Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Tue 13th Nov Todays News


Happy birthday and many happy returns Sarem, Penelope GraceRuby Bulatao MaderaMisay Lim and Tony Nguyen. Born on the same day, across the years Remember, birthdays are good for you. The more you have, the longer you live.
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Child abuse a tool of political abuse

Piers Akerman – Tuesday, November 13, 2012 (4:06am)

WHILST the Royal Commission into “vile and evil” child sexual abuse approved yesterday by Cabinet is to be applauded, one has to wonder why Labor and the Greens took so long to agree.
Just 17 months ago, in June last year, an attempt to investigate the Heiner Affair was sunk in the Senate when former Family First senator Steve Fielding voted with Labor and the Greens to prevent a private members bill introduced by Senator Nick Xenophon from proceeding.
Today we see the Labor Party, at last, expressing concern over a real issue which it has steadfastly ignored.
A realist would ask why.
Obviously, there is the element of distraction from the flood tide of boats arriving, the debt, and Gillard’s own serious credibility problems about her activities as a law partner with a corrupt boy friend, Craig Thomson, Peter Slipper, etc …
But a cynic might only point to last night’s ABC coverage of the story.
On Sydney TV, the ABC newsreader announced with some obvious disgust that the commission was to be “only a broad one”.
What could have possibly be meant?
It became obvious when the 7.30 Report’s poisonously crippled presenter Leigh Sales asked Minister for Human Services, Brendan O’Connor: “Why is it not confined to the Catholic Church?”
That was the gotcha moment.
The other giveaway was the announcement of the commission without any terms of reference or even the name of the commissioner.
And no Catholic Church.
So what is it about?
It is about another Labor Party effort to smear the Opposition leader Tony Abbott, a practising Catholic, and to paint him as a member of an organisation which turned a blind eye, at the least, to child abuse.
The ALP knows a lot about child abuse, a number of its former MPs are in prison.
But it knows more about the dark tricks needed to smear opponents and it is now playing one of those with its media mates.
For weeks now there has been a concerted effort to link Abbott with scandals associated with Catholic organisations.
Labor’s strategists – the same people who attempted to catch Abbott in a race riot of their own construct in Canberra last Australia Day – hope that the media will pummel Abbott over his Catholicism in coming months and that voters will believe that he has somehow been engaged in the most disgraceful behaviour the commission uncovers.
That’s what the timing of this is all about. That’s why it has no framework, no commissioner, nothing but the ABC trying to point a bone at a particular church.
The Greens are playing along though they went out of their way with Labor to stop the inquiry into the Heiner affair last year.
Disgraceful, disgusting, true, but Labor and Green to the core.
One can only hope that someone other than lawyers will gain some dignity at the end of this Machiavellian abuse of political power.

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Today’s abuse victims must be kept in focus

Miranda Devine – Tuesday, November 13, 2012 (7:39pm)

IT’S hard to separate the royal commission into child sexual abuse from politics and anti-Catholic agendas, in the fetid atmosphere that currently exists in Canberra. 

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TERMS OF REFERENCE

Tim Blair – Tuesday, November 13, 2012 (10:25am)

Today’s Nicholson:

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AUTO AGEISM

Tim Blair – Tuesday, November 13, 2012 (10:17am)

Under proposals presented to the city council on Monday, Socialist mayor Bertrand DelanoĆ« intends to outlaw by September 2014 the use of cars and utility vehicles more than 17 years old and lorries or buses more than 18 years old.
Motorcycles built before 2004 will also be forbidden, as the mayor said they were the “most polluting and noisiest”. 
The mayor might find that cars produce less pollution if you simply stop setting fire to them. And he’s missed another possible pollution solution: 
Critics said it failed to tackle the real problem in France: its heavy reliance on diesel, used by 60 per cent of all vehicles and emitting three times as many harmful fine particles as petrol. The town hall sidestepped the issue by calling on the government to cut tax incentives to use diesel.
Users of old cars are only thought to account for three per cent of the 4.5 million or so vehicles in the Paris region. 
If anyone in Paris wants to offload a soon-to-be-banned Lancia Delta Integrale at the right price, they should give me a call.

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WOODS CUT

Tim Blair – Tuesday, November 13, 2012 (10:02am)

Sydney newsreader Bill Woods, who presents News At Five with Sandra Sully, is the latest high-profile casualty of Ten’s cuts to its news operations. 
Woods is an excellent newsreader; unobtrusive, genial, precise. Ten may struggle to replace him.

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MONEY FIXES EVERYTHING

Tim Blair – Tuesday, November 13, 2012 (9:35am)

James Delingpole on the BBC’s shame
First, it has allowed a gang of predatory paedophiles – including probably its biggest-ever children’s star – to operate with impunity on its premises over a period of three or four decades. Then, just to keep things fair and balanced I suppose, it has libellously exposed as a predatory paedophile an entirely blameless man. These are the kind of catastrophic errors of judgment which, in the private sector, would lead to many heads rolling – and quite possibly the closure of the organisation. (Look at what happened to the News of the World). This won’t happen at the BBC …
The BBC is like the NHS. Everyone knows in their head that it’s crap and should have been buried long ago. But their hearts keep telling them its a national treasure which deserves to be kept on a life-support machine, no matter what, till the end of time. 
The organisation is now under pressure over its decision to pay former Director General George Entwistle £450,000 following his resignation after just 54 days in the job. Damian Thompson
The shocking thing about Entwistle’s Today programme interview was the muddle-headed mediocrity it revealed – could this man really be CEO of the world’s most respected broadcasting corporation? We don’t know exactly why the nominally Tory Patten chose him, but the clear signal it sent out was that this was business as usual. That is: smug, haughty liberalism. And we’ll get more of the same from Entwistle’s successor – unless the BBC Trust acquires a chairman in touch with public opinion. 
Not a chance. Speaking of business as usual, here’s one of BBC Newsnight‘s regular anchors: 
Jeremy Paxman, in a statement released through his agents at Capel & Land, blamed budget cuts for failing standards. 
Yes. Because the BBC’s decision not to offer an accused man the right of reply would have been remedied by more public money.

