Keep your heads down, folks. Prepare yourself for the ghastly din of the ABC engaging in impassioned discourse with itself. It could go on for months.
Let’s not be too harsh. Remember, one man’s narcissism is another man’s yearning for self-concept. And it does make a nice change from the federal government talking endlessly about itself. The Morrison government is quite pleased to have the topic of the national conversation moved along.
At the same time, Morrison and the gang will be keen not to dig too deeply into the ABC morass as there is the considerable chance of a political back splash.
The allegations are serious and involve the former prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull, allegedly throwing his weight around in calls to the ABC Chairman, Justin Milne and again, allegedly, calling for the summary dismissal of two ABC journalists.
Malcolm Turnbull has denied he issued instructions for any journalist to be sacked. Milne, in turn, has said he was never asked to hire or fire.
All I’ll say is the English language is a wondrous thing and people who are known to use it well, like lawyers for example, are quite capable of saying one thing while meaning another.
The only way to get to the bottom of this is a judicial inquiry where evidence is given under oath. Just between you and me and the gate post, that will not be happening as there is considerable downside for the Morrison government with the possibility of it becoming involved in a scandal it cannot control.
Aware of the political risks, the Morrison government thinks it better to summon up the memory of a dozen Yes, Minister episodes and launch a departmental inquiry where the findings are almost certainly known in advance and a press statement of the “It is a deep and abiding mystery. Let us never speak of this again” kind is released around 5.30pm on a Friday.
But wait, Labor and the Greens have called for a Senate inquiry. We shouldn’t get our hopes up there either. The Senate, collectively, could not find their own arses with a sextant and a well-thumbed copy of Gray’s Anatomy.
Ultimately, we will never know the extent of the Turnbull government’s interference into the running of the ABC. Perhaps those who do not think kindly of the ABC will say this does not matter but it does. The ABC is a public broadcaster, not a state one. It is owned by you and by me, not the government of the day.
I seek to add some further evidence. It is circumstantial, certainly, but it speaks of an often irate prime minister who has made his displeasure known to a number of institutions, private and public, over the telephone and immediately after those calls, people have been given their marching orders.
On Anzac Day, 2015 an SBS sports reporter, Scott McIntrye, tweeted up some truly awful remarks regarding Australia’s involvement in World War One. Some of the worst of it if was directed at Australian servicemen from that appalling conflict, all now deceased.
The controversy quickly spiralled into a debate around free-speech and the limits around using employer-linked twitter accounts to express personal views.
Back when he was a mere minister for communications, Malcolm Turnbull publicly condemned Mr McIntyre’s comments describing them as “despicable remarks which deserved to be condemned.”
It’s impossible to disagree with Turnbull’s comments but his intervention went further. Turnbull then discussed McIntyre’s tweets directly with the broadcaster’s managing director Michael Ebeid in a late-night phone call on the very same day.
McIntyre was sacked the following morning. Both SBS and Mr Turnbull denied the Minister had directed SBS to take any action in relation to McIntyre’s employment.
Then there was a telephone call Turnbull as Prime Minister made to Cricket Australia Chairman, David Peever, in the immediate aftermath of the ball tampering brouhaha. The contents of what was later described as a “frank discussion” were not disclosed but Test captain, Steve Smith and his vice-captain, David Warner, both ‘agreed’ to stand down from their leadership positions that very same day, right in the middle of the match, pending further action from Cricket Australia. Australia was captained by Tim Paine in days four and five of the Third Test in Johannesburg.
“We all woke up this morning shocked and bitterly disappointed by the news from South Africa,” Turnbull said.
“It seemed completely beyond the belief, that the Australian cricket team had been involved in cheating. After all, our cricketers are role models. And cricket is synonymous with fair play. How can our team be involved in cheating like this? It beggars belief.”
“(David Peever) has said to me that Cricket Australia will be responding decisively, as they should.”
I’d like to think Cricket Australia’s response to a call of this kind would have been, “Malcolm, if we need you to pop the pads on and bat at four for Australia, we’ll let you know. Don’t call us et cetera etc.”
