Tuesday 30th of April 2024

Blogs

too much water in the beer...

civility

The University of Arizona — whose Tucson campus President Obama used for his nationwide address on civility after the shooting of Representative Gabrielle Giffords last month — will announce on Monday that it is establishing an institute to promote compromise among opposing political parties and views, the organization’s director said on Sunday.

in the backroom, at steptoe and son...

stepfox & son

On a night in late January when he should have been in the Swiss village of Davos, James Murdoch went to dinner here with his father, Rupert, and several journalists from The Sun, the tabloid that the Murdochs have owned since 1969.

In the private room at Wheeler’s of St. James’s, father and son politely argued about the lesser of the public controversies swirling around the Murdoch empire: the firing of Andy Gray, the chief soccer pundit for their Sky Sports network, for making sexist comments.

“Can we stop firing people for making a joke?” Rupert Murdoch asked.

no coaching please...

coaching

Abbott faces battle telling NSW Liberals what to do

PHILLIP COOREY

Tony Abbott will have no quibble with a finding in part two of Labor's post-election review, the unreleased section that deals with the election campaign.

In the words of a member of the ALP national executive who read the review on Friday, a key reason Labor fell over the line on August 21 last year was because the NSW division of the Liberal Party ''fluffed it''.

http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/abbott-faces-battle-telling-nsw-liberals-what-to-do-20110220-1b0xr.html

review 2010 .....

rearranging the deckchairs .....

After speaking with many hundreds of Party members and supporters today we released the 2010 ALP National Review Report.

Review 2010 was the largest in the history of the party thanks to the participation of members like yourselves who contributed online, through a formal submission or at one of the consultation forums.

What is clear is that members and supporter are passionate about our great Party, but very concerned about its future.

That is why the Review Report recommends significant changes in Labor's organisation including:

we should all be egyptian .....

we should all be egyptian .....

Did you hear about the uprising?

Not the one in Tunisia, or Egypt.

No, not the one in Libya, though what has been happening there is certainly riveting. Thousands of protesters took to the streets in several cities, defying the forty-year rule of Muammar el-Qaddafi under threat of death.

Not the similar one in Bahrain, where several died and many more were injured.

Not the similar one in Yemen, which has been going on for more than seven days.

come the day .....

come the day .....

Scott Morrison, the Liberal frontbencher who this week distinguished himself as the greatest grub in the federal Parliament, is the classic case of the politician who is so immersed in the game of politics that he has lost touch with the real world outside it.

This week it was race. Morrison decided to see if he could win some political points by inflaming racism and resentment. More specifically, he zeroed in on some of the most vulnerable people in the country for political advantage. Indeed, is there anyone more vulnerable than a traumatised, orphaned child unable to speak English, held in detention on a remote island?

beware the spin doctors .....

beware the spin doctors .....

from Crikey .....

Former NRMA director: insurance industry hiring "a conga line of spin doctors"

Crikey senior journalist Andrew Crook writes:

his master's voice .....

his master's voice .....

from Crikey .....

Hockey stands aside from Islamophobia campaign - and where was Labor?

Crikey Canberra correspondent Bernard Keane writes:

joe and the heartless...

joe and the heartless...

... when asked if he was comfortable with the Government's decision, Mr Hockey said he understood why asylum seekers would want to attend.

"I would never seek to deny a parent or a child from saying goodbye to their relative."

"No matter what the colour of your skin, no matter what the nature of your faith, if your child has died or a father has died, you want to be there for the ceremony to say goodbye," Mr Hockey told reporters in Sydney.

"I totally understand the importance of this to those families.

another secret police .....

another secret police .....

This column is about lawlessness, and what your government is doing in your name. Or, more accurately, how it's spending your money while dodging the oversight of Parliament in direct contravention of the law.

It is about the High Court challenge to the National School Chaplaincy Program and the reason why - whatever you think of school chaplains, love or hate 'em - you should be hoping the challenge succeeds. Any Australian who cares about the primacy of the law over the electoral fortunes of the political party in power should.

the more things change .....

the more things change .....

Hosni Mubarak ceded power to the Egyptian military as a popular revolt swept away the leader of the Arab world's most populous state, throwing into question the future course of a reliable US ally in the Middle East.

Egyptians, who only hours earlier shouted anger that Mubarak was clinging to power, celebrated through the night in Cairo and other cities after an announcement that Mubarak had resigned, bowing to the demands of protesters who had occupied central Cairo for 18 days. In downtown's Mubarak subway station, revelers crossed out his name, replacing it with "Martyrs' Station."

keeping us safe .....

keeping us safe .....

When shit happens to Tony Abbott, as it has a lot lately, his first instinct is to run to the loving embrace of Alan Jones, the venerable broadcaster. So it was on Wednesday morning, after that now famous encounter on Seven News the night before. As ever, it was the Great Man - Jones, that is - who did most of the talking. ''If I could perhaps amplify and you might then just comment ...'' he began helpfully.

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