Category: General news

Managing director of Ebono Institute and major sponsor of The Generator, Geoff Ebbs, is running against Kevin Rudd in the seat of Griffith at the next Federal election. By the expression on their faces in this candid shot it looks like a pretty dull campaign. Read on

  • The forces that could stop the Islamic State (ISIS)

    The forces that could stop the Islamic State (ISIS)

    by · August 18, 2014

    ISIS on the march in Iraq

    ISIS on the march in Iraq

    With Barack Obama launching airstrikes against the forces of ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq & Syria) and Western leaders like Tony Abbott expressing their readiness to take their countries into military action also, Left Flank joins the discussion on the Left about the alternative to more imperialist militarism.

    The UK-based Counterfire website has run a good piece by John Rees outlining the history of the Kurdish Question since the 1916 Sykes-Picot division of the region, copper-fastened at Lausanne. I want to add a couple of further points and an argument questioning the necessary centrality and imperviousness to co-optation of the call for an independent, unified state of Kurdistan, which John advances in his piece.

    As I’ll return to, none of this questions the legitimacy of the demand for an independent Kurdistan, nor is it arguing in some bad “ultra-imperialist” way that all national questions are now of necessity subsumed by one or other imperialist interest.

    Raising the demand for a Kurdish independent state (particularly from within the imperialist powers) does not ally with imperialism. But is it wise? And is it a permanent sure-footing against sliding into that morass?

    A few points:

    1) The recent history of the Iraqi Kurdish political leaders is appalling. As John says, they have collaborated with the Turkish state against the Kurdish struggle in Turkey. In fact, between them the PUK and KDP have worked with the Shah, the Iranian state in the 1980s, Saddam and those before him, the Turkish state, Israel and the imperialist states against others and against one another.

    They have long degenerated to be little more than the extensions of the Barzani and Talabani clans. They unite in repressing young and progressive Kurdish and other forces in the KRG (Kurdistan Regional Government) region they control in northern Iraq. Their heroic days are long gone. The old mountain trained cadre is in Gucci suits not guerrilla fatigues. Their revolutionary vigour has shrunk in proportion to their expanding waistlines. Nothing good will come of those forces. They are long gone from our side, broadly defined.

    The PKK leadership is of course better. And the reality of oppression by NATO member Turkey has forced a certain path. But it too is not immune from the effects of the realpolitik it must practise. And the degeneration of elements of the party into cultism — under the pressure of horrific repression, we must never forget — should not be forgotten.

    It is not now fighting for an independent pan-Kurdish state. It is a matter for it and its base what it fights for, of course. But this is the situation.

    Until three years ago it made some progress in talks with Erdogan towards greater autonomy, national rights and so on. Then Erdogan abandoned yet another mark of distinction from the Kemalist establishment and renewed the madness of seeking a military solution to the Kurdish question.

    That said, there is no force among the Kurds raising the call for a unified state as central. Indeed, many left-wing Kurds are deeply critical of the politics that have led to this impasse and are emphasising the common struggle of peoples across the region as central, with the national question to be dealt with through unifying that struggle, not as a revolutionary “detonator” for a second stage of social revolution (the old “Kurdish-Marxist” position).

    2) Just as the position of Kurdish forces is malleable, so is that of Turkey and the now diminished states of Iraq and Syria.

    Of course, they are opposed to Kurdish developments that damage them. But the game now is accommodating the idea of “Kurdistan” in a way that directs it more against their opponents.

    So Erdogan’s Turkey is in favour of a stronger KRG against any Iraq that is close to Iran. And it has enormously increased trade with the KRG. It doesn’t want outright secession by Kurds in Turkey, of course. But no actual political force among the Kurds in Iraq or even Turkey is pressing for that. Raising a pure vision of an independent Kurdistan may appear to verbally cut through this, but no social force is pushing for it and there is enormous flexibility by imperialism over these questions. This is particularly so given the volatility of the whole region and when no material, fighting force is possessed of the slogan, it then floats free for others to play with.

    The US and its allies said they would never arm the KRG directly as it would threaten the breakup of Iraq and potentially redound against Turkey. Until they did arm the KRG.