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NO JOKES SPRING IMMEDIATELY TO MIND

Tim Blair – Monday, November 12, 2012 (10:39pm)

The actor who provides the voice for Sesame Street’s Elmo has taken leave from the program following allegations of underage sex. The accusations are denied.
UPDATE. And in other scandal developments
Mr Petraeus, who resigned last week as the nation’s head spy, and his family are said to be devastated over the affair, especially his wife Holly, who “is not exactly pleased right now,”said Steve Boylan, a friend and former Petraeus spokesman who spoke to Mr Petraeus over the weekend. 
There’s a scoop. Further on the events that have now led Paula Broadwell to retain Washington criminal defense attorney Robert F. Muse: 
Former CIA director David H. Petraeus told the woman with whom he was having an extramarital affair to stop sending threatening e-mails to a family friend, Jill Kelley, after a federal investigation determined who was behind the harassment …
Federal investigators have said Broadwell sent a series of e-mails to Kelley from an anonymous account telling her to stop behavior she saw as overly friendly toward Petraeus, or she would be exposed. The law enforcement officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the e-mails indicate Broadwell felt jealous of the other woman …
People close to Petraeus say his affair with Broadwell ended four months ago, around the time he e-mailed her about the harassment. 
Petraeus may not be the quickest fellow when it comes to understanding various behavioural characteristics.
UPDATE II. The scandals keep coming: 
Belize police say computer antivirus pioneer John McAfee is on the run after being named the prime suspect in a brutal murder. 
Via sdog, who asks: “Is it just me, or has the last week been exceptionally freaky?”

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PEDAL PEOPLE PUNTED

Tim Blair – Monday, November 12, 2012 (9:46pm)

Progress in Canada: 
The city will begin removing the Jarvis Street bike lanes on Monday, bringing to a close the saga of Toronto’s most contested piece of cycling infrastructure …
Street parking will also be back on the west side of Jarvis as a result of the change.
The bike lanes were installed under former Mayor David Miller in 2010, at a cost of $86,000. 
Only 86 grand? Converted from Canadian Moosenotes to Australian Didgeridollars, that’ll barely buy you 41 metres of stupid bike lane at Sydney prices. Toronto’s soon-to-be-removed pedal kiddie lane seems a little longer, but with even fewer users.
(Via Alan R.M. Jones)

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LABOR CORRUPTION ALLEGED

Tim Blair – Monday, November 12, 2012 (9:41pm)

Awesome allegations at the Independent Commission Against Corruption: 
Ex-Labor powerbroker Eddie Obeid is to be suspended from the party after claims he stood to have profited around $100 million as a result of alleged corruption, NSW Opposition leader says.
Mr Robertson said he would “immediately” move to have Mr Obeid suspended from the Labor party.
“The gravity of the allegations that came out this morning at the ICAC in the opening statements are so shocking,’’ Mr Robertson said.
‘’I, like most people, can’t believe the magnitude and the seriousness of these allegations.’’ 
Counsel assisting the inquiry, Geoffrey Watson, SC, delivered some epic lines: 
The allegations of corruption to be investigated by the inquiry could involve corruption on a scale “probably unexceeded since the days of the Rum Corps”, during the first government in NSW in the late 1700s …
“We will go inside the NSW Cabinet room. The evidence will open up for examination a number of decisions made by a Minister of the Crown. It will examine political and personal allegiances inside and outside the Cabinet.” 
Central to the allegations – coal
In opening up Bylong Valley to coal mining, [former NSW Labor Resources Minister Ian] Macdonald is accused of doing the bidding of the Obeid family, who hid their involvement through “multiple layers of discretionary trust and $2 shelf companies”.
Mr Watson said the former Labor minister not only rigged tendering in their favour, but provided the Obeids with inside information which enabled them to buy up land in the area and know which mining companies would be involved. 
One property, allegedly acquired for just $200,000, later sold for $60 million.
No comments.

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TALLADEGA FIGHTS

Tim Blair – Monday, November 12, 2012 (8:47pm)

Yeeee-haw! NASCAR drivers and crews go at it following on-track unfriendliness:



Reaction to the incident and its aftermath was mostly negative, but driver Kevin Harvick loved it: 
‘‘The sport was made on fights. We should have more fights. I like fights,’’ Harvick said after the race. ‘‘They’re not always fun to be in, sometimes you’re on the wrong end, but fights are what made NASCAR what it is.’’ 
He’s not wrong. Check this clip from 1979 …

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Dear AFR editor: about your Mark Latham

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER132012(7:07pm)

Mark Latham responded today in comments below this post today with a silly personal attack based on a misrepresentation. He did not even attempt to answer the points I’d made in the post.
Just before 7pm, he rang me to claim: 
- I’d “censored” his comment. (I don’t actually do the moderating on this blog, and his was one of about 120 comments still awaiting moderation. It is now up.)
- I’d made “100 allegations” against Gillard, and suggested they were all false. (Asked to name just one of my allegations, he failed three times to correctly state what I’d said. He then gave up what he called a “silly” game - which others would call backing up what you’ve alleged.)
- I’d failed to report a crime - Mark Baker’s alleged breach of client confidentiality. (Which breach? Which client of Mark’s exactly? What crime? Latham then conceded there was no crime actually involved.)
- that nothing that could be alleged in the AWU case could be said to be a [potential] crime. (Fraud isn’t a crime, I asked?  And is failure to report a fraud is not an offence? So police have and are investigating what allegations then?)
- that no proven crime could have been reported to the police by Gillard. (That’s not the test, Mark. No crime is ever “proven” when it’s being reported to the police, as I tried to tell him. Only complaints or suspicions of possible criminal activity are reported. Then it’s up to the police and the courts. Incidentally, Latham ignored the apparent duty of Gillard to also notify the AWU.) 
After 10 minutes of Latham’s aggression, which I’d been pleasantly spared the last few times we spoke, I twigged. I asked if he was actually planning to report on our conversation, which I’d naturally taken to be as private as our last. Only then did he confess that he was indeed planning to do so. He said that by noting early that he been “doing” a story about me, that covered the matter adequately.  I should have known, he said.
At that stage I told him I thought his behaviour unethical. He had had an obligation to properly inform me that our conversation was on the record. Clearly I would not have engaged him in what was, on his side, a clearly irrational, angry and hectoring conversation had I known he planned to write it up.
I also told him his arguments were absurd, and I had no interest in listening to a Latham rant. End of conversation.
Is this how columnists of the Australian Financial Review conduct interviews? We should be told.
PS: Needless to say, I have not and do not claim Gillard knew of her boyfriend’s scams or profited from them. 

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2GB, November 12

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER132012(4:48pm)

With Steve Price from 8pm. Listen live here.
Last night: on the royal commission into sexual abuse of children. Listen here.

