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On the Road III

After Jabiru and Ubir rock we cross the Alligator River and head to Gurig National Park on the Coburg Peninsular. Located NNE of Darwin and accessible via Arnhem Land the trip covers 560 km of mostly gravel roads and some great land. Shane Stone told me that Arnhem Land never had any leases operating and I wonder why. Seemingly great cattle country with ample feed and water I can only surmise that it was to remote to settle.

Permits are required for Australians to drive through Australia when there are Aborigines present and access to the park is also dependant on a $220.00 fee. But hey, who’s complaining.
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Fahrenheit 9/11

Yeah. I know. The subject has been around for awhile but I’ve decided to include this link to 59 deceits by Dave Kopel to help readers gain access to a critical assessment of the politdoco produced by Michael Moore.

I haven’t seen Fahrenheit 9/11 and have no intentions of doing so. To me it would be like taking time out of my busy life to spend an evening with Phillip Adams. I just have better ways of spending my time than watching a 122 minute anti-Bush/US political add peppered with lies, lies of omission and half truths.

It amazes me that people in Brisbane Australia will pay good money to watch a Democrat Political ad and accept it in blind faith. What?s more upsetting is that Moore is making buckets of money out of the exercise and no-one is calling him to order other than in the blogworld.

Great money if you can get it. I bet John Singleton never made anywhere as much money out of any of his ALP TV adverts. But then John is not as unprincipled as Moore.

I’m surprised Phillip Adams hasn’t thought of this and produced a politdoco making Howard look like a liar and a fool using the same formulae as Moore. Get an unflattering film clip of Howard, season with lies, lies of omission and half truths and sell it to the world.

Then again, maybe Phil has thought of it.

As an aside. Can you imagine the uproar if someone produced a similar piece on John Kerry. We would never hear about it. The press would block it and no actor would even look at a script and yet with Kerry’s background it would be a great expose.

Ah, the dream. Level playing field – unbiased media.

Stupid of me, I know.

Howard rejects war lies petition

JOHN Howard yesterday rejected a statement by 43 former service chiefs and diplomats who accused him of committing Australia to the Iraq war on the basis of lies.

The Prime Minister vowed to continue to reject the “misrepresentation” that his Government joined the war in Iraq based on false assumptions and deception.

The letter was signed by former defence force chiefs Alan Beaumont and Peter Gration, former defence department secretary Paul Barratt, former prime minister’s department secretaries Alan Renouf and Richard Woolcott and former ambassadors including Rawdon Dalrymple, Stephen Fitzgerald and Ross Garnaut.

There are no surprises there.

They did the same in 2002 as reported here and look at the signatories then:

Bill Hayden, governor-general, 1989-1996; E.G. Whitlam, prime minister 1972-1975; J.M. Fraser, prime minister 1975-1983; R.J. Hawke, prime minister 1983-1991; John Hewson, opposition leader 1990-1994; General Peter Gration, chief of the Defence Force 1987-1993; Admiral Alan Beaumont, chief of the Defence Force 1993-1995; Admiral Mike Hudson, chief of the naval staff 1985-1991; Major-General Peter Phillips, national president, RSL.

No surprises there either.

The Evatt foundation also talk about the 2002 petition. Go there and see what company they keep.

Margo Kingston, Al Gore, Gareth (Biggles) Evans, Phillip Knightly and Tom Uren to name a few.

I hope Howard had the wit to roll his eyes on receiving the petition.

Top aides quit Government House

From Brisbanes Courier Mail.

Three top aides to Governor Richard Butler have indicated they will conclude their duties and not return.

Official secretary John Chilcott, senior adviser Anne Parker and aide-de-camp Chris Beattie will leave Government House today.

Mr Chilcott, a respected public servant, and Mrs Parker, a lawyer who previously worked in private practice in Hobart, are expected to hand in their resignations shortly. Mr Beattie has already resigned.

The walkout comes after months of conflict between staff and Mr Butler and his wife Jennifer over the role of governor.

Even the Aide de camp has voted with his feet

Another Government House figure, police aide-de-camp Commander Syd McClymont, also handed in his notice this week after 17 years in the honorary role.

Only Butler, so anti establishment, would force senior public servants to leave.

Must be a great story there but I doubt if we will ever here it all.

If any Tassie readers know more please leave a comment.

UPDATE Reader Harry Tuttle has done some googling and come up with these links that add more detail to the saga. Read his comments and then follow up the links here and here

Thanks Harry.

UPDATE II

Premier orders Butler to crisis talks.

RICHARD Butler has 24 hours to prepare a convincing argument that he should remain the Tasmanian Governor after a frustrated Premier Paul Lennon yesterday ordered the irascible former diplomat to a crisis meeting about his handling of the vice-regal post.

Love it. What goes around comes around Richard old chap.

FTA II

Niall on my post on the FTA

Skimming the pond brought up a visit by some soul from a typical right-leaning site with a little to say on the AUSFTA issue. I say ‘little’ because that’s essentially all there is. Hardly enlightening and not very surprising, but rather depressing to realize these people still exist.

I guess he’s depressed because right-leaning sites still exist with opinions that differ from left-leaning sites.

Get use to it Niall. The left is, was and always will be a minority.
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FTA

Australia is on the verge of gaining better access to the greatest and largest market on the face of the globe and all Labour can do is use the agreement as a US bashing exercise. If the trade agreement was with another market there wouldn’t be a whisper.

