Promises and Delays Continue In The Northern Territory

28 10 2008

The Northern Territory Response (NTER) review report recommended a a reintroduction of the racial discrimination act. The government’s commitment to modify the intervention has been welcomed by the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice commissioner, TOM CALMA, but he has questioned the delay in implementing key elements.

Here he begins explaining the reasons for the removal of the act in the first place and the strategy to quarantine welfare payments….

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Mother Do You Think They Will Drop The Bomb?

28 10 2008

Smallpox is believed to have emerged among humans in about 10,000 BC and has killed millions of people till date

After successful vaccination campaigns throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, the WHO certified the complete eradication of smallpox in December 1979.

Has it been really eradicated?

If so why has United States spent close to 10 billion dollars to produce large amounts of vaccines to deal with an outbreak of deadly diseases, with Small Pox being one of them.

The answer to that billion dollar question lies in the threat of Bio-terrorism…

Speaking on the subject is John Clerici, who has played a significant role in formulating President Bush’s emergency Bio-terrorism laws.

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dirtybomb1





New Kingdom by James O’Donnell

27 10 2008
New Kingdom

New Kingdom





World’s Collide by James O’Donnell

27 10 2008

World Collide by James O'Donnell

World Collide by James O

 





A Tale of Two Hearings by James O’Donnell

27 10 2008

A Tale of Two Hearings

 

by James O’Donnell

 

It was the best of post-Surge environments; it was the worst of post-Surge environments.  The Surge had helped achieve a reduction in violence; the Surge had initiated the most violent period of the war for Iraqis and American troops alike, resulting in nearly 2.5 million internally displaced Iraqis. 

 

America had begun to reap the benefits of our success, thanks to a military-civilian partnership that would be emulated for years to come; we were “losing Iraq to the criminals and the corrupted,” thanks to our government’s refusal to support Iraqi anti-corruption officials, 31 of whom had been murdered, without a single investigation called. 

 

The Iraqis had made significant political progress; sectarianism, cronyism, and graft at the highest levels of the Shi’ite government had immunized the powerful from prosecution for their crimes and had turned “hospitals into death zones for Sunnis.” 

 

The Sons of Iraq had become America’s most vital ally in suppressing the country’s violence; the U.S.-backed central government had just commenced operations to assassinate or capture over 600 leaders of the Sons of Iraq. 

 

Over 100 Iraqi battalions had stepped up and were now “in the lead;” the operations of Iraqi troops were impossible “without ‘Coalition’ enablers (which would “remain the case for some time,” according to the Secretary of Defense). 

 

The threat from violent extremists had “receded;” suicide bombers continued to inflict “mass civilian casualties,” thanks in part to our government’s support for Islamic extremists (according to an American senior advisor to our government in Iraq). 

 

Baghdad had been restored to a semblance of normalcy, its residents free to resume their daily lives; Baghdad residents had electricity for one hour in seven, no clean water, and often had only the black market for medicine and gasoline (when it was available to their blast-wall enclosed ethno-sectarian-cleansed enclaves).

 

…and so forth. 

 

Such were the contradictions evident in two hearings Code Pink attended this week, depicting two very different IRAQs.

 

On Monday we attended Senator Byron Dorgan’s hearing on the “Second Insurgency,” focused on the corruption in Iraq that has undermined the U.S. mission and led Transparency International to rank Iraq the third most corrupt country in the WORLD:  a nation where “gangs control the day” and the U.S. aids and abets Iraqi criminals and militants alike (whatever it takes to placate our venal Iraqi partners as they funnel hundreds of millions of dollars to banks in Jordan, Lebanon, the U.A.E., Germany, Pennsylvania, and New York).

 

And on Tuesday, we got to see the flip side.  We attended the Senate Armed Services Committee’s final fluffing of Secretary Robert Gates… pillow (whew, that was close!).

 

In the first hearing, the Iraq that emerged bore some resemblance to the debacle that Americans have come to know and revile/lament:  31 billion MISSING American dollars; “ghost projects” that exist only on paper; “rusted, decades-old weapons” provided to Iraqi security forces; allies who use their positions in the Iraqi government to free “al Qaeda terrorists;” U.S. contractors who smuggle convicted Iraqi criminals out of their cells in the middle of the night and fly them out of the country to their new homes in… America!

 

In the second hearing (the fluff piece offered by Carl Levin and John Warner), the senators, Democratic and Republican alike, waxed sentimental over the fact that the hearing was likely Secretary Gates’ final appearance before their committee…  (I half expected champagne and a gold watch for the old boy!) 

