Tuesday, 20 August 2019
The extreme far-right in Australian politics is on the march and hopes to capture the Liberal and Nationals' party machines
In October 2018 Australian mainstream media reported that a far right group had attempted to infiltrate the NSW National Party.
The Guardian, 15 October 2018:
The New South Wales Young Nationals has expelled one member and suspended two others after revelations the group had been infiltrated by members of Australia’s alt-right movement.
On Sunday the ABC’s Background Briefing revealed that members of the NSW Young Nationals were members of the Lads Society, a far-right fight club whose leaders include the prominent alt-right figure Blair Cottrell.
The Young Nationals – including one member of the party executive – were or had also been members of a Facebook group called the New Guard, whose followers include self-described fascists.
Membership to the party’s youth organisation has also been temporarily suspended.
On Monday the deputy premier and leader of the NSW Nationals, John Barilaro, admitted his party may have been an “easy target” for members of the far-right seeking to influence mainstream politics.
“We are a grassroots party that is brought together by geography so I think we are probably an easy target,” he told ABC radio.
“If you want to become a member and then start bringing more members in, we are a small party so a small number of members joining can actually change the structure of a branch or an electorate council as we call them.
“So maybe it’s because we are an easy target for individuals to infiltrate.”
Barilaro admitted the reports were “worrying”, saying there was a “question mark” over how influential the members identified by the ABC had been in developing policy within the party’s youth wing.
He downplayed the significance of the group on the wider party.
Earlier in 2018 media was reporting on a religious right attempt to infiltrate the Liberal Party at Victorian state level.
The Guardian, 19 May 2018:
It’s one of those dilemmas politicians like to call wicked problems. Politicians, at least the folks still on the planet, know that it’s important to build a political movement from the ground up, but such movements can sometimes produce outcomes that are uncomfortable for people in power.
One of these case studies exists presently with the Liberal party in Victoria, where Malcolm Turnbull has been used as a recruitment tool, and not in a positive way. Conservative forces in the Victorian branch have used the rolling of Tony Abbott and Turnbull’s alleged progressivity as a rallying cry to recruit new members.
An army is being raised in Melbourne’s outer-eastern suburbs with the objective of taking the Liberal party back from the Costello clique – the group that rose to a position of influence when Peter Costello was the most significant centre-right political figure in Victoria.
The grassroots recruitment drive has been active amongst conservative church groups looking for a home after the collapse of the Christian micro-party Family First.
The Age, 3 June 2018:
An Age investigation has confirmed with senior church sources that at least 10 of the 78 people elected to the Liberals’ administrative bodies at the party’s April state council are Mormons.
This amounts to nearly 13 per cent of all those now in key positions within the Liberals’ organisational wing, compared to just 0.3 per cent of all Australians who are members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Combined with conservative Catholics, evangelical Christians from churches such as Victory Faith Centre and City Builders, the religious right-wing now has unprecedented sway in Liberal Party politics.
West Australian Liberal Party members were going public with their concerns at the beginning of 2019.
The West Australian, 15 January 2019:
Any political party trying to win the majority of voters at the silent centre of noisy left/right politics understands why religious zealotry is a turn off.
Depending on who you talk to, given most people in politics are motivated by self-interest, the Liberals are either approaching a crossroads over the evangelical push for influence in the northern and southern suburbs branches, or they are already past the tipping point.
Plenty of party players will offer background on the battles being fought inside Liberal branches and divisions, but few want to go public for fear of the powerbrokers who control the numbers.
Long-standing Liberal Party member Deidre Willmott has been a chief of staff at the highest levels of government, was chief executive of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry until recently, is a proud Anglican and is not one for sensationalism.
Therefore, her view that evangelical forces were gaining control of the party should matter in Liberal land and party leaders, like Mike Nahan, and other stalwarts should take note. Willmott talked freely about “those people” from the religious right “getting the numbers”.
“The party runs the risk that a narrow-based agenda will be the priority of the party and make it irrelevant to the broad base it has represented,” she said. “I have no problem with Christians, I am one myself, but I just don’t think a socially conservative agenda is part of a mainstream Liberal Party.”
Following on from weekend news about members of another evangelical church, True North, nominating for control of the party’s Sorrento-Duncraig branch, there was much chatter on social media about the so-called “alliance” of Liberal powerbrokers.
Perhaps, given the topic, southern suburbs Christian warrior and Upper House Liberal Nick Goiran, his northern suburbs parliamentary colleague Peter Collier and Federal Liberal minister Mathias Cormann should be dubbed the Holy Trinity.
Highly placed Liberals insist they control the party’s dominant faction and do so with the help of scores of members from Pentecostal and Baptist churches.
Federal Liberal MP Ian Goodenough is one politician who does not shy away from confirming the support he receives from the evangelical community, including Globalheart and True North churches.
