Tuesday 18 February 2014

Further evidence of the talent in the Abbott Government


In November 2012 NSW Senator Arthur Sinodinos, who is now the Assistant Treasurer in the Abbott Government, informed the parliament that he had resigned from the board of the Mary Makillop [sic] Foundation. In an earlier declaration (25/11/2012) Senator Sinodinos referred to it as the Mary Mackillop [sic] Foundation.


No, Senator Sinodinos, it's the Mary MacKillop Foundation.

On 25 November 2011 the senator declared he was on the board of Blue Earth [sic] Charity. He informed the parliament in a declaration dated 11 November 20ll (but stamped by the Registry on 22 December 2011) that he resigned from the board on 13 December 2011. But, to his credit, the senator informed the Registry that he had previously goofed and it was in fact the Bluearth Foundation.










Senator Sinodinos needs to polish up on the names of the charities he gets himself associated with AND he needs remedial lessons in reading the calendar. One has to wonder if the senator can read the time from a clock face ... the big hand is on ... and the little hand is on ...

See the senator's declarations here.

News, opinion or advertisement?


I wonder if the businesses involved in this type of advertising fudge realise the badwill they create in the hearts of quite a few newspaper readers?

Dressing the family up in white won't undo any negative opinions formed.

Snapshot from Page 7 of The Daily Examiner, 12 February 2014

Click on image to enlarge

UPDATE

The identical advertorial and photograph was published in a rival newspaper, The Clarence Valley Review, on the same day - again it was being passed off as a news article on Page 6.

The Lies Abbott Tells - Part Eleven


THE LIES

We want to protect workers' pay and conditions..... We want to see the take home wages of Australian workers increase......Under our policy, no Australian worker will be worse off......
[Tony Abbott quoted at news.com.au, 9 May 2013]

I do not begrudge any Australian worker his or her wage. I want the Australian worker to be better paid all the time.
[Prime Minister Tony Abbott on the floor of the House of Representatives, Hansard 11 February 2014]

THE FACTS

Mr Abbott said on Monday penalty rates may be costing jobs and suggested a Coalition government could voice its support for particular cases brought before the Fair Work Commission.
''I think the best way forward, at least initially, is to try to ensure that the award situation does maximise employment, and at the moment we are not maximising employment by closing down businesses and preventing people from getting jobs,'' he said at a community forum in South Australia on Monday.
''I am confident that if the government were to back, for argument's sake, applications to the Fair Work Commission for adjustments in this area it may well be successful.'' [The Sydney Morning Herald, 30 April 2014 2013]

Abbott Government's Submission To Fair Work Commission 4 Yearly Review Of Modern Awards on 3 February 2014 in which it questions existing minimum terms and conditions in modern awards, the inclusion of penalty rates in any new awards and the basis for the minimum wage.

Monday 17 February 2014

Another example of the talent in Australia's coalition government


Mathias Cormann, Liberal Party Senator for Western Australia, is another member of the Abbott government to show off his talents with his entry in the parliament's register of senators' interests.

While Senator Cormann, a product of Belgium, might have trouble getting his tongue around the lingo spoken in Australia that's no excuse for not reading what was in front of him before he signed it.

What makes matters worse is that this bloke is the Minister for Finance. You'd have to wonder whether he checks his personal cheques and bank slips before he signs them.

Samples from Cormann's register of interests appear below.








Also appearing on the Senator's register is this entry. Interesting!!??!!





Australian Defence Minister David Johnston takes one's breath away


Senator David Johnston
The Australian

In which Australian Minister for Defence Senator David Johnston appears to imply that being Australian means you don’t lie and being a furriner means you do....

The Australian 8 February 2014:

Senator Johnson dismissed a report published by Fairfax Media yesterday in which Somalian man Yousif Ibrahim Fasher said he was a witness to brutality, where asylum-seekers allegedly had their hands deliberately burned. "He's not even Australian," Senator Johnson said.......

NSW Liberal Party's Peter Phelps MLC playing the fool as usual


This Liberal Party member of the NSW Parliament must hold the parliamentary record for time wasting at taxpayers' expense.

Here is a typical example..........

ZOMBIES
Page: 26523

The Hon. Dr PETER PHELPS [7.20 p.m.]: I speak about a significant development in the cultural malaise greeting the West, and I speak of nothing else than zombies. Yes, zombies. Zombies are the proverbial canary in the cultural coalmine. One might be tempted to say, "Where go zombies, so goes the nation." I speak in particular tonight about the moral menace posed by the concept of fast zombies. Frankly, zombies do not run. Zombies are lumbering; they are eternal; they are blind and brainless. They rise from the grave, but they do not run. In the 1970s, the zombie mythos was created by the great George Romero films such as the Night of the Living Dead and the Dawn of the Dead. The dead rise, but they do not run. They lumber, they lurch—you can run, but you cannot hide. You think because they are slow you can outrun them, and thereby save yourself from the apocalypse that awaits you. You can grab your shotgun, but eventually it will run out of shells. You can grab your chainsaw, but it will run out of fuel. You can grab your baseball bat, but even the strongest maple will one day splinter and break. Indeed, zombies are a powerful cultural symbol. They are a metaphor for the death that awaits us all—the strong, the smart and the brave. It does not matter because zombies eventually will be feeding on your innards.

What do we see in the current cultural crisis facing the West? We see fast zombies. Fast zombies go against the entire mythos of zombiedom. Once upon a time you thought you could run, but now you cannot even do that, because you are being chased by the Usain Bolt of the undead. Consider the current zombie shows that have been foisted on us: 28 Days Later, Dead Set, Zombieland. All these movies have zombies running faster than CityRail. All this phenomenon of fast zombies or pseudo zombies, as they should be, is a disgrace to the zombie mythos. Even I Am Legend has zombies running about and showing feelings. I will put aside the fact that the movie I Am Legend is a disgraceful attempt to steal the vampirism in the original book and then turn it into a quasi-zombie story. Movies such as Warm Bodies have zombies falling in love. Worst of all, we now have pole-dancing zombies in the movie Zombie Strippers. This is an outrage. Zombies do not fall in love, they do not dance, and they do not express feelings.

Even World War Z, which is arguably the finest zombie book ever written, has been completely destroyed by Hollywood—and how many times has that phrase been used—by making them fast. The great zombie mythos has been rewritten and it has now become the Stawell Gift of horror movies. Why is that so? It is because of the demand for instant gratification from Generation Y. They cannot wait 90 minutes for the eventual evisceration or to have your brains being eaten by a lumbering zombie; they have to have a disembowelling every 30 seconds or they are onto the iPhone and then onto Twitter complaining about how boring the movie is and running a #oldpeoplezombies. I warn the people of New South Wales, Australia, Western civilisation and the world that we will continue to decline until we get our zombies back under control and stop them from running around like a bunch of undead chooks. Merry Christmas.

Question—That this House do now adjourn—put and resolved in the affirmative.

Motion agreed to.
The House adjourned at 7.25 p.m. until Tuesday 4 March 2014 at 2.30 p.m.

Sunday 16 February 2014

An example of the talent in Australia's coalition government: Senator Ron Boswell


Ronald Leslie Doyle Boswell, who has been a Queensland National Party senator since 1983, displays his obvious raw talent and possibly the results of his private school education at  St Joseph's College Gregory Terrace in his statement of registrable interests lodged with the nation's parliament.
















Looks like Senator Boswell wasn't paying attention when the S words came up in his spelling lesson.