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Submitted by Margo Kingston on September 28, 2005 - 8:30am.
Ten reasons why young idealistic people should forget about organised politics

"It doesn't give me any pleasure to say this, but I need to be honest with you. The system is fundamentally sick and broken, and there are other more productive and satisfying ways in which you can contribute to society. Whatever you do, don't get involved in organised politics. Let me give you ten good reasons why you should do something else with your time." Mark Latham

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Submitted by Guest Contributor on September 28, 2005 - 3:11am.
Is the Coalition's IR advertising blitz legal?

Is the Government acting lawfully in advertising its IR policy with taxpayer's money or is it breaching Australia's Constitution? We'll find out on Thursday.

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Submitted by Guest Contributor on September 28, 2005 - 1:09am.
Up, up & away in my beautiful balloon: some questions of media policy

"At the end of August 2005, Communications Minister Helen Coonan used an address to the National Press Club in Canberra to float her ideas about changing media law in Australia. They were conveyed to the people by the press and the broadcast media. Whether these ideas amount to a media policy, whether they are truly democratic and whether she was launching a fully-blown balloon or just flying kites, remain to be seen. As does the public's response." Frank Morgan

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Submitted by Craig Warton on September 27, 2005 - 11:59am.
Nothing is as clear cut as you imagine...

"I have voted Liberal since 1996. I voted for the ALP before that but the Keating “true believer” election was the one that did it for me. Following that election, all that it seemed the ALP was concerned with was how to win the next election. They had simply run out of steam and ideas.  Sadly for us they have not got it back yet." Craig Warton

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Submitted by Jack H Smit on September 24, 2005 - 6:57am.
Launching Webdiary and Club Chaos in WA

"So when the mainstream media are failing to such an extend that they are no longer reporting the thinking and truths behind the facts behind the events, and when they on many occasions choose to completely ignore the reporting of even the events themselves, the landscape of reporting changes and the nature of journalism shifts as dramatically as it shifted when newspapers first came into circulation. ... Margo's move to Webdiary was in itself already something to take note of, and her separation and independence of Fairfax is something which I imagine will still be discussed in journalism courses in 50 years time, if we still run them in Australia." Jack H Smit

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Submitted by Dylan Kissane on September 24, 2005 - 5:02am.
Taking human rights and John Howard seriously

"The Human Rights Council of Australia acknowledges that the research that went in to the report was paid for out of the pockets of the Australian Manufacturing Workers Union (AMWU). This is the same AMWU whose leader has recently branded the Australian government authoritarian. This is the same AMWU who would seem to be unhappy with any government in recent history if their claim that contemporary capitalism restricts democratic rights is to be believed." Dylan Kissane

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Submitted by Margo Kingston on September 23, 2005 - 2:30am.
The future of fair dinkum journalism

The problem as I see it is that Fairfax had given over editorial control of a space it had believed was marginal, but then realised was at the forefront of a trend that would revolutionise the paper itself. Issues of 'control', paramount in big media, are knotty to negotiate in this new era, and Fairfax distanced itself from Webdiary as part of my change of status from employee to contractor, and by inserting on my home page: 'The views expressed in this blog are not necessarily those of the Sydney Morning Herald or John Fairfax'. Yet eight months later in April 2005, global media baron Rupert Murdoch proclaimed himself dead wrong about Internet media and pledged to embrace it, and blogging, in an effort to maintain his dominance in the industry.

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Submitted by David Roffey on September 23, 2005 - 1:28am.
Rita, Katrina, Oil and the Economy

"Commentators at the positive end had already started writing their "why the world economy survived Katrina" pieces within a week or so of the disaster. The (economic) question is - will US consumer confidence (and market confidence generally) survive Rita? I leave for others the shorter term questions around whether the US authorities learned enough from the Katrina debacle to ensure that far more Americans personally survive Rita. As I write, Texans are evacuating. A second Cat. 4/5 storm in the Gulf within a few days is a very different thing for public sentiment to cope with than a single, not unprecedented event - two Cat 4 storms in a year last happened in 1915, when 275 died in Louisiana when Lake Pontchartrain broke its banks and 275 in Galveston, Texas a little later ... Even if, as we all hope, Rita passes or fades without the dramas and human suffering of Katrina, the fact that it existed at all is going to change how people feel, and potentially push them toward saving for a rainy day rather than spending. If so, the world economy may be in for a storm of its own." David Roffey