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More reason for Abbott to repeal the RDA

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER132012(3:42pm)

I look forward to getting more distinguished company in the dock with me under our absurd Racial Discrimination Act: 
TONY Abbott has described Australia’s first indigenous lower house MP Ken Wyatt as an “urban Aboriginal” and says parliament must do more to encourage “authentic” indigenous representatives.
Mr Abbott said he was “very proud” that Mr Wyatt had entered federal politics as a member of the Coalition but said he hoped Northern Territory indigenous MP Alison Anderson would also join his team in order to better represent “the ancient cultures of central Australia”.
That said, the actual quote is a little less provocative than reported:
“I think it would be terrific if, as well as having an urban Aboriginal in our parliament, we had an Aboriginal person from central Australia, an authentic representative of the ancient cultures of central Australia in the parliament,” he said.
Abbott and I will have a vice chancellor for company: 
A PROMINENT Aboriginal politician has declared elder Shane Mortimer should “shrug off” remarks by a Canberra academic that he looks like a white man and get on with fixing the real problems affecting indigenous society.
Northern Territory MP Bess Nungarrayi Price labelled as “silly” Mr Mortimer’s concerns over the comments by former University of Canberra vice-chancellor Don Aitken…
In August, Professor Aitkin, a former National Capital Authority chairman, wrote on his blog he was attending a “now obligatory” welcome to country ceremony given by Mr Mortimer, who ”looks about as Aboriginal as I do”…
Mr Mortimer has launched a Federal Magistrates Court damages claim under Section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act, which conservative columnist Andrew Bolt was found to have contravened when he labelled a group of indigenous leaders self-serving, light-skinned Aborigines.
Price might have to join us, too: 
The member for Stuart said welcome to country ceremonies were not particularly meaningful to traditional people anyway.
“We don’t do that in communities. It’s just a recent thing,” Ms Price said.
“It’s just people who are trying to grapple at something that they believe should be traditional.”
What? Aborigines doing welcome to country ceremonies aren’t traditional? Can that still be said in this country?

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Another Gillard green scheme crashes

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER132012(3:33pm)

Julia Gillard last year launched Solar Dawn, an “important” project to achieve our “clean energy future”: 
Together, Solar Dawn and the Moree Solar Farm will bring Australia closer to a cleaner energy future.... The Australian Government is helping drive this transition by directly investing in these and other projects under the $5 billion Clean Energy Initiative, through the expanded Renewable Energy Target and by pricing carbon.
Your money thrown away: 
Solar Dawn will be one of the largest power plants of its kind in the world as well as the most environmentally responsible, with at least 85 per cent of its power generation to be emissions-free.
A total of $464 million in federal funding will go towards that project, worth an estimated $1.2 billion.
Today: 
THE Solar Dawn Consortium has confirmed it no longer plans to develop its beleaguered Western Downs facility, dashing any hopes of resurrecting the nation’s largest solar energy project.
The $1.2 billion Solar Dawn project - which was to begin construction of a 250 megawatt solar thermal power plant near Chinchilla in 2013 - was dealt a blow earlier this year when the Newman Government pulled out $75 million in funding.
(Thanks to reader John.)

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AWU scandal - Police ask to talk to Blewitt about slush fund

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER132012(1:00pm)

 The AWU scandal
Police have asked lawyers for former AWU official Ralph Blewitt if he’ll talk to them about the slush-fund Julia Gillard helped her then boyfriend Bruce Wilson set up in 1993.
Blewitt’s lawyer, Robert Galbally, of Galbally Rolfe, says Blewitt was “happy” to give police a statement if it included a “built in” assurance the evidence would not be used against him.
He said a Victoria Police sergeant wanting to talk to Blewitt was now seeking instructions on whether this could be done.
The slush fund, deceptively registered as the Australian Workers Union Workplace Reform Association, was used by Wilson to misappropriate $400,000, some of which was used to buy a house for Wilson under Blewitt’s name.
Gillard helped to register the slush fund, witnessed a document giving Wilson power of attorney to buy the property allegedly on Blewitt’s behalf, attended the auction and is said by Slater & Gordon in a Press Council complaint to have worked on the conveyancing.
Gillard says she did not know her boyfriend’s frauds, did not profit from them, was not in charge of the conveyancing file, did not operate the slush fund and did not go to police when she became aware of Wilson’s scams, allegedly because inquiries were already on foot.
Blewitt, currently in Malaysia, is understood from other sources to be prepared to discuss the slush fund, the purchase of the Fitzroy house, the sale of the house and the delivery of cash to Wilson at another Melbourne property.
The investigation came in response to the laying of a complaint by Michael Smith, dumped by Fairfax Radio after asking Gillard “unauthorised questions” on the scandal. 

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Murdoch can be excused a little payback

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER132012(12:31pm)

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AWU scandal - Slater & Gordon deny Gillard’s excuse

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER132012(11:10am)

