Saturday, 24 February 2018
Friday, 23 February 2018
There's something worse than a cashless welfare card out there in the darkness
What could possibly be worse than the Turnbull Government's Cashless Debit Card which will eventually cover all government cash transfers to individuals except Age and Veterans' Affairs pensions?
The answer is - welfare payments being converted into 50 per cent Cashless Debit Card and 50 per cent a generic low grade, nutritionally suspect, weekly or fortnightly processed, tinned & dry goods food parcel.
Such as this proposed program......
Vibe, 13 February 2018:
In Donald Trump's budget proposal, America's poor is hit the hardest, including Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) recipients. The plan proposes a $17.2 billion-cut to the program by 2019 and will replace monthly cash benefits with a food box delivery program, according to reports.
White House budget director Mick Mulvaney compared the program to Blue Apron, an ingredient-and-recipe meal kit service. The Chicago Tribune notes SNAP provides roughly $125 per month to 42.2 million Americans, and the Agriculture Department would use part of those benefits to buy and deliver boxes of "homegrown" food. It's called "America's Harvest Box."
The Harvest Box would contain things like shelf-stable milk, juice, grains, cereals, pasta, peanut butter, beans, canned meat, poultry or fish, and canned fruits and vegetables. Since the boxes are valued at half of SNAP recipients monthly benefit, the remainder of their benefits would be put on electronic benefit cards, CNN Money reports.
The existing US Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program offers about 46 million low-income Americans an allowance to buy from grocery stores and farmers markets a wide range of breads, cereals, rice, pasta, dairy products, fresh fruits & vegetables, meats, fish and poultry, as well as seeds and plants which produce food for the household to eat. Soft drinks, candy, cookies, snack crackers, and ice cream are food items and are therefore eligible items. Seafood, steak, and bakery cakes are also food items and are therefore eligible items.
Trump intends to change this program as a government cost-cutting measure saving up to a reported US$127 billion over ten years and, have the private sector under contract give out shelf-stable food bought in bulk. No choice of food parcel content appears to be allowed - it will be one-size-fits-all.
What could possibly go wrong? So many things if private contractors of the type the Trump Regime will pick were to attempt regular food delivery to est. 46 million people.
Given the love affair that those right-wing warriors in the Liberal and National parties have with the political extremes of US Republican politics, it won't be long before the likes of Minister for Human Services Michael Keenan and Minister for Social Services DanTehan start suggesting similar food parcels as a component of the bulk Centrelink welfare payments here in Australia.
NATS Spill? Monday 26 February 2018
According to Junkee on 22 February 2018:
Nationals MP Andrew Broad has publicly called on Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce to resign from the leadership of the National Party, firing the starting gun on a leadership challenge.
Nationals MP Andrew Broad has publicly called on Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce to resign from the leadership of the National Party, firing the starting gun on a leadership challenge.
In an interview on ABC
radio this afternoon Broad said his local Nationals branch had called on
Joyce to resign and that he would represent that view to the Nationals party
room meeting in Canberra next Monday. He called on Joyce to resign as party leader
and go to the back bench.
Are we about to see......
Thursday, 22 February 2018
So Prime Minister Turnbull has been bitiching again about the ABC's reporting
It's also disingenuous to talk about a 30 per cent rate when so few
companies pay anything like that thanks to tax legislation that allows them to
avoid paying corporate tax. Exclusive analysis released by ABC today reveals one
in five of Australia's top companies has paid zero tax for the past three years.
On that same
day the House
of Representatives Hansard recorded these mentions:
Mr THISTLETHWAITE
(Kingsford Smith) (10:12): ………All of these hardworking Australians would be
thrilled to know—very pleased to know—that the ABC has uncovered that about one in five Australian
companies pay no company tax whatsoever in this country. Yes, that's right: 380
of Australia's largest companies pay absolutely no income tax at all—a big
doughnut; a big fat zero. They include airlines, banks, financial
service companies, mining, energy, clothing, steel, and telecommunications
companies. There's even a condom manufacturer. That's rather appropriate, given
what they've just done to the Australian taxpayer in paying no tax at all
during the course of the last couple of years…..
