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Saturday 15 December 2007

They're All Dogs




"Desperately he watched the walls begin to lean, the floor to tilt. Grabbing a stanchion, he hung on almost calmly as the cabin moved from vertical to horizontal, then into a complete roll. Dust, mud, water, bits of wood, and a few pounds of miscellaneous components showered down on him as he stood, shakily, in the centre of the cabin trying to find enough energy to scream."
Martin Logan.


They're all dogs, she said, as I approached the small huddle outside the train station. You don't have to tell me that, came the reply. I know. She gestured down the block. The streaky boy pushing the pram, nineteen and pale sick with scars up his arms, remained silent. Oh they're dogs mate; they'd do anything. I approached, pushed through, they barely parted for a pedestrian. The sky was closing in but the rain hadn't come, not yet.

Notes for a radio spot:

This story has had widespread coverage in Australia not just because of the horrific details of the case but the political backdrop. The decline in outback communities, with children sniffing petrol, not attending school and being regularly abused or neglected, is widely being seen as a failure of government policy, particularly left wing government policy. Billions and billions of dollars have been poured into the desert sands and the situation for many aboriginal people has simply got worse.

What is most shocking about this case is that it is not an isolated incident. The dysfunction and sexual abuse in remote communities has now sparked direct government takeover of dozens of isolated communities in the north of the country. It brings into stark relief the issues of child protection and the damaging impacts of passive welfare. The abuse and rape of so many of these kids is being painted as the abject failure of political correctness which has protected and concealed these disasters. Child protection officers are being accused of keeping cases from police.

The girl in question was born with foetal alcohol syndrome, making her somewhat intellectually disabled, at Cape York in the far north of the country. She was first abused at the age of five and placed in foster care, but then returned by child preotection authorities to the community, where raped by five boys at the age of seven. She was again removed.

After a number of failed placements she eventually settled and found some happiness with a white foster family.

Defying belief, officers from the Department of Child Safety child forced the child's removal back to the community where she had been raped. The girl's mother pleaded with them that the girl was not safe at Araukun.

At age ten she was raped by six youths three men in their early. She was raped on six other occasions.

The prosecutor of the case Steve Carter, tried to paint the rapes as childish sexual experimentation and described the boys and men involved as "naughty". The girl was reportedly offering sex in return for alcohol and cigarettes. Not surprisingly, the prosecutor has been stood down.

Cairns District Court judge Sarah Bradley, a graduate of the 1970s and something of a golden girl of left wing women lawyers and a public advocate for differential treatment of aboriginal offenders, allowed all nine attackers to walk free because the girl "probably agreed to have sex with all of you." She released six younger males with no conviction and gave three older males suspended sentences.

There's reports in parts of Australia of homes where children have taken the knobs off their bedroom doors to protect themselves. Most of the doors have been kicked in. Those children are not being protected.

Ever since the delivery of a nation transforming report Bringing Them Home, documented in graphic and moving detail the so-called stolen generation, the children who were removed for decades in the earlier parts of last century from indigenous families by charities and the authorities for decades; it has been very very difficult for child protection authorities to remove children from their families. The fear of creating another stolen generation has meant indigenous children are often left in circumstances which would not be tolerated in most Australian suburbs.

Politicians have been accused of instructing welfare workers not to report suspected child abuse cases to police. Police say cases of children showing up at clinics with gonorear or other sexually transmitted diseases are not passed on to them.

The complete collapse of these isolated communities has been going on for years, but has often been hidden from view by a thing called the permit system. I don't think a lot of people realise that there are vast tracts of Australia that with landrights have been handed back, and for outsiders to get in requires special permits and permission and can be quite difficult. What began with such noble intent, the gifting of land and effectively pride, in the end isolated these remote communities from all the benefits of the modern world.

I believe the complete moral and civic, spiritual and physical collapse of these communities, with chaotic scenes of alcohol abuse and child neglect, will be studied by amthropologists with great fascination for decades.

The former Federal Government began what is being called The Intervention in the Northern Territory, with the use of teams including the Federal Police, following a report Breaking The Silence which documented the complete social collapse of these communities. Alcohol and pornography have now been banned or strictly proscribed.

Our new Prime Minister Kevin Rudd met with aboriginal leaders on the weekend has suported the Intervention but said he will be reviewing it closely. The absue of indegenous chidlren is expected to be high on the agenda at a meeting of the Prime Minister and the country's premiers this week.



THE BIGGER STORY:


SMH:
Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama says he doesn't think his campaign will be hurt by the effort last week by an adviser for rival Hillary Clinton to bring attention to his admitted teenage drug use.

He suggested at the weekend that the Clinton campaign's increasingly negative tenor was a measure of a tightening race.

"I do think that the average American believes that what somebody does when they were a teenager 30 years ago is probably not relevant to how they're going to be performing as commander in chief of the United States," Obama said.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article3056283.ece

The new face of America
Once written off, Barack Obama is suddenly surging in the polls and could become the first African-American president . The reason is because he is the only man who can halt the racial, religious and cultural civil war that is tearing America apart.
Andrew Sullivan

Last week was a horrible one for Hillary Clinton. Her husband had thrown a wrench into her campaign to become president of the United States by declaring that he’d been against the Iraq war from the beginning - a transparent fib that reminded many Democrats of the pathological lying of the 1990s.

Two Clinton campaign staffers were then caught sending out e-mails warning that Barack Obama, her main rival for the Democrat ticket, was a closet Muslim. And one of her campaign co-chairmen raised the issue of Obama’s past drug use - something Obama had dealt with candidly years ago. Clinton was forced to apologise and her aide resigned. Grassroots Democrats were appalled at the descent into nastiness. It suggested desperation in the Clinton camp.

But everything came to a head in last Thursday’s Iowa debate between the Democratic candidates. Obama was asked by the moderator how he could claim to represent change on foreign policy when he had so many former Clinton administration officials advising him. Hillary burst into desperate laughter. “I’d love to hear him answer that,” she cackled. Obama paused, then fired: “Well, Hillary, I’m looking forward to having you advise me as well.” The audience erupted. In one moment, the Alpha Female ceded authority to the Alpha Male.

The Washington media are taken aback by Obama’s surge in the polls. They dismissed him months ago, buying into the notion that a Clinton presidency was inevitable. But they can’t ignore the facts in the key states: in Iowa, Obama is slightly ahead and has the organisational edge. In New Hampshire, Clinton’s double-digit lead has suddenly evaporated. In South Carolina, black voters have begun to switch en masse to Obama. It’s still far from over - and no one should discount Hillary Clinton - but the momentum is suddenly his.

Monday 10 December 2007

After Clicking Done




Admiration, n.: Our polite recognition of another's resemblance to ourselves.
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Ambrose Bierce (1842 - 1914), The Devil's Dictionary

To be positive: To be mistaken at the top of one's voice.
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Ambrose Bierce (1842 - 1914), The Devil's Dictionary

Cogito cogito ergo cogito sum (I think that I think, therefore I think that I am.)
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Ambrose Bierce (1842 - 1914), The Devil's Dictionary

Brain: an apparatus with which we think we think.
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Ambrose Bierce (1842 - 1914), The Devil's Dictionary
- More quotations on: [Brain]


There wasn't anyway through this, the nervous clasping, and he was in sympathy for lost causes, fervent but unfashionable beliefs. The damaged building loomed over them, familiar faces looked up and away, caught in wintry sunlight. He could see remotely familiar faces in the crowd who he knew were detectives. Everything was closing in. Indeed had closed in long ago. His viral count was up and he was on another batch of herbs. His new car whizzed through the streets, and gave him pleasure, briefly, before he was faced once more with the stark truth. They had come to this. They had surrendered. His dissenting voice had failed. They had, all of them, become automatums.

The decline of the country he had once loved so passionately, had been so proud to be part of, began innocuously enough. New anti-terror laws had seemed appropriate enough; in the post September 11 environment when the world was gripped in fear of Islamo-fascists. Long fought for freedoms were dispensed with; just like that. Legislation drafted and passed and the toiling masses barely noticed. Civil libertarians poked up their whingy voices and no one listened. He certainly hadn't listened. His preoccupations had been graver, more profound; he had been gripped by a far greater melancholy than they would ever know. That was a result of being born defective; he felt too much.

The backlash had been slow; scattered; unfashionable, stifled, closely monitored by the authorities. He should have known better, but didn't. Those meetings, so long ago, had seemed futile to him even then. There were no grave consequences. They didn't even really understand what they were fighting against. Before the implants. Before his intelligence had been augmented in what had once seemed dramatic and exciting ways. He was drifting away from Don now; in the crowd. Coffee, he shouted over the noise; more sirens in the distance; sheltering under the crumbling facade. Don shrugged; and slipped into the crowd, disappearing before his eyes.

