Friday 27 April 2018

PHFEN SHOCK: THE MYSTERIOUS YEARNING FOR THE CHASM

Image may contain: night, tree and outdoor
Dingos hanging from a dog tree in the Barrington Tops. Nick O'Malley 

Phfen Shock. The phrase kept repeating through his head, although he could find no definition, no logical reason. He found himself perched above a strange valley. House sitting a farm. Two useless dogs, three donkeys, four chooks. And a rooster. 

Instead of being industrious, he just went into some sort of profound shock. 

There were times he could hear them thinking, out there. And others when his mind rooted around for threat, and they gathered there in their bored ranches, more worried, like all good public servants, about their contracts than the target or the task at hand. 

Days passed without pen in hand. The record broken. 

A massacre in Afghanistan. 53 dead on first reports. Promptly disappeared from the consciousness of all but the immediate families and neighbours. In a land used to tragedy. 

Pedestrians were mowed down in Toronto. The mayor promptly claimed the city proud of its diversity. More lies. The same as Australia. Lie after lie after lie to defend a failed theory. Until those who knew the truth, how this engineered debacle had come about, had all died, been eliminated, or were in retreat. 

Now, the machines were difficult if not impossible to detect. Invisible drones. Micro-cameras. Who knew if they had given up, or simply withdrawn to a safer distance. 

Once they set the inflammation in place, it remained, even if the disease, the mismanagement of the nation, the mismanagement of the agencies, the brutal assassinations, the misuse of power, the persecution of the people, no longer presented in his immediate life. 

But there it was, a mystery. His mind swept across an unmarked valley. Primordial in nature. Fabulous in intent. Complex as only machines could be; as if they, too, had sown organic machines across the galaxies and this was just one fine reach, far, far away. 

Giant wombats, larger than most he had seen in other parts of the country, romped in the fading light. Rabbits picked across the disappearing pastures. A few lichen coated apple trees, remnants of the orchards from a century ago, still survived. Around, the deep forest. 

It was the shock of somewhere new, somewhere different. Where, when you entered a new valley, even a neighbouring valley, it took time to determine where the threats lay. Unseen. Lurking. Ready to strike. Born in dangerous times in a dangerous world.

He was rising from the ether. He was marking out territory. He was defying the worst the society had to offer. He was carried through his own mysterious yearning. And then away, away, as if he could not focus, as if he could not stay intent on one narrow grievance, as if the gods were welcoming him to a safer place. 

While all around lay a mysterious injustice. A place where no one cared. No one took any pride. Where the shops were dilapidated, as the country sank into Third World status. 

On a trip to Sydney, that morning, the only Australian accent he heard were the housos checking the value of stolen Ray Bans on their equally stolen iPad. 

And all around, no one hoped. Sydney had become the worst city in the country. Crowded, bogged, grasping, vicious, and they were led by the greediest, shallowest, most vicious leader the country had ever seen. 

He drove, like so many, straight back out of town. Back to the primordial valley. To be watched, he assumed, by the surveillance machines. The bastardry of this government knew no bounds. And most mysterious of all, as the country drove ever more rapidly backwards, was that nobody cared. 

THE BIGGER STORY

A hacker on a computer

RICHARD FLANAGAN 

There are no saviours of democracy on the horizon. Rather, around the world we see a new authoritarianism that is always anti-democratic in practice, populist in appeal, nationalist in sentiment, fascist in sympathy, criminal in disposition, tending to spew a poisonous rhetoric aimed against refugees, Muslims, and increasingly Jews, and hostile to truth and those who speak it, most particularly journalists to the point, sometimes, of murder.


