Tuesday, 13 February 2018
Another how low can they go moment courtesy of the Catholic Church in Australia
The
Sydney Morning Herald,
12 February 2018:
The Catholic Church in
Australia is worth tens of billions of dollars, making it one of the country’s
biggest non-government property owners, and massively wealthier than it has
claimed in evidence to major inquiries into child sexual abuse.
A six-month investigation
by The Sydney Morning Herald has found that the church misled the
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse by grossly
undervaluing its property treasures in both NSW and Victoria while claiming
that increased payments to abuse victims would require cuts to its social
programs.
The investigation was
based on intricate data from local councils that allowed more than 1860
valuations of church-owned property in Victoria. That showed that across 36
municipalities - including nearly all of metropolitan Melbourne - the church
had land and buildings worth almost $7 billion in 2016.
Extrapolated nationally,
using conservative assumptions, the church owns property worth more than $30
billion Australia-wide.
This put the Catholic church
among the largest non-government property owners, by value, in NSW and
Australia, rivalling Westfield’s network of shopping centres and other assets.
It dwarfs all other large property owners.
"These figures
confirm what we have known; there is huge inequity between the Catholic
Church’s wealth and their responses to survivors," said Helen Last, chief
executive of the In Good Faith Foundation.
"The 600 survivors
registered for our Foundation’s services continue to experience minimal
compensation and lack of comprehensive care in relation to their Church abuses.
They say their needs are the lowest of church priorities.’’…..
Monetary payments to
abuse survivors have averaged just $49,000 under Towards Healing, the national
compensation system established by the church in 1996……
The church also has
extensive non-property assets including Catholic Church Insurance and its own
internal banks - often known as Catholic Development Funds - with nearly $1
billion in assets in Sydney alone.
And it has other investments,
including in superannuation, telecommunications and in the stock-market. A
Church-owned fund manager has more than $1.4 billion under management.
Labels:
child sexual abuse,
compensation,
crime,
law,
religion,
royal commission,
Wealth
There is no good news when it comes to climate change
University of Colorado Boulder, Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC), media release, 5 February 2018:
Scientists find massive reserves of mercury hidden in permafrost
Researchers have discovered that thawing permafrost in the Northern Hemisphere stores twice as much mercury as the rest of the planet's soils, atmosphere, and oceans. The finding has significant implications for human health and ecosystems worldwide.
In a new study, scientists measured mercury concentrations in cores of frozen ground—or permafrost—from Alaska and used the data to estimate how much mercury has been trapped in Northern Hemisphere permafrost since the last Ice Age.
They found that Northern Hemisphere permafrost regions contain 1,656 gigagrams of mercury (32 million gallons, or enough to fill 50 Olympic-sized swimming pools), making them the largest known reservoir of mercury on the planet. This amount is nearly twice as much mercury as all soils outside of the northern permafrost region, the ocean, and the atmosphere combined.
The researchers also found that of the 1,656 gigagrams of mercury, 863 gigagrams lie in the surface layer of soil that freezes and thaws each year (27 Olympic-sized swimming pools), and 793 gigagrams are frozen in permafrost (23 Olympic-sized swimming pools).
"This implies permafrost regions contain roughly 10 times the total human mercury emissions over the last 30 years," said NSIDC scientist Kevin Schaefer, a co-author of the study published today in Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union.
"Previous studies assumed little or no mercury in permafrost regions, but we find the opposite is true," Schaefer said. "This completely changes our view of how mercury moves through the land and ocean."
"This discovery is a game-changer," said Paul Schuster, a hydrologist at the U.S. Geological Survey in Boulder, Colorado and lead author of the study. "We've quantified a pool of mercury that had not been done previously with confidence, and the results have profound implications for better understanding the global mercury cycle."