It left him there, bewitched, uncertain; his thoughts echoing through the empty chamber of his head. And beyond the mop-up what was the story? Nothing he could grasp. Nothing that would satisfy his bosses. And he turned away from the grand marble entrance of the building he had learnt to hate more than any other building in the city; one foot before the other, his skeleton imprinted on the planet surface and his head in a thousand places. He looked back at the crowd which still stood behind the police tape, staring in awe, or disbelief, or perhaps even satisfaction; and this time recognised no one. It wasn't his city, his place, his time, any more. The doctor's warnings rang in his head, as he walked fearfully back to the office.



THE BIGGER STORY:



Lone voice of dissent censored by United Nations
Written By: Tom Swiss
Published In: News Releases
Publication Date: December 13, 2007
Publisher: The Heartland Institute


(CHICAGO, Illinois - December 13, 2007) -- For the second time this week, the International Climate Science Coalition (ICSC) was kicked off the press schedule for the United Nations' climate conference in Bali, Indonesia.

The ICSC is a group of scientists from Africa, Australia, Europe, India, New Zealand, and the U.S. who contend sound science does not support the outrageous claims and draconian regulations proposed in Bali.

The ICSC team leader, Bryan Leyland, an expert in carbon and energy trading, reported, "This morning I confirmed we had the main conference hall for 9:00 AM tomorrow. At 4:30 PM today, I found that Barbara Black bumped us off the schedule and closed further bookings. I'm fuming."

Black is NGO liaison officer for the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change in Bali.

Earlier in the week, UN officials in Bali closed down the ICSC's first press conference there. Black interrupted the press conference and demanded the scientists immediately cease. She threatened to have the police physically remove them from the premises.

Black's efforts are part of the United Nations' ongoing censorship of dissenting voices at Bali. ICSC scientists have been prevented from participating in panel discussions, side events, and exhibits.

For further information:

Bryan Leyland
+64 21 978 996
bryanleyland@mac.com
Christopher Monckton
+44 7980 634784
monckton@mail.com

Posted by A Dog Named Kyoto

Sunday 9 December 2007

Infinite Silence Infinite Melancholy




"The order of Trappist monks got it right - keep your counsel and maintain hope."
John Howard, deposed Prime Minister of Australia.

These were all the cruelties that came gushing out; the infinite longing and the sensation of being utterly lost; while all around is Christmas and celebration; other people's celebration. I didn't know what had become of me. I didn't know that the world was changing. He was teary for no reason and clung to things that were utterly pointless. The changing political tide was only fast in retrospect. At the time he had barely noticed anything. There were inappropriate tears and maudlin chaos. Get a grip get a grip. Then a man says brightly, "another day in paradise", and I look up, startled. Paradise? Not in here it ain't.

He looked up and around and was surprised by the number of faces he recognised in the crowd. Don was looking at him strangely; waiting for him to act. But what was he to do? Gesture to the police; indicate to them the man he thought was guilty. Explain that it was just a feeling; that his enhanced brain had triggled together the dots; that scene after scene kept flashing through his brain, neatly dated, neatly timed. Born with the lost twin syndrome; he kept thinking there was someone he could turn to, some advice he could take, some way to escape the gripping tendrils; the melancholy with which he was born. The pit of his stomach kept sinking, there was no way out.

Henrietta has left for Thailand and the house is much quieter. The politics had moved; so that he and his ilk were not just no longer fashionable; but no longer deserving. The Rudd government is all off to Bali to talk Kyoto. I ran into Bernadette today at a meeting in Newtown; and even she thinks it's all a crock. I was there in '92 and I helped draft it; she said. It's not just shite, it's worse than shite, she said. And yet everyone is in a grip, we're signing Kyoto and we've all moved on to a higher moral plain. The dogs keep whining at the back door; and I don't know, I really don't know, how to move from here back to the promised land; to "another day in paradise", to climb back into sanity and be happy again.

And then the phone rang, again. His boss, again. And he couldn't believe in this modern life of opportunity and colour and easy magnificence, that he had become a slave.

THE BIGGER STORY:


ABC:

Reporter: Rebecca Barrett
MARK COLVIN: Commonwealth-State relations got their first real road test since the federal election today, at a meeting of the nation's Health Ministers. And if we're to believe them, it was all sweetness and light.

The Ministers said after their meeting in Hobart that the blame game on health had ended. Their task was to begin discussing the next hospital funding agreement. The Federal Government had come with an offer of $600-million to start clearing elective surgery waiting lists around the country.

State and territory ministers now have a week to come up with plans to wipe out the backlog. The new Commonwealth money should start flowing early in the New Year.

Rebecca Barrett reports.

REBECCA BARRETT: By all accounts, it was a very unusual health ministers meeting.

It seems there was no sparring or even disagreement as the nation's all-Labor Health Ministers sat down together for the first time.

STEPHEN ROBERTSON: Today is the end of the blame game. Today is the first day where all state, territory and commonwealth health ministers are dedicated to working together to improve health care in this country.

Friday 7 December 2007

Cascading Wit




Cocaine is the drug of ego. All shiny surface and hollow euphoria, it's the drug of stockbrokers and estate agents. Of puppet governments and corporate warmongers. Of thin girls with expensive teeth and cheap souls, of sharp subprime boys whipping fast financial horses. Where acid dissolves ego, cocaine is powdered narcissism. The Age of Aquarius is dead. All hail the Age of Celebrity. Do what? Invest, obviously, in coca futures.
Elizabeth Farrelly


He answered his phone and wished he hadn't. Where are you, she demanded. You can't just walk out without telling me where you are.
Of course not, he thought, because then you wouldn't have total control.
Total control, over you. A pop song from long ago.
I just had a feeling...
You're not paid to have feelings.
Finally, a flash of anger. It was all very well to be a control freak, but this woman was beyond anything...
He was cured, he had been cured for a long time. He was coming back.
I just had a feeling, he repeated...
She started frothing at the other end of the phone.
He turned it off.
He should have turned it off a long time ago. No one should be constantly humiliated, as he was. Nothing was right. The crowds were tittering, as if the surface had been tilted.
There were still wisps of smoke from the top of the building, and a curious crowd. The crime scene tape was still intact, and kept the crowd back.
He scanned the faces, and wasn't in the least bit surprise to see Don, standing there with a group of others. Three men and a woman, he thought. Just staring. As if they couldn't believe it.
He made his way over to them.
Don looked up, mistrustful after their conversation.
What happened? he asked.
Nothing that's not in the newspapers, he replied, staring at his old friend.
How was this to play, what was he to do?
Call the police? This is my old friend, I think he did it.
Now, standing next to him, he felt even more certain. He took in his companions, he had seen them, in those meetings, in those rooms in those remote suburban church halls. His brain was doing overtime, checking the archives.
Well, I don't suppose everyone will grieve, he said.
Perhaps, Don grunted, and just kept on staring. Weren't the guilty always meant to return to the scene? Wasn't this too big a give away?
"Perhaps," he said again quietly. "But certainly not everybody."
"Maybe we should go somewhere, talk?" he asked.
"You're a newspaper man, and not to be trusted," Don said. "Even if I knew something, which I don't, you'd be the last person..."
"Don, I know you know," he said quietly. "If I know, it's only a matter of time before the authorities catch up."


THE BIGGER STORY:

SMH:

TREASURER Wayne Swan flies to the international climate change conference in Bali today carrying an ultra-cautious message on targets for cutting greenhouse gas emissions.

As part of the Government team arriving over the next week, Mr Swan will set the stage for Australia to resist growing pressure to sign up to a 2020 target.

From Australia, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd overruled the official Australian delegation in Bali after it last week endorsed a 25 to 40 per cent cut in 1990 greenhouse gases levels by 2020.

Mr Swan told The Sun-Herald before departing that the Government would await a report commissioned from Professor Ross Garnaut before committing Australia to short-term targets.

"Labor has a policy to reduce greenhouse gases by 60 per cent by 2050, but any interim target will depend on the Garnaut report," he said.

Professor Garnaut, the head of economics at the Australian National University and chairman of the Government's climate change review committee, will not deliver his report until the middle of next year. Professor Garnaut is attending the Bali conference.