    None of the imperialist powers gave a fig for national rights in Kosovo throughout the 1990s until… until they went to war in the name of Kosovan independence. Independence under NATO air power and tutelage was, many of us argued at the time, a sick joke. Some others believed in the magical, romantic power of the Kosovo question such that under any circumstances pursuing independence could be only progressive. It was not, notwithstanding the “right” to self-determination in principle. Upholding that right by socialists in Yugoslavia was hugely important. Believing you could exercise it in alliance with imperialism, as the KLA did at the very least, was to destroy the very notion of self-determination.

    I see nothing inherent in the Kurdish question that makes slogans based upon it immune to the shifting policies of imperialism.

    That’s all pretty speculative. Now to the concrete:

    3) Sykes-Picot is breaking down. The two principals that delineated its borders, Syria and Iraq, are fragmenting. Whatever happens, they will not be put back together as they were.

    A de facto threefold partition of Iraq is well advanced.

    Forces railing against the Sykes-Picot division are not only we socialists or progressives. They include IS and all sorts or sectarian, particularist reactionaries.

    It would be madness for socialists to defend the old lines on the map. Equally, we must recognise that the dominant political trends are towards the chauvinist, sectarian repartitioning of the region. In this, there is ample room for manoeuvre by the imperialist powers (even if it is a dangerous game). The Biden plan is one such playbook.

    The Levant and Middle East have long shared a characteristic with the Balkans — they may be unified or redrawn from above or from below. From above has always meant ethnic displacement as one power expands at the expense of others. The direct presence of imperialism (especially its outpost Israel) has subtly maintained the divisions that amplify this prospect.

    None of that means indifference to national oppression or to the right to self-determination. But it does mean recognising that they may be overcome/achieved successfully only through a radical struggle from below encompassing all peoples, firmly against imperialism (including Israel) and formulating a programme of national rights anchored in the internationalist defence of minorities in majority-other polities.

    4) There is a deep sentiment across the region for such a universalist rebuff to all sectarianism and particularism (including where national consciousness is indeed a product of national/ethnic oppression — Kurds, Assyrians, Turcomen, Copts, Berbers, etc).

    That sentiment informed the first wave of “constitutional” nationalism in the region; e.g. Egypt and Iran. But that political project was compromised by the narrow nationalism of nation-state building and by failure to consistently confront imperialism.

    The second wave of radical pan-Arabism offered more hope. But it, in both Nasserist and Ba’athist registers, failed to draw in non-Arabs and succumbed to the petty rivalry of Sykes-Picot states it had raged against: the failure of the Egypt-Syria Arab union, the war between the Ba’athist states of Syria and Iraq.

    Then the Islamists — Muslim Brotherhood and others — offered an answer transcending particularist identity and Sykes-Picot-truncated states. But they too have failed; most obviously with regard to non-Muslim minorities. Rabaa a year ago was a massacre. The removal of Morsi was a coup. But his government and supporters did ferociously attack the Copts, thus making the military coup all the easier as well as being utterly reactionary in itself. The Syrian disaster has heightened Islamist particularism — even sectarianism.

    The old vehicles for promoting the radical struggle from below are still major features on the stage. But none can carry us forward as they once promised.

    5) In these circumstances I believe we should champion a rejuvenated anti-imperialism which foregrounds the best positions of the early communist movement in the region. Of course it is criminal to oppose an independent Kurdish state if social forces fight for it against the wider apparatus of divide and rule.

    But should our message not rather be: there can be no freedom under the twin gangs of Talabani and Barzani; none under Erdogan or the Kemalists; none as Kurds while the Arabs are playthings of those who robbed us in 1923; none while Palestine is occupied; none while the kleptocrats of the Gulf are in power; none under Sisi; none from the takfiris; none for me but not my brother — out with the imperialist powers and all the elites, equal rights for all the peoples through common struggle of us all — from Rabaa, to Ramallah, to Irbil.

    For sure, there are many tactical and nuanced positions that then must be taken. Politics is not about declaiming socialism. An orientation left at that may become abstract. But in a situation where the breakdown of the old order threatens — as it always does — greater reaction as well as the prospect of great progress I believe we should champion our politics of revolutionary progress, while dealing with confused and partial struggles on that basis, not hoping that one of them or one national formulation and slogan will unlock the gate to the prison house and never fall into the hands of the jailer

    – See more at: http://left-flank.org/2014/08/18/forces-stop-islamic-state-isis/#sthash.bihsUe9x.dpuf

  • Daily update: Abbott’s new attack on renewables may spark another solar boom

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    AdUTS Secondary Teachingwww.uts.edu.au/future-students – Masters degree 1.5 years UTS Open Day 30 August

