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Pearls and Irritations

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December 18, 2018

ALLAN PATIENCE. It's time to cleanse the Augean stables of corporate and political governance in Australia.

It will require a Herculean effort to clean out the greed, corruption, sense of entitlement, selfishness and ideological blindness at the “commanding heights” of Australia’s government, economy and society. The banking royal commission has exposed merely the tip of this ugly reality. In business, in the professions, in the media and in politics, many of those at the top are the custodians and reproducers of a culture that is morally fetid.  They remain obsessed with themselves, their cronies, their salaries and bonuses, their perks of office.

July 4, 2019

DONALD COZZENS. How much corruption can we tolerate in the church before we leave?

After reading James Carroll’s lengthy lament in The Atlantic on the corruption in the Catholic Church and its priestly caste, I remembered reading an article in America magazine by the late Jesuit theologian Walter Burghardt.

“In the course of half a century,” the weathered scholar wrote in Tell the Next Generation, “I have seen more Catholic corruption than you have read of. I have tasted it. I have been reasonably corrupt myself. And yet I joy in this Church — this living, pulsing, sinning people of God.”

January 24, 2020

JOHN CARMODY. Australia Day. We cannot allow our future to be based on falsity and denial

Perhaps because, by its very nature, establishing a colony at Port Jackson in 1788 was theft of another people’s land, Australia seems to have been a racist society from the beginning and to have remained so.

December 21, 2017

KIERAN TAPSELL. Secrets and the Royal Commission's final report.

Media attention has been drawn to the recommendation in the Final Report of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse that religious confession should not be exempted from civil law requirements to report child sexual abuse. However, of much greater practical significance is the recommendation that the Catholic Church’s pontifical secret should not apply to such abuse.

December 29, 2015

Magical thinking about ISIS.

Adam Shatz is the contributing editor at the London Review of Books. He lives in New York. In this article he says

‘The attacks in Paris don’t reflect a clash of civilisations, but rather the fact that we really do live in a single, if unequal world, where the torments in one region inevitably spill over into another, where everything connects, somethings with lethal consequences.  … For all its medieval airs, the caliphate holds up a mirror to the world we have made, not only in Raqqa and Mosul, but in Paris, Moscow and Washington.’

February 26, 2019

MACK WILLIAMS. The Second Trump:Kim Summit - Just another step along the way?

Amid all the media speculation feeding off Trump’s own optimistic commentary and resolute scepticism of many long term Korea watchers there are some recent glimmers of very limited progress emerging from the Hanoi Summit. After a late start, the lead US negotiator Biegun has reported encouraging discussions with Kim’s negotiating team first in Sweden and now in Hanoi. Though understandably Secretary of State Pompeo has cautioned that there is still a long road ahead. The crux of the discussions remains an agreed definition of “denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsular” – left unresolved after the Singapore Summit.

November 3, 2018

JOHN MENADUE. Detention on Manus and Nauru serves no useful policy purpose.

On 13 August 2016 Robert Manne, Frank Brennan, Tim Costello and I wrote the following article for The Melbourne Age.  It was also posted on this blog.  Since that time, we have consistently argued on many occasions , first, that all detainees on Manus and Nauru should be brought to Australia for processing and possible settlement, and second, that the policy of turnback of boats should be continued and if necessary strengthened to ensure that there were no more boat arrivals.  I repost below that article from August 2016. We think the basic arguments that we made over two years ago are still valid.  .  It is turn backs  that deter boat arrivals and not cruel detention on Manus and Nauru. John Menadue

October 24, 2018

MICHAEL TOMASKY. Fighting to Vote.

If you grew up, as I did, in the 1960s and 1970s, watching (albeit through a child’s eyes) the civil rights movement notch victory after victory, you could be forgiven for thinking at the time that that happy condition was normal. By high school, in the late 1970s, I began reading some history and learning about the struggles people endured to win the right to vote in this country. I thought then that these battles were over and done and won—that a new consensus had been achieved.

This article was published by The New York Review of Books on the 11th of October 2018 issue. 