Monday 26 November 2007

Conquered





The Fractured Cloud


The fractured cloud struggles just to breathe. Tortured and tormented by the stresses of life, she is teetering on the brink of sanity. She started her existence normal enough: calm, collected, and clear-minded, but recently something changed. It started off small. A stream of small problems and challenges not unlike those she had faced earlier in life, but this stream never stopped. She tried to get through solely on her own steam, too proud to ask for help. This was probably her undoing. In time, this stream of problems turned into a web. Trapping, and immobilizing her to the point where she was no longer even able to partially slow the flow of problems. Now she sits, helpless, gathering all of her might to unleash in one final burst of strength. How this will affect her situation, and what effects it may have on her psyche is not quite clear, but at this point one thing is quite clear: no matter what the consequences, this is her only remaining hope.


http://theweeklycloud.blogspot.com/2007/11/fractured-cloud-struggles-just-to.html


The country has changed already; almost overnight; and the sweet chaos to which we had all beckoned, it was gone. A smooth incumbent. The parties in chaos. The building kept burning in his imagination; as if it would never stop; the sequence of yesterday's events playing through his head. There were other reporters involved now; police, social affairs, legal affairs. The stream of consequence moved forward like a great procession; and he had nothing to say for himself.

He waited until there was a gap in the authoritarian rule of his boss and made his own way back up to the scene of yesterday's events. Police tape still surrounded the building, which was still closed to staff and the public. Traffic diversions were still in place. A small crowd of onlookers had gathered to gape at the damaged building; the misshapen penthouse on top of the stolid, expensive government architecture.

He recognised a couple of faces in the crowd; not just other reporters gathering atmosphere or seeing for themselves; but faces he had seen in meetings long long ago. Had they, too, just come to see for themselves? Or was it more? The changing nature of everything; the overthrow of the mundane; the increasing expansions of their brains. The meetings were coming up in his head now; as if from a retrieval system; and he could see the impassioned talks in the town halls. Before the implants came. They were trying to argue it was wrong; that we as a race would never be the same. Those who were protesting in a stream of impassioned words were painted in the media and therefore in the public mind as reactionaries, alarmists, old fashioned and ridiculous. Who wouldn't want a better brain?

Already he could see his phone going off again. That woman never rested.

THE BIGGER STORY:


ABC:


Outgoing prime minister John Howard has arrived back at Parliament House for the first time since his election loss, to clean out his office and make way for his replacement Kevin Rudd.

Mr Rudd may not officially take over until early next week and says he hopes to have his new Cabinet finalised by Thursday and sworn in by next Monday.

In another of Mr Rudd's priorities, the Labor leader says any apology to Indigenous Australians will only be made after adequate consultation with Aboriginal communities.



Bernama
Howard was bushwhacked
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - 15 hours ago
Kevin Rudd has fractured the electoral coalition that kept John Howard in power for more than a decade by winning over voters from the provincial and rural ...
Kevin Rudd pushes Work Choices, Kyoto mandates NEWS.com.au
Howard's official website suspended Hindu
Howard’s end leaves poorer legacy National Business Review
RTT News - Telegraph.co.uk
all 2,293 news articles »

Sydney Morning Herald
Libs turn on Howard: let's dump Work Choices
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - 13 hours ago
"No Liberal candidate could look in the mirror and say the leadership of John Howard was not the central factor on Saturday," Mr Pyne said. ...
Keating says Bishop should lead Libs The Age
Three to contest Liberal leadership The Age
Rivals left to slug it out among themselves Sydney Morning Herald
NEWS.com.au - The Age
all 275 news articles »

Canoe.ca (subscription)
Howard cleans out office as Rudd looks ahead
ABC Online, Australia - 2 hours ago
Outgoing prime minister John Howard has arrived back at Parliament House for the first time since his election loss, to clean out his office and make way ...
Australia's PM-elect to say sorry to Aborigines Reuters South Africa
Rudd Will Apologize to Aborigines The Associated Press
New PM Kevin Rudd to apologise to Aborigines Telegraph.co.uk
BBC News - Melbourne Herald Sun
all 118 news articles »

Canada.com
mckew Set to Win Howard's Seat, First Leader to Lose Since 1929
Bloomberg - 25 Nov 2007
26 (Bloomberg) -- Maxine mckew, a former journalist, is set to topple John Howard from his Sydney seat, making him the first Australian Prime Minister to be ...
Howard's End CounterPunch
Easy life on pension for John Howard Melbourne Herald Sun
pm's people didn't think we had it in us: mckew Sydney Morning Herald
Reuters UK - Melbourne Herald Sun
all 449 news articles »

Sky News Australia
Howard told to quit a year ago
The Age, Australia - 15 hours ago
SENIOR Liberal strategist and former minister Nick Minchin strongly advocated a leadership change more than a year before the poll, telling John Howard he ...
Pasquarelli: Howard held hostage by Bennelong's ethnic make up Crikey (subscription)
Liberal senators round on Howard Sydney Morning Herald
Defeat can be a new dawn for the Liberals Sydney Morning Herald
ABC Online - ABC Online
all 95 news articles »

Sydney Morning Herald
Knives come out for final act
New Zealand Herald, New Zealand - 11 hours ago
By Greg Ansley The battle to succeed John Howard as leader of the Liberals has already begun. Photo / Getty Images As Labor Prime Minister-elect Kevin Rudd ...
Downer out as senior Libs jockey Melbourne Herald Sun
With new Labor in place, can new Liberalism be far behind? The Age
Libs more harmonious than ever: Hockey Melbourne Herald Sun
Melbourne Herald Sun - The Age
all 551 news articles »

Tuesday 20 November 2007

Time Travel



"I am focused on spending my waking hours and my energy over the next three days in saying to that group of people ... if you think that Howard hasn't done a bad job, if you think the economy's good and national security's being looked after, if you're flirting with change just for the sake of change, remember that you can't have a changeless change of government." John Howard.

"John Howard is running in this election to retire, it's an extraordinary thing, unprecedented in Australian political history that a leader walks into an election campaign and says I'm going. The problem with being a lame duck, and John Howard is a lame duck, is that your promises don't count. Anything you say does not bind your successor." Kim Beazley.





He didn't know why he was wanted. It wasn't safe anymore. Cracks kept appearing where ever he looked, he didn't know why. His head was full of things he shouldn't have known. There were even little video clips running in his head of their last dozen visits. They were being watched, even back then. He wished he could withdraw everything that had happened, but it was impossible. Regret was mashed up with a jumbling set of priorities, he would have to act. His boss was at him, again and again. She never gave up. He swallowed every last shred of dignity and bowed his head to his desk. There was no way out.

There was more political turmoil running on the screens constantly, politicians denouncing each other in a strangely restrained way; as if the truth was something no one could face. For a moment, deciphering the streams of propaganda, he thought it was a fight between those with implants and those without. He could see the government's press releases, call them up in chronological order, collate them by topic. It was useless information and his head was full of it.

Don was no ordinary friend. Their friendship blossomed in a different time; away from the fluorescent lights that now pierced his soul; in quiet suburban streets where secret networks pulled towards each other; where all their lives had been destroyed by government agencies and there was nowhere to go. There was no sanity in the system. There was nothing to keep them safe; nothing to make them belong. He crawled up inside and knew the answer; plain as the nose. It was all there, the recordings of their conversations. Strangely, considering the normally shot nature of his memory, he could recall every last word of their last encounter. That cryptic look, those cryptic words. It all made sense now. How far would he betray someone, for the sake of a story? How far was he driven, to do what he did?

THE BIGGER STORY:


Howard says Rudd would be for life, not just Christmas
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - 1 hour ago
Opposition Leader Kevin Rudd, who today received a 90000-signature petition calling for the laws to be scrapped, challenged Mr Howard to release the ...
'Bomber' flies last mission for Rudd The Age
Kevin Rudd slips slightly in poll Melbourne Herald Sun
Rudd's approach to economy hijacks Coalition's strongest selling point The Age
International Herald Tribune - NEWS.com.au
all 379 news articles »

The Age Rudd would seek four-year fixed terms
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - 5 hours ago
Opposition Leader Kevin Rudd told reporters he would put the issue to a referendum if he won government. "I do not believe it is proper for the prime ...
Rudd's $5m mentor plan Sydney Morning Herald
Rudd visit inspires a case of school daze The Age
Teen girl faints as Rudd mobbed Melbourne Herald Sun
The Age - ABC Online
all 159 news articles »
Rudd given anti-Work Choices petition
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - 9 hours ago
Labor leader Kevin Rudd has been presented with a petition signed by 90000 people opposed to the Howard government's industrial relations laws. ...
Rudd can't fathom workchoices secrecy Melbourne Herald Sun
ALP ramps up Work Choices scare campaign Sydney Morning Herald
PM denies second wave of IR reforms LIVENEWS.com.au
NEWS.com.au - The Age
all 176 news articles »
Kevin Rudd's 'cocky little smirk' won't work - Alexander Downer
Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia - 7 hours ago
LABOR leader Kevin Rudd's "cocky little smirk" and cliche-driven style won't wash with voters, says Foreign Affairs Minister Alexander Downer. ...
Downer attacks Rudd's 'cocky little smirk' Daily Telegraph
Press ganged into that sinking feeling The Age
all 14 news articles »

