out – were among the MPs to be removed from question time on Thursday.

Excerpt from House of Representatives Hansard of 27 November clearly demonstrates that it takes little to be ejected from the Chamber these days:

The SPEAKER: The member for Freemantle on a point of order.
Ms Parke: Government members have been asking and answering questions all week about the China free trade agreement—
The SPEAKER: You are to speak to the standing order. What standing order are you referring to?
Ms Parke: Standing order 100(d)(i): 'Questions must not contain statements of fact unless they can be authenticated.'
The SPEAKER: The member will resume her seat. Indeed, having sat down she too will leave under 94(a) sequentially.
The member for Fremantle then left the chamber.

Coal seam & tight gas miner Metgasco Limited and community consultation


This is a snapshot from a Metgasco Limited 17 page ‘community consultation’ document dated March 2014:



So is this image a slice of the Berwyndale gasfield in Queensland and is it really a bucolic nivarna as suggested?

Berwyndale and the Undulla Nose gasfields are situated here:



The field configuration in the Metagasco snapshot does not match the Berwyndale South gasfield (left), but appears to be land sandwiched between that intensive gasfield and another to the north. Gas production on this land is apparently not yet fully developed and, the land itself may possible belong to the mining corporation holding the tenement.


Conclusion? 

By not precisely naming the gasfield and limiting the image in its community consultation document to a small number of paddocks, it looks suspiciously like an attempt by Metgasco to conceal the bigger picture in the Berwyndale area.

UPDATE

The 'community consultation' document also states that Metgasco has entered into:

More than 300 voluntary landholder agreements.

These 300 land holder agreements to date appear to cover less than 50 boreholes, 63 drill cores and only two gas sites (NSW Trade and Investment: Energy & Resource MinView) with one potential production well.

However, like its "suscessful co-existence" spin, all is not quite as the community is being told.

The Northern Star, 10 June 2014, Page 4:

When asked about the inconsistency between the claims, Metgasco CEO Peter Henderson said: "We have approximately 50 land access agreements for wells, the remainder are associated with seismic programs." 

Apparently Megasco believes that it is acceptable to fudge the facts during its alleged consultation process.

Saturday, 29 November 2014

For those hoping to see Tony Abbott receive a vicarious boot between the legs - here's the Victorian State Election Virtual Tally Room link & apps for 29 November 2014


Follow the action at the official Victorian State Election Virtual Tally Room after 6pm on 29 November 2014 at: http://tallyroom.vic.gov.au/vtr/tallyroom.html

Victoria Votes Mnet Mobile apps for Android and iOS devices.

ABC online coverage at: www.abc.net.au/news/vic-election-2014/

ABC Radio 774 Melbourne at: http://www.abc.net.au/melbourne/ & follow the count on livestream after 6pm at http://www.abc.net.au/radio/player/beta/#live/local_melbourne

The Age newspaper online at: http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/victoria-state-election-2014

Herald Sun newspaper online at: http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria-state-election-2014/victorian-election-2014-live-coverage/story-fnqggr3j-1227138237845

ABC News 24 Victoria Votes 2014 from 6pm

Once around the park with Australia's political cartoonists


Cartoonists and subjects which were popular in mainstream and social media in November 2014.....



Quote of the Week


Black people are constantly divided, chained to an ideology and sacrificed by others in the pursuit of their idea of the greater good. I’ve worked in the interface between black and white for long enough to be exploited most often as the proof of life.
I am in the ubiquitous photos of participants rounded up to pose and confirm the community engagement objective of a workshop was met. I am the counterweight that provides balanced reportage to a site, once I have been edited and strategically placed. I am the polarizing link that provides the dark to their light. I am what sustains their precedence over my self determination.
Is it any wonder that it is so difficult to find an Indigenous person willing to express an opinion?
[Siv Parker, On Dusk, 22 November 2014]

Friday, 28 November 2014

George Brandis: I will decide who has a right to access my metadata and the manner in which they access it


Personal information contained in metadata is 'owned' by you if you just happen to be Australian Attorney-General George Brandis (left) or one of his political or personal acquaintances, but not if you are unfortunate enough to be Bazza Citizen…..

The Sydney Morning Herald 27 November 2014:

Attorney-General George Brandis wants your private phone and internet metadata to be accessible by law-enforcement agencies without a warrant but won't let you see his.
As the Abbott government moves to make it a requirement for internet and phone providers to store every Australian citizens' metadata for two years, Mr Brandis has refused to divulge the metadata of his mobile phone bill.
Instead, a redacted version not even showing the cost of his bill has been released. It shows his Telstra bill for July is 17 pages long - 13 pages longer than this author's bill for the same month.
According to Mr Brandis' chief of staff, the decision to entirely censor the bill was due to it containing "personal information about a number of individuals' telephone numbers", as well as the time and origin of calls, reports technology publication ZDNet.
"Disclosure of the personal information in the document is unreasonable," Mr Brandis' chief of staff Paul O'Sullivan said, adding that who the minister called was not relevant…..
Telstra is refusing to hand it over and the case is currently before the Privacy Commissioner, who is set to decide on the matter before the end of the year.

Snapshot from reply to FOI request for Brandis metadata dated 27 November 2014:



* Photograph from news.com.au, May 2014