 The AWU scandal
JOURNALIST: The former AWU official, Peter Trebilco, has said that if he’d been told by Slater & Gordon back in 1995, 1996, they could have acted about that slush fund more quickly. So the question for you is why didn’t you communicate to the AWU what you knew about the creation of that fund?
PM: ... My role here was as a lawyer. I provided advice on the incorporation of an association. I was never connected with the operation of any fund. Never connected with the operation of any fund. I was not an office bearer of the association. I was not involved in its activities. I was not involved in any bank accounts it may have held. I was not an official of the AWU. I was not in charge of the conveyancing file. So you are effectively asking me why didn’t I report to authorities things I did not know.
Mr Latham has taken issue with an editorial in The Australian Financial Review yesterday, saying it misrepresented key facts about the Prime Minister’s role in the Australian Workers Union Workplace Reform Association fund when she was a lawyer in the 1990s. The editorial followed a Weekend Financial Review article which examined allegations against Ms Gillard about the fund…
Mr Latham said the AFR editorial misrepresented the report by saying it raised unanswered questions about the conveyancing... 
But Slater & Gordon now appears to contradict Gillard’s claim even as it goes to the Press Council, increasingly being used as a weapon by the Left to stifle reporting:
But Slater & Gordon managing director Andrew Grech has confirmed Ms Gillard ‘’acted directly’’ in the conveyancing work on the property purchase. The confirmation came in documents lodged with the Australian Press Council in support of a complaint against Fairfax newspapers and this journalist over reporting of the firm’s role in the Australian Workers Union ‘’slush fund’’ scandal…
In a ‘’summary of issues’’ submitted to the Press Council, Mr Grech objected to accusations by lawyers representing Mr Blewitt that Slater & Gordon was stalling the release of an unofficial file created by Ms Gillard detailing work on the incorporation.
‘’The only documentary evidence Slater & Gordon was in possession of was that Ms Gillard acted directly for Mr Blewitt in relation to a conveyancing matter, a union dispute and a defamation matter,’’ he said.
Gillard clearly misleads in claiming she simply gave some legal advice on the incorporation of the slush fund and no further involvement in its activities, which included using stolen money to pay for a house for her boyfriend
She drafted the power-of-attorney [boyfriend Bruce] Wilson used to buy the unit in the name of his crony, Ralph Blewitt, at an auction she attended with Wilson. She organised finance from a Slater & Gordon loan facility (in addition to more than $100,000 siphoned from the AWU association) and she rounded off the work by signing, ‘’fee declined, Julia’’. And later she was a regular guest in the premises Wilson made his Melbourne home.
When asked at her August media conference whether she had a problem because she couldn’t rule out that money from the association had been used to pay for renovations on a house she owned in Abbotsford, Gillard snapped: ‘’I paid for my renovations.’’ Yet when challenged by the senior partners at Slater & Gordon in 1995, she could not ‘’categorically rule out’’ that association or union money had been used for work on her house. 
How could the waiving of fees be Gillard’s call if she was not in charge of the conveyancing?
(Gillard says she did not know of her boyfriend’s scams and did not profit from them.)
UPDATE
Reader Ben wonders if anyone should be rushing in a request for more Slater & Gordon documents before they disappear for good:
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UPDATE
Only sexists could doubt such an honest woman:
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(Thanks to reader Grant.)
UPDATE
Mark Latham thinks the best way to defend Gillard is to smear Chris Kenny:
In watching, know this about Latham’s attacks:
- Mark Baker must have an impeccable source for his allegations on the contents of the letter Gillard sent the WA Corporate Affairs Commission about her boyfriend’s slush fund since not only has Gillard not denied what Baker reported, but The Age lawyers are satisfied enough to have allowed him to publish. Logic suggests the source is the publicly redacted parts of the record of interview between Gillard and her Slater & Gordon partners in 1995 - an interview in which Gillard was questioned over the file which had been found and about which the partners wanted answers. I have little doubt Baker has a copy of that record of interview, no doubt at all that he read it, and none on who showed him.
- Latham says only a “flint-hearted Tory” would shop their ex-boyfriend to the police over an alleged fraud. This ignores the fact that Gillard was actually her boyfriend’s solicitor, as well as a solicitor for the AWU he’d ripped off, and she had a clear professional duty as a solicitor as well as a citizen to notify authorities - and the union - of his possible crimes the minute she suspected him. That she did not simply underscores her gross misjudgement and her conflict of interest in having her boyfriend as her client and that of Slater & Gordon. Further, Latham overlooks the apparently false explanation Gillard gives for not having gone to the police - that there were inquiries in place already.
- Latham asserts as fact that Gillard was not in charge of the conveyancing. Slater & Gordon itself suggests she had in fact a direct role in the conveyancing, and Gillard is recorded has having declined the fee for the work she did. She was also involved in key aspects of the purchase of the property, as explained above.
All Latham’s yelling, abuse and attempted intimidation (and the talking over the sole woman on the panel) does not disguise the fact that his defence of Gillard was based not on evidence but bluster, red herrings and very suspect information.
UPDATE
While nothing beyond circumstantial evidence has emerged to challenge Gillard’s insistence that she did nothing wrong - and knew nothing wrong was being done - her account of events remains questionable in several key areas: her role in establishing the AWU association, her role in the purchase of the Fitzroy unit and her recent insistence that none of the stolen funds slushed in her direction.
Gillard says she only gave routine advice on the establishment of the association, but, as The Age revealed last month, a letter she wrote to the West Australian Corporate Affairs Commission in mid-1992 was instrumental in overcoming the commission’s objections to its formation - supposedly to promote workplace safety and training rather than the union election ‘’slush fund’’ she later conceded it was. Now Slater & Gordon is unable to find the unofficial incorporation file kept by Gillard, and a corresponding file held in the WA archives was recently found to be empty - neither of which supports the wistful contention of Gillard backers that this is the end of that matter.

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Dear public servant: your boss invites you to a pro-Labor rally

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER132012(10:44am)

 Culture wars
Many in the Left seem to feel entitled to the organs of the state - and to using them to promote their politics. I mentioned the Left’s takeover of journalism courses yesterday. Today’s example comes from South Australia, where public servants were yesterday emailed this message, inviting them to a lecture to take up the themes of an Abbott-smearing speech by Julia Gillard and rally to her side:
From: Information Message from [mailto:DPC-INFORMATION@LIST.SA.GOV.AU] On Behalf Of DPC:Information
Sent: Monday, 12 November 2012 18:21
To: DPC-INFORMATION@LIST.SA.GOV.AU
Subject: A Switch in Time: restoring respect to Australian politics
 
A Switch in Time:  restoring respect to Australian politics
Presented by Mary Crooks AO for the Don Dunstan Foundation
Did the Prime Minister’s recent speech in Parliament (that went international) strike a chord with you?
If so, come to Elder Hall on Monday 19 November and join in the conversation… 
DATE:  Monday 19 November, 2012
TIME:  5.45pm for a 6.00pm start
VENUE:  Elder Hall, North Tce, University of Adelaide
TICKETS: $20 General, $15 Concession/DDF subscriber
BOOKINGS: http://www.trybooking.com/BYDK
Mary Crooks argues that sexism, inflammatory journalism and political inaccuracies are taking their toll on ‘having a fair go’. The time has come to take a stand and to restore respect for democratic principles and work for the common good.

“In a frighteningly short space of time, a series of interrelated, negative forces have come into play (in Australian politics) and are taking their toll…” The Sydney Morning Herald

Launched in September 2012 and published by the Victorian Women’s Trust, A Switch in Time, is a call to action in the Trust’s long standing quest for gender equality, interest in strengthening our democracy and commitment to care for the Earth. Mary Crooks AO is the Executive Director of the Victorian Women’s Trust.