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Submitted by Guest Contributor on September 22, 2005 - 8:50am.
Pain, catastrophisation and Mark Latham

"While entranced viewers, readers and bloggers have bandied about explanations like narcissistic personality disorder, depression, chronic anger and bipolar disorder, (this last since apologised for by Jeff Kennett), Latham assured Andrew Denton that: 'No. No, not for a day in my life have I ever suffered from depression.' A pain specialist might have a few questions about that. It's unlikely Mark Latham's seen one, despite the excruciating pain that accompanies pancreatitis. Pain is poorly understood and poorly treated in Australia's general medical community." Catherine Job

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Submitted by Guest Contributor on September 22, 2005 - 3:10am.
Rural communities at risk under Welfare to Work policies

"The Government may well decide that if there are no local jobs (which can mean under Newstart Allowance up to a ninety minute journey away) then individuals and families ought to be forced to move to a district with more jobs available. That means social dislocation for the family, loss of the social supports which make living feasible, and much higher housing costs, while for the community they leave, it means a drop in the incomes of local businesses, and maybe the loss of a teacher from the school." Marie Coleman

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Submitted by Margo Kingston on September 21, 2005 - 7:16am.
Susan Crennan, Australia's new High Court Justice

"This year will be the 150th anniversary of the Eureka Stockade. It helped secure the diggers' suffrage, which led seamlessly to manhood suffrage and more flexibility in qualifications for members of parliament. Manhood suffrage in turn was the template for later grants of suffrage to women and indigenous people. It was this substantial, although still incomplete, democratising of parliament, which spread throughout Australia, which gave egalitarian theory political expression. It also formed the bedrock upon which our founding fathers instituted our federal system, marked by the division of power exemplified in section 5 of the Constitution." Susan Crennan, Australia's new High Court Justice, last year

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Submitted by Guest Contributor on September 21, 2005 - 5:49am.
Howard's 'World Statesman Award': on what criteria, please, New York's 'Appeal of Conscience Foundation'?

"We note with concern that your organisation proposes to confer its World Statesman Award on Mr John Howard, Prime Minister of Australia. The Appeal of Conscience Foundation has not, to our knowledge, consulted any civil liberties or human rights organisations in Australia before determining to grant this award.  In order to overcome this omission, we wish to advise you of the following matters, arranged by reference to the citation to the award." Brian Walters SC, Liberty Victoria

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Submitted by Jack H Smit on September 21, 2005 - 4:07am.
Amanda's Baxter backyard blitz

"It doesn't happen every day that a journo phones me to let off steam, but yesterday, following a press conference by Immigration Minister Amanda Vanstone on the Baxter Detention Centre, it did. The journo just needed to let off the frustration of being subjected to an inordinate amount of government spin emanating from the mouth of the Immigration Minister... So I went hunting for a transcript, and that quest shows that Webdiarists would do well keeping and building a database of reporters and journalists. It took about five phone calls before another good reporter with one of Australia's better dailies sent the transcript." Jack H Smit

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Submitted by Guest Contributor on September 20, 2005 - 11:02pm.
Julia Perry details the Government's Welfare to Work plan

"In legislation about to be introduced, the Government will cut the rate of income support for parents with children aged six and over and for people with disabilities who are assessed as being able to work at least 15 hours a week. From July 2006, Parenting Payment (for sole parents and one parent in a very low income couple) will be abolished for families with children aged six or over. Disability Support Pension will be restricted to those who cannot work 15 hours a week or more. Those who are no longer able to claim these payments will have to apply for Newstart (unemployment benefit) and be required to look for jobs of at least 15 hours a week." Julia Perry

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Submitted by Guest Contributor on September 20, 2005 - 3:47am.
Marie Coleman on getting traction in the Welfare to Work debate

"The Office for Women advised the women's organisations secretariats that they were not permitted to use their grants for such a purpose, and demanded that the pledges not be honoured, on pain of deductions from their 2005-6 funding. The women's secretariats, faced with this opposition from the Government to their attempt to gauge the effects of policy on Australian women, guaranteed NFAW (the National Foundation for Australian Women) that they would honour their pledges through contributions from affiliated organisations. Given the urgency and the importance of the matter, NFAW took the risk, and went ahead with the contract." Marie Coleman

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Submitted by Sol Salbe on September 19, 2005 - 10:35pm.
Danby MP vs Melbourne University Press

