Monday 17 November 2008

First Mullum Music Fest kicks off at Mullumbimby Thursday 20 - Sunday 23 2008

Mullumbimby is undeniably the biggest little town in Australia. It is also quite possibly the quirkiest, most diverse, opinionated, passionate and generous collection of humans who have learnt to live from the heart.

During the 4 days of the festival we hope to bring the town of Mullum alive with music.

The Thursday, Friday and Saturday events are separately ticketed for each venue. The venues have limited capacity so please book early to avoid disappointment.

The Sunday ticket provides entry to all venues, so festival goers can hop between venues and gigs from 1pm – 10pm, with over 25 performances and 5 workshops.

It’s inevitable that some performances will be more popular than others. Study the programme and attend your favourite performances early.

We have kept prices as affordable as possible so that everybody can hopefully get into the spirit and come to a show. We have also produced a limited edition festival compilation as a gift for the first 1000 ticket holders.

Phone (02) 8250 1102 to make a booking or drop in to 28 Mill Street Mullumbimby, 9 – 5pm Monday – Friday.

Tickets cost between $22 - $30 for adults and $12 -$20 for children

Day passes are available.

Artists include: The Band of Brothers, Tina Harrod, Mr Percival, Blue Hulas, Jali Buba Kuyateh, Mc, Afro Dizzi, Jali Buba,DJ Del Larkin (ex Skunkhour), Gin Wigmore, Scarlett Affection, Jez mead, Mullum Folk Club, Rhombus, Ladi6, MIhirangi, Jackie Marshall, Tin Pan Orange, Lucie Thorne, Mr Percival, King Tide, Joel Salom, Fyah Walk and others.

Full program details here.

The Member for Goldman Sachs objects

Almost nightly on the teev we are faced with a moment to two from the member for the seat of Wentworth, the Honourable Malcolm 'Captain Caveat' Bligh Turnbull MP.
Irritating and yawn inducing as he is, there are some moments when he is wonderful to behold.
His objection in Parliament early last week to a momentary lack of the use of his 'title' Leader of the Opposition during Question Time was a political flounce which sent his crinoline a-whirling and was well worth that momentary glimpse on the nightly news.

"Mr Turnbull—Mr Speaker, on a point of order: I
am very happy to refer to the gentleman opposite as the
member for Griffith, if he would like to do that; if he
wants to be ‘the Prime Minister’ he should address me
as ‘the Leader of the Opposition’.
Mr Melham—Where is it in the Constitution, Malcolm?
The SPEAKER—Order! The member for Banks!
Honourable members interjecting—
The SPEAKER—Order! The House will come to
order!
Mr Randall interjecting— "


The end result was foregone - the House of Reps became littered with references to the member for Goldman Sachs and his ego lies a-bleeding alongside the latest Newspoll which shows that only 22% of voters think he would make a better prime minster than Kevin Rudd with the Coalition trailing by ten points in the two-party preferred stakes.

** Pic from Crikey

Sunday 16 November 2008

A thoughtful pause on Sunday


Is this the type of company Australia should be keeping?

No Australian Internet Censorship at FaceBook

Japan ready to begin 2008 Southern Ocean whale hunt

Minke Whale breaching from National Geographic


According to Al Jazeera last Friday:

Japan's whaling fleet is preparing to leave port to commence its annual hunt in the waters off Antarctica.

Fisheries officials say they plan to kill more than 900 minke whales and 50 fin whales, despite protests from environmental groups and slumping Japanese demand for whale meat.

The ships are expected to set sail in the coming days, although officials said that for safety reasons no exact date is being made public.

The fleet failed to reach its target catch in last season's hunt, partly due to a series of protests and disruptions by animal rights activists.

Japanese media had earlier reported that the target catch for this season's hunt would be cut back in an effort to avoid protests, but fisheries officials say no such cut is planned.

While Stuff.co.nz reports:

Greenpeace said that, even if the catch remained the same, cracks were starting to appear in the annual campaign.

Spokeswoman Sara Holden said Japan's whaling industry was troubled by the announcement that a high-profile whale meat shop in Tokyo would close in 2010 because of financial problems.

And for the first time, the fleet would not be 100 per cent Japanese-crewed because of resignations of former crewman.

"We are seeing the beginning of the end of whaling in the Southern Ocean whale sanctuary," she said. "The whaling industry's days are numbered."

However Japan's Institute for Cetacean Research continues taking a hard line on its right to an annual whale kill and little if anything has changed in relation to this year's hunt.

It's time to begin this year's round of letters and emails to the Government of Japan.

Details for the various Japanese cabinet ministers are here.

  • Cabinet Office, Government of Japan1-6-1 Nagata-cho, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 100-8914, Japan. Tel: +81-3-5253-2111
  • Cabinet Secretariat, Cabinet Public Relations Office,1-6-1 Nagata-cho, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 100 - 8968, Japan
  • Embassy of Japan in Australia
    112 Empire Circuit, Yarralumla ACT 2600, Australia
    Telephone
    (02) 6273 3244
    Facsimile
    (02) 6273 1848
    E-Mail
    cultural@japan.org.au

Who said that?

Who said this about Internet censorship?
"I'm quite concerned by them, I saw the reports, also the comments by Kevin Gosper.
My attitude to our friends in China is very simple. They should have nothing to fear by open digital links with the rest of the world during this important international celebration of sport."

If you said Kevin Rudd you're on the money, cobber.
Internet censorship in China bad, Internet censorship in Australia good - according to the twisted logic of our prime minister.

Saturday 15 November 2008

It's November and time for another peek at Rudd's risible Grocery Choice website

It was my turn this month to click onto the Rudd Government's Grocery Choice website.
There it was again, the same totally useless generalised information for North-East NSW and the usual generic basket of basic staples. 1

Coles/BI-LO $76.54
Woolworths/Safeway $77.94
Franklins $82.23
Independents $81.86
ALDI $61.12

1 Basic Staples
This basket includes a selection of staple grocery products purchased by Australian households. It includes a variety of products from each of the other grocery baskets, for example milk, bread, fruit, vegetables and meat.

Mr. Rudd, if you are not going to supply information that will allow true comparisons before we all do our weekly shopping, do you think that you might at least put your head together with the states and do something about supermarket chains selling rotting vegetables to captive markets in regional areas?
BI-LO is becoming notorious for this at its Yamba store.