But he will not concede that the systematic approach Globalheart members have taken to winning key positions in Liberal branches differs greatly from other followers of religions getting involved in the party.
Now we are hearing that mid-2019 the Queensland Liberal-National Party had to shore up its barricades.
The Courier Mail, 18 August 2019:
QUEENSLAND’s Liberal National Party changed it rules last month in a bid to thwart an ultra conservative takeover of the party.
Now it can be revealed the party has launched a widened investigation into who was behind the alleged “religious right” takeover push and what methods they were using in their bid.
The investigation is an extension of a probe launched earlier this year into allegations attempts were being made to woo far-right extremists into the fold and use their networks trawl for new recruits.
It is understood there are three to four people of interest to the investigation with the focus on stacking efforts witnessed at two party unit AGMs – the Metro South AGM and the Metro North AGM – where officer bearer positions that also have a vote on the LNP’s powerful state executive were up for grabs.
It was the Metro North AGM – where more than 100 new faces arrived including some who allegedly were bussed in – that was the catalyst for the rule change brought in last month.
Now new members must wait a year before voting on office bearer elections just as they have to for MP preselections.
And once more New South Wales is in the news, but this time it's the NSW Liberals, not the Nationals, who are being targeted.
The Sydney Morning Herald, 8 August 2019:
A group promoting religious freedom is working to recruit 5000 Christian conservatives to the NSW Liberals as part of an ambitious scheme aimed at taking "control" of the state division of the party.
Leaked documents obtained by the Herald, which contain metadata leading back to Federal and NSW parliaments, reveal the NSW Reformers group hopes to recruit thousands of members across Sydney.
A 900-word document titled ‘NSW Reformers - Taking Back Our Nation Through Good Government’ lays out the group's intentions to exert influence on politicians by joining Liberal branches and gaining pre-selection votes.
“If we recruit 5000 Christian conservatives we will control the NSW division of the Liberal Party,” it reads.
“We will organise information sessions for local coordinators as to how the intricate parts of the party work ...
Politicians are far more receptive to people and causes if they directly impact their chances of being in Parliament.”
The group believes greater control of state and federal preselection in NSW would ensure a strong "conservative representation in Parliament".
The document’s metadata suggests it was written by a staff member in a federal ministerial office last year. The staffer did not return calls or text messages....
Other documents show names, addresses and contact details of hundreds of constituents were collated from a series of petitions advertised on the NSW Reformers' page.
The petitions that netted the data of hundreds of constituents refers to "gender ideology", “gay surrogacy”, religious freedom and Zoe’s Law legislation, which would make it a crime to cause death to a fetus.
The spreadsheets also contain lists of dozens of churches across Sydney to be targeted in the recruitment drive.
Barnaby Joyce invades personal spaces
This bloke, who is a downright national disgrace, is making phone calls that have a recording of him calling on people to contact their Local MP in the NSW parliament and have them oppose the abortion bill.
Get lost Barnaby!
Barnaby’s calls come from 02 66 984 046.
Below is a screenshot from the website numberlookup.com.au. It shows reports made about calls from 02 66 984 046.
Visit the website for updated reports here.
Monday, 19 August 2019
Macquarie Media & 2GB flog radio shockjock Alan Jones with a limp lettuce
On the morning of Thursday 15 August 78 year-old radio shockjock and climate change denier Alan Jones opened his mouth on air and inappropriately vented concerning New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.
After previously calling her "duplicitous", "gormless", "a clown", "a joke" and "lightweight" he expanded his criticism that morning.
According to Channel 10, Jone's exact words were "“Here she is preaching on global warming and saying that we’ve got to do something about climate change...I just wonder whether Scott Morrison is going to be fully briefed to shove a sock down her throat."
At first Jones refused to backdown from this statement and, misrepresented what he had actually said.
As has happened in the past when Jones was being very self-indulgent, insulting, verbally violent or inciting riot, some advertisers began to to re-consider their support of his breakfast program.
A personal apology was issued late on Friday 16 August 2019.
Then, having only just signed a new contract with Jones last May, Macquarie Media Limited and 2GB Radio flogged Alan Jones with this very limp lettuce:
Statement Image @JoshButler |
Bushfire Danger Period has begun on NSW North Coast
It is still winter yet the 2019 bushfire danger period has begun on the NSW North Coast.
Time to make or update a Bushfire Survival Plan for your home.Bush fire season has now started in more than 20 areas across NSW. An extra nine areas on the north coast start their bush fire danger period today. Permits are required. Don't be the fire risk to your community. #NSWRFS pic.twitter.com/vqV1OKZ7ua— NSW RFS (@NSWRFS) August 16, 2019
See: https://www.rfs.nsw.gov.au/plan-and-prepare/bush-fire-survival-plan
By midday on 18 August 2019 the NSW Rural Fire Service reported that there were 58 bush or grass fires across the state, with 31 still to be contained.