May 7, 2019

JUDITH WHITE. Arts, culture and the Australian elections

The Federal election on Saturday 18 May has profound implications for culture, heritage and the arts – and voters would be well advised to take heed of what is happening in NSW.
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Since its re-election on 23 March, the Berejiklian Coalition Government in NSW has renewed its assault on the arts and its pro-developer agenda.
Two weeks after the State Election, in a sign of things to come, Arts Minister and Liberal Party numbers man Don Harwin announced that the government would be “forging ahead” with its signature policy of demolishing the Powerhouse Museum at Ultimo. The announcement came in defiance of professional opinion, popular opposition and a damning report from an all-party Upper House inquiry.
The Powerhouse Museum Alliance has vowed to continue the fight, but it’s an uphill battle. On the back of her electoral success, Premier Gladys Berejiklian has engineered a significant shift of power to the executive branch of government, with serious implications for culture.
First, ministries have been amalgamated and decisions concentrated in just eight super-departments, with Arts transferred to the Department of Premier and Cabinet. This means that scrutiny of cultural projects will be even harder and independent professional input less likely.
Second, in a further reduction of accountability, the number of Parliament’s sitting days has been reduced to just 35 for the year. The Upper House Inquiry into Museums and Galleries, which spanned almost three years of the last Parliament, concluded that a further inquiry was needed. But it has yet to be established and requires a new vote in the Legislative Council.
Passing under the radar of parliamentary scrutiny so far is the $344 million Sydney Modern project at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. The Upper House last year forced publication of the business case for the Powerhouse move – a heavily redacted version, released only because the Government was brought to the brink of constitutional crisis over the issue. But the business case for Sydney Modern, the Coalition’s other major cultural infrastructure commitment, remains a closely guarded secret, with the Government claiming it as “Cabinet in confidence”.
Museum professionals believe its costings are unrealistic. Building costs alone are likely to double, and ongoing funding is a mystery. Given that the Upper House Inquiry found that the business case for the Powerhouse move was “a political document designed to justify, at any cost, [a] fundamentally flawed decision”, why would anyone trust the Government’s business case for its other big arts project?
On the eve of the State election the National Association for the Visual Arts (NAVA) issued its report card on the policies of the contesting parties. Under the heading “NSW culture” both the Greens and Labor were found to have positive policies. Labor’s included a new $500m Western Sydney institution, funding for live music and night-time arts, a review of previous funding decisions, the de-politicisation of board appointments, and the repeal of restrictive festival regulations and anti-protest laws.
Findings for the Liberal Party under the same heading were all negative. The report said it had: “No commitment to integrity in funding decisions and governance”.
But while Labor had far better cultural policies, the party failed to harness them to a visionary appeal. And Michael Daley proved no match for the unquestionably energetic Gladys Berejiklian.
There are lessons in the NSW experience for the Federal Election– especially if, like me, you shudder at the thought of a re-election of the grinning, boat-stopping, baseball-cap wearing Pentecostalist Scott Morrison and his back-to-the-fifties cronies.
Federal Labor at least has a published arts policy, developed over the past three years under Shadow Minister Tony Burke. I’ve searched the Liberal Party’s platform for one, in vain.
The arts and culture section of Labor’s national platform begins: “Arts and culture are essential to the good life; while a creative nation is a prosperous nation. All people can participate in arts events and education and express their creativity in an array of different cultural forms. Labor will not only support artists, we will strengthen communities and develop a creative culture so Australians are ready for the challenges and opportunities of life.”
There is more in the same vein, good motherhood stuff, and streets ahead of anything the Coalition parties have issued. It’s redolent of a desire to return to the inspirational atmosphere of the Whitlam era. But there’s a reality to be faced.
For 35 years, Labor has been vying with the Liberals to cut public spending in the cultural sector. It was the Hawke-Keating Government of the 1980s that introduced the “efficiency dividend”, the notorious recurrent spending cut to the public service. It was part of Labor’s embrace of the damaging, anti-social outlook of neoliberalism. According to this dogma, society and culture are nothing; the individual and the dollar are everything.
In the hands of Coalition Governments the efficiency dividend, enforced by politically-appointed boards, has weakened national cultural institutions to the point that heritage collections and programs are at risk – at the National Library, the National Gallery and all other institutions except the Australian War Memorial.
A tiny fraction of the national budget would restore cuts to those institutions, to the ABC, the Australia Council and the CSIRO. Labor needs to make that clear commitment.
A reluctance to do so goes hand-in-hand with a tendency to justify arts expenditure on the grounds of economic expediency – the arts generate income – rather than on the grounds of social need.
Two and half thousands years ago, the Greeks knew better. “Our love of what is beautiful does not lead to extravagance,” said Pericles; “our love of things of the mind does not weaken us. We regard wealth as something to be properly used rather than something to boast about.”
That’s from the man who built the great monuments of the Acropolis. The only monument Scott Morrison wants to build is a statue of Captain Cook to celebrate the invasion of Australia by the British and their relentless assault on indigenous culture.
After the heady promise of the 1970s, we’re still a long way from securing the great new, inclusive culture we know can be achieved in the Great South Land.
Judith White is the author of 'Culture Heist: Art versus Money' and writes on the website cultureheist.com.au
October 24, 2018

