Tuesday 8 December 2009

No one publishes obituaries for junkies


The October 10 - 11 edition of Brisbane's Courier Mail carried an obituary in Kathleen Noonan's "Last Word" column. It appears below:

MOST of us make mistakes and survive. We pick the wrong car to get into, go to the wrong party, kiss the wrong boy or girl, drive when we should have walked, walk when we should have caught a cab, say yes when we should have said no, try things not worth trying, trust someone not worth trusting, wake up in dumb places.

Most of us make mistakes and get away with it. We survive with no awful, lifelong consequences. Not wrapped around a tree at high speed. Not overdosed on the bathroom floor. No fatal outcome.

Robbie Edgar didn't get away with his mistakes. He paid for them. He died recently because of them.

No one publishes obituaries for junkies. That's what his sister Rosey wrote to me. You usually have to be a fine upstanding citizen, sportsman, businessman, dedicated Rotarian or notable academic.

Junkies, really, don't rate. Once we see the word junkie, it sort of makes all the other words in our head disappear. "Junkie" negates everything else. It makes a big, complex, sometimes beautiful, life disappear into one small judgmental word.

"What of someone who did not rise high above his demons, from whom others might feel entitled to withhold their respect? Who will speak to keep his name alive? I will," writes Rosey.

"I will write of Robert Edgar, born 17 May, 1954, to Thomas and Eileen Edgar in Brisbane, precociously interested in the sciences, with a voracious appetite for knowledge and a sharply detailed memory."

He left school early, started an apprenticeship with an optician, but threw that in to come to northern NSW for the Aquarius Festival and the blossoming of the emotional, intellectual and spiritual freedoms promised in the counter-culture.

Robbie embraced transcendental meditation, became vegan, practised yoga, grew organic vegetables, his evenings glowed under kerosene light, he rose early, was fit from long walks, swam with platypus, found glow-worm caves, sought enlightenment.

"He created food gardens at each place: Nimbin, Tuntable Valley and Jiggi," writes Rosey. "He lived by his belief in karma. He did not steal; neither did he drink alcohol nor smoke. He abhorred hard drugs.

"His passions were for food, knowledge meditation and women.

"With the smooth golden skin, a ponytail of long wavy black hair to his waist and a beautiful face, he was a hippie heart-throb."

So what went wrong? One morning Robbie was arrested for possession and supply of drugs – LSD. By his standard, these were not hard drugs. His logic differed from the court's. He was jailed. By the time he was released, he smoked cigarettes, he ate meat and had developed a bad habit that he never came clean of – heroin.

Around this time, he acquired the hepatitis C virus. He continued to live in northern NSW, a junkie. His health suffered from his lifestyle.

But, says Rosey, his humour was resilient and as dry as the dust that swept over Lismore the afternoon of his death. Wicked sarcasm, misquotes, deliberate Spoonerisms: "Time wounds all heals" – were things Rosey loved about her brother. And always pertinent facts, a snippet of history. "Did you know that Pope Leo VIII died of a stroke while committing adultery?" he'd ask.

He made his mark in the community, with well-written and wry articles and letters to various magazines and newspapers.

"He would decimate prejudice with logic and facts," writes Rosey, "and lambast and enlighten with irony and history and humour."

His last article was published posthumously in The Northern Rivers Echo. He wrote, in part: "Greedy people smugglers . . . sneaking unwashed, unwanted aliens with a very different and foreign religion, with superstitious dietary rules and modes of dress . . . incapable of assimilation and as part of a world-wide creed bent on the destruction of our way of life. None but a soft-headed government or left-wing intellectuals would hesitate to intern, in the remotest possible location. Welcoming these illegals and queue-jumpers would open the floodgates to millions of their brethren . . . Ideally, they could all be returned immediately to where they should be waiting, in an orderly manner to be properly and legally processed.

"From a press release from the Swedish Nazi Party, late 1941, in response to the arrival of 90 per cent of Denmark's Jewish population on Sweden's shores, aboard Denmark's fishing fleet.

"Signed Robert Edgar, Lismore."

When Robbie wasn't being Robbie the junkie, he sounds like a bit of a ratbag. Back a couple of years violinist Richard Tognetti, director of the Australian Chamber Orchestra, spoke on ratbags and why we need them in society. "The ratbag is one of the essential bacteria in our culture . . . By breathing in ratbaggery, we become less likely to fall to the illness of moral hypocrisy. Ratbags have no moral agenda; they have a hyperactive bullshit detector; they cannot be entrusted with money, for if they are given money, they will use it on valueless things, such as adventures and storytelling; and the ratbag should confound, astonish, query and disrupt, rather than confirm and soothe."

