Saturday 29 March 2008

Bless 'em - the all singing and dancing 2020 Summit partygoers list

Here is the full Australia 2020 Summit invitees list.
 
Just for laughs have a close look at those attending this workshop.
It's so reassuring to see that the wealthy, ivory tower denizens, pollies and the fourth estate will again be informing federal government.
I will sleep well at night knowing that Miranda Devine, Gerard Henderson, Kerry Stokes and George Brandis all managed a seat at the table. 
Plus ça change.....
 
Future of Australian Governance
Mr Martin James Bailey, Male WA
Mr Joseph Martin Fernandez, Male WA
Ms Pia-Angela Francini, Female WA
Ms Alison Lesley Gaines, Female WA
Professor Janette Hartz-Karp, Female WA
Ms Holly Elizabeth Ransom, Female WA
Mr Wayne Francis Scheggia, Male WA
Dr Christine (Chrissy) Sharp, Female WA
Mr Peter Ajak, Male VIC
Professor Judith Margaret Brett, Female VIC
Mr Julian William Kennedy Burnside, Male VIC
Mr Paul Chadwick, Male VIC
Professor Allan Fels, Male VIC
Ms Iresha Herath, Female VIC
Ms Kristen Anna Isobel Hilton, Female VIC
Professor Sarah Louise Joseph, Female VIC
Ms Janice Winearls Keynton, Female VIC
Dr Terry MacDonald, Female VIC
Professor Robert Manne, Male VIC
Ms Katherine Dawn Sampson, Female VIC
Professor Cheryl Anne Saunders, Female VIC
Ms Sally Warhaft, Female VIC
Mr Alan Wu Male, VIC
Dr Sally Young, Female VIC
Mr Benedict Bartl, Male TAS
Ms Lyn Mason, Female TAS
Rev Professor Michael Tate, Male TAS
Ms Olivia Guarna, Female SA
Ms Elizabeth Francesca Ho, Female SA
Ms Tanya Louise Smith, Female SA
Mr Sean Barrett, Male QLD
Senator the Hon George Brandis, Male QLD
Dr Alexander Jonathon Brown, Male QLD
The Honourable Matthew (Matt) Joseph Foley, Male QLD
Mr Paul Formosa, Male QLD
Ms Bridie Kathleen Jabour, Female QLD
Ms Joanne Kelly, Female QLD
Professor the Honourable Michael Lavarch, Male QLD
Mr Michael McKinnon, Male QLD
Mr Alexander McLaughlin, Male QLD
Mr Stewart Mcrae, Male QLD
Dr David Solomon, Male QLD
Dr Anne Tiernan, Female QLD
Ms Danielle Vujovich, Female QLD
Professor Patrick Weller, AO Male QLD
Ms Sarah Jane O'Rourke, Female NT
Mr Mauri Japarta Ryan, Male NT
Ms Erin Adams, Female NSW
Mr Phillip Adams, Male NSW
Ms Robin Banks, Female NSW
Associate Professor Lyn Carson, Female NSW
Professor Greg Craven, Male NSW
Associate Professor Kate Jane Crawford, Female NSW
Ms Miranda Devine, Female NSW
Mr Macgregor Duncan, Male NSW
Professor Geoffrey Ian Gallop, Male NSW
Ms Kate Gauthier, Female NSW
Mr Gerard Henderson, Male NSW
Dr Helen Irving, Female NSW
Dr Paul Kelly, Male NSW
Ms Miriam Lyons, Female NSW
Mr David Marr, Male NSW
Mr Simon Rice, Male NSW
The Honourable Helen Sham-Ho, Female NSW
Professor Christopher Dominic Sidoti, Male NSW
Mr Brett Solomon, Male NSW
Associate Professor Anne Frances Twomey, Female NSW
Professor Hillary Charlesworth, Female ACT
Mr Harry Evans, Male ACT
The Honourable Justice Mary Gaudron, Female ACT
Ms Susan Gail Harris Rimmer, Female ACT
Mr Michael James Harvey, Male ACT
Ms Janet Eileen Hunt, Female ACT
Sir Anthony Mason, Male ACT
Mr Ian McPhee, Male ACT
Ms Jamila Helen Rizvi, Female ACT
Professor Marian Sawer, Female ACT
Ms Amelia Mary Simpson, Female ACT
Professor George John Williams, Male ACT
Sir William Deane, Male ACT
Ms Janet Giles, Female SA
Ms Amy Sarah King, Female
Prof Julianne Schultz, Female
Mr Kerry Stokes, Male NSW
Mr Howard Whitton, Male

Friday 28 March 2008

Families Minister and Member for Jagajaga channels Mal Brough and throws compassion out the window

ABC1 AM:
TONY EASTLEY: The Federal Government will quarantine the $5,000 Baby Bonus from parents who neglect or abuse their children. Families Minister Jenny Macklin says parents will instead receive the bonus in the form of vouchers to buy items like prams and nappies.

Leaving aside the fact that Minister for Families, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs is merely parroting the former Howard Government and the previous ministerial incumbent; the Welfare Rights Centre pointed out in 2006 that such a move was not going to solve the problem of bad parenting and would be unlikely to stop individual abuse of welfare payments by recipients with an established alcohol, drug or gambling addiction.