Mr THISTLETHWAITE
(Kingsford Smith) (13:49): As mums and dads pack up the kids, send them off to
school and head off to work; as pensioners struggle to put the air-conditioner
on because of rising electricity costs; and as students face increases in their
fees because of cuts to TAFE and cuts to funding for education—these
hard-working Australians, as they head off to jobs and study today, would be
pleased to know that the ABC has uncovered that one in five Australian
companies pay absolutely no company tax in this country. That's right, 380 of Australia's
largest companies paid absolutely zero company tax over the course of the last
three years. They include airlines, energy companies, mining companies,
clothing companies, banks, insurance companies and a manufacturer of
condoms—which is highly appropriate, given the rogering that they've just given
Australian hardworking taxpayers by paying no tax. Now, given that these
companies pay no corporate tax, what is the response of the Turnbull
government? The response of the Turnbull government is to give them a tax cut.
These companies are struggling so much that we're going to give them a tax cut!
Yes, that's right: 380 of the largest companies that pay no tax will get a tax
cut, despite the fact that they're increasing taxes for Australian workers by
putting up the Medicare levy. We won't cop it. Labor will oppose these tax cuts
and we'll stand up for average, hard-working, battling Australians……
Mr TURNBULL
(Wentworth—Prime Minister) (14:03): I thank the honourable member for her
question. The government is supporting and delivering lower business taxes
because we know they will result in more investment and more jobs. Company tax
is ultimately a tax on workers. When nearly nine in 10 Australians work for
private business, surely it is obvious that it's in the national interest to
support the companies that employ the overwhelming majority of Australians.
But, instead of supporting policies that will create jobs and grow wages, the
opposition is busy peddling the myth that business does not care about the
level of tax and doesn't in fact pay tax. I'm not sure where the $68 billion of
company tax receipts came from, but, according to the Labor Party, companies
don't pay tax. The Labor Party wants to increase taxes; the government wants to
reduce them. But we do not believe that paying tax is optional. Every
Australian and every business that makes a profit in Australia must pay their
fair share of tax. You'd think that was common sense, but not for the
opposition. Like everything the opposition leader does, he calls for action one
minute and then opposes it the next. He called for action against multinational
tax avoidance and then he voted against some of the toughest anti-avoidance
laws in the world. If this isn't clear enough for the members opposite, we'd be
happy to arrange a briefing with officials from the Australian Taxation Office.
We have introduced and, no thanks to the Labor Party, passed through the
parliament some of the toughest multinational tax avoidance laws in the world.
At that briefing from the ATO, I am sure that those distinguished officials
will be able to provide a tutorial on the difference between revenue and profit
because members opposite either don't understand the difference or they're now
calling for businesses to be taxed on revenue—not profit— even if the business
makes a loss. We saw that
they were busily retweeting the article—one of the most confused and poorly
researched articles I've seen on this topic on the ABC's website. Of
course, the ABC is an enterprise that understands profit and loss.
Opposition members
interjecting—
Mr TURNBULL: It does! It
understands taxes; they're recipients of them. They receive them—taxpayers'
funds. They understand the difference: the hard work of investing and
struggling and losing money one year and then being able to offset it against
profit the next—or not. No, the ABC has the same understanding of the
commercial world as does the opposition. (Time expired)
The Australian
Financial Review scenting blood after the prime minister’s
criticism went to print with this disingenuous take on 15 February 2018:
Both premises fatally
expose their author's innumeracy. The first is demonstrably false. Freely
available data produced by the Australian Taxation Office show that 32 of Australia's 50 largest
companies paid $19.33 billion in company tax in FY16 (FY17 figures are
not yet available). The other 18 paid nothing. Why? They lost money, or were
carrying over previous losses.
I’m sure North Coast Voices readers will quickly
notice that Alberici was citing statistics for a baseline of around 1,900
companies and the ‘Fin Review’ columnist was citing a baseline of 50 companies -
so of course the number of companies paying no tax to the number of companies
paying tax is going to differ between the two baselines.
Reading the full text there does not appear to be any factuall inaccuracies in the Alberici article being complained about.
Reading the full text there does not appear to be any factuall inaccuracies in the Alberici article being complained about.
Meanwhile ABC News withdrew the online version of
the economic analysis
and updated Alberici’s
companion article in order to provide further
information and context.
The companion
article still contains those same statistics:
Analysis by the ABC
reveals Qantas is not alone — about 380, or one in five, of Australia's largest companies have paid
no tax for at least the past three years.
