SOMETHING IN THE AIR
If we greenlight the 30 coal and fuel export initiatives asking to proceed, Australia may have precipitated 22 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions, Guardian Australia studies, which is about 40% of worldwide annual emissions. Newsflash Vitality Minister Chris Bowen, says Greenpeace’s Shiva Gounden: all of us reside in the identical world, and exporting our fossil fuels continues to be going to hurt Australians. Vanuatu’s Local weather Change Minister Ralph Regenvanu says the federal government informed him lots of the initiatives wouldn’t go forward — I hope so, he provides. Sources Minister Madeleine King has stated earlier than that Australia has to maintain exporting, in any other case it’ll lose its voice within the area. Wait ’til she hears about how rather more we’ll lose if we don’t urgently act on local weather change — proper now, virtually all of Queensland is battling a storm supercell with flash flooding, The Courier-Mail ($) studies, whereas record-breaking rain has seen 12 individuals rescued from floods in NSW and Victoria, Guardian Australia says.
In the meantime King was pissed off after no less than seven Labor MPs snapped a photograph with environmentalists in Canberra who need Atmosphere Minister Tanya Plibersek to knock again two approvals from Woodside’s Burrup Hub venture. We’d like fuel to transition to renewables, King informed The West ($), and so do Japan and Korea. As for the endangered whales, turtles and 1000’s of coral species in Scott’s Reef? This comes as former Rural Fireplace Companies commissioner Greg Mullins informed The New Day by day we could face a Black Summer season-level bushfire season each two years, bringing smoke inhalation threats (40 deaths in 2019-20), heatwaves (which see a 12% enhance in deaths), and bushfires (33 individuals lifeless in 2019-20, in addition to greater than 1 billion animals). Some excellent news no less than from COP28 — a brand new fund that’ll assist poor nations with disasters, Reuters studies, with $100 million pledged by the UAE, $51 million from the UK, $17.5 million from the US, $10 million from Japan, and $245 million from the EU.
PRESSURE COOKERS
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has slammed the Coalition for sending abroad its largest delegation since Federation to a “cooker conference” (slang for a conspiracist with far-right views, The New Day by day quite helpfully explains). This may be the Alliance for Accountable Citizenship convention, the place John Howard stated he had all the time had hassle with multiculturalism, and Tony Abbott stated local weather change was implausible. (Guardian Australia notes Howard’s hardline insurance policies on asylum seekers occurred on the precise time as Australia was experiencing a “growth” in migration that bolstered our economic system.) Fifteen Coalition figures went to London to “bag multiculturalism and to bag local weather change”, Albanese stated.
In the meantime the states are badgering Albanese for no less than $5 billion in annual GST top-up funds to grow to be a everlasting factor, the AFR ($) studies, after the PM informed nationwide cupboard to fund the therapy of “early developmental issues and delicate autism”. There are greater than 200,000 Aussies with an autism spectrum situation, the ABC studies, which has elevated by 25% between 2015 and 2018 as consciousness has led to higher public understanding. The life expectancy of an autistic Australian is 20 to 36 years shorter than that of the overall inhabitants proper now — dismal. Treasurer Jim Chalmers is assembly the state and territory purses as we speak in regards to the Morrison-era funds, that are because of end in 2026-27 as a result of they have been imagined to price $6.7 billion, however at the moment are fives instances that at $33.9 billion.
BORDER TERRIERS
The 12 individuals who arrived in a distant a part of WA have been flown to Nauru inside 41 hours, in response to The Australian ($), the second since September after 11 individuals have been diverted at sea to the Pacific nation. It’s the primary time Nauru has been utilized in 9 years, the paper provides. Operation Sovereign Borders (OSB) has created 29 movies to this point to discourage individuals searching for asylum in South and South-East Asia from coming right here by boat, translated into 16 languages. “You’ll by no means settle in Australia,” a steely OSC commander Justin Jones says within the video. This comes as an Iranian who got here right here by boat and had been held for 10 years and not using a legal conviction (10 years!) has been launched, The Australian ($) studies. Yesterday a Federal Court docket decide discovered Ned Kelly Emeralds was “not lawfully detained and is entitled to be launched instantly”, however the authorities says it’s contemplating interesting. Emeralds stated yesterday he got here right here 10 years in the past to “search safety from torture in my nation, and as a substitute I used to be tortured”, having “no strategy to escape”.
