Tuesday 15 January 2008

Cup of tea, a Bex and a good lie down

I am old enough to have lived through the era when over-the-counter analgesics like Bex were used to alleviate stress, aid sleep and act as a pick-me-up.
Renal disease was frequently the result of longterm abuse. There was often an apparent relationship between this abuse and low-income suburbs. From memory I seem to remember that the Newcastle region featured heavily in newspaper articles of the time.
I had thought those days were gone.
 
Now it seems other analgesics are beginning to find their way into bathrooms, kitchen cupboards, handbags, briefcases, school bags and lives, in an attempt to ease the many problems of associated with modern life. News.com.au reports that Nurofen is now being used in an abusive pattern, causing renal problems, ulcers and organ damage.
 
"In the latest edition of the Medical Journal of Australia, Dr Martin Dutch of The Angliss Hospital in Melbourne wrote that misuse of Nurofen Plus was a "significant" problem.
"Over a six-month period, two patients presented (themselves) to a community hospital emergency department with perforated gastric ulcers as the result of recreational misuse of over-the-counter ibuprofen–codeine preparations," Dr Dutch said.
"Misuse of these medications appears to be an emerging cause of significant morbidity in patients with codeine addiction."
News.com.au report:
 
Widespread unhappiness and dissatisfaction manifests itself in many ways.
Are we seeing not just addiction, but another canary in the mine telling us that all is not well within our economically stratified society.

Monday 14 January 2008

Would anyone like to sell Senators Conroy and Ludwig a Habour Bridge or Statue of Liberty? They're so obviously in the market

First Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy, Senator Stephen Conroy, announced a plan to apply mandatory censorship of the Internet at ISP level.
Now the Minister for Human Services, Joe Ludwig, wants an e-card for all our personal medical information. Which raises worries that this might be the start of the rumoured national identity card backdown. 
ZDNet Australia:
 
Want to bet that the next bout of Rudd Government 'me-too' will be to adopt the former Howard Government's Communications Legislation Amendment (Crime or Terrorism Related Internet Content) Bill 2007. Which can potentially flick the switch on any or all of us.
Parlinfoweb:
 
None of this sounds like the Australian Labor Party. It looks suspiciously as if these senators are in thrall to a bureaucracy still wedded to Howard's paternalistic agenda. Care for an old copy of George Orwell's 1984 anyone?

Having your cartel cake and eating it too

'THE Federal Government has released a draft bill to criminalise cartel behaviour — which proposes that authorities be banned from using telephone taps to uncover evidence of cartels.
The draft bill, released yesterday by Assistant Treasurer Chris Bowen, proposes penalties of up to five years' jail for anyone who makes or implements an agreement with competitors for cartel behaviour and fines of up to $10 million for corporations.
To make criminal charges stick, however, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission must prove that the person made or carried out the agreement "with the intention of dishonestly obtaining a benefit".
A memorandum of understanding between the ACCC and the Director of Public Prosecutions says the ACCC will focus on "conduct of the type that can cause large-scale or serious economic harm", and "will not ordinarily refer relatively minor cartel conduct to the DPP".'
The Age full article last Saturday:
 
A rather interesting read. The Rudd Government is all for stopping cartel behaviour, but appears to be contemplating taking the guts out of any investigative power by banning telephone interception warrants in cartel investigations.
It's almost as if the Treasurer would like to catch another Visy and is rather scared that he actually might.
However we have all been given until 29 February 2008 to comment on the Rudd Government's draft bill, which was reportedly lifted holus bolus from that quashed Costello draft. 
Knock yourselves out.
 
Discussion Paper and submission details:

Thankful for small mercies

When Nationals Luke Hartsuyker was voted onto the Federal Opposition benches and his compatriot Chris Gulaptis failed to find a seat, that threat to fund the installation of big brother CCTV monitoring in Grafton, South Grafton, Yamba, and possibly Maclean, thankfully went out the window.
Not a good look for a valley which prides itself on a family friendly atmosphere for the tourism trade.
Let's hope local government noticed the lack of enthusiasm for this idea reflected at the polling booths on 24 November.
More police numbers in the Clarence Valley - yes.
Having a filmed record of me surreptitiously adjusting my jeans as I walk down the street - no.

Sunday 13 January 2008

Greenpeace catches up to whaling fleet


Japan will continue its Southern Ocean whaling program, despite being followed by a Greenpeace protest ship. (AFP: Greenpeace, Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert)

"Greenpeace protest ship the Esperanza located the fleet in the Southern Ocean early this morning and the environmental group has vowed to stop the Japanese fleet from killing any whales."
ABC News story yesterday and video link:
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/01/12/2137204.htm?section=australia

I don't want the Rudd Government to be fiscally conservative - I want it to save the Murray-Darling rivers

The former Howard Government promised $10 billion and created a new Commonwealth water act supposedly to save the Murray-Darling river system.
Then it sat on its hands and did almost nothing, except plan to rob other catchment areas of freshwater and risk further environmental degradation.
Now there is no more time left for the Murray-Darling. Recent flooding in south-east Queensland and northern New South Wales are little more than a mirage when it comes to returning a strong environmental flow to this large river system.
The new Rudd Government has made a start, but I for one don't want to see federal government become so focussed on balancing the budget that it forgets it must act swiftly to make up for the years of inaction.
 
As for the NSW Government. If I remember my map, this state has the highest concentration of irrigators drawing from the Murray-Darling system. Time for Morris Iemma to stop pretending that there is any water to return to irrigators if he doesn't want to see the river dead within a decade.
 
"STRETCHES of the Murray River are turning into the corrosive equivalent of battery acid, in further evidence the devastating drought is causing more harm to the nation's iconic watercourse.
Scientists are warning that acid sulphate soils are turning river banks and billabongs into death traps for fish and birds and hazards for humans.
It is impossible for animals to survive NSW's Bottle Bend lagoon, which now has a pH -- or acidity -- level dropping as low as 1.8 -- equivalent to the sulphuric acid found in car batteries. And it is corrosive to the touch.
The waterway is just one of dozens of sites throughout South Australia, NSW and Victoria which falling water levels have turned into aquatic graveyards."
The Australian article yesterday:

Rudd Government clears up Social Security anomalies for non-parent principal carers of children

Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard and the Dept. of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations appear to have recognised that not all children are cared for by blood or marriage relatives under a Family Court parenting order.
It looks as though from 7 January 2008 all non-parent principal carers of children will be able to apply for a 12 month bloc exemption from participation requirements for parenting payments, youth allowance, newstart and special benefits.
At last some commonsense prevails.
ComLaw:
 http://www.comlaw.gov.au/ComLaw/Legislation/LegislativeInstrument1.nsf/0/BCB69D7BEB03CD8ECA2573CC00036065/$file/ExplanatoryStatement.pdf