However,
these opening lines written by Alberici in the article “There's no case for a corporate
tax cut when one in five of Australia's top companies don't pay it” on
14 February are now missing in action as this analysis gently sinks to the
bottom of the Internet:
There is no compelling
evidence that giving the country's biggest companies a tax cut sees that money
passed on to workers in the form of higher wages.
Treasury modelling
relies on theories that belie the reality that's playing out around the world.
Since the peak of the
commodities boom in 2011-12, profit margins have risen to levels not seen since
the early 2000s but wages growth has been slower than at any time since the
1960s.
The Guardian reported on 16 February that:
Guardian Australia understands ABC News management has been in crisis meetings for two days after the prime minister attacked the articles in question time and then wrote formal letters of complaint to management.
The Guardian reported on 16 February that:
Guardian Australia understands ABC News management has been in crisis meetings for two days after the prime minister attacked the articles in question time and then wrote formal letters of complaint to management.
I suspect
that what Turnbull took umbrage to in the first place was the fact that one article took a stronger position on
why corporate tax cuts were not good for the economy or wages growth and, therefore
were unlikely to benefit workers and
their families and, the other article which is still online did not address this aspect of government taxation policy.
So he set out to shoot the message down and be damned to the fate of the messenger.
Of course in attempting this Turnbull created a Steisand Effect With A Twist - ensuring that the full text of “There's no case for a corporate tax cut when one in five of Australia's top companies don't pay it” has been copied onto websites he can't bully and the article's analysis is still being discussed by voters.
So he set out to shoot the message down and be damned to the fate of the messenger.
Of course in attempting this Turnbull created a Steisand Effect With A Twist - ensuring that the full text of “There's no case for a corporate tax cut when one in five of Australia's top companies don't pay it” has been copied onto websites he can't bully and the article's analysis is still being discussed by voters.
BACKGROUND
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/...abc-turnbull.../story-fna045gd-1226869241476?...
Jan 26, 2018 - COMMUNICATIONS Minister
Malcolm Turnbull says ABC board members who do not want to
get involved in ensuring news content on the public broadcaster is accurate and
impartial should get off the board. Revealing he receives hundreds of complaints about
the ABC each week, MrTurnbull said “the ..
Q&A:
Malcolm Turnbull phones ABC boss Mark Scott to complain about crude Tony Abbott
tweet
26 August 2015
https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/...turnbull...abc.../ff6ad001ced93bb9c40eee1f4c839...
Dec 2, 2013 - THE minister in charge of
the ABC, Malcolm Turnbull, rang the broadcasters boss Mark Scott last
week to tell him he had made an “error of judgment” in teaming with the
Guardian to run revelations that the Indonesian presidents phone was bugged.
https://delimiter.com.au/.../watch-turnbull-implies-complained-abc-failed-nbn-coverag...
Feb 4,
2016 - Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull appears to have implied
that he made the samecomplaint to ABC management that he has
previously made in public before the 2013 Federal Election, stating that the
broadcaster had "failed" to provide balanced coverage of the
competing National Broadband Network ...
Australian
Tax Office, 2015-16 Report of Entity Tax Information
This report contains the total income, taxable income and tax payable of
over 2000 corporate tax entities for the 2015-16 year. This report also
includes separate lists of entities whose information was not available by the
cut-off date to produce the Report of Entity Tax Information for 2013-14 and
2014-15.
Labels:
corporations,
economy,
government policy,
Our ABC,
statistics,
taxation,
Turnbull Government
Wednesday, 21 February 2018
George Christensen running a little distraction for his 'mate' Barnaby Joyce?
Far-right federal politicians tend to stick together in the face of negative media coverage and on 17 February 2018 thirty-nine year old George Robert Christensen, Liberal-Nationals MP for Dawson, apparently decided to give social media something else to talk about other than his 'mate' Nationals Leader Barnaby Joyce.
Unfortunately when picking a topic George showed all the maturity and sound judgement voters have come to expect from members of the Turnbull Coalition Government.
Cristensen's Facebook caption reads "You gotta ask yourself, do you feel lucky, greenie punks?"
Unfortunately for George at least one member of the public reported his Facebook post to the police and the prime minister. So it wasn't that long before he changed the captioning of this gun-totting image.
Some time later he also removed the image with a silly show of petulance.
Perhaps he finally got around to considering whether his prime minister might be as unamused as many other Australians given these facts about those so-called "greenie punks".