And yet this new authoritarianism is resonant with so many, acting as it does as a justification for rule by a few wealthy oligarchs and corporations, and as an explanation for the growing immiseration of the many.
In Australia though we feel ourselves, as ever, a long way away. We feel we are somehow immune from these dangerous currents. After all, we have had routine forays into populist extremism from the mid 1990s with the likes of Hansonism without it ever threatening our democracy. Our politics may be dreadful, a black comedy pregnant with collapse, its actors exhausted, without imagination or courage or principle, solely obsessed with pillaging the tawdry jewels of office and fleeing into distant sinecures as ambassadors or high commissioners, or with paid up Chinese board posts, while outside the city burns. But it is all very far from a dictatorship.
Our society grows increasingly more unequal, more disenfranchised, angrier, more fearful. Our institutions are frayed. Our polity is discredited, and almost daily discredits itself further. The many problems that confront us, from housing to infrastructure to climate change, are routinely evaded. Our screens are filled with a preening peloton of potential leaders, but nowhere is there to be found leadership.
Holderlin, the great 19th century poet, wrote of the “mysterious yearning toward the chasm” that can overtake nations. Increasingly, one can sense that yearning in the overly heated rhetoric of some Australian politicians and commentators. That yearning can overtake Australia as easily as it has many other countries, damaging our democratic institutions, our freedoms and our values.
Politics, which ought to have as its highest calling the task of holding society together, of keeping us away from the chasm, has retreated to repeating divisive myths that have no foundation in the truth of what we are as a nation, and so, finally only serve to contribute to the forces that could yet destroy us. Or worse yet, openly stoking needless fear and, with the refugee issue, a xenophobia for short-term electoral advantage.
The consequence is a time bomb which simply needs as a detonator what every other country has had and we have not: hard times. But hard times will return. And when they do what defence will we have should a populist movement that trades on the established scapegoats arises? An authoritarian party with a charismatic leader that uses the poison with which the old myths are increasingly pregnant to deliver itself power?



Monday 16 April 2018

THE DEATH THROES OF CREDIBILITY: TURNBULL ON THE ROPES

Google Dream

What will it profit a man if he gains the whole world, yet forfeits his soul? Matthew 16:26. 

Truly pathetic, a failing Prime Minister, just like his predecessor, was using the military to bolster his standing. 
America, after pulverising Aleppo, Raqqa, Mosul, after flying tens of thousands of its lethal drones over villagers around the world, after committing a string of some of the worst war crimes in history, was taking the high moral ground on Syria and the use of chemical weapons. 
Without waiting, of course, for UN inspection teams, or for evidence. 
And Australia, of course, was jumping up: me too, me too, us too, us too. 
Well, at least this particularly hapless caste of politicians were. 
Before he jets off to discuss international security in London, Brussels and Berlin, Malcolm Turnbull has announced a new Australian Defence Force chief and made sure he is in lock step with Donald Trump.
Mr Turnbull says the appointment of the hero of Operation Sovereign Borders, Lieutenant General Angus Campbell, to the top defence job before he departed for Europe was a “coincidence”.
But it did provide a welcome aura of authority to an embattled leader, as he stood surrounded by the nation’s top brass in his Parliament House courtyard.
Former defence secretary Paul Barrett says the air strikes lacked UN Security Council authority, Mr Trump lacked congressional support, and the United Kingdom’s Theresa May avoided a querulous parliament. In other words, the strikes were a clear breach of international law.
It makes Mr Turnbull’s indignant condemnation of Syria’s gas attacks more than a tad hypocritical.
Mr Barrett is not the only commentator who believes Ms May’s and France’s Emmanuel Macron’s weak political standing at home was a key motivator in them quickly backing Mr Trump. It made them look stronger leaders.The next 10 days overseas will be a definite respite for Mr Turnbull. He leaves behind at least four leadership aspirants who have begun jockeying for his job.
The destruction of the leader is inevitable when that genie is out of the bottle... 
The leaking of a story at the weekend accusing Mr Turnbull of investing $1 million in a contentious fund that profits from Australian companies who fail is a sure sign destabilisation is in full swing. Embattled Malcolm Turnbull goes on a war footing, Paul Bongiorno, The New Daily, 16 April, 2018.
They robbed the poor and gave to the rich. 
"Worst government in Australian history," the lad behind the counter at the Tallong store declared, keen to talk about the gay marriage plebiscite which had alienated the constituency Turnbull had so grandly courted, masquerading as a social justice warrior. Without any prompting from Old Alex. The young man's idea of history barely stretched back two decades, but never mind. It was a widespread sentiment. 
"I think that, too," Old Alex replied with more enthusiasm than was his wont, and off the conversation ran. 
A phone order came in for hot chips and gravy. 
"Vegans," the lad explained.
"Healthy!" Alex exclaimed.
Everything was ordinary, too ordinary. Quiet, too quiet. 
The valleys were breathing in the air. And everyone waited for the bang. 
THE BIGGER STORY: 
campbell turnbull
The Prime Minister just can’t handle criticism or being caught out telling untruths. Because he thought the politics of even having canvassed a cut in immigration as proposed by Abbott looked bad, he raced to deny a report in The Australian that the matter had been discussed among ministers. I called this outright lie “mega dumb” on Richo on Sky News on Wednesday night. Peter Dutton conceded a discussion between himself and Turnbull and other ministers had taken place. Turnbull went into his normal hopeless spin mode. Having originally branded The Australian’s story as fake news and telling the journalist concerned to check his sources, Turnbull resorted to claiming no discussion had been held in cabinet or in a cabinet subcommittee — a suggestion never made by this newspaper.
Declaring a jihad on The Australian when the newspaper is right on the issue and needs only to rely on Dutton’s public utterances to prove it shows Turnbull has learned nothing from past mistakes. He still believes he is the smartest man in every room he enters but the evidence to the contrary is continuing to mount.
Friendless and floundering, this Prime Minister knows time is running out. He would be stark raving mad to call an early election, so he will have many, many more mornings when he wishes the alarm just won’t ring. The mob have well and truly worked him out.
Graham Richardson, Turnbull's lack of political nous proving deadly, The Australian, April, 2018.

