Author: Neville

  • Another Country (MONBIOT)

    Monbiot.com

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    Another Country

    Posted: 28 Jan 2013 12:29 PM PST

    The way we are governed is inexplicable – until you understand the upbringing of the elite.

    By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian 29th January 2013

    Those whom the gods love die young: are they trying to tell me something? Due to an inexplicable discontinuity in space-time, on Sunday I turned 50. I have petitioned the relevant authorities, but there’s nothing they can do.

    So I will use the occasion to try to explain the alien world from which I came. To understand how and why we are now governed as we are, you need to know something of that strange place.

    I was born into the third tier of the dominant class: those without land or capital, but with salaries high enough to send their children to private schools. My preparatory school, which I attended from the age of eight, was a hard place, still Victorian in tone. We boarded, and saw our parents every few weeks. We were addressed only by our surnames and caned for misdemeanours. Discipline was rigid, pastoral care almost non-existent. But it was also strangely lost.

    A few decades earlier, the role of such schools was clear: they broke boys’ attachment to their families and re-attached them to the instititions – the colonial service, the government, the armed forces – through which the British ruling class projected its power. Every year they released into the world a cadre of kamikazes, young men fanatically devoted to their caste and culture.

    By the time I was eight those institutions had either collapsed (in the case of colonial service), fallen into other hands (government), or were no longer a primary means by which British power was asserted (the armed forces). Such schools remained good at breaking attachments, less good at creating them.

    But the old forms and the old thinking persisted. The school chaplain used to recite a prayer which began “let us now praise famous men”. Most of those he named were heroes of colonial conquest or territorial wars. Some, such as Douglas Haig and Herbert Kitchener, were by then widely regarded as war criminals. Our dormitories were named after the same people. The history we were taught revolved around topics such as Gordon of Khartoum, Stanley and Livingstone and the Black Hole of Calcutta. In geography, the maps still showed much of the globe coloured red.

    My second boarding school was a kinder, more liberal place. But we remained as detached from the rest of society as Carthusian monks. The world, when we were released into it, was unrecognisable. It bore no relationship to our learning or experience. The result was cognitive dissonance: a highly uncomfortable state from which human beings will do almost anything to escape. There were two principal means. One – the more painful – was to question everything you held to be true. This process took me years: in fact it has not ended. It was, at first, highly disruptive to my peace of mind and sense of self.

    The other, as US Republicans did during the Bush presidency, is to create your own reality. If the world does not fit your worldview, you either shore up your worldview with selectivity and denial, or (if you have power) you try to bend the world to fit the shape it takes in your mind. Much of the effort of conservative columnists and editors and of certain politicians and historians appears to be devoted to these tasks.

    In the Origins of Totalitarianism, Hannah Arendt explains that the nobles of pre-revolutionary France “did not regard themselves as representative of the nation, but as a separate ruling caste which might have much more in common with a foreign people of the same society and condition than with its compatriots.”(1) Last year the former Republican staffer Mike Lofgren wrote something very similar about the dominant classes of the US: “the rich elites of this country have far more in common with their counterparts in London, Paris, and Tokyo than with their fellow American citizens … the rich disconnect themselves from the civic life of the nation and from any concern about its well being except as a place to extract loot. Our plutocracy now lives like the British in colonial India: in the place and ruling it, but not of it.”(2)

    Secession from the concerns and norms of the rest of society characterises any well-established elite. Our own ruling caste, schooled separately, brought up to believe in justifying fairytales, lives in a world of its own, from which it can project power without understanding or even noticing the consequences. A removal from the life of the rest of the nation is no barrier to the desire to dominate it. In fact it appears to be associated with a powerful sense of entitlement.

    So if you have wondered how the current government can blithely engage in the wholesale transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich, how its front bench can rock with laughter as it truncates the livelihoods of the poorest people of this country, why it commits troops to ever more pointless post-colonial wars, here, I think, is part of the answer. Many of those who govern us do not in their hearts belong here. They belong to a different culture, a different world, which knows as little of its own acts as it knows of those who suffer them.

    www.monbiot.com

    References:

    1. Hannah Arendt, 1951. The Origins of Totalitarianism. Chapter 6. Originally published by Schocken Books, Berlin.

    2. Mike Lofgren, 27th August 2012. Revolt of the Rich. The American Conservative. http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/revolt-of-the-rich/

  • Tropical Cyclone Felleng (South Indian Ocean)

    Tropical Cyclone Felleng (South Indian Ocean)
    01.28.13

    AIRS image of Felleng› Larger image
    NASA’s Aqua satellite passed over Tropical Storm Felleng on Jan. 28 at 4:29 a.m. EST and showed very cold cloud top temperatures (purple) and bands of thunderstorms wrapping around the center. Credit: NASA JPL, Ed Olsen NASA Satellites Analyze New Tropical Storm Felleng

    NASA’s Aqua and Terra satellites have provided infrared imagery of Tropical Storm Felleng to forecasters. The imagery helped forecasters determine that Felleng would continue to intensify as it nears Madagascar.

