Discrediting the very notion of human rights

The oddest part about many of the decisions Gillian Triggs has made is that she has done more to discredit the notion of human rights abuse than any actual instance uncovered since she came to head the AHRC. Is there more to this latest instance or is it as bizarre as it sounds:

A TOP tech firm has been told to cough up $76,639 in compo to a drug dealer, after besieged human rights boss Gillian Triggs ruled he had been unfairly fired over his criminal record.

The Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) wants Data#3 to pay the sacked IT consultant $71,639 in lost earnings plus $5000 in compo for “hurt, humiliation and distress as a result of being discriminated against’’.

Ms Triggs — whose politically-correct decisions have triggered calls for her resignation as AHRC president — gave the eyebrow-raising edict that obtaining a security clearance or passing a police check were not “inherent requirements’’ of the IT job.

But Data#3, which does sensitive work for government agencies, told the AHRC that the contractor’s employment was “untenable’’ because all employees “must have and exhibit the highest ethical standards’’. . .

The sacked worker, known as Mr AW, was hired on a $185,000 salary package as a Microsoft “solution specialist’’ late in 2013.

He was fired a few weeks later after Data#3 discovered his criminal conviction on six counts of selling ecstasy in New Zealand in 2011.

In what sense is it dealing with “human rights” abuse to punish firms to the tune of thousands of dollars for making a judgement call about whether they can trust an individual who has withheld information about their prior criminal conviction? Is there some kind of law she is following, or does she just make it up as she goes along?

A billion here, a billion there and soon you’re talking big money

If you want some idea how truly bad our governments have been, and in particular that economic illiterate of a Prime Minister of ours, let me begin with this: Government loaning NBN $20 billion to finish rollout.

NBN Co has abandoned plans to borrow money from debt markets to complete the roll-out and will instead borrow $19.5 billion from the federal government “on commercial terms”. This takes total government contributions to the project to nearly $50 billion.

They no doubt abandoned such plans because no one would give them the money since it is a project that is destined never to make a cent. Meantime, I want you to keep both the present $20 billion and the $50 billion in mind as we move to the next part of the story.

Here we come to the bit Judy has highlighted:

Treasurer Scott Morrison has left open the door to considering a Grattan Institute proposal to curb or scrap three aged-based tax breaks that cost the budget $1 billion a year.

Wow, save a billion by screwing Australians whose aim is to stay in the paid workforce, that is, to remain productive by earning an income. These are the very people the government should be doing everything they can to keep in the value-adding part of the economy, rather than just spend and drain productivity away. And then to go with these, there is this:

Much lower than expected wage growth has knocked a hole in the government’s budget projections, blowing out deficits right through until 2019-20.

The worse position, confirmed by Treasurer Scott Morrison, comes despite a doubling in the price of coal and a 50 per cent jump in the price of iron ore. . . .

Deloitte is expecting an underlying cash deficit of $40.5 billion in 2016-17, around $3.4 billion worse than budgeted.

We have possibly the most incompetent economic managers this side of Greece, with no vision, no will and no concept of what they are doing wrong. The NBN remains my favourite because it is so stark. But do you think Malcolm has any idea of what’s wrong with what he has done? Instead they sit around shredding their hankies worrying about the trade effects of Donald Trump. Even if he deliberately set out to undermine the Australian economy, he could not do more damage than these clowns have already done all by themselves all on their own.

A taste of the president to come

We have heard that the Malcolm Turnbull has had a conversation with Donald Trump, just as Trump has noted that he spoke to Malcolm as one of the 29 world leaders he had talked with. What was said and the tone of the conversation was not, however, mentioned. This is from David Archibald, in an article he titles News from the Cone of Silence to emphasise what we do not know about what was said.

Our own langorous leader decided to join the good and the great in having a telephone conversation with someone they so recently despised in public. To do so he reprised Maxwell Smart in going to the cone of silence to make the call. In this case it was the ASD crypto-centre in Canberra to make the secure call to the private number of Trump, which had been provided by Joe Hockey, Australia’s ambassador to the United States.

Turnbull had the call on speaker. On good report, everyone in the room was surprised when Greg Norman answered the mobile number. Mr Norman patched the call through to President-elect Trump who was not rude but made it plain in telling Turnbull what the new rules were and that Trump would be using Greg Norman as a filter as he would be very busy.

