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May 2024

Derryn Hinch, spokesman for The Rogers Family announces the death of radio legend, Bob Rogers.

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Today, I said goodbye to my dear friend, my ‘brother’, radio legend Bob Rogers. He died at home with his wife, Jerry, and his precious daughters there. He was 97.
 
His show business career spanned 80 years. Bob started in radio at Melbourne’s 3XY when he was 15. He was still doing a radio program on Sydney’s 2CH in his nineties.
 
The words legend and icon are thrown around too easily these days but Bob Rogers was both. As a kid I used to listen to him on my crystal set from across the ditch in New Zealand.
 
One of his career highlights was in the 1960s when he accompanied The Beatles on their trip to Australia. He was called ‘the fifth Beatle’. Bob was a champion tennis player at White City, was one of the first male nude models for Cleo magazine and was an ace poker player.
 
I shall be honoured to deliver his eulogy in Sydney next week.
 
Vale, my brother.




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ABC issues Laura Tingle statement - she still thinks Australia is racist.

I regret that when I was making these observations at the Writers' Festival the nature of the free-flowing panel discussion means they were not surrounded by every quote substantiating them which would have – and had – been included in what I had said earlier on the ABC.

This has created the opportunity for yet another anti-ABC pile-on.

This is not helpful to me or to the ABC. Or to the national debate.

Well excuse us for not being helpful to you Laura.

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Statement by Laura Tingle, 7.30 Chief Political Correspondent

For much of the past two weeks, the political debate has focused not on the federal Budget but on the Leader of the Opposition's budget reply in which he pledged to cut migration to deal with the housing crisis.

I have written and broadcast on this decision and its implications on ABC platforms numerous times since then. I was also a panellist at the Sydney Writers' Festival on the weekend when migration and housing were also discussed in a panel on the year in politics.

In my writing and broadcasts over the past two weeks I have observed on several occasions that there were considerable dangers for the way our political discourse would unfold – and for social harmony – in linking migration to the housing crisis.

At the Writers' Festival I was asked to comment on the Opposition leader's policy on migration and the economy, including housing. Mr Dutton has been vocal on this topic, particularly over the past fortnight.

"It's not just housing," he said. "People know that if you move suburbs it's hard to get your kids into school or into childcare. It's hard to get into a GP because the doctors have closed their books. It's hard to get elective surgery. These factors have all contributed to capacity constraints because of the lack of planning in the migration program."

He has also said migrants are the cause of "congestion on our roads".

As the alternative Prime Minister, with an election approaching within a year, Mr Dutton's comments deserve rigorous scrutiny and examination.

I have also pointed out that there were flaws in the Opposition's position as a piece of viable policy. That is, while on the face of it an obvious answer to a shortage of housing might be to immediately try to cut the number of people seeking it – and the obvious answer there is migrants – things are actually a lot more complicated when you try to do that.

The Morrison government announced an almost identical cut in permanent migration numbers in the 2019 Budget, saying the "planning level of the Migration Program will be reduced from 190,000 to 160,000 places for four years from 2019-20". The pandemic rather disrupted that plan.

But the very same 2019 budget papers were forecasting that net overseas migration would be 271,700 in 2019 before dropping to just 263,800 three years later in 2022, despite the cut of 30,000 permanent places a year.

A big reason for the fact that net overseas migration was not forecast to fall, despite the cut in the permanent number, is that more than half the people who are accepted as permanent migrants are already here when they apply. So cutting permanent migration doesn't necessarily mean fewer people in, or coming to, the country. Some of the migration pool just changes "class". Others are still able to come here on temporary visas.

There has also been confusion about whether the Coalition planned to cut the (relatively small) permanent migration number, or to cut back the much larger, demand-driven net overseas migration number, which includes programs that have no formal caps and includes overseas students.

Shadow Treasurer Angus Taylor added to that confusion last week when he said the plan was to cut net overseas migration by 25 per cent, not just permanent migration. Mr Taylor also accused Labor of using migration to prop up the economy – and it is true that the post-pandemic surge in returning temporary visa holders has indeed played a crucial role in keeping a barely simmering economy from dropping into recession. But that raises the question of what happens if you cut migration as dramatically as the Coalition appears to want to do.

Discussions at writers' festivals are much less formal and more free-flowing than a piece of analysis on an ABC platform and this was a format where adding detailed context to the discussion wasn't really possible.