Join the Don Dunstan Foundation to be inspired and to gain ideas on how to play a constructive part in redirecting the negative, destructive undercurrents of the current political landscape towards a more productive and civil discourse.
“This message has been authorised by Dr Tahnya Donaghy, Deputy Chief Executive on behalf of Jim Hallion, Chief Executive, Department of the Premier and Cabinet”
Does the director of the Department of Premier and Cabinet also circulate messages of support for Liberals? Invitations to group-love sessions for Tony Abbott?
Are Liberals actually welcome in the South Australian public service?
(Thanks to reader R.)
UPDATE
Here’s the theme of Crooks’ message - that criticism of this Prime Minister’s record of deceit is sexist, criticism of her carbon tax is driven only be the corrupt or the partisan, and claims (by Gillard, among others) of dangerous man-made global warming shouldn’t be questioned: 
The gendered attacks directed towards the Prime Minister are disrespectful - to her and women and girls generally. Levelling constructive criticism of government policies and decisions is one thing; relentless, gendered attack as has dogged the Prime Minister since her election is another. Different standards are applied to her. We are told that she lacks ‘’authority’’, that her leadership is ‘’tainted’’ and that she has ‘’breached the faith of the public’’ even though this is not the first occasion that a leader’s undertaking has altered....
A great weight of scientific evidence warns that our planet is in peril. Yet sectional business interests, parts of the media and a politically expedient campaign against carbon pricing have sought to discredit this evidence. Even scientists and other professionals who spend their lives in the service of the community have become targets of violent abuse and threats. In eroding public confidence in climate science, these negative elements elevate self-interest at the expense of the common good - creating confusion, mistrust and a diminishing of the reservoir of community goodwill that previously existed regarding action on climate change.
The combined weight of these developments poses an immediate and real threat to our democratic culture.
Really? What’s truly dangerous to our democratic culture is to use government resources to ram this illiberal demand for the stifling of criticism of the government down the throats of people who depend on government for their salary.

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The price of this royal commission could be very high

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER132012(10:01am)

 Culture warsPolitical things
Scott Prasser, author of Royal Commissions and Public Inquiries in Australia, may be hoping against hope that this won’t be a witch-hunt: 
IT is not surprising given the pressure from within her own party, numerous interest groups and concerned citizens that Julia Gillard has announced a royal commission into the child abuse issue across religious, state and not-for-profit sector institutions…
The public nature of royal commissions and that they can take evidence in the form of hearsay and scuttlebutt, also means that those mentioned at hearings may have their reputations permanently damaged…
[in addition], as royal commissions are arms of executive government and are not part of the legal system, they have largely avoided the extensive normal checks and balances imposed on the courts in terms of appeal or review… Justice Ronald Sackville, experienced in chairing royal commissions, believes “investigative royal commissions constitute a serious and continuing threat to civil liberties in Australia."…
The allegations about child abuse in the Catholic Church and other institutions raise grave concerns, of course. However, if this royal commission is not going to result in a media circus and a feeding frenzy of prejudice and revenge of unprecedented scope then the Gillard government must take time to determine its aims, its powers and its membership so that this inquiry is conducted not just effectively, but with due respect to everyone’s rights.
Chris Merritt warns real justice may not be done:
A commonwealth royal commission ... might provide psychological benefits to the victims of sexual abuse. It might shine a spotlight on priests and others who have protected pedophiles…
But if the goal is to lock up criminals by uncovering fresh evidence, there is a real risk of failure… Even before Julia Gillard unveiled her plans, concerns were emerging about the fact that evidence gathered using the coercive powers of a royal commission cannot generally be used in subsequent criminal proceedings.
And before Gillard gave the inquiry a focus that goes beyond the Catholic Church, concerns had also emerged that the commission’s hearings would be used to smear this church with allegations that would never stand up in court…
“There is clearly a political, anti-Catholic agenda here,” says Melbourne’s Peter Faris QC…
Terry O’Gorman, president of the Australian Council of Civil Liberties, says the extreme powers that are vested in royal commissions mean great care will need to be taken to ensure it does not become a witch-hunt.
The Catholic church could not dare stand against a process that will cost it millions and become a weapon against it, however the evidence falls:
CATHOLIC archbishops last night supported the decision to set up a royal commission into institutional child abuse, but denied the existence of systemic sexual abuse within their church.
“Sexual abuse is not confined to the Catholic Church. Tragically, it occurs in families, churches, community groups, schools and other organisations,” said a statement agreed by the archbishops.
“While there were significant problems concerning some dioceses and some religious orders, talk of a systemic problem of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church is ill-founded and inconsistent with the facts,” they said on behalf of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference
The nation’s most senior Catholic, Archbishop of Sydney George Pell, released a separate statement, saying “the air should be cleared and the truth uncovered”.
UPDATE
The day after the royal commission is announced and already a fiance of a government minister turns this into a witch-hunt against the Catholic Church itself - throwing in a cheap slur of the Opposition as racist:
One other thing - if the church is going to be serious about this issue it should examine the question of celibacy, in the same way it is looking at the question of whether the confessional should continue to be off-limits for the reporting of crimes. So much of the problem would seem to stem from insisting on the nonsense that you cannot be close to God if you engage in physical pleasure. No wonder these blokes are so bent out of shape…
A few years ago the federal government staged an intervention in Aboriginal communities because some black people can’t be trusted around kids. The church on the other hand gets tax-free status, millions of dollars in government funding, and the ability to influence public policy, such as its successful insistence on deciding under law who should and shouldn’t be allowed to get married.
But Barney Zwartz is right to note the Catholic Church has a culture to confront:
The argument by Cardinal Pell, Archbishop of Sydney, at the weekend that the Catholic Church was no worse than other organisations, and that calls were motivated by anti-Catholic prejudice, was clearly self-serving, and it is appropriate that it fell on deaf ears.
As the Victorian inquiry has been told, nine out of 10 cases of clergy sexual abuse involve Catholic priests or brothers. But victims of sexual abuse in other institutions, whether state orphanages or Jewish schools, must also have the opportunity to tell their stories.
UPDATE
The witch-hunt against the Catholic church actually started within hours. Check this astonishing debate on the ABC’s The Drum - and bravo to Sue Cato for calling it out.
No need to wait for an inquiry or hard evidence. The accusation becomes the proof. The Catholic Church itself becomes the sin.
Rhys Muldoon, actor and commentator:
The Catholic Church are really at the pointy end of this… I think it’s time to actually really have a look at stopping the tax-free status of the churches all round, most sincerely. I don’t think they deserve it.  They have betrayed our trust.There’s been a cover up… The Age said the one in 15 Catholic priests are pedphiles. I would have thought that something should be done… Why can’t we go for the Catholic Church?
Joe Aston, Australian Financial Review:
It’s quite clear that almost exclusively this is an issue within the Catholic church… A lot of this goes down to outdated practices in the Catholic church, the celibacy of priests. Other churches have been able to move with the times.
(Thanks to reader Ben.)