“Two hundred
environmental activists, wildlife rangers and indigenous leaders
trying to protect their land were killed in 2016, according to the
watchdog group Global Witness – more than double the number killed five
years ago.” [The
Guardian, 13 June 2017]
"A New South Wales farmer who shot and killed an environment officer involved in land clearing prosecutions against his family has been found guilty of murder." [ABC News, 25 May 2016]
Speak Up for Battery Hens Before It's Too Late: NSW Government taking submissions on Model Code of Practice for Poultry until 26 February 2018
15 Feb 2018 4:00 AM AEST
- Australians Urged to Speak up for Battery Hens Before it's too Late
15 February, 2018
Australians Urged to
Speak up for Battery Hens Before it's too Late
Australians are being
encouraged take part in a once-in-a-generation opportunity to help end the cruel
use of battery hen cages by making a submission to the poultry code review.
With polls indicating
84% of Australians believe that battery cages should be banned, it's alarming that
11 million hens still suffer in cages in Australia today.
Deemed cruel and
unacceptable in many other countries including Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the entire
European Union, Australia is now lagging behind the rest of the world by continuing
to allow the use of battery hen cages.
The reasons to act now
and make a submission to the poultry review are clear. Battery hens in Australia
are permanently locked in small cages, denied the freedom to walk around and
stretch their wings for their entire life. Furthermore, scientists estimate
that four in five caged hens suffer from crippling osteoporosis due to the
conditions they are forced to live in.
Setting the standard for
the treatment of farmed birds, the review of the Model Code of Practice for
Poultry is now open for public consultation. But the process hasn't been
without scandal, with documents acquired under the Freedom of Information Act
indicating collusion between the egg industry and the NSW Government to ensure
battery cages remain in use.
With industry interests
dominating the agenda, now is the time for the public to raise their voices for
animal welfare standards to reflect community expectations.
"This is the first
time in 17 years that the laws that allow cage egg farming have come under review.
Currently, more than 90,000 Australians have made a submission through the
Animals Australia website, which
is staggering. It's already the biggest response to a public consultation for
farmed animals that Australia has ever seen. This demonstrates the depth of
concern in the community about this issue," said Animals Australia's
Campaign Director Lisa Chalk.
The expectations of the
community have changed significantly within the last decade, with many consumers
already voting with their wallets. Most Australians no longer buy cage eggs and
while major companies such as Woolworths, Aldi, McDonald's, Subway, Hungry
Jack's, Arnott's, Nestle and Heinz are removing cage eggs from their supply
chains, cage egg corporations are still permitted to operate in Australia.
Cage egg farming in
Australia is dominated by three multi-million dollar corporations whose combined
annual revenue is over half a billion dollars. They can well afford the 2.5
cents per egg it would cost to give hens a better life.
With support for cage
egg farming waning, some egg producers are now looking to export cage eggs overseas.
A legal ban on battery cages would ensure Australian hens aren't condemned to
suffer in cages to lay eggs for other countries.
"Australian
Governments like to project the nation as a world leader on animal welfare but
in reality, Australia is lagging well behind other developed nations,
particularly in failing to acknowledge the unacceptable cruelty caused by
battery hen cages," said Lisa Chalk.
"What we have
before us is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to secure a better life for
millions of animals."
The poultry code review
provides a rare opportunity to secure a legal ban on the cruel and archaic battery
hen cage. Running until February 26, the public consultation process enables
everyone in the community to join well-known Australians - Judith Lucy, Mick
Molloy, Sam Pang and Lehmo - to be part of history in the making and help free
hens from cages.
Submissions take only a
minute and can be made by visiting AnimalsAustralia.org before February 26th.
Video and images are
available for download at:
Please email submissions to publicconspoultry@animalhealthaustralia.com.au
Or
Post submissions to: Animal Welfare Standards Public Consultation PO Box 5116 Braddon ACT 2612
Labels:
animal rights,
animal welfare,
birds
Tuesday, 20 February 2018
US Dept of Justice-FBI investigation of Russian links to Donald Trump's election campaign inexorably rolls on
On 17 May 2017 the probe into Russian influence on US political processes and collusion between the Russian Government and individuals associated with the election campaign of President Donald J Trump became an investigation which would inevitably lead to charges being laid.
To date both President Trump's former campaign manager and campaign deputy-director have been indicted, along with thirteen Russian nationals and three corporations.