Invictus Games, glossing over inconvenient truths - the arms trade and the British royals

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have arrived and the media frenzy has erupted, fuelled by news of the royal pregnancy. As media coverage goes, the Invictus Games team couldn’t have managed it any better. Yet, when it comes to the actions of the royal family, all that glisters is not gold.

July 13, 2020

Second outbreak of Covid-19 in Victoria

It is clear that, after our initial success in dealing with the Covid-19 pandemic, Australians are disappointed and even angry that we have been thrown back into lockdown. Rates of infection have, relatively speaking, shot up.

June 14, 2019

C.J. POLYCHRONIOU. Noam Chomsky: Trump’s “Economic Boom” Is a Sham (Truthout)

Donald Trump ran a campaign — and won the 2016 presidential election — based on unorthodox tactics, whereby he used irrational provocation to defy traditional political norms and make a mockery of established beliefs on both domestic and international issues confronting the United States. Amazingly enough, Trump has continued his instinctual political posturing even as president, dividing the nation and causing severe friction with the traditional allies of the U.S. Yet, his unorthodox tactics and irrational leadership style appear to remain a winning formula as current polls indicate that, unless something dramatic happens, Trump may very well be re-elected in 2020 by an even bigger margin.

January 4, 2018

STEPHEN LEEDER: A little bit of sugar may (or may not) make the weight go down.

The statistics do not support the view that there are big differences in sugar consumption between the fat and the thin.  We need to define our enemy clearly in the battle against obesity.

January 23, 2019

JOHN QUIGGIN. Socialist utopia 2050: what could life in Australia be like after the failure of capitalism?

From four-day weeks to unconditional basic income to free education, it’s possible to imagine a future where society’s focus has moved from consumption to quality of life.

October 10, 2018

Coalition’s breathtakingly stupid response to IPCC climate report (RenewEconomy, 09.10.18)

It wasn’t too hard to predict what the Coalition government’s responses to the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report would be – you just needed to know where they would be making them.

October 25, 2018

Disadvantaged schools miss out in access to teachers.

The large gaps in student achievement between advantaged and disadvantaged schools in Australia are well known. What is less well known is that government teacher policies are compounding the gaps by discriminating against disadvantaged schools in their access to teaching resources. Incredibly, Australia allocates more and better teacher resources to socio-economically advantaged schools than to disadvantaged schools. 

February 25, 2019

What to do about Human Rights in China

Human rights in China are under threat. The People’s Republic of China (PRC) government ignores international representations. Should Australia even attempt to intervene? What would we risk? The easy course would be to do the minimum and restrict our representations to cases where Australian citizens and interests are directly involved. Despite possible repercussions for other aspects of our vital bilateral relationship, Australia should take a stand and declare to the PRC and other countries that the ideals of human rights are central to our cultural identity.

December 30, 2019

DAVID SHEARMAN.-Doctors urged to engage with water policy concerns and a timely review

he climate and health emergency must remind doctors and the community that water is one of our life support systems and its scarcity in Australia will bring human misery, displacement of individuals and towns, and failures in food production.

February 8, 2019

JEFFREY D. SACHS. Trump's Syria withdrawal is a chance for peace.

