HONG KONG VIOLENCE
Violence has continued to escalate in Hong Kong’s protests after a student was shot by police, the ABC reports. Thousands have taken to the streets to protest Beijing’s influence in Hong Kong as China celebrates 70 years of communist rule.
The 18-year-old man is being treated in hospital after being shot at close range, with police claiming the officer who shot him was acting in self-defence. The Hong Kong Free Press has released footage of the incident. It is the first time a protester is known to have been shot during recent protests.
A security clampdown failed to thwart protesters, with one organiser saying 100,000 people had taken to the streets to mark China’s National Day.
SERIOUS QUESTIONS
Prime Minister Scott Morrison is facing serious questions over reports Donald Trump asked for his assistance in investigating the origins of the Mueller probe, the Nine papers report.
Morrison — who told the president his government was “ready to assist” — is being asked to provide “clear answers” about his offer, fending off calls to release details of the undertaking. Opposition leader Anthony Albanese has called on Morrison to “explain to the Australian people exactly what happened here”. Meanwhile, former Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoulos has told The New Daily that Morrison is “doing the right thing” in putting the US-Australia relationship above the personal interests of “Clinton ally” Alexander Downer, who helped prompt the FBI investigation which sent Papadopoulos to prison.
MORE CUTS TO COME
Reserve Bank governor Philip Lowe has suggested that further interest rate cuts are inevitable after the board yesterday cut rates to a new record low of 0.75%, its third cut in four months, the ABC reports. Lowe told last night’s Reserve Bank board dinner that central banks were being forced to respond to slowing growth, calling on the government and businesses to act and again prodding the government to increase spending and introduce structural measures to lift the nation’s productivity.
CBA and NAB have failed to pass on the full rate cut to customers, while Westpac and ANZ have yet to announce their response, the Nine papers report.
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THEY REALLY SAID THAT?
Good on you there Joel Fitzgibbon, the shadow minister, but talking to anyone in the government is a waste of space.
Alan Jones
The 2GB host has a surprisingly warm moment ($) with the shadow minister for agriculture, after suggesting the government isn’t doing enough for rural Australians.
READ ALL ABOUT IT
Molan wins backing of NSW Liberals’ conservatives for Canberra return
Female student dead, nine people hurt after sword attack in Finnish college
Iran sentences one man to death, jails two others for spying for US
Gillard’s British lashing for Morrison over foreign aid ($)
Britain rules out Brexit barrier on Irish border as Boris promises ‘very good offer … soon’
Essential poll: 70% of Australians think Morrison was wrong to snub UN climate summit
NSW considers laws to stop blocking of coalmines on climate grounds
Western Australia rolls out lifesaving hotline to address Indigenous deaths in custody
Beyond ATAR: Calls for ‘learner profile’ to replace uni entrance rank
Surgeries delayed and patient security fears after cyber attack on Victorian hospitals
Guns and poses: China’s military front and centre for 70th anniversary parade
CRIKEY QUICKIE: THE BEST OF YESTERDAY
ScoMo, Trump and the dangerous banality of bromance
“What Howard and now ScoMo both instinctively understand is that Australia’s relationship with America, and thus the prime minister’s to the president, is one of subservience. It is a pantomime of bowing and scraping that reflects both our self-assuredness as to where we stand in the world, and our indecisiveness. Trump, like Bush, enjoys the company of lesser men, and ScoMo, like Howard, is all too willing to oblige him.”
The unfortunate legacy of Alexander Downer
“But our American allies are confused; it just doesn’t seem likely that Downer would deliberately orchestrate the downfall of a foreign president, less-so one whose policies largely align with his own conservative views. This is the man who, while contending to be prime minister and talking about the Liberal slogan ”The Things That Matter”, joked that his party’s domestic violence policy would be labelled ”Things That Batter”. This is the man so anti-republic that he was appointed as chair of the Royal Over-Seas League, a London-based private membership organisation full of wealthy individuals who love the Queen and Commonwealth just a little bit too much. This is a man who is really, really bad at Twitter. And yet his legacy, nonsensically, will be that of a small-l liberal stooge. That’s got to sting.”
We’re from Tigerland: when Richmond’s Tiger Army takes to the streets
“Sport is often talked about as the great equalizer, but it’s always surreal to actually see it in action. This probably wasn’t the scene in the MCG on Saturday — where the majority of grand final tickets still go to corporate types who go for the free Crownies — but it was true for Swan Street. There are young families, old die-hards, men in suits and others in guernseys christened by black Sharpies. They’re spilling out of the dive bars and reno’d gastropubs and cheap sushi joints and Instagrammable restaurants that charge $4 for still water — most with a beer in hand despite cops’ orders. The Herald Sun asked a dad with kids, aged 13 and 15, what he was doing after Richmond’s historic 89-point win over the league’s youngest club, the GWS Giants. ‘I’m not entirely sure where we will end up,’ he said, ‘but I just want to sing’.”