Gulf Times Australia's Rudd will sign Kyoto pact if wins vote
Reuters - 18 Nov 2007
By Rob Taylor CANBERRA, Nov 19 (Reuters) - Australia's Labor Party leader Kevin Rudd said on Monday he would lead his country's delegation to December's ...
Rudd won't commit Garrett to portfolio Sydney Morning Herald
Rudd sets emission target The Age
Carbon copies the order of the day The Age
AFP - NEWS.com.au
all 117 news articles »

LIVENEWS.com.au Rudd won't pull Liberal appointees from diplomatic postings
ABC Online, Australia - 12 hours ago
Federal Labor leader Kevin Rudd says he will not recall former Liberal politicians who have been appointed to diplomatic roles if he wins government. ...
Rudd to keep pm's diplomatic postings The Age
State 'will lose clout' with Rudd Advertiser Adelaide
You're toast, says one happy little Vegemite to the PM Sydney Morning Herald
LIVENEWS.com.au
all 11 news articles »
Waxing frugal, praise rings in Rudd's ears
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - 21 hours ago
Future aspirants will note there is no evidence it damaged Kevin Rudd's standing and it did give him something to joke with Rove mcmanus about - "I was just ...


LIVENEWS.com.au Media complicit in Rudd's spin
LIVENEWS.com.au, Australia - 13 hours ago
There has been criticism, as you know, of Kevin Rudd pulling out of difficult engagements with the media. I have no problem about that, he's entitled to go ...
Howard is a big finisher but Rudd still holds the cards Courier Mail
Poll will be closely, says Rudd Sydney Morning Herald
Polls have Rudd winning nailbiter NEWS.com.au
Melbourne Herald Sun - Special Broadcasting Service
all 106 news articles »

Sky News Australia Election an IR 'referendum'
The Age, Australia - 8 hours ago
Labor leader Kevin Rudd says Prime Minister John Howard wanted the election to be a referendum on industrial relations - and he's got it. ...
workchoices clash Sky News Australia
maccormack: The government's bad luck campaign continues Crikey (subscription)
It's not workchoices, it's the economy: Hockey The Age
ABC Online - NEWS.com.au
all 59 news articles »
Rudd dismisses interviews criticism
Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia - 13 hours ago
LABOR leader Kevin Rudd has dismissed criticism that he has not made himself available for challenging news interviews, instead preferring soft media ...

Sunday 18 November 2007

Gaps In The Transmission




"He passed houses and tenements which had grown into desolation the way a man grows into senility, unnoticed, with a fragmentary concern; each existed on the edge of life, and carried the despair of being incomplete. He moved towards the centre of town, but swung round after a few minutes, avoiding the centre. It was clear to him, in this peculiar light of evening, that the days of youth were really gone: the smooth days, the balmy days, the days of no decisions had petered out, like a disused road."

Randall Flynn


There were gaps in the transmission, when he stepped over the edge into a vast silence; when the mall that was his face held corrupted secrets; and all was lost. These moments never lasted long; as he sat at his desk, dialing routinely, pretending to be busy. There wasn't any way out, or through. He could guess. The crime linked back through other crimes; and his own vageries, his own indulgences, were swept away by the passing days; his skeleton on the planet surface, his strong desire for release.

The termination date, however, came as an unpleasant surprise. he had always thorught he would be there forever, his consciousness just not the type to be washed away easily. Somehwere, in the internal alley ways, he would survive, hunted but alive. He could see the date, ten years hence, as if on a digital clock, hanging in his brain. Would he betray his friend? Without proof, but with absolute certainty. Would they find the evidence to prove his madness? Did he know anymore, if at all, what he stood for?

The timescales were impossible, he knew. The country has been enveloped in an election. The ads batter each other on television, 70% of a Rudd Labor government would be former union officials, the ads pound. And Labor fights right back. Don't let Howard and Costello expand the IR laws. They fight only on the grounds on which they're comfortable. It's like watching a train wreck in slow motion, the Liberal National government heading towards defeat; or annihilation on some predictions. Howard could lose his own seat. They stare defeat in the face. The tumult and the shouting will die down. And half the country is barracking for one man's disaster; the shocked stare out the window of the government limousine. The end of an era.

THE BIGGER STORY:


Turkish Press
Five days left and Howard looks a goner
New Zealand Herald, New Zealand - 10 hours ago
By Greg Ansley CANBERRA - Prime Minister John Howard today starts his final week of campaigning for Saturday's elections so far behind the only question ...
Australia's battlers 'to turn on John Howard' Telegraph.co.uk
Howard, Rudd switch to all-out attack Melbourne Herald Sun
Howard attacks Rudd on mining boom ABC Online
Earthtimes - The Age
all 313 news articles »

The Age
Howard shores up Asian vote
ABC Online, Australia - 2 hours ago
By Peta Donald Prime Minister John Howard talks to members of the Sydney Sae Soon Presbyterian Korean Church. (AAP: Paul Miller) It is almost 20 years since ...
Howard losing the Koreans and Chinese Sydney Morning Herald
Rudd, Howard deny cockiness on campaign trail ABC Online
God likes Liberal policies: Howard Sydney Morning Herald
New Zealand Herald - Telegraph.co.uk
all 46 news articles »

Sydney Morning Herald
JOHN HOWARD has always been shrewd but, famously, he has also had ...
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - 13 hours ago
Bad luck, John. Even after embracing climate change as a cause last year, Howard still has trouble mentioning it without immediately adding the word "but". ...
World won't end tomorrow due to climate change - Howard NEWS.com.au
Environment goes from bad to worse Sydney Morning Herald
Poll spotlight on climate The Age
ABC Online - Border Mail
all 94 news articles »

Sydney Morning Herald
'I'd take Howard in a bar fight'
NEWS.com.au, Australia - 13 hours ago
And he didn't disappoint, admitting he was a nerd but saying he could beat John Howard in a bar fight. Mr Rudd was forced to use his skills as a diplomat to ...
Rudd shows soft side on Rove show NEWS.com.au
Leaders gear up for final campaign week ABC Online
It's not workchoices, it's the economy: Hockey The Age
Sydney Morning Herald - ABC Online
all 88 news articles »
Howard promises drug crackdown
NEWS.com.au, Australia - 18 hours ago
... Government would take control of the welfare payments of people convicted of offences involving hard drugs, Prime Minister John Howard announced today. ...
Howard to withhold welfare from drug offenders ABC Online
AMA slams Howard drug plan Gold Coast News
Welfare plan to hit drug users The Age
Sydney Morning Herald - Sydney Morning Herald
all 59 news articles »
Girl faints as Rudd visits
The Age, Australia - 52 minutes ago
Quizzed about his breakfast preferences on Network Ten's 9am with David and Kim, he said he liked simple fare and, like John Howard, he makes it himself. ...

Sydney Morning Herald
Vaile denies Coalition split
ABC Online, Australia - 1 hour ago
Environment Minister Malcolm Turnbull has today denied newspaper reports that he has privately criticised Prime Minister John Howard for staying on and has ...
Vaile says sorry to auditor Melbourne Herald Sun
Regrets, the Deputy pm's had a few The Age
PM backs Vaile over grants The Age
The Age - ABC Online
all 73 news articles »

The Age
Election defeat looms for ‘big spender’ John Howard
Times Online, UK - 17 Nov 2007
JOHN HOWARD, Australia’s prime minister since 1996, may be ousted in federal elections next Saturday, polls suggested this weekend. ...
The most important week of all? The Age
Labour’s Rudd set to oust Howard in Australian election Sunday Business Post
Try-hard looks good to beat the devil you know The Australian
The Australian - Melbourne Herald Sun
all 13 news articles »

Friday 9 November 2007

The Polluted Line




These were the points of shame; the entire public debate polluted with negativity, hostility, lies in the old format. There wasn't going to be any salvation, any way back. The public discourse had been entirely corrupted. His brain kept flitting across the extra domains of information it had acquired; the maps that showed him where his friend Don lived; the telephone number; all of it.

And oddly, he could see a list of all the numbers Don had called over the past six weeks; although there were patterns in the numbers. He could see, he didn't know how; that he had trouble with his plumbing a fortnight ago and called both his landlord and an emergency plumber; that he had been robbed and had to replace all his credit cards. But something inside him told him more; that one of those numbers held the key.

But who's side was he on? That's what he wanted to know.

Any progress? his boss asked yet again.

And he shook his head again; lying, again.

