Saturday, 14 February 2015

Hot

So called Valentine's Day - really hot here in Adelaide. Borrowed book by a favourite author Andrea Camilleri "4th Secret". Short and with a tired feel. Plot similar to a number of others. Is Camilleri at the end of his writing? Read the book in just under 3 hours.

Tuesday, 10 February 2015

9 Feb 2015

They Came For The Abbott Spill, And Missed The Only Real Story In Town

By Amy McQuire
Canberra often has an air of unreality about it. But it's only when a circus comes to town that the media's impotence is really exposed. Amy McQuire reports.
Earlier this morning, the nation’s breakfast hosts assembled on the lawns of Parliament House, expecting an uninterrupted broadcast of the day’s top story.
The fate of Tony Abbott, not only the Prime Minister, but also the self-appointed ‘Prime Minister for Indigenous Affairs’ attracted the likes of Karl Stefanovic, Lisa Wilkinson, David Koch, Samantha Armytage and ‘that guy from Channel Ten’ (Hugh Riminton), all broadcasting alongside each other in makeshift studios open to the elements.
What the mainstream media weren’t aware of was that for months, there had been a Freedom Summit sit-in organised by Aboriginal leaders pushing for sovereignty and treaty, to be held to mark the first day of Parliament for the year.
What they also weren’t aware of was a strong delegation of grandmothers who had descended on the Aboriginal Tent Embassy in Canberra to protest the skyrocketing rates of child removal that have risen every year since Kevin Rudd said “Sorry”.
The anniversary of the apology is this Friday.
While breakfast television reported on the nation’s top story, there was a much more urgent story unfolding right behind them.
And it was one they by and large ignored.
This morning, about 100 protestors walked the short path from the Aboriginal Tent Embassy to Parliament House, where they took advantage of the media furore and hijacked the photogenic backdrop.

An almost blank Armytage largely ignored the rally, while ‘Kochie’ took a short coffee break to admonish those in attendance, telling them to look up his charities before addressing him personally.
“Our people are suffering!” one woman cried back at him.
Protestors later drowned out Clive Palmer as he was being interviewed by Wilkinson and Stefanovic. Not only were they calling for the return of the thousands of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children, but also justice for black deaths in custody.
A small girl held a picture of the 22-year-old Yamitji woman Julieka Dhu, who suffered excruciating pain for three days whilst in custody and died after being refused hospital care last year. She had been arrested and jailed for unpaid fines.
Her uncle, Shaun Harris, travelled from Geraldton in Western Australia and has camped at the tent embassy for two weeks to raise awareness of her death.
Julieka’s face was beamed across the nation behind the shoulders of Clive Palmer, a miner who made his wealth from ripping resources off the stolen land of Aboriginal people.
“Loan us $20 Clive,” one protestor asked him. Palmer reportedly replied he had no money on him.
As the protestors drowned out Channel Nine’s coverage, the crew took a break to discuss how they would handle it. A short while later, Stefanovic stepped off the stage and approached them.
“I’m not going to bullshit you,” he said.
“All I’m saying is at the moment we are concentrating on the leadership spill… I’m happy to talk to you after… I’m off at 11 and I’m happy to talk to you.”
After 11, Stefanovic was nowhere to be seen.
News broke that Abbott had survived, but it was largely brushed off by the protestors.
The 24-hour media cycle might clock the fate of politicians, but it does nothing to measure the trauma of slow justice which has been ticking over for 200 years.
The roundabout of leadership, whether Labor or Liberal, barely makes a difference to the thousands of Aboriginal families struggling to cope with the trauma of removed children, or those who have had loved ones die in police custody.
These rates have risen regardless of who is in government.

