Sunday 31 March 2013

Pearson gaps created




Christopher Pearson
Writing for The Australian, Christopher Pearson covers a wide variety of cultural and religious matters pertaining to Australian society. He served as a speech writer to the former Prime Minister of Australia, John Howard.

Words with the power to move


ON Tuesday, after church, I was taken home by a Vietnamese taxi driver. The radio was on and an announcer played Boney M's version of Rivers of Babylon to commemorate the 25th anniversary of its release.





The driver, a knowledgeable Buddhist, was more than just politely surprised at my knowing the text in Latin and the King James version, and the assurance that in Latin Rite and Orthodox congregations across the world the Lamentations of Jeremiah would be being sung in musical settings - most of them ancient and very formally demanding - lasting many hours during the course of Holy Week.





If there is a postmodern lesson to be learned in all this, I suppose it's that civilisations never quite abandon or forget their meta-narratives. They just morph like this one into ganja-sodden Rastafarian versions for the disco generation, where the only technical developments are that some of the voices are entirely studio created and half the line-up lip-synch.




The liturgy in which the Lamentations are heard is called Tenebrae, the lessons delivered in the darkness. They are the psalms and readings for Matins and Lauds appointed for the Thursday, Friday and Saturday of Holy Week, normally sung the night before in a near-darkened church where one of the few candles is extinguished at the end of each psalm. In Catholic churches in Australia, which are often poor, mean buildings, it can be a distinct advantage not to be able to see where you are and to have to fall back on the texts and the music.






The texts are structured around the Babylonian Exile, which ended in 538BC. In Judaism it is seen as the period where God punished his chosen people for their faithlessness in straying after strange gods, before restoring them to the promised land and allowing them to rebuild the Temple in Jerusalem.



In the Christian liturgy, the narrative of exile is conflated with the advent and rejection of Christ as the Messiah, his crucifixion and the new covenant.





 It is a season of sackcloth and ashes, transfigured by the prospect of Easter and renewal.




Jeremiah's lamentations over Jerusalem are plangent at any time and it is arguable that there is no year's Lent in living memory when the church has had more need or urgent occasion to invoke them.



Quomodo sedet sola civitas plena populo: facta est quasi vidua domina gentium: princeps provinciarum facta est sub tribute. "How doth the city sit solitary, that was full of people! How is she become as a widow! She that was great among the nations and princess among the provinces, how is she reduced to paying tribute."











Plorans ploravit in nocte, et lacrimae ejus in maxillis ejus: non est qui consoletur eam ex omnibus caris ejus: omnes amici ejus spreverent eam, et facti sunt inimici. "She weepeth sore in the night, and her tears are on her cheeks: among all who love her she hath none to comfort her: all her friends have dealt treacherously with her, they are become her enemies."













If words such as these have the power to move you, read them over slowly aloud the way you encounter poetry for the first time. If the Latin is more of a distraction than a help, disregard it. If you have the luxury of time, familiarise yourself with the texts and Google them in performance. The Gregorian chant version, augmented with Tomas Luis de Victoria's settings of the responsories, is probably the best-loved. Couperin's Lecons de Tenebres is ravishing in a different way; a triumph of baroque minimalism, once heard, never forgotten.








Migravit Judas propter afflictionem, et multitudinem servitutis: habitavit inter gentes, nec invenit requiem: omnes persecutors ejus apprehenderunt eam inter angustias. "Judah is gone into captivity because of affliction, and because of great servitude: she dwelleth among the heathen, she findeth no rest: all her persecutors overtook her between the straits."














Vitae Sion lugent eo quod non sint qui veniant ad solemnitatem: omnes portae ejus destructae: sacerdotes ejus gementes: virgines ejus squalidae, et ipsa oppressa amaritudine. "The paths of Zion mourn, because none come to the solemn feasts: all her gates are desolate: her priests sigh, her virgins are afflicted, and she is in bitterness."









In his commentary on the Way of the Cross at the Roman Forum during Holy Week 2005, days before he was elected pope, Joseph Ratzinger talked about "the filth that defiles the church". He was the first person in a position of great authority to do so in many years and took unprecedented steps to expunge it but got virtually no credit for doing so in most of the media.