In the meantime, our top-heavy navy is sort of a “satire”, the Greens’ David Shoebridge informed the ABC. For each star-ranked officer within the Australian Defence Drive, there are simply 260 personnel beneath them — evaluate that with the US the place there’s one for each 1,526 personnel, and the UK’s one for each 1,252 personnel. The variety of star-ranked officers has almost doubled in 20 years, whereas general troop numbers have dwindled, and stars don’t maintain Australia protected, Shoebridge says. By the way, the broadcaster notes, the chief of defence will get greater than $1 million a 12 months, whereas the US counterpart will get $329,304 and the UK counterpart $329,304.
ON A LIGHTER NOTE
Great information, of us — a large rat that may chew by coconuts is alive and effectively! Measuring 45 shuddering centimetres from nostril to tail, the Vangunu rat is definitely critically endangered and was feared misplaced eternally contemplating one had by no means been documented alive. However the Indigenous individuals on Vangunu, which is within the Solomon Islands, swore they scurried amongst them. So researchers from the College of Melbourne received along with counterparts on the Solomon Islands Nationwide College and informed locals within the village of Zaira we merely should see proof of the large horrifying rat, though we respect recognizing maybe the world’s rarest rodent is not any straightforward feat. One of many Aussie researchers had accomplished surveys for 5 years, laying digital camera traps, spotlights and looking out hole bushes. The rat had remained elusive.
Pffff, Zaira locals stated, go away it to us. Their exact directions to researchers about the place to set the cameras up proved lifeless on — over six months, the staff snapped no fewer than 95 pictures of rattus giantus. “The data is with the individuals. They’re the custodians of the native data,” one of many research’s authors stated. It seems the Vangunu rat has a extra delicate palate than they realised, as switching peanut butter (which works off quick) for sesame oil proved helpful for bringing them out too. The affirmation that the rat lives is nice information for Zaira locals as a result of they’ve been pushing for the federal government to guard their patch of forest — and this might actually strengthen their case, The New York Instances studies. Simply don’t go to mattress with out washing these dinner dishes, one would possibly suppose.
Hoping you’ll be able to see data in all types of locations, and have a restful weekend.
SAY WHAT?
We let convicted Australian criminals who’ve served their phrases again into the group on a regular basis, and there’s no argument for why foreigners with nowhere else to go ought to be handled in another way that isn’t deeply racist/dehumanising.
Rachel Withers
The Month-to-month journalist put it plainly after the federal government rushed by laws forcing ankle screens and 10pm-6am curfews on no less than 142 stateless detainees.
CRIKEY RECAP
Australia’s media: Simply one other company curiosity, one which leaks journalism as a byproduct
“Information Corp stays Information Corp — though its Center East protection, as soon as substantial and balanced below Chris Mitchell and John Lyons at The Australian, is now a unbroken screed of anti-Palestinian propaganda, a part of the 9/11-isation of the Hamas atrocities, designed to polarise, painting something lower than the annihilation of Palestinians as softness on terrorism, and thereby facilitating the very course of that may create extra radicalisation and extremism.
“And its free speech warriors, quelle shock, have been silent on — or supportive of — 9 gagging its journalists. Additionally quite quiet at Seven and Information Corp are the cheerleaders for Bruce Lehrmann and the relentless critics of Brittany Higgins as Lehrmann was dissected into small components by the Ten Community’s barrister in his defamation case.”
Lehrmann’s home of lies, Ben Roberts-Smith pays, and tv mourns Bridget Munro
“[Ben] Roberts-Smith has filed to attraction the choice to the complete bench of the Federal Court docket, set down for early subsequent 12 months. The struggle over prices within the case concluded this week, with an order from Justice Anthony Besanko that Roberts-Smith pay indemnity prices assessed from the start of proceedings, which date again to August 2018.