Wednesday 11 April 2018

THE CONTRACT IS BROKEN, THE BASTARDS SLEEP

Flinders Power Boilers being blown up


A government that treats its citizens with the complete contempt that this one does, does not deserve to govern. 
The oligarchs were destroying the country.
The bureaucrats were destroying the country. 
Ruinous rates of immigration were destroying the country.

In September 2015 the NSW Premier, Mike Baird, urged the Federal Government to accept a “generous number” of Syrian refugees, pledging to settle the bulk of them in his state. Ultimately, Australia took 12,000, with the Baird Government accepting 7,000 for NSW. Big promises were made about their positive economic impact on country towns.
Two-and-a-half years later, where did the Syrians end up? More than 6,000 settled in just one local government area, Fairfield in Western Sydney. There was no dispersal to NSW country towns. Nor is there any evidence of significant job placement.
Fairfield has become Australia’s refugee capital. As Mayor Frank Carbone said, “They stopped the boats and put them on buses instead”. The local impact has been devastating, with housing rents rising by 35 percent and Fairfield High School facing new enrolments four times higher than previously planned.
The district already had the highest unemployment rate in Sydney, at over 9 percent. Less than one in five of the new arrivals have found paid-work, adding to problems of welfare dependency and ethnic enclaves. Twice last year I tried to interview people in the Fairfield town centre for Mark Latham’s Outsiders, but only 10 percent could speak English. The local State Labor MP, Guy Zangari, told me to learn Assyrian instead. Mark Latham, column, Daily Telegraph, 10 April, 2018.

And still they blundered into a dystopian future. 
When the bombing starts. 
Dystopia: a society characterized by human misery, as squalor, oppression, disease, and overcrowding.
They cried with laughter.
Soon enough they would cry with grief.
There were offers of help. I'm going to go out on a limb here. They demanded an answer. 
"You don't understand what he's doing."
There they were, out of phase, passing through the lattice. 
At the centre of it all, the Gobble Turkey in chief, mired into the front page, as if the entire country was about only one person. One grievous preening idiot with a smack on grin, caught, pleasingly as far as he was concerned, in a mirror maze, his image front and centre on a thousand screens, in every newspaper. It was grievous assault, a terrible waste of money. And it was happening here. And happening now. 
I did fight it. 
But they kept their distance. 
The days were growing shorter. 
The locals more familiar. 
Divorced from their own country.
Imperiled, although they did not realise it, in a tiny place.