As a rule of thumb, Cricket Australia should not be copping lectures on ethics from politicians for rather obvious reasons.
Remember the FIFA World Cup when the Optus streaming service collapsed? Turnbull jumped in then, too.
“I had a call with Allen Lew, with Optus, to seek his assurance that the failures in the streaming service have been rectified,” Turnbull said.
Did he think he could solve a complex technical problem by sheer weight of a telephone call? Apparently, Turnbull thought so but Optus put the white flag up a day later and handed its exclusive coverage of the tournament over to SBS.
No one was sacked on this occasion or at least not publicly but at the time it stood as an odd form of intervention by the then prime minister. One has to wonder whether this was a sound use of his time. Perhaps Turnbull, uncertain of his authority within his own parliamentary party, felt he had to impose it elsewhere.
Sadly, we will never get to the bottom of this. The political stakes are too high. I am sure Malcolm Turnbull would welcome the opportunity to set the record straight under oath because as it stands there is abundant evidence of a tendency to engage in matters where he did not belong.
This column was published in The Australian 28 September, 2018
A light laugh here from the late great George Carlin, Mr. Insider and the skit about Politicians being dishonest and here in Australia we have seen truckloads of that!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IGMc9g8eK0I
This isn’t going to bode well for electricity Bill trying to sell his negative gearing policy. Add this a credit squeeze due to the banks playing square up re the Royal Commission and things could get very interesting. I wouldn’t write Morrison off yet……
What’s this nonsense in having a go at the roosters because they may not have been transparent re his ability to play. The players aren’t horses and that’s just old fashioned gamesmanship. Suck it up storm supporters, whose team btw, don’t like it up ’em and got all antsy and dirty near the end. What I also didn’t like was the embarrassing bullshit go slow by the roosters at the death – no need.
Barassi should also keep quite about one refereeing decision. There were many decisions made throughout the game. most right and perhaps a handful wrong or 50/50 and not one of them in themselves were game changers. Stop it Ron, you’re emBARASSIng yourself and diminishing a great game and eagle’s victory.
Stephen Colbert on Brett Kavanaugh, Mr. Insider who, who innocent or guilty doesn’t seem to handle pressure too well.
How this will pan out who knows.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x6Ng298HXcM
And the blind ideology continues to strip this nation of jobs and a secure future.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/climate/foreigners-scoop-renewable-energy-windfalls/news-story/115f0e2470518f58eb0c3571c51e4bd3
Unintended consequence – BBQ sales will go up in smoke.
There have been over 6000 jobs created in QLD in the lat 12 months on Renewable projects and as many to come in the next 12 months and for the next decade on latest data on expected projects in QLD. The Vic. projects will add more than another 6000 jobs in the next 12 months. SA has had close to 3000 jobs created in the last 12 months on Renewables projects with the same expected for the next 2 years and onwards. I did not see you complaining about the mega LNG projects over the last 5 years built by foreign multi nationals who received huge subsidies and concessions, pay NO tax in Australia and imported over 5000 workers on one project alone in Darwin due to special deals done by the abbott government. Not to mention creating the increasing power prices because the companies Lied about how much gas they had and have scooped up all the third party gas on the market. You supported the coalitions company tax cuts, over 65% of the benefits of those would go to foreign investors. Enough with your Hysterical overreactions to everything Puhleease. The latest report form the AEMO shows South Australia has the most Stable grid of all NEM states. The Hornsdale big battery has kicked to smooth out the grid multiple times as the coal fired power stations have gone offline unexpectedly over 100 times since last summer. AS it did when QLD and NSW were knocked out by lightening strikes a couple of weeks ago.
99% of all blackouts are Transmission related not generation. The only thing stopping Australia from having a secure future is the conservative coalition and its ignorant hysterical supporters.
Driest September ever recorded in Australia.