Labels:
bushfires,
Northern NSW
Sunday, 18 August 2019
CLIMATE CHANGE 2019: The Morrison Government and much of the media are obviously not listening, so ordinary Australians have to
Media
Matters (USA),
14 August 2019:
In
the early hours of August 8, the United Nations’ Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released a report detailing climate
change’s effects on land and agricultural practices. The next
morning, on August 9, a majority of top newspapers in each of the top
10 agricultural producing states failed to mention this report on
their front pages. Additionally, neither NBC Nightly News nor any of
the Sunday political news shows discussed the report.
According
to the new IPCC report, climate change is drastically altering the
planet’s agricultural land and humankind’s ability to survive
from it. Land use accounts for about 23% of human greenhouse gas
emissions, and practices like deforestation and intensive farming are
adding more stress to it. Fertilizer emissions have risen sharply
since the 1960s, and soil is being lost at an almost unprecedented
rate. Land is heating up faster than the oceans, and the consequences
-- more droughts, floods, coastal erosion, and melting permafrost --
have major food security implications. Food insecurity will hit
people from developing and lower-income countries the hardest.
The
IPCC has laid out a number of solutions to this crisis, including
cutting food waste, adopting smarter farming methods, and protecting
forests. Ultimately, the report states that humanity needs to become
better stewards of its land if we want to tackle the climate crisis.
In Australia the mainstream media response to the UN report was almost as desultory, with only the AAP wire service and three print mastheads running articles in the first two days.
For those who have not yet read the 43 page IPCC summary or started on the much longer full report, here are some of the predictions set out below.
For those who have not yet read the 43 page IPCC summary or started on the much longer full report, here are some of the predictions set out below.
As
of June 2019 the world population is an est. 7.7 billion men, women
and children. This figure is too high to guarantee that people will not die of thirst, starvation, heat stress, severe cold, infection or natural disaster as
climate change intensifies.
IPCC
Special Report on Climate Change, Desertification, Land Degradation,
Sustainable Land Management, Food Security, and Greenhouse gas fluxes
in Terrestrial Ecosystems: Summary for
Policymakers,
7
August 2019, excerpts:
A1.5.
About a quarter of the Earth’s ice-free land area is subject to
human-induced degradation (medium confidence). Soil erosion from
agricultural fields is estimated to be currently 10 to 20 times (no
tillage) to more than 100 times (conventional tillage) higher than
the soil formation rate (medium confidence). Climate change
exacerbates land degradation, particularly in low-lying coastal
areas, river deltas, drylands and in permafrost areas (high
confidence). Over the period 1961-2013, the annual area of drylands
in drought has increased, on average by slightly more than 1% per
year, with large inter-annual variability. In 2015, about 500
(380-620) million people lived within areas which experienced
desertification between the 1980s and 2000s. The highest numbers of
people affected are in South and East Asia, the circum Sahara region
including North Africa, and the Middle East including the Arabian
peninsula (low confidence). Other dryland regions have also
experienced desertification. People living in already degraded or
desertified areas are increasingly negatively affected by climate
change (high confidence). {1.1, 1.2, 3.1, 3.2, 4.1, 4.2, 4.3, Figure
SPM.1}
A2.5.
In some dryland areas, increased land surface air temperature and evapotranspiration
and decreased precipitation amount, in interaction with climate
variability and human activities, have contributed to
desertification. These areas include Sub-Saharan Africa, parts of
East and Central Asia, and Australia. (medium confidence) {2.2,
3.2.2, 4.4.1}
A4.5.
Changes in forest cover for example from afforestation, reforestation
and deforestation, directly affect regional surface temperature through exchanges of
water and energy27 (high confidence). Where forest cover
increases in tropical regions cooling results from enhanced
evapotranspiration (high confidence). Increased evapotranspiration
can result in cooler days during the growing season (high confidence)
and can reduce the amplitude of heat related events (medium
confidence). In regions with seasonal snow cover, such as boreal and
some
temperate,
increased tree and shrub cover also has a wintertime warming
influence due to reduced surface albedo28 (high confidence). {2.3,
2.4.3, 2.5.1, 2.5.2, 2.5.4}
A.
Risks to humans and ecosystems from changes in land-based processes
as a result of climate change
Increases
in global mean surface temperature (GMST), relative to pre-industrial
levels, affect processes involved in desertification (water
scarcity), land degradation (soil erosion, vegetation loss, wildfire,
permafrost thaw) and food security (crop yield and food supply
instabilities). Changes in these processes drive risks to food
systems, livelihoods, infrastructure, the value of land, and human
and ecosystem health. Changes in one process (e.g. wildfire or water
scarcity) may result in compound risks. Risks are location-specific
and differ by region
A5.2.