Trump's former security adviser, along with a former member of his foreign policy advisory team and an individual who unlawfully supplied US bank accounts to Russians associated with the alleged political interference, have plead guilty to charges.
Current State of Play according to US Dept. of Justice
U.S.
v. Internet Research Agency, et al (1:18-cr-32, District of Columbia)
A federal grand jury in
the District of Columbia returned an indictment on Feb. 16, 2018, against 13
Russian nationals and three Russian entities accused of violating U.S. criminal
laws in order to interfere with U.S. elections and political processes. The
indictment charges all of the defendants with conspiracy to defraud the United
States, three defendants with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and bank fraud,
and five defendants with aggravated identity theft.
U.S.
v. Richard Pinedo, et al (1:18-cr-24, District of Columbia)
Richard Pinedo, of Santa
Paula, Calif., pleaded guilty on Feb. 12, 2018, to identity fraud, in violation
of 18 U.S.C. 1028.
U.S.
v. Michael T. Flynn (1:17-cr-232, District of Columbia)
Lieutenant General
Michael T. Flynn (Ret.), of Alexandria, Va., pleaded guilty on Dec. 1, 2017, to
making false statements to FBI agents, in violation of 18 U.S.C. 1001.
U.S.
v. Paul J. Manafort, Jr., and Richard W. Gates III (1:17-cr-201, District of
Columbia)
Paul J. Manafort, Jr.,
of Alexandria, Va., and Richard W. Gates III, of Richmond, Va., have been
indicted by a federal grand jury on Oct. 27, 2017, in the District of Columbia.
The indictment contains 12 counts: conspiracy against the United States, conspiracy
to launder money, unregistered agent of a foreign principal, false and
misleading FARA statements, false statements, and seven counts of failure to
file reports of foreign bank and financial accounts. The case was
unsealed on Oct. 30, 2017, after the defendants were permitted to
surrender themselves to the custody of the FBI.
U.S.
v. George Papadopoulos (1:17-cr-182, District of Columbia)
George Papadopoulos, of
Chicago, Illinois, pleaded guilty on Oct. 5, 2017, to making false statements
to FBI agents, in violation of 18 U.S.C. 1001. The case was unsealed on Oct.
30, 2017.
UPDATE
U.S.
v. Alex van der Zwaan (1:18-cr-31, District of Columbia)
Alex van der
Zwaan, of London, pleaded guilty on Feb. 20, 2018, to making false
statements to FBI agents, in violation of 18 U.S.C. 1001.
Statement
of the Offense
U.S.
v. Paul J. Manafort, Jr., and Richard W. Gates III (1:18-cr-83, Eastern
District of Virginia)
Paul J. Manafort, Jr.,
of Alexandria, Va., and Richard W. Gates III, of Richmond, Va., were indicted
by a federal grand jury on Feb. 22, 2018, in the Eastern District of Virginia.
The indictment contains 32 counts: 16 counts related to false individual
income tax returns, seven counts of failure to file reports of foreign bank and
financial accounts, five counts of bank fraud conspiracy, and four counts of
bank fraud.
Indictment
U.S.
v. Paul J. Manafort, Jr. (1:17-cr-201, District of Columbia)
A federal grand jury in
the District of Columbia returned a superseding indictment on Feb. 23,
2018, against Paul J. Manafort, Jr., 68, of Alexandria, Va. The superseding
indictment contains five counts: conspiracy against the United States, conspiracy
to launder money, unregistered agent of a foreign principal, false and
misleading FARA statements, and false statements.
U.S.
v. Richard W. Gates III (1:17-cr-201, District of Columbia)
Richard W. Gates III,
45, of Richmond, Va., pleaded guilty on Feb. 23, 2018, to a
superseding criminal information that includes: count one of the indictment,
which charges conspiracy against the United States, in violation of 18 U.S.C.
371 (which includes conspiracy to violate 26 U.S.C. 7206(1), 31 U.S.C. 5312 and
5322(b), and 22 U.S.C. 612, 618(a)(1), and 618(a)(2)), and a charge of making
false statements to the Special Counsel’s Office and FBI agents, in violation
of 18 U.S.C. 1001. A status report with regard to sentencing was scheduled for
May 14, 2018.
Labels:
crime,
Donald Trump,
elections,
law,
US-Russia relations
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