"A Labor MP has launched a blistering attack on Melbourne University Press. No, the book concerned is not the Latham Diaries which have at least been published. Michael Danby MP is aiming at something higher: denouncing a book which at the time was not even written. The book concerned is provisionally titled Voices of Reason by former Webdiarist Antony Loewenstein and its subject matter is the Middle East conflict and the Australian Jewish community." Sol Salbe

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Submitted by Guest Contributor on September 17, 2005 - 5:58am.
Scott Parkin speaks

"Australia claims to be a free society with freedom of speech. In a free society, in a democratic society they should be able to basically take on that criticism or that message that I'm putting out and be able to deal with it in a civil discourse, not in basically, you know gagging and arresting and removing people who disagree with them." Scott Parkin speaking to AM's Karen Percy

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Submitted by Phil Uebergang on September 17, 2005 - 4:38am.
Phil's response to Michael Duffy on ID

"A group of conveniently accommodating imaginary 'experts' are invoked by Duffy, who claim that we are fighting a war against terrorism - a spurious claim in itself - largely for the sake of 'evolutionary theory'. Having mentioned the war for dramatic effect it is immediately discarded, to be replaced by a quote from a noted historian who supposedly legitimises the imaginary experts by claiming that Darwin's theory of evolution is the 'most important idea of all time'. Apparently it is more important, to Duffy at least, than the idea of brotherly love and tolerance." Phil Uebergang

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Submitted by Guest Contributor on September 17, 2005 - 3:49am.
Julia Gillard: struggling to put into words her feelings about Mark's diaries

"I do not believe that Mark Latham should have published these diaries in this form. I suspect when we see the full book that it will describe some major issues that need to be addressed, about Labor's policies, about its culture, about Australia's political culture generally and the way the media works. I suspect the truths in the book will be ignored because the focus will be on the spleen, not the substance. I think that is a great pity." Julia Gillard

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Submitted by Chris Saliba on September 17, 2005 - 2:32am.
Why do suicide bombers want to kill us?

"Author Robert Pape, associate professor of political science at the University of Chicago, has studied every suicide attack from 1980 to 2003 - a total of 315 attacks. His findings on the motivations of suicide terrorists fly in the face of the war-on-terror rhetoric that our leaders and media lackey’s serve up daily." Chris Saliba reviews Robert Pape's book: Dying to Win: The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism.

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Submitted by Margo Kingston on September 16, 2005 - 11:39pm.
Why be in politics unless you're going to say what you think?

"I think the public's got a sense that it's a bit artificial. I think in modern politics we've got too much reliance on polling, spin doctors, professionals telling people what to say, and not enough straight talking and straight shooting... My opposite number, Peter Costello, the other day said that in politics you shouldn't reflect too much because you might say what you think. But from my point of view, I think it's part of the problem. From my point of view, why be in politics, why spend all that time — and a lot of it away from family — unless you're going to say what you think?" Mark Latham to Andrew Denton, July 28, 2003

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Submitted by Margo Kingston on September 16, 2005 - 2:01pm.
Latham after the fall: house dad and proud of it

As Webdiarists know, I've always liked Mark, and I've always liked the fact that he was a thinker, a dreamer. I still do. I know he's blokey and that he's dished it out a lot over the years yet is super-sensitive to criticism himself, but he's REAL. I don't like some of the things he's said in his book about others, and one day I think he'll regret saying some of those things. But as he so rightly pointed out tonight, at least he's had the guts to put his name to what he says.

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Submitted by Margo Kingston on September 16, 2005 - 8:08am.
Latham on 'Enough Rope' tonight!

STOP PRESS AGAIN: Craig Rowley reports: "News just to air on ABC. NSW Supreme Court lifts injunction on Lateline interview going ahead." (The Enough Rope one ran in place of Lateline)

STOP PRESS: Interview pulled at last minute for legal reasons after Murdoch injunction, ABC reverts to normal programming.

Urgent and interesting news. The Andrew Denton Enough Rope interview with Mark Latham has been brought forward to 8.30 pm tonight Thursday 15 September.

Why is this? Margo suggests this is because "the Murdoch papers broke their contract with MUP re when they'd run extracts. Supposed to be Monday morning, I think - Crikey stories today will confirm."

It is breaking news on the Enough Rope website.

Webdiarists. Watch the interview. Write a < 500 word review on Latham's interview. Or make a comment. Tell us what you think the future holds for Labor and the Labor leadership. The mike is open. More information and links will be published during the evening.