    Another tropical cyclone was born in the Southern Indian Ocean on Saturday, Jan. 26 as Tropical Storm 13S came together. On Sunday, Jan. 27 at 10 a.m. EST/U.S. (1500 UTC), Tropical Storm 13S was located at 13.7 South and 61.9 East, about 590 nautical miles (679 miles/1,093 km) northeast of La Reunion Island. Tropical Storm 13S was moving to the west-southwest at 11 knots (12.6 mph/20.3 kph). At that time, the low-level circulation center was partially exposed to outside winds. The strongest convection and heaviest rainfall was being pushed to the north of the center from southerly wind shear.

    The MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) instrument aboard NASA’s Terra satellite captured an infrared image of Tropical Storm 13S on Jan. 27 at 1814 UTC (1:14 p.m. EST) that showed some strong thunderstorms around the center of circulation.

    On Jan. 28, Tropical Storm 13S was renamed “Felleng.” La Reunion Island has also assigned “07/20132013” to the storm because it will be affected by Felleng on its track to the west.

    NASA’s Aqua satellite passed over Tropical Storm Felleng on Jan. 28 at 0929 UTC (4:29 a.m. EST) and the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) instrument captured an image of the storm’s cloud top temperatures. AIRS observes in infrared light, which basically provides temperature information. In respect to tropical cyclones, the higher the thunderstorms (they’re made up of hundreds of thunderstorms), the colder the clouds, and the stronger the thunderstorms. AIRS data showed that cloud top temperatures around the center of Felleng were as cold as -63 Fahrenheit (-52 Celsius). Those strong storms are indicative of areas where heavy rain is falling.

    AIRS imagery also showed that bands of thunderstorms were wrapped tightly around Felleng’s center indicating that the storm was well-organized. AIRS data also showed that the storm is symmetrical. A non-symmetrical storm usually weakens, while symmetrical storms have the potential to strengthen.

    On Jan. 28 at 1500 UTC (10 a.m. EST), Felleng had maximum sustained winds near 45 knots (51.7 mph/83.3 kph). Tropical-storm-force winds extend about 60 nautical miles (69 miles/111 km) from the center. Felleng was located near 13.3 south latitude and 58.4 east longitude, about 500 nautical miles (576 miles/926 km) north-northeast of La Reunion Island. Felleng is moving to the west at 10 knots (11.5 mph/18.5 kph).

    The Joint Typhoon Warning Center expects Tropical Storm Felleng to intensify over the next several days as it moves west. Felleng is expected to reach hurricane (cyclone) strength as it approaches Madagascar’s east coast, and then it is forecast to be pushed south by an approaching area of low pressure. Felleng is forecast to move south and travel between eastern Madagascar and La Reunion Island by Feb. 1.

    Text Credit: Rob Gutro
    NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.

  • Rinehart branches out into oil and gas

    Rinehart branches out into oil and gas

    Posted 2 hours 52 minutes ago
    Map: VIC

    One of Gina Rinehart’s companies has invested more than $4 million in a Victorian-based gas exploration firm.

    Lakes Oil has announced a $4.25 million investment by a subsidiary of Mrs Rinehart’s Western Australian iron ore giant Hancock Prospecting.

    The deal gives Hancock Prospecting’s subsidiary an 18.6 per cent interest in the Gippsland-based exploration company.

    Part of the deal is the appointment of mining expert and climate change sceptic, Professor Ian Plimer, as a director of Lakes Oil.

    The chairman of Lakes Oil, Rob Annells, says the appointment of Professor Plimer to the Board will strengthen the company’s position.

    “He’s had tremendous experience in the mining business and so we’ll have the benefit of that, plus he’s of international standing which once again will help us at a later stage when we’re looking for funding for development,” he said.

    Mr Plimer currently serves on the boards of four listed resources companies and three unlisted companies, including the Hancock Prospecting group.

    Lakes Oil says the current plan is for another Hancock nominee to be appointed as a non-executive director in due course.

    Topics: business-economics-and-finance, company-news, iron-ore, oil-and-gas, vic, wa, australia

  • Greens call for permanent disaster fund

    Greens call for permanent disaster fund
    By chief political correspondent Simon Cullen

    Updated 3 minutes ago
    Essendean Bridge Photo: Bundaberg in central Queensland is currently facing its worst flood on record. (Audience submitted: Carl O’Loughlin)
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    Map: Australia

    Greens leader Christine Milne is urging the Government to establish a permanent disaster recovery fund, arguing that extreme weather events will become more frequent because of climate change.

    Recent bushfires across several states and severe flooding in Queensland and New South Wales have caused extensive damage to homes and buildings as well as road infrastructure.

    Treasurer Wayne Swan says it is too early to calculate the cost of dealing with the latest natural disasters because authorities are still dealing with the emergency situation facing several communities.

    Queensland Premier Campbell Newman yesterday suggested a flood levy, similar to the one introduced after the 2011 floods, may need to be considered.

    But Senator Milne is pushing for a more long-term solution.