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Sir Barbarian, raised by the state

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER132012(7:42am)

Theodore Dalrymple on the trashing of Western culture in Britain, too. Example - the elevation of serial pedophile and professional vulgarian Jimmy Savile: 
The real scandal of Savile was that the BBC ever employed him in the first place. Although personally a highly intelligent man, he was a militant vulgarian, indeed vulgar stupidity was his stock in trade, his only real or distinguishing quality. He was not unselfconsciously vulgar, however, or vulgar because he did not know better. His mission in life was to vulgarise the culture of his country and in this he was triumphantly successful. To the last day of his life he dressed in garish vulgar clothes and expressed himself crudely. And by seeming (and very conspicuously) to do a lot of charitable work, he gave vulgarity a good name, as if it were somehow associated with a warm heart and a generous spirit, unlike restraint and refinement. Of course, he was not solely responsible for Britain’s strenuously and studiously low-IQ popular culture, but he was an important pioneer of it.
He could not have succeeded by his own exhibitionist efforts alone; on the contrary, he was made into a “star” in effect by the state, or at any rate by the expenditure of public monies. It was the hierarchs of the BBC who promoted him and turned him into a national institution as well as a millionaire although by doing so they were breaking the charter of the very organisation for which they worked. They were tired, however, of the difficult task of maintaining artistic and intellectual standards; it was easier to provide what George Orwell in Nineteen Eighty-Four called “prolefeed”, using the argument that it was democratic to do so, though in fact the demand for the vulgarisation exemplified by Savile never came from below…
The award of a knighthood to him as a form of public recognition was a deeply subversive act. It suggested that, provided you did good works (as they then seemed, and no one is more sentimental about conspicuous good works than the British), it mattered little how you comported yourself publicly.
UPDATE
Meanwhile, in Australia: 
The girls, aged 17 and 18, were bussed to the clubhouse of the Nomads outlaw motorcycle gang in Carrara after the dinner at the Gold Coast convention centre on Saturday night...

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Gore’s team tries again to buy fake evidence of global warming

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER132012(7:20am)


Filmmaker Chris Tangey shot this footage of a naturally occurring event. But no matter how clearly he demonstrated it had nothing to do with man-made warming, Al Gore’s team would just not accept natural as an answer. This exchange of emails is a damning insight into the Gore mindset.

Gore team’s first attempt to buy the footage for propaganda purposes:
On 25/09/2012, at 2:52 AM, Jill Martin wrote:
Hi Chris,
I work for former U.S. Vice President Al Gore. Mr. Gore recently saw the amazing footage of the fire tornado taken on September 11th, and is interested in showing it during some of the presentations he gives on environmental topics.
Could you give me an idea of what you might charge to license that footage to us? Here are some details about how it would be used:
Usage: in live, PowerPoint-type presentations to live audiences
Where: worldwide
Term: for up to five years
Context: Mr. Gore often shows photos and video of wildfires in his presentations. This video would augment that section.
Thank you very much,
Jill
Jill Martin | Office of the Honorable Al Gore
Jill@xxxx
From: chris tangey
Date: 30 September 2012 5:29:32 PM ACST
To: Jill Martin
Subject: Re: Licensing the “fire tornado” film clilp 
Jill,
Sorry for the late reply but I have been in Melbourne on a shoot down there.
I’ve now had time to look at your offer to license my footage, no doubt for a substantial amount of money, and have carefully considered it.
Having now had time in the last couple of days to research Mr. Gore and his usage of third party material previously I have to say I am a little concerned about the context in which my footage might be used.
To be honest, in terms of a global warming/climate change presentation it is difficult for me to imagine a fire event less relevant. This was, by all accounts and as reported, a highly localized event. The fire occurred in a patch of highly flammable spinifex grass, renowned for its intense heat, which had remained unburnt for a period of over 50 years, possibly causing an unprecedented build up of oils and resins in that small area. The local cattle ranchers had been protecting the habitat of the nearby mesa, Mt.Conner right up until this month’s fire.
On top of that it has been reported that the 10 day-old fire it emerged from was deliberately lit, not a natural event. In fact with not a cloud in the sky that day or even the slightest breeze, the only “weather” around had to come from the very-much contained area of the fire itself.
I am aware that you may have missed the reporting on the very localized nature of this firestorm. However, in any case, I am confused as to why you would offer to buy a license to use it at all unless you had conducted even elementary research which might indicate that this Mt. Conner event had direct linkage to global warming/climate change. I am happy to hear your response, but I can’t personally imagine one that I would find convincing.
Having taken all of the above into account I have had to make a decision not based on monetary reward but on what is the right thing to do. Hopefully I have demonstrated that I have not dismissed this offer lightly. For me, if I were to allow this footage to be used in an out of context scenario, even by insinuation, I just wouldn’t feel right.
In fact if I were to use it myself in any climate change framework I would feel like I were being deliberately deceptive, so please thank the Vice President for your offer, but I must respectfully decline.
Kind regards
Chris Tangey
Gore team’s second attempt to buy the footage for propaganda purposes:
On 07/11/2012, at 1:04 PM, Andrea Smith wrote: 
Hi Chris!
Wasn’t sure if this is the same Chris who shot the fire tornado? But I was curious if Alice Springs Television still controlled the rights to the footage?
I’m a producer working on some documentary pieces for a nonprofit organization doing an internet broadcast, and was wondering how much it would
be to license some of the footage?
Thank you so much for your help and time!
Best wishes,
Andrea L. Smith
Producer/The Climate Reality Project
andrea.xxxxxxx
On Wed, Nov 7, 2012 at 4:28 AM, chris tangey wrote: 
Andrea, 
I mean no disrespect, but I have to say that at best your organisation has some serious internal communication problems.
At worst, Mr. Gore is now requesting these images “through the back door”, and I note in your email that you completely omit mentioning Mr. Gore or the specific intentions you have for its usage.
As I’m sure you are aware I have previously refused a request for this footage from your Founder and Chairman on the grounds that there is no evidence to support your proposed usage. 
That is, that this intense, but incredibly localised, event has any relationship whatsoever to climate change/global warming.  In fact from the expert advice I have received, I believe the evidence is to the contrary.
I am happy to be proved wrong, but that appears highly unlikely.
In any case, even if “the left hand doesn’t know what the right hand is doing” in Mr. Gore’s organisation, I again have to ask the question; Why would you request this footage if you do not have firm evidence to prove that this particular event was caused by, or was in any way attributable to, global or even regional climate change?
If a project is bold enough to call itself “Climate Reality, “ then I would reasonably expect a great deal of fact and reality attached to it… Are all your requests for visual material to support climate change presentations made without any prior requirement for supporting evidence?
I must say that this continuing episode has adversely affected my view of those promoting anthropological climate change , and I now view any programs about it with a more sceptical eye.
So, yet again, I cannot in all conscience accept your offer, for any amount. 
Sincerely
Chris Tangey 
On 08/11/2012, at 4:05 AM, Andrea Smith wrote:
Chris,
First of all, I in no way meant to disrespect or offend you. I am an independent, freelance producer, and I don’t think anyone is trying to acquire the footage through “the back door.” I can assure you that the Climate Reality people have been very very tough on us as far as what stories we are able to cover. For instance, I have produced a piece on climate change and coffee in Colombia with scientists from CIAT, so it is very grounded in science, and both fascinating and terrifying as to what is happening all over this planet. 
The program this year is to discuss “Dirty Weather” and “Extremes” of weather. It’s an open point for discussion for the scientists and panelists that will be participating.  It’s to invite conversation and discussion. As a freelance producer I had no idea when I started this project that the US is the only country in the world that has an active Climate Denier movement - every other country in the world has accepted this as a fact and is moving forward to do something about it. From what I understand, Australia has implemented a very innovative carbon tax and has a number of other programs in place in many of their cities.  I’m somewhat embarrassed I live in a country where we so greedily use up so much of the earth’s resources and seem immune to it.
Anyway, it’s an incredible piece of footage and fantastic you captured it. I have been lucky enough to have the opportunity to visit your country twice for extended periods of time, including Alice Springs. I can easily say Australia is one of my favorite places in the world.  Again, no offense meant, and none taken.  I hope you do have the opportunity to watch part of the programming and that you find merit in it.
Very best wishes,
Andrea L. Smith 
From: chris tangey 
Date: 8 November 2012 11:25:39 AM ACST
To: Andrea Smith 
Subject: Re: Firenado footage
 