Jeremiah's lament over Jerusalem tells us: Sordes ejus in pedibus ejus, nec recordata est finis sui: deposita est vehementer, non habens consolatorem. "Her filthiness is in her skirts, she remembereth not her last end; therefore she has been overthrown, she had no comforter."












In among the lamentations and the penitential Psalms there are signs of hope; not least, St Paul's recapitulation of the Last Supper.




Also fresh in my mind is a lesson from St Augustine on the Psalms: "I would to God that the ungodly who now try us were converted, and so were on trial with us. Yet, though they continue to try us, let us not hate them: for we know not whether any of them will continue to the end in his evil ways. And mostly, when thou thinkest thyself to be hating thine enemy, thou hatest thy brother, and knowest it not."


















C Pearson: Words with the power to move




Christopher Pearson
Writing for The Australian, Christopher Pearson covers a wide variety of cultural and religious matters pertaining to Australian society. He served as a speech writer to the former Prime Minister of Australia, John Howard.

Words with the power to move


ON Tuesday, after church, I was taken home by a Vietnamese taxi driver. The radio was on and an announcer played Boney M's version of Rivers of Babylon to commemorate the 25th anniversary of its release.
The driver, a knowledgeable Buddhist, was more than just politely surprised at my knowing the text in Latin and the King James version, and the assurance that in Latin Rite and Orthodox congregations across the world the Lamentations of Jeremiah would be being sung in musical settings - most of them ancient and very formally demanding - lasting many hours during the course of Holy Week.
If there is a postmodern lesson to be learned in all this, I suppose it's that civilisations never quite abandon or forget their meta-narratives. They just morph like this one into ganja-sodden Rastafarian versions for the disco generation, where the only technical developments are that some of the voices are entirely studio created and half the line-up lip-synch.
The liturgy in which the Lamentations are heard is called Tenebrae, the lessons delivered in the darkness. They are the psalms and readings for Matins and Lauds appointed for the Thursday, Friday and Saturday of Holy Week, normally sung the night before in a near-darkened church where one of the few candles is extinguished at the end of each psalm. In Catholic churches in Australia, which are often poor, mean buildings, it can be a distinct advantage not to be able to see where you are and to have to fall back on the texts and the music.
The texts are structured around the Babylonian Exile, which ended in 538BC. In Judaism it is seen as the period where God punished his chosen people for their faithlessness in straying after strange gods, before restoring them to the promised land and allowing them to rebuild the Temple in Jerusalem.
In the Christian liturgy, the narrative of exile is conflated with the advent and rejection of Christ as the Messiah, his crucifixion and the new covenant. It is a season of sackcloth and ashes, transfigured by the prospect of Easter and renewal.
Jeremiah's lamentations over Jerusalem are plangent at any time and it is arguable that there is no year's Lent in living memory when the church has had more need or urgent occasion to invoke them.
Quomodo sedet sola civitas plena populo: facta est quasi vidua domina gentium: princeps provinciarum facta est sub tribute. "How doth the city sit solitary, that was full of people! How is she become as a widow! She that was great among the nations and princess among the provinces, how is she reduced to paying tribute."
Plorans ploravit in nocte, et lacrimae ejus in maxillis ejus: non est qui consoletur eam ex omnibus caris ejus: omnes amici ejus spreverent eam, et facti sunt inimici. "She weepeth sore in the night, and her tears are on her cheeks: among all who love her she hath none to comfort her: all her friends have dealt treacherously with her, they are become her enemies."
If words such as these have the power to move you, read them over slowly aloud the way you encounter poetry for the first time. If the Latin is more of a distraction than a help, disregard it. If you have the luxury of time, familiarise yourself with the texts and Google them in performance. The Gregorian chant version, augmented with Tomas Luis de Victoria's settings of the responsories, is probably the best-loved. Couperin's Lecons de Tenebres is ravishing in a different way; a triumph of baroque minimalism, once heard, never forgotten.
Migravit Judas propter afflictionem, et multitudinem servitutis: habitavit inter gentes, nec invenit requiem: omnes persecutors ejus apprehenderunt eam inter angustias. "Judah is gone into captivity because of affliction, and because of great servitude: she dwelleth among the heathen, she findeth no rest: all her persecutors overtook her between the straits."
Vitae Sion lugent eo quod non sint qui veniant ad solemnitatem: omnes portae ejus destructae: sacerdotes ejus gementes: virgines ejus squalidae, et ipsa oppressa amaritudine. "The paths of Zion mourn, because none come to the solemn feasts: all her gates are desolate: her priests sigh, her virgins are afflicted, and she is in bitterness."
In his commentary on the Way of the Cross at the Roman Forum during Holy Week 2005, days before he was elected pope, Joseph Ratzinger talked about "the filth that defiles the church". He was the first person in a position of great authority to do so in many years and took unprecedented steps to expunge it but got virtually no credit for doing so in most of the media.
Jeremiah's lament over Jerusalem tells us: Sordes ejus in pedibus ejus, nec recordata est finis sui: deposita est vehementer, non habens consolatorem. "Her filthiness is in her skirts, she remembereth not her last end; therefore she has been overthrown, she had no comforter."
In among the lamentations and the penitential Psalms there are signs of hope; not least, St Paul's recapitulation of the Last Supper.
Also fresh in my mind is a lesson from St Augustine on the Psalms: "I would to God that the ungodly who now try us were converted, and so were on trial with us. Yet, though they continue to try us, let us not hate them: for we know not whether any of them will continue to the end in his evil ways. And mostly, when thou thinkest thyself to be hating thine enemy, thou hatest thy brother, and knowest it not."