“[Journalist Chris] Masters has beforehand stated it took round $30 million to defend the case, though later estimates sit round $25 million. The courts have additionally made orders requiring Roberts-Smith to pay virtually $1 million in safety for prices earlier than his attraction.”
Neglect slamming them, we ought to be encouraging MPs and the media to do their analysis by taking organised journeys
“[Daanyal] Saeed and Crikey are seemingly drawing an assumption about these journeys to Israel — that it’s about undue affect. That is regarding … When Australian politicians go to Israel, some within the media see this as being influenced and taking sides. But when Australian and different politicians travelled to Ukraine, the media and public welcomed this as important in understanding the conflict and the disaster it introduced.
“…I labored for MPs who undertook paid journeys to communist international locations, together with Cuba (below Fidel Castro’s dictatorship), Vietnam and China. If there was an outcry from Crikey or others that communist forces try to affect Australia, I should have missed it.”
READ ALL ABOUT IT
Henry Kissinger: 10 conflicts, international locations that outline a blood-stained legacy (Al Jazeera)
Russian courtroom bans ‘LGBTQIA+ motion’ (BBC)
Nepal registers first same-sex marriage hailed as win for LGBTQIA+ rights (BBC)
No extra dry burgers: McDonald’s overhauls its greatest merchandise (The Wall Avenue Journal) ($)
Two extra Israeli hostages launched, as ceasefire is prolonged (euronews)
Buffy Sainte-Marie’s claims of Cree ancestry and delivery on Sask. First Nation faraway from her web site (CBC)
Democrats don’t have any Biden backup plan for 2024, regardless of age issues (Reuters)
THE COMMENTARIAT
Henry Kissinger dies celebrated, however why? His achievements have lengthy since crumbled — Simon Tisdall (The Guardian): “His help for the murderous navy coup in Chile in 1973 that overthrew the elected authorities of Salvador Allende, and ushered within the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet, nonetheless stands out as a dreadful monument to the myopic, damaging American neo-imperialism of that period. US help for violent Chilly Conflict nationalist teams amid proxy wars with the Soviet Union, corresponding to Unita in Angola or later the Contras in Nicaragua, and Washington’s propping up of the worst sort of African and Center Japanese dictators — as a result of it supposedly suited US geopolitical pursuits — have been insurance policies that owed a lot to Kissinger’s considering.
“After which there was Vietnam. Though Kissinger is credited with serving to to finish the conflict, what he bequeathed, not in contrast to Donald Trump in Afghanistan, was a damaged, shattered nation that swiftly succumbed to a totalitarian takeover, rendering earlier sacrifices futile. For some who can bear in mind it, Kissinger won’t ever be forgiven for the key carpet-bombing of impartial Cambodia in 1969-70, as a part of the Vietnam marketing campaign. Kissinger reportedly informed the US air drive to strike ‘something that flies or something that strikes’. About 50,000 civilians have been killed.”
Peter Dutton’s time to strike is now as Anthony Albanese bungles coverage — Peta Credlin (The Australian) ($): “Peter Dutton’s choice to oppose the Voice again in April when it nonetheless had 60% help confirmed a uncommon disposition to do what’s proper quite than what’s merely politically expedient. And his success in out-arguing and out-campaigning the prime minister ought to have given the opposition chief the arrogance to create a transparent and compelling distinction on different points, too. We are able to see he’s the one driving the mop-up of the federal government’s detainee mess, nevertheless it’s greater than that. There’s a push contained in the opposition for an even bigger, bolder model of Morrison’s tremendous for housing coverage.
“There’s a rising understanding that it’s now authorized quite than unlawful immigration that’s uncontrolled, pushed not by our nationwide curiosity however by universities’ enterprise mannequin. And final week the Coalition power spokesman flagged a coverage centred on no additional retirements of coal-fired energy, speedy growth of recent fuel fields and an finish to the nuclear ban. What’s to not like in insurance policies that flip renters into house owners, put the federal government quite than unaccountable establishments again in cost, and make it inexpensive to maintain the lights on? If Dutton can get these insurance policies into voters’ minds with out a lot inner dissent, Labor actually might be in hassle.”
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WHAT’S ON TODAY
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