Partly because he couldn't explain how he knew what he knew. And partly because he kept glimpsing the full depth of Austin's bastardy; the callous disregard for those who had appeared before him; the sounds of children crying, daddy, daddy. And he was unconvinced the world was not a better place without him.

The thought kept recurring: should he tell someone the implant wasn't working? Should he go back to the doctors? Should he just let the chasms that kept opening up take their course? He didn't know, he just really didn't know.

THE BIGGER STORY:

THE AGE:

A bugger of a sorry life

Jewel Topsfield
November 10, 2007


WHEN Jackie Kelly decided to quit her seat of Lindsay in Sydney's western suburbs, the home of the mythical Howard battler, she famously declared politics was a "bugger of a life".

John Howard was probably inclined to agree after he courageously, some might say foolishly, visited the mortgage-belt electorate in the same week he declared he was sorry — but was not apologising — for a rate rise, and then blamed the other mob for playing word games. Quizzed ad nauseum about when sorry did not mean sorry, Mr Howard clarified on radio that he was the Prime Minister and not an English teacher.

He then dropped in on working-class Lindsay, held by a precarious 3 per cent by Ms Kelly, who came to symbolise the Coalition's success in winning seats considered Labor territory.

Mr Howard visited a fencing factory, where everyone was apparently loving workplace agreements, before braving the uncharted territory of Penrith shopping plaza.

There was chaos and carnage. The Prime Minister was mobbed by shoppers, demanding handshakes, kisses, photos — and to know what he was going to do about interest rates and climate change. One woman was knocked out cold by a rampaging soundie in the thick of the media scrum.

Tuesday 16 October 2007

As If





As if dismay was all he felt; the final outcome. The present unruffled repression aka social calm had its origins in the poitics of yore. In the end it had been so easy to move from the notion of the common good to common chains. He felt as if the chains would always be there for him. The finality of the death sentence was what shocked him; the finite number of days. The shame he had so often felt, living with a person he didn't really like; who had moped about and blown everything; who cringed in the shadows and wasted what days there were left.

The flourescent lights never gave up. HIs boss never gave up. The system was snuck inside a dolphin's wing; someone had finally replaced the dying pot plants with metallic sculptures and his brain skittered across the terminals on the floor; eves dropping on his colleague's work. Austin remained the story of the day. Now that he knew who knew, he had to act. There was another verbal flick of the whip from his boss; any progress? she asked. He shook his head. It felt good, lying to his boss.

He rang his old friend, Don, and began, as with all the others, "We're doing a story...." No, he didn't know anything about it. No, he didn't really want to comment until he thought about it. No, he didn't know anyone who had the vaguest idea how Austin had come to be blown up.

Don, I know you're lying, he said.

There was silence at the other end of the line. Then: you do?

Yes Don, I know you know who did it.

How?

I just do, I'm a reporter, we know all sorts of crap.

There was more silence at the end of the line. Then: what are you going to do about it?

Nothing. I don't know. Maybe we should meet up, off the phone.

Maybe we should.

THE BIGGER STORY:


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071023/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq;_ylt=Am6WCqZnqAhaUMT9pf9MDUVvaA8F

BAGHDAD - A U.S. helicopter opened fire on a group of men as they were planting roadside bombs in a Sunni stronghold north of Baghdad on Tuesday, then chased them into a nearby house, killing 11 Iraqis, including five women and one child, the military said.

The airstrikes came a day after Osama bin Laden scolded his al-Qaida followers and other insurgents, saying they have been "lax" for failing to overcome fanatical tribal loyalties and unite in the fight against U.S. troops.

The message of his new audiotape reflected the growing disarray among Iraq's Sunni Arab insurgents and bin Laden's client group in the country, both of which are facing heavy U.S. military pressure and an uprising among Sunni tribesmen.

The men were seen placing the bombs near the volatile northern city of Samarra, said Maj. Peggy Kageleiry, a military spokeswoman.

Saturday 13 October 2007

From A Recent Controversy





"Don't believe the ads you see on television from the union bosses trying to create fear. The unions are now running an almighty campaign against the government and they are trying to create a climate of fear."
Joe Hockey. Howard Minister.

But Group of Eight universities chairman Alan Robson hit back, saying he was disappointed at the Government's "attack on the intellectual honesty of the investigators".

"I think it's appalling that a legitimate study is attacked because one of the founders is the unions," he said. "I have absolute confidence that this is a rigorous study and that, as I understand it, it is an ARC linkage grant, so it was peer-reviewed, and there's no reason whatsoever to assume that the results will be biased … if the funder was a business organisation, would the same matters have arisen?"
The Age.

"The left and the socialists in particular have been absolutely decimated and annihilated over the last 20 years until we realised we are actually on our knees already we are going to make a whole lot of strategic blunders... I didn't read a newspaper for 2 months after the election, I could hardly talk to my friends, I was traumatised and I don't think I was alone there and I think it is really important that we do look for realistic seeds of hope... Call me old fashioned but I am inspired by the Romans, they took the view attack is the best means of defence. You do not accommodate, you don't simply buckle under but you've got to complement that with realism...you've got to be very very careful about the way you inject your lethal force but you've got to think about how you inject the lethal force in the current situation."
Academic John Buchanan, 2005.


He began, reluctantly, almost desultorily, to work his way through a list which had formed automatically in his head.

He took on the record comments first, as a way of re familiarising them with his main stream role, and then switched to that old and dubious concept, "off the record". But off the record didn't get him much further than on. None of the usual lobby groups, small numbers of people with a united grievance, had the vaguest idea of a perpetrator. The remnants of political parties had even less idea, if that was possible.

In the preliminary stage of the succession of interviews he took down critique's of Austin's reign, knowing in his bones, x-rayed as always on the planet surface, that they were unlikely to be published, that nothing would break the mill pond of public perceptions created by the floating media world.

The thought kept occurring to him throughout the day that he should tell someone his implant wasn't working properly. Under the harsh fluorescent lights things would appear perfectly normal one minute; and then make no sense whatsoever the next. And in those moments when they made no visual sense, the already subdued colours of their headquarters de-linked into an abstract, fuzzy grey. And he felt desperate all at once, absolutely desperate and absolutely sad, as if he was suddenly elevated to look across a quagmire of pain. Unrealised voices. Unpublished voices.

The Austin thing wasn't helping; as he dialed and dialed and whips of verbal torment lashed out from his boss.

Critiques from the disaffected was not what she wanted.

As far as he could tell no one else was experiencing the same vicious series of mini-breakdowns. He looked perfectly normal in the bathroom mirrors. He went about the phone calls while attending to his other routine duties - and tried unsuccessfully to avoid his boss - and the fabric of things would open up again and again.

And then, as his fingers flicked across the keyboard and stabbed at the phone, it came to him. He knew who knew.


THE BIGGER STORY;

THE award of the Nobel Peace Prize to Al Gore and the UN's top climate panel on Friday has prompted a fresh chorus of criticism from global warming sceptics -- with one dubbing the award "a political gimmick".
Herald Sun

And it looks like today might be the day John Howard calls the election.

At last.

And then it will be Viva Republic d' Kevin and we shall see.

How the betrayed become ever more betrayed.


Why Howard needs a miracle
NEWS.com.au, Australia - 58 minutes ago
By Glenn Milne JOHN Howard goes into the 2007 election seeking an historic, fifth-term vindication not only for his long-serving government, ...
Howard expected to call election today TVNZ
Howard to call election for November 24 NEWS.com.au
Howard's enemies: The young and the restless Sydney Morning Herald
NEWS.com.au - ABC Online
all 361 news articles »

Earthtimes
John Howard to call Nov.24 election today: Report
Hindu, India - 2 hours ago
Melbourne (PTI): Australian Prime Minister John Howard is set to call a November 24 election Sunday, according to a leading daily. ...
Referendum plan mostly my work: Howard The Age
Aborigines press Howard for apology Aljazeera.net
Last-minute convert - editorial Melbourne Herald Sun
BBC News - ABC Online
all 423 news articles »
We offer a secure future - John Howard
Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia - 6 hours ago
THE coming election boils down to a single question: which side of politics has what it takes to keep Australia strong, prosperous and secure into the ...
John Howard 2007 inspired by Ronald Reagan 1984 NEWS.com.au
Howard unveils vision for the country NEWS.com.au
Howard promises a prosperous future LIVENEWS.com.au
ABC Online - Sydney Morning Herald
all 24 news articles »

Salem-News.Com
Howard cool on Gore's big prize
The Age, Australia - 7 hours ago
PRIME Minister John Howard yesterday dismissed the significance of Al Gore winning the Nobel Peace Prize for his work highlighting climate change, ...
Howard congratules Gore on Nobel prize Melbourne Herald Sun
Maybe the PM will now get the message Sydney Morning Herald
Al Gore's Nobel prize is one for the globe The Age
NEWS.com.au
all 3,917 news articles »
Howard's run: the good, the bad, the taxing
The Age, Australia - 7 hours ago
So what has really changed under John Howard? In terms of structural reform, several big items stand out. The most far-reaching was the introduction in 2000 ...
short-term incumbent or the mystery package The Age
all 3 news articles »

Friday 5 October 2007

Stirling Efforts in the Cold Blood




"Don't believe the ads you see on television from the union bosses trying to create fear. The unions are now running an almighty campaign against the government and they are trying to create a climate of fear."
Joe Hockey. Howard Minister.

