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Pearls and Irritations

John Menadue's Public Policy Journal

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Letters
June 25, 2015

Rod Tiffen. Murdoch's declining influence.

Current Affairs

Labor might not have noticed it yet, but Rupert Murdochs capacity to influence the outcome declines with each passing election. Over the past eight months, Victoria and Queensland have voted out first-term Liberal governments despite the best efforts of the Murdoch press in those states. Their slanted front pages, unfair coverage and combative editorials only highlighted their growing irrelevance to the electoral process.

The central reason for this decline in influence is the radically shrinking reach of News Ltds newspapers. Last year, the total circulation of all Australian daily newspapers was a little over 2.1 million, fully one million lower than it was at the turn of the century.

September 17, 2018

MUNGO MACCALLUM. ScoMo, ProMo, Status QuoMo

We still dont know just who or what the new Prime Minister is, but he is determined to tell us whether we like it or not. Our manic leader is seldom lost for words and this is just as well as he appears chronically short of ideas.

June 30, 2019

MICHAEL KEATING. Urban and Regional Policy

Spatial inequality has risen dramatically over Australia in the last forty years, and our cities are in many ways becoming less liveable. This article draws on the recent CSIRO report on the Australian National Outlook to summarise the major policy shift that is required affecting urban development to enable well-connected, affordable cities that offer more equal access to jobs, lifestyle amenities, education and other services.

August 5, 2019

ANDREW PESCE. Explaining Gap Fees and their impact. What you knew and what you may not know Part 1.

There has been recent public and media focus on out of pocket (OOP) costs for Australians receiving health care, usually referred to as Gap fees. Minister Hunt recently announced his intention to establish a Website to publish doctors fees. This reflects and maintains the public focus on gap fees charged by doctors. This is indeed an important issue, for it may be a significant impediment to equitable access to necessary health care, a principle strongly endorsed by Australians.

June 19, 2018

GARRY EVERETT. The Catholic Church at the crossroads.

The cross has long been a radical and confronting symbol among religious groups. In a similar way, at the crossroads of life, we are challenged by choices which will lead us to either good or ill. The Catholic Church in Australia has reached the crossroads and there is an urgency to the choices that must be made. The old ways have run their course and new ways must be found.

December 10, 2018

SAMANTHA MAIDEN. Tanya Plibersek backs Shortens boat turn-back policy in major backflip (The New Daily, 11.12.18)

Deputy Labor leader Tanya Plibersek has backed boat turn backs but pledged a Shorten governmentwould get people off Manus and Nauru and boost Australias refugee intake.

April 11, 2017

RICHARD WOOLCOTT. The importance of better security and trade policies.

The relationship between the United States and China is now the most decisive bilateral relationship in the world. It works on two levels, one public and one private.

August 13, 2019

American missiles in Darwin?

While in Australia last week for the annual Australia-US Ministerial Consultations (AUSMIN), U.S. Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, twice hinted at the possibility of Australia becoming host to American missiles pointed at China. Although Prime Minister Scott Morrison attempted to “rule a line” under the idea, it is unlikely to be the end of the story.

August 7, 2018

GEOFF MILLER. Trumps unilateral use of economic power: will it work, and what about the consequences?

Trumps actual and threatened use of the United States economic power to bring about changes in other States behaviour raises questions about the utility of such behaviour and its likely consequences, as well as about the United States commitment to multi-lateral institutions.

April 23, 2018

ALEX WODAK. Why is the drug policy debate in Australia stuck?

Drug policy in Australia has been debated for decades but doesnt seem to be getting close to resolution.However some progress is being made. Examples include the Victorian government’s decision in 2017 to establish a Medically Supervised Injecting Centre in Melbourne and the ACT government’s in principle decision in 2017 to allow a trial of pill testing. Social policy reform is always slow. The drug policy debatehas some particular characteristics that make it especially difficult.

June 25, 2017

ROBYN SAMPSON. Ending child immigration detention is just a matter of time.


Momentum is growing around the world to end child immigration detention. All major human rights experts now agree that immigration detention is a child rights violation. Meanwhile, more and more countries are passing laws that prohibit child immigration detention.

August 16, 2021

Afghanistan is a warning for all US allies

As an ally of the US Australia should be reflecting deeply on Americas third major postwar strategic fiasco. The US military has brought overwhelming military power and technological sophistication to major defeats in Vietnam, Iraq, and now Afghanistan. In each, the allies have been let down or suffered.

October 23, 2017

JERRY ROBERTS. Where were our politicians when the Rio Man bad-mouthed our country?

