SearchRecent comments
Democracy LinksMember's Off-site Blogs |
our democracy .....Poor old Joe. Forced to flick the default personality switch from ''generally avuncular'' to ''prophet of doom'', Hockey flailed at a loss, sinking deeper the more he spun in his own rhetorical quicksand. Good economic news was just that. Good. However the Coalition narrative demanded it be spun into something less good. Something bloody awful. Well, we were good, us plucky Aussies, spending and saving and growing, resilient and all — don't get me wrong. It was just The Government that was Bad. A shambles actually. And our success proved it — Australia could be, or perhaps it was already, paradise lost, or in danger of being lost, or ... something. Good economic data evidenced, somehow, the deficiency and incompetence of the Gillard Government. ''Imagine how well our country could do if we had a good government,'' Mr Hockey blustered, truly heroic in his quest for badness and sadness. And as for that Treasurer Wayne Swan, (who, given Australia's 4 per cent annual growth rate, had earlier called for a moratorium on doom-saying about the economy?) Mr Swan was the ''scariest thing in Australia''. Adrian Dodd, on Twitter, pretended to agree with Mr Hockey's analysis. ''I loved him in Wolf Creek.'' Blogger Possum Comitatus did not pretend to agree. He demurred. ''There's scarier things in my fridge than Wayne Swan.'' (This observation seemed, on balance, true enough — of my neglected fridge at least, given our buttoned down Treasurer bristles periodically, and broils, and sometimes permits himself to emit a squawk of pure, unvarnished irritation — but rarely bites.) The heroic Hockey epic badness analysis continued. This was not the time to price carbon (when Australia's rate of economic growth was among the strongest in the developed world). This was not the time to tax the mining industry (when the red-dust-on-the-shoes set doing so well they are expanding and investing and drilling and generally prospering to such a degree that one journalist today pointed out Western Australia was actually growing faster than China.) It was a simple case of black being white. If you say it often enough. Mr Hockey's little ironic smile that flashed as he departed the podium seemed to telegraph more than words could that it would have been better left unsaid.
|
User login |
making world news...
Australia's economy grew by more than expected in the first three months of the year, allaying fears of a global slowdown hitting its growth.
The economy grew by 1.3% during the period from the previous three months. Analysts had forecast growth of 0.5%.
Compared with the same period last year, the economy grew by 4.3%.
There have been fears that slowing global demand for commodities and a stagnant domestic market may hurt Australia's growth.
However, some analysts said that the latest data showed that Australia was well placed to sustain growth.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18336521
Joe Hockey (see comment above) is a poor sod... A dick-head really, for deliberately being a bear with a sore head and twisting the facts to suit an agenda of huge Liberal (conservative) pettiness.... he should know when to shut up...
posting job vacancies on a website....
Under a new Federal Government initiative, mining companies will have to post job vacancies on a website for Australian job-hunters before seeking foreign workers.
Unions were infuriated when the first Enterprise Migration Agreement was approved last month.
Mining magnate Gina Rinehart was given the green light to bring in 1,700 foreign workers to her company's Roy Hill iron ore mine in Western Australia's Pilbara.
The Government has now launched a website designed to make it easier to connect employers and Australian job-seekers.
Job vacancies will have to be posted there before companies seek overseas workers.
The Australian Mines and Metals Association has welcomed the move.
Meanwhile the West Australian Government is trying to lure workers to the state's mining industry, with a delegation led by Training and Workforce Development Minister Peter Collier.
The delegation also includes Fortescue Metals boss Andrew Forrest.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-06-10/new-plan-to-recruit-resources-workers/4062652