From Donald Trump’s point of view, a US-installed Syrian puppet regime that would push out Russia and Iran is neither central to US national security nor practicable. And, here, Trump is right for a change.

November 27, 2018

Time for a long hard look at the goals and purposes of schooling.

Schools hold up the mirror to a society as well as shaping its future. There is more to education than schools, but schooling is the formal process by which we assist young people to develop their capacity to learn and to think for themselves in a democratic society. 

December 12, 2018

ALI KAZAK. Australia’s or Israel’s national interest?

In their arguments for recognising Jerusalem as “Israel’s capital” and moving the Australian embassy from Tel Aviv, Prime Minister Scott Morrison, his deputy Josh Frydenberg and the Minister of Defence Christopher Pyne have been repeating Israel’s propaganda and hiding the truth from the public.

January 27, 2018

MICHAEL MULLINS. What happened to my Australian accent?

I spent the summer of 1983-84 in the Philippines. During this time I fell in love with the Philippines and its people and felt ashamed to be Australian.

December 28, 2018

PETER MAGUIRE. Regulate It, Man. Marijuana

One of the few issues that many Americans can agree on in 2018 is, improbably, marijuana legalization. Pot is now legal in thirty-three states and Washington, D.C. In April, John Boehner, the former Republican Speaker of the House, made the rounds of the morning TV talk shows to announce that he now supported decriminalization. Boehner, a former Big Tobacco lobbyist, had declared in 2015 that he was “unalterably opposed” to making pot legal. Now, perhaps hoping to cash in on the marijuana “green rush,” he sits on the advisory board of Acreage Holdings, a New York City–based marijuana startup headed by investment bankers. Acreage hopes to be to Big Pot what R.J. Reynolds, Boehner’s other employer, is to Big Tobacco. Acreage’s CEO, Kevin Murphy, optimistically predicts a “massive consolidation in this business” that will earn his company billions by 2020.

June 27, 2018

STEVE CANNANE. Banking royal commission: 'Big four' accountancy firms 'heavily conflicted, should be under inquiry spotlight' (ABC 25/6/2018)

Australia’s “big four” accountancy firms should be put under the spotlight of the banking royal commission, according to a British investigative journalist who has written an expose on their activities overseas.  

November 5, 2018

NOAM CHOMSKY. Members of Migrant Caravan Are Fleeing from Misery & Horrors Created by the U.S.

As President Trump escalated his attacks and threats against the Central American migrant caravans making their way to the U.S.-Mexico border, the Trump administration unveiled new sanctions against Venezuela and Cuba on Thursday. National security adviser John Bolton declared Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua to be part of a “troika of tyranny” and a “triangle of terror.” We speak with world-renowned professor, linguist and dissident Noam Chomsky about U.S. foreign policy in Central America. He joins us in Tucson, Arizona, where he now teaches at the University of Arizona. Chomsky is also institute professor emeritus at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he has taught for 50 years.

This article was published by Democracy Now! on the 2nd of November 2018. 

October 17, 2017

JAMES O’NEILL: Requiem for a democracy

The Australian Security agencies have asked again for further powers to enable them to prevent terrorist attacks.  Among the requests made are for extended detention powers, increasing the time a “terror suspect” can be detained without charge from 14 to 28 days.

January 24, 2020

Culture wars and the climate catastrophe.

This summer’s Australian bushfires, says Sir David Attenborough, signal a crisis point for Earth. They also signal a crisis point in the ideological struggle within Australia over the future of the country and the world we live in. 

November 10, 2018

JERRY ROBERTS Armistice Day thoughts

In 2014 publishers gave us some superb books describing the origins of the First World War including Christopher Clark’s spellbinding The Sleepwalkers.  In the four years between 2014 and 2018 has the world moved towards peaceful coexistence?  Do we learn from history?  You must be joking

October 31, 2017

AMBER CARVAN. The health impacts of climate change in rural and remote Australia

Without swift action climate change stands to further cement the health deficit experienced in rural and remote populations. Conversely, taking action to build the climate-resilience of rural and remote communities, and the health care services that support them, could lead to a seismic shift in health outcomes for the seven million people living in rural and remote Australia.