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Submitted by Andrew Bartlett on September 16, 2005 - 4:51am.
Howard's sabotage of the Senate: Telstra and the guillotine

"The debauched process used to railroad this legislation through the Senate - from when the five Bills were first made public last week (3 of them on Wednesday 7th Sept and 2 of them on Thursday 8th), to when they were forced to a final vote on Wednesday 14th  - signals a major step towards gutting the role of the Senate as a serious House for reviewing legislation and scrutinising the actions and decisions of Government, and going down the path of becoming just a mindless and arrogant giant rubber stamp for the Government, as the House of Representatives has long been." Senator Andrew Bartlett

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Submitted by Margo Kingston on September 16, 2005 - 12:49am.
Dress nice for Howard, please, as you tear down the dignity of the People's Parliament

G'day. While Parliamentary Democracy crumbles around him, Howard's handpicked Speaker of the House of Representatives, David Hawker, worries about dress codes. Perception and reality. And it looks like he's cracking down hard and making up new rules. I tended to wear jeans and T-Shirts in Parliament House, as a statement was I was not in the club. I thought most journos in the place looked like politicians or big business lobbyists. My male colleagues were peeved - once a Parliamentary attendant tapped me on the shoulder when I was in the reporters section of the House of Reps gallery to ask me to leave because of what I was wearing, and apologised when he realised I was female. But for the boys, jackets and ties are compulsory. Here is Hawker's statement to the People's House on Tuesday.

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Submitted by Guest Contributor on September 16, 2005 - 12:37am.
Whistleblowing and the media: transparency the greatest casualty

"Open and deliberate measures to deter and intimidate public comment by public servants clearly fly in the face of principles of open government and robust public discourse. In the landmark Bennett  case Justice Finn warned that unqualified sanctions on public service employees contravened the implied constitutional freedom of political communication." Helen Ester

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Submitted by Guest Contributor on September 15, 2005 - 11:02am.
The right to an independent judiciary

"To ask whether judges deserve their independence is like asking whether parliamentarians deserve their freedom of speech. It should not be difficult to explain to the public, and to those in the political branches of government, why they need, benefit from, and have a right to, an independent judiciary. Providing and reinforcing that explanation is a responsibility of the modern judiciary. It is not enough to justify our independence to one another. There is an educational role for us to take up. Legal practitioners, and law teachers, are our allies in that task, but we should not assume that we are facing a hostile audience. In Australia, and in many other parts of the Commonwealth, it is unlikely that there would be a direct challenge to the concept of judicial independence. What is more likely is that some people, not understanding why it exists, or what it involves, will make well-intentioned demands, in the name of accountability, which are inconsistent with independence." Murray Gleeson

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Submitted by Martin Gifford on September 15, 2005 - 6:50am.
Worldwide happiness - say yes, pass it on

"After hearing the rationale for making this world into a happy home for us all, and after having objections answered, what if we say that it is a good goal and that it is possible? What if we just say yes? And what if we ask the next person to experiment with saying yes? By saying yes, we can see how the world looks from that viewpoint. It is a creative step that opens the door to further creativity. Then arguing becomes part of the co-creative process of life. We start using our minds for exploring how worldwide happiness might be possible, rather than for guarding the door. We might even discover a better goal." by Martin Gifford

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Submitted by Guest Contributor on September 15, 2005 - 1:15am.
Julian Burnside QC on the Scott Parkin Case

"It is time that Australians woke up and realised what’s going on. We are losing the freedoms our parents and grandparents fought so hard for. We aren’t losing them to make us safer from the threat of terrorism. As the Scott Parkins case shows, we need those freedoms more than ever. If Scott Parkin, Cornelia Rau, Vivian Alvarez, Mamdouh Habib and David Hicks are anything to go by, we don’t need the protection of the Government, we need protection from it!" Julian Burnside, QC.

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Submitted by Richard Tonkin on September 14, 2005 - 11:37am.
The new terrorism: working for peace!

"What message is sent to Australian activists by Parkin's incarceration? As someone who has sensed unethicality in the company's activities both abroad and within Australia I feel vindicated in my beliefs.  To remove a person who might promote information implies a desire of the democratic actor, in this case Australia's Federal Government, to obscure and conceal what this man could portray and reveal, and what he could make us think." Richard Tonkin

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