19 May 2016

Victorian sheriff selling Bob Jane's house unlawfully?

How well do you know your law?


Do you know who the sheriff of Victoria is?

Is he and his dePuties in office lawfully?

Are the people who swore him in, lawfully in office?

Where does he get his 'authority' from to take your 'stuff'?

How many 'lawful' Chapter III ( from the Australian 'Constitution') courts are there in Australia?

They are just some of the basic questions people have with regards to the sheriff of Victoria.

Victoria's currently alleged sheriff is a person by the name of Brendan Facey.

The gazetted office is at 444 Swanston St. Melbourne, Victoria.

As an example, when you commit a 'criminal' offence that results in a parking or speeding fine and do not pay it, the result from an unlawful court called the 'Infringements Court' escalates to a warrant from the so called sheriff of Victoria - Brendan Facey. 

We have confirmed proof that no lawful warrant exists that has arisen from a fictitious place called the  'Infringements Court'.

We also have evidence that no lawful warrants exist in the state of Victoria.

There is no gazetted appointment for the current so called sheriff of Victoria - Brendan Facey, as required by law.

The sheriff obtains his powers to take your 'stuff', which otherwise would be a criminal offence from a law (read Act) called the Sheriff Act 2009.

This Act is not a lawfully enacted Act, meaning it is invalid despite the fact that authorities are using it to steal your possessions.

As a result the Victorian government is involved in corruption, fraud, deception, theft, false imprisonment and cover up with regards to the actions of Victoria's so called sheriff.

As always with regards to any criminal offence, if you have had harm committed against your 'person', you must take action.

It is very doubtful that any law firm will want to take this matter on, or even if it does, it may (deliberately/) stuff you up in any claims against the so called sheriff.

See how the fraud is committed against the man who's 'persons' name is Bob Jane in the article  by the corporate media of the title Bob Jane hits the skids in illustration below:

18 May 2016

Australian law oppressive - made by corporations for corporations

Many Australians do not comprehend nor maybe even want to comprehend the colour of law in Australia.

From 1788 for 40 years there was Martial Law officially installed on this land.

From certain events within the British monarchy of the time, a few researchers hold they key to the true state of law on this continent/island called Australia.

Some say that there is no law, per se, only corporate agreements that are in force, where the serfs are punished for not being subservient to them.

This follows the fact that Roman Code is followed in this country, where strict liability and absolute liability are in force.

In any event 'Australia' was started of as an economic project, a 'corporation' if you will.

Queensland is one legal bordello.

  • No 'lawful' Chapter III (as per Australian Constitution) courts.

  • No 'lawful' laws - no upper house. For a law to be 'lawful' it must pass both upper and lower houses of parliament.

Take a look at the example of law in a 'small' town in the top end of the land of the Queen, called Weipa.

History

Bauxite deposits near Weipa, 1969
 
Weipa began as a Presbyterian Aboriginal mission outpost in 1898.

Very restrictive legislation was enacted by the state of Queensland in 1911, making the Protector the legal guardian of every Aborigine and half-caste child (until he/she was 21), and the right to confine (or expel) any such person within any reserve or Aboriginal institution, and the right to imprison any Aborigine or half-caste for 14 days if, in the Protector's judgement, they were guilty of neglect of duty, gross insubordination or wilful preaching of disobedience. It also gave powers to the police to confine Aborigines to reserves to "protect them from corruption". This latter power was given by Comalco in 1957 to justify the removal of Weipa Aborigines.[4] 

 Source: - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weipa,_Queensland


17 May 2016

Bible Scripture or BS?

So let's take a closer look at the Holy Bible that was placed by the Gideons.



According to the 'index' under MAN appearing at Genesis 1:27

"So God created man in His own image; in the image of God...."
as illustrated in the scan below:


Now let's have a look at what it says in the actual 'text' of the document.

Genesis 1:26

"Then God said, "Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our...."


Isn't there a difference between one doctor taking credit for operating on you in the operating theatre and a few?

Isn't there a difference between one God creating 'man' and a few Gods creating 'man'?


Note: The King James bible that is used today is based on the Geneva Bible.


