Sunday 28 March 2010

Competitor Number 41 please return to the finish line - your party needs you!


Abbott's posed pre-race photograph

Australian Leader of the Opposition and self-styled fitness template, Tony Abbott, was competitor Number 41 in a field of 1,529 to 1,540 others entered in the Ironman Australia Triathlon on Sunday 28 March 2010 at Port Macquarie.

Fifty-three year old Abbott ranked 1,425 (div.pos. 120) in the 2.4 mile swim, 1213 (div. pos. 91) in the 112 mile bike ride and, 1170 (div. pos. 83) in the 26.2 mile run leg of the triathlon - subject to adjustment.

Despite his obvious enthusiasm for the chase perhaps he really should stick with his day job. Because it really was a chase - he was still manfully pedalling through the last stages of the bike leg while the front runners were three-quarters of the way through the final run stage of the event and his own run was still dragging on long after the leading pack had passed the finish line.

It may seem a hard position to take when viewing an event with a big field over a long course, one which saw some participants fail to finish the run before the triathlon results were called.

However this is a middle-aged politician with a history of using his bare chest and crotch physical fitness to pimp for votes and, much older men on the NSW North Coast competing for pleasure in similar events in the past managed to officially finish with very respectable times under their belts.

After all, when it comes down to the crunch, most people want to see economic, environmental and social policy rather than hairy pecs in an election year.

Here is Tony's official race record.

The McGrath Foundation public relations misstep


They say that a picture is worth a thousand words. However in an election year charities should be more than a little wary about what those words might be saying if manipulative politicians are involved.


Shoulders back and best foot forward, as Opposition Leader Tony Abbott uses the McGrath Foundation to relentlessly promote himself in March 2010.

What the tax man saw....


While we wait to find out exactly what is in the Henry Tax Review, the Australian Taxation Office has published its latest statistics which are in a nutshell:

For the 2007–08 income year:

  • 14.8 million returns were lodged, an increase of 6.7% from 2006–07
  • 12,640,767 individuals lodged tax returns
  • individual returns represented 85.2% of all returns lodged
  • the proportion of individuals lodging returns using e–tax increased to 17.7%
  • $7.7 billion in tax bonus payments were paid to 8.8 million individuals based on their 2007–08 tax return.
  • 79.5% of individuals were salary and wage earners
  • 13.7% of companies were in the rental, hiring and real estate services industry
  • 25.9% of partnerships were in the agriculture, forestry and fishing industry
  • 17.8% of trusts were in the rental, hiring and real estate services industry
  • trusts experienced the largest growth in the number of returns lodged, with an increase of 8.3% from 2006–07
  • individuals accounted for 19.6% of total income, 62.5% of taxable income and 64.4% of net tax
  • companies accounted for 76.1% of total income, 26.7% of taxable income and 30.6% of net tax
  • super funds accounted for 4.3% of total income, 10.7% of taxable income and 5.0% of net tax
  • transfers providing assistance to families and individuals (excluding the one-off tax bonus payment) totalled more than $2.4 billion, a 2.1% decrease from 2006–07.

For the 2008–09 financial year:

  • 2.6% fewer fringe benefits tax returns were lodged than in 2007–08
  • fringe benefits tax collections totalled $3.4 billion, a decrease of 1.3% from 2007–08
  • GST liabilities were $41.5 billion, a decrease of less than 1% from 2007–08
  • excise liabilities were $24.3 billion, an increase of 3.1% from 2007–08 liabilities
  • liabilities from the wine equalisation tax were $729 million, a 13.2% increase from 2007–08
  • luxury car tax liabilities were $376 million, a decrease of 15.9% from 2007–08
  • PAYG withholding liabilities were $116.9 billion, an increase of 2.0% from 2007–08
  • PAYG instalments were $65.1 billion, a decrease of 7.4% from 2007–08
  • During the 2008–09 financial year there were 410,318 self-managed super funds, with a total of 772,300 members.
For those completely spellbound by figures, the complete document and chapter downloads can be found here.

Saturday 27 March 2010

This blog can no longer be seen in China. Can yours?