It is important and very interesting that President-elect Trump is said to have said, “Let’s start by you getting your navy up here to take part in Freedom of Navigation patrols, then we can talk about our relationship.”

Apparently Turnbull was somewhat nonplussed and said, “Well, we need to discuss climate change and the TPP…” Trump peremptorily dismissed both issues with “Not a priority, but talk to Greg. He is a great Aussie who has been part of my team for 30-years and he is the advisor I trust.” It was a shock to Turnbull to engage with someone who didn’t want to hear his waffle, as most in this country do far too politely.

The other interesting conclusion is that Hockey is out of the loop with respect to the Trump administration, as someone who is useless and stupid. It is also evident that Trump is aware of the enormous task ahead of him and is not wasting a moment.

Trump is clearly a man who has his eye on the ball, knows what he wants and is not prepared to pussyfoot around with idiots. What a change is in store for us all.

Misreading the obvious the norm for Australia’s economic advisors

The Australian Prime Minister’s Chief Economic Advisor gave a speech yesterday. It was, in effect, a warning about the economic dangers of President Trump’s policy proposals. It is discussed here, but let me especially bring to the surface one of the comments from the post: Martin Parkinson misses the point (again).

John Comnenus
#2211865, posted on November 18, 2016 at 12:34 pm (Edit)
I was at this speech and reported on it in an earlier thread.

The Parkinson speech was, in my view, an ill timed full throated plea for Trump to reverse policy. It was clearly the Government’s position and I suspect Parkinson fully supports it.

The question and answer session is not captured in the link. The first asked why Parkinson thinks this populism thing is happening Brexit – Trump etc?

Parkinson called the response ‘inchoate’ and he didn’t understand why it was happening, but he certainly recognised it was going on. But really it isnt that hard to understand if you look at what Parkinson said in his speech.

During the speech Parkinson noted the following as a key benefit to Americans of US trade and economic diplomacy:

“To give some context, US residents’ ownership of private foreign assets has risen from 6.5 percent of US annual GDP in 1950 to more than 140 percent of annual US GDP, or $25 trillion today. In other words, openness to trade and to investment abroad has directly contributed to a massive increase in the wealth of individual Americans.”

US economic and trade diplomacy created a truckload of wealth.

In the answer to why the revolution question, Parkinson noted that 60% of US workers real wages are equivalent to what they were 30 years ago.

Now I’m not Einstein, but even I can see the obvious connection between those two data points and popular anger.

The last question totally dumbfounded Parkinson, it was from a CEO who asked what impact Parkinson thought the Trump tax plan would have by going from the highest corporate tax rate in the G20 to the lowest.

Parkinson was stuck in a very long pregnant pause whilst trying to work out how to respond. Clearly the answer is obvious, but how does it fit with the narrative that Trump will wreck the world economy? In the end Parkinson conceded it is likely to create strong jobs and wealth growth and that Treasury modelling suggests that half the benefit of those corporate tax cuts will go to the workers.

At the end of the lunch I thought how ridiculous is Parkinson? He tells us on one hand that he doesn’t know why people are voting Trump and Brexit noting that lots of wealth has been created. Later he acknowledges that wage earner has seen none of this wealth, in fact they are going backwards fast, and then finally that Trump’s tax plans will create more jobs and better pay.

Now I don’t have a PhD in economics from Princeton but even I can connect those three dots.

Parkinson’s speech unintentioanlly proved that the massive wealth accumulation from US trade policy has gone to very few people, that most workers have seen none of it and that Trump’s tax plan will help spread that benefit to a lot more workers. It really suggests, unlike Parkinson, that the average Trump voter understood what is going on, what Trump was offering and voted for their best economic interest. That is the average Trump voter voted the smartest way they could given the choice.

If I were Turnbull I would be very circumspect about taking too much advice from Parkinson who assembled and looked at all the evidence only to miss the most obvious conclusion.

A little later down the comments he added the following:

Parkinson’s further remarks to the tax cuts question defy belief and indicate a complete lack of self awareness.

Parkinson advised, in his most serious tone, that the deficits that result from tax cuts are ok if the money is invested in long term productivity improving infrastructure, but bad if they are spent on recurrent expenditure.

There are three things wrong with Parkinson’s statement:

1. what a damning statement about Australia’s idiotic and wasteful fiscal policy over the last decade or so. No contemporary Australian is in a position to tell any other government anything about wasting deficits on recurrent expenditure.