While Rio Tinto and former chief executive Tom Albanese deny fraud charges brought by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, critics in our hemisphere are asking what is going on in the Australian Securities and Investments Commission. A more important question is what happened to our politicians in 2010 when Albanese insulted our nation.

April 7, 2019

MICHAEL KEATING. The Budget: Part 1

 

The Budget provides the opportunity for the Government and the Opposition to outline their respective economic strategies and their relative priorities. Interestingly, while there are significant differences between the two major political parties, there are also important similarities; probably reflecting the economic constraints which both parties have had to work within.

November 21, 2017

RICHARD BUTLER. Making the use of nuclear weapons thinkable again?

The Trump Administration is preparing a new Nuclear Posture Review, (NPR) to be completed by early 2018. The instruction under which it is proceeding is to make US nuclear weapons more useable, in a variety of situations. It is being preceded by a massive program of new nuclear weapons development. Russia is also embarked on a similar program of expansion of its nuclear weapons capability. It seems that these weapons are being designed to be used more widely, not simply to serve as a deterrent force.

August 22, 2018

LESLEY BARCLAY, HANNAH DAHLEN, NIGEL LEE. Australia is breaking records for intervention in childbirth, and the costs are many.

Variation in rates of obstetric intervention, including caesarean section, were recently cited by the Grattan Institutes Dr Stephen Duckett when suggesting that a new Code of Conduct for doctors should include a focus on over-intervention.

In the article below, Emeritus Professor Lesley Barclay AO, Professor Hannah Dahlen and Dr Nigel Lee argue that concerted efforts to reduce caesarean section rates in Australia would bring benefits for women, babies and those who fund health services.

August 6, 2018

FRANK BRENNAN. A planet to heal (Hiroshima Remembrance Ecumenical Service, Adamstown Uniting Church, Newcastle, 5 August 2018).

I join with you in acknowledging the traditional owners of the land on which we meet. This weekend at the 20th Garma Festival held on Yolgnu lands in Arnhem Land, the acclaimed Tasmanian author Richard Flanagan spoke. Having disclosed his own potential Indigenous heritage for the first time, he told the audience:

November 16, 2017

RICHARD BUTLER. Eat Your Heart out Marco Polo

They say in the history of people coming to China, theres been nothing like that. And I believe it President Donald Trump speaking about his Asian travels, to journalists on Airforce One, en route to Hanoi.

October 10, 2017

ARTHUR STOCKWIN. Developments in Japan including threats to press freedom

Most international attention on East Asia today is sharply focused on North Koreas nuclear and missile developments. But this does not mean that we can neglect the significant developments taking place in Japans domestic political landscape. Since winning the December 2012 elections, Prime Minister Shinzo Abes government has maintained a commanding majority in the national Diet, and Abe himself is sometimes called all-powerful Abe.

June 6, 2019

ABUL RIZVI: Chaos in our Visa System Continues

New Shadow Minister for Home Affairs, Kristina Keneally and Shadow Immigration Minister have signalled they intend to hold the Government to account for the chaos in our visa system. This article updates some of the data on that chaos which confirms Home Affairs continues to struggle. The Departments funding over the next few years, together with its plans for visa privatisation, suggest the Government has no effective method for regaining control over our air borders.

August 31, 2018

GARRY WILLS. The Priesthood of The Big Crazy (The New York Review of Books, 23.08.18)

The grand jury report of Catholic priests predations in Pennsylvania is enough to make one vomit. The terrifying fact that hundreds of priests were preying upon over a thousand victims in that state alone makes one shudder at the thought of how many hundreds and thousands of abusers there are elsewhere in the nation, elsewhere in the world. It is time to stop waiting for more reports to accumulate, hoping that something will finally be done about this. Done by whom? By the church? If the church is taken to mean the pope and bishops, nothing will come of nothing. They are as a body incapable of making sense of anything sexual.

June 29, 2018

ERIC HODGENS. Storms and Synods.

The Catholic Church is facing a perfect storm. How well will an Australian National Synod deal with it?

June 18, 2017

JUSUF WANANDI. Tribute to ambassador Richard Woolcott

Jusuf Wanandi pays tribute to Dick Woolcott, former Ambassador to Indonesia and Secretary of the Department of FOreign Affairs and Trade, on his 90th birthday. Throughout his long career Woolcott has been a friend to Indonesia.