And the politics remained putrid: 
The party is turning on itself in a spectacular and public fashion. The leadership issue will keep running not just because Turnbull rejects the conservative mantra. Ultimately, this is not about what Turnbull says or does — it is about what he represents.
Understand what the 30th Newspoll represents. It shows the Liberals cannot liberate themselves from the events of September 2015. They are obsessed about themselves. Sure, the symbolism is powerful: Turnbull should be held to account because he now fails the test on which he judged Abbott. Turnbull now says he made a mistake at the time in invoking Newspoll. Of course he must say this, but it doesn’t matter. The real point is that the Liberals cannot get over it.
And they have persuaded much of the media the biggest story in politics is Liberal strife. It is a frustrating and convenient story because it is all headlines though nothing ever happens — it is a story in permanent anticipation of an event. Liberals will struggle for however long they remain the issue, Paul Kelly, The Australian, 11 April, 2018.

Local news dwindled to nothing.
It was easier and cheaper to write about Trump. 
Meanwhile the politicians, captive to armadas of bureaucrats, continued to rewrite the country, drowning it in people who had no allegiance either to the country or to its history. 
Black people, now, were the Sudanese. Not the indigenous, who shrank, at least in suburban imagination, to ever more remote and dysfunctional reservations. 
All they knew was their taxes paid for all of it.
And the democratic contract was broken. 
Broken. 
Someone turning 30 in Australia had never in their voting life known decent, honourable, honest politics. 
All the heir apparent Peter Dutton had to do to win the next election was to promise a return to pre-Howard levels of immigration, 70,000 a year, when, even then, there had been no public support and cries it was too high. And a line by line audit of government spending, which was entirely out of control. Every single bureaucrat, every single idiot project, should have to answer one simple question: why should someone have to go to work in a factory to support this?
At the centre of mounting tensions and rising dysfunction was history.
Former Prime Minister John Howard, always mates to the big end of town, particularly the Chamber of Commerce, quadrupled the rate of intake and transformed the country quicker than the left could possibly have dreamed. 
A typical blind by Howard. 
You never paid any attention to what he said.
You watched what he did.
This contempt for, and manipulation of, public sentiment continued to be a defining feature of the Liberals aka the conservatives to this day. 
Fundamental dishonesty. 
Ironically, the public blamed the left, the Labor Party, thanks to their ceaseless promotion of identity politics and, equally, contempt for ordinary working people who paid their salaries.
The contract was broken. 
It didn't matter where you looked, nothing worked. The pathological contempt for males that characterised its social policies, including family law, child support, and child protection. The massive incompetence of communication policy, where millions of people were being forced by law onto an inferior broadband network. The massive mismanagement of immigration. Of power, with the most expensive electricity in the world. Shocking mismanagement, top to bottom.
And their, mired in the middle of it, transfixed into every front page, a grinning corpse, Malcolm Turnbull.

THE BIGGER STORY: 







The prime minister emphatically denied a report in the Australian Dutton had suggested reducing Australian’s immigration intake by 20,000 last year, a proposal which was reportedly shut down by Turnbull and Scott Morrison before it made it to cabinet.“It is completely untrue, it is completely untrue, it is completely untrue,” Turnbull said on Tuesday. “The article, the claim in the article, is false. Full stop. OK? Full stop.”
But asked about the report on Wednesday, Dutton, confirmed that discussions canvassing different options had taken place, while maintaining he was not contradicting his leader.
“I’m not going to going into comments or discussions and who said what and who was in the meetings and the rest of it, others can speculate on that,” he said. “I don’t, as a policy and I never have, commented on what’s been discussed in cabinet or subcommittees or whatever it might be, or gatherings of cabinet colleagues.
“But as I say, as immigration minister, as Scott Morrison did, as Chris Bowen did, Philip Ruddock, whoever you like to nominate … of course there are discussions of what the figures should be, the benefits of different aspects of migration, there is obviously a debate about congestion and about housing affordability and the government is alive to all of those concerns, about geographic placement of people out to the regions, they are all issues that we considered.
Peter Dutton contradicts Turnbull on immigration, Amy Remeikis, The Guardian, 11 April, 2018.

Peter Dutton has confirmed reports he discussed cutting Australia’s immigration rate, contradicting Malcolm Turnbull’s repeated denials that the conversations took place.

Tuesday 10 April 2018

THE DISMAL TURNBULL YEARS: THE DEMOCRATIC CONTRACT IS BROKEN

Image may contain: sky, mountain, outdoor and nature
Mt Semeru East Java Jac Vidgen

The dismal Turnbull years rolled on.

The democratic contract was broken, under his watch. 

Work hard, do the right thing, you will get ahead. Your life will get better. 