The word of 'God' or a bastardised translation following a particular agenda of the 'authority' of the day?


16 May 2016

Why does the Australian government cut funding for people in need of legal help?

So here's the deal.



The corporate media reported that last year there were approximately 10,000 'criminals' who missed out on legal aid being unrepresented in Australia's (Roman code) court system.

It was also stated that Britain spends twice as much funds per capita as the Australian government does for its 'criminals'.

As people should know there is that historical tie to the Monarchy, hence the corporate media's obligatory comparison to mother England.

What the peasants/plebs/commoners may not realise is that according to 'law' they are residing in a penal colony of the British empire.

Strict liability and absolute liability are implemented in the 'administrative' courts of Australia.

According to the law makers of Australia, when you get a parking ticket, and elect to take the matter to court, it is listed as a criminal matter and not as the alternative a civil matter

You are a CRIMINAL if you do not pay your parking fine issued unlawfully by a 'city council'.

You are in the same category, as a polygamist, thief, murderer, rapist? 

Does that sound like a law of a penal colony or a nation of 'free' men?

Now logically, as a government/business, would you want to pay for someone who is going up against you ??? !!! ??

15 May 2016

Mortgage fraud against banks but no report of fraud commited by banks against their customers

How appropriate that the corporate media reports of fraud committed against the banks.

Will the corporate media ever report that the banks commit fraud against their customers with every single one of their loans [ for example] with cash they do not actually have?

You can read the article from Friday the 13th of May 2016 from news.com.au of the headline:

Mortgage fraud is the dirty secret that could spark a financial meltdown, economist warns


A Westpac customer claims their income and assets were massively inflated by the bank.
MORTGAGE fraud by brokers and banks could bring on a financial meltdown, an economic researcher has warned.
As at least three of the major banks investigate allegedly dodgy loans to Chinese buyers, LF Economics founder Lindsay David says fraudulent lending is rife in Australia’s property market — and that we should all be scared.

NAB is the latest bank to launch an investigation after receiving a tip-off about a mortgage broker involved in a new tower development in Melbourne’s Southbank.

It comes as lenders instruct brokers to stop lending to overseas borrowers, after Westpac and ANZ launched an investigation into suspect loans worth almost $1 billion.

But Mr David believes the practice of doctoring paperwork on home loans is much broader than the banks would have us think.

NAB has been told a broker used Photoshop to inflate figures on pay slips and bank statements in order to secure loans for overseas buyers.

“We are investigating these claims and will refer them to authorities if and when appropriate,” a spokeswoman for the bank told news.com.au.

It is understood that Westpac has also been contacted about the mortgage broker, but the bank declined to say whether any investigation had been launched when contacted by news.com.au.

DODGY LOANS

While the practice has long been portrayed as the work of a few bad apples in the competitive mortgage broking industry, evidence is emerging that senior banking employees themselves may be involved in mortgage fraud.

Last month, ABC business journalist Elysse Morgan revealed that her loan documents had been tampered with, telling Four Corners that she got them back from the bank to find that her income had been “massively inflated”.

“There was a line that says ‘your monthly income’, and for my husband it was correct, but for me it was inflated by around 38 per cent,” Ms Morgan said.

She said she had never found out who changed the figures on her loan application, and declined to name the bank when contacted by news.com.au.

It may sound extraordinary, but Ms Morgan is not alone. Hundreds of mum-and-dad borrowers have contacted the Banking and Finance Consumers Support Association with claims that lenders have forged their signatures on loan documents, with details of their personal income and assets bumped up by hundreds of thousands of dollars.

BFCSA President Denise Brailey says she has reported hundreds of such cases to the financial services regulator, ASIC.

Borrowers come to her for advice when they find themselves saddled with massive debts and their homes repossessed, after being sold loans that are beyond their ability to pay.

Are we on the verge of a meltdown in the style of 
<i>The Big Short</i>? Picture: Paramount
Are we on the verge of a meltdown in the style of The Big Short? Picture: ParamountSource:Supplied

WHY IT MATTERS

When Ms Morgan saw that her income had been inflated, even though she was “on a pretty good salary”, she wondered: “What’s in the interest of the organisation or the institution to prop that up?”
“You’ve only got to think to yourself, ‘are they taking it from a double-A to a triple-A rating?” she said.