But Group of Eight universities chairman Alan Robson hit back, saying he was disappointed at the Government's "attack on the intellectual honesty of the investigators".

"I think it's appalling that a legitimate study is attacked because one of the funders is the unions," he said. "I have absolute confidence that this is a rigorous study and that, as I understand it, it is an ARC linkage grant, so it was peer-reviewed, and there's no reason whatsoever to assume that the results will be biased … if the funder was a business organisation, would the same matters have arisen?"
The Age.

"The left and the socialists in particular have been absolutely decimated and annihilated over the last 20 years until we realised we are actually on our knees already we are going to make a whole lot of strategic blunders... I didn't read a newspaper for 2 months after the election, I could hardly talk to my friends, I was traumatised and I don't think I was alone there and I think it is really important that we do look for realistic seeds of hope... Call me old fashioned but I am inspired by the Romans, they took the view attack is the best means of defence. You do not accommodate, you don't simply buckle under but you've got to complement that with realism...you've got to be very very careful about the way you inject your lethal force but you've got to think about how you inject the lethal force in the current situation."
Academic John Buchanan, 2005.
























THE BIGGER STORY;


By ninemsn staff

Veteran newsreader Mary Kostakidis has accused SBS co-host Stan Grant of bullying and treating her with disdain, the Federal Court heard yesterday.

She also launched an attack on the management of SBS — her employer of 21 years — for catering only to over 55s, Fairfax papers reported.

Kostakidis has alleged SBS breached her contract and contravened parts of the Trade Practices Act since Grant was added as co-host of World News Australia seven months ago.

Wednesday 3 October 2007

Available For Download



He assumed at first that the same thing was happening to everybody. But it wasn't.

Who's the Deputy Premier of South Australia? he asked the workers in his pod.

Only to be greeted with blank stairs.

He knew the answer of course, that was the alarming thing.

Who was the Prime Minister of Japan in 1972, he asked again; only to be greeted with an even more confounded response.

"We're not encyclopaedia's," one of his colleagues infomred him curtly, before turning back to his terminal.

You might not be, but I am, he thought. And I don't know what to do about it.

He assumed there were others, but for a long time he didn't meet them. Every now and then he would ask a stray question; just to see.

Who was the head of the Department of Veterans Affairs in 1984?

Unfortunately, he knew the answer. But no one else did.


THE BIGGER STORY:



The last of 3,200 miners trapped deep in a South African mine shaft have come to the surface, capping a day-long rescue mission that began with fears of the worst and ended in wild celebrations.

Valedictions




The doctor was very concerned my implants weren't working properly and took extensive notes. He didn't seem to think it a matter of concern that I had a map of the city in my head; more my questioning of it. We've all prayed for augmented intelligence, he mumbled, not looking at me. I was rescheduled for another hospital visit. That was 18 months ago. The implants are failing again.

He looked at the torrent of praise for Austin and shook his head. It jelled with nothing that he knew, nothing at all.

And then the nightmare began again; as it always did. She still wasn't in; although it was after eight am. But her number lit up his phone and then she was barking in his ear; already frothing at the mouth. "Follow up" he heard several times; then: "You knew these people; find out everything you can," she said.
"No one I know could pull off a thing like this."
"Perhaps, but ask them anyway."

Austin and "deep well of pain" were the only fragments he could remember. But he knew, too, the received world had gone astray. The television screens, even some of the computer terminals, carried Austin's picture and scene's from yesterday's incident. Not a single person stood up and said: "That's not right, that's not the way it was."

THE BIGGER STORY:


Voice of America:

Australians have suffered a dramatic loss of confidence in the ability of the United States to manage international affairs. The first survey of attitudes by a center set up by the Howard government to improve relations, finds a significant deterioration in the way Australians feel towards the U.S. due largely to the Iraq War.

Tuesday 2 October 2007

If On A Winter's Night



"God made the world round so we would never be able to see too far down the road."
Isak Dinesen.

He first noticed the expansions when he wasn't lost all the time; when he knew exactly where he was. He was the type who could get lost walking around the block and then one day he knew exactly where he was. It was like having Google Maps inside his head; including the satellite version; and at street level the directory was excellent. What, was he going to complain that he wasn't lost anymore? That he thought the Medicare implants were overstepping their mark?

And who exactly was he going to complain to?

His brain didn't have an answer for that.

The next thing he noticed was his increased knowledge of the country's bureaucratic and governmental institutions and processes. He could name the departments with ease. He could tell you the head of the West Australian Health Care Complaints Commission. He could tell you the heads of all the departments. He could name the Prime Ministers back to Federation. This was going too far. He went to the doctor. He wished he hadn't.


THE BIGGER STORY:

Washington - New revelations about shootings in Iraq involving the security contractor Blackwater USA have intensified debate in Washington about the wisdom of the US government's reliance on private firms to perform quasi-military functions.

Contractors do so many jobs in Iraq and Afghanistan that at this point the US military cannot carry out basic operations without them, say some experts. Personnel from private firms help run Patriot missile batteries, for instance. They load B-2 bombers, as well as protect US diplomats and visiting members of Congress.

Monday 1 October 2007

Coincidences and Disaster



"He was in a suit, boldly hatless, striding along, a man of the world, a man of this splendid new world, a man both talented and, in some proud Finnish way, accomplished and urbane, a man successfully fighting a sense of himself as doomed - a romantic, stupid, and possibly self-fulfilling notion, but one that was driven inside him like a nail that had wormed itself deep into the heart of a tree."
Richard Rayner.


He could see the third of the ambulances picking its way through the traffic; its sirens screaming, police everywhere. News didn't get much bigger than this. The artificial intelligences which had added so much finesse and order to the world wide web had only gained dominance five years ago. Old timers like him could remember a different era. Austin had been the pinnacle of a bizarre social order; cult-like, drunk with power; no other views were tolerated, or even recognised.

What amazed him, reading the papers the next day, were the valedictions. The final image of him kept flashing in his mind, that distinctive hair, that distinctive face, drawn in their arrogance from a top shelf life. Only the best for the champions of the people. His additions weren't working. They would have to retire him soon. He was one of the few who could remember what things were like, and that wouldn't do. The mass amnesia still shocked him on a daily basis. How could they forget? And forget so easily.

Austin had been a credit to the nation, a pioneering figure in the new judiciary, a champion for women and children, a man of his times. A man of his times riddled with alcohol; so the "additions" worked with ease. No one was more eloquent on the new social order. Love, a capitalist notion of the bourgeoisie, had long gone, despite pockets of resistance. Everything is fair, they chanted, and everyone believed. He couldn't, even in himself, pinpoint when it happened. The implants had meant to be for his health; to monitor his heart, his failing body.

But that, as he soon discovered, was not all that they did.

THE BIGGER STORY:

AUSTRALIANS have been warned to brace for catastrophic heatwaves, bushfires, drought and severe water shortages as climate change causes widespread havoc.

Rising temperatures, lower rainfall and more searing hot days are predicted in a major report released by the CSIRO and Bureau of Meteorology today...

Coastal towns and areas such as East Gippsland in Victoria will be under siege from storm surges and more floods because of rising sea levels.

Ski fields and Kakadu's wetlands will also be threatened under the environmental upheaval.

http://www.csiro.au/news/ClimateChangeInAustraliaReport.html

Climate Change in Australia provides the latest information on observed climate change over Australia and its likely causes, as well as updated projections of changes in temperature, rainfall and other aspects of climate that can be expected over coming decades as a result of continued global emissions of greenhouse gases.

“By 2030 we expect temperatures will rise by about 1ºC over Australia compared with the climate of recent decades,” says one of the report’s authors, CSIRO’s Dr Penny Whetton. “The probability of warming exceeding 1°C is 10-20 per cent for coastal areas and more than 50 per cent for inland regions.”

The amount of warming later this century will depend on the rate of greenhouse gas emissions. “If emissions are low we anticipate warming of between 1ºC and 2.5ºC around 2070, with a best estimate of 1.8ºC,” Dr Whetton says. “Under a high-emission scenario the best estimate is 3.4ºC, with a range of 2.2ºC to 5ºC.