Thursday 28 March 2013

Noel Pearson's Cape York trial 'changing lives'


Noel Pearson's Cape York trial 'changing lives'

Noel Pearson




Noel Pearson says the Cape York welfare reform trial has produced results. Picture: David Geraghty Source: The Australian
ABORIGINAL leader Noel Pearson has called for a federal takeover of indigenous affairs if the Queensland government fails to fund his radical Cape York Welfare Reform trial, amid evidence the program has cut crime rates, improved infrastructure and services and helped school attendance levels.
An independent evaluation report into the trial, obtained by The Australian, says individuals and families are beginning to gain respite from daily living problems and people feel that life is "on the way up". It finds that, since the trial began in July 2008, the Cape York communities of Aurukun, Coen, Hopevale and Mossman Gorge in far north Queensland have experienced improved school attendance, care and protection of children, and community safety.
It says people in the four communities are taking on greater personal responsibility and raising expectations, "particularly in areas such as sending kids to school, caring for children and families and their needs, and accessing supported self-help measures to deal with problems". After only three years of the trial, the report says there has been a "level of progress that has rarely been evident in previous reform programs in Queensland's remote indigenous communities".
"What is most promising is that some of the progress relates to subtle but fundamental shifts in behaviour that, if sustained and built upon, can be expected to yield significant longer-term results," it says.
The Cape York welfare trial, which has received about $100 million from the federal and Queensland governments, includes funding for economic development projects, but is centred on the Family Responsibility Commission. The FRC is able to withhold welfare payments from parents in circumstances such as failure to send their children to school.
Mr Pearson, director of the Cape York Institute, yesterday accused Queensland Indigenous Affairs Minister Glen Elmes of being a "cowboy" following the state's declaration on Tuesday that it could no longer justify its expenditure on the program.
"I see this as a real crossroads," Mr Pearson said.
"Given the reversal (on alcohol bans in communities) that has taken place in the Northern Territory on the reform agenda and given the reversal that is now taking place in Queensland, it raises a real question about whether states and territories should at all be involved in indigenous policy."
Mr Pearson said Queensland had now taken its regressive policy direction further by backing out of welfare reform that was transforming Aboriginal people's lives.
"The crisis in indigenous communities that (federal Indigenous Affairs Minister) Jenny Macklin understands, but that the Queensland government doesn't understand, has two nose-on-the-face features - alcohol and welfare dependency.
"And on those two issues we now have the Queensland government's decision to reverse alcohol control and now to stop welfare reform. The position the Queensland government has adopted is one of really begging the question: If you're not going to invest in indigenous affairs and indigenous reform, then why are you in indigenous affairs at all?
"There has been no focus by the Queensland government on indigenous reform. They have just allowed Glen Elmes to kind of make things up on the run. This cowboy has just basically come in to the scene and off-the-cuff decided that this program was going to stop. He does not himself have a credible alternative and he ignores the very explicit positive report that is contained in the evaluation."
Mr Pearson accused Mr Elmes of making the decision without the advice of his department, which had been discussing future models of the trial.
Mr Elmes yesterday continued to defend the Newman government's decision, saying it was "far too expensive an exercise for just four communities".
"It has had mixed results and in places like Cherbourg and Mornington Island, they are getting kids to school in other ways that don't cost as much."
Between 2008 and 2011, the trial drew about $48m in commonwealth funding, with a further $40m coming from the Queensland government. The state's contribution this year is $5.65m and Mr Elmes said on Tuesday it would not be renewed next year. The commonwealth is providing $11.8m this year and remains "committed to continuing funding for the trial".