That’s exactly what Mr David believes is going on, and he warns of an impending disaster on the scale of the collapse of the United States housing bubble that sparked the global financial crisis of 2007-8.

If the banks are massaging the numbers on people’s loans to make them look more creditworthy, this would allow them to secure credit more cheaply from the institutions that lend to them.

The Australian economy relies on credit from these overseas sources to function, and the integrity of the banking system, including loanbook serviceability, is critical to the ongoing supply of capital that keeps the nation running.

Business journalist Elysse Morgan’s income was inflated by 38 per cent on her loan application.
Business journalist Elysse Morgan’s income was inflated by 38 per cent on her loan application.Source:Supplied

Mr David believes Australia’s lending market is littered with “junk loans”, arguing that there is no way the banks’ fast-growing loan books could be entirely made up of serviceable debt.

“We think we’re just scratching the surface on this,” he said. “It’s the biggest problem facing the economy.”

Even a relatively small downturn, or a housing market collapse, could bring the whole system crashing down, he said.

“It’s quite easy to sell off your asset when it’s appreciating in value, even if you can’t pay the loan,” Mr David said.

“But when the reverse happens and you overbank what your house eventually becomes worth, that’s when real problems begin.”

He argued that Australia’s spiralling household debt — now worth more than $2 trillion, in an economy that has a GDP of just $1.6 trillion — posed a danger to the economic system, which may only be acknowledged once “the bubble bursts and causes havoc”.

And with much of Australia’s economy linked to the property market, he said, the results could be catastrophic.

“There are just too many loans out there that are simply never going to be able to be repaid,” Mr David said.

“During a real estate boom, everyone is too busy speculating and making paper profits to care about what is happening ... Only voices from the fringe see through the deception and raise concern, while the government, regulators, economics profession and the public are seemingly oblivious to the clear and present dangers.”

AN INSTANT PAY RISE

Among the documents in Ms Brailey’s files is a Westpac loan with a gross annual income allegedly inflated by a whopping $288,000.

The document forms part of LF Economics’ submission to the Parliamentary Inquiry into Penalties for White-Collar Crime, released earlier this month. 

On it, the self-employed borrower, whose name is marked out for privacy reasons, has listed the alleged discrepancies: “motor vehicle — overinflated by $10,000; personal effects — overinflated by $100,000; monthly income — exaggerated by $14,500; rental income — exaggerated by $3456.

Westpac customers say their loan application forms were forged.
Westpac customers say their loan application forms were forged.Source:Supplied

Westpac customers say their loan application forms were forged.
Westpac customers say their loan application forms were forged.Source:Supplied

The Westpac customer also claims that the loan was written down as being for investment purposes when in fact it was their home; that its valuation was inflated by $25,000; that their listed occupation as an investment manager was incorrect, and that they owned an $85,000 share portfolio, when in fact they owned no shares at all.

Ms Brailey says she has thousands of documents on file showing similar cases.

Buyer’s agent and property commentator Catherine Cashmore also believes the problem is widespread.

“I’ve got clients it’s happened to, changes happen without them seeing,” Ms Cashmore said, disputing the banks’ line that they subject all loans to “rigorous checks”.

TIME FOR CHANGE?

With voters growing frustrated by repeated scandals in the banking sector, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull last month warned the institutions to lift their game. 

Opposition Leader Bill Shorten has promised a Royal Commission into the sector if Labor wins the coming Federal Election, but has been light on detail about what it would cover. 

ASIC, which Mr Lindsay accuses of “turning a blind eye” to mortgage fraud by bank, will soon get an extra $120 million over four years to crack down on the banking and finance sector. 

Last month’s funding announcement was widely read as a move aimed at blunting Labor’s calls for a Royal Commission, which Treasurer Scott Morrison has said would “put at risk confidence in the banking system”.

None of the big four banks would provide detail of how they ensure loan application forms are accurate when contacted by news.com.au.