And a cold one on the eastern seaboard….and about to get all of October’s rain in four days! That’ll make up for September numb nuts.
you continue to highlight your own ignorance razor. The season is running at 1.2 degrees above long term average on the east coast. Rainfall in South Eastern Australia has dropped 30% in the last 30 years. You come in abusing others and no doubt you will now claim to be a victim because facts offend your delicate Histrionic Personality Disorder. No surprises. Even the 3rd generation cockies in W QLD are saying Climate Change is real caused by man and the droughts are longer and hotter than ever.
HPD, pfft! From a chap whose posts are regularly riddled with theatrically melodramatic comments. You’re a funny fellow Dismayed.
And the BoM reports invariably have a disclaimer, as under.
“This statement has been prepared based on information available at 12 noon EST on Monday 1 October 2018. Some checks have been made on the data, but it is possible that results will change as new information becomes available, especially for rainfall where much more data becomes available as returns are received from volunteers.”
And you are going to read volumes into that of course.
But of course JB, but of course. I’m always searching for the bright side. Unlike yourself who appears to be regularly reading scenarios of doom, gloom and mayhem into such matters, as well as seemingly deriving a touch of self satisfied glee in the process me old mate.
Well I’m quite balanced then. Doom, gloom and glee.
You can search for the “bright side” all you like Carl, but if you cant see that we are well f*********d, then ignorance whether wilful or foolish is demonstrably bliss.
This is bliss me old mate.
NASA researcher: Antarctica still GAINING ice – cfact
http://www.cfact.org › All Posts
Ah yes. Here we go again.
https://www.skepticalscience.com/arctic-antarctic-sea-ice.htm
So now we can’t have a steak!
Nobody can tell me there is not an agenda here.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/climate/less-meat-coal-key-to-a-cooler-planet/news-story/345d0207d6e0312f4cd1d5eef54a13ee
Oh another conspiracy. You are the poster Child for “when you are accustomed to privilege equality feels like oppression”. It has been known for decades now the meat industry releases huge amounts of methane and the land use and fodder are also less efficient than other means of food production.. There is no agenda no conspiracy. On health aspects alone it is logical to eat less meat. Less of something is not none.
What we are seeing is that conservative seem more prone to Histrionic Personality Disorder daily.
Obviously there is an agenda. It is to cut Greenhouse Gas emissions. Don’t panic Razor, read the article.
The climate change impacts of our food system is astonishing mate & it’s a good thing to see it being given the attention it has to have in the media. An imbalanced diet high in red and processed meat but low in fruit & vegetables is responsible for the biggest health burden anyway.
For your body & the planet it’s wise to eat less red meat.
Hey mate, enjoy your trip out on the reef while it’s still alive (somewhat).
Oh BTW please try to release any sharks you may catch as our species already kills well over 200 million of them every year with many types vulnerable to extinction.
Regards, Bella
We don’t take sharks at all Bella and are a catch & release crew other than, on average, half a dozen fish each at the end of the trip. As for the frames another bloke and myself keep for fish stock. We use everything.
Good man Razor. 💚
Straw man argument. The emphasis is on eating less meat (and by definition enjoying it more) in order to reduce the carbon footprint. Ive eaten plenty of crap steaks in my life to approach them with caution.
Being a kiwi it doesn’t surprise me you can’t find a good steak. Stick to mutton……Enzed will be broke again within 5 years so a good old fashioned boil up will be a treat!
Taranaki has more beef cattle per capita than texas. as usual razor you have no fn clue. No surprises.
That’s suss. There’s so many dairy cattle in the ‘Naki, there isn’t room for that many beefers.
Sorry Razor, but we can only get NZ beef and lamb when we are in SE Asia and they are far superior to Australia’s beef and lamb….obviously I never ask for the NZ products when I am here.
You do seem to have a particular beef about NZ and New Zealanders in general though, just saying.
NZ export lamb would have to be one of the best meat dishes in the world Penny.
They are also zealous withe their labeling – lamb means lamb which is less than 12 months old and then they move into hogget and then mutton.
In OZ, a lamb is 2 years or less.
The kiwis have recently changed their definition though.
I recall getting nz lamb when we lived in Edinburgh and there seemed to be no shortage of sheep in that part of the world. Also remember seeing it in a grocery story in Malacca and wondering why oz hasn’t got their product over there.