    Daily update: Abbott’s new attack on renewables may spark another solar boom

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    Renew Economy editor@reneweconomy.com.au via mail12.atl111.rsgsv.net

    3:18 PM (33 minutes ago)

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    Abbott attack on renewables may spark solar boom; Australia risks being last on renewables; SunPower to trial leasing in Melbourne; Climate change should be on G20 agenda: CEDA; Wind provides 25% of demand in W.A.; Germany meets 75% of domestic electricity demand with renewables; while Japan’s coal use barely moves despite nuclear shutdown; Evidence shows dredge spoil threat to Barrier Reef; Ocean acidity levels’ rapid rise; Bike sharing? Its complicated; and Empire State Building gets efficient.
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    RenewEconomy Daily News
    The Parkinson Report
    Tony Abbott’s renewed attacked on the renewable energy industry might be bad news for wind and large scale solar, but it could spark another ‘solar-coaster’ as households and small businesses rush to install rooftop PV systems before the remaining incentives are closed.
    Renewables sector says cutting or killing RET will kill off solar, cost investors billions, and leave Australia ‘dead dog last’ on clean energy.
    SunPower to test solar leasing model in Australia with launch of pilot program in Melbourne, offering 25-year locked in monthly rate at no up-front cost.
    CEDA report calls climate change a ‘G20 litmus test,’ and test of Australia’s role in tacking global economic problems requiring collective action.
    Wind energy accounts for 25% of W.A’s electricity demand – a far cry from days when 5% was said to break the grid.
    At 2pm on August 18, the combined output of renewables in Germany amounted to 41GW, or 75% of all domestic power requirements.
    Japan has kept fossil energy consumption roughly at pre-recession levels, despite shutting down most of its nuclear power stations since 2011.
    Counter to scientific evidence, proponents for the huge expansion of coal ports along the coast of QLD insist dredging won’t harm the Great Barrier Reef.
    New study from NOAA shows growing acidification of Alaska’s waters, particularly those off the southern coast, threatens the state’s whole economy.
    How many people have traded their car for a bike-share bike? That’s where the certainty ends about how bike-sharing programs benefit the climate.
    The energy retrofit at the Empire State Building has changed the trajectory of energy use in buildings.
  • Australian class actions set to rise

    Professional services organization the Goal Group has predicted that the number of securities class actions in Australia was about to rise significantly, after they opened their first Australian office in Melbourne.

    This comes after Maurice Blackburn announced their class action against each of the big banks over credit card charges.

    Andreas Costi predicted last week that securities class actions, which had been averaging 11 a year, would rise to approximately 20 following the entrant of a new and aggressive specialist law firm ACA.

    Goal has estimated that more than $31.5 billion of withholding tax is deducted globally each year and that its products and services facilitate the recovery of about $11.5 billion of that. However, there is still about $10.6 billion left unclaimed by its rightful owners.

    The Goal global class action service supports corporates and institutions such as superannuation funds, fund managers and custodians that have suffered financial loss from owning shares in a company where there has been mismanagement or unlawful behaviour.

    Goal, which started life in 1989 in the UK as an investment technology company, is now one of the world’s major providers of securities class action outsourcing services and global withholding tax reclamation services.

  • Southbank best retail and food destination in Queensland

    Southbank from the airSouthbank made history last week when it received top honour of 2014 Retail Property of the Year at the Property Council of Australia (Qld) Awards making it the first time a ‘precinct’ has won the coveted title.

    It was also the first entrant to receive a perfect score as winner of the Excellence in Marketing Award and then took out the Excellence in Food Retailing Award.

    The much-loved destination, which draws over 10 million visitors annually nudged out some of the State’s largest retail centres and dining districts to score its award-winning trifecta.

    CEO of South Bank Corporation Jeff Weigh was delighted with the three accolades and was grateful to the PCA for recognising the precinct’s overall retail offer, diverse dining options and excellence in marketing.

    “We are extremely proud of our leasing and marketing efforts over the past few years as we work to maintain our position at the forefront of the State’s retail, dining and leisure scene.

    “The Retail Property of the Year award is one of the most prestigious honours for excellence in the retail sector, recognising outstanding overall achievement for a property or precinct. The accolade was awarded to the retail property that achieved the highest average aggregate out of the three award categories.