Westpac spokeswoman Lucy Wilson said the bank had “no tolerance for fraud”, with “systems in place to identify and thoroughly investigate any potential dishonest behaviour”.

“If fraudulent activity is discovered, we take action against those involved ... liaising with the appropriate regulator and the police as required,” she said.

An ASIC spokesman said in a statement: “If someone suspects their loan application or any similar document had been altered without their knowledge or approval, that may well involve a serious misrepresentation and a complaint should be made as soon as possible.”

In its supplementary response to the parliamentary inquiry, the regulator said dishonest or fraudulent conduct was “more commonly found in relation to mortgage and finance brokers rather than lenders”.
Since taking over regulation of consumer credit in 2010, ASIC has investigated more than 50 mortgage brokers over alleged fraud relating to home loans and personal loans, with 13 criminal charges resulting in 11 convictions, including four guilty pleas. There have been at least 38 administrative actions, which usually means bannings.

The Finance Brokers Association of Australia, for its part, claims that mortgage fraud is “limited to a small section of the industry and is definitely not systemic and entrenched”.

FBAA chief executive Peter White conceded that loan tampering was a problem, but argued the practice was “not widespread”.

“Ninety nine per cent of brokers are doing the right thing but unfortunately, like in any industry, there is a tiny element who cross the line, particularly when it comes to the repayment of loans that rely on foreign income from certain countries,” Mr White said.

11 May 2016

Toyota sacks workers for porn stash but Redland Bay council keeps Craig Ogilvie stalking creep

You can bet your (Australian) 'Constitution' that the 520+ so called city councils are the dodgiest business in Australia.

From what started out as municipal offices, that are a department of the state, have stealthfully turned into businesses, and even claims that these businesses are a third tier of government.

ALL unlawfully, but that is another post or dozen.

Keep in mind that we are told by the Murdoch media "it is not romantic or sweet of you to take a photograph of a woman without her knowledge."

See news.com.au article:

http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/real-life/wtf/when-did-stalking-become-a-sweet-love-story/news-story/a008c24d1eba5fdb139b33af9f7d3790

So,

at Toyota in Melbourne the company did a sweep of employees computers to see if there was any pornographic material stored on the PC's as there has been some emails going around that people found offensive.

After this sweep a few people's employment was terminated, but needless to say the company did not want this to be a high profile matter, and as a result this was not reported by the corporate media.

So,

going back to the Redland Bay 'city council' of Brisbane, Queensland, an employee by the name of Craig Ogilivie has a porn stash justifying this by stating that he is a "red-blooded" (Aussie?).

To make it worse he is a creep by stalking women, talking covert pictures and storing them on council supplied equipment.

Should the council NOT terminate Craig's employment it could be quite easily seen that they support this kind of behaviour - i.e. sexual harassment of women.

See article from 7 March 2016 by brisbanetimes.com.au of the headline:

Redlands councillor Craig Ogilvie defends porn stash


A Redlands City councillor caught with personal sex tapes and pornographic images on his ratepayer-funded laptop has defended storing the content the device, saying he is guilty only of being "red-blooded".

Division 2 councillor Craig Ogilvie, who is seeking re-election at the local government polls on March 19, also said he had not done anything wrong and the public revelation of the material on his computer was akin to being "slut-shamed".
 
Speaking with 612 ABC Brisbane breakfast host Spencer Howson on Monday morning, Mr Ogilvie admitted to storing personal sex tapes and pornographic material on his council-supplied devices, but refuted allegations he had also stored covert pictures taken of women in bikinis on the municipality's beaches.

"I think I'm guilty if anything of being red-blooded, and maybe more red-blooded than some, I don't know, I don't think so but certainly not guilty of any improper or illegal behaviour," he said.
"In relation to covertly taking photos of people at the beach, I just want to say that allegation has already been referred to the police and that was dismissed, so the idea I'm capable or have been indulging in that type of behaviour is incorrect."

Cr Ogilvie, who was also outed as having used his council accounts to access cheating website Ashley Madison in last year's database hack, said he did not believe he had done anything wrong.