December 9, 2019

GEORGE BROWNING. Peace on Earth, Good will towards all: Tale of Two Jerusalem Prizes

The holy city’s name focuses the universal longing for peace: the hope, indeed the expectation that diversity and difference do not need to issue in animosity, injustice and violence, but in mutuality, enrichment from the other’s difference.  It is associated with blessing from Melchizedek the mysterious the King of Salem to Abraham, ancestor, founder and prophet shared by Judaism, Christianity and Islam. The city is sacred to all three. 

December 7, 2017

TONY SMITH. A hope for the future?

There is plenty to criticise in the current state of Australian politics. It is important that expert commentators continue to point out the shortcomings of the system and the poor quality of those attracted to politics. There are however, occasional reasons for optimism and the inaugural speech of the new Greens Senator for Western Australia is certainly one worth noting.

December 20, 2017

MICHAEL MULLINS. Who really killed Confession?

Most Catholics have stayed away from Confession for decades because the thought of it has made them feel small and unworthy. It’s not dissimilar to the dynamic of sexual abuse. It is part of what critics of the Church see as a power play that is designed to tighten the screws of the institution’s psychological grip on its faithful. But it needn’t be that way. Confession can offer a pathway to wholeness and growth.

December 16, 2019

CHRIS BONNOR. School fixes and fantasy

Two weeks ago I commented on the forthcoming Education Council of Ministers meeting and how it was apparently going to tackle our latest reported dive in student achievement. I declared that the chance of an enduring solution emerging from that gathering amounted to fantasy. True to form, the ministers emerged from that meeting with strong statements, pious hopes and an ongoing commitment to … fantasy.

November 17, 2017

ANDREW FARRAN. Eternal vigilance or eternal military deployments?

Prime Minister Turnbull recently visited the Philippines to attend regional economic and trade talks attended also by US President Trump. Given the presence of both, what do we know about their commitment of military assistance to their host, President Duterte of the Philippines, to ‘contain’ insurgency in that country? 

June 5, 2019

PETER JOHNSTONE. Is religious freedom code for a licence to discriminate?

Just one worrying aspect of current talk that religious freedom needs to be legislated is that the need is rarely explained. There is vague reporting of the ‘right’ of religious schools to teach faith-based doctrine. This begs the question as to what these schools want to teach that they think is at risk. It seems that this is code for teachings that devalue people of LGBTIQ sexual orientation.

March 25, 2019

KIM WINGEREI. Independent Media Continues to Grow!

Independent media continues to grow apace, while mainstream media is at best stagnant. Based on data provided by SimilarWeb - a global online traffic measurement service - independent media traffic has grown by 9.76% from November 2018 to February 2019*. During the same period the top corporate mainstream media sites** grew by 1.1%.

June 26, 2019

GEORGE GRUNDY. Greed in the game made in heaven.

I couldn’t sleep last night. All the bigotry, hatred and stupidity in the news gets to me sometimes. For some reason, Israel Folau’s story has really bothered me. It’s not just that old Izzy likes to stand at a pulpit and tell people they’re going to hell, it’s that when called out for it he’s gone straight for the ‘I’m being victimised for my beliefs’ trope. You know, the one people use when they want the right to say something indefensible and not be criticised for it.

November 3, 2018

MICHAEL MCGIRR. Christianity tells stories; Islam finds designs (Eureka Street, 30.10.18)

My year ten class studies Islam, one of the most formative influences in the world that my students will inhabit and hopefully improve. I have a profound respect for Islam. Westerners, and especially western Christians, often fail to acknowledge the debt they owe to Islam, a tradition that had a huge role in bringing Europe through the Dark Ages and into the Renaissance.

February 14, 2019

Canada, China, the US and the Rule of Law – A Postscript

It will be recalled that on 1 December, Meng Wanzhou, chief financial officer of Huwaei Technologies, was arrested at Vancouver airport by Canadian authorities at the request of US prosecutors seeking her extradition to face charges of breaching sanctions imposed by President Donald Trump on Iran. _I argued earlier_ that the mantra of ‘the rule of law must prevail’ had been instrumentalised as part of US lawfare against China and Ottawa had ignored the need for a carefully considered policy that located the best settling point for Canada between legal processes, geopolitical interests and bilateral relations with the US and China.