Conform, at least to the extent of getting up and going to work every day, and you will be rewarded.

A place in the world. Achieved by labour. 

Not anymore. 

The public watched as the least creative, least inventive, least hard working of them all rose to the frothy top.

They watched as their country was sold out from under them.

They watched as members of the Chinese Communist Party bought the best homes in Sydney. 


While the professions were taken over by foreigners. 


While their suburbs were swamped with strangers. 



I guess if you live on the harbour in Darling Point, the urban stresses that mere mortals in Sydney and Melbourne face on a daily basis are hard to understand.
The reality is the Turnbull government has two chances to win the next election: do something dramatic about electricity prices and cut the immigration program. Both decisions would differentiate the Coalition from Labor. At budget time, the government has a real chance to secure some political advantage by ­recasting the migration program, both in terms of numbers and composition.
Treasury needs to keep its nose out of the immigration debate, Judith Sloan, The Australian, 10 April, 2018. 

They watched as the oligarchy ran rampant.

Instead of getting ahead, people worked hard and watched their incomes being depleted by ravenous taxation levels and ludicrous over-regulation. The most expensive electricity in the world. The most hopeless internet. Poor quality transport. The dream of your own home out of reach for many.

Coal-fired stations have closed in South Australia, Victoria and NSW; gas plants have been mothballed; and wholesale prices have been forced up. It has been terrific for risk-free renewables investors and other suppliers taking advantage of the constricted market. But it has been disastrous for consumers. The world’s highest prices, a statewide blackout and the promise of more shortages — this has been the impact of bipartisan policies. The planned closure of Liddell in NSW’s Hunter Valley in 2022 has prompted warnings from the Australian Energy Market Operator about further price increases and supply shortfalls.Private companies can’t invest in thermal generation when it cross-subsidises renewable competitors and they could be hit with a carbon price, increases in the RET or other regulatory burdens at any time. Given all this, it is hardly surprising — no matter how far it is from the ideal — that politicians who usually argue pro-market positions are suggesting public investments to ensure sufficient baseload generation.They are simply placing a higher priority on energy affordability and security than on economic ­purity — in a market already corrupted by interventions.Turnbull could ease energy crisis, Chris Kenny, The Australian, 7 April, 2018.

Every hope destroyed. 

The country lay in ruins, multiculturalism a spent farce. 

And still the rich trumpeted. Gobble turkeys the lot of them.

The insane levels of immigration and complete mismanagement of the entire arena, which began under John Howard as yet another sop by craven politicians to the big end of town, continued apace under the disastrous leadership of Malcolm Turnbull. 

As he passed his 30th losing Newspoll.

It was a landmark in many ways, and the press made the most of it.

Some of the analysis was good. Commentators got as lyrical as they could in a straitened medium.
There’s a common whinge that Turnbull’s office is loaded with Liberals who live in the eastern suburbs of Sydney — people of Turnbull stock; not the types to know what hits people in the mortgage-belt suburbs.
One minister warned The Australian of the pitfalls of this piece: “Have you ever written a story about the Turnbull prime ministership before? Watch out.
“Malcolm’s office is very Sydney eastern suburbs ... so of course they hear different things from what we’re concerned about — which is energy prices and immigration.
To examine Turnbull and the reason for his 30 consecutive Newspoll losses, the focus really comes on the man — not his staff or the influence of his wife. And how he is outplayed at politics constantly by Labor.
After all, he could have better advice — but what is the point when you tend not to take advice you are given in any case.
Don't play with the big boys, Andrew Clennell, The Australian, 9 April, 2018. 

Migration, identity politics, diversity, continued to dominate the media's so-called "conversation".

What a polite term for destroying  the country and obliterating debate. 

And all the while Malcolm Turnbull never shut up. Even on that eventful Monday when he passed the 30 negative news poll tests, he did what was optimistically described as a "wide ranging interview", the usual pap and self-justification and bullshit he always dished out, for The Daily Telegraph

If you are flogging a product which is not selling, you might think you would alter the product.


If you faced constant negative polling you might think you would throw up your hands in a mea culpa, we have heard the voices of the people, we have heard the voices of discontent, we have listened, we will spend every working hour of our lives to make your lives better.