"I don't think it's uncommon behaviour, I guess my message to ... everybody is the time to be prudish about this sort of thing, I think we have moved on," he said.

"There's a whole thing about being sex-positive in this world in that people who have sex lives shouldn't be ashamed or slut-shamed by anybody else for having a sexuality and enjoying that."

Councillor Craig Ogilvie said he is only guilty of being red-blooded.
Councillor Craig Ogilvie said he is only guilty of being red-blooded. Photo: Supplied
"Do you feel slut-shamed?" Howson asked.

"I definitely feel there is an element of slut-shaming in what's occurring, yeah," he replied.
"It's private stuff, personal stuff and I think it's my domain, not the public domain."

Cr Ogilvie insisted he was no different to many other employees across the country who were also issued with work-funded devices.

"All of us use our work supplied devices for some element of private use and it could be things of this type," he said.

"I don't think people should feel threatened that somebody might seize their work-supplied devices."
He said, if re-elected, he would be fighting for councillors being issued with private devices that enabled them to access all council-related material necessary, without the threat of the devices being seized.

Cr Ogilvie was the subject of a local government investigation after concerns were raised he used his rate-payer funded phone, computer and tablet to access cheaters website Ashley Madison when the hacking scandal broke last year.

After the story broke on Sunday, Deputy Premier and Local Government Minister Jackie Trad said voters would decide if Cr Ogilvie's use of his ratepayer-funded devices was appropriate on March 19.
But Ms Trad, while not commenting on the Cr Ogilvie matter, said there was nothing stopping him from facing voters in the upcoming local government elections.

"Ultimately every single elected representative faces Queenslanders and the voting population and it is the voters who will make the ultimate determination about the behaviour and the direction that local representatives take," she said.

10 May 2016

Facebook provides false info - rigging news data

Many companies do it, from search engines, news outlets wherever statistics come into play, deliberately misleading the readers where even falsifying the opinion of the masses or the political climate of the general populous.

This time it's Facebook's founder Mark Zuckerberg, you know the one who called his Facebook users "Dumb F#cks" is at it again

Facebook Users - Dumb F_ _ks 

   

Read the article from 10 May 2016 posted by news.com.au of the headline:

Former Facebook staffers say conservative news is deliberately suppressed

Chief executive and co-founder of the social networking website Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, has denied Facebook tampers with the visibility of its news stories.
Howard KurtzFox News
FACEBOOK is being accused of fiddling with its formulas to suppress conservative news.
That’s what some unnamed former Facebook workers told the tech site Gizmodo — and it’s an accusation that strikes at the heart of the social network’s credibility.

Facebook relies on computer algorithms to determine what is “trending,” an influential designation that inevitably boosts traffic for what are deemed the hottest topics. But unbeknown to much of the public, Facebook hires journalists to tweak these formulas, and this is where the question of political bias has erupted.

Gizmodo reports that Facebook “routinely suppressed news stories of interest to conservative readers,” according to a former journalist who worked on the trending designations. And several former Facebook “news curators” told the website that they were told to “inject” certain topics into the trending list, even if they weren’t popular enough to warrant making the crucial list.

Depending on who was on duty, said the unnamed conservative ex-curator, citing fear of retribution from the company, “things would be black-listed or trending … I’d come on shift and I’d discover that CPAC or Mitt Romney or Glenn Beck or popular conservative topics wouldn’t be trending because either the curator didn’t recognise the news topic or it was like they had a bias against Ted Cruz.”

Facebook denies any political bias. A spokesperson said in a statement: “We take allegations of bias very seriously. Facebook is a platform for people and perspectives from across the political spectrum.
Trending Topics shows you the popular topics and hashtags that are being talked about on Facebook.

There are rigorous guidelines in place for the review team to ensure consistency and neutrality. These guidelines do not permit the suppression of political perspectives.”

The Gizmodo account is based on interviews with a handful of ex-employees who chose to remain anonymous and could be pushing their own views. Other former curators told Gizmodo they did not consciously make biased judgments on trending topics, and no one is alleging that Facebook management ordered such actions.