Around 1 pm, as the talking heads left, a concerned Mel Doyle from Channel Seven approached the rally to make a deal with protestors, as she readied herself to take over the afternoon coverage.  According to Doyle, not only was she going to discuss the leadership spill, but also the victims of the Sydney siege, as if that shouldn’t be interrupted by Aboriginal protestors who only want to discuss sovereignty and stolen children.
She offered a compromise – if protestors were quiet, Channel Seven would run a story on the issues raised by the rally.
The rally agreed. Doyle left, and then a short while later, workers began taking down the stage.
New Matilda did not hear of whether Channel Seven planned to run the story.
But if the media had stuck around, and bothered to cover the real story, which was only two metres behind them, they would have heard from the strong Aboriginal women who are trying to wrangle back control of their future, and the future of their children.
Women like Vanessa Colbung, Karen Fusi, Jennifer Swan and Debbie Swan, who have travelled from all around the country to demand the return of their children as part of the various Grandmothers Against Removals groups which now have branches across Australia.
The latest statistics are urgent. 
The Productivity Commission’s Report on Government Services found 14,991 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children were in out-of-home care as of 30 June 2014. That makes up 35 per cent of all children in care, despite Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander kids only making up 4.4 percent of the population.
The last Productivity Commission report into Overcoming Indigenous Disadvantage, released last year, found removal rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children had increased by 65 per cent since Kevin Rudd said sorry to the Stolen Generations.
Debra Swan, who worked in child protection in NSW for 13 years before she quit after her sister’s grandchildren were removed, told New Matilda it wasn’t a new Stolen Generations.
“The Stolen Generations never stopped. It’s a continuation. They just changed the language of it.”
Her sister, Jennifer, who is fighting for the care of her grandchildren, remembers vividly where she was when Kevin Rudd said sorry.
“We had tears in our eyes. I thought ‘I would never want to go through that, then it happens to me [a few] years later.”

To the millions who saw the red, black and yellow flags blocking out Parliament House on morning broadcasts, these protestors were just a backdrop. They were pictures. But there are stories of heartbreak and hurt in every person who let their frustration spill out on screen.
Unfortunately whilst mainstream media concentrated on the political future of a man who has done nothing for this nation’s most vulnerable, the other, more urgent story came to them. And they were too blind to see it.
In the midst of this, eight delegates from the Freedom Summit won a meeting with Indigenous affairs minister Nigel Scullion, who later met the protestors at the rally. Aunty Jenny Munro told the rally it was the beginning of “a dialogue, a process”.
According to Les Coe, who attended the meeting, the issue at the centre of the protest was “power and control”.
“We don’t care who is the leader. They are all the same. We want to talk about power and control over our lives.
“We want to talk about power and control over our kids future.”
It’s a shame so few people – in particular media – are prepared to listen.

Sunday, 8 February 2015

Lost blog

Lost former blog format. This one is awful. Can't get old back so stuck here for a while. Let me know if you can help me fix it.

Podemos

Podemos: ‘We have to rescue the people, not the banks’

 
  83  586  
WEB EXCLUSIVE
Tim Baster and Isabelle Merminod hear words to cheer at a rally of Spain’s mass-movement for change.
Pablo Iglesias [Related Image]
Democracy is the possibility of changing something that does not work said Pablo Iglesias at the Podemos march on 31 January. © Isabelle Merminod
They chanted ‘Yes, it is possible!’ Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators jammed into Madrid’s Puerta del Sol and side streets on Saturday 31 January for the first national rally of Podemos, Spain’s fast-growing mass movement for change.
Why were they there? Well-dressed 30 to 40-year-olds facing unemployment, young people without a future and the older generation who had lived through Franco’s dictatorship responded, ‘We are fed up.’
‘Finish with austerity, finish with the cuts, recover all the rights they have robbed from us… The people have regained the hope that they can reconstruct something,’ says Isabelle Alba, a member of the National Citizens’ Council, the governing body of Podemos. ‘We used to live thinking that nothing depended on what we did.’
In 2011, the Indignados (15M) movement occupied the Puerta del Sol. Young people facing levels of unemployment topping 50 per cent demanded a future from a Spanish élite clinging to neoliberal policies and austerity. When the occupation ended, the emphasis switched to grassroots organizing.
As Occupy movements spread in the West and the Arab spring exploded, the Spanish people formed a lively anti-austerity movement across Spain. Blockading houses to stop evictions, building movements against privatizations and fighting cuts in public services. From this strengthening grassroots movement of resistance Podemos was born in early 2014.
As Miguel Urban of Podemos Madrid, put it bluntly: ‘We had enough political honesty to recognize that everything else we tried had failed.’ He argues that activists were forced to create a clear national political challenge to neoliberal policies. Germán Cano, another member of the National Citizens’ Council, said that for the Spanish Left, 15M was a revelation, which made them rethink their practice and their discourse.