    “In a world that is increasingly warming, we are going to see more extreme events and that means we can’t keep suggesting that this is a one-off response that is needed every time,” she told reporters in Canberra.

    “What we need is not another one-off flood levy this year, but what we do need is a permanent fund established in Australia to assist communities to deal with the consequences of loss of infrastructure.”

    Opposition Leader Tony Abbott says the Coalition’s “instincts” towards a flood levy are the same as they were in 2011, when it fought against the one-off charge.

    “I would make the general point that Australia is a land of droughts and flooding rains, and the ordinary business of government should include being able to cope with the sorts of natural disasters which we regularly experience in this country,” he told reporters in Melbourne.

    The Federal Government has deployed defence personnel, helicopters and cargo planes to flood affected areas in Queensland to help with the crisis.

    Prime Minister Julia Gillard has promised they will remain available as long as they are needed.

    Disaster recovery payments are also available to people living in dozens of council areas, which includes immediate cash assistance and funding for household items.

    When asked yesterday whether the Commonwealth may need to reintroduce the flood levy, Mr Swan said it was “far too early” to be talking about the issue.

    “We’re in the emergency phase right now where we have to absolutely concentrate on saving lives and on saving property,” he said.

    “We have processes which we will put in place which will deal with the recovery phase.

    “I could talk a lot if you like about the impact of extreme whether events, how they’ve become more frequent and what that may mean for the future of public policy, but today or tomorrow isn’t the time for that discussion.”

    Topics: disasters-and-accidents, storm-disaster, government-and-politics, greens, australia

    First posted 58 minutes ago

    Contact Simon Cullen

  • Federal Labor could lose 18 seats: poll

    Federal Labor could lose 18 seats: poll

    AAPUpdated January 29, 2013, 9:43 am

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    An opinion poll of marginal seats across Australia suggests federal Labor could lose 18 seats.

    The result would cut Labor’s numbers from 54 in the lower house, handing power to the coalition with 91 seats, The Australian Financial Review reports.

    The poll of 54 marginal seats conducted by JWS Research found the best-case scenario for Labor would be a loss of seven seats in four of the biggest states, but it would still lose government.

    Labor would pick up six seats in Queensland as result of a backlash against the cuts to services under the Newman state government but would lose 10 in NSW, according to the polling.

    The seats of Kingsford Smith and Lindsay, held by Labor frontbenchers Peter Garrett and David Bradbury would fall.

    JWS researcher John Scales told ABC radio they polled 3350 people across 54 marginal seats.

    “Overall there is a swing against Labor of over five per cent,” he said.

    He said allegations against former NSW Labor powerbrokers being examined at the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) were damaging Labor’s prospects of retaining marginal federal seats.

    Asked if Labor could turn around the figures, Mr Scales pointed to the Howard government’s victory in 2001.

    “Never rule anything out in politics,” Mr Scales said.

    “I think the electorate is a bit more ready to change government these days than it has in the past.”

    Labor parliamentary secretary Mike Kelly, who holds the marginal NSW seat of Eden-Monaro, took a swipe at the opposition for sitting on its policies.

    He said the real contest would be when voters got a chance to compare policies.

    “It’s always going to be a tough battle in marginal seats,” Mr Kelly said.

    “This is an issue that will pan out through the course of the year.”
    Liberal frontbencher George Brandis said the next election would be hard fought.

  • Mathieson’s prostate joke ‘bad taste’: MP

    Mathieson’s prostate joke ‘bad taste’: MP

    AAPUpdated January 29, 2013, 9:43 am

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    AAP © Enlarge photo

    Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s partner is in hot water over a joke about prostate cancer and Asian women.

    Tim Mathieson, with Ms Gillard standing behind him, delivered the joke to members of the West Indian cricket team at a reception at The Lodge in Canberra on Monday.

    “We can get a blood test for it, but the digital examination is the only true way to get a correct reading on your prostate, so make sure you go and do that, and perhaps look for a small Asian female doctor is probably the best way,” he said, to laughter.

    But the opposition says it’s no laughing matter. Liberal MP Kelly O’Dwyer says the joke was tasteless.

    “Prostate cancer is an important issue. However, the comments made by the prime minister’s partner Tim Mathieson lacked judgment, were in bad taste and were inappropriate,” she said in a brief statement.

    “I am sure the prime minister would not condone them.”

    Labor MP Mike Kelly said Mr Mathieson had done a lot of good work promoting prostate cancer awareness, but he conceded the joke was off-colour.

    “Certainly I think everybody would probably agree there’s a better way of trying to achieve that,” Mr Kelly told Sky News.

    “A poor choice of words.”

    Shadow attorney-general George Brandis said the joke was “slightly unfortunate” but cautioned against people getting too carried away.

    “The joke was in poor taste but that having been said, I don’t think we want to have in this country a culture of finger-wagging and confected outrage,” he said.

    “Political correctness in Australia has gone way too far.”
    Senator Brandis said Mr Mathieson would have been “carted away to the re-education camp by the thought police” under the government’s proposed anti-discrimination laws.