2. Parkinson doesn’t get that company tax cuts are going to companies and not the government. You don’t get to direct private consumption (yet).

3. The company owners will decide what to spend the additional profit on. I bet they get better and more relevant productivity improving development through private sector investment than any massive infrastructure waste government would deliver, say like the NBN.

This whole speech, in hindsight, was just embarrasing and appropriate indicator of the Govenrment’s complete inability to come to grips with Trump’s private sector driven economic growth approach.

And then he immediately added this in the very next comment:

Everyone, including Parkinson, assured us those jobs aint coming back.

Why what was that I read yesterday? Ford is moving a truck plant from Mexico to Ohio and Apple is looking at producing iphones in America.

Trump is on a roll and he isn’t even in office yet.

Is it too early to call: BEST PRESIDENT EVA!

And then finally he added this.

I felt like standing up and telling Martin that in the private sector wages have been flat compared to the public sector where wages are on average higher and they keep growing regardless of performance and that is before you add the outrageous level of superannuation and the obscene recent pay increases the politicians and top ‘public servants’ gave themseleves as if they have been doing a good job running the country.

The only thing saving Parkinson from a Trumpageddon event is the fact that the US Trumpageddon event is about to create a massive private sector led economic recovery in the USA and some of that will flow to Australia.

These morons will never learn that you can’t tax your way to growth which means you can’t government spend your way to growth either.

If he says anything else, I will add those in later.

The Gillian Triggs Award

I do not think that Gillian Triggs should be allowed to go unpunished and just slink off into her fully-funded retirement without some kind of memorial. My proposal is that we have an annual Gillian Triggs award to commemorate her tenure as head of the Australian Human Rights Commission. The award should be annually presented to the person, of whatever gender they choose to have, irrespective of national ethnicity, race, colour or religion, who has shown the most dense, obtuse and hypocritical understanding of human rights in Australia.

My aim, in the first instance, is that she should know that there are some of us who will remember, so that, even as she is enjoying her future retirement on the grossly inflated pension she will receive in spite of her lack of judgment and perspective, she will know there are others who hold her in contempt. If she doesn’t know about the GT Award, so much the better for her. But if she does, one hopes it will irritate and annoy, providing that tiny bit of reflection on the role she has played in Australian public life.

It is also important that the name of the award should not be bestowed in perpetuity, since that would provide future recognition. Instead, it is an award whose name will be changed in dishonour of someone else and that date of this change of name should occur three years after she finally departs from public life. There will no doubt be many who will unfortunately richly deserve the role as the name of the award given each year.

The nominations will be via Catallaxy readers and when a final list of five is determined, will be chosen by a survey of readers.

This will be part of the Catallaxy Awards that will be awarded in a number of categories which have not yet been determined. Feel free to suggest the kinds of public disservice that should be immortalised in these awards. The award winners will be published on April 1 of each year.

What passes for conservative thought in Australia

No names, but this has just come up on my inbox from what is supposedly Australia’s most conservative “market-based” organisation:

Donald Trump would not have been my first (or second or third) choice for Republican nominee for US president. My personal preferred order was Rand Paul, then Scott Walker, then Ted Cruz. Others also liked Chris Christie, Jeb Bush and Marco Rubio. As I said a few weeks ago I’m not sure Trump is a conservative (in the American sense of the term). He doesn’t support free trade for example. But at the same time, some of Trump’s policies are conservative.

Who knew that free trade was a conservative principle, although with Trump we will get a lot more of what is actually free trade. It is no wonder that our right-of-centre government is as clueless as it is with this kind of ethos infecting so much.

My presentation on the American election

I spoke to one of the branches of the Liberal Party last night about the American election. They obviously chose me since they wanted someone who might speak positively about Donald, which is what they most certainly received from me. Here were my opening points:

1) If you are not for Trump and are even tempted to vote for Hillary, you ought to consider shifting to the Greens.

2) I do not prefer Trump in the sense of the lesser of two evils. I prefer Trump as the best imaginable choice to “Make America Great Again”, or more realistically, as the last possible chance to save Western civilisation from disintegration.

3) If you do not see this then you are blind to everything that is going on, almost all of which is hidden from view by a media that is almost as corrupt as Hillary.