It is very good but they were very thinly cut chops. We certainly couldn’t afford a lamb roast over in the UK.
Agree JS, we did have a very good leg of lamb which we bought in Waikerie in Sout Australia, the rest were very ordinary. I had to laugh in Darwin where the butcher charged $4.00 more per kilo for salt-bush fed lamb. When we lived in Morocco that was all the sheep and goats ate….and it certainly was much cheaper.
I can’t believe how wanky some parts of Australia (read Sydney, Melbourne) are becoming about food. God just put it on the plate, I don’t want to eat unconstructed pavlova…
Yes, a lotta love goes into preparing the product.
The lowered brain functioning that is one of the symptoms of protein deficiency. They’re trying to level the playing field.
A couple on this blog are obviously not meat eaters Dwight 🙂
which “couple” is that JS I have not seen Burke and Hare here for ages.
If the cap fits ……
Hmmn, it’s not the meat then Dwight? Were you a boxer.
The most enviromentally economical method of converting sunlight to protein is an animal. A bovine (or 10 sheep) uses half a hectare (one acre near enough; a rugby league field not counting the in-goals) of decent pasture and produces (gains) about 150kg of edible protein per annum. Cropping produces about 1.5 tonnes of raw protein at harvest (soya bean figures) per acre per annum with recoverable protein of 15%, 225kg. The rest is water and cellulose. Next year the pasture will produce another 150kg of edible animal protein, but due to necessary crop rotation, the cropped paddock planted to soy beans this year will not produce any protein as it needs to be planted with another crop, usually a carbohydrate crop, wheat, barley etc. The following year the pasture will produce another 150kg of animal protein, but the cropped acre will produce nothing, as it must be left fallow to rest the soil.
Cropped acreage produces only half the amount of protein over the 3 year cycle as grazed acreage. Vegetarians require double the amount of farmed acreage that omnivores require. Vegetarians are eating us out of house an home. Further, if the planet cools, many crops won’t grow at all, and vegetarians will start starving in their millions and they’ll abandon their strange ways and we’ll have to start sharing meat with them or watch them starve to death. I prefer the latter. To preserve us as a species, do your bit and woof into a steak. And be sure to point out these verifiable agricultural facts to any vegetarians you meet.
You’re a bit hung up on protein aren’t you? Do you think you might have missed the point?
“To preserve us as a species, do your bit and woof into a steak.”
Or put pork on your fork.
cotc you claim to be some sort of adherent to delusions of the Abrahamic cults don’t you. I dont think you know much about anything other than to be the opposite and opposing view for the sake of it.
“And to every beast of the earth, and to every bird of the air, and to everything that creeps on the earth, everything that has the breath of life, I have given every green plant for food.” —Genesis 1:30” I got a plenty ore where this comes from.
yup
Still prefer roo for red meat, and no methane. Neat huh
IMO meat is delicious, so, leaving aside the bit about an alternate universe in which the planet cools, I did try to verify your “agricultural facts”. I’m afraid to say I was unsuccessful, although I admit I didn’t try InfoWars. I did, however, find this:
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2018/03/20/1713820115
TL;DR: “…plant-based replacement diets can produce 20-fold and twofold more nutritionally similar food per cropland than beef and eggs, the most and least resource-intensive animal categories, respectively”.
Try again JOH. Prepare yourself properly. LSD should be efficacious if you want to verify, it’s all in the interpretation.
There is plenty of land in Aus that could be used for either cropping or grazing, but there is also a helluva lot that is suitable for grazing but would be quite useless for cropping.
If there is one thing we have learned about food over the last thirty years, when governments and other busybodies start telling you what you should eat, ignore them as they will have it arse about nearly every time.
And the cotton farmers are doing very well Jack, pity about the amount of water they use.
Having said that we did an environmental walk through the mulga just outside Charleville a couple of months ago, it’s amazing the anount of shrubs, trees and of course the different types of bush grass that can be fed to cattle in times of drought. Sheep are the difficult ones to feed.