In January 2010 Open Net Initiative reported that more than half a billion Internet users are being filtered worldwide:

So, just how many people are censored online around the world? We have estimated a number based on the number of Internet users that reside in countries which practice substantial filtering--in terms of the number of sites and/or type of content blocked. The number we have come up with is 563,018,414, or approximately 32% of all Internet users.

This is the international censorship club Prime Minister Rudd and Communications Minister Conroy want Australia to join?

Because North Coast Voices is hosted by Google's Blogger.com and, Google is currently in dispute with the Chinese Government, it appears that we may be blocked by government censors in China.
Although we only had occasional visitors from mainland China it is still disappointing to find that we appear to be inaccessible now.

Google reports via its Mainland China service availability site:

This page offers a summary of Google service accessibility from within mainland China. The status is determined at the level of the service and may not reflect individual experiences. Unless otherwise noted, this status information applies to consumer services as well as services for organizations using Google.


















The Berkman Center for Internet & Society (Harvard University) Herdict states that:

  • China has 10,212 reports of inaccessible sites (1,550 are unique)
  • China has 5,478 reports of accessible sites (1,822 are unique)
  • China is ranked 1 in number of reports.
Currently listed as predominately inaccessible in that country are Internet websites such as Scribd, The Huffington Post, BBC and the search engine Bing, along with Twitter and email services Gmail and Hotmail.


Herdict graph of Blogger access in China




In January 2010 Open Net Initiative reported on Chinese search engines; Foreign visitors to Baidu are not exempt from the blocking: If a search contains blocked phrases, Baidu will lock the user out of the search engine for five minutes. A search for the term Google returns normal results, while a search for the URL of the Google blog brings about a lockout (warning: you will actually be barred from Baidu for five minutes). The same scenario occurred when searching on QQ, Sogou, and Yahoo.cn.

A Saturday saunter through Northern Rivers art


Karyn Fendley
Cradle Mountain
2008

Matthew Farrell Alchemical Bottle Allegria 5,6,&9, 2009






Liz Deckers
Project Oh Dolly (5)
2007




From the Arts Northern Rivers-Visual Arts Network

Friday 26 March 2010

Vale Patricia Wrightson


Patricia Wrightson author and long-time Clarence Valley resident died this month.


Patricia Wrightson, who died this week aged 88, was one of the first children's writers to use Australian places and idioms in her novels. [Many of her works draw on Australian mythology.] Born in the northern NSW town of Lismore, Wrightson's first books were published in the 1950's, and she continued writing until ill health forced her retirement in the late 1990's.

In 1999, the NSW Premier's literary awards honoured Ms Wrightson by naming their children's literary prize after her. Minister for the Arts, Virginia Judge, yesterday acclaimed Ms Wrightson as an "Australian literary great". (As reported in The Australian, March 25, 12:00 am.)

Ms. Wrightson was one of Australia's best known children's authors. She worked as assistant editor of School Magazine from 1964-1970 and became editor in 1970 until 1975. Her first children's book The Crooked Snake, written in 1955 won the Children's Book Council of Australia Book of the Year 1956. With a writing career of nearly fifty years, Ms. Wrightson won that award again for The Nargun and The Stars (1973), The Ice is Coming (1977), A Little Fear (1983). High commendations were awarded for The Bunyip Hole (1958), The Feather Star (1962), I Own the Racecourse! (1968) which was also the CBCA Book of the year in 1969, An Older Kind of Magic (1972), Behind the Wind (1981), Balyet (1989) was shortlisted for Older Readers 1990, The Sugar-gum Tree (1991) was shortlisted for Younger Readers in 1992, Rattler's Place (1997) was named an Honour Book for Younger Readers in 1998.

Ms. Wrightson received the Dromkeen Medal in 1984, the Hans Christian Andersen Award in 1986 and delivered the annual Arbuthnot Lecture in 1985.

In a 1991 Horn Book Magazine article, Wrightson describes the roots of writing:

"The necessary, natural struggle to tell a story is always new, but the roots were there already: hiding in yourself, planted by your inheritance to be discovered through need. They were deep and strong... the roots of writing are deeper than you think. "Deeper Than you Think." by: Wrightson, Patricia, Horn Book Magazine, Vol. 67, Issue 2.

Photograph from The National Library of Australia