The evaluation report - commissioned by all parties to the trial, including the two governments - concludes that in Aurukun and Mossman Gorge, there were "statistically significant improvements" in school attendance, reflected in falls in students' unexplained absences from school.
Coen and Hope Vale have historically had higher rates of school attendance. This did not change during the trial at Coen, while Hope Vale recorded a very small increase in unexplained absences in 2011. There has been a significant increase in school attendance in Aurukun, where it has risen from 46.1 per cent in the first term of 2008 to 70.9 per cent in the first term of 2012.
The trial communities' attendance rate was 4 percentage points lower than the attendance rate in comparable indigenous communities in 2008, but by 2011, it was six percentage points higher.
By tracking individual students' attendance across years, analysis reveals that Year 2 students in the trial communities went from three percentage points below the attendance rates of their peers in comparable indigenous communities in 2008 to nine percentage points higher in 2011. "The change in Aurukun is greater than in any other indigenous community in Queensland, and there are indications that it is related to the actions of the FRC," the report says. "It is also clear that the improvements in Aurukun are not part of a general trend in indigenous communities in Queensland."
The evaluation also found a large sustained fall in serious assaults resulting in injury in Aurukun in mid-2008, which reflects the impact of the closure of the Aurukun Tavern.
The report concludes the "improvements across the trial communities did reverse a trend of rising offence rates prior to the trial, which was not the case in comparison communities".
Another positive indicator is that the hospitalisation rate for assault has been lower in the communities than it was before the trial, although "it is not possible to definitively link this to the trial as a similar trend is evident in other indigenous communities in Queensland".
The FRC has been shown to have played a crucial role in increasing parental responsibility and restoring social norms in communities. But the evaluation also highlights challenges with assisting harder-to-reach groups in the communities, including young people who are no longer engaged in education.
The report shows that local indigenous authority is stronger as a result of the work of the FRC and this has been a key factor
in bringing about positive behavioural change.
As part of the evaluation, a Social Change Survey was undertaken among indigenous people in all trial communities. It found the FRC was respected and valued by the majority of community members and was seen as a driving force for change.
Importantly, two-thirds of respondents felt that people should go to the FRC if they did not take their children to school and that the community would be a better place to live if everyone followed up on their talks with the FRC.
When asked about changes in social and safety issues, 52 per cent of respondents felt that more people were trying to be better parents; 24 per cent felt more people were trying to give up grog, smoking or gambling; and 33 per cent felt there was less fighting between families.
Ms Macklin told The Australian the independent evaluation proved the trial was making a difference to Aboriginal lives.
"We know progress is being made and that there is still more to be done, particularly in the areas of increasing employment and home ownership opportunities," she said.

About the Wayback Machine



http://archive.org/web/web.php



About the Wayback Machine

Browse through over 240 billion web pages archived from 1996 to a few months ago. To start surfing the Wayback, type in the web address of a site or page where you would like to start, and press enter. Then select from the archived dates available. The resulting pages point to other archived pages at as close a date as possible. Keyword searching is not currently supported.
http://archive.bibalex.org, the Internet archive at the New Library of Alexandria, Egypt, mirrors the Wayback Machine. Try your search there when you have trouble connecting to the Wayback servers.