This diagram shows the modern mercury cycle with major reservoirs in white (gigagrams of mercury) and exchanges between reservoirs in black (gigagrams of mercury per year). Northern Hemisphere permafrost contains 863 gigagrams of mercury in the Active Layer, the layer of ground that is subject to annual thawing and freezing. About 793 gigagrams of mercury is found in Northern Hemisphere permafrost. Credit: Schuster et al./GRL/AGU. High-resolution image
Permafrost is permanently frozen ground and occurs in approximately 22.79 million square kilometers, or about 24 percent of the Northern Hemisphere land surface surrounding the Arctic ocean.
Mercury naturally occurs in the Earth's crust and typically enters the atmosphere through volcanic eruptions. The element cycles between the atmosphere and ocean quickly. However, mercury deposited on land from the atmosphere binds with organic matter in plants. After the plants die, soil microbes eat the dead organic matter, releasing the mercury back into the atmosphere or water.
In permafrost regions, however, the organic matter gets buried by sediment before it decays and becomes frozen into permafrost. Once frozen, the decay of organic matter stops, and the mercury remains trapped for thousands of years unless liberated by permafrost thaw.
"As long as the permafrost remains frozen, the mercury will stay trapped in the soil," Schaefer said. Higher air temperatures due to climate change could thaw much of the existing permafrost, allowing the decay of organic matter to resume and releasing mercury that could affect Earth's ecosystems. The released mercury can accumulate in aquatic and terrestrial food chains and cause harmful neurological and reproductive effects on animals.
"Although measurement of the rate of permafrost thaw was not part of this study, the thawing permafrost provides a potential for mercury to be released—that's just physics." Schuster said.
Climate models predict a 30 to 90 percent reduction in permafrost by 2100, depending on actual fuel emissions.
The researchers determined the total amount of mercury locked up in permafrost using field measurements. Between 2004 and 2012, the study authors drilled 13 permafrost soil cores at various sites in Alaska and measured the total amounts of mercury and carbon in each core. They selected sites with a diverse array of soil characteristics to best represent permafrost found around the entire Northern Hemisphere.
These images show soil mercury content (in micrograms of mercury per square meter) in Northern Hemisphere permafrost zones for four soil layers: 0 to 30 centimeters, 0 to 100 centimeters, 0 to 300 centimeters, and permafrost. The permafrost map represents mercury bound to frozen organic matter below the active layer and above a depth of 300 centimeters. Credit: Schuster et al./GRL/AGU. High-resolution image
Schuster, Schaefer, and their colleagues found their measurements were consistent with published data on mercury in non-permafrost and permafrost soils from thousands of other sites worldwide. They used their observed values to calculate the total amount of mercury stored in permafrost in the Northern Hemisphere and to create a map of soil mercury concentrations in the region.
The researchers believe their study gives policymakers and scientists new numbers to work with and calibrate their models as they begin to study this new phenomenon in more detail. The researchers intend to release another study modeling the release of mercury from permafrost due to climate change.
"Permafrost contains a huge amount of mercury," Schaefer said. "We need to know how much mercury will get released from thawing permafrost, when it will get released, and where."
-end-
Labels:
climate change,
health,
pollution
Monday, 12 February 2018
AUSTRALIA CARD MARK II: no national digital ID number will mean no access to any Australian federal government services
“When signing
up to the platform for the first time, users will be asked to provide their
name, email address, and phone number, and verify their details via email or
SMS. They will then be asked to provide information from three identity
documents, which goes through the exchange to the identity provider for verification.
The exchange receives encrypted details back which it passes on to the
government service the user wants to reach, which then grants the user access.” [IT News, 20 March 2015]
IT
News, 8
February 2018:
The Department of Human
Services looks set to become the federal government's exclusive manager of
digital identities after being selected to build the identity provider solution
that will be used for the Govpass platform.
The Govpass framework is
a decentralised identity model that allows individuals
to choose their identity provider - an organisation that issues identity
documents, like Australia Post or the ATO - and access a range of public and
private sector services through a single digital identity credential.