Since then Ms. Macklin has moved from endorsing a straight voucher system to talking of implementing a debit card or store cards which would be useable at approved stores and for approved purchases.

The aim still appears to be to progress that old neo-con agenda. Starting with the Baby Bonus and other family payments as a trial of the electorate's gullibility, before moving onto the unemployed, disabled and finally introducing universal income management for all pension, benefit and allowance recipients from groups which are not seen as politically powerful.

Such income management would eventually stop 50% of the fortnightly welfare payment from going directly into a recipient's own personal bank or building society account, and 100% of all advance or lump sum payments would also no longer be given as cash payments into accounts.

Now here's the rub for any rural or regional parent receiving one of these debit/store cards (who even lives within commutable distance of one of the government-favoured big three, Coles, Woolworths and K-Mart) covering the Baby Bonus or other family allowance. These future guinea pigs who are already being identified as 'bad' by both the media and the Minister.

Rural and regional towns and villages are by definition reasonably small - if you don't actually socialise with the person standing next to you, you frequently know a friend of theirs or their children go to school or weekend sports with yours.

Store clerks and cashiers have no training and often no tact when it comes to welfare recipients as it is. They sometimes have no compunction in identifying store gift vouchers, being presented for payment of purchases, as having come from a non-government welfare agency.
In one instance I witnessed a cashier confiscating a packet of sweets from a very average pile of groceries a developmentally challenged adult (whom she only knew as a regular store customer) wanted to purchase with his gift voucher, on the stated grounds that lollies are not good for you.

When under any income management scheme almost inevitably one of these cashiers loudly and publicly tells a parent accompanied by a child that an item the parent wishes to purchase is not on the Centrelink/Community Services/Government list, everyone within earshot will be able to identify that family as 'dysfunctional' and the child as possibly considered to be neglected or abused.

Just how long do you think that child's privacy will last and his/her dignity remain intact when the local rumour mill will have that checkout incident across town and in the schoolyard within days?

One of the saddest aspects of Labor's rush to create its own form of Big Brother has been the sight of Ms. Macklin rising to her feet in Parliament last week and relying on a caller to the Alan Jones radio show for evidence of a need for Baby Bonus income management. A show notorious for setting up straw men to further its namesake's own biased arguments.

Ms. Macklin and the rest of the Rudd Government need to slow down here and develop a little political humility and compassion.
They are displaying nothing less than an arrogant paternalism. At the same time ignoring the fact that the Baby Bonus is currently not being handed out as a lump sum to identified dysfunctional families, but rather is being successfully and discretely delivered in instalments - without placing any child's right to privacy at risk or exposing a family to malicious gossip.

A little Mandarin goes a long way

Photograph from Indymedia


ABC News reported this late last night.

A senior Australian diplomat will be allowed to visit Tibet tomorrow, as a part of a delegation granted access by the Chinese Government.
Australia had requested diplomatic access to Tibet to assess the situation in the region, after a recent Chinese Government crackdown on protesters.
After initially ignoring the request, the Chinese Government has agreed to allow one senior diplomat from Australia's Beijing Embassy to join other foreign diplomats on a trip to Tibet, accompanied by Chinese officials.
The speed of China's approval has surprised the Australian Government.
Before leaving Australia for an overseas trip today, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd described the lack of access as a sticking point.
A spokeswoman for Foreign Minister Stephen Smith says the Australian diplomat hopes to check on the welfare of four Australians known to be in Tibet.

Clearly an instance where Kevin Rudd and Stephen Smith made better ground than might have been possible if John Howard and Alexander Downer were still at the helm.

The Rudd dog whistle exposed

Faced with the reality of office, everytime it comes up against an uncomfortable moment in the media cycle the Rudd Government has been drawing out of the hat that old trick of re-labelling some troublesome behaviour as significant social problems and then telling the world that these were out of control or at 'epidemic' levels.
Coming out from under 11 years of John Howard using this very same tactic, it was easy to spot the political dog whistles.
Teenagers out-of-control, bad parents, addicts.
This was confirmed mid-week when the COAG communique was posted at the Prime Minister of Australia website here.

"Binge Drinking. COAG today agreed on the importance of tackling alcohol misuse and binge drinking among young people. COAG agreed to ask the Ministerial Council on Drug Strategy to report to COAG in December 2008 on options to reduce binge drinking including in relation to closing hours, responsible service of alcohol, reckless secondary supply and the alcohol content in ready to drink beverages. COAG also asked the Australia New Zealand Food Regulation Ministerial Council to request Food Standards Australia New Zealand to consider mandatory health warnings on packaged alcohol.

Gambling. COAG agreed to continue to discuss issues related to problem gambling".

A perfect example of sound and fury signifying very little.
Not so easy is it fellas. Just because you are now teh Federal Government doesn't automatically mean you would be able to come up with instant easy-fix answers or allow you to pretend that this focus on binge drinking and gambling was anything other than a beat up.
I look forward to hearing you discover Laura Norder, border security and welfare 'cheats' next week.