 
Please email any issues to info@archive.org.

K-12 Web Archiving Program

If you were a K12 student which websites would you want to save for future generations? What would you want people to look at 50 or even 500 years from now?
These questions are central to the K12 Web Archiving Program, a partnership between the Internet Archive and the Library of Congress. Now in its fourth year, with 5th to 12th graders participating in schools across the country, this program provides a new perspective on saving history and culture, allowing students to actively participate and make decisions about what "at risk" website content will be saved.
View the K-12 Web Archiving Program website

Web Archiving Services

Visit www.archive-it.org
Visit www.archive-it.org
Visit www.archive-it.org

Archive-It allows institutions to build and preserve their own web archive of digital content, through a user friendly web application, without requiring any technical expertise or hosting facilities. Subscribers can harvest, catalog, and archive their collections, and then search and browse the collections when complete. Collections are hosted at the Internet Archive data center, and accessible to the public with full text search.

Archive-It is designed to fit the needs of many types of organizations and individuals. The over 200 partners include: state archives, university libraries, federal institutions, state libraries, non government non profits, museums, historians, and independent researchers.

The 1,700 Collections captured by Archive-It range from subject matters as diverse as "Political parties in Latin America" to the "Matthew Shepard Web Archive"  to  the "2008 Beijing Olympic Games" to "Iranian Blogs" to "North Carolina State Government Web Site Archive".
Contact the Archive-It team for more details about subscribing to this service.

Around the World in 2 Billion Pages

Thanks to a generous grant from the Mellon Foundation, Internet Archive completed a 2 billion page web crawl in 2007. At the time this was the largest web crawl attempted by Internet Archive. The project was designed to take a global snapshot of the Web.

Please browse through the resulting collection.

Special thanks to the memory institutions who contributed URLs to the crawl. The crawl began with 18,000 websites from over 60 countries.

Web Collections

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita
The Internet Archive and many individual contributors worked together to put together a comprehensive list of websites to create a historical record of the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina and the massive relief effort which followed. This collection has over 25 million unique pages, all text searchable, from over 1500 sites. The web archive commenced on September 4th.
View the collection
National Archives
The UK Central Government Web Archive is a selective collection of UK Government websites, archived from August 2003, which has been collected by the Internet Archive on behalf of the National Archives of the United Kingdom. history.
View the collection
Election 2002
The Library of Congress, in collaboration with WebArchivist.org of the State University of New York Institute of Technology and the Internet Archive, created the Election 2002 Web Archive. A selective collection of nearly 4,000 sites archived between July 1, 2002 and November 30, 2002, the collection includes congressional and gubernatorial candidates, political party, government, advocacy, blogs, public opinion, and miscellaneous Web sites related to the 2002 United States elections.
View the collection
September 11th 
The tragic events of September 11, 2001, prompted web creators around the world to respond. This special collection of archived web sites preserves this unique moment in our history.
View the collection
The End of Term Web Archive 2008-2009
The End of Term Web Archive documents the United States Government's World Wide Web presence during the transition between the administrations of President George W. Bush and President Barack Obama.
View the collection
Web Pioneers
The early years of the internet are a testament to the internet's diversity and ingenuity. This special collection highlights a handful of sites that played a role in the early internet.
View the collection

Take The Wayback Machine With You

Put the Wayback Machine right in your browser!
The Wayback Machine Bookmarklet
Drag this link to your browser's toolbar: Wayback
When you visit a page that you want to find an old version of, just click the toolbar link.
You will be transported to any historic versions at the Wayback Machine.
Thanks to gyford.com


Wayback Machine Forum Subscribe to or unsubscribe from this forum RSS feed of most recent posts to this forum