With high emissions, the chance of exceeding 4°C is around 10 per cent in most coastal areas and 20-50 per cent inland. There will also be changes in temperature extremes, with fewer frosts and substantially more days over 35ºC.”
“By 2030 we expect temperatures will rise by about 1ºC over Australia compared with the climate of recent decades,”
says one of the report’s authors, CSIRO’s Dr Penny Whetton.

Increasing levels of greenhouse gases are likely to cause decreases in rainfall in the decades to come in southern areas during winter, in southern and eastern areas during spring, and in south-west Western Australia during autumn, compared with conditions over the past century.

As with temperature, rainfall projections for later in the century are more dependent on the level of greenhouse gas emissions. “Under the low-emission scenario in 2070, annual rainfall decreases in southern Australian range up to 20 per cent, and up to 30 per cent under the high-emission scenario,” Dr Whetton says. “An increase in the number of dry days is expected across the country. However, when it does rain, it is likely to be more intense,” she says.

Another of the report’s authors, Dr Scott Power from the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM), says Australia’s average temperatures have increased since 1950, the surrounding oceans have warmed and sea levels have risen.

“The temperature increases are likely to be mostly due to increases in greenhouse gases from human activities,” Dr Power says. “Since 1950, most of eastern Australia and south-west Australia have also experienced substantial rainfall declines. Attributing causes to rainfall changes is more difficult but the increase in greenhouse gases is likely to have contributed to the drying in the south-west and is a major suspect in the east,” he says.

Climate Change in Australia will be an important resource for government, business and community groups.

“We need to plan ahead, to reduce risks and make the most of any opportunities that may arise as a result of global warming,” Dr Power says. “The information in Climate Change in Australia is critical for that planning.”

Developed by CSIRO and the BoM, in partnership with the Australian Greenhouse Office, through the Australian Climate Change Science Program: the report also states that: droughts are likely to become more frequent, particularly in the south-west; evaporation rates are likely to increase, particularly in the north and east; high-fire-danger weather is likely to increase in the south-east; and, sea levels will continue to rise.

Sunday 30 September 2007

Pain and Life




"You will meet your destiny on the road you take to avoid it."
Anon


He was escorted unceremoniously outside the police tape and given a stern warning along with threats of complaints to his employers. All in a day's work, he thought, as he turned his phone back on. They could see he didn't care what they said, and this infuriated them more. He saw the patterns forming on the phone screen, took in the bedlam that was the scene in front of him.
And dialed his boss.
Nothing was ever easy with that woman.
I couldn't answer you, I was inside the building, he said. Austin's dead, or badly wounded.
Chief Personal Conduct Officer Austin?
The one.
Jesus. And you saw him?
Yes.
Jesus.
For once the contempt was blown out of her voice.
I'll send someone else down to help. A photographer's on their way. Stay where you are.
The click told him she couldn't be happier.
She was never happier than when she could settle into her chair and declare: this looks like the day from hell.
The death or injury, even just the explosion, meant there would be no agonising over what was going on the front page the next day.
Other media were arriving now; radio, television, the news crews. He recognised most of them; and the police media officer was already doing her best to corral them safely out of the way.
There was still smoke coming from the top of the building; and in some strange way he couldn't be happier. Destiny had placed him here; to tell the stories that weren't being told; to show that things were not the way they seemed; that beneath the democratic surface of their country, all had been lost.

THE BIGGER STORY:


First time voters in 1996 are split on John Howard for 2007 Election
Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia - 3 hours ago
THEY voted for the first time in 1996, the election that swept John Howard into office. Will the Prime Minister get their support a fifth time? ...
Rudd goes for the Power, Howard the cats Sydney Morning Herald
PM speaks on life, his wife and that musical The Australian
Prepare for food shortages, PM warns Sydney Morning Herald
The Age
all 57 news articles »

Sydney Morning Herald
Ministers give John Howard a wide berth on election timing
Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia - 10 hours ago
SENIOR ministers have moved to give John Howard a wide berth in choosing an election date, giving the PM the option of putting Kevin Rudd under the glare of ...
Howard will hold Bennelong: Turnbull Melbourne Herald Sun
Good auspices as McKew woos Chinese voters The Australian
Major parties press PM for election date ABC Online
The Age - Melbourne Herald Sun
all 54 news articles »
Howard not afraid of electorate: Vaile
ABC Online, Australia - 29 Sep 2007
Deputy Prime Minister Mark Vaile has denied that a delay in calling the federal election makes it look like John Howard is afraid to face the voters. ...
Howard or not doesn't sway voters Sydney Morning Herald
PM avoids election talk Sydney Morning Herald
Howard may quit seat if Coalition loses election The Australian
NEWS.com.au
all 66 news articles »
Howard promises millions for rugby league centenary
ABC Online, Australia - 21 hours ago
Prime Minister John Howard has announced that the Federal Government will spend $12.5 million on celebrations for rugby league's centenary in Australia. ...
PM to fund League birthday bash The Australian
Sports transcends politics, says PM The Age
PM promises $10m for league Hall of Fame Sydney Morning Herald
all 23 news articles »

The Age
Three strikes against the polls, or the Govt is out
ABC Online, Australia - 3 hours ago
Will the polls show the parties drawing much closer together once John Howard calls the election? Is the Coalition's position in its own marginals looking ...
Labor retains its lead The Australian
Newspoll shows Labor in 12-point lead Melbourne Herald Sun
Labor widens lead in new poll ABC Online
Sky News Australia - The Age
all 56 news articles »
Try to look like you care, academic tells Howard
The Australian, Australia - 11 hours ago
A LEADING indigenous academic has challenged John Howard to show genuine concern for Aboriginal children instead of appearing scared he would "catch a ...

Saturday 29 September 2007

Ruination




"...who rode with such nonchalance on the high beam of uncertainty, whose life was crammed with dangers he seemed to find necessary, emerging, as if they were the fuel that made him a phoenix, ever reborn, calmly emerging from the flames."
Richard Rayner


The phone went off again, his boss, again. This time he turned the phone right off, but it was too late. Even as a security man approached him, he looked around the uniform, watched transfixed as Warren Gabriel Austin was loaded on to a stretcher; on to a trolley and towards the lifts. This man who laid claim to being the most hated man in the country; who's sonorious, comfortable, well fed tones had filled the airways while hundreds of thousands struggled to survive.

The government had never admitted fault, never changed course; as the line of darkness moved deeper into the population.

Who are you, this is a secure area, the policeman demanded. Can I see your identification please, now.

He fumbled for his wallet, said nothing. He wished he had dressed better for the day. It might have helped.

The Sergeant looked at his media identification in a funk somewhere between astonishment, outrage and anger; took down his name and the name of the company.

"Get out of this building now; stay behind the crime tape."

He put up absolutely no resistance, he had learnt that much.



THE BIGGER STORY:

Time:

On Friday Burma began to go dark. After days of the largest street protests since 1988, the ruling military junta cracked down, confronting and firing on civilians, reportedly sealing thousands of monks inside their monasteries. Lines of communication into the country were apparently being cut, with Internet cafes closed and web sites shut down, leaving Burmese exile groups and reporters starving for information...

:But while the junta can control the street, the monasteries and even the web, they can't control the sky...For the first time in Burma, scientists were able to use orbital satellites to confirm on-the-ground reports of burned villages and forced relocations of civilians by the military."

Wednesday 26 September 2007

Turbulent Gifts




"Evolution had shaped language to convey many concepts, but going from a single to a networked topology of self was not amongst them. But if he could not convey the core of the experience, he could at least skirt its essence with metaphor. It was like standing on the shore of an ocean, being engulfed by a wave taller than himself. For a moment he sought the surface; tried to keep the water from his lungs. But there happened not to be a surface. What had consumed him extended infinitely in all directions."
Alastair Reynolds.

As if anything was ever going to change. He could smell the explosives in the air. Ambulance officers crouched around the famous figure. His phone started ringing; at just the wrong moment, bringing attention to him in the midst of being invisible. Time was of a sequence and had left him entirely bankrupt. He clicked the busy button; and wished he could busy the woman right out of his life. Only one person noticed his phone ring; and they were too busy attempting to save the man's life to worry about who he was or why he was there.

There had been a complete breakdown in the practice of power. The media sang along with it; or was destroyed. But he had been around long enough to know the media had been complicit long before. Complicit or dead. But he could remember a time when he could write anything he wanted and it would be published much as he wrote it. Bar the ever present twiddling by the sub-editors, the subs, the living dead as they were sometimes called; who didn't feel they were doing their jobs unless the copy was thoroughly massaged; from silken finesse to mashed potato half the time.