Not sure who I was discussing Richard de Crespigny (QF32) with in earlier blog?
Anyway went along to listen to him. As you said, businesslike, professional and interesting to listen to him talk – especially about PTSD and his description of its affects.
Also listened to Leigh Sales with Richard Fidler today. Great conversation. I had no idea of how ill she had been. Her book would be a good read too.
Richard de Crespigny a genius imho Boadicea. Heres a short clip where he tells of the failures onboard QF32 that day. Cheers
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LMaklkg90Po
Me
😊
Young Jack Edwards for the NSW Blues is having a pretty good start to the JTL series. Player of the future for sure. Darcy Short the other day? cant get a look in for the first 11? Would not put too much stock in the A game results in the UAE.
I pose the question to all, Mr. Insider, can Scott Morrison PM pull off a win in the seemingly lost next Federal Election?
From what I am seeing, had he and not Turnbull been PM a long time ago, his Government would be in a must better condition in the Polls.
Time will tell but I admire “pluck” and ScoMo has it in spades imho!
“much”
Yes…..bbbbbbuuuttt….he would have a snowflakes chance in hell against Albo. Morrison is carrying a LOT of baggage-massive debt, no policies, doubled wholesale electricity prices, ignoring the populace cry for action on climate change and renewable energy, no wage increases but plenty for the big end of town, instability within his own party, the torture of children, his objection to Royal Commissions on child abuse, banks and aged care….all called for by Labor which he and his party eventually were dragged to kicking and screaming. Political donations will be difficult too for Morrison’s mob. Big Business is already meeting with Labor to map their business strategies under a Labor government. This is not a good sign. Morrison will do what Downer suggested during a TV interview after his daughter missed out-SCARE EVERYBODY to DEATH!
If he differentiates his government from the Turnbull debacle. The signs are not good right now.
i watched a bit of Insiders and it now seems to be conventional wisdom that the Coalition was in a winning position before dumping Turnbull, but I have no recollection of this proposition being put at all
I agree and was going to comment on how it is passed off as fact that Turnbull was going to win. Abbott had 30 negative polls and everyone said he would lose an election and Turnbull used this as reason to axe him. Turnbull had about 38 negative polls and everyone was saying it was Shorten’s election to lose, at least on here (and by both coalition/labor leaners). As you’ve stated before, Jack, and it’s no secret, Turnbull was a hopeless, lazy and passionless campaigner and that what have gone in Shorten’s favour. Even in the Longman by-election he was pointing at and arguing with old folks and then going into a pub and queue jumping the locals. I’ve no doubt that Morrison would easily do a better job and has a lot more mongrel and hunger, and that won’t go in the charismatically challenged Shorten’s favour.
IMO Morrison has already had his little dead cat bounce. That blokesy-folksy schtick of his will get old fast. The pattern in recent years seems to be: the more they know you, the less they like you.
Yes, I’ve noticed that effect on Rudd and now Shorten. I mean fair suck of the sauce bottle.
You hate the folksy thing JOH. Some years ago you accused me of it. Is that because you can’t relate to ordinary people or as an old / new lawyer just trying to fit in……..
I find it a bit hard to relate to you too Razor, and I’m the first to admit you are very ordinary.
No, it’s because it’s fake.
I get along fine with most kinds of people, but I have noticed that cops usually only hang around with other cops.
And they wear their colours!
Actually my experience is quite the opposite. Most cops, outside of work, don’t ‘hang’ with other cops. It’s a way to keep sane.
Did you think that through?
That was certainly true of Rudd and Turnbull, but I believe that related to their personalities and behaviour.
Anecdotally, I can say the reverse applied to Julia Gillard. On quite a few occasions I was introduced to business or professional people who had met her and discussed policy with her as PM with the instruction tell Jack what you thought of the PM.
Every time the conversation was much the same, along the lines of I sat next to her in a meeting, she was efficient, very bright, warm, strong, occasionally quite funny, it was a pleasure to deal with her, and I couldn’t believe it was the same person I see on the tele.