SubjectPosterRepliesDate
Add my websiteplumert0March 26, 2013 03:27:23pm
New Jersey Wedding VenueJasonpatterson0March 26, 2013 12:15:02am
Please consider our sitelargpro0March 25, 2013 11:27:16pm
add my websiteplumert0March 25, 2013 12:53:20pm
add my websiteplumert0March 25, 2013 12:43:42pm
add my websiteplumert0March 25, 2013 12:14:06pm
add my websiteplumert0March 25, 2013 12:12:54pm
add my websiteplumert0March 25, 2013 12:11:16pm
add websitenuntaonline0March 25, 2013 08:15:34am
Other Poetry is PossibleEthno Indigo Records0March 24, 2013 05:34:04am
How to get approval for BSA?sridharb60March 23, 2013 08:33:21am
not archived since 08, 2012Vertigo_DOVANOTI0March 23, 2013 06:05:42am
Maxion Bakım teknik bilgiler klavuzuserdar450March 22, 2013 10:56:15am
please add my websiteb0rman230March 21, 2013 07:26:30pm
Heimech StudiosStackout0March 21, 2013 07:03:02pm
add my websiteadelrmdn1March 20, 2013 09:50:25am
add my websiteadelrmdn0March 20, 2013 09:46:03am
adding homepage wort-stark-job.atwort-stark0March 20, 2013 08:56:14am
Please add web sitepieco0March 20, 2013 08:39:42am
new sitespirosan0March 20, 2013 02:34:38am
new site (flyerinn.com)spirosan0March 20, 2013 02:27:34am
web designers in Chennai?Gleantech Solutions0March 20, 2013 01:38:07am
takedown requestlilo8lilo1March 19, 2013 02:03:14pm
   Re: takedown requestJeff Kaplan0March 19, 2013 02:17:47pm
Submitting My WebsiteAutumnMeadow1March 18, 2013 11:41:07pm
   Submitting My WebsiteGleantech Solutions0March 20, 2013 01:37:08am
add my web pagedualmedya0March 18, 2013 02:30:33pm
Addmetal soul0March 17, 2013 10:40:41am
Add my SiteReparaciondelpc0March 16, 2013 02:25:44pm
site crawling rateCG-Systems1March 16, 2013 07:58:03am
   Re: site crawling rateJeff Kaplan0March 16, 2013 08:48:59am
add site pleeeeeasecarousel.shop0March 15, 2013 08:55:51am
Please Add Self Help Sexualityarchiles0March 14, 2013 01:55:59pm
add sitePsamafa0March 14, 2013 01:35:34am
What twitter is blockedwebarchiver3540March 13, 2013 09:20:18am
Please Add My WebsitesSharm Touring Egypt0March 11, 2013 08:36:09pm
please add my sitekunpon0March 11, 2013 10:33:07am
please add my sitekunpon0March 11, 2013 10:33:07am
Can't download files in complete sizenexx3March 10, 2013 11:59:34pm
   Re: Can't download files in complete sizeJeff Kaplan1March 11, 2013 06:55:17pm
     Re: Can't download files in complete sizenexx1March 12, 2013 11:34:44am
please add my websiteTa Bao1March 10, 2013 09:49:48pm
   Re: please add my websitewebarchiver3540March 11, 2013 09:28:02am
please add my website6hanem1March 10, 2013 12:02:04am
   Re: please add my websitewebarchiver3540March 10, 2013 09:46:36am
breadth of crawlTom Phelps0March 08, 2013 12:32:28am
add pleasezombiegames0March 07, 2013 09:36:09am
Add Sitestürk emre0March 07, 2013 03:30:30am
please add www.tophold.comtophold0March 07, 2013 12:58:48am
please add my sitefiremagazine0March 06, 2013 02:16:07pm
add siteTop Directivo0March 06, 2013 01:41:33pm
add sitesMaterealise0March 05, 2013 02:48:56pm
add siteprohorcov0March 05, 2013 12:17:22pm
add siteibrak1March 05, 2013 07:42:53am
   Re: add sitemiro1234567890March 05, 2013 11:41:47am
Add sitethedude803March 04, 2013 01:29:02am
   Re: Add sitewww.wishinfo.net0March 04, 2013 03:39:25am
   Add siteNibiru70March 04, 2013 04:15:34am
   Add siteNibiru70March 04, 2013 04:20:50am
Please capture current show b4 WednesdayDigital Arts California0March 03, 2013 09:38:27pm
Please, add my sitebolnoi1March 03, 2013 06:45:52am
   Re: Please, add my siteionutgmne0March 18, 2013 01:38:08pm