Panellist Niki Savva had quoted those points Mr Dutton had made about too many migrants meaning things like it was too hard to buy a house, get in to see your GP, or get into childcare, and noted that the Opposition Leader seemed to bring everything back to immigration.

In agreeing with that observation, based on Mr Dutton's own quotes, I once again raised the risks for the political debate of a major political leader doing this, which I truncated as "everything that's going wrong in this country is because of migrants".

That was simply a result of trying to summarise a point in a much less structured forum and was not intended to imply he had said that verbatim. If I had been speaking on an ABC platform, or not in a five-way discussion, I would have provided all that context, as I do in my stories for the ABC.

I did indeed make the observation on Sunday that we are a racist country, in the context of a discussion about the political prospects ahead. I wasn't saying every Australian is a racist. But we clearly have an issue with racism. For some months now, for example, The Australian newspaper has been devoting considerable space to its alarm about a rise in anti-Semitism in Australia.

Without even going into the historic record, there is also ample evidence that racism remains a particular problem in our legal and policing systems. A coronial inquest underway in the Northern Territory has become mired in an expose of racism in the NT's elite policing unit. Racism and racial profiling repeatedly show up as an issue of concern in our policing and justice systems.

The morning radio news bulletins on the ABC on Monday featured several stories that were related to racism, including one about racial profiling of young South Sudanese men in a police presentation to legal practitioners in Melbourne.

Surveys, including by the ABC, have repeatedly found the majority of Australians of non-European backgrounds reporting experiences of discrimination and racism in their lives, sometimes starting as early as primary school.

Is it relevant to raise this record of Australian racism in political analysis? Absolutely, if it becomes an issue of controversy in our political contest – as it clearly did when Pauline Hanson appeared on the national stage in 1996 and declared the country was being "swamped with Asians". John Howard had similarly flirted with the issue of Asian immigration in the 1980s and Julia Gillard did too in 2013 when she used a speech on a visit to western Sydney to announce a clampdown on the issue of temporary skilled worker visas.

In my commentary at the ABC, and at the Sydney Writers' Festival, I expressed my concern at the risks involved in Peter Dutton pressing the hot button of housing and linking it to migration for these reasons.

Political leaders, by their comments, give licence to others to express opinions they may not otherwise express.

That does not make them racist.

But it has real world implications for many Australians.

Finally, panellists were asked to nominate a positive change that had come from the change of government, on the basis of the famous quote that "when you change the government, you change the country".

Not having the time in that setting to attempt a detailed and serious assessment of what has changed with the change of government, I made an off-hand observation that simply observed we now had fewer stunts like the "needles in strawberries" affair and that, whatever its failings, the current government seemed serious about policy.

I regret that when I was making these observations at the Writers' Festival the nature of the free-flowing panel discussion means they were not surrounded by every quote substantiating them which would have – and had – been included in what I had said earlier on the ABC.

This has created the opportunity for yet another anti-ABC pile-on.

This is not helpful to me or to the ABC. Or to the national debate

I am proud of my work as a journalist at the ABC, on all its platforms, and I let that work speak for itself.

It is based, always, on solid research and a lifetime of experience reporting on Australian politics.

That work is built on, and delivered in, the framework of the ABC's very high editorial standards.


Great comment from reader mm on civilisation's enemy Hamas and the nature of war.

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Thank you mm for this personal and wise comment.  'mm' said:

I am of German descent.

My only excuse is my ancestors arrived in the 19th Century, but I've never felt that gets me off the hook.

Germany's citizenry had to be bombed into the ground to get them to give up (at the close of World War Two in Europe).

It's all very well blaming Hitler but........it's not the full story.  Ordinary Germans paid a heavy price for their foolishness - they started a war others had to end.

Its always the same.

I am at a loss to see now, in Australia, a generation who do not seem to understand the consequences of starting a war.

Ending one is not simply a matter of stamping your feet and bleating from the sidelines.

This one is over when Israel says it's over.

It's Israel's right.

Thats the way it works.

What a fantastic comment.


Message from Senator James Paterson

 
Dear Michael, 
 
Labor’s failures on community safety are unacceptable.
 
Last year, they released 153 criminals into the community, including child sex offenders and murderers. 
 
This was after being caught flat footed by a High Court decision, without legislation ready to fix the problem. At least 30 of these criminals have since been charged for new offences. 
 