I think of this reading Rosey's words about her brother. "So much knowledge, such a beautiful, perverse, sharp, contradictory mind. Such a placid nature. He was not demonstrative; he never yelled or lost his temper (except that one time when the Nolan's cow gorged on his vegie patch). His laughter was a chuckle, his rage was a scowl, and his retaliation was a roll of the eyes. And grief did not fall in tears but was breathed as a sigh. Except for that one time, two weeks ago when told that he had terminal liver cancer."

Robbie died on September 22 aged 55. I spoke to Rosey the day after she and her father Tom had seen his body for the last time. Grief threatened to shipwreck her. She spoke of the waste of her whip-smart brother and the care the doctors, nurses and other staff of the Lismore Base Hospital and community nurses who cared for him with non-judgmental respect and loving kindness.

Coming home late the other night, I turn the corner near South Bank and there's a young man near the train station, too drunk or off his tree on something to be a threat. He's thin, that dry, papery Yellow Pages-thin of the addicted. I watch him shuffle off through a dirt-filled empty block, his feet breathing dust in the moonrise.

Many families have a Robbie, someone who makes mistakes and doesn't get away with them.

They don't publish obituaries for junkies. Rosey, you're right. They – we – don't usually see past the word "junkie". It's like the moon blocking out the sun in an eclipse. Everything else they are and they have done in their lives is hidden by the dark side. So let's make the exception. Just because we got away with our mistakes, doesn't make us better than anyone. Because we all make mistakes and we are more than our mistakes.


AND ANOTHER THING

Noonan had this piece in her column the following week:

Last week's obituary for Robbie brought such a strong response from readers, who emailed, wrote and phoned, stopped me in cafes and in the street to say thanks to Rosey and her family for sharing his life. Which makes you think that in this crazy world, there are deep pockets of tolerance and gentleness and open-mindedness. "It made me believe a little more," wrote Ben, who spent a year in jail for something stupid when he was 19 and is now a fine upstanding citizen, putting his kids and two foster kids through uni.


Source: The Courier Mail


The Sydney Morning Herald & The Age refused to print this editorial


The Guardian on 6 December 2009 concerning the 'Fourteen days to seal history's judgment on this generation' world-wide editorial:

Two Australian papers, the Age and the Sydney Morning Herald, pulled out at a late stage after the election of climate change sceptic Tony Abbott as leader of the opposition Liberal party recast the country's debate on green issues.

To rectify in some measure this doubtful call by these newspapers here is an excerpt from that editorial of 7 December 2009:

Today 56 newspapers in 45 countries take the unprecedented step of speaking with one voice through a common editorial. We do so because humanity faces a profound emergency.
Unless we combine to take decisive action,
climate change will ravage our planet, and with it our prosperity and security. The dangers have been becoming apparent for a generation. Now the facts have started to speak: 11 of the past 14 years have been the warmest on record, the Arctic ice-cap is melting and last year's inflamed oil and food prices provide a foretaste of future havoc. In scientific journals the question is no longer whether humans are to blame, but how little time we have got left to limit the damage. Yet so far the world's response has been feeble and half-hearted.
Climate change has been caused over centuries, has consequences that will endure for all time and our prospects of taming it will be determined in the next 14 days. We call on the representatives of the 192 countries gathered in Copenhagen not to hesitate, not to fall into dispute, not to blame each other but to seize opportunity from the greatest modern failure of politics. This should not be a fight between the rich world and the poor world, or between east and west. Climate change affects everyone, and must be solved by everyone.
The science is complex but the facts are clear. The world needs to take steps to limit temperature rises to 2C, an aim that will require global emissions to peak and begin falling within the next 5-10 years. A bigger rise of 3-4C — the smallest increase we can prudently expect to follow inaction — would parch continents, turning farmland into desert. Half of all species could become extinct, untold millions of people would be displaced, whole nations drowned by the sea. The controversy over emails by British researchers that suggest they tried to suppress inconvenient data has muddied the waters but failed to dent the mass of evidence on which these predictions are based...........

Overcoming climate change will take a triumph of optimism over pessimism, of vision over short-sightedness, of what Abraham Lincoln called "the better angels of our nature".
It is in that spirit that 56 newspapers from around the world have united behind this editorial. If we, with such different national and political perspectives, can agree on what must be done then surely our leaders can too.
The politicians in Copenhagen have the power to shape history's judgment on this generation: one that saw a challenge and rose to it, or one so stupid that we saw calamity coming but did nothing to avert it. We implore them to make the right choice.