July 14, 2020

'Palace letters' reveal the palace's fingerprints on the dismissal of the Whitlam government (The Conversation 15.7.2020)

_The palace letters show the Australian Constitutions susceptibility to self-interested behaviour by individual vice-regal representatives. They also reveal the vulnerability of Australian governments to secret destabilisation by proxy by the Crown.

July 17, 2019

The crisis in Private Health Insurance arrangements in Australia is a symptom of our public health failures.

Australias private health insurance (PHI) industry fears it is in a death spiral, and politicians need to rethink whether or to what extent taxpayers should continue to subsidise the industry the Grattan Institute tells us as they call for a review of the purpose of PHI in Australia. The Grattan report emphasises what is already widely appreciated that, Australians are increasingly dissatisfied with private health insurance, and policy reform is urgent. Premiums are rising much faster than wages or inflation. People are dropping their cover, especially the young and the healthy. Those who are left are more likely to get sick and go to hospital, driving insurance costs up further.However any review of PHI should start with an analysis of the failure in our efforts to have a public health system providing timely quality health care to all on the basis of need rather than financial wellbeing. PHI arrangements are symptoms of this failure.

July 17, 2019

GEOFF RABY. The Problem with Chinas Soft Power: It doesnt have any( AFR 17 July 2017)

Last week the US Pace Gallery announced it was closing its flagship contemporary art gallery in the famous 798 art space and expanding at home. Also last week, police squads and bulldozers moved in to demolish several more of Beijings spontaneously formed art villages.

April 12, 2018

Substituting question marks for exclamation marks

Fake news seems unavoidably associated with Donald Trump. He insists on casting himself as the victim of fake news even as any resemblance between his compulsive tweeting and facts seems largely coincidental. Still, it seems a pity that the rumours proved false of the Pentagon having increased the nuclear launch codes to more than 150 characters in order to stop the president from tweeting them.

April 29, 2018

GEOFF RABY. The current mess in Australia/China relations

The Australia/China relationship is at its lowest point since the bloody crackdown in Tiananmen Square on 4 June 1989 which provoked western sanctions against China. Arguably, it is even worse now. Back then the Chinese Government was bending over backwards to entice ministerial-level visits from Australia. Today the Chinese Government is telling our Ministers not to bother applying.

June 23, 2019

RICHARD WOOLCOTT. If the US treats China like an enemy, then it will become one.

It is time for Australia to accept the reality of the rise of China and a resurgence of Russia.

April 15, 2019

BOB CARR. Australians with Chinese origins need to come together.