Recently, it has emerged dozens more non-citizen criminals have had their visa cancellations overturned by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal. 
 
This includes child rapists, repeat domestic violence perpetrators and drug traffickers. 
 
This is because of a government decision (known as “Direction 99”) which means an offender’s ties to Australia must now be a primary consideration for the Tribunal. 
 
Yesterday, the Department of Home Affairs admitted it warned the Minister that his change could lead to more visa cancellations being overturned. He ignored this warning. 
 
On the same day, the media reported a man had the cancellation of his visa reversed (due to Direction 99) despite having been convicted of eight counts of rape, 48 counts of sexual assault, and three counts of indecent treatment of children under 16. 
 
Keeping Australians safe is the first responsibility of the Government.
 
That’s why when he was Minister for Home Affairs, Peter Dutton cancelled more than 6,300 visas of dangerous non-citizen criminals.
 
We will fix Labor’s mess.
 
Labor has shown it is incapable of taking the decisions needed to protect our community.
 
We will. 
 
Kind regards,
Senator James Paterson
Shadow Minister for Home Affairs

ABC celebrates the arseholes who vandalised the Opera House.

Twenty-one years ago the pair boldly defaced the Sydney Opera House

 

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ABC documentary:
 

You may never have heard of Dave Burgess and Will Saunders, but you will almost certainly have seen their handiwork.

Twenty-one years ago the pair boldly defaced the Sydney Opera House in an act of defiance against the impending war in Iraq.

Now, the pair reveal how they pulled off the historic protest with a couple of tins of paint and how they view their actions all these years later.

 

The ABC is sick. 

UPDATE - another genius comment from reader mm who is on fire today!

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Ralph Blewitt's continuing unsuccessful efforts to obtain a visa for his wife to visit Australia

Infuriating in light of the issuance and continuance of visas for known, recidivist serious criminals.

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The Honorable Andrew Giles, Minister for Immigration.

Dear Minister.
My wife Rubieedeeyati Binti Ali (Malaysian Passport number XXXXX) made an application for, Subclass 601 Tourist Visa on April 4th 2024, and we received an email from Department of Home Affairs with ETA application reference number XXXXXXX.

We have tried logging into her immigration account but are locked out of it.

On the Australian ETA App in the check visa line, it shows, No Visa Found.
No visa was found for this passport. OK.

Background history, My wife Rubieedeeyati of the last 14 years has travelled to Australia over Twenty (20) times on subclass 601 Tourist visas. Without any problems and at no time breached the rules or regulations pertaining to her visa.
A search of, your immigration records will show her visa history.

Ruby travels with me, because she's my wife we visit friends and I attend medical appointments pre-arranged, and naturally my wife takes good care of me on these trips to Australia.

I can see No reason why ruby's application for a subclass 601 tourist has been rejected this time,
Other than the fact that Ruby said she was travelling as my carer when asked the purpose of her visit.
 
My name is Ralph Edwyn Blewitt I'm an Australian citizen holding an Australian passport number PB4690581.
I'm also a Department of Veterans Affairs, TPI (Totally & Permanently Incapacitated)  Gold Cardholder.
And an Australian Vietnam Veteran: having served with the Second Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment in Sth, Vietnam in 1967/68.

I'm 78 years of age, suffering from, Low blood pressure, Diabetes type 2, Emphysema, and last year had an operation for lung Cancer. At which time, my wife Ruby was in Australia on a subclass 601 visas with me and cared for me during my recovery, which as my wife she is entitled to.

So my request of whatever department handles correcting records of my wife's purpose of visit, can the record be corrected to show that Ruby is (A)  Travelling as my Wife, (B) A Tourist.

I've just returned from Australia and I had to travel alone because Ruby was not issued with a visa,

Not having my wife alongside me on the trip caused me major stress, I suffer from PTSD as well, and I'm on medication for all of my ailments which my wife would normally help me take as prescribed each day. 
 
I note that the Department of Immigration is allowing numerous persons fleeing persecution visa's to stay in Australia and given the position of myself and my wife I see No reason why Ruby cannot be issued a Subclass 601 Tourist Visa.

Your URGENT assistance would be appreciated so as my wife can travel with me when I next need to return to Australia for medical treatment.

Yours Faithfully
Ralph E Blewitt.