 

There were accolades for “open-minded, thoughtful” administration officials, “brilliant” generals, and great “achievements.” 

 

The Iraq of the second hearing was a place of massaged numbers — math SO “fuzzy” that 9 + 11 STILL equaled “IRAQ” …and a “liberated” Iraq at that! 

 

In the Levin-Warner hearing, Iraq’s progress could be measured in the font size of the bold-print pronouncements about all the great “accomplishments” of recent months… nearly all of which are debunked by the asterisks dogging those bold-print headlines:  The stalled status of forces agreement; the ongoing war over oil-rich Kirkuk; the re-de-Ba’athification (purging another 27,000 Sunnis from the government under the rubric of “reconciliation”); the July 2008 provincial elections stalled until December; the refusal of the Iraq’s factions to agree on a “hydrocarbons” law that places Iraq’s oil in the hands of Western oil company executives for the next 30 years. 

 

All told, it was the “feel good” time-waste of the year… 

 

Whereas:

 

- While it was depressing to hear about all the honest Iraqi investigators that the State Department has thrown to the assassins and the Justice Department’s similar refusal to investigate many crimes in Iraq;

 

- While it was alarming to hear of the “many” U.S. advisors “screaming again and again,” at Iraqi anti-corruption officials, “Why are you investigating this case, this is American money!” (apparently less bothered than Iraqis at the prospect of U.S. taxpayers getting bilked);

 

- While it was frustrating to learn that the U.S. advisor to Iraq’s central bank helped corrupt officials launder hundreds of millions of dollars…

 

At least I LEARNED something in Senator Dorgan’s hearing:  This “cluster” got (screw)ed by GREED and GRAFT and WILLFUL BLINDNESS to OUTRAGEOUS CORRUPTION on a MONUMENTAL scale — which continues to this very day.

 

And all I learned in the second hearing was just how far that corruption goes… “Heckuva job, Gatesy!” beamed Senators Levin and Warner.  

 

(Heckuva job, Carl… John.)





Live Radio Theatre, (and Peter as Flash Gordon)

21 10 2008

Radio is often referred to as ‘theatre of the mind’, a description that has its origins in radio’s golden days, pre-television, when the airwaves were filled with tales of adventure, mystery and intrige through radio plays like Dossier on Dumetrius or the Carter Brown mystery hour.

But the radio play is still alive and well, including often live on stage.

Black Crowe Productions is s new production company who are presenting, a radio play of “Sherlock Holmes and the case of the Musgrove Ritual’.

Terry Crowe and Janet Jauncey came in this morning armed with some props used for creating sound effects, and convinced Peter to join them in a read through of ’Flash Gordon’. 

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Ticket and performance details are on the Getting Out page





The Great Fletch

21 10 2008

Ken Fletcher was a fair dinkum Aussie character. he won the Grand Slam of mixed doubles with Margaret Court, rebelled against Australian tennis, was part of a winning Davis Cup team, befriended film stars, kings and philanthropists.

But, his lifelong goal of winning the Wimbledon singles title was never realised.

Fletcher died in 2005 after a battle with cancer, and now lifelong friend, High Lunn, has written ‘The Great Fletch’, a memoir of the life of a great and relatively unknown Australian.

High Lunn spoke with Belinda Brand, who asked him, hypothetically, how would Ken Fletcher’s life have been different if he had won the Wimbledon title he craved?

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Out Of His Dreams And Into His Electric Car

21 10 2008

Electric cars have been on the roads for sometime, although in very small numbers. But with so much uncertainty over future oil reserves and what we could be paying for fuel, not to mention issues of greenhouse gas emissions and global warming, the day of the electric car must be drawing nearer.

Some aren’t prepared to sit back and wait for motor companies to offer electric cars, they are going out and building there own.

DAVID ROWE has done that, and he tells how it all began…

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James O’Donnell – Friday October 17th

17 10 2008




The Mikado

15 10 2008

This summers musical at the Adelaide Festival Centre is Gilbert and Sullivans, The Mikado.

It’s not in a traditional G & S style, it’s an updated version but still with plenty to offer fans both new and old.

And it’s an all star cast too, with Colin Lane as Pooh Bah, David Collins from The Umbillical Brothers as Koko. Helen Donaldson as Yum Yum and Julie Anthony as Katisha.

Both Helen and Julie joined us on the program this morning…

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