Full text of editorial here.

One of the reasons why the North Coast Area Health Service continues to be given a FAIL


Sometimes it almost beggars belief what the NSW Government, NSW Dept of Health, the North Coast Area Health Service and its CEO Chris Crawford consider priorities in a region where public health services continue to fail to meet community need.

Target budget cuts of $300M, undertake a three-wave reduction of 400 health care positions from directors of nursing right down to ward staff. Even sack a hospital chaplain. Because the Northern Rivers doesn't need medical services - it needs an expensive spin doctor!

This position advertisement is up on the NSW Dept of Health website:

Caring Together Liaison Officer
Name of Facility Lismore Health Campus
Position Number 0433/09
Basis Permanent Full Time
Salary $88,048-$100,375
Closing Date 27 November, 2009

Purpose of Role:
This position reports to the Chief Executive and is responsible for the effective coordination of the implementation of the NSW Health Caring Together, Health Action Plan recommendations incorporating the management of Area-wide media liaison. This will include coordinating media strategies and media responses with NSW Health Communications and the Office of the NSW Health Minister, and the preparation of publications, media releases and editorial contributions, including photographs, and briefings about media issues relating to the activities of NCAHS, in particular, the ongoing implementation of the NSW Health Caring Together Health Action Plan.


The Daily Examiner 4 December 2009

Northern Star 3 December 2009 $100,000 job offer a PR disaster

RED GUMS NEED YOUR URGENT HELP! Email the NSW Premier today


KENEALLY MUST NOT OVERTURN GOOD NATIONAL PARK DECISION

Last week, the NSW Government announced the creation of a magnificent new Red Gum National Park in the Millewa group of forests, and other new reserves along the major rivers in south-western NSW.

This is a magnificent environmental outcome.
It protects globally significant wetlands and threatened species that are facing severe long-term threats to their survival.

However, there is now massive pressure being brought to bear on the new Premier, Kristina Keneally, to reverse the decision. This would be a disaster. It is important that her office is flooded with thousands of emails this week urging her to deliver in full on the decision announced last week.

SEND AN EMAIL TO THE PREMIER NOW!

This is the most important moment in the Red Gum campaign. We urgently need your help to cement this historic reserve outcome. Send an email now to the Premier, by clicking here, and urge her to implement the outcome in full.

Save Red Gum from logging!

National Parks Association of NSW Media Release 7 December 2009
Copyright © 2009
National Parks Association NSW

Premier K-K-Keneally continues to embarrass Kevin and Feral Mal makes life a misery for Abbott's Libs


Click image to enlarge

NSW Labor continues to be an rope stretched out in front of Federal Labor's path to the next election with this from Crikey on 7th December:
"Stunning new details have emerged of the role played ALP heavyweight Joe Tripodi in securing NSW Premier Kristina Keneally's ascension to state parliament, with leaked meeting notes indicating Mr Tripodi told bitter rival Laurie Brereton that anti-branch stacking rules "didn't matter" in relation to Ms Keneally's preselection.......
Labor insiders told Crikey this morning that the process of selecting Ms Keneally was "absolutely bastardised" by the involvement of her husband.
"Ben's always been Joe's man and he's always been completely controlled."