None of it mattered; but this was one death where the reporting would be thoroughly scrutinised. And no doubt altered to protect the guilty. It wasn't exactly hate he felt for the man; well maybe it was. He was certainly appalled by his behaviour; by the callous and brutal disregard he had shown to so many thousands of people; the lives he had destroyed. There was movement now. A group of them heaved the body on to a stretcher. He couldn't tell from the odd angle of his head whether he was dead or just nearly. There was certainly plenty of blood. And his phone started up again; and this time a police officer fixed him with a piercing stare?

Do you have a right to be here? he asked.


THE BIGGER STORY:


NZ Herald

Xue finished stop-violence programme before killing
5:00AM Thursday September 27, 2007
By Elizabeth Binning

Nai Yin Xue completed a court-approved "Stopping Violence" programme just three months before he is believed to have murdered his wife and callously dumped her body in the boot of his car.

The 54-year-old fugitive was ordered by the courts to attend the programme in November after his wife, An An Liu, sought a protection order after a violent knife incident at their New Lynn home.

In January the programme co-ordinator suggested Xue change to another course due to language difficulties and in February he was referred to a programme especially for Asian men.

That programme was completed by the middle of June, by which time the Herald understands Xue had participated fully in the programme and completed all the tasks set in it.

Despite his successful completion of the course, the tai chi master's wife ended up in the boot of a car after what police described as a "violent death" two weeks ago.

Monday 24 September 2007

Freeze Frames



What are the roots that clutch, what branches grow
Out of this stony rubbish? Son of man,
You cannot say, or guess, for you know only
A heap of broken images, where the sun beats,
And the dead tree gives no shelter, the cricket no relief...

And I will show you something different from either
Your shadow at morning striding behind you
Or your shadow at evening rising to meet you;
I will show you fear in a handful of dust.

TS Elliot, The Waste Land.

Some parts of life were conducted in freeze frames. This was one of them. He would remember every last frame, the lurching reality. The lift door opened and he took in the scene immediately. Briefly the tableau of ambulance officers and police looked him back. Someone looked like they were going to ask him what he was doing there. He did his disappearing act; blending into the walls, hoping it would work even in these exposed circumstances. They seemed to forget him as soon as they had noticed him.

He was shocked by the extent of the damage. He could see holes through several walls, there were broken bricks everywhere and furniture lying haphazard on its side. The phone went off, blowing his cover, and he clicked busy as quickly as he could. It was work, it was her, hounding him as always. He couldn't go through all this without support. He felt completely abandoned. For a moment he caught sight of the man on the floor. It was one of the most famous faces in the country.

His brain lurched into overdrive. Now he really did have reason to ring the office. Right now that was impossible. Without a photographer and without authority to be there, sooner or later he would have to extricate himself. The ruddy cheeks and well fed frame of a government employee. They were now intensely sought after jobs; the only guarantee of comfort and wealth. And this man had been at the pinnacle; his own personal fiefdom of power and wealth while all around the streets turned into chaos and hell; the people hungrier and more desperate every day since he economy collapsed.

THE BIGGER STORY:


Iranians Condemn US Reception of Leader


Tuesday September 25, 2007 8:01 PM

By NASSER KARIMI

Associated Press Writer

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Iranians on Tuesday called the combative introduction of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad by the head of Columbia University ``shameful'' and said the harsh words only added to their image of the United States as a bully.

In a region where the tradition of hospitality outweighs personal opinions about people, many here thought Columbia University President Lee Bollinger's aggressive tone - including telling Ahmadinejad that he exhibited the signs of a ``petty and cruel dictator'' - was over the top.

``The surprising point of the last night meeting is the behavior of the university president,'' state-run radio reported, describing Bollinger's introduction as ``full of insult, which was mostly Zionists' propaganda against Iran.''

The chancellors of seven Iranian universities issued a letter on Tuesday to Bollinger saying his statements were ``deeply shameful'' and invited him to Iran.

In the letter, they asked him to respond to 10 questions ranging from: ``Why did the U.S. support the bloodthirsty dictator Saddam Hussein during the 1980-88 Iraqi-imposed war on Iran?'' to ``Why has the U.S. military failed to find al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden even with all its advanced equipment?''

Ahmadinejad's visit to New York to attend the U.N. General Assembly has created a stir and thousands have protested his appearance there.

Google John Howard:

Howard holds nuclear laws until after election
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - 4 hours ago
LEGISLATION flagged by the Prime Minister, John Howard, six months ago to pave the way for the establishment of a nuclear industry in Australia has been ...
John Howard scores poll point Melbourne Herald Sun
Rudd out to hose down cockiness claims Melbourne Herald Sun
Don't get too cocky, Rudd warns party Melbourne Herald Sun
The Australian - Taipei Times
all 128 news articles »

The Age
Go west to seek food fortunes, says Howard adviser
The Age, Australia - 5 hours ago
A KEY policy adviser to Prime Minister John Howard believes it is time for governments to plan a "slow migration" of people, agriculture and businesses to ...
IT IS almost five years since Prime Minister John Howard announced ... The Age
Howard to give more money to farmers The Australian
Farmers paid to quit Sydney Morning Herald
Melbourne Herald Sun - The Australian
all 75 news articles »

The Age
Howard pledges more for disabled
The Age, Australia - 9 hours ago
"We need someone to take the pressure off us," a clearly exhausted Mrs Skerrett asked the electorate officer to tell John Howard. ...
Howard tipped to retain Bennelong - just Melbourne Herald Sun
Protesters at PM HQ The Age
Sit-in protest outside PM's office The Age
Daily Telegraph - The Age
all 32 news articles »

Thursday 20 September 2007

Lanes

 
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"As poor as my young family was when I drove to the recruiting centre in Oklahoma in March of 2002, I would never have signed up if I knew that I would be blasting into Iraqis' homes, terrorising women and children and detaining every man we could find - and all that, for $1200 a month as a private first class. One's first obligation is to the moral truth buried deep inside our own souls... I had to sign a paper... "Desertion in the time of war means death by a firing squad'. That just about sums it up."
Joshua Key, The Deserter's Tale

Nothing could fix the sinking depths, nothing. I was out of the taxi and heading towards the chaos of the building. Already a police woman was putting up crime scene tape; trying to control the crowds. Several people were sitting on the pavement. He walked right in. He had always had an uncanny knack of being able to walk in anywhere; becoming almost invisible or appearing as if he belonged.

Whatever it was, he could walk past almost any security; and had done so. Already he was in the foyer. There was smoke everywhere; chaos and dust; pain and confusion. On the spur, he pressed the lift button. He couldn't deny he hadn't pressed the button before; in one of the gloomiest stages of his life. Frantic registrars and normally stitched up office women; usually stomping around with sheaves of paperwork, looking important; holding people's lives in their arrogant, self-righteous hands; tumbled out of the lift. He hesitated a micro-second and stepped in.

He could see a policeman heading towards him. He had woken up, obviously, to the fact that he was in the wrong place at the wrong time. He pressed Floor Five and the doors slid shut. Suddenly he was alone; and like all the madness in his life it could only have happened to him, alone in the lift in a bombed building; while sirens and chaos enveloped the area for a kilometre around. The lift wasn't its normal self; and groaned and creaked as it ascended.

God, this place of all places; the place tens of thousands of its victims hated more than any other place; while millions of dollars of government propaganda made the pretense that what happened here was worthy; the cheap dark corrupt bastardy and the the gloating self-satisfaction of the victors in the charade that was this place's reality never made it into the public mind. He had done his best to expose the sick psycho-pathology of the place; and had failed. And now here he was. Even in the lift he could smell the dust and the flames.

THE BIGGER STORY:


NY Times blogs:

Columbia University was the scene today of speeches, rallies and protests related to a speech by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran, which began at 1:30 p.m. (We live-blogged the speech.) The school’s campus in Morningside Heights was off-limits to the public for much of the day; a university identification was required to enter through the main gates on Broadway at 116th Street.

In his most pointed arguments yet, Mr. Ahmadinejad said that science and research had been used in the West as tools of oppression.

“They even violate individual and social freedoms in their own nations under that pretext,” he said. “They do not respect the privacy of their own people. They tap telephone calls … They create an insecure psychological atmosphere, in order to justify their war-mongering acts in different parts of the world.”

He added: “By using precise scientific methods and planning, they begin their onslaught on the domestic cultures of nations, which are the result of thousands of years of interaction, creativity and artistic activity. They try to eliminate these cultures in order to strip people of their identity.”

The Age:

A new online voter poll shows federal Labor would trounce the coalition if an election were held now.

The Herald/Nielsen poll, conducted for Fairfax newspapers, is the first online national survey of voters conducted before the election.