There is no limit on the
number of identity providers outside of the Commonwealth that can be accredited
for Govpass; Australia Post has already indicated it will seek to become
the first non-government identity provider, using its Digital iD platform.
Several state and
territory government agencies and private sector entities are also expected to
become identity providers over time.
However, the federal
government last year made the decision that only one
identity provider would operate for the entire Commonwealth.
The Digital
Transformation Agency revealed the decision following meetings with existing
Commonwealth identity service providers, DHS and the ATO. Its rationale for the
move was to focus security efforts in one place and avoid complex
administrative structures.
iTnews revealed in
October that the DTA was yet to make up its mind up on which of the two
agencies would serve as the federal government’s sole identity provider for
GovPass, even as testing
of the new platform was taking place with the ATO’s new online tax
file number application service.
Instead the DTA said it
was working closely with the ATO and DHS on the “next steps” for the platform.
But in response to
questions on notice from recent estimates hearings, DHS revealed it had been
instructed to develop the federal government’s single identity provider
platform, to be known as myGov IdP.
“The department was
commissioned by the DTA to build the identity provider (IdP) for the
whole-of-government,” it said.
“The myGov IdP will
enable citizens to verify their identity online and use it to apply for
government services.”
iTnews has made
several attempts to clarify the statements with the DTA and DHS, but
both refused to comment on the build and DHS’ apparent position as the
single government identity provider.
The ATO similarly
redirected questions about its involvement with Govpass, including whether it
had also been asked by the DTA to build an identity provider solution, to the
DTA.
Selecting DHS as the
sole government identity provider would be an obvious choice for the DTA -
the agency is the government’s current defacto whole-of-gov identity provider
through the myGov digital services platform.
A private beta release
of myGov IdP is currently planned for later this month.
Identity providers on
Govpass will use the DTA-built identity exchange – and in turn the document
verification service (DVS) and facial verification service (FVS) – to verify an
individual’s credentials without revealing their identity to service providers.
[my yellow bolding]Note: The Face Identification Service (FIS) is a one-to-many, image-based identification service that can match a photo of an unknown person against multiple government records to help establish their identity. FIS is also available to police, security services, Dept. of Immigration and Dept. of Foreign Affairs. [Australian Attorney-General's Department, October 2017]
Sunday, 11 February 2018
Why so many voters are annoyed by Barnaby Joyce's statement* that his private life is a private matter
“When it influences
staff positions and even contributes to winners and losers in a reshuffle,
Barnaby's affair with a younger staffer is not a private matter” [Stephen Mayne on Twitter, 9 February 2018]
During the lengthy extramarital
relationship with a member of his staff Australian Deputy Prime Minister and
Nationals MP for New England Barnaby
Joyce:
* arranged
for a change of employment for the staffer in this relationship. She was employed
at taxpayers’ expense by another federal minister, in a senior position
specifically created for her with a six-figure annual salary;
* successfully sought a second staff position for his former staffer when that federal minister was forced to resign from the front bench while a dual citizenship claim was resolved. This second position was with the Nationals Chief Whip - resulting in him having two people in his office doing the same job at taxpayers' expense;
* successfully sought a second staff position for his former staffer when that federal minister was forced to resign from the front bench while a dual citizenship claim was resolved. This second position was with the Nationals Chief Whip - resulting in him having two people in his office doing the same job at taxpayers' expense;
* left his
wife of 24 years and their four children;
* began living
rent-free with the now pregnant former staffer in an Armidale townhouse
owned by multi-millionaire businessman Greg Maguire who himself attracted some political controversy in 2004-2006 concerning potential breaches of the Electoral Act;
* allegedly assaulted
a member of the public in a pub in his electorate for referring to the former
staffer as his “mistress”;
* publicly
admitted in parliament to separating from his wife but not to the
extramarital relationship; and
* allegedly
during a cabinet reshuffle vindictively
moved against fellow members of the Turnbull Government he felt had privately
criticised the extramarital relationship.