A new burst of messaging on China Panic has been unleashed by Four Corners and newspapers, again giving the impression that hostile forces are threatening Australia. Last month former Australian foreign minister Gareth Evans noted a new form of Sinophobia is emerging. He said this is one of the reasons Chinese-Australians are underrepresented in senior leadership. <!--more-->
Sometimes there have been legitimate concerns lying beneath the surface of China Panics. I have not criticised the Australian government for banning foreign campaign donations or requiring representatives of foreign governments to register. On Huawei, I am neutral. Who knows what evidence was considered by the National Security Committee of Cabinet to justify the ban on the worlds biggest telco as supplier of 5G equipment?
But, as Evans says, a lot of the publicity has been conflated, even tinged with racism. Take the following examples:
In 2017 former China correspondent for Fairfax John Garnaut alleged that China was exporting racial chauvinism to our universities. This generated a raft of headlines and bought warnings from then-foreign minister Julie Bishop to Chinese students. But a careful survey by James Laurenceson of the Australia-China Relations Institute (ACRI) at UTS of media stories on the subject showed that, with about 130,000 Chinese students in Australia, there were a mere four incidents. And in not a single case was freedom of expression compromised or classroom discussion stifled.
China-panic media stories focus on large campaign donations to Australian political parties by Chinese businessman Huang Xiangmo. But, out of the 300 companies in the Australia-China Chamber of Commerce, none donates to political parties, and this includes investors in mining, airlines, banks and food. There is in fact no pattern of donations from China swamping political parties.
A leak that may have come from ASIO suggested that Chinese-Australians standing in local government elections represented security threats because they may have belonged to an organisation called the Australian Council for the Promotion of Peaceful Reunification of China. In fact, none of the candidates mentioned has ever been associated with agitation or lobbying on issues of concern to Beijing such as South China Sea, Taiwan or Tibet.
One of the worst examples of anti-China prejudice comes from the book written by a professor of public ethics, Clive Hamilton, calledSilent Invasion, published in early 2018. On pages 280-281 Hamilton wrote that up to 40 percent of the Chinese in Australia are disloyal. Specifically, he said that they are ready to take to the streets to express their loyalty to Beijing in other words, to Australias enemy.
Australias enemy? No Australian government since 1972 has used that kind of talk. Scott Morrison says his government isabsolutely committed to the long-term constructive partnership with China based on shared values, especially mutual respect.Bill Shorten says, Pre-emptively framing China as a strategic threat isnt a sufficient response to its role and increasing influence in our region
But Hamilton and his supporters like retired academic John Fitzgerald insist on seeing China as Australias enemy. See China as our enemy and the next step is that Australians with family links to China can be seen as potential traitors. That is what Hamilton does by saying they are ready to rise up.His only evidence? He says two friends of his with Chinese backgrounds told him.
Heres what should concern us all. When this book appeared last year no one in the Federal government rose to defend Australian-Chinese from this appalling smear. Nobody. The silence of the government perpetuated the suspicions that anti-China zealots were sowing. In particular this was a shameful abandonment of Malcolm Turnbulls duty as Prime Minister to defend any community of multicultural Australia being subject to unfair attacks based on racial or political prejudice.
Any country is entitled to introduce legislation to protect its sovereignty. But when he did so Turnbull parodied the comment popularly attributed to Chairman Mao, saying that with this legislation the Australian people stand up. It could easily be interpreted as finger pointing at China and Chinese people who have made Australia their home and given it their loyalties.
An ACRI publication,Australia talks China, made the point that Australian citizens born in China are less likely than most other migrant groups to push the foreign policy of the country of their birth. We allow Jewish Australians to make a case for Israel. We dont tarnish their loyalty. We allow Armenians, Turks, Tamils and Greeks and migrants from the former Yugoslavia the right to argue a case that favours the country of their origin. We dont call their loyalty to Australia into doubt.
Chinese-Australians have the same right. But theenergetic propaganda directed at them, and not rebutted by the Federal government, is feeding the prejudice of a small minority of Australians who still have old fashioned White Australia prejudices.
On March 11The Australianreported that the ABC had been forced to retreat from severe allegations made on itsFour Cornersprogram in June 2017. The program interviewed a Chinese student, Lu Lupin. She says she was horrified when she saw the broadcast. She alleged that the ABC story had been recklessly indifferent to the truth and severely injured her reputation by slandering her as a Chinese spy. The ABC apparently accepted her complaint and reached an out of court settlement. But it never made public this agreement.
In February this year theSydney Morning Heraldlost a defamation action brought by Chinese-Australian businessperson Chau Chak Wing over explosive allegations made against him in October 2015 by theHeralds former China correspondent John Garnaut. The article linked him to a US bribery case. The judgement found in favour of Chau, noting that Garnauts article adopted a sneering and deprecating tone and used language that was imprecise and loose and sensational and hyperbolic.
Justice Wigney concluded that Garnaut had no rational or reasonable basis for his extraordinary, if not outlandish and paranoiac, statements or theories that Dr Chau may have [been] an agent of the Chinese State or an actual asset of the Chinese intelligence system.
Justice Wigney also noted Garnaut failures to take contemporaneous notes of his conversations with several people that he had relied on for his article.For a responsible journalist, taking notes of conversations with sources should be standard practice. Garnauts failure to do so led Justice Wigney to seriously doubt his credibility, and to question whether some of these conversations actually took place at all, or were fictitious additions by Garnaut to add a sheen of authority to his unsupported speculations: I am not persuaded that Mr Garnaut was being entirely truthful about those matters The likelihood is that Mr Garnauts evidence concerning that source was manufactured.
A Western Australian Labor MP, Pierre Yang, was savaged inThe Australianon December 6 last year because, the paper alleged, he had spent three months on a Chinese government vessel. This was enough to have him classed as a potential spy. But it emerges that Yang was serving as an Australian Army Reserve Captain. He had been mobilised by the Army to serve on the Chinese vessel in the international search for the missing Malaysian airplane MH370 because he was a fluent Mandarin speaker and could serve as liaison officer and linguist. No matter that he was performing duties as an exemplary citizen, his loyalty was impugned.
A similar smear was directed at a NSW Labor MP Ernest Wong in June 2018 in an article that appeared in theSydney Morning Heraldand claimed that security agencies believed Wong had been targeted by suspected Chinese government intelligence agents. The report emphasised hed done nothing wrong. Still the charge was impossible for Wong to rebut (how many MPs could say with certainty they havent been targeted by agents of a foreign government?) and is likely to have damaged his career.
The message is as Gareth Evans argues if you are of Chinese background your loyalty to Australia may be suspect.
I think Chinese-background citizens need to learn from Jewish citizens.
Faced with the poison of anti-Semitism Jews in America formed an Anti-Defamation League. The purpose of the league was to quickly reply to racist comments and to defend the Jewish community from those who attack it. Australians with Chinese origins need to come together to set up a similar body to give legal advice, to make defensive statements and educate the public about their community.
I was Premier of New South Wales for longer than anyone. I got to know the Chinese community and got to appreciate its loyalty to Australia and its democracy and cannot imagine Australia without them. They are not pushing a Communist Party agenda. Right now they feel uncomfortable with headlines that associate them with disloyalty.
And I will offer my advice and support when they are ready to set up an organisation to defend this proposition.
It should be an organisation without any links to Beijing or any obligation to defend Chinas system of government; an organisation, however, that will assert that migrants from China who do the right thing should not be subject to taunts and stereotypes and vilification.
With this, it might be said, Chinese migrants in Australia will stand up, just as Jewish migrants did in the United States.
Professor the Honourable Bob Carr is Director of the Australia-China Relations Institute at the University of Technology Sydney. He is a former foreign minister and the longest-serving Premier of NSW.
 