Andrea,
Thanks for your response, I’m sure from your comments below that you are personally committed to the cause of anthropological climate change, but as copyright owner my primary concern is that any usage of this material should be scientifically valid and in context. I find that your response hasn’t addressed my specific questions on whether it would be scientifically appropriate to use it in an extreme weather context .
As has been widely reported, it was such a highly localised event it was most likely caused by the fire itself, let alone any external “weather” and certainly not anything on a climatic scale.
The cattle station owners (who have been on that property for 55 years) have indicated that is their firm belief, and that in fact its heat and severity was caused by the fact that they have deliberately protected that patch of resin-filled spinifex grass for over half a century, allowing that resin to build up over time. Spinifex (Triodia) is highly flammable and creates intense heat in any case.
Joel Lisonbee, Manager of the Northern Territory Climate Services Centre, was quoted as saying he also saw no connection between this event and climate change/global warming.
“This event was better described as a dust devil within a fire. Most of us have seen dust devils and know they are not uncommon,” Mr Lisonbee said
“You need hot, dry conditions but you get those in desert-like conditions everywhere, regardless of global warming.”
I know that we could just “agree to disagree” but I feel I must raise some real concerns to your response. Firstly your title indicates your are employed at the highest level of the Climate Reality Project, a Producer, freelancer or not, so I am confused as to why you refer to “the Climate Reality people” in the third person. Assuming for a moment that these people are separate to yourself you go on to say that they “have been very very tough on us as far as what stories we are able to cover”. So clearly this indicates they must have approved not just your enquiry about the footage, but the next stage of actually offering to buy it.
Since Mr. Gore’s office first contacted me to buy the rights, which indicated Mr. Gore himself had made the request to purchase, I have had cause to conduct considerable research on climate change. In the course of this research I have discovered a lot of non-scientific, apparently agenda-driven name-calling going on, including your below “Climate Denier” tag.
Apparently “climate deniers” are people with a different viewpoint to yours, so are fair game to be labelled , put in a box and publicly pilloried. I would have though the correct scientific response would be to simply convince them of your argument. I think few people have doubt that the climate is changing, the questions are to what extent and whether it is human-induced. I am happy to be convinced, but by simply labelling questioners who need more information “climate deniers” might be colorful politics, but would seem a doomed approach to science education.
Now, the doubts that I mention don’t appear from thin air, but have actually been introduced by your own “team” so to speak , so it would appear a bit rich to be blaming others, let alone calling them childish names for them now having doubts:
Much more relevant to me is that my research has shown that your own Founder and Chairman has had his own share of controversy:
I have even found a quote from Mr. Gore saying that “the science is settled”.  As far as I know true operational science is never settled, it is always open to additional data that may later arrive at a new conclusion.
You say the context of using my footage on this global media event would merely be as “an open point for discussion for the scientists and panelists that will be participating” and to “invite conversation and discussion.” If there is going to be an “open discussion”, then I presume there will be Scientists with opposing opinions, if not, how will it be “open”?
I’m sorry, but this seems to me both disingenuous and illogical and echoes Mr. Gore’s original request to simply use it in “presentations” on “environmental topics”.  In barely the space of a month 2 major Al Gore organisations, Climate Reality Project and Carthage Group have asked to buy this footage. Given the very reason for the existence of these organisations is to promote anthropological climate change, I am to believe that the purpose is actually NOT to sell viewers on climate change? Then sorry… why do you wish to buy it?
For your information I am no stranger to either science or extreme, wind-related weather events. For instance, I was Associate Producer, Head of Research and Co-Writer on the 1 hour long, 2001 National Geographic Channel (U.S.) documentary “Red Storm” which dealt with dust storms and the relevant science globally.
It seems to me I am the type of person you are making this program for, those of us yet to be convinced, but after the experience of the last month or so I’m afraid I am left less convinced than ever.
Cheers
Chris

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The president of free stuff

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER132012(6:46am)