Only the fact that his marriage had ended could be rightly said to be a private matter.
Five of the seven dot points above go to issues concerning fitness for office, possible corrupt conduct and what may be an in-kind political donation in a by-election year and not the post-election "gift" listed on the Register of Members' Interests on 3 January 2018.
Those issues are not private.
As much as he wants to, Barnaby Joyce cannot pretend to be a victim of unfair media scrutiny.
As much as he wants to, Barnaby Joyce cannot pretend to be a victim of unfair media scrutiny.
BACKGROUND
Fifty
year-old Barnaby Thomas Gerard Joyce,
an accountant by profession, came into the Australian Senate in 2004 and
his election appears to have not been without some passing controversy at the time.
He resigned from the Senate and was elected to the House of Representatives for New
England, New South Wales, for the first time in 2013 then re-elected in 2016.
Joyce refused to step down as deputy prime minister and refused to resign from the Australian Parliament once the New Zealand Government confirmed he was a citizen by descent of that country and he was referred to the High Court of Australia concerning the claim of dual citizenship. He continued to sit in the House of Representatives in contravention of the Australian Constitution.
His election was ruled void on 27 October 2017 under section
44 of the Australian Constitution. The High Court of ruling him
ineligible from 2 June 2016, having found he held New Zealand and well as Australian citizenship since
birth.
Having renounced his New Zealand citizenship in August 2017 he was elected
at the New England by-election on 2 December 2017.
* Barnaby Joyce Statement
In the same week Wall Street was finally spooked by the sheer weight of Donald Trump's inadequacies as the 45th US President.....
.....and the Dow Jones Index indicated that financiers and big business might be seriously worried about possibly higher than expected interest rates, rising national debt and the size of the US federal budget deficit Trump created in his first twelve months in office - he also rather unwisely performed in front of the cameras on the subject of treason.
YouTube, Time, 5 February 2018:
(CNN)President Donald Trump wasn't -- and,
apparently, still isn't -- happy that Democrats in Congress didn't stand to
applaud him in his State of the Union address last week.
"They were like
death and un-American. Un-American. Somebody said, 'treasonous.' I mean, Yeah,
I guess why not? Can we call that treason? Why not? I mean they certainly
didn't seem to love our country that much."
So, here we are. Again.
Let's quickly define
"treason," shall we?
"The offense of
attempting by overt acts to overthrow the government of the state to which the
offender owes allegiance or to kill or personally injure the sovereign or the
sovereign's family."
Trump loyalists will
dismiss all of this as much ado over nothing. He was joking! He didn't even say
that it was treasonous! He was just agreeing with people who said it was
treasonous!
Fine. Also, wrong. And
missing the point in a major way.
The point? It's this:
Not standing during applause lines for the State of the Union isn't treasonous
or un-American. Not even close.
If it was, all of the Republicans
in that chamber are treasonous and un-American as well because when former
President Barack Obama would tout his accomplishments in office -- as Trump was
doing last Tuesday night -- lots and lots of Republican legislators would sit
on their hands while the Democratic side of the aisle erupted in cheers. And so
on and so forth for every president before him (and after).
The
Washington Post,
6 February 2018:
This isn’t the first
time Trump has used the T-word as president. Just last month, he accused
FBI agent Peter Strzok of treason for sending negative text messages about him
during the 2016 election to a lawyer at the FBI who he was having an affair
with. “By the way, that’s a treasonous act,” the
president told the Wall Street Journal. “What he tweeted to his lover is a
treasonous act.”
Labels:
debt,
Donald Trump,
economics,
treason,
US politics
Saturday, 10 February 2018
Tweet of the Week
Scott Morrison is on the radio. pic.twitter.com/b1s1aOdxKI— The Cathy Wilcox (@cathywilcox1) February 5, 2018
Labels:
#auspol,
Liberal Party of Australia
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