January 8, 2018

MUNGO MACCALLUM. Downer finally puts fishnet stockings behind him.

So here we go2018, the year of delivery.

Or was that 2017, or maybe 2016? No matter 2018 will be the year Malcolm Turnbulls government seizes the initiative, surging forward to cement its underrated achievements to take control of politics and the economy.

February 23, 2015

The frontier wars - best we forget.

 

I have posted many blogs about our refusal to acknowledge the frontier wars, when we suffered the largest death toll in war in our history in relation to our population at the time. In the SMH on February 12, see link below, Tim Flannery draws our attention to the valour of 52 indigenous people who were killed near Casterton, Victoria, in the 1840s. The victors write history! These heroes have been largely expunged from our history. There were no rewards for those who were defending their homelands in the battle known as ‘Fighting Hills’. John Menadue

July 31, 2018

Greg Bailey. The IPA, Gina Rinehart and Transparency.

The Institute of Public Affairs and Gina Rinehart seem to be inextricably connected. In the last two weeks it has been revealed she gave a donation to the IPA which amounted to half of their entire budget for two years. Yet the source of this donation was not revealed on the IPA web site. Given the IPAs influence on the present government, should it not be much more transparent in its revelation of those who in turn influence it?

December 7, 2016

WALTER HAMILTON. Education as a way of life

The OECD-endorsed rankings of educational proficiency recently released give the lie to those in Australia who attribute outcomes solely to levels of spending. Throwing more money at the Education Establishment will not automatically produce smarter students.

December 8, 2014

Jock Collins. Australia's shift from settler to temporary migration nation.

Immigration is a political hot potato. On the day the OECD published its latest annual survey of global migration, Swiss voters rejected a referendum to reduce annual migration numbers.

A few days earlier, yet another UN committee criticised Australias asylum seeker policies. Meanwhile, British Prime Minister David Cameron announced plans to reduce annual immigration from 260,000 to below 100,000 per year in response to the UK Independence Party (UKIP) securing its second parliamentary seat. And on November 20, US President Barack Obama announced his intention to permit millions of resident undocumented migrants access to permanent residence.

November 19, 2018

MIKE SCRAFTON. The Geopolitics of Lombrum Naval Base

It is difficult to find a strong, rational strategic argument for Australias to return to Lombrum Naval Base (or HMPNGS Tarangau) on Manus Island. Of course, not all of Defences activities have strictly military objectives or relate directly to the defence of Australia and in the Southwest Pacific Defence cooperation has been a major component of foreign policy and diplomacy. But even in that context an Australian naval presence at Manus Island makes little sense. The somewhat vague US decision to contribute to developing the base is even more obscure.

September 20, 2018

KATHARINE MURPHY. AMA president calls for urgent transfer of refugee families from Nauru.

Exclusive: Tony Bartone writes to Scott Morrison saying situation is a humanitarian emergency requiring urgent intervention.

December 4, 2017

JOHN DWYER: When will we seriously tackle the Inequity associated with the delivery of health services to rural and remote Australians? Part 2 of 2.