The scramble to organize

Podemos was formally registered on March 2014. As Isabelle Alba explains, there was then a scramble to organize for the European Parliament elections on 25 May 2014.
With no national organization and just three months in which to organize, Podemos won five seats in the European Parliament with nearly 8 per cent of the vote.
‘Finish with austerity, finish with the cuts, recover all the rights they have robbed from us... The people have regained the hope that they can reconstruct something’
Over 2014, people were setting up ‘circles’ in the neighbourhoods, in work, and around the defence of public services. Alba says there are around 800 of them now – self-organized groups ‘of debate and education’ operating in the already rich and strengthening anti-austerity movement across Spain.
At the end of 2014 Podemos had their first national assembly, voting for a 62-member national ‘Citizens Council’ and organizational and political documents. This includes the famous Ethical Code, which requires Podemos representatives to work for ‘the recovery of popular sovereignty and democracy’.
Alba says that Podemos does not have ‘members’ as such. They have the ‘signed up’ – some 200,000. She points out that anyone can vote – you just sign up. It is not like a traditional political party with a membership.
2015 is the year of elections in Spain. Snap elections in the region of Andalucía are due for March. In May there are municipal elections and elections in 13 regions including Madrid. Cataluña has elections in September. National elections are due to be held in November.
Recent polls of voting intentions put Podemos either in front or second after the rightwing Partido Popular (PP).

The people’s demands

Podemos supporters concentrate their deepest contempt on what they call La Casta – the Caste. This means the corrupt bi-party political system of the PP and the Partido Socialista Obrero Español (PSOE) taking turns to implement austerity and neoliberal polices.
Isabelle Merminod
'Here is the proof that the people are rising. That lies are no longer acceptable,' heard the crowd in Puerta del Sol.Isabelle Merminod
Just over a week ago, the ex-treasurer of the PP, Luis Bárcenas, facing serious corruption charges, was surprisingly released on bail, thus delaying his trial. Many people noted that had he not been released, his trial would have taken place during this year of elections, thus embarrassing the PP.
Carlos Fernández Liria, professor of philosophy, says that the people’s demands are hardly revolutionary: ‘They demand, on the one hand, dignity and that [La Casta] doesn’t mock or cheat them, and on the other the basic necessities for a life of dignity…which are now disappearing.’
But he adds: ‘Capitalism has become so cruel that the only way of obtaining things like the right to [support] a family is to do away with capitalism.’
According to the grassroots organization fighting evictions, PAH, there were 23,340 legal actions for repossessions of homes in the final quarter of 2014, a 10-per-cent increase over the same period in 2013. Tens of thousands of evictions take place each year.
Five and half million people are now unemployed – just under 24 per cent of the working-age population, with youth unemployment (those between 15 and 24 years old) at 53 per cent. As one of the speakers at the rally, Jose Luis Monedero, exclaimed: ‘We have to rescue the people, not the banks.’
The Spanish people are working out for themselves how to get rid of a corrupt élite and put an end to neoliberalism and austerity. As Pablo Iglesias, the leader of Podemos, said at the rally on 31 January: ‘Today we dream. And we take our dreams seriously.’

- See more at: http://newint.org/features/web-exclusive/2015/02/04/podemos-rally/#.dpuf

Monday, 2 February 2015

Asylum Seekers as a false problem

Asylum seekers, people coming to Australia on boats, are a false problem that prevents for the Australian people a direct confrontation with a real problem. The federal govt. (& many Australian people) see asylum seekers as a problem when they really they act as a type of solution to a problem: serving to prevent the govt (& people) from encountering its own internal crisis, viz., its fear of the other.