Tyler Durden on a syndrome in US politics that’s emerging here, too: 
There is a rational explanation for the President’s reelection which doesn’t invoke a deep or complex meaning. The only way to explain the outcome is in the simplest and direct prose: the moochers prevailed...
From cell phones and contraceptives to food stamps and unemployment benefits, the Obama administration kept the money flowing to ensure a steady turnout on Election Day. The coup de grĆ¢ce was painting his opponent as a second coming of Dickens’ Scrooge that was ready to cut the voters from their trust funds.
The campaign made no attempt to hide this tactic. In an online video, celebrity Lena Dunham was tapped to extol the virtues of government-supplied birth control. The advertisement was aimed at a younger generation already guaranteed access to their parent’s health insurance till they turn 26 (and then morph simultaneously into full grown, self-sufficient adults). The video was a great demonstration of the campaign strategy but it was topped by one woman from Cleveland, Ohio who exemplified the public trough mentality on camera. Commonly referred to as the Obama-phone lady, this woman was so enraptured by her “free” cell phone and other welfare entitlements, she was determined to “keep Obama in president” to use her exact words. Though clearly dimwitted, Ms. Obamaphone was a phenomenal orator of the President’s message of goodies in exchange for votes…
Obama won the election by catering to the worst of all human traits: envy. He demonized the rich while promising to take more of their income and give it out in the form of entitlement payments. Under his presidency, the attitude of the takers will continue to swell as they clamor for more privileges. Anybody who speaks out against the Robin Hood scheme will be called an unconscionable xenophobe and a hater of the poor. The protestant work ethic will slowly be choked into submission through deliberate iconoclasm launched by the political class and their pet media pundits.
I think this is why so many conservatives are more shaken by this loss than by the two to Clinton and the first to Obama. It signals more than just a decline in political fortunes. It may be a permanent decline in cultural fortunes, too.

===

How NSW Labor works

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER132012(6:38am)

 Politics - state
Allegations at ICAC yesterday:
Not only is this ‘’the most important investigation ever undertaken’’ by the Independent Commission Against Corruption but ‘’it is corruption on a scale probably unexceeded since the days of the Rum Corps,’’ counsel assisting the inquiry, Geoffrey Watson, SC, said in his opening address on Monday.
Mr Obeid, the dominant factional player in the ALP, manipulated Mr Macdonald to do his bidding. This included rigging a public tender, demoting a senior official and even making changes to the state’s formal coal licence maps to ensure the scam would ‘’confer massive cascading profits upon Mr Obeid and his family’’, the ICAC heard… 
The inquiry heard that the Obeids had both ends of the coalmining deal sewn up. Using inside information, the family and its associates bought three adjoining properties over which Mr Macdonald would later grant an exploration licence. The profit for the Obeids and their associates from this deal alone was almost $26 million.
They also had highly confidential information about who would win the government tender. This allowed them to join forces with the successful bidder, Cascade Coal, and later to extract a $60 million payout from Cascade from an outlay of a mere $200,000, Mr Watson said....
The former premiers Morris Iemma and Nathan Rees will give evidence today on how their attempts to remove the controversial ministers Joe Tripodi and Mr Macdonald from cabinet ultimately ended their premierships. It was Mr Obeid and Mr Tripodi who really controlled the Labor government, the inquiry is expected to hear.
The allegations are denied. The hearings continue.
(No comments.) 

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The pride of the family

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER132012(6:28am)

More than just one bad man. There was, it seems, a culture of approval:
A program broadcast by the M6 channel on Sunday included secretly filmed footage of her saying she was “proud” of her brother for “fighting to the end"…
Mohamed Merah, a self-described al-Qaeda sympathiser, shot a rabbi, three Jewish schoolchildren and three French paratroopers in attacks in and around the southern city of Toulouse in March before being shot dead in a police siege.
A sister so proud of a big, brave man who shot dead these unarmed girls and this father:
image

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Labor still behind, but the smears are working

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER132012(6:06am)

VOTER support for Tony Abbott has dropped to its lowest level since he became Opposition Leader three years ago, as the Gillard government’s relentless attacks on his character take a toll on his standing with the electorate.
Less than one third of voters, 27 per cent, are satisfied with the way the Liberal leader is doing his job, and the highest number on record, 63 per cent, are dissatisfied with his performance…
With Greens’ support unchanged on 10 per cent in the last survey, the Coalition holds a narrow lead over Labor, 51 per cent to 49 per cent, on a two-party preferred basis using preference flows at the last election.
I misjudged Gillard’s vile “misogyny” attack on Abbott. I thought voters would see it for what it was - a lie by a Prime Minister desperate to divert attention from her sleazy defence of a sleazy Speaker, and a divisive ploy for victimhood. But Gillard sounded strong, Abbott reacted passively, and many of the women particularly who do not really follow politics simply assumed that what Gillard said must be true - that Abbott really had been sexist to her “every day”. They didn’t realise how dishonest Gillard is prepared to be, or didn’t care.
And now this royal commission into bad Catholics…
That said, the Coalition still leads, it has not yet fired its big guns on policy, and Labor surely cannot get a better run than its had in the past two months. Narratives eventually change. But there is is becalmed feel to the Opposition’s campaign that must change. It is too reactive, and has failed to get the third-party endorsement that Labor uses so well and, being the party of the media class, can summon so easily.
In one of the true ironies of modern political campaigning, a relentlessly negative and obsessive campaign is being run to portray an opponent as relentlessly negative and obsessive.
No more defensiveness against this. Call it out as the diversion from waste, bungling, division, deceit and - allegedly - corruption. Demand a new culture of respect, unity and progress. Go after what Gillard has protected - not least crooked unions. Stress family policy in everything, and surround Abbott with reminders of it. Make the Liberals the family party.

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Homeless promise

Andrew BoltNOVEMBER122012(7:35pm)

Yet another promise being broken. Yet another example of the difference between announcement and delivery.
Kevin Rudd in 2008:
I’d like to enlist your support for a great new enterprise: how we as a nation can begin to turn the homelessness crisis around for the long term rather than just apply band-aids in the short term…
If we take a hard honest look back over the last decade or more - as a nation we have not done enough to address homelessness…
Which Way Home – the Green Paper on homelessness - is the Government’s first Green Paper… The White Paper will include a comprehensive national action plan to reduce homelessness by 2020.
Today:
The rise follows then prime minister Kevin Rudd’s unveiling in 2008 of a $6 billion plan to halve homelessness by 2020 and offer crisis accommodation to every person sleeping rough. Mr Rudd had promised in his first month in the job to make the issue a priority.


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