December 18, 2018

DAVID TIMBS. The Pax Romana and the Gospel of Disturbance.

The first Roman Emperor, Augustus Caesar, is synonymous with a new age of optimism and hopefulness for the peoples of the Empire. This era of unprecedented peace, stability and prosperity came to be known as the Pax Romana. Jesus of Nazareth was born in to this world around 4 BCE. For his followers, Jesus’ birth also heralded in a new era in which humanity would be created anew, right relationship on every level would be restored and God’s moral claim upon the world would be fully realised. The coming of Christ for believers marked the Dawn of Redeeming Grace.

October 10, 2018

MAX HASTINGS. Smoke and Mirrors (New York Review of Books, 27 September, 2018)

The United States spends more than $70 billion a year on the gathering and assessment of information about its enemies—and friends. Other nations lavish proportionate amounts, which can only increase now that cyberwarfare and information games have become inextricably entangled with intelligence and counterterrorism. China is estimated to employ some two million people on electronic data collection and surveillance, much of this directed at its own people.

December 5, 2019

IMOGEN ZETHOVEN. Judgement Day for the Great Barrier Reef is Looming

Recently I was talking to a political insider in Canberra who told me he’d heard on numerous occasions at dinner parties that tragically the Great Barrier Reef is dead.

December 3, 2019

The barbaric nature of the human condition

It was a right hook in the third round that sent the 26 year old boxer to the canvass. The crowd cheered with excitement; after all, this is what they had hoped to see. On the referee’s count of “five” the man struggled to his feet and was directed to the ring side doctor. That professional shook his arms looked at his pupils and asked if the man wanted to continue. “Yes”, he said, upon which he was allowed to return to the slaughter. Twenty-seconds later he was back on the canvass, 24 hours later he was dead. Numerous small blood vessels, torn asunder as his brain bounced back and forward inside its bony cage, bled and bled. All the intensive care staff could do was watch him die.

October 29, 2019

JEREMY SMITH. Our Climate Crisis

While local drought-affected communities are declaring a climate emergency, present proposals to mitigate the impacts of drought fail to address the real crisis. They do not recognise that this drought is not just another variation on ‘normal’ conditions, but a step towards a new climate. More radical and comprehensive planning and action are required.

February 13, 2019

JOHN MENADUE . Heath ministers may be in office but they are seldom in power

The Rudd/Gillard governments muddled through on health policy. There was very little  to show in the way of useful reform,with one exception. That was plain packaging of cigarettes. 

  The record is not encouraging, and will not be  better in future if the next health minister spends her time smoodging  powerful providers . Necessary health reforms are hard.  Without  determined  Prime ministerial and health minister leadership  nothing much will change.

July 10, 2020

Australia's pro-Israel media fights facts and ends careers

The day after Scott Morrison set the date for the mid-May 2019 federal election, Labor lost one of its star women performers. International lawyer Melissa Parke, the Member for Fremantle, a shrewd “get” by Kevin Rudd back in 2007, announced her resignation from politics.

October 23, 2019

MIKE SCRAFTON.But what about war?

Military forces perform many functions, but their unique role is to fight wars. Though obvious, this is rarely addressed by commentators on defence policy or by governments. Professor Dibb’s _presentation_ to Royal Australian Navy’s Sea Power Conference avoided direct references war. At the same function the _Defence Minister’s speech_ was quiet on the ultimate point of investing billions in the armed forces.

June 7, 2019

SHARON PARKINSON, DEB BATTERHAM, MARGARET REYNOLDS. Homelessness soars in our biggest cities, driven by rising inequality since 2001 (The Conversation)

Homelessness has increased greatly in Australian capital cities since 2001. Almost two-thirds of people experiencing homelessness are in these cities, with much of the growth associated with severely crowded dwellings and rough sleeping.

February 19, 2019

IAN McAULEY. The rot set in when they privatized the Commonwealth Bank

The banking and finance commission’s focus was on specific poor behaviours. It avoided broad policy issues, including the general failure of competition to improve consumer outcomes.  

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