Nothing of the kind, of course, happened under this appalling government. 


The worst the Liberal Party had to offer. 


Greedy, self-flattering, uninspiring. Appalling and indifferent managers. Above all, greedy.


THE BIGGER STORY: 



Image result for nsw JUSTICES OF THE PEACE
So much for the claims religious freedoms would be protected:

The NSW Justices Association Inc has received the following communication from the Appointments Services, Department of Justice. A copy of this communication has been sent via email to all NSWJA members and is posted here for your information.
-------------------------
JPs appointed in NSW can witness the Commonwealth Notice of Intention to Marry document pursuant to s42 of the Marriage Act 1961 (Cth).

Refusing to witness a Notice of Intention to Marry on the basis that the two signatories on the form are of the same sex even if that refusal was on religious grounds, would amount to unlawful discrimination under anti-discrimination legislation.

The Code of Conduct for JPs provides that a JP must not ‘unreasonably refuse to provide a justice of the peace services.’ In this context, any refusal that breaches the law would be considered an unreasonable refusal under the Code of Conduct.

Accordingly, JPs appointed in NSW must not refuse to witness a Notice of Intention to Marry on the basis that the two signatories on the form were of the same sex. Any such refusal would be a breach of the JP Code of Conduct and constitute grounds for review of that JP’s appointment which may lead to their suspension or removal as a JP.


Regards

Bruce Sanders| Assistant Appointments Officer

Appointments Services| Ministerial and Parliamentary Services | Department of Justice.

Thursday 5 April 2018

PROPHET, SAID I, THING OF EVIL

Image may contain: outdoor, nature and water



He finished reading Hillbilly Elegy and one thing was clear: 


When the old compact, work hard and you will get ahead, falls apart, the country falls apart.

Increasingly it played in a place where there own wages were ordinary, while bloated taxpayer funded ticks hauled in massive incomes for doing little but stuffing up the country.

In the end, the working class see no point in working and become, as has happened across Australia, the working class which doesn't work.

None of their stories are played back to them in the national media.


In the relentless brainwashing of identity politics and identity media, the stories of the host population remain entirely untold.


Their gripes, their dissatisfactions, their triumphs. Their struggles to survive. 


When they see fiascos like the NBN, its boss walking off with $13 million in payments after five years doing a terrible job at the top of a terrible tree.


No one was responsible. All was a lie.


When they see politicians and bureaucrats paid ten times the average wage for a damn sight less work than your average tradie, the compact broke down. 


When they saw insanely negligent governments blowing tens of billions of dollars on everything from failed broadband networks to outlandishly slack defence contracts, the compact was broken. While fat cat public servants swanned from meeting to meeting achieving bugger all. 


And as in his case, when they used government money to pursue, harass, survey and intimidate journalists, the compact was lost.


There was no democracy.


"The world is not what we think it is," Old Alex said to Miller as he left the Lake View. Apropos of nothing. 


"No, it's not," he replied, in one of those flashes of recognition. 


Miller was intelligent and did his best to conceal it. Intelligence was never trusted. That much about Australia hadn't changed. 


We're all laughing, here in the slime coated walls. What were they, those things pasted onto the wall, like mollusks or sea animals of some kind, breathing their last breath out of water. Why were they crying, when everything else was a laugh? 


"How are you?"


"I'm in some sort of time dilation. Every hour seems like a century."

Another week. Another day of the dismal Turnbull era. When the compact was broken at the highest level. When lie after bullshit lie came pouring from the mouths of their ostensible leaders. 

IS IT really over for Malcolm Turnbull?
Speculation about a leadership challenge appears to be growing but it could be a fake crisis of the Prime Minister’s own doing, after he used the 30 Newspolls milestone to topple former leader Tony Abbott.
Mr Turnbull’s own deadline will be reached on Monday, when the poll is delivered.
Some believe this artificial deadline will come and go without incidence.
But Fairfax political editor Peter Hartcher suggested in a column on the weekend that while “nothing dramatic” will happen the milestone will “signal open season on Turnbull”.
“Quietly, the Liberals’ expectation now is that Turnbull will not be leading them to the next election,” Hartcher wrote. “They will focus increasingly on their post-Turnbull prospects as the year wears on.” Today, when asked in central Queensland whether he was confident of his colleagues’ support, Mr Turnbull said: “Very.” Is support building for a challenge? Charis Chang, News, 5 April, 2018.