But as Facebook has mushroomed into a mighty media force, one that has content-sharing arrangements with major news organisations, Mark Zuckerberg has always cast his global operation as a neutral platform. If there is a cooking of the digital books that penalises conservatives, Facebook could face a considerable backlash.

A former curator gave Gizmodo notes he had made of stories that were omitted from trending topics. These included the allegations that former IRS official Lois Lerner improperly scrutinised conservative groups, and stories involving Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, the Drudge Report and Chris Kyle, the former Navy SEAL who was killed three years ago.


–– ADVERTISEMENT ––
All this, said the unnamed curator, “had a chilling effect on conservative news.”

Facebook’s algorithms collate the day’s top trending news.

Facebook’s algorithms collate the day’s top trending news.

The sources also told Gizmodo that stories reported by such conservative-leaning news outlets as Breitbart, the Washington Examiner and Newsmax, which were trending enough to be picked up by Facebook’s algorithm, were excluded unless so-called mainstream sites like the New York Times, CNN and the BBC followed up on those stories.

Facebook’s political stance has been called into question during the presidential campaign.

Zuckerberg, the company’s founder and CEO, took an obvious shot at Donald Trump last month, saying: “I hear fearful voices calling for building walls and distancing people they label as ‘others.’ I hear them calling for blocking free expression, for slowing immigration, for reducing trade, and in some cases, even for cutting access to the internet.” Zuckerberg has also signed a legal brief asking the Supreme Court to uphold President Obama’s executive action limiting deportation of illegal immigrants.

And in March, as part of a weekly internal poll, some Facebook employees asked Zuckerberg: “What responsibility does Facebook have to help prevent President Trump in 2017?”

That prompted a statement from Facebook: “We as a company are neutral — we have not and will not use our products in a way that attempts to influence how people vote.”

With more than 1 billion users worldwide, Facebook wields tremendous influence. The controversy over trending topics could cause some users to question whether the social site is subtly tampering with people’s news feeds to promote or minimise certain political stories or viewpoints.

08 May 2016

Supreme Court restricts mother’s access to newborn


The child is the fourth to be removed from the mother.
A MOTHER has lost a fight for the right to breastfeed her baby after the 10-day old was removed from her care because of concerns about her parenting.

The child is the fourth to be removed from the mother who today took her desperate fight for access to her child to the Supreme Court.

The baby was taken into emergency care three days after its birth last month and placed with a maternal aunt.

In that time the mother lived with the child but a children’s court ordered the baby be placed in the custody of a third carer.

Under the order the mother can now only see the child between 10am and 4pm.

The case is due back before the children’s court on Monday, but the baby’s parents today asked the Supreme Court to overturn the decision.

They hoped the baby could be placed in their care for the weekend, including Mother’s Day on Sunday.

Lawyers for the baby’s parents raised concerns about the unstable start to the child’s life, saying the baby should be with its parents.

“Three carers in 10 days does not bode well,” the lawyer for the baby’s mum said.

A lawyer for the child’s father said he was able and willing to care for the child and had hoped for the baby’s mother to move in with him.

The couple have been together for 12 months, and at the time of the baby’s birth the mother was living in motels and at friends houses.

It is understood she had no pram, cot, car capsule or other baby related items.

The Department of Human Services successfully had the baby removed from the mother because of her “chaotic lifestyle” and history of substance abuse.

She also has a significant criminal record.

Authorities say it is unclear who the child’s father is, but the man purporting to be so is a known wife-beater with convictions for domestic violence offences.

Supreme Court judge Justice Andrew Keogh dismissed the application.

He said the matter could be more fully explored when it returns to the children’s court on Monday.

heraldsun.com.au 6 May 2016

The Australian Government disassembling families, one breastfeeding mum after another?

Why stop at the Aboriginal community?

06 May 2016

Australians are getting screwed at the petrol bowser

Here is the official story by news.com.au

EVERY so often, the price of petrol rises mysteriously. What costs $1.10 on Wednesday costs $1.30 by Saturday. 
Why? The case of the extra 20 cents per litre should be an easy one to solve.