However, the Liberal Party has its troubles too and just as I predicted last Thursday Malcolm Turnbull is continuing to hammer away at the man who took his job, Tony Abbott, and that man's supporters:
While a shadow minister, Tony Abbott was never afraid of speaking bluntly in a manner that was at odds with Coalition policy.
So as I am a humble backbencher I am sure he won't complain if I tell a few home truths about the farce that the Coalition's policy, or lack of policy, on climate change has descended into.
First, let's get this straight. You cannot cut emissions without a cost. To replace dirty coal fired power stations with cleaner gas fired ones, or renewables like wind let alone nuclear power or even coal fired power with carbon capture and storage is all going to cost money.
To get farmers to change the way they manage their land, or plant trees and vegetation all costs money.
Somebody has to pay.
So any suggestion that you can dramatically cut emissions without any cost is, to use a favourite term of Mr Abbott, "bullshit." Moreover he knows it.
The whole argument for an emissions trading scheme as opposed to cutting emissions via a carbon tax or simply by regulation is that it is cheaper - in other words, electricity prices will rise by less to achieve the same level of emission reductions.
The term you will see used for this is "least cost abatement".
It is not possible to criticise the new Coalition policy on climate change because it does not exist. Mr Abbott apparently knows what he is against, but not what he is for.
Second, as we are being blunt, the fact is that Tony and the people who put him in his job do not want to do anything about climate change. They do not believe in human caused global warming. As Tony observed on one occasion "climate change is crap" or if you consider his mentor, Senator Minchin, the world is not warming, it's cooling and the climate change issue is part of a vast left wing conspiracy to deindustrialise the world.
Now politics is about conviction and a commitment to carry out those convictions. The Liberal Party is currently led by people whose conviction on climate change is that it is "crap" and you don't need to do anything about it. Any policy that is announced will simply be a con, an environmental figleaf to cover a determination to do nothing. After all, as Nick Minchin observed, in his view the majority of the Party Room do not believe in human caused global warming at all. I disagree with that assessment, but many people in the community will be excused for thinking the leadership ballot proved him right.
Remember Nick Minchin's defense of the Howard Government's ETS was that the Government was panicked by the polls and therefore didn't really mean it.
Tony himself has, in just four or five months, publicly advocated the blocking of the ETS, the passing of the ETS, the amending of the ETS and, if the amendments were satisfactory, passing it, and now the blocking of it.
His only redeeming virtue in this remarkable lack of conviction is that every time he announced a new position to me he would preface it with "Mate, mate, I know I am a bit of a weather vane on this, but....."
Third, there is a major issue of integrity at stake here and Liberals should reflect very deeply on it. We have an Opposition whose current leadership dismisses the Howard Government's ETS policy as being just a political ploy. We have an Opposition Leader who has in the space of a few months held every possible position on the issue, each one contradicting the position he expressed earlier. And finally we have an Opposition which negotiated amendments to the Rudd Government's ETS, then reached agreement on those amendments and then, a week later, reneged on the agreement.
Many Liberals are rightly dismayed that on this vital issue of climate change we are not simply without a policy, without any prospect of having a credible policy but we are now open to the charge that we are also without integrity. We have given our opponents the irrefutable, undeniable evidence that we cannot be trusted to keep our word or maintain a consistent position on the issue of climate change.
Not that anyone would doubt it, but I will be voting for the ETS legislation when it returns in February and if my colleagues have any sense they will do so as well. If the legislation is passed, incorporating as it does the amendments Ian MacFarlane negotiated with Penny Wong, then the issue will be settled. It is manifestly in the national interest and in the interest of the Liberal Party that it be so.

Not that the Nats get off lightly - Barnaby 'one shingle missing and another one slipping' Joyce is being tipped to be the Coalition's shadow spokesman on finance!

Monday 7 December 2009

Kristina Keneally. The only profile which matters is the $$$ profile


Profile of NSW Premier Kristina Keneally according to the ALP and The Sydney Morning Herald.

However, increasingly in NSW politics the only political profile which matters is a politician's donation profile.

Democracy 4 Sale displays 89 records of campaign donations to Ms. Keneally between 2002-2008 worth $171,066. These donations were from the Labor Party (including MPs Tripodi and Sartor), development companies, the hotel industry, unions, lobby groups and indivduals.

The Sydney Morning Herald from August last year:

Linda Scott, who is No. 2 on Meredith Burgmann's Labor ticket for the September 13 council election, was standing as a Labor candidate for the state seat of Sydney last year when she received $20,000 from Kristina Keneally, the state member for Heffron, to pay for printing. The donation was made days after Ms Keneally's campaign was given $19,955 in six separate donations by the Frank Sartor for Rockdale campaign.

Ms Scott ran on a campaign promising donation transparency and not receiving money from property developers. But the Frank Sartor for Rockdale campaign had received tens of thousands of dollars in property developer donations for a war chest that was disbursed to other Labor candidates.

Documents lodged with the Election Funding Authority show Ms Keneally received the $19,955 from Mr Sartor's campaign in six instalments between March 10 and 19 last year.

On March 20, banking documents show Ms Keneally's campaign paid $20,000 to Jeffries Printing Services to pay for Ms Scott's direct mail expenses.

