Tuesday 26th of November 2024

degamed — a step towards the republic....

The Victorian Government’s bombshell decision to scrap their proposed hosting of the 2026 Commonwealth Games has been met with fierce backlash along political lines, with some of Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews’ harshest critics lining up to slam the decision. 

The decision to scrap the Games comes after claims the costs had blown out to as much as $7 billion, almost $5 billion more than the original cost estimates of $2.6 billion. 

Federal deputy opposition leader Sussan Ley labelled it an “international embarrassment for this country”, while Andrews’ state counterpart John Pesutto said that the “damage to (Victoria’s) reputation will be deep, and it will be lasting.” 

“The Andrews government’s decision to scrap the 2026 Commonwealth Games is a massive humiliation for Victoria,” Mr Pesutto posted on Twitter.

“This decision is a betrayal of regional Victoria and confirms that Victoria is broke and Labor simply cannot manage major projects without huge cost blowouts.”

International Olympic Committee vice-president John Coates said it was a “terrible embarrassment to Australian sport”.

Commonwealth Games Australia chief executive officer Craig Phillips also said the backflip would be a hammer blow to Melbourne’s claim to be one of the world’s foremost sporting cities. 

Nine newspapers’ national affairs editor James Massola said while he was “no particular fan of the Commonwealth Games, (it) surely damages Victoria’s international reputation, if not Australia’s.”

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Despite the cries from all corners that the world would heap scorn on Victoria for cancelling the Games, Guardian columnist Greg Jericho pointed out that the news failed to make headlines overnight in the United Kingdom. 

Not one of the UK’s prominent papers ran with the story on the front page, despite the Commonwealth Games remaining as one of the few crowning jewels left in what is left of the British Empire’s formal reach.

The Times splashed with a story about a breakthrough Alzheimer’s drug, while the UK Guardian led with the “Soaring toll of 28,000 convictions for Covid breaches”. 

The Daily Mirror’s headline was “Burning Up”, a story about the heatwave sweeping across southern Europe, while the Daily Star led with a story about dwarf actors upset about Hugh Laurie’s casting as an Oompa Loompa in the upcoming Paul King-directed film Wonka. 

Jericho was sardonic in his view of the international response to the Commonwealth Games, suggesting critics “get a grip”.

“For all those suggesting dumping the Comm Games was going to make headlines around the world and destroy Australia’s reputation, maybe get a grip,” Jericho wrote. 

“It really is hard to care unless you were hoping you or a family member was going to make a team.” 

Former host of Insiders, veteran journalist Barrie Cassidy also noted the outwardly partisan response to the news. 

“Never appreciated until now that support for the Commonwealth Games fell so neatly along party lines,” Cassidy wrote. 

“Clearly ALP supporters don’t care for them and Coalition supporters enthusiastically embrace them.” 

The cancellation marks the second Games in a row that an allocated host city has pulled out of the Games, with the 2018 Games initially allocated to Durban in South Africa before being moved to Birmingham.

The Birmingham Games were delivered at late notice for just £778 million ($1.5b).

The revised estimates from the Andrews Government on Tuesday would have been off the charts. 

The event was held in Melbourne in 2006 with total costs of $1.1 billion.

 

READ MORE:

https://www.news.com.au/sport/commonwealth-games/commonwealth-games-cancellation-left-off-uk-front-pages-amid-empires-apathy/news-story/a57b7ed95894839180262bbae69e5ace

 

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war games.....

 

By Brian Toohey

 

The mainstream media has once more tried to generate alarm about the presence of two relatively innocuous Chinese electronic spy ships in international waters during the latest biennial Talisman Sabre military exercise spread across the Australian mainland and offshore oceans. It involves 30,000 troops from 13 countries. Although the Indian prime minister Narendra Modi had publicly assured his Australian counterpart Anthony Albanese that his country would attend, India did not turn up.

The unnamed enemy is China. A London based journalist reported from Townsville that the latest exercise was occurring against a “changing security landscape in which China grows evermore belligerent”. Apparently, he didn’t see any need to give evidence for this dubious claim. The defence minister, Richard Marles said Talisman Sabre provided an opportunity to practice “high-end” warfare. Just how participants such as PNG, Tonga and Fiji can do this is not clear. In a war, their role would be to let the US operate from their territory.

During the last exercise, the ABC’s national television news each night ran a video of the spy ships across the top of the screen. It hasn’t gone that far this time, but has given extensive coverage to the spy ships without explaining what harm they might be doing.

The participants don’t seem alarmed. During the last exercise, an ABC journalist asked an American soldier on an amphibious ship if he was worried about the presence of Chinese spy ships. He replied, “No, we do it to them and they do it to us”. An Australian military spokesman said this time that it had taken the appropriate precautions to ensure the spy ships don’t cause any harm. A core reason is that all signals traffic is encrypted. The reality is that the US and its allies conduct electronic intelligence gathering on a much greater scale than China can. The Pine Gap satellite ground station in central Australia, for example, generates billions of pieces of intelligence every day. This did not stop the ABC defence correspondent Andrew Green commenting on the activities of one Chinese spy ship, “If knowledge is power, China has just become more powerful”.