Latham, by his antics, can only be described as Anti American and we all know where the left sit on this matter.

As Janet ALBRECHTSEN notes

WHILE the ALP may have given a slow-motion thumbs up to Australia’s free trade agreement with the US, it will do little to allay fears that anti-Americanism is still writ large on the party’s psyche.

That’s the worry. It might look like clever posturing on Lathams behalf but I can’t see the voter being over concerned by the small details of the patents on drugs. They will just see it as anti-American and that will be dangerous baggage for Labour to carry to the election.

For a long time now Latham has said we will reserve our stand on the FTA until our Senate enquirie comes up with a recommendation. The enquirie has now come up with a recommendation…..It’s good for Australia accept it… but he has to pay homage to left-wing members and his own anti-Americanism.

Let’s see. How can I let everyone know I’m anti-American and gain political mileage out of this? I know. I’ll put in some conditions. That way we won’t look like we folded under pressure.

Left wing still not happy, voters confused and rolling eyes and all Howard is trying to do is stitch up a deal with the Yanks.

On the Road II

We arrive in Darwin on the 26th of June late in the afternoon. The first obvious point about Darwin is that there is no golden mile of motels. Wary of top prices in the CBD we look at the Stuart Highway and eventually choose one of only two we could find on the road into town.

We watch the football at the local pub and next morning work hard at laundry so when the wives arrived they wouldn’t have to.

The next morning Brian phones Shane Stone to be told we’d made a dubious choice with the motel…’Third country mate!’ and then we remembered a disproportionate number of cabs pulling up with ladies of indeterminate professions, maybe the oldest, but then what would I know?.

Shane offers us his recently vacated house – no furniture but power and tons of room to throw down swags. Shane was at the house when we arrived and amongst other things said.

“If the elections was set for August do you think I’d be here cleaning up my garage?

No. But I’m happy to see the media waste space on guesses.

At dinner that night Shane was very clear in his description of Galarrwuy Yunupingu, the Chairman of the Northern Land Council, and summed it up with…He’s a Black Prince.

I’d followed Galarrwuy in the press and wondered how I would be able to reconcile his rumoured wealth with the poor conditions his people suffer.

I’m beginning to think I won’t be able to.

I do know I can’t agree with his thoughts on the maintenance of tribal law.

You may wonder at the connection between Shane Stone, Galarrwuy Yunupingu and us. Both of them have sons at a GPS Boarding School in Brisbane and my friends run the house where the boys live. Nothing sinister, no insider deals, just a common interest in two boys.

Shane and Josephine are first order hosts and the few days we spend in Darwin are used up with restocking for our sojourn into Arnhem Land, rest and social activities. We watched the fireworks celebrating Territory Day from the balcony of their top floor apartment at Rundle Bay and next night have dinner at Buzzes and the next, at Sicilian.

If you go to Darwin do yourself a favour and visit these two fine restaurants.

Whilst at Buzzes I had occasion to use the bathroom and after establishing correct aim I looked up to see the whole restaurant through a one way mirror. My initial reactions was a mid-stream freeze but resumed business when I noticed no one was looking.

We now head off to Kakadu, or as the Territorians call it, Kakadont and arrive in time to go on the Yellow Waters boat tour. All the boats are skippered by woman and they do an excellent job.

With crocodiles

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Birds

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and brilliant sunsets

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it was money well spent.

Whereas my money was well spent, I’m not sure that royalties given to the local people by ERA have been as well used.

There has been a lot of political bullshit about Kakadu and the debate still rages.

Troppo Armadillo posted a positive piece here and a dated article by David Barnet paints a less happy picture.

Energy Resources of Australia (ERA), has, for instance, since 1980, paid out more than $132 million in royalties, plus $5.1 million in up-front fees and lease costs, to the Northern Land Council and to local Aborigines. It expects to pay out another $210 million over the next 28 years.

The Northern Land Council shares 40 per cent of these royalties among the Territory’s four Land Councils, taking 57 per cent of that share for itself. Another 30 per cent goes as ‘grants’—running costs for the Aboriginal Benefits Trust Account, which is the body set up to receive the royalties after ERA pays them to the Commonwealth—and ‘Land Council top-ups’. Up until 1995, the Gagadju Association got the remaining 30 per cent.

There has been a rediscovery of spiritual connections to the land. Since Kakadu was set up, and since the uranium royalties began to flow, the Aboriginal population has risen from 100 to 300.

and

There are flaws in this Eden, flaws that afflict Aboriginal Australians more generally. It would seem from various somewhat guarded reports, that there has been no improvement in either health or education. The schools have failed to provide adequate levels of literacy, so that there are training and education problems. Along with the flow of uranium royalties there has been an increase in alcoholism and crime.

Northern Land Council distribution of these royalties is very questionable.

Later in our trip we visit Nhullunbuy where I witness Black Prince/Northern Land Council excesses and little obvious advancement of life styles of our Indigenous brothers. A society locked in time-warped nomadic lives gathering yams but no English skills, while leaders have degrees and fly around in helicopters.

More on that later.

I’m happy John

Clearly the FTA will be of great benefit to Australia. How do I know this?

Well Margot Kingston says it won’t be good and Latham is squaring up for a shit fight with his left-wing contingent at his Caucus meeting. As well, I just saw Bob Brown delivering another stunningly erudite statement about Latham giving in to Howard and Bush.

That clinches it!

Don’t have to be an economist to work out what is good for the country – just watch the left’s vote and go against it

Bound to work

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