Health outcomes for Australians living in rural or what are characterised as remote areas are far inferior to those of their city cousins. If you dont live in metropolitan Australia your life expectancy is reduced by about four years. You are four times more likely to die of a stroke. Rates of obesity, infant mortality, mental health disorders, and diabetes are all much higher than is the case for our urban population. There is nothing new here, we have known about these realities for decades as well as the strategies needed to address the problem. At least five major enquires have reached similar conclusions over the last decade yet hardly any of the recommendations have been implemented as needed policies are stymied by political wrangling and incompetence.This is particularly true for attempts to solve the biggest problem of all; the shortage of Australian trained doctors in the bush. (Part two)

June 13, 2015

Peter Hughes. The War on Australian Citizenship

Current Affairs

It’s hard to be sure when the “War on Terror” became the war on Australian citizenship.

I think it started in March 2014 when the Independent National Security Legislation Monitor was persuaded to recommend in his report[1] that the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection be given the power to revoke the Australian citizenship of dual citizens on national security grounds.

Even though the idea of dealing with Australian Jihadists by revoking their Australian citizenship has been around since then, there has not been a convincing sense of urgency or clarity about it as an effective solution. The Prime Minister announced the governments commitment to implement the idea in February 2015 and announced it again last week, but no legislation has yet been introduced into Parliament.

August 26, 2019

High Court should leave Pell alone. Theres no unresolved point of law, and no mere judicial disagreement on facts invites special leave

George Pell will be doing very well if he succeeds in getting the High Court to grant him leave to appeal after the Victorian Court of Appeal threw out his appeal against his conviction for child sex offences. Pell was convicted by a well- instructed jury; neither side had the slightest complaint about the judges instruction to the jury.

October 16, 2018

Will behaving like the 51st state of the United States win Wentworth for the Liberals?

Prime Minister Morrison has been channeling Donald Trump for the Wentworth by-election, on two key policies and in his handling of the truth of important matters.

April 8, 2019

MUNGO MACCALLUM. Sick of Morrison's shilly-shallying

A somewhat exasperated Bill Shorten accuses Scott Morrison of playing games over the election date and so he is.

December 12, 2017

MICHAEL KEATING. The Productivity Commission on more effective government. Part 1 of 2.

This article, the first of two which discuss the Productivity Commissions recommendations for more effective government, focuses on how to improve Commonwealth-State relations, and fiscal disciplines and accountability. The conclusion is that the Commissions recommendations are for the most part disappointing. They fail to take account of the practical difficulties in better matching taxable capacity with expenditure responsibilities, and the extent to which governments are already held to account for achieving budget targets.

June 15, 2018

ANDREW HAMILTON. Triggs champions common compassion (Eureka Street 12/6/2018)

_Common compassion is an aspiration more widely praised as a gift of Western Civilisation than accepted and practiced. But once government trash it with impunity we are all the losers.

September 27, 2018

JOCELYN PIXLEY. Emma Albericis data was inconvenient for corporate tax cutters.

Times are dangerous for the ABC, at least to those who appreciate fair, independent journalism. My example is Emma Albericis report on corporate tax cuts, which was stating what is well-known across the OECD for years. In addition, taxes are no charity.

May 12, 2019

JOHN MENADUE. A Repost: The facts on boat arrivals that the media wont face.

From September 2015, almost four years ago, Peter Hughes and I have pointed out repeatedly that Tony Abbott and Scott Morrison triggered the surge in boat arrivals from September 2011 and did not stop the boats as they claim from December 2013 when Operation Sovereign Borders commenced.

July 9, 2018

ROSS GITTINS. Clever tax strategies may be legal, but they aren't productive (SMH 9/7/2018)

_The developed worlds economists have been racking their brains for explanations of the rich countries protracted period of weak improvement in the productivity of labour. Ive thought of one that hasnt had much attention.

September 22, 2019

DAVID SHEARMAN. Climate change diplomacy, one big step for humanity

As fire, flood and drought ravage swathes of the Earth, communities around the world are realising that climate change is accelerating and climate emergencies are declared. Many governments fail to act and quibble about fulfilling the meagre responsibilities of the Paris agreement. Some others seek to pressure the recalcitrants. This might be called climate diplomacy but it could include the twisting of arms if necessary.

August 31, 2018

ALESSANDRO DEMAIO. An evidence-based five-point plan to tackle child obesity in Australia.

Few challenges are a greater threat to the health of Australians than obesity. Weight gain has now become the normthe biological and social path of least resistance. Within a decade and without significant government intervention, more Australians are expected to be obese than normal weight. Opportunities to stem the tide of obesity do exist we have the evidence and largely we know what to do. Here is an evidence-based five-point policy plan, a lifeSPANS approach, that focuses on our kids to move the health agenda forward.

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