There are only a handful of major fuel retailers in Australia. Caltex and Woolworths are in a joint venture. Coles bought out Shell. Then there are 7-Eleven and BP. These players control the majority of the market.

Just last year the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission announced fuel profit margins were the highest since record-keeping began. “Unreasonably high,” it called prices.

The ACCC is constantly haranguing fuel retailers. A major court action against five petrol retailers was resolved last December with a court forcing them to publicise the numbers in their formerly private price-sharing arrangement. The ACCC also monitors petrol stations and publishes report after report on the state of the industry.

And yet the fuel price cycle repeats and repeats. If you’re in Perth, the petrol price cycle is weekly.

Perth petrol prices.
Perth petrol prices.

In Sydney it is slightly longer.

Sydney’s slightly less predictable prices.
Sydney’s slightly less predictable prices.

In Melbourne the pattern is different again, but across Australia the point is the same — sometimes a whole lot of petrol stations — coincidentally — decide they can’t sell fuel cheaply any more.

And Melbourne is less predictable again.
And Melbourne is less predictable again.

It is clear something weird is going on. And petrol is far from the only industry where competition is suspiciously mild.

Two big companies that have a big stake in fuel are Woolworths and Coles. They also control a big share of groceries, liquor, and hardware.

Of course, Australia is not a big country. Our population is not large enough to support huge numbers of competitors like they have in America.

The US has dozens of competing supermarkets — Walmart is the biggest and it has less than 30 per cent of the market. Then there’s Kroger and Safeway and Whole Foods, Sprouts, Trader Joes, Dollar Stores, Costco and many, many more.

We, meanwhile, have two major chains, plus Aldi and IGA.

In Australia, Coles and Woolworths pretty much control the groceries, liquor and hardware markets. Picture: AAP Image/Dan Peled
In Australia, Coles and Woolworths pretty much control the groceries, liquor and hardware markets. Picture: AAP Image/Dan PeledSource:AAP

America has dozens of airlines. Delta, United, Southwest, American, JetBlue and Alaska airlines are all big enough to matter. We have Qantas and Virgin. Then there is Jetstar (owned by Qantas), Tiger (owned by Virgin) and a few minor airlines doing regional links.

Not to mention telecommunications, banks and media.

High market concentration is a major risk for low levels of competition. And competition is really important.

COMPETITION — THE KING

Economics says capitalism and free markets work best when companies compete hard on price and quality, always offering us cool new products at better prices. And yeah, they do that. Sometimes. But they also spend a lot of time finding ways to do the opposite. Offer us the same old products at higher and higher prices.

Companies can make big profits in two ways. By being the best competitor, or finding ways to reduce competition in their markets. It should be no surprise when they collude, cheat, or trick us. That’s what the incentives tell them to do.

But when this happens, the point of a free market economy goes out the window. Instead of the benefits of markets coming to us, the consumers, the benefits stay in the pockets of those big companies. This is why we have to make sure competition is razor sharp.

At any domestic airport in Australia you’ll see the same brands over and over again. There’s not much variety and very little competition. Picture: Nicole Garmston
At any domestic airport in Australia you’ll see the same brands over and over again. There’s not much variety and very little competition. Picture: Nicole GarmstonSource:News Corp Australia

ADVANCE AUSTRALIA FAIRLY SLOWLY

So what are we doing to maximise competition? The answer is not enough. The ACCC does what it can. It has around 100 investigations going and has recently taken to court companies trying to subvert competition in the cement, high voltage cables, ball bearings and credit card industries.

The head of the ACCC recently said it simply can’t do more. “Our resources are very limited and our investigators are fully stretched. Our most difficult issue is to decide what to investigate and what not to.”

It seems clear we should give the ACCC more oomph.

A big set of legal changes to help electrify competition is due to go through the Senate soon — probably after the election. Will they be enough to prevent our economy from falling into the hands of two or three big companies? I don’t know. One way we may be able to tell they’re working is if the mystery of the rising petrol price is never heard of again.

05 May 2016

The kid who sued Victoria



For those who have had 'harm' done against them by 'persons' representing the state of Victoria, this kid's actions should be jotted down.