The rituals had become more insistent. The commentary. I come to bury you, more in sorrow than in malice. The ritual denials. Peter Dutton forcibly declaring his loyalty. Others declaring their loyalty. Nobody believed any of it. For those paying attention, an increasingly tiny minority of the Australian population, it was an expensive and pointless circus. Another break in the contract, where the preening idiots who called themselves politicians were meant to serve the public, and didn't. 

Their idea of an ordinary person was a public servant. 

With no ideas of their own, they accepted those of the bureaucratic elites. And they were wrong, deeply, entirely wrong. 

The lie was over a long time ago. It was just that their advisers forgot to tell them. And if it was Turnbull, he wouldn't have listened anyway. He was, after all, the smartest person in the room. 

Addicted to the stab of publicity, the rush of fame and self-importance, his own image reflected at him a thousand times a day, he was the man who broke the compact with the Australian public.

But it was the public who would pay the price. 


"Prophet", said I, "thing of evil Prophet still, if a bird or devil By that heaven that bends above us By that God we both ignore Tell this soul with sorrow laden Willful and destructive intent Tell me, tell me how had lapsed a pure Heart lady to the greediest of needs? Sweaty arrogant dickless liar Who has ascribed to nothing higher Than a jab from a prick to a needle Straight to betrayal and disgrace A conscience showing not a trace?" "Be that word, our sign of parting Bird or fiend," I yelled upstarting "Get thee back into the tempest And the smoke filled bottle's shore Leave no black plume as a token Of the slime thy soul has spoken Leave my loneliness unbroken Quit as those have quit before Take the talon from my heart And see that I can care no more Whatever matter came before I vanish with the dead Lenore."
The Raven. Adapted by Lou Reed from Edgar Alan Poe. 
THE BIGGER STORY:





“This nation [Muslims] should know that it was […] created to spread Allah’s religion and lead the nations, and this could only be achieved by Jihad for the sake of Allah!”
These words were not said somewhere in the war ravaged Middle East by a supporter of ISIS or other extremist groups. They were not whispered in a dark room, hidden from public sight. This call for holy war, or jihad, was voiced loud and clear to a large crowd in a Sydney mosque just a few months ago.
My investigation has found that an extreme terrorist-supporting group of preachers has been operating inside Australia’s major cities for two decades, spreading hate, open antisemitism, anti-Western sentiments and separatism, potentially inciting new generations of terrorists. All this is done out in the open, and in public – and the nature and activities of this dangerous group must be well known to Australian authorities.
The organisation referred to is called “Ahl As-Sunnah wal-Jama’ah” ( أهل السنة والجماعة‎ , The family of the way of the Prophet, the Sunnah, and his Companions), or ASWJ. It is regarded as the most radical Muslim group in Australia, and is an Australian branch of an international fundamentalist Salafi organisation. It was launched in 1985 by Jordanian-born Melbourne resident Sheikh Mohammed Omran (whose work was the subject of a previous AIR expose titled “Jihad in the suburbs” by Naomi Peled in 2005). According to ASWJ’s religious views, all Muslims must adhere to the ways practised in the 7th century by the Prophet Muhammad and his followers – as they interpret them.
The aim of the organisation is to preach in mosques, spread its message online and through books and texts sold in its bookshops, and to actively convert Muslims to follow its version of Islam. Through its centres in New South Wales, Victoria and Western Australia, ASWJ offers lectures, social support, charities, annual trips to the holy city of Mecca to perform the Haj pilgrimage and more. ASWJ preachers teach in several Muslim academic institutes in Australia and are popular guest speakers, with their lectures recorded and shared with thousands of people online and on social media.

ASWJ states on its website that it has “gained a lot of trust and respect from the community due to its firm adherence to the principles of Islam and its freedom from external political interference. It is an independent body free from any governmental influence both financially and ideologically. It is this ‘no strings attached’ policy that has allowed the Sheikhs of ASWJ to speak with a sense of freedom not shared by many other organizations.” As will be shown through this investigation, that freedom is often used by ASWJ to advance hate, undermine social harmony and incite terror.