Thursday 27 March 2008

Northern Rivers couple star in documentary

Yaegl woman and film-maker Pauline Clague celebrates her parents life in the documentary film When Colin Met Joyce.

Ms Clague told The Daily Examiner that "For us as film-makers it's important to give it back to our community," ---
"This film is a gift to the Clarence River. It identifies Yaegl country really well,"
Pauline said she was excited and nervous about showing the film at Yamba.
"As a writer and producer it's hard to bring it back to my own community, but Mum and Dad have seen it and they're happy with it," she said."

Details of the film
here.

When Colin Met Joyce will also be shown on SBS at 7.30pm on 1 August 2008.

Opposition shadow spokesperson for water makes a Laughing Jackass of himself

It's been a long saga and like many other Aussies I have been crossing my fingers and hoping that this nation will finally come to grips with those huge environmental problems in the Murray-Darling river system which have been generations in the making.
However, Opposition spokesperson for environment and water Greg Hunt continues the Liberal's new tradition of counting kookaburras whenever it is brought face-to-face with another instance of cooperative endeavour between the Commonwealth and the States under the Rudd Labor Government.
Yesterday when a real breakthough was announced on management of water within the Murray-Darling Basin, I swear I heard Hunt on the teev repeating a version of his February line about the Murray-Darling being an "defining failure" of the Rudd Government.
Only this time he was calling it "an abiding failure".
After the complete, utter, total, abiding failure of the John Howard-Malcolm Turnbull attempt to bully the states into a collective formal agreement over this dying river system, all Hunt could do yesterday was accuse Rudd of a similar failure.
He has definitely taken to imitating the Laughing Jackass. A real Koo-koo-koo-waa-aah-aah-ah!
This new agreement may not be perfect, but at least it's a fair dinkum attempt.
You remember what fair dinkum means don't you, Greg?
Here is the Murray Darling Basin Reform Memorandum of Understanding signed by the Prime Minister and every Premier and State Minister with territory within the Murray-Darling Basin.

The 2008 Olympiad as a graphic

Telling graphic from Club Troppo's Missing Link.

Wednesday 26 March 2008

Don't do it, Nicola!

This week The Age reported that the Federal Minister for Health Nicola Roxon was inviting Liberal opposition frontbencher Tony Abbott to have coffee and smooth things over between them.
Apparently Abbott has been complaining about a lack of bipartisanship in government decision making in areas covered by his Indigenous Affairs shadow portfolio.

That was on Monday. By the next day that ever changeable far-right media tart was saying something different according to The Sydney Morning Herald.
"Opposition indigenous affairs spokesman Tony Abbott has criticised plans for a bipartisan approach to indigenous issues, saying it could lead to "sanctimonious" and unsuccessful policies.
---Mr Abbott, writing in The Australian newspaper, said bipartisanship could make "wrong-headed" policies harder to change."

So don't do it, Nicola. Don't try to smooth things over with Abbott. The man will only see this as a sign of weakness and continue to harass rather than help, because he truly believes the Opposition is the real federal government.

Give Mac Bank the flick & bring back bonds says Motorists Action Group

This turned up in the Inbox yesterday.
It seems that the Motorists Action Group has joined those sending Morris Iemma a message about his planned privatisation of NSW electricity supplies.
 
Draft Media Release
 
Government Bonds Not Selling-off Assets To Fund New Infrastructure
 
The NSW Government has been asked to re-issue once popular government bonds to fund new road, rail and services infrastructure projects instead of selling-off publicly owned infrastructure such as the electricity generation network to pay for such works.
 
Richard Talbot, President of the Motorists Action Group (MAG) & long serving NRMA Director said: "A once off sell-off of publicly owned assets to pay for new infrastructure is not the way to go. Nor is handing over new infrastructure projects to merchant bankers who create debt ridden financial models to hoping they can on-sell these financial basket cases and exit the scene to make a short term profit.
 
"Good government is about providing long term, sustainable and user affordable solutions to this countries growing and changing needs. Government bonds were a traditional way previous generations have funded many road, rail, water & electricity projects. They were very popular with mums & dads investors as a safe way of saving for their retirement as they were government guaranteed. Importantly they were a relatively cheap way of the government gaining access to a large pool of funds without having to go through a middleman.
Government bonds were phased out of existence when the economic rationalists took the helm of successive state governments and conga lines of private sector lobbyists became regular fixtures at expensive political party fundraisers.
 
"We should learn from the mistakes of the past with a number of infrastructure funding failures such as the Cross City Tunnel, Lane Cove Tunnel and the Airport Rail Link. The new transport initiatives such as the North West Rail Link and M7 Extension (from Blacktown to Kariong) can all be funded by giving the public and superannuation funds to directly invest in the projects. Additionally other already built projects can be bought back through such an investment method.
 
"Selling-off the silver wear then handing it over to privateers to extract short term profits is not in the best interests of residents and taxpayers. Gaining the support of the people who'll be using the final product by giving mums & dads a chance to invest in their own infrastructure is in the best long term interests of both governments and consumers".
 
Richard Talbot has written to the NSW Government urging the re-introduction of State Government Bonds.