The RAAF’s P8A Poseidon electronic spy planes pose an aggressive threat to China by dropping sonar buoys in the South China Sea where its submarines are based on Hainan island close to the mainland. The small buoys contain an underwater microphone to pick up the sounds from submarines and relay the data to the spy planes conducting surveillance for potential military use.

Australia’s behaviour in the South China Sea is the same as if Chinese planes dropped sonar buoys outside the Fremantle base for Australian and US submarines. But the Chinese planes don’t do this. That’s another sign that its main military focus is on defending the approaches to its own territory. That constitutes no threat to Australia let alone America. Perhaps they will acquire a long range surveillance capability in future and patrol outside Freemantle.Perhaps they won’t. No one knows.

Clinton Fernandes, professor of international and political studies at the University of NSW’s Canberra campus, says, “Australia and the US airdrop sonar buoys in the South China Sea by the thousands to detect submarines”. He says, “Our goal is to enable US hunter-killer submarines to trail and sink Chinese vessels at the outbreak of hostilities”. Fernandes explains that tensions are high because the US insists it is entitled to conduct military and intelligence collection activities within other countries’ Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs). These zones extend for 200 nautical miles from their coastline. International law does not stop coastal states from establishing Air Defence Identification Zones for security reasons within their EEZs.

Coastal states also have the right to regulate activities such as fishing and petroleum exploration within their EEZs. The US accepts it should not go within 12 nautical miles of the coast, but demands the right to do what it likes inside the EEZs. India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam, Brazil, Portugal and Pakistan are among the countries that agree with China that they are entitled to stop war ships from engaging in military and intelligence gathering activities within their EEZ’s. Indonesia and Vietnam go further, making submarines surface to go through some or all of their waters.

Unsurprisingly, tensions can run high. In May this year, the Eurasian Times, an Indian-Canadian publication, noted that in a previously unreported incident three US military aircraft in early 2021 “embarked on an unusual submarine hunt conducting operations remarkably close to China’s shoreline.” The South China Morning Post reported that the intensity of the situation “prompted the US to destroy its floating sonars to prevent them falling into Beijing’s hands”.

In June last year, Marles complained that a RAAF P8 was conducting “routine” surveillance in international airspace above the South China Sea, when it was intercepted by a Chinese J-16 fighter plane which released small pieces of aluminium “chaff”, some of which could have been sucked into the plane’s engines. However, the plane landed safely. It was one of two Australian planes flying surveillance missions out of Clarke airbase in the Philippines. Defence did not release a map of the plane’s flight path over the South China Sea, nor explain whether it was dropping sonar buoys as is normally the case. The latter could be regarded as provocative rather than routine, although not necessarily illegal. Certainly, Australian media would consider it provocative if China developed a long-range air capability and dropped sonar buoys off the submarine base at Fremantle. Albanese portrays the co-operation between the US and Australia to conduct potentially aggressive military activities in the South China Sea as part of the struggle between autocracies and democracy. Unfortunately, the draconian nature of some of Australia’s national security laws, deprive Australia of the right to call itself a liberal democracy.

Similar problems arise with Albanese’s iron grip on the Labor party’s federal conference in Brisbane on August 17-19. Although he describes Labor as a democratic party, he has effectively banned any parliamentarians attending the conference from supporting motions in favour of scrapping the AUKUS pact or the acquisition of nuclear submarines. Albanese has also banned any parliamentarian from supporting the existing conference policy of making it a priority to recognise of Palestine as a state.

https://johnmenadue.com/australian-medias-alarm-over-chinese-spy-ship-highlights-stark-double-standard/

 

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ring ring, hello democracy, have the psychos won?

 

 

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no gas....

The Australian state of Victoria plans to impose a ban on connecting natural gas pipes to new homes starting next year, Minister for Climate Action Lily D’Ambrosio announced on Friday.

The measure is a part of a state program aimed at cutting emissions and lowering energy bills. The gas sector reportedly accounts for 17% of the state’s greenhouse gas emissions.

"Reducing our reliance on gas is critical to meeting our ambitious emission reduction target of net zero by 2045 and getting more Victorians on more efficient electric appliances which will save them money on their bills,"D'Ambrosio said in a statement.

The new requirements will apply to all new public buildings yet to reach the design stage, including housing, schools and hospitals.

The southeast Australian state is expected to face gas shortages in the coming years, as production declines at offshore fields operated by Exxon Mobil, which have long provided fuel for the region.

 

https://www.rt.com/business/580551-australian-state-bans-gas-homes/

 

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ring ring, hello democracy, have the psychos won?

 

 

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