These persons may include, Victoria Police, Victorian Sheriff - Brendan Facey, a court's registrar, a judicial clerk/Magistrate, prosecutor and many more.

The action is to Sue, SUe, SUE!!!

It may be fortunate/unfortunate that other circumstances have to this 'person' being brought before the courts, but that is not the primary focus of this post.


From article of  5 May 2016 by news.com.au of the headline:


Beau Abela faces court for theft after he successfully sued the Victorian Government

(text only)
 
HE IS the kid who single-handedly sued an entire state and got away with hundreds of thousands of dollars and a free car. 
But when will Beau Abela start taking responsibility for his actions?

He blamed the Victorian Government because he couldn’t read or write and his illiteracy saw him fall behind his classmates.

He ended up with a generous compensation to set him up for his future, but he is still unemployed and it seems he has learnt little from the experience.

The boy who sued Victoria has turned to a life of crime and it seems the state won’t be able to save him this time.

HOW A KID SUED A STATE
In 2007 a chubby baby-faced kid peered over a book and declared war on Victoria.

He blamed the state for the fact he was illiterate and that marked the beginning of an eight-year long court battle with the government.

He was a 14-year-old kid who felt like he had not much of a life ahead of him.



He couldn’t read a bus timetable or a menu and even just counting to 10 was a challenge.

Beau blamed the Victorian Education Department for taking away his future, as his primary school, Panton Hills in outer Melbourne, should not have let him progress to high school because he had an intellectual disability and struggled with his reading and writing.

At the time Beau announced his action against the government, he said he would never get an apprenticeship and his father, Peter Abela, said “the government failed my son” and “Beau was cheated of his education”.

When Beau was in grade three, parent/teacher notes said he would sometimes lash out in the playground.

The notes stated he was “extremely reluctant” to talk in front of the class and he needed a great deal of encouragement and assistance.

During the eight-year court battle, Beau and Mr Abela failed to sue the state but they appealed to the Federal Court and eventually won.

Documents from a court sitting in 2013 state teachers tried to help Beau and Mr Abela grudgingly admitted they did, but said his son needed more.

Mr Abela couldn’t help Beau himself because he also struggled with literacy and numeracy but he said it was the school’s job to educate his son anyway.

Beau also had other problems beyond his reading and writing.

He was also disruptive and court documents from 2013 state when Beau went to Eltham High School, he had some behavioural issues.

Mr Abela told the school “it’s your problem” and that he “didn’t have time for this”.

During his teenage years, Beau went to a number of different high schools and dropped out.

But when he tried to re-enrol in one at Collingwood he wasn’t let in and he blamed the Education Department, claiming he was being discriminated against because of his intellectual disability.

Barrister David Hancock told the Federal Court that Beau “sits at home wondering what to do with his life”.

The Age reported Mr Hancock said the department was in the wrong because it blamed Beau, his family and even his diet for his classroom behaviour.

Mr Hancock said the longer Beau was in school, the more aggressive and disengaged he became.
Last year the case finally came to a close when the Federal Court approved a secret settlement between Beau and the state.

According to the Herald Sun, he won $300,000 to further his education, along with a free car.

But it seems that education has not helped Beau get a job and he has instead turned to a life of crime.

‘STOP MAKING EXCUSES’

Now covered in tattoos with a lip ring and a backwards cap, Beau is still blaming his choices on his illiteracy.

He fronted court yesterday and pleaded guilty to stealing a $2100 Nissan from a carpark in Flinders Lane.

The Herald Sun reports this was the second time he faced court on car theft charges.

Beau complained about still being unemployment and said it was due to his reading and writing skills but Magistrate Tim Burke had no sympathy.

“Don’t use that as an excuse,” he said.

“Use it as motivation to prove everyone wrong.”

The Herald Sun reports Beau stole the car after his own vehicle was impounded.

The 22-year-old was let off with a good behaviour bond without conviction.

Outside court, Beau hid behind a pair of green-rimmed sunglasses and proceeded to stick his middle finger up at cameras.

He did not respond to news.com.au’s attempts to contact him.