NSW Legislative Council General Purpose Standing Committee No. 4 Badgerys Creek land dealings and planning decisions:

The Committee is of the view that is it unusual for a minister to take the position adopted by Minister Keneally that she does not need to be informed of contact between the Director-General of the Department of Planning and professional lobbyists, including Mr Richardson. The Committee believes that the working relationship of a minister with the head of their department should more appropriately be as that described in Australian Mandarins:
Secretaries ha[ve] a duty to keep the minister informed of any matter in the running of the department that could have some sensitivity for the minister.328
The Committee is also of the view that steps must be taken to ensure that the advice given from the Department of Planning to the Minister is not, and cannot be perceived to be, unduly influenced by professional lobbyists.

Japanese whaling fleet expected to enter Antarctic killing grounds this week


As it usually takes the fleet around 21 days to reach Antarctic waters, it is expected that this week will see the Japanese ships begin to deploy across their chosen killing grounds.

A large section of seabed in Antarctic waters was granted to Australia as sovereign territory in 2008 but as yet this does not include exclusive rights over marine populations.

The whaling fleet is expected to take 935 minke whales and 50 fin whales this summer, ostensibly for scientific research but in reality to supply Japan's domestic whale meat market.

If you object to this needless whale slaughter please consider contacting the Embassy of Japan in Australia and making your view known:

Ambassador Mr Takaaki Kojima
Embassy of Japan
112 Empire Circuit
YARRALUMLA, ACT AUSTRALIA 2600
Tel: +61 2 6273 3244
Fax: +61 2 6273 1848

Labor's PR machine working overtime to craft Wikipedia entry of new Premier Keneally?


Puzzled by a close similarity in the wording of multiple news reports when it came to the background of new NSW Premier Kristina Kerscher Keneally, it didn't take long to zero in on Wikipedia as a logical source.
With such a polished wiki entry and one so favourable to this politician (the slick photo opposite sort of gave it away right from the start) I began to wonder if the Labor Party had been carefully protecting this page.
Well waddaya know - it was!
Not only is the page now locked against all but established Wikipedia editors, one of those editors actively deleting anything which might remotely cast Ms. Keneally as a very

rightwing politician is none other than Ben Aveling from the
Australian Labor Party.

As was pointed out in the Kristina Keneally discussion tab:
Gosh, you're not the same Ben Aveling who's the ALP Alexandria branch secretary, are you? Gosh, that would be embarrassing, what with you removing stuff that isn't particularly complementary about Mrs Keneally. But i'm sure you're not relation at all. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 60.241.126.39 (talk) 07:46, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
Yes, I am the same Ben Aveling. I assume you are referring to
this edit? That was a tough call. On the one hand, yes I am an involved party. On the other, the edit I reverted was inappropriate, arguably vandalism, and it had to be reverted by someone. I opted to be bold. Do you think I did wrong? Cheers, Ben Aveling 12:31, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
Aveling and others have edited everything from Keneally's own assessment of her youthful bathing habits, the family friendship with Joe Tripodi, repeated public denials of personal leadership aspirations and details of ministerial planning decisions, in a minor orgy of censorship.
Aveling was anti-Iemma in 2008. Don't know how he felt about Rees but he obviously has a longstanding soft spot for Keneally.
Nothing wrong with having a hobby as well as a day job, but Wikipedia should insist that all of its hosted pages have a conflict of interest disclosure in brackets within the text right after sections submitted by members of political parties or serving politicians.

A dinki di encyclopedia Wikipedia ain't and sadly it's getting blown out by professional spin these days.

Sunday 6 December 2009

Is this your waterfront block? Mapping predicted sea level rise (3)


This is the advertised view from one NSW North Coast vacant building block selling for almost, but not quite, half a million dollars.

Notice the relative 'newness' of the canals and the nice soft, sandy shoreline.

This is exactly the type of land which is considered at risk in the Rudd Government's recent report Climate Change Risks to Australia's Coasts
that contains a 1.1 metre predicted sea level rise as its worse case scenario for New South Wales over the next ninety years.

This is Google Earth mapping of a sea level rise in the same area of only 1 metre.

Caveat emptor.




Time to show your vote to world leaders at U.N. Climate Change Conference, Copenhagen 7-18 Dec 2009


It's time to stand up and be counted at Show Your Vote.

A new Australian-inspired website is recording individual and organisation climate change action votes by country, state and post code so that world leaders might understand that ordinary people want action now.

Voting results will be presented in a petition to the UN Climate Change Conference, Copenhagen 2009.

Take a minute and register your vote.

Northern Rivers Art: an eclectic mix


Midnight by Matthew Farrell







Afternoon Walk
by Susan Simoni

Boobook 2007 by Noel Caldwell

All images can be found at Arts Northern Rivers:Visual Arts Network