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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.