With increasing warming, climate zones are projected to further shift
poleward in the middle and high latitudes (high confidence). In
high-latitude regions, warming is projected to increase disturbance
in boreal forests, including drought, wildfire, and pest outbreaks
(high confidence). In tropical regions, under medium and high GHG
emissions scenarios, warming is projected to result in the emergence
of unprecedented29 climatic conditions by the mid to late 21st
century (medium confidence). {2.2.4, 2.2.5, 2.5.3, 4.3.2}
A5.3.
Current levels of global warming are associated with moderate risks
from increased dryland water scarcity, soil erosion, vegetation loss,
wildfire damage, permafrost thawing, coastal degradation and tropical
crop yield decline (high confidence). Risks, including cascading
risks, are projected to become increasingly severe with increasing
temperatures. At around 1.5°C of global warming the risks from
dryland water scarcity, wildfire damage, permafrost degradation and
food supply instabilities are projected to be high (medium confidence). At around
2°C of global warming the risk from permafrost degradation and food
supply instabilities are projected to be very high (medium
confidence). Additionally, at around 3°C of global warming risk from
vegetation loss, wildfire damage, and dryland water scarcity are also
projected to be very high (medium confidence). Risks from droughts,
water stress, heat related events such as heatwaves and habitat degradation
simultaneously increase between 1.5°C and 3°C warming (low
confidence). {Figure SPM.2, 7.2.2, Cross-Chapter Box 9 in Chapter 6,
Chapter 7 supplementary material}
A5.4.
The stability of food supply30 is projected to decrease as the
magnitude and frequency of extreme weather events that disrupt food
chains increases (high confidence). Increased atmospheric CO2 levels
can also lower the nutritional quality of crops (high confidence). In
SSP2, global crop and economic models project a median increase of
7.6% (range of 1 to 23%) in cereal prices in 2050 due to climate
change (RCP6.0), leading to higher food prices and increased risk of
food insecurity and hunger (medium confidence). The most vulnerable
people will be more severely affected (high confidence). {5.2.3, 5.2.4, 5.2.5,
5.8.1, 7.2.2.2, 7.3.1}
A5.5.
In drylands, climate change and desertification are projected to
cause reductions in crop and livestock productivity (high
confidence), modify the plant species mix and reduce biodiversity
(medium confidence). Under SSP2, the dryland population vulnerable to
water stress, drought intensity and habitat degradation is projected
to reach 178 million people by 2050 at 1.5°C warming, increasing to
220 million people at 2°C warming, and 277 million people at 3°C
warming (low confidence). {3.5.1, 3.5.2, 3.7.3}
Saturday, 17 August 2019
Friday, 16 August 2019
Northern Rivers landowners can breathe a sigh of relief, council rates will not rise sharply this year
Northern Rivers local governments and landowners have had a reprieve - for now.
One increase in NSW Government charges on local councils will not go ahead and Clarence Valley Council will not have to find an additional $260,000 this financial year.
However, there is no guarantee that by July 2020 the emergency services levy hike will not again be back on the books and, there is also no guarantee that the Berejiklian Government's plan to abandon unimproved value as the baseline for land rate calculations is either dead, buried or cremated.
The Sydney Morning Herald, 14 August 2019:
The NSW government is backflipping on a controversial plan to force councils across the state to pay for a $14 million emergency services levy hike.
The Berejiklian government wanted the state's 128 councils to share the financial burden of the increase in the emergency services levy to fund reforms to workers’ compensation for firefighters suffering from work-related cancers.
The move follows a radical proposal to change the way NSW council rates are calculated, that would drive up costs for owners of expensive apartments, and steep increases in waste management fees in some council areas.
The emergency services levy hike was opposed by the local government sector, which voiced concerns that the increase, which varied in amounts between areas, would force councils to cut funds to services and facilities.
Local Government NSW president Linda Scott said that councils' share of the emergency services budget was embedded in council rates, with additional costs recovered through insurance premiums.....
In 2017, Premier Gladys Berejiklian's shelved plans for a new system to fund fire and emergency services in response to backlash over sharp increases in what some property owners would pay.
Labor's local government spokesman Greg Warren said the decision to grant NSW's councils a year-long reprieve from the levy increase was "little comfort to councils across the state".
"This is another backflip from the government on this issue, they've simply kicked the can down the road.....
Ms Hancock said the government would continue to "consult with local councils to better manage the impacts of the emergency services levy, especially on their annual budgeting cycles".
Ms Hancock said the government would continue to "consult with local councils to better manage the impacts of the emergency services levy, especially on their annual budgeting cycles".
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