I then discussed all of the policies that are in parallel with the Coalition’s. You know:

  • border protection
  • dealing with terrorism and Islamic jihad
  • market-based policies to encourage recovery
  • lower taxes and certainly no “death taxes”
  • reduced public spending
  • removal of Obamacare and an open national market for health insurance
  • Supreme Court appointments who are constitutional scholars
  • suppressing voter fraud
  • understanding climate change is a fraud
  • encouraging fracking and coal-based sources of power

You know, sanity for a change. The Q&A made it quite an evening, but I am happy to report, the sentiment of the room was definitely with me. A very unusual experience, I can tell you.

Politics as the art of the inconceivable

Julie Bishop’s judgement is, as usual, bottom shelf. Having deposed Tony and instrumental in bringing in Malcolm, today’s AFR headline front page: Bishop warns on Trump. Is it her or her department of analytical morons? Trump has had virtually the entire military endorse him for president, at least those who are able to speak in public. So what’s Julie’s concern?

In her most forthright commentary yet on the US election, Ms Bishop appeared to back Hillary Clinton, whose campaign has been rattled anew by a fresh probe into emails she kept on a private server.

“US engagement in our region is important for us,” Ms Bishop told the ABC. “I believe that will continue under Hillary Clinton.

“It will be up to our region, including Australia, to persuade a Trump administration to focus on the Asia-Pacific.”

Ms Bishop talked up Ms Clinton’s regional credentials, describing her as the architect of Barak Obama’s famous pivot towards the Asia-Pacific region.

“She sees the US as having a global leadership role,” Ms Bishop said. “Candidate Donald Trump does not. He sees the US as having got a raw deal from globalisation and he would focus more on domestic matters.”

She has seen Hillary’s foreign policy judgement in action along with Obama’s and wants her to become president to replace the current disaster. There is a level of density here that defies explanation.

Meanwhile there is a bit of turmoil going on in the US which this might help to clarify: BREAKING TIES: Obama is Now Throwing Hillary Under the Bus. If so, anything is now possible. See the chart below which is from the article:

hillary-crack-up

To which there is this to add.hillary-rush

Coded writing at the AFR

A fascinating article in The AFR today which in the paper is called, “The Secrets of Team Turnbull” but online is titled, By delegating power, Turnbull tries to avoid Rudd and Abbott’s mistakes. This is one of the best pieces of coded writing I have ever come across since it is on the surface about how clever Malcolm is and how wonderful things now are, but in every para shows his incompetence in the softest possible light. How’s this for an example of just how excellent Turnbull’s governance has been:

Even ministers concede that Turnbull’s decentralisation has made him less effective at managing what has been dubbed the “24-hour media cycle” – all-day coverage of politics on websites, social media and cable television (although by fewer reporters).

But they argue that over the longer term Turnbull’s approach will produce better policy, which will deliver votes.

So far, it isn’t working. Turnbull’s personal approval rating has almost halved since he took over, and the Coalition trails Labor in the polls.

Allies are disillusioned.

And if you think his allies are disillusioned, you should see what people who don’t like him think. Then there’s this:

Abbott and Turnbull are very different prime ministers in private. Abbott made himself accessible to the business community, lobbyists say, but was reluctant to consider major policy changes.

One of Credlin’s achievements was instilling political and policy discipline in Abbott, who had a reputation for gaffes when he spoke off the cuff. “With Abbott, certain areas were off-limits,” says one lobbyist who dealt with both prime minsters. “He would say: ‘We’ve just got to kill the carbon tax’.”

Well, certainly no one goes around saying that kind of thing any more. And then just one more about how things have changed for the better since Abbott and Peta Credlin left and Malcolm’s Chief of Staff Sally Cray took over.

Observers say Turnbull’s office lacks the personal intensity of Abbott’s office, which often felt under seige because of the strong emotions created by Credlin’s tough style and Abbott’s deep loyalty to her. More staff feel they have direct access to the Prime Minister, which they say enhances the sense of collaboration.

“Within the PMO, it’s a very happy place,” said a business executive who lobbies the government. “People get along.”

Still, the business executive misses Credlin’s knowledge of government decision-making. “Peta would tell you what is happening,” the executive says. “If she said something was going to be delivered, it would be delivered.”

Even some former Coalition ministers say they struggle to get Cray to return their phone calls.

Don’t worry? Be happy.