THE COMMENTARIAT
China relations are now at a dangerously low ebb – Tony Walker (The Age/Sydney Morning Herald): “The view promulgated by former Prime Minister John Howard that Australia did not need to choose between its historical alignment with America and its geographical proximity to China is no longer sustainable. The question now is how Australia positions itself between the elephants in the jungle to avoid getting crushed. Conspicuously siding with one of the elephants, unless necessary, would not seem to be the wisest course.”
It’s a sideshow — we both must focus on Indo-Pacific ($) – Simon Jackman (The Australian): “It is all an unwelcome distraction. As Australia digested this news, China showed off new weaponry in celebrations of the 70th anniversary of its communist revolution. Behind the state visit to Washington, Australia and the US remain focused and working together on strategic challenges in the Indo-Pacific and a raft of issues. These are the more important matters facing both countries.”
Someone blew the whistle on Trump – if it happened in Australia we might never hear about it – Ben Oquist (The Guardian): “In the US, the process for whistleblowing is straightforward: an intelligence official makes a report to the intelligence community inspector general. Credible “urgent concerns” are reported to the Senate and House intelligence committees within 21 days. In Australia the hypothetical whistleblower falls at the first hurdle. Australia’s federal whistleblowing legislation, the Public Interest Disclosure Act, applies only to conduct by public officials, agencies and commonwealth contractors. Ministers and parliamentarians are “public officials” under the commonwealth criminal code but, conveniently, not under whistleblowing legislation.”
HOLD THE FRONT PAGE
WHAT’S ON TODAY
Perth
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Professor Mindy Blaise will give a public lecture, discussing how multispecies stories can generate new climate change pedagogies with young children.
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The Grain Industry Association of Western Australia (GIWA) will host its 2019 GIWA Forum, with Minister for Agriculture and Food Alannah MacTiernan to give the opening address.
Joondalup, WA
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The WA State NRM and Coastal Conference will take place, with this year’s conference highlighting the changes needed to meet the urgent climate threats to our land, sea and coast.
Melbourne
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WorkSafe Victoria will hold a business leaders’ breakfast, with Arts Centre CEO Claire Spencer discussing the Arts Wellbeing Collective.
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The Australian Graduate School of Entrepreneurship will host “Supply Chain Innovation in an Era of Automation and Digitalisation”.
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The International Association of Music Libraries, Archives and Documentation Centres (Australian Chapter) will host its 2019 Conference with the theme “Beyond the Beat: Taking music libraries to our users”.
Sydney
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Sydney Ideas will host “Precision medicine: can it live up to the hype?”, with world-renowned thinkers exploring some of the key issues around precision medicine
Vulnerabilities? Name a Laberal politician who cares! Our dependence on foreign fuel supplies despite the massive LNG takeaways is but one of a number of huge vulnerabilities that are simply being ignored because our politicians are in the back pockets of a ruling clique that regards our property as its own, for plunder. Latent risk of our massive reliance on imported Chinese manufactures (given minimal local stocks), for instance.
Our nation’s wealth is not for services or protections for us, but for massive tax and resource giveaways to it.
Debate about vulnerabilities should include all relevant issues. It should also extend to doing a lot more with what we have, rather than helping choke sunrise industries and promoting dead fossil-fuel ones – acting to remedy the unavailability of finance for new local ventures, for instance.
“We” allow globalisation, tariff reductions and non-intervention to destroy our manufacturing industry because transnational capitalism owns our politicians precisely to ensure our vulnerability. Twice in the last century, Australia suddenly had no shipping, because what wasn’t halted by the prohibitive marine insurance costs arising instantly with declaration of war was taken by our great and powerful friend for its own use.
Observe how the media defers and accedes to the institutional right of force of the State. No little-local-battler larrikin hero here, the police have the right as well as the might. Just as Australia’s media never questioned the right of U.S. cops to murder a thousand motorists a year, nor even to murder an Australian woman seeking to talk to some of them, so any State violence is legitimate, while protest violence is not.
Trial of King Charles was the forerunner of the modern efforts to make tyrannical rulers accountable to the people they oppressed: from Hitler and Milosevic and Pinochet to Saddam Hussein. Only some rulers, of course – neither John Howard not George Bush nor Anthony Blair have ever faced any risk of trial for war crimes and mass murder.
Charles’ trial nevertheless signalled acceptance of British monarchy to be conditional on governmental respect for the people’s basic rights, which obviously required that they were inalienable. Obviously many of Australia’s journalists still do not accept such an outcome. Nor does Border Generalissimo-MOP dutton and his department, given their view that Australian citizenship by birth is conditional.
Amusing that the media that once eagerly denounced the Tiananmen massacre is sympathetic to neo-PRC police suppression of protest. They even report with some sympathy and apparent regret that police morale is starting to suffer – yet the police are paid and trained, with no risk of a lifetime of repercussions for their actions plus a pension for it.