    “Our innovative South Bank Concierge marketing campaign scored a perfect score of 100 points from the judging panel based on our ability to tap into the 61,000-plus conference delegates visiting the destination annually.

    “The Excellence in Food Retailing Award cements our dominance of the Brisbane food scene and key points-of-difference including the choice of over 28 restaurants, cafes and bars that line both Little Stanley and Grey Streets,” Weigh added.

    “Our re-launch campaign of Little Stanley Street in late 2013 generated immediate results and has proven to be our most successful brand marketing and retail sales campaign to date.”

    Queensland executive director of the Property Council, Kathy Mac Dermott said the Queensland Retail Property Awards recognise excellence in retail properties and precincts throughout Queensland in the areas of marketing, design, food and presentation.

    “In 2014, 68 finalists were recognised throughout the State, representing properties and precincts in a range of size categories.

    “South Bank’s achievement marks the first time a precinct has won Retail Property of the Year…and our congratulations go to all finalists and winners on their fantastic achievements,” Mac Dermott said.

    South Bank is also gearing up to welcome a further 3,500 to 4,000 people who will live and work in the vicinity following Anthony John Group’s announcement in April it will build its second Emporium Hotel; together with a new commercial precinct housing the global headquarters of Flight Centre at the southern end of Grey Street.

    It will also be a key destination when Brisbane hosts the G20 Leaders Summit in November 2014.

  • Red Bull Flying Bach – Winners announced

    Red Bull Flying Bach returns to Australia and will be back in New South Wales and Victoria, and debuting in Queensland, Western Australia and South Australia in September and October.

    Best explained as classical music meets urban dance moves. Breakdancing choreographed to Bach’s composition of the ‘Well-Tempered Calvier’, which dates back to 1722.

    Watch the videos below to see what Red Bull Flying Bach is all about.

    Red Bull Flying Bach 2014 will be showing at QPAC in Brisbane September 24-26.

    Westender’s Red Bull Flying Bach 2014 Contest Winners

    Westender wants to congratulate the six lucky winners of this contest, thank you all for participating!

    Winners have been notified by email.

    More info about Red Bull Flying Bach 2014

    Red Bull Flying Bach 2014 Australian tour dates:
    • State Theatre, Sydney: 4 shows, 9-12 September
    • Crown Theatre, Perth: 4 shows, 17-20 September
    • QPAC, Brisbane: 3 shows, 24-26 September
    • Arts Centre, Melbourne: 4 shows, 1-4 October
    • Festival Theatre, Adelaide: 3 shows, 7-9 October

    Ticket information:
    Tickets are on sale now, prices starting from $89: www.redbullflyingbach.com

    Social Media
    Twitter: www.twitter.com/RedBullAU #FlyingBachAU #GivesYouWings
    Instagram: www.instagram.com/RedBullAU #FlyingBachAU #GivesYouWings
    Facebook: www.facebook.com/redbull

  • Business tune-up for Small Business Week

    Tony Curl
    Tony Curl presenting at Brisbane’s Entertainment Centre

    Leadership, Life and Style is hosting an event to inspire and build business as part of 2014 Queensland Small Business Week. 2014 Queensland Small Business Week from 1-6 September is a Queensland Government initiative supporting and celebrating the important role of small business in the Queensland economy.

    The event, a Business Tune-Up Workshop will be held at Norman Hotel, 102 Ipswich Road, Wooloongabba on 1st September at 6pm.

    Tony Curl, Founder of Leadership, Life and Style said the focus of 2014 Queensland Small Business Week was to help small business to have a big future.

    “Our event is designed to provide information that will inspire business owners and contacts that will help them build their business,” Tony said.

    “Small business is vital to Queensland’s economy, representing approximately 95 percent of all Queensland businesses and employing almost half of the state’s private sector workforce.

    “2014 Queensland Small Business Week is being delivered by the Department of Tourism, Major Events, Small Business and the Commonwealth Games.”

    The event by Leadership, Life and Style is one of a host being delivered by business, industry and government as part of the statewide celebrations.

    Tony said the event, “Business Tune-Up” was a workshop designed to provide greater understanding in financial understanding, team engagement and customer retention for the business owner. It’s open to business owners interested in:

    • gaining a better understanding of business support available

    • gaining new ideas and inspiration

    • gaining an insight into growing your business, networking and business trends

    • improving your business management capability.

    To book for the event and for more information on 2014 Queensland Small Business Week visitwww.business.qld.gov.au/smallbusinessweek