View more forum posts



Monday 25 March 2013

CUT & PASTE From:The Australian March 23, 2013 12:00AM


Ready to belt the misogyny out of any man, unless he has a microphone and a bunny suit


WHEN it comes to Julia Gillard's standards, it sometimes seems like a case of double or nothing.
Misogyny Day. The Prime Minister in question time on October 9, 2012:
I SAY to the Leader of the Opposition, I will not be lectured about sexism and misogyny by this man. I will not. And the government will not be lectured about sexism and misogyny by this man. Not now, not ever. ... Misogyny, sexism, every day from this Leader of the Opposition. Every day in every way, across the time the Leader of the Opposition has sat in that chair and I've sat in this chair, that is all we have heard from him.
Christopher Pyne in question time on Tuesday:
THE Prime Minister answered the question and then she, as an aside, said for some unknown reason, "misogynist Tony is back".
Let's hear from a true expert. Kyle Sandilands on November 22, 2011:
SOME fat slag on news.com.au has already branded (my TV show) a disaster. You can tell by reading the article that she just hates us and has always hated us. What a fat, bitter thing you are. You're deputy editor of an online thing. You've got a nothing job, anyway. You're a piece of shit. This low thing, Alison Stephenson, deputy editor of news.com.au online. You're supposed to be impartial, you little troll. You're a bullshit artist, girl. You should be fired from your job. Your hair's very '90s. And your blouse. You haven't got that much titty to be having that low cut a blouse. Watch your mouth or I'll hunt you down.
Gillard with Sandilands and Jackie O on 2Day FM yesterday:
SANDILANDS: Are you sitting behind the big desk this morning Prime Minister?
Gillard: I'm not behind the big desk right now, Kyle, I'm sorry, but I did want to say good morning to you and to Jackie O and to say we've got to go Easter egg hunting, don't we?
Gillard on Abbott on Misogyny Day:
DOESN'T turn a hair about any of his past statements, doesn't walk into this parliament and apologise to the women of Australia. Doesn't walk into this parliament and apologise to me for the things that have come out of his mouth.
Out of his mouth. Sandilands's first response on July 29, 2009, when a 14-year-old guest revealed she'd been raped when she was only 12:
RIGHT ... is that the only (sexual) experience you've had?
Gillard in an apres-interview tweet to Kyle and Jackie O yesterday:
THANKS for the chat. Can't wait to see Kyle in a bunny suit!
Back to Gillard on Misogyny Day:
WELL, this kind of hypocrisy must not be tolerated.
Dedicated to Ferguson, Crean, Bowen et al. From Nikolai Gogol's The Government Inspector (1836):
KHLESTAKOV: So, have your patients recovered? There didn't seem that many.
Warden: Since I took over the running of the place ... they've been recovering like flies.
Following on from the last thrilling instalment of Cut & Paste, Gerard Henderson in Media Watch Dog yesterday:
WHAT a Walkley-worthy piece by Laura Tingle in yesterday's Australian Financial Review. It appears that La Tingle wrote an article on the new edition of David Marr's Political Animal: The Making of Tony Abbott (Black Inc) based merely on the publisher's blurb which was, well, just blurb. As a result, Tingle claimed that the new edition of Political Animal had unearthed copies of correspondence between Tony Abbott and B. A. Santamaria in the late 1980s which are located in the Santamaria Collection in the State Library of Victoria.
In fact, this correspondence was discovered by the Melbourne-based researcher Geoffrey Browne and written up by historians Ross Fitzgerald and Stephen Holt in the front-page splash in The Weekend Australian on 13 October 2012.
The source of the Abbott-Santamaria correspondence is acknowledged by David Marr in the